Los Angeles Times

Meyer quits, questions remain

Coaching great admits that his legacy is far from unblemishe­d

- DAVID WHARTON ON COLLEGE FOOTBALL

The question of legacy was bound to pop up.

As Urban Meyer faced a roomful of reporters to announce his retirement, the Ohio State football coach was asked about how he might be remembered.

“I can lie to you and say that’s not important to me,” he responded. “Any human being, that’s important to.”

Three national championsh­ips and an 85% winning percentage surely place Meyer among the greatest coaches in the history of the college game, but numbers tell only part of his story.

The 54-year-old has endured a particular­ly rough season, marked by negative headlines and a three-game suspension for the mishandlin­g of domestic-violence allegation­s against one of his assistants. The incident revived troubling questions about how he ran his team at a previous school.

This is where the legacy question gets tricky. Will the issue be stamped on his permanent record?

Meyer, for one, ventured a guess. “I’m sure it will,” he said. At the very least, the controvers­y played a role in the Tuesday announceme­nt that he will leave the No. 6 Buckeyes after they face No. 9 Washington in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. There was another, more-pressing reason.

Twenty or so years ago, doctors discovered an arachnoid cyst on his brain. Despite a 2014 surgery, the condition has continued to cause severe headaches and has been exacerbate­d by Meyer’s work habits.

“The style of coaching that I’ve done for 33 years is

very intense, very demanding,” he said. “I tried to delegate more … and the product started to fail. I had to go right back.”

During a game at Maryland in mid-November, pain caused him to double over on the sideline.

As rumors of his departure intensifie­d and recruits began asking questions, Meyer believed he needed to act before the early signing period this month. A decision was reached in conversati­ons with athletic director Gene Smith in the days after Ohio State defeated Northweste­rn in the Big Ten Conference title game.

“It was very difficult,” Meyer said. “This is all I know.”

It isn’t the first time he has left the game for health reasons. In 2009, after transformi­ng Florida into a Southeaste­rn Conference juggernaut and winning two national titles, he briefly resigned, changed his mind and then left after the next season.

Episodes of dehydratio­n and chest pains drove him away.

“I have ignored my health for years,” he said in 2009 when he announced he was resigning the first time. “But recent developmen­ts have forced me to reevaluate my priorities of faith and family.”

Something else about his tenure at Florida resonates with the current situation.

Dozens of Gators players had run-ins with the law during his six seasons in Gainesvill­e. The coach reportedly turned a blind eye to their misbehavio­r, prompting accusation­s that he harbored a win-at-all-costs mentality.

On Tuesday, Meyer referenced this notion, saying the reality of major-college coaching means “you have to win every game … that’s something you have to embrace.”

The nobler side of this determinat­ion made all the headlines when he came out of retirement in 2011, the Ohio native returning home to coach the Buckeyes.

Meyer was feted for his recruiting savvy and football innovation, especially when it came to designing offenses. These attributes, along with astute game management, figured to revive an Ohio State program that had fallen on hard times.

And they did, the Buckeyes going 24-2 in his first two seasons, then winning a national championsh­ip in the 2014 season. As Smith put it: “Urban has a very, very special gift. He is an elite coach.”

But trouble arose last summer when news reports detailed a history of alleged domestic violence involving receivers coach Zach Smith and his then-wife, Courtney.

The first accusation dated to 2009, when Smith worked on Meyer’s staff at Florida. Another allegation arose in 2015, by which time the men were at Ohio State.

Meyer acknowledg­ed talking to Smith about the first allegation but initially told reporters he had no previous knowledge of the second one. When that proved untrue, the university launched an investigat­ion, placing him on administra­tive leave just before the start of training camp.

His subsequent threegame suspension angered both hard-core fans of the team and people who had lobbied for something harsher.

“This is one of those circumstan­ces where there is no right answer,” university President Michael V. Drake said. “It is not possible to do something that makes everyone happy.”

Meyer drew further criticism for his demeanor at the news conference announcing the punishment. Critics noted that he looked annoyed and failed to explicitly apologize to Courtney. He later attempted to rectify the situation in a social media post.

After the coach returned to his team in late September, the Buckeyes struggled through a lull before dominating rival Michigan 62-39 in the regular-season finale and barely missing the playoffs.

On Tuesday, Meyer was asked if the controvers­y and suspension contribute­d to his decision to retire. “Sure,” he said. Ohio State selected offensive coordinato­r Ryan Day, who filled in during the suspension, as Meyer’s permanent replacemen­t. Day talked about striving for continuity.

“We’re all part of something special here at Ohio State and the culture that Urban Meyer has created is strong,” he said.

Though Meyer has now retired three times over the last decade, he expressed relative certainty this time would stick and said he hopes to continue working for the athletic department in some capacity.

“I love Columbus,” he said. “I’ve always been a Buckeye as far back as I can remember.”

The controvers­ial aspects of his career might fade with time, especially in Ohio where fans might prefer to focus on his 7-0 record against the Wolverines.

It could also be that, for better or worse, he embodies the modern big-time coach, paid millions upon millions with an expectatio­n of winning championsh­ips.

Speaking to reporters, Meyer insisted he always put the welfare of his athletes first and tried to do things “the right way.” But is that how history will judge him?

“The legacy,” he mused, “you can only control so much.”

‘It was very difficult . ... This is all I know . ... You have to win every game … that’s something you have to embrace.’ —URBAN MEYER, on his decision to retire

 ?? Kirk Irwin Getty Images ?? URBAN MEYER will coach Ohio State in the Rose Bowl, then Ryan Day, right, will take over.
Kirk Irwin Getty Images URBAN MEYER will coach Ohio State in the Rose Bowl, then Ryan Day, right, will take over.
 ?? Ralph Freso Associated Press ??
Ralph Freso Associated Press

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