STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP)—The flu couldn’t slow down Evan Royster, and neither could Temple.
After two pedestrian weeks, the shifty tailback put on one of his trademark performances in sidestepping around tacklers and bouncing off defenders for 134 yards and a touchdown in No. 5 Penn State’s 31-6 win Saturday over the Owls.
And to think, just two days earlier, Royster was laid up with what he thought was the flu.
“The first quarter was kind of tough for me, my legs kind of felt like they were gone,” Royster said. “They just felt more tired than they usually are, but I went out there and just kept playing.”
Temple couldn’t stop him in a first half in which Royster ran for 119 yards, leading the Nittany Lions to a 21-3 lead.
Later, coach Joe Paterno said about 15 or 16 players had fallen ill during the week with flu-like symptoms, though most were able to play Saturday. Five or six players had fevers, while Royster was one of the other Nittany Lions who otherwise “felt lousy,” Paterno said.
Others sickened earlier in the week were tight end Mickey Shuler and star linebacker Sean Lee, who limped off the field in the fourth quarter with what was later termed a minor lower left leg injury. Teammate Josh Hull said Lee had a cramp and would be OK.
Standout defensive tackle Jared Odrick also said he had felt ill the last few weeks, but was feeling better. Some of the sick players, including Royster, were isolated at times from the rest of the team.
“We worried about it. … We tried to space their time a little bit,” Paterno said about the illness. “It was a hit-or-miss kind of thing.”
The illnesses might explain some of Penn State’s choppy play against overmatched opponents to open the season. The trend continued against Temple:
— Quarterback Daryll Clark finished 16 for 26 passing for 167 yards with an interception and two touchdowns, but didn’t look sharp and took some big hits from Temple defenders.
Clark later said he suffered a “little stinger” to his right shoulder as he threw a ball, a minor injury that bothered him for more than a quarter. “I’m all right now. It’s a little sore, but I’ll ice it up and be ready for next week.”
— Kick coverage still needs work after allowing Temple an average of 25 yards per return.
— Temple quarterback Vaughn Charlton was 15 of 33 passing for 205 yards, and was able to move the ball well at times on the Nittany Lions’ tough defense.
Owls coach Al Golden said his team wasn’t intimidated. With two field goals, Temple scored more points against Penn State than in the three previous games combined.
“This was really the first year I heard guys say, ‘Hey, let’s go up there and win,’ as opposed to ‘Let’s just try to survive,”’ said Golden, a former player and assistant under Paterno. “It didn’t work out, but at least they had a good attitude going into the game.”
And yet, illness and all, Penn State still overwhelmed the Owls with talent.
Lee finished with 12 tackles and a sack, while Odrick added another sack. Safety Drew Astorino recovered a fumble forced by tackle Ollie Ogbu.
Penn State hasn’t given up more than seven points in each of its three wins — the first time that has happened since the first four games of 1996.
The small contingent of Owls fans held out hope of an unlikely upset after Brandon McManus’ 25-yard field goal cut the Penn State lead to 7-3 at the end of the first quarter.
Then, on the first play of the second quarter, Golden surprised his old boss when the Owls recovered an onside kick. But Temple went three-and-out on its ensuing drive, as the Owls failed to score a touchdown against Penn State for the fourth straight year.
“When you have shots against Penn State, you’ve got to convert them,” Golden said. “We didn’t do that.”
The Nittany Lions had no such problem on offense.
A drive that started on the Temple 35 ended with Royster steaming up the middle from the 7, bouncing off defenders like a pinball into the end zone with 5:46 left in the first half.
Set back by the illness, Royster said he felt his “legs were dragging” until midway through the second quarter. Later, Royster had 33 yards on three carries on a drive that ended with Clark’s 4-yard TD pass to Derek Moye to make it 21-3 just before halftime.
Paterno inserted Johnnie Troutman into the starting lineup at left guard, and the offensive line responded with its best outing of the year after struggling its previous two games.
