Urban Meyer has 'no desire' to return to coaching after flame out with Jacksonville Jaguars

Nitt1300

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After his historic flame out last season, being fired midway through his first season as a head coach in the NFL, Urban Meyer insists he has no desire to return to the sideline.

In an appearance on the "All Things Covered" podcast hosted by Vikings cornerback Patrick Peterson and former Steelers corner Bryant McFadden, Meyer opened up about his 13-game tenure with the Jacksonville Jaguars, which ended with his firing after several several off-field missteps and a 2-11 record.

"No desire," Meyer said in the podcast. "Of course, I would've done some things differently."

After his firing, Meyer returned to television, working as an analyst for Fox Sports' college football broadcasts. Then-offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell took over as the interim before the Jaguars hired Doug Pederson in February 2022 to be Meyer's successor.

Pederson and the Jaguars were one of the biggest surprises in the NFL this season, going 9-8 and winning the AFC South. Jacksonville upset the Los Angeles Chargers in the wild card round of the playoffs before losing to the eventual AFC champion Kansas City Chiefs in the divisional round.

"I was excited to see because they have a lot of different players from when I was there," Meyer said. "They did a really good job in free agency this year. But to me, it's kind of funny when you hear people say the NFL is a quarterback league — Pop Warner is a quarterback league. So is high school. It's a quarterback sport and when you get a killer like a Trevor Lawrence ... you've got a chance. So they've got a great future."

Not only did Meyer's performance in Jacksonville fail to meet expectations, he committed several missteps off the field that alienated him from players and the fan base.

It started shortly after he was hired, in February 2021, when he named former Iowa strength and conditioning coach Chris Doyle, who had left the Hawkeyes program after allegations of racism and bullying surfaced. Doyle resigned the day after he was announced as Jacksonville's director of sports performance.

After a Week 4 loss in Cincinnati, Meyer drew criticism for not flying back with the team and instead remaining in his home state to socialize with friends. That weekend, he was recorded in a video that went viral on social media with a woman who was not his wife dancing close to him.

Then in December 2021, the day before he was fired, former Jaguars kicker Josh Lambo accused Meyer of kicking him during a preseason game before his release.

Previously, Meyer enjoyed one of the most successful college coaches in history, posting a 187-32 overall record and winning three national championships. His winning percentage of .853 is the third-highest in college football history.

"I was done," Meyer said. "I was retired. I had some health issues at Ohio State ... I got approached by a few (NFL) teams and this team really appealed to me," Meyer said. "Trevor Lawrence, who might be a Hall of Famer some day, he's that good. Obviously it didn't go well, but I had no plans of doing that at all. It just happened."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Urban Meyer, ex-Jaguars coach, has 'no desire' to return to sideline
 
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PSUFBFAN

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Oct 7, 2021
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After his historic flame out last season, being fired midway through his first season as a head coach in the NFL, Urban Meyer insists he has no desire to return to the sideline.

In an appearance on the "All Things Covered" podcast hosted by Vikings cornerback Patrick Peterson and former Steelers corner Bryant McFadden, Meyer opened up about his 13-game tenure with the Jacksonville Jaguars, which ended with his firing after several several off-field missteps and a 2-11 record.

"No desire," Meyer said in the podcast. "Of course, I would've done some things differently."

After his firing, Meyer returned to television, working as an analyst for Fox Sports' college football broadcasts. Then-offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell took over as the interim before the Jaguars hired Doug Pederson in February 2022 to be Meyer's successor.

Pederson and the Jaguars were one of the biggest surprises in the NFL this season, going 9-8 and winning the AFC South. Jacksonville upset the Los Angeles Chargers in the wild card round of the playoffs before losing to the eventual AFC champion Kansas City Chiefs in the divisional round.

"I was excited to see because they have a lot of different players from when I was there," Meyer said. "They did a really good job in free agency this year. But to me, it's kind of funny when you hear people say the NFL is a quarterback league — Pop Warner is a quarterback league. So is high school. It's a quarterback sport and when you get a killer like a Trevor Lawrence ... you've got a chance. So they've got a great future."

Not only did Meyer's performance in Jacksonville fail to meet expectations, he committed several missteps off the field that alienated him from players and the fan base.

It started shortly after he was hired, in February 2021, when he named former Iowa strength and conditioning coach Chris Doyle, who had left the Hawkeyes program after allegations of racism and bullying surfaced. Doyle resigned the day after he was announced as Jacksonville's director of sports performance.

After a Week 4 loss in Cincinnati, Meyer drew criticism for not flying back with the team and instead remaining in his home state to socialize with friends. That weekend, he was recorded in a video that went viral on social media with a woman who was not his wife dancing close to him.

Then in December 2021, the day before he was fired, former Jaguars kicker Josh Lambo accused Meyer of kicking him during a preseason game before his release.

Previously, Meyer enjoyed one of the most successful college coaches in history, posting a 187-32 overall record and winning three national championships. His winning percentage of .853 is the third-highest in college football history.

"I was done," Meyer said. "I was retired. I had some health issues at Ohio State ... I got approached by a few (NFL) teams and this team really appealed to me," Meyer said. "Trevor Lawrence, who might be a Hall of Famer some day, he's that good. Obviously it didn't go well, but I had no plans of doing that at all. It just happened."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Urban Meyer, ex-Jaguars coach, has 'no desire' to return to sideline
This is like me announcing I have no desire to date Jennifer Anniston any longer.
 

VaDave4PSU

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Oct 12, 2021
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I love how he tries to explain away the vast difference in record, team chemistry, and overall success this year by pointing out how many new players they have.

He failed to credit all the new coaches didn't he?

I think he returns to college one day.
 

psuro

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Give him a couple years. He will be looking to get back into coaching.
 
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Nits74

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Meyer was a great coach and he seems to have always been a supporter of Coach Paterno - he is okay in my book.
You make a good point. I do think he's doing a good job as an analyst. He actually knows what he's talking about.
 

Lion84

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Oct 7, 2021
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He is a tool and a cheat who covered up for a murderer at Florida (allegedly) - so if Charles Manson was a Joe supporter that would make him ok in some peoples mind?
 

84lion

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He is a tool and a cheat who covered up for a murderer at Florida (allegedly) - so if Charles Manson was a Joe supporter that would make him ok in some peoples mind?
Depending on who you listened to at the time, there were plenty of pundits "alleging" that Joe covered up for Sandusky abusing children. Equating Urban Meyer and Charles Manson is quite a stretch. That said, Meyer is no saint...but what football coach is these days?
 
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BostonNit

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I wonder if his medical condition will allow him to remember that he said he doesn't want to coach any more.

Or if it only impacts his ability to remember that his wife told him that his assistant coach is beating his wife?
 

OhioLion

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Oct 12, 2021
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I wonder if his medical condition will allow him to remember that he said he doesn't want to coach any more.

Or if it only impacts his ability to remember that his wife told him that his assistant coach is beating his wife?
Yeah, how’s the heart condition doing? Have the headaches subsided?
🤦🏻‍♂️

OL
 
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