20150310

Chronicowls '15 Temple-UConn

 Reflections after Ending the Regular Season with a Crisp 75-63 Bang
Posted by Blog Contributor Phil "Tall" Wagner
If you like silent auctions, this was your day—you could bid on all from kumquats to Sherman tanks.
If you like free TEMPLE MADE tee shirts, this was your moment—you couldn’t not be given one.
If you’d never seen the Liacouras full—10,206 bodies full—they were all there. Yet sadly, only 8 tubas.
If you’d wondered which avian ilk would show up, these were surely cherry and white birds of prey…
playing, if you love somewhat compromised drama, the defending NATIONAL champion (17-12, 10-7) Huskies.

For UConn, Boatwright (torrid in 1st half with 21) and Purvis combined for 43 pts. and 73 mins.
For Temple, Cummings and Morgan paired for 40 pts. and 67 mins., DeCosey chipping in 15 over 32.
Temple’s 8 steals were twice their turnovers while, woefully, UConn’s comparables were 3-14.
For Dunphy, this was win #499 (310-163 at Penn, 189-106 on North Broad). Who’s ready for #500?
Things look swell vs. Memphis (minus top gun Nichols) on Fri., but may be hell vs. SMU (AP #20) on Sat.
Of course, looking beyond a team you beat by a single point five weeks back is seldom advised.  
But the good news is Temple can’t play UConn till the finals—beating anybody thrice a season is tough.

So who’s the sleeper in the AAC mix? Who’s ready to play 3-4 days running? And we do mean running.
And how early and often must Temple win this week, if they’re truly on the bubble, to go dancing?
On the subject of RPIs, interesting to note that the Owls’re a most pedestrian 2-7 vs. top 50 RPI teams.
RPI look for AAC tourney’s 5 byes:  SMU 15 (ooohh!), Temple 34, Cincy 35, Tulsa 47, Memphis 82.
Brace yourself. There’s dribbling and high-fiving ahead, with luck, much of it for those Temple Owls!



20150212

Chronicowls '15 - Temple-Cincinnati

Posted by Chronicowls Contributor Phil "Tall" Wagner


Well you North Broad hoopheads, your Temple Owls  drew even last night, knotting things on the season  vs. the team with three more n’s and i’s each, those upstart Bearcats from Cincinnati. For the now 18-7, 9-3 and 11-2-at-home Owls, a critical win at a moment they critically needed one if to go dancing in weeks to come; for the now 17-7, 8-4 and 3-5-on-the-road Ohio visitors, vice versa.
Your Owls, with 6 games left including an East Carolina pair, are 6-0 since their 3-game swoon. Those Bearcats play 7 more, including a Tulane twofer.   
But this time, Dunphy in his 9th season showed Cronin in his 8th that dismantling his Owls by 31 in January, without his star Cummings on the court, don’t mean squat on this February Tuesday when #2 never sat. And he made his mark just .30 in en route to 21 pts., 5 assists, 4 steals
The line was 2. The score was 15-5 early. The 36-25 halftime tally was articulate. The final gap was a robust 16. The 75 Temple points may’ve been one shy of tacos, but they were 20.4 over the points per game previously allowed by the AAC scoring defense leader (and 6th nationally). The lead was established with Cummings’ opening layup, built at will, managed carefully, never threatened throughout a thoroughly businesslike evening.
These Owls came to play, inspired as we all were by a national anthem rendition from a young troupe of both genders who carpe’d the diem and the hearts on the Liacouras floor. And, naturally, by the 10 tubas (never enough) and the Diamond Gems (never enough). Morgan (4x3=12), Bond, Watson, DeCosey and Brown were all big. Turnovers were big, 17 for Cincy, and small, only 8 for the homesters; steals 6 for the visitors, 10 for the Cherry and White as they beat on the Red and Black.
The hope, nope, the presumption, is that, come March Madness, last night’s game will loom large in the collective memory. And in the Owls early spring agenda. Play on.

20141126

Stand Tall and Resolute

The title offers my best advice to aspiring fans of Temple athletics. As if the viewing experience weren't an adequate deterrent, the Owl Club (or Athletic Department) have determined that last year's campaign of 20 losses (a school first) merits higher ticket prices and an extension of a seat license surcharge(I know, I'm supposed to refer to it as a contribution to the university) that would make sense if the seat, once vacated, were  resold. The resale of the seat is as likely as Temple restoring its gymnastics and baseball programs as varsity sports. That's a discussion for another forum, along with the state of the men's soccer program. For now, let's enjoy the successes of the women's athletic squads.


After a 10-month hiatus from blogging, Chronicowls is back. For how long is as much up to the readers as it is to the author. Once again, your comments are welcome - actually, they're invited.

