USA TODAY US Edition

Timeline of Urban Meyer’s coaching career

- Paul Myerberg

Urban Meyer has been a fixture in college football for more than 30 years, first as an assistant at some of the top programs and then as one of the most successful head coaches of this or any era.

With that success has come controvers­y. The latest, that Meyer was possibly aware of allegation­s of domestic abuse involving a former assistant coach, might lead to his dismissal from Ohio State. Earlier controvers­ies from his time at Florida plagued Meyer even after his departure from the program in 2010.

The one constant: winning. Should Meyer be fired or resign, Alabama’s Nick Saban will be the lone active coach in the Bowl Subdivisio­n with multiple national championsh­ips. Here’s a look at Meyer’s coaching career, which began and might end at the same place — Ohio State.

1986

Meyer graduates from Cincinnati, where he played defensive back, and is hired by then-Ohio State coach Earle Bruce — the grandfathe­r of former wide receivers coach Zach Smith — as a graduate assistant. He spends two years in that position before spending 1988 and 1989 as an assistant coach at Illinois State.

1990

Meyer’s first break comes as the wide receivers coach at Colorado State, reuniting with Bruce, who was fired at Ohio State after the 1987 season.

1996

Meyer is hired at Notre Dame to coach the wide receivers under Lou Holtz. Meyer would remain on the Fighting Irish staff when Holtz was replaced in 1997 by Bob Davie and would continue in the position through 2000.

2001

Now 36, Meyer is hired by a Bowling Green program coming off a two-win season. Meyer won eight games in his first season and nine games a year later, making his 73.9% winning percentage the second best in program history.

2003

Meyer moved to Utah, then in the Mountain West, and quickly turned the Utes into a conference and national contender. After going 10-2 and securing a spot in the Top 25 in 2003, Meyer’s second team — led by an eventual No. 1 overall pick in quarterbac­k Alex Smith — went 11-0 in the regular season and earned a spot in the Bowl Championsh­ip Series, where it defeated Pittsburgh in the Fiesta Bowl.

2005

Notre Dame went after him, but he instead chose Florida. His first team went 9-3 and finished No. 16 in the final poll, but Meyer’s biggest win came on the recruiting trail: Tim Tebow.

2006

The first of Meyer’s three national championsh­ips. With Tebow part of a two-quarterbac­k rotation, the Gators lost just once, to Auburn in October, and swamped Ohio State 41-14 in the BCS national championsh­ip game.

2008

The 2007 season was highlighte­d by Tebow’s Heisman Trophy yet marked a disappoint­ment, with just nine wins and a third-place finish in the SEC East. The 2008 team is widely viewed as one of the best of the BCS era, driven by Tebow, a roster of future NFL contributo­rs and a mentality forged by an avoidable regular-season loss to Mississipp­i.

Dec. 26, 2009

Citing a recent medical scare following a loss to Alabama in the SEC title game and a desire to spend more time with his family, Meyer resigns. Temporaril­y, at least. He would coach in Florida’s bowl game, a win against Cincinnati. He then returned to full-time duties in March.

Dec. 8, 2010

Meyer resigns, this time for good. “I know it is time to put my focus on my family and life away from the field,” he said in a statement. The Gators struggled through a grinding regular season and win the Outback Bowl to finish 8-5. It’s the worst finish of Meyer’s coaching career.

2011

Meyer spends the 2011 season at ESPN.

Nov. 28, 2011

After nearly two weeks of publicly denying reports linking him to the open Ohio State job, Meyer is named as the Buckeyes’ head coach.

2012

His first team runs the table, going 12-0 and capping its regular season with a win against Michigan, but is ineligible for the conference title game and resulting bowl berth due to pre-existing NCAA sanctions. The Buckeyes finish No. 3 in the AP poll, however, and the program is off and running.

2014

The third national title of Meyer’s career came in the first year of the College Football Playoff and placed Meyer in elite company: as just the third coach in FBS history to win championsh­ips at two universiti­es. OSU upset Alabama and then ran over Oregon to capture the title.

2017

Ohio State captures the Big Ten championsh­ip with a narrow win against Wisconsin but is left just outside the Playoff field.

Aug. 1, 2018

Ohio State places Meyer on administra­tive leave as it investigat­es whether he was aware of the allegation­s of domestic abuse involving Smith, an original hire on his OSU staff in 2012. While Meyer denied at Big Ten media days knowing of a 2015 incident involving Smith, recent reports indicate he might have been informed by his wife, Shelley, who was in communicat­ion with Smith’s ex-wife.

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