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Urban Meyer

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American football coach (born 1964)

Urban Meyer
Meyer in 2017
Biographical details
Born (1964-07-10)July 10, 1964 (age 61)
Toledo, Ohio, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Cincinnati
Ohio State University
Playing career
1983–1986Cincinnati
PositionDefensive back
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1985St. Xavier (OH) (DB)
1986–1987Ohio State (GA)
1988Illinois State (OLB)
1989Illinois State (QB/WR)
1990–1995Colorado State (WR)
1996–2000Notre Dame (WR)
2001–2002Bowling Green
2003–2004Utah
2005–2010Florida
2012–2018Ohio State
2021Jacksonville Jaguars
Head coaching record
OverallNCAA: 187–32
NFL: 2–11[1]
Bowls12–3
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Awards
College Football Hall of Fame
Inducted in 2025 (profile)

Urban Frank Meyer III (born July 10, 1964) is an Americansportscaster and formerfootball coach. He spent most of his coaching career at the collegiate level, having served as the head coach of theBowling Green Falcons from 2001 to 2002, theUtah Utes from 2003 to 2004, theFlorida Gators from 2005 to 2010,[2] and theOhio State Buckeyes from 2012 to 2018.[3] He retired from coaching in 2019 at the end of the Rose Bowl, and stayed at Ohio State as an assistant athletic director and was also an analyst forFox Sports, appearing weekly on theirBig Noon Kickoff pregame show. In 2021, Meyer came out of retirement to take his firstNational Football League (NFL) job as head coach of theJacksonville Jaguars, but was fired 13 games into his first and only season, after going 2–11 and being involved in both on- and off-field controversies. He then went back to Fox Sports to resume his broadcasting career.

Meyer was born inToledo, Ohio; grew up inAshtabula, Ohio; and attended theUniversity of Cincinnati, where he played football as a defensive back. While at theUniversity of Florida, he coached the Gators to twoBCS National Championship Game victories, during the 2006 and 2008 seasons. Meyer's winning percentage through the conclusion of the 2009 season (.842) was the highest among active coaches with a minimum of five full seasons at aFootball Bowl Subdivision (FBS) program.[4]

Following his temporary retirement in 2011, he worked as a college football analyst for the television sports networkESPN before joining Ohio State to become their head coach. In 2014, he led the Buckeyes to their firstBig Ten Conference title under his tenure as well as the program's eighthnational championship.[5] Meyer is one of four coaches, along withPop Warner,Howard Jones, andNick Saban, to win a major college football national championship at two universities. Meyer was inducted into theCollege Football Hall of Fame in 2025.[6]

Early life

Meyer was born on July 10, 1964, inToledo, Ohio,[7][8] and was raised inAshtabula, Ohio.[9][10] He graduated from Ashtabula'sSaint John High School in 1982.[11]

Meyer was selected in the 13th round of the1982 Major League Baseball Draft by theAtlanta Braves as a shortstop, where he spent two seasons playing minor league baseball in the Braves organization.[12] He concurrently playeddefensive back at theUniversity of Cincinnati before earning hisbachelor's degree inpsychology in 1986.[13] During his undergraduate studies, Meyer was a member ofSigma Chi fraternity (Zeta Psi chapter).[14]

Meyer earned his master's degree insports administration in 1988 fromOhio State University.[13]

Coaching career

In 2004, Meyer was recognized as the college football coach of the year by both sportswriters (Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year) and television commentators (Home Depot Coach of the Year Award).[15] He then had twenty years of college coaching experience, including nine as a head coach.[15] His overall record as a head coach through the end of the 2009 season was 96–18, and he was 49–14 in conference play.[16] His winning percentage (.842) through the end of the 2009 season ranked first nationally among active college football head coaches.[17] By winning the 2009 BCS Championship game on January 8, 2009, Meyer moved past Oklahoma head coachBob Stoops into second place on the list of active Division I coaches ranked by winning percentage.