Just in time for the Big Ten opener next week against Iowa at Beaver Stadium.
“Timing is everything with our run game. Running a zone offense is all based on timing,” Royster said. “If we block the way we do this weekend, we’ll be fine.”
Head to Head - Week 3
| Team | Total Yds | Pass Yds | Rush Yds | First Downs | 3rdD% | Pen./Yds | Turnovers | Time of Poss. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Temple | 251 | 205 | 46 | 12 | 29.4% | 8/65 | 1 | 29:01 |
| Penn State | 359 | 173 | 186 | 21 | 53.8% | 6/55 | 1 | 30:59 |
- Nevada-Boise St. Preview
- Stanford assistant Taggart to coach WKU
- UCLA can boost bowl hopes by beating USC
- Arizona coach Stoops wants his Wildcats to finish
- Washington St coach given assurance he'll be back
- Sam Houston State fires Todd Whitten as coach
- Oklahoma St. QB Robinson throwing again
- Bama's defense rolling, Auburn's struggling

21 Comments
1 - 21 of 21
Report Abuse
i'm ashamed i went to psu
bunch of blockheads jesus!
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
What D-1 College football needs is a playoff system, just like every other professional and college sport worth a damn has right now. Let these kids decide who the champion is going to be on the field and take it out of the hands of some computer and a bunch a reporters who´ve never played an oraganized sport in their lives. Until that happens we will be having the same tired arguements about popularity and weakness/strength of schedule until people switch to watching rugby :)
Report Abuse
What are you going to do? It's all a freaking farce, the way that D-I football is set up. USC dropped to from No. 3 to No. 12 after losing to Washington. Fine. Whatever. That's similar treatment that Oklahoma got when the Sooners slipped from No. 3 to No. 13 after losing to BYU. Now two of the best teams in the country -- in order to have a shot at the national championship -- have to run the table and hope that a bunch of other teams lose at least once. Likely won't happen, perhaps because neither USC and Oklahoma are good enough anyway (time will tell), but perhaps not. Maybe USC or Oklahoma, by the time the season ends, turns out to be deserving of a BCS title game berth, but because of a last-second loss in September, their ultimate goal is left in the s--- hole.
That's no way to run a damn sport. Indeed, it's a popularity contest, based on perceptions, bias, and crookedness. (Everyone remembers, I'm sure, a few years ago when Mack Brown's brother voted in such a way that bumped Texas ahead of Cal in the final BCS standings and into the Rose Bowl, because Cal did not blow out Southern Miss by enough points in its season finale. Total goddamn joke.) But we love watching the games every week ... and making arguments for our teams and conferences. It's a f---ed-up sport, but it's OUR f---ed-up sport. :-)
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Go PSU
Report Abuse
Oh yeah one-quarter of #3 Alabama's schedule is Chattanooga, Florida International and North Texas. One-quarter of #2 Texas' schedule is UCF, Louisiana-Monroe and Wyoming.
So much of the National rankings is perception - perception of stregth of schedule, a how big a team wins, a team's "flash" and the player and coaching personalities. I think that those perceptions work their way through the writers to the fans and ulitmately can affect a team's confidence and self perception - which is so very important in College Football. Yes to be a great football team, you have to have the Talent- the star athletes, Play calling - the coaches, the execution and disciple. But not calling out this media bias and sophistry and creating a perception and reputation can become a self-fulfilling prophecy - affecting recruiting and rankings.
I'm sorry but I think this Penn State Football Team can play and beat any of the top 10 teams in the Country on any given Saturday - we will see if I'm right starting next Saturday with Iowa.
PSU Fan
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
GO PSU
Report Abuse
GO PSU
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Their next game is against Iowa,and PSU has to come out with fierce intensity, smash mouth without let-up, and avenge the loss that scrambled what should have been a perfect season for PSU. This is the game that will set the tone for the rest of PSU's season. When does Penn State's season start, thonas77? Right Now! For the Glory!
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
1 - 21 of 21