Urban Meyer is back in football -- with a new twist.
The Jacksonville Jaguars announced Thursday they have hired the three-time national championship-winning coach to be their next head coach.
With the move, Meyer is again leaving retirement and the comfortable confines of the broadcast booth for a headset and the sideline.
“This is a great day for Jacksonville and Jaguars fans everywhere,” Jaguars owner Shad Khan said in a statement. “Urban Meyer is who we want and need, a leader, winner and champion who demands excellence and produces results. While Urban already enjoys a legacy in the game of football that few will ever match, his passion for the opportunity in front of him here in Jacksonville is powerful and unmistakable. I am proud to name Urban Meyer the new head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars.”
The 56-year-old Meyer is poised to take his first stab at the NFL with the job, bringing with him a sparkling overall mark of 187-32 in time spent at Ohio State, Florida, Utah and Bowling Green. Meyer won a national title with the Buckeyes in the 2014 season to add to his two championships earned while coaching the Gators in 2006 and 2008.
While Meyer’s time in the NFL will be new, the Jaguars’ interest in him is not. Jacksonville had eyes on Meyer succeeding the recently ousted Doug Marrone prior to the season’s conclusion.
“I’m ready to coach the Jacksonville Jaguars,” Meyer said in a statement. “Jacksonville has an enthusiastic fan base, and the fans deserve a winning team. With upcoming opportunities in the NFL Draft, and strong support from ownership, the Jaguars are well-positioned to become competitive. I’ve analyzed this decision from every angle -- the time is right in Jacksonville, and the time is right for me to return to coaching. I’m excited about the future of this organization and our long term prospect for success.”
Meyer's jump to the NFL should come with an expectation of more than one or two losses in a season, of course, as the NFL's parity and team-building process is drastically different from college football's top-heavy landscape. What will also be interesting is how Meyer adjusts to coaching at the professional level, where game plans and player interaction are more important than Meyer's greatest skill: recruiting. While the coach can attract talent with his name, he's not spending the offseason pounding the pavement to rack up a class full of five-star prospects. Instead, it'll be up to Khan's pick for general manager to assemble a quality roster.
That same point might help Meyer coach successfully and for a longer period. Meyer left Ohio State because of health issues brought about by the stress and workload of coaching a major Division I program, which understandably became untenable. He stepped down from Florida due to similar health concerns after the 2010 season. A lighter offseason load could prolong his chances of coaching for years to come.
If there's one thing Meyer is skilled at, it's coaching in big games. Meyer owns a 12-3 record in bowl games, including a perfect 3-0 mark in national championship games. The NFL will present him with a weekly big game, which will be interesting to monitor as the talent-deprived Jaguars will likely take some time to get going.
Meyer walks into a somewhat advantageous situation, at least when it comes to quarterback. Jacksonville owns the No. 1 pick in April's draft and could tab Clemson's Trevor Lawrence or possibly Ohio State's Justin Fields -- who has yet to announce his draft intentions -- as its signal-caller of the future with that selection. Meyer will be afforded the first chance to turn possibly either of the two into a franchise quarterback.
He'll need to use his same motivational skills that powered Ohio State to an incredible run of success with the Jaguars, who haven't tasted legitimacy since their surprising 2017 run to the AFC Championship Game. Since then, they've been bottom-feeders, something Meyer -- and Khan -- will look to reverse before long.