Meyer is Catholic,[18][19] and on several occasions has referred to the head coaching position at theUniversity of Notre Dame as his "dream job", leading to speculation that he would someday wish to coach there. However, according to a July 2009 newspaper report, Meyer insisted he would never leave Florida for Notre Dame.[20] And when the employment status of Irish coachCharlie Weis came into question in November 2009, Meyer held a press conference to dispel rumors linking him to the possible opening, stating that he would remain at Florida for "as long as they'll have me".[21] The University of Cincinnati'sBrian Kelly was eventually hired for the job.

On December 26, 2009, Meyer announced he would resign following the team'sbowl game against Cincinnati, citing health concerns.[22] However, the following day Meyer announced that he would instead take an indefiniteleave of absence,[23] and he resumed his coaching duties in time for the beginning of the Gators' spring practice on March 17, 2010.[24]

Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley announced Meyer's resignation on December 8, 2010, but stated that Meyer would remain as the head coach through the Gators' appearance in theOutback Bowl on January 1, 2011.[2]

On November 28, 2011, Meyer accepted the head coach position at Ohio State University.

Early coaching career

After playing as a defensive back and placeholder for the University of Cincinnati, Meyer spent one season interning as a defensive back coach atSaint Xavier High School inCincinnati, Ohio, in 1985 under the mentorship of legendary St. Xavier head coach Steve Rasso, where he met members of the Ohio State coaching staff.[25] His first collegiate coaching position was a two-year stint as a graduate assistant coaching tight ends at Ohio State under head coachEarle Bruce.[15] He spent the next thirteen years as an assistant—two atIllinois State, six atColorado State, and five atNotre Dame.[15]

One of the talents he coached at Colorado State was WRGreg Primus (3,096 yards and 17 TD in 3 years). He put up over 1,000 yards receiving from 1990 to 1992 under Meyer's tutelage. At Notre Dame, he coached WR Bobby Brown who would finish his career with 1,521 yards and 12 TD receiving.[26] At Notre Dame in 2000, he coached WRDavid Givens who would later be drafted by theNew England Patriots.[27]

In 1990, while still the linebacker coach at Illinois State, he calledToledo head coachNick Saban's home and spoke to Saban's wife to inquire if a position was available. Saban, however, never returned the call. Saban later said "I was so kind of caught up and busy with what I was doing, I never really followed up on that. Obviously, that was a huge mistake on my part because the guy's a fantastic coach."[28]

Bowling Green

In 2001, Meyer took his first head coaching job atBowling Green.[16] In his first season there, he engineered one of the greatest turnarounds in theNCAA football history, going 8–3 and capping off the season with a 56–21 victory over Bowling Green's rival, the University of Toledo Rockets.[29] He also earned Mid-American Conference coach of the year honors. The next year, Bowling Green finished with a 9–3 record.[29] After a 17–6 overall record, Meyer left for the University of Utah.[30]

He helped turn around a team that had gone 2–9 in 2000 in large part due to QBJosh Harris, a player tailor-made for Meyer's scheme. In a part-time play in 2001, Harris passed for 1,022 yards with 9 touchdowns and ran for 600 yards and 8 touchdowns. The next year, he passed for 2,425 yards with 19 TD and ran for 737 yards with 20 TD. Meyer would later use such quarterbacks asAlex Smith andTim Tebow in a fashion similar to the way Meyer used Harris.

Utah

After two seasons at Bowling Green, he took the job atUtah in 2003.[31] In hisfirst year there, Meyer was named theMountain West Conference's Coach of the Year with a 10–2 record, the best ever for a coach's first season at Utah.[31] He also earned honors asThe Sporting News National Coach of the Year, the first Utes coach to do so.[32] They also won the program's first outright conference championship since the1957 team won theSkyline Conference title.

Meyer's success can be attributed to his unique offensive system, which is an offshoot ofBill Walsh'sWest Coast Offense, relying on short pass routes.[33] Meyer's base offense spreads three receivers and puts thequarterback inshotgun formation.[34] Then, he introduces motion in the backfield and turns it into anoption attack, adding elements of the traditional run-orientedoption offense.[34]

In2004, Meyer led the undefeated Utes to aBowl Championship Series bid, something that had not been done by a team from a non-automatically qualifying BCS conference since the formation of the BCS in 1998.[35] He remained at Utah long enough to coach the team to aFiesta Bowl win overPittsburgh,[16] capping off the Utes' first perfect season (12–0) since 1930.[36]

In 2003, Utes quarterback Alex Smith threw for 2,247 yards and 15 touchdowns and ran for 452 yards with five touchdowns. In 2004, he threw for 2,952 yards with 32 touchdowns and ran for 631 yards and 10 touchdowns. His production in Meyer's offensive scheme was a large reason why Smith was considered a first-round pick entering the2005 NFL draft.[citation needed]

Florida

In the wake of his accomplishments at Utah, both theUniversity of Florida and the University of Notre Dame vied for his services.[37] Meyer chose to become Florida's head coach for the 2005 season, signing a seven-year contract worth $14 million.[37] He later signed a six-year contract extension with the Gators on June 7, 2007; the extended contract paid an average of $3.25 million per year.[38] On August 3, 2009, Meyer received another contract extension that made him the SEC's highest-paid coach during the 2009 season; his 2009 extension was worth $24 million over six years.[39] At the time of the latest contract extension, Meyer was the third highest-paid college football coach, behind onlyPete Carroll andCharlie Weis.[40]

Meyer has been criticized by some commentators because 31 of his players were arrested during his six years as the Gators' coach.[41][42] The seriousness of the charges varied widely, from minor offenses such as possession of alcohol by a minor to the charges of possession of a concealed weapon, "aggravated stalking, domestic violence by strangulation, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny and fraudulent use of credit cards".[42] Many of the charges were ultimately dismissed.[41][42]

In September 2010, after Gator receiverChris Rainey was arrested for sending a threatening text message to a former girlfriend, Meyer stated that he was "real upset about that. After a while, enough's enough. If there's something that we can improve on, we're certainly looking into that. It's like if our graduation rate stinks then we gotta improve that. If there are other issues in a program, that's our job to get it better. It's people making stupid mistakes, that's something we gotta correct."[43]

2005 season

See also:2005 Florida Gators football team

In 2005, his first season at Florida, Meyer'sGators team finished the season 9–3 (5–3 in theSoutheastern Conference).[44] The season included an undefeated record at home and a bowl victory againstIowa in theOutback Bowl inTampa, Florida. The Gators would have facedLSU in theSEC Championship Game,[45] but they lost toSouth Carolina and former Florida head coachSteve Spurrier in the SEC regular-season finale.

Meyer at the White House in 2007.

2006 season

See also:2006 Florida Gators football team

In 2006, Meyer coached the Gators to a 13–1 (8–1 in the SEC) record, with the one loss coming to theAuburn Tigers.[46] After clinching the SEC East, the Gators won theSEC Championship Game on December 2 overArkansas by a score of 38–28. The Gators defeated theOhio State Buckeyes, 41–14, in the2007 BCS National Championship Game to win the national championship.[47] It was the first BCS bowl berth for the Gators since theOrange Bowl that capped off the 2001 campaign,[48] and Florida's first national championship appearance and victory since winning the1997 Sugar Bowl.[47]

Meyer has been known for winning big games. In addition to his 5–1 record in bowl games at Florida, Meyer compiled a 16–2 record against three of the Gators' biggest opponents—Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida State.

2007 season

See also:2007 Florida Gators football team

The Gators managed a 9–3 regular season record in 2007, including blowout wins over rivalsTennessee andFSU but once again losing toAuburn. During his tenure at the University of Florida, Coach Meyer never defeated Auburn.[49] Quarterback Tim Tebow also became Coach Meyer's firstHeisman Trophy winner. The team led the conference in scoring,[50] but struggles on defense made it difficult for the Gators to reach aBCS bowl game.[51] The Gators lost theCapital One Bowl toMichigan 41–35 on January 1, 2008.[49] Meyer served as a pre-game and halftime analyst for the2008 BCS National Championship Game.

2008 season

See also:2008 Florida Gators football team
Meyer with the Florida Gators in 2008

In 2008, Meyer led the Gators to a 13–1 overall record and theBCS National Championship overOklahoma, including wins over six ranked teams. The team's lone defeat came at the hands ofOle Miss on September 27, 2008, a game in which Florida led in time of possession and passing yards, but had three turnovers. Eleven of the Gators' twelve wins in the 2008 regular season were by 20 points or more. On December 6, 2008, Meyer led the Gators to a 31–20 victory over then top-rankedAlabama in theSEC title game. Leading in time of possession, rushing yards, and passing yards, the Gators rallied from behind after a third-quarter deficit to score two touchdowns and hold Alabama scoreless in the fourth quarter. The victory would vault Florida to No. 1 in the Associated Press Poll, No. 2 in the USA Today Coaches' Poll, and No. 2 in the BCS rankings, setting up a showdown againstOklahoma in theBCS Championship Game on January 8, 2009, at Dolphin Stadium in Miami, Florida. The Gators won 24–14, securing their second national championship under Meyer.

2009 season

See also:2009 Florida Gators football team

In 2009, Meyer's Gators began the season ranked No. 1 by the largest margin in the history of the AP preseason poll. Though the team struggled on offense at times, and quarterback Tim Tebow suffered a frighteningconcussion in a September victory overKentucky, Florida finished the regular season 12–0 and still ranked No. 1. The winning streak ended in theSEC Championship Game, when they lost 32–13 toAlabama.

Florida was selected to play the undefeatedCincinnati Bearcats in the2010 Sugar Bowl. The Gators won 51–24 to finish the season with a 13–1 record for the second consecutive year.

Leave of absence

In the early morning of December 6, 2009, soon after returning home following his team's loss in the 2009 SEC Championship Game, Meyer was quietly admitted into a Gainesville hospital suffering from chest pains and dehydration. He was released later in the day, and the incident was not announced to the public at the time.[52]

On December 26, after discussions with his family, Meyer revealed his medical scare and announced that he would resign as Florida's head coach due to health and family concerns following his team'sNew Year's Day Sugar Bowl appearance.[22] Meyer stated: "I have ignored my health for years, but recent developments have forced me to re-evaluate my priorities of faith and family." He also said: "I'm proud to be a part of the Gainesville community and the Gator Nation and I plan to remain in Gainesville and involved with the University of Florida."[52] Meyer admitted that he had suffered frequent chest pains, later discovered to be caused bygastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and occasional severe headaches due to anarachnoid cyst for years, and that they were related to stress.[53]

On December 27, Meyer announced that he would take an indefinite leave of absence instead of resigning. He was unsure if he would return for the 2010 season but stated that "I do in my gut believe that will happen."[54] Offensive coordinatorSteve Addazio would serve as theinterim coach in Meyer's absence.

On January 1, 2010, Meyer coached the Gators in their 51–24 Sugar Bowl victory over the Cincinnati Bearcats. In a post-game interview, Meyer again suggested that he would return to coach the Gators at some point by saying: "I plan on being the coach of the Gators."[55]

Meyer took significant time off from his coaching duties after the bowl game in an attempt to improve his personal health.[56] While he did stay in touch with potential new players during thebusy recruiting season, Meyer did much less traveling to visit recruits than usual.[57][58] Nevertheless, the Gators still signed the consensus No. 1 recruiting class in the nation in February.[59][60][61][62]

On March 17, 2010, Meyer returned full-time to his position for the start of the Gators' spring practice and continued in that role into the 2010 season.[63]

2010 season

See also:2010 Florida Gators football team

With his victory over Kentucky on September 25, 2010, Meyer achieved his 100th career win as a coach. With that win, his record was at 100–18 over the course of 10 seasons. He became the sixth fastest NCAA coach to reach that record, followingGil Dobie (108 games),George Woodruff (109 games),Bud Wilkinson (111 games),Fielding Yost (114 games), andKnute Rockne (117 games). He was also the second-fastest to reach 100 wins since Wilkinson in 1945.[64]

Despite reaching this milestone, the season was a difficult one for the Gators, and their 7–5 regular-season record was the worst in Meyer's tenure at Florida. On December 8, 2010, Meyer again announced his retirement from coaching for much the same reasons he mentioned in December 2009: his family and his health.[65][66]

Meyer's last game as Florida's coach was a 37–24 win in the2011 Outback Bowl on January 1, 2011.[67]

Aftermath

After a three-month investigation, theSporting News published an exposé titled "How Urban Meyer broke Florida football", suggesting that Meyer had created a toxic culture in the locker room at Florida and departed just before implosion.[68] The article quoted several Florida players who declared that Meyer developed a "Circle of Trust" that included only star players, and that those players received favorable treatment, including not having to complete workouts, lenient punishment, and hiding the player's positive drug tests from the public. Although Meyer stated: "I've never heard of Circle of Trust before in my life", former players contend it was the foundation of Florida's culture under Meyer.[68]

ESPN career

After resigning as the head football coach of the Florida Gators, Meyer worked as a college football commentator and analyst for the American television sports networkESPN.

Ohio State

On November 17, 2011,Eleven Warriors reported that Meyer would become the head coach of theOhio State Buckeyes.[69] Meyer denied the report publicly,[70] then asked ESPN to be taken off assignment during the weekend of theOhio State–Michigan game, adding more to the speculations that he might be named the next head coach of Ohio State.[71][72] On November 28,WBNS Columbus confirmed that Meyer had accepted the job as Ohio State's head football coach, and was introduced as head coach later that night.[73] The school said Meyer would receive a six-year contract that paid $4 million annually, plus another $2.4 million total in "retention payments".[74] It was reported by CBS Sports on April 13, 2015, that Meyer signed a contract extension with the Buckeyes through 2020.[75]

2012 season

See also:2012 Ohio State Buckeyes football team

In Meyer's first year of coaching at Ohio State, he helped lead the Buckeyes to an undefeated 12–0 record and a No. 3 AP Poll ranking. The team was ineligible for all other rankings, as well as postseason play, due to NCAA sanctions.[76] He was surrounded by first-year coaches such as offensive coordinator Tom Herman, co-offensive coordinator Ed Warriner, and co-defensive coordinator Everett Withers.

Meyer in 2013

2013 season

See also:2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team

Meyer's next year was not as good as the previous one, but Ohio State still finished #12 in the BCS rankings and a 12–2 record.[77] Meyer lost talent at the end of the year to the 2014 NFL Draft, including linebackerRyan Shazier, cornerbackBradley Roby, and running backCarlos Hyde. Roby and Shazier went in the first round, and Hyde went in the second round.[78]

2014 season

See also:2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
Dublin, Ohio, the city in which Urban Meyer resides, renamed West Bridge Street in his honor for his accomplishments during the 2014 season.[79]

Before the start of the season, Ohio State lost its star quarterback,Braxton Miller, when he sustained a right shoulder injury during practice.[80] Redshirt freshman quarterbackJ. T. Barrett stepped in as his replacement and led Ohio State to an 11–1 record through the first 12 games of the season. However, in the final game of the regular season, he sustained a broken ankle and was lost for the remainder of the year.[81]Cardale Jones replaced Barrett at quarterback and guided Ohio State to a 59–0 blowout win overWisconsin in theBig Ten Football Championship Game. With the conference championship and the convincing win over Wisconsin, Ohio State moved up to #4 in theCollege Football Playoff rankings, jumping the two Big 12 teams in playoff contention, Baylor and TCU, qualifying for the inaugural four-team postseason tournament. They played #1Alabama in the semifinalSugar Bowl. Despite being nine-point underdogs and trailing by as much as 15 points in the first half, Ohio State came back to win, 42–35. The Buckeyes then faced Heisman Trophy winnerMarcus Mariota and theOregon Ducks in theCollege Football Playoff National Championship. The Buckeyes were again underdogs as the #2-ranked Ducks were favored by seven points. Despite giving up four turnovers, Ohio State beat Oregon, 42–20, with MVP performances from running backEzekiel Elliott and safety Tyvis Powell. The victory marked the eighthnational championship in Ohio State's history and gave Meyer his third career national title, following his two with Florida.

2018 season

On August 1, 2018, Meyer was placed on paidadministrative leave by Ohio State after reports surfaced that Meyer knew about spousal abuse allegations against assistant coach Zach Smith prior to Smith's firing the week prior.[82]

After an independent investigative panel reviewed the evidence, the Ohio State Board of Trustees found that Meyer and Ohio State University Athletic DirectorGene Smith did not uphold the values of the university. On August 22, the board voted to suspend Meyer for the opening three games of the season for the Buckeyes. He missed the team's games against Oregon State, Rutgers, and TCU.[83][84]

Ohio State finished the year with a 12–1 record, including winning the Big Ten conference, but was not selected for the College Football Playoff, instead receiving a spot in the2019 Rose Bowl.[85]

On December 4, 2018, Meyer announced that he would retire from coaching following the team's Rose Bowl game for health reasons. It was announced thatRyan Day would take over the head coaching position immediately after the Rose Bowl.[86]

Jacksonville Jaguars

See also:2021 Jacksonville Jaguars season
Meyer with the Jaguars in 2021

On January 14, 2021, Meyer was hired to become the head coach of theJacksonville Jaguars.[87] On July 1, 2021, the NFL fined Meyer $100,000 for violating practice rules during organized team activities.[88]

In early October, a video appeared to show Meyer inappropriately touching a woman who was not his wife while he was at his Columbus-area restaurant, Urban Meyer's Pint House.[89] Meyer apologized to the team and personnel. Jaguars ownerShahid Khan said that Meyer's behavior had been "inexcusable" and that Meyer "must regain our trust and respect".[90]

The Jaguars won their first regular season game on October 17 against theMiami Dolphins by a score of 23–20.[91] The Jaguars won their second regular season game when they defeated the heavily favoredBuffalo Bills by a score of 9–6 on November 7.[92]

Toward the end of the 2021 season, Jaguars players and coaches were critical of Meyer's treatment of them, to which the team officially responded with assertions of Meyer's job security.[93][94][95]

On December 15, former JaguarskickerJosh Lambo publicly accused Meyer of physical abuse, saying that Meyer repeatedly kicked Lambo's leg during warmups prior to the team's final preseason game. Lambo said it was inexcusable for any boss at any workplace to strike an employee. After Lambo told Meyer never to kick him again, Lambo said Meyer responded, "I'm the head ball coach. I'll kick you whenever the fuck I want." Later that day, Lambo reported the incident to his agent, who then reported it to the Jaguars team.[96][97] Within hours of these new revelations from Lambo, Jaguars owner Shahid Khan made the decision to fire Meyer from his position and informed him of this in the early hours of December 16, 2021.[98][99]

Meyer recorded a 2–11 (.154) record during his brief tenure. His thirteen-game tenure is tied withLou Holtz andBobby Petrino for fourth-shortest coaching tenures in NFL history. Holtz and Petrino also were making their NFL head coaching debuts after previously being a head coach in college.[100] His .154 winning percentage is the worst of any non-interim head coach sinceCam Cameron's .063 winning percentage with theMiami Dolphins in 2007.[101]

On January 26, 2022, Meyer spoke publicly for the first time about his tenure with the Jaguars onDan Dakich's podcastDon't @ Me, calling it "the worst experience I've had in my professional lifetime", citing the five-game losing streak and the differences in practice time compared to college football. Meyer added that he experienced "depression", and said, "I'd stare at the ceilings and [think] 'are we doing everything possible' because I really believed we had a roster that was good enough to win games. I just don't think we did a great job."[102][103]

Spread offense

When Meyer landed his first head coaching position at Bowling Green University, he traveled to visitJohn L. Smith andScott Linehan at University of Louisville,Randy Walker andKevin Wilson at Northwestern University,Bill Snyder at Kansas State University,Joe Tiller andJim Chaney at Purdue University, andRich Rodriguez at West Virginia University, all of whom ran some version of thespread offense.[34]

Meyer's teams at Bowling Green, Utah, Florida, and Ohio State all ran the spread, chiefly utilizing a run-first variation most similar to Rodriguez's at West Virginia, but with tweaks to fit the offensive personnel.[104] For example, Meyer's first two years at Florida skewed toward a drop-back passing attack led byChris Leak, while Tim Tebow led an option run-based spread (as did Alex Smith at Utah).[34] Using this offense, he won two BCS titles, won the inaugural College Football Playoff National Championship, became the first coach to lead a BCS non-automatically qualified conference team (Utah) to a BCS bowl,[105] coached aHeisman Trophy winner (Tim Tebow),[106] and graduated a player who became a number one overall pick in the NFL draft (Alex Smith).[107]

Coaching tree

Assistant coaches under Meyer who became NCAA or NFL head coaches:[108][109]

Head coaching record

College

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffsCoaches#AP°
Bowling Green Falcons(Mid-American Conference)(2001–2002)
2001Bowling Green8–35–3T–3rd(East)[111]
2002Bowling Green9–36–23rd(East)
Bowling Green:17–611–5
Utah Utes(Mountain West Conference)(2003–2004)
2003Utah10–26–11stWLiberty2121
2004Utah12–07–01stWFiesta54
Utah:22–213–1
Florida Gators(Southeastern Conference)(2005–2010)
2005Florida9–35–3T–2nd(Eastern)WOutback1612
2006Florida13–17–11st(Eastern)WBCS NCG11
2007Florida9–45–33rd(Eastern)LCapital One1613
2008Florida13–17–11st(Eastern)WBCS NCG11
2009Florida13–18–01st(Eastern)WSugar33
2010Florida8–54–42nd(Eastern)WOutback
Florida:65–1536–12
Ohio State Buckeyes(Big Ten Conference)(2012–2018)
2012Ohio State12–08–01st(Leaders)[n 1][n 1]3
2013Ohio State12–28–01st(Leaders)LOrange1012
2014Ohio State14–18–01st(East)WSugar,WCFP NCG11
2015Ohio State12–17–1T–1st(East)WFiesta44
2016Ohio State11–28–1T–1st (East)LFiesta66
2017Ohio State12–28–11st(East)WCotton55
2018Ohio State10–1[n 2]7–1[n 2]T–1st(East)WRose33
Ohio State:83–954–4
Total:187–32
      National championship        Conference title        Conference division title or championship game berth

NFL

TeamYearRegular seasonPostseason
WonLostTiesWin %FinishWonLostWin %Result
JAX20212110.154Fired
Total2110.15400.000
Meyer on the set ofBig Noon Kickoff in 2024

Personal life

While studying at University of Cincinnati, Meyer met Shelley Mather, a freshman nursing student, atSigma Chi's Derby Days philanthropy event. They married in 1986.[15][14] The Meyers have three children: Nicole ("Nicki"), Gisela ("Gigi") and Nathan ("Nate").[15] His daughters played Division I volleyball: Nicki played forGeorgia Tech,[112] and Gigi played forFlorida Gulf Coast.[113] He is a practicing Roman Catholic.[114]

See also

Notes

  1. ^abIn 2012, Ohio State was ineligible for theBig Ten Conference title, postseason play, and theCoaches Poll.
  2. ^abMeyer was placed on administrative leave for the first three games of the 2018 season. Offensive coordinatorRyan Day served as acting head coach in his absence, and Ohio State credits the first three games to Day and the final 11 games to Meyer. Under Day, the Buckeyes won all three contests, one of which was a conference game. Ohio State finished with a record of 13–1 and conference mark of 8–1.

References

  1. ^"Urban Meyer Coaching Record, Statistics, and Category Ranks".Pro-Football-Reference.com. RetrievedOctober 1, 2025.
  2. ^ab"Meyer stepping down as Florida football coach".ESPN.com. Associated Press. December 8, 2010. RetrievedJuly 6, 2025.
  3. ^Thamel, Pete (December 4, 2018)."Sources: Urban Meyer to step down as Ohio State head coach after Rose Bowl".Yahoo! Sports. RetrievedDecember 4, 2018.
  4. ^"College football: Highlights and lowlights of the decade,"Sports Illustrated (December 17, 2009). Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  5. ^"Ezekiel Elliott's 4 TDs lift Ohio State to inaugural CFP title over Oregon".ESPN.com. Associated Press. January 13, 2015. RetrievedJuly 6, 2025."[1]," ' 'ESPN' ' (January 13, 2015). Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  6. ^"NFF Announces All-Star 2025 College Football Hall of Fame Class".National Football Foundation. January 15, 2025. RetrievedJanuary 16, 2025.
  7. ^"Ohio State decision on Urban Meyer hiring remains hot issue".The Sporting News. November 27, 2011. Archived fromthe original on November 29, 2011. RetrievedDecember 5, 2011.
  8. ^Markey, Matt (November 29, 2011)."Coach Meyer returns to roots: Ohio native is 24th coach of Buckeyes".The Toledo Blade. RetrievedDecember 16, 2021.
  9. ^Archdeacon, Tom (November 28, 2011)."Urban Meyer — A Buckeye through and through".Dayton Daily News. Archived fromthe original on December 12, 2011. RetrievedDecember 5, 2011.
  10. ^Pfledderer, Sarah; Antonetz, Alex (November 30, 2011)."Ohio State bucks tradition with Urban Meyer hire".The Lantern. RetrievedDecember 5, 2011.
  11. ^Podolski, Mark (November 29, 2011)."Hometown of Urban Meyer celebrates".The News-Herald. RetrievedDecember 16, 2021.
  12. ^Bowman, Mark (December 30, 2016)."Baseball was Meyer's first love".MLB.com. Major League Baseball. RetrievedDecember 16, 2021.
  13. ^ab"Urban Meyer: A career timeline from Ashtabula to the Ohio State Buckeyes".The Plain Dealer. November 23, 2011. RetrievedDecember 16, 2021 – via cleveland.com.
  14. ^abHines, Raymond III (October 25, 2006)."Denise Meyer Chat Transcript".florida.scout.com. Gator Country. Archived fromthe original on February 18, 2007. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2009.
  15. ^abcdefGatorzone.com, Football,Urban MeyerArchived May 23, 2009, at theWayback Machine. Retrieved September 1, 2009.
  16. ^abcCollege Football Data Warehouse, All-Time Coaching Records,Urban Meyer Records by YearArchived February 15, 2010, at theWayback Machine. Retrieved September 2, 2009.
  17. ^Associated Press, "Meyer, Stoops taking the fast track to greatness," San Diego Union-Tribune (January 8, 2009). Retrieved December 16, 2021.
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