The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Is Urban Meyer still having fun coaching Ohio State?

- By Mitch Stacy

COLUMBUS >> Urban Meyer doesn’t seem to be having much fun these days.

The Ohio State coach is not demonstrab­ly mirthful, of course, at least not when it comes to his job.

“It’s not like me to be the Joe Positive guy,” he acknowledg­ed the other day. “I’m usually the opposite.”

But the 54-year-old Meyer’s sideline demeanor has taken on a decidedly beleaguere­d stoop this season. The usual shouting and gesticulat­ing, the ripping off his headset, those are often followed by a hand moving up to the left side of his head because of severe headaches.

Just last week, TV cameras captured his pained reactions as his team slogged through a mistake-filled overtime win over Maryland, adding to the speculatio­n that health problems could lead to his early retirement — something he has repeatedly denied.

One the eve of the biggest game of the year, No. 10 Ohio State’s showdown with No. 4 Michigan this weekend, it is easy enough to wonder if Meyer is still suffering through one of the more difficult stretches of his storied career.

This season, his seventh in Columbus, was tumultuous bordering on absurd even before the first game kicked off on Sept. 1.

Meyer weathered a scandal involving a now-fired assistant coach that led to his suspension for the first three games and a series of public apologies and explanatio­ns. He has battled a flare-up of the arachnoid cyst in his head that causes debilitati­ng headaches, one of which dropped him to a knee during a game Oct. 6.

He lost star defensive end Nick Bosa to an early seasonendi­ng injury, and the Buckeyes defense never fully recovered. The problems led to a shocking blowout by unranked Purdue on Oct. 20 that pushed Ohio State to the fringe of the playoff picture. Other injuries have been a plague all year.

Just last week Meyer had to stop preparatio­ns for the Maryland game and address another off-the-field issue, this one involving a report that a former player left the program because of bad treatment. Everyone at the university issued denials, but Meyer had to talk to the team and the media about it while trying to keep it from becoming a distractio­n.

“All that stuff is foolishnes­s,” insisted Ryan Day, the co-offensive coordinato­r who ran the show during Meyer’s early-season suspension. “This team right here knows what a great person coach Meyer is, and the rest of that stuff we’re not even focused on. There have been a lot of things that have been said this year, and it hasn’t bothered this team.”

It is safe to say that nothing has personally hurt Meyer more in his career than people saying his lax treatment of now-fired assistant coach Zach Smith made him culpable in the domestic abuse allegedly suffered by Smith’s ex-wife. Meyer said he knew about the accusation­s against Zach Smith — grandson of former Ohio State coach Earle Bruce — but wasn’t sure they were true and kept Smith on his staff because no criminal charges were filed. The university cited that lapse when it suspended Meyer .

A chronic worrier and control freak, Meyer had lost control of certain things in his world and, by all accounts, that knocked him off-kilter. His wife, Shelley, a psychiatri­c nurse, pulled the curtain back recently when she responded to a Twitter user who was inquiring about Urban’s “most difficult personalit­y trait.”

“(I) think he would be ok if I said his ‘control/perfection’ issues are the most difficult to deal with — as we know LOGICALLY, a person can’t control everything, and being perfect is REALLY hard when (you) can’t control ALL,” she wrote.

Meyer won two of his three national championsh­ips at Florida but retired twice because of stress-related ill health, leading to conversati­on recently that he might be close again to doing something else. He already has experience as an ESPN broadcaste­r. He’s a grandfathe­r now, and he and Shelley are empty-nesters. He will make $7.6 million this year with a contract that runs through 2022.

There have been reports that the 39-year-old Day — who moved from the press box to the sideline with Meyer this season — is being groomed as the “coach-in-waiting,” although Ohio State has denied it.

Meyer, who acknowledg­ed depression and anxiety issues late in his six-year tenure at Florida, said he is not close to giving it all up. He told reporters recently he plans to be Ohio State’s head coach for “as long as I can,” without saying exactly what that means.

 ?? NICK WASS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ohio State coach Urban Meyer is not demonstrab­ly mirthful, of course, at least not when it comes to his job. But the 54-year-old’s sideline demeanor has taken on a decidedly beleaguere­d stoop this season. The usual shouting and gesticulat­ing, the ripping off his headset, those are often followed by a hand moving up to the left side of his head because of severe headaches.
NICK WASS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ohio State coach Urban Meyer is not demonstrab­ly mirthful, of course, at least not when it comes to his job. But the 54-year-old’s sideline demeanor has taken on a decidedly beleaguere­d stoop this season. The usual shouting and gesticulat­ing, the ripping off his headset, those are often followed by a hand moving up to the left side of his head because of severe headaches.

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