New York Daily News

Jags give it old college try but Meyer a mess

- PAT LEONARD

Urban Meyer’s hiring in Jacksonvil­le feels like some Florida gator bait. Billionair­e Jaguars owner Shad Khan is going with experience and baggage over young talent and a fresh start.

He’s entrusted his franchise’s most critical turning point to a 56-year-old who has never coached in the NFL and who left two major college programs at Florida and Ohio State with championsh­ips but also scandals, controvers­ies and health issues in his wake.

“Urban Meyer is who we want and need, a leader, winner and champion who demands excellence and produces results,”

Khan said in a statement Thursday night.

The hiring is almost more befitting of the English Premier League, where Khan owns Fulham F.C., and where it’s common to shell out big money for big-name managers to roam the sidelines in the hopes of reinvigora­ting a fan base and team.

Meyer has never coached in the NFL, though. He is a big name in college football. He is an unknown commodity in the pros. And the EPL teams that normally land the big-name managers are the heavyweigh­ts.

The Jaguars are coming off a 1-5 season and have gone 12-36 the past three years.

Meyer is coming back for this job and this job only, however, because if a college coach is ever going to take his first stab at the NFL, Jacksonvil­le’s situation provides the dream scenario to do so.

The Jags have the No. 1 overall pick in April’s NFL Draft, which means they will land Clemson QB Trevor Lawrence. They have 11 draft picks total in 2021, including two in the first round and five of the first 65.

They project to have a leaguehigh $73 million in salary cap space, assuming a $176 million base cap, per overthecap.com, though the NFL’s cap hasn’t been finalized yet.

And there is good young talent on the roster already, such as running back James Robinson, wide receivers D.J. Chark Jr. and Laviska Shenault Jr., edge rushers Josh Allen and K’Lavon Chaisson, linebacker Myles Jack, and corner C.J. Henderson.

The big question now is whether Meyer is right for the job.

For one, Meyer’s three national championsh­ips are scarred by what happened under his watch off the field.

More than 30 Florida players were reportedly arrested during Meyer’s six seasons in Gainesvill­e, some charged with crimes ranging from misdemeano­r battery to felony domestic assault and theft.

The late Aaron Hernandez, whose history of transgress­ions only became clear years later, played for Meyer at Florida and once was questioned by police but never charged following a shooting in Gainesvill­e.

More recently, Meyer’s Ohio State tenure ended in scandal.

Meyer was placed on administra­tive leave and suspended for three games in 2018 over allegation­s that he was aware of fired Ohio State assistant Zach Smith’s history of abuse of his then-wife Courtney.

Meyer, who had employed Smith at Florida, too, allegedly was aware of abuse in both 2009 and 2015 but had continued to employ Smith on his Buckeyes staff. Meyer denied knowledge of the 2015 incident, but Courtney Smith made public that she had told Meyer’s wife, Shelley, of both instances of abuse.

At the end of that 2018 Ohio State season, Meyer abruptly retired citing health reasons. Then he transition­ed to Fox Sports as a college football analyst, while serving as an assistant athletic director for Ohio State.

Now he’s testing the waters of the NFL, hoping they’ll wash his legacy clean, perhaps. It helps that he’s going to Jacksonvil­le. He wouldn’t last a day in New York walking in with this resume.

Meyer won’t be able to recruit in the pros like he does in college. Player acquisitio­ns are about money and the draft, not connection­s in certain areas of the country.

Plus, a lot of these Jaguars players may be young but they are paid profession­als, not amateur college athletes. Meyer will have to earn his authority in an NFL locker room.

Meyer is the first of the seven head coaching vacancies filled. Titans offensive coordinato­r Arthur Smith is believed to be the hottest commodity at the moment, and once he lands somewhere, the dominoes could fall.

Meanwhile, Khan believes he made a statement that he’s going for it all by landing a big fish.

It remains to be seen just who will end up on the hook at the end of the line, though: Meyer, or the Jaguars themselves.

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