The Oklahoman

Jaguars hire Meyer to be head coach

- By Mark Long

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Urban Meyer has won everywhere he's coached. Small colleges. Big-time programs. He's been a difference maker at each stop during his storied career.

He's ready to try something new: the NFL.

Meyer agreed to become head coach of the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars on Thursday, leaving the broadcast booth and returning to the sidelines after a two-year absence that followed another health scare.

The 56-year-old Meyer was team owner Shad Khan's top target for weeks, maybe even months, and the deal was finalized after their third and final meeting in seven days. They met last Friday on Khan's yacht in Miami, again Wednesday and once more at the facility Thursday.

Hiring the longtime college coach with three national championsh­ips signifies a new direction for a franchise that has lost 105 of 144 games since Khan took over in 2012.

“This is a great day for Jacksonvil­le and Jaguars fans everywhere,” 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.”

Meyer went 187- 32 — a staggering winning percentage of 85.3 — in stops at Bowling Green (2001-02), Utah (2003-04), Florida (2005-10) and Ohio State (2012-18). He ranks seventh all time in collegiate winning percentage, trailing only Notre Dame legends Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy among coaches at major programs.

But some doubts remain about Meyer's ability to make a smooth transition to the NFL, where motivation­al tactics tend to be moot and losing multiple games every year is a given. Meyer never lost more than five times in any season as a college head coach; he went 83-9 at Ohio State.

Still, Meyer has been eyeing an NFL move for months. He researched the league with help from former players and friends, started assembling a potential staff and learned how the front office works. Meyer and Khan have been friends for years, building a relationsh­ip while both were living in Big Ten country.

Jacksonvil­le was the most attractive opening. The Jaguars have 11 picks in the 2021 draft, including five in the top 65, and are nearly $100 million under the projected salary cap. Adding to the appeal: Khan, a billionair­e businessma­n, has shown a penchant for patience and a willingnes­s to spend big.

Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence is a lock to land in Jacksonvil­le with the top pick and will be the centerpiec­e of the team's latest rebuild.

Meyer replaces Doug Marrone, who was fired after losing the final 15 games in 2020. Marrone went 25-44 in four-plus seasons with the Jaguars, including 2-1 in the 2017 postseason. Marrone failed repeatedly to fill the team's long-standing hole at quarterbac­k, and Khan kept him and general manager Dave Caldwell around a year longer than many expected to make them clean up a fractured locker room and a stressed salary cap.

Khan also interviewe­d Kansas City offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy, Atlanta defensive coordinato­r Raheem Morris, San Francisco defensive coordinato­r Robert Saleh and Tennessee offensive coordinato­r Arthur Smith.

The general belief was the job was Meyer's if he wanted it. He clearly did, with some stipulatio­ns.

He will have the leeway to put his touch on every aspect of the organizati­on, the kind of overhaul Jacksonvil­le hasn't seen in nearly three decades of existence. Khan is switching to a coach-centric model that could give Meyer final say in personnel.

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