Temple wrapped up spring football on April 11 with its annual Cherry and White Spring Game, turning the final practice date into a full campus event in North Philadelphia.
The scrimmage kicked off at 2 p.m. at Edberg-Olson Hall, while the Spring Game Street Fair opened earlier in the day with food, vendors, activities, and giveaways.
The setup gave Temple fans more than just a final spring look at the roster. It gave the program a day that felt closer to a game-day lead-in than a routine practice ending.
On the field, quarterback Jaxon Smolik gave Temple the sharpest performance of the afternoon. He finished 15 of 19 for 241 yards and three touchdowns, capping spring ball with the kind of outing that naturally pushes his name to the front of the quarterback conversation heading into the summer.
Temple’s official recap also pointed to defensive newcomers Kolin Dinkins and Jaylon Joseph as two of the more noticeable performers on the other side of the ball.
Smolik’s day stood out because the quarterback battle had been one of the biggest storylines of spring practice. Temple brought in both Smolik and Ajani Sheppard to reshape the position room, and Saturday gave both players one more public chance before camp breaks for the offseason.
While Smolik looked comfortable and explosive, Sheppard finished with 70 passing yards on 6-of-21 accuracy, according to Temple News, which also described the spring game as a stronger day overall for the offense.
The best plays of the afternoon came through the air. Smolik hit Jojo Bermudez for a 60-yard touchdown, connected with Zander Baptiste on a 35-yard gain, and found Coen Logan for another score.
Temple’s official recap also highlighted an early sideline connection with Jayce Freeman and a productive outlet play to running back Sam Brown V, who turned a short throw into a 20-yard gain.
Temple heads into the break before fall camp with more clarity than it had a month ago, even if the roster is still far from settled.
Head coach K.C. Keeler called the Owls an “unfinished product” after the game, but he also pointed to the progress made during spring ball.
With the spring transfer portal window now closed and the next major checkpoint coming in preseason camp, the Cherry and White game served its real purpose: giving Temple a final public snapshot of where things stand before attention turns to the opener against Rhode Island on Sept. 5 at Lincoln Financial Field.
Temple’s spring finale did not need to be a huge headline to matter. The street fair brought people in, the offense gave fans something to talk about, and Smolik left the strongest impression of the day.
For a program still shaping its identity under Keeler, that was enough to make April 11 feel like more than just the end of practice.