Chronicowls '15 Temple-La. Tech


Notes from the Chronicowls Underground, posted by blog contributor Phil "Tall" Wagner

Owls over American 40-37…over Lousiana Tech 82-75…a trend?...unlikely!

AAC meets ACC (that’d be #4 Duke) Friday at Brooklyn’s Barclay’s Center. Hmmm!

But for now, last night’s was one helluva game. Qdoba tacos for all, soft or crunchy.

First Half

From Richie’s seats, we saw an Owl-lay-up/dunk attempt become a stuck-tight rim-jam.

And acres of Gems and cheerleaders deftly filling 4-minute commercial breaks.

We saw Tech surge via great guards, rocket passes, fast-twitch balletics and deadly treys.

To say naught of a whirligig, arms akimbo, 360 dunk, a Greentail Howitzer, quoth Scott.

Plus hierarchical sweatmopping—dweeb on knees w/towel vs. dude w/pad on pole.

Student band, 8 tubas strong, in rare form. Quoth Scott, “Can’t have too much tuba.” True.

Yet at the half, miraculously, Bulldogs over Owls by only 4, thanks to a Tech buzzer-loser.

Halftime

Some poor bastard, shooting 1 from halfcourt for a year’s apartment lease, won…a tee shirt.

Second Half

Bingo! 4+ minutes in, reseated just behind 8 gyrating Gems, we see the Owls go up 43-38.

Then 49-40 on Tech goaltending. And 54-44 halfway in, a sterling 20-6 run setting the tone.

Josh Brown showed some moxie, his career-high17 highlighted by 10 straight, capped by a 3.

40-minute DeCosey and Cummings, his 13 from the stripe mostly late, each bagged 20.

Obi Enechionyia. Aiynoihcene Ibo. Obi Enechionyia. Aiynoihcene Ibo. Intoxicating stuff.

With 19.3 sec. left, at77-69, I BELIEVE…  rings forth to stick a final fork in the Bulldogs.

Conclusions

Owls +2 turnovers, -4 assists! Jaylen Bond back Fri? Maybe 1,500 there of 4,237 announced?

Dunphyspeak: We went with (pressure) and it kind of looked like we knew what we were doing.

20140131

First Win in The American

Posted by Chronicowls contributor Tall Phil

And so the stage was dramatically set on this final pre-Super Bowl polar vortexed eve. Here they were, the AAC’s lone two sub-500 teams duking it out for either a Rutgers Redux or a kiss-your-sister split. Introduced with pyrotechnic fanfare, 5-13 Temple was favored by 4 on its home floor over 8-12 Rutgers. Remember, these Scarlet Knights had already upended the Owls by 5 in peerless Piscataway on New Year’s Day.

The basketball world held its breath. And mind you, adding immeasurably to the Owls’ woes this season—ever since parlaying its early 4-3 record into 4-5 by way of those two loin-numbing, early December losses to Texass and Texass Southern (by a grand total of two damn points)—was the fact that the AAC’s playing some mean ball in its own right of late.

Consider its aggregate 127-72 tally to date, well past the regular season mid-point. Consider that its top three teams sit comfortably amongst the AP’s top 25. Consider that UConn’s next win should boost them there to boot (rhymes with hoot).

Inconsequential interruption #1: The intrepid Chronicowls field team, always in search of a new truth, dined before the game at Kite & Key, 1818 Callowhill, where the draft beer selection excels. Well, the bottomless mussels, 4-way shared in a huge bowl full of hot (temp) sweet “soup” prior to sandwiches, are worth the travel from Erie. Great evenings are built on great meals, plus respites at Pub Webb afterwards. But we digress.

Now, consider this about dem Owls. Eleven games remain, 6 at home. Next up, this Saturday at 4 p.m. at Liacouras, is #9 Villanova (17-2). Oh, and by the way, Temple smoked these same Wildcats last year by 15, to go 3 of their last 4 over the Main Line boyz. And the Owls hardly want to see Villanova clinch the venerable Big 5 title on the Liacouras floor, now do they? So, can you spell “jinx”…or “domination”…or do you sense that the impossible’s about to happen?

That wouldn’t right this season’s ship. But it will (not, would) feel good. Then, ahead after that for the Owls are two vs. #12 Louisville, one vs. #22 Memphis and one vs. Connecticut. So barring a miraculous serial moment in the Memphis-based AAC tourney, there’ll be neither tap, lap or rap dancing on North Broad after conference champion coronation on the Ides of March.

Inconsequential interruption #2: Those coveted, multi-colored, limited-edition Temple Owls’ scarves, intended for frigid, freezing and just plain cold weather, drew wide-eyed attention yet again last eve. Should prospective consumer demand prove out via comments to Chronicowls, who knows, they may reappear on the open market.
 

Now here’s an interesting if worthless non-sequitur factoid proving yet again that life’s seldom fair. Temple’s total 1441 points this season are just 17 less than its opponents’ 1458. Yeah, that doesn’t change reality for a 6-13, sub-.333 team. But go figure the power and the glory of numbers and stats in sports. Without such galvanizing drivel, what’s to talk about, or bet on.

More to the point factoid: Temple’s 88 points scored last eve were 6 more than Rutgers’ 82 (and 2 more than Vegas) as the Owls laughed their 8-game futility streak away with their first home victory in nearly 6 weeks. And did so while nabbing their first conference win this season.

Inconsequential interruption #3: Walking up to the ticket counters last eve, this commentator was stopped by a nice-looking guy clutching two tix. Did I need a ticket for the game, no charge? Hell, I’ll take a frontal lobotomy, no charge? We consummated the deal—thanks again—as I reflected on this being the second such instance, and on Temple folks being my kinda folks.

You still want more numbers? Temple last night ruled in 20-pt. scorers (2-0), team rebounds (7-5), blocked shots (3-2), steals (8-2), turnovers (6-13) and paid attendance (5,039, perhaps one third of whom went through the motions of appearing in the actual flesh). Not so much, though, in 3-pointers (6-19, .316 to Rutgers’ 10-17, .588), which is why the score closed so alarmingly.

Anyway, things, for this moment, are looking up. In basketball as in life, there is always good news and bad. Come what may this season will end sooner vs. later, yet with valuable lessons learned and a strong nucleus in the fold for ’14-’15. Seem like an eternity since Temple trimmed Penn 78-73 on Nov. 9 at the Palestra? It is. But there’s still a month and a half to go. Let it happen. And besides, who’s watching the bi-polar Flyers, gestational Sixers or ancient Phils?

Final thought: Our seats are behind those occupied by residents and staff from a Woodbine, NJ home for developmentally disabled characters. And they are characters, both knowledgeable and passionate about their basketball, plus otherwise much like us all. A different contingent comes to each—yes, each—game through the good graces of generous alums and the Temple Athletic Department. When you witness such a spirited collaboration, you see a better world.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

20131210

Owls Lose by 1 in OT: Snatching Defeat from the Longhorns: Temple vs. Texas, Wells Fargo Center, 12/7/13

Posted by Chronicowls contributor Tall Phil
 
So there we were at the Wells Fargo Center, where entertainment reigns while, coincidentally, sporting events happen. Here’s a place where employees greet you with “How you doin’” according to a stated Customer Service Philosophy. A hallowed sports venue where the lights and lighting shenanigans so bedazzle that you feel punch drunk roughly 90 seconds in. Fact is, Nick among us, who promised to be our designated lighting commentator before vanishing, is said to be receiving light therapy for heavy lighting disorder, aka HLD. Come in, Nick.

If you picked Temple and the spread, you ended up doin’ good, but that’s a tough way to make a buck. (And to cheer your team on!) Any other bet, not so good, because, of this game’s 161 points, Temple’s nice round 80 fell, well, but a millimeter tragically short. Like a Dalton (45-minute man) Pepper-stepping-over-the-line-on-a-critical-free-throw-shot short).

Early on, looked like a blowout was brewing—the Owls down by a few, more, a bunch, and 11 at the half. But at the buzzer ending regulation, to say naught of the heart-piercing buzzer ending OT, you needed a shower whether you’d played or just watched this lollapalooza. And yes, it very much came down to free throws, which were the Owls’ glaring 15-31 Achilles Heel. (Elsewhere—3 fewer turnovers, twice as many steals and 6 more assists—they done good.)

As Joe in our foursome put it,
Shocking final last seconds…BlogMaster Tim’s first commandment states: You ab-so-lute-ly cannot win without making free throws!!!
Period.
 
Then there’s Scott, he with the keen analytical mind amongst us:

Texas was shredding Temple's man-to-man defense in the first half and shutting Temple's half-court offense. They were up 16 points at one point, and seemingly grabbing every offensive rebound for a total of 21 second chance points versus Temple’s 9. It certainly looked like an easy win for Texas.

 
But Temple hung in there and once Dunphy switched to a zone defense the tide started to turn. Temple fought back to tie Texas at 73 with numerous steals and fast break baskets. That's when Dunphy hurt his Dingle. Dan Dingle left with what appeared to be a turned ankle but returned to contribute 18 minutes in total. Temple could have easily won this game twice. First, Anthony Lee shot 3-9 from the charity stripe, then Dalton Pepper stepped over the free-throw line to negate a shot that went in after all.  That would have at least assured a second OT.

But no, the tough Texas guard made a huge basket to seal the victory. This was a tough loss but one that won't hurt them when the tournament committee meets in March. It was encouraging to see Temple play great zone defense and to get valuable minutes from Dingle, Williams, and McDonnell, but they need to do a much better job of boxing out and rebounding or they are doomed to suffer the same fate when playing teams that have size down low.


Joe again, on the ambiance of the day:

Forget cheerleaders - Diamond Gems are all one needs to live free and smile freely.
Truth be spoken, Joe. Wholesome and talented as each is, they had it going in unison. You go, girls.
 
Good selection of beer - even peanuts for the second half.
No argument, Joe. Recommendation from this IPA drinker who couldn’t find a true IPA: Go with the Red Hook Audible. (Thought I was mishearing when she said Audible. Thought that was sports talk.).
 
Best party preparation this season got us off a fast start
Totally, Joe. Nice twist on tailgating.
 
Loved our second half seats.
Who didn’t, Joe—and brilliant reconnaissance. From a perfectly good vantage point with stunning diagonal view of all the action, at Joe’s urging we established eminent domain in four thrones five rows up, just wide of mid-court for the second half. It was the eye and we the beholders.

Scott again:
Texas roster lists the two big guys #55 and #44 as 6'9" and 6'10". They looked much bigger than Anthony Lee to me.
  South St. [to which we repaired, Copacabana specifically, for thirst-quenching adult bevs served by the proud GM doing it just right] was a great after-party idea. Next home game is 12/18 [vs. Texas Southern, 7 p.m.].

Oh, by the way, anyone find the Owls’ shorts design (using the word loosely) a bit gnarly? Just askin’. I mean, the wing thing’s cool and awl, but need we gag on it.

 
But that’s a rhetorical question, as is, at 4-4, where’re the Owls headed from here. And, come to think of it, why’s the guy offering water squeeze bottles during timeouts in shirt and tie.

 

20130324

Temple Made

Khalif Wyatt is Progress Made. Temple Made.





In his freshman year, Wyatt played 19 minutes and scored 5 points. For the SEASON.
Fast forward, to 2013, his senior year, and Wyatt wins Player of the Year award in the Atlantic 10 Conference, and produces a memorable, and remarkable,  NCAA tournament performance.

Here's a look back, through the lens of Chronicowls. of the Temple making of Khalif Wyatt.

Wyatt has breakout game (2011) - read here

Wyatt and the Eurostep (2012) - read here

Wyatt's 25 points and clutch foul shooting - read here

Thanks to all seniors (Di Leo, Hollis-Jefferson, O'Brien, Randall, Wyatt) for a very entertaining season. Good luck to each of you. And good luck to every Chronicowls Reader.


20130310

Chronicowls '13 Temple-VCU


Exhilarating finish to the regular season! Talk about wild swings, I don’t recall a game where each team had a lead larger than 15 points. Yet it was the Cherry and White who had the last lead, prevailing over #21 VCU, and clinching a first-round bye in next week’s Atlantic 10 tournament. And, most likely, assured themselves of a spot in the NCAA tournament
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At the 16:08 mark, the Owls had a 12-3 lead. The Cherry and White didn’t score again until five minutes had passed, during which time VCU ran off 18 consecutive points, making 8 straight shots. VCU built that lead to 16, with just over 3 minutes left in the first half. The Owls then ran off the next 11 points, to cut the halftime deficit to 5.
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VCU entered the game creating more opponent turnovers than all teams in the nation. Key to this game: VCU had more turnovers than Temple. And the Owls had more steals than the visitors.
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A sellout was announced. While there were pockets of empty seats, the Liacouras Center was awash in white, and charged in atmosphere. Lots of Ram supporters came up from Richmond as VCU fans filled almost two entire sections. And queues were everywhere: into, and of course, out of, the parking garage; at the ticket window, stretching across the entire lobby; at the concession stands; and the restrooms.  But I’ll gladly accept the lines rather than the desolate feeling from games where the crows number no more than 4000.
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Four Owls, led by Khalif Wyatt’s 30 points, scored in double figures. That’s an encouraging sign, as the owls have won 14 of 17 games in which they’ve had four double-figure scorers. And Wyatt became the 12th Temple player in history to score more than 600 points in a season, and has an outside chance of becoming only the 5th to score 700 points.
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John Chaney was in the house, as was former President Peter Liacouras, as they joined the 1986-87 team on the floor during a halftime recognition. Dean Demopolous, assistant to coach Chaney, also participated in the ceremony. Dean is presently an assistant coach with the NBA’s Los Angeles Clippers.
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Probably among the top 5 games I’ve witnessed at the Liacouras Center. Other four that leap to mind are: December 1998 one-point, last-second win over #5 Michigan State; December 2008, Dionte Christmas scored 35 points to lead the Owls to an 88‐72 win over #8 Tennessee; December 2009, Juan Fernandez delivered a career‐high 33 points in a 75‐65 win over #3 Villanova; December 2010 Ramone Moore exploded for a career‐high 30 points in a 68‐65 win over #9 Georgetown.