The Guardian (USA)

Urban Meyer to retire from Ohio State after rocky season on and off the field

- Associated Press

Urban Meyer, the highly successful coach who won three national championsh­ips and sparked controvers­y and criticism this season for his handling of domestic violence allegation­s against a now-fired assistant, will retire after the Rose Bowl, the university announced on Tuesday. Co-offensive coordinato­r Ryan Day is expected to be named the program’s 25th head coach.

Ohio State didn’t immediatel­y say why Meyer was stepping down after seven years at Ohio State, but the 54-year-old coach has previously cited health concerns. He has what is called an arachnoid cyst in his brain that causes severe headaches. Meyer had shown obvious effects of being in pain on the sideline this season. He also was heavily criticized for what some saw as overly lax treatment of now-fired assistant coach Zach Smith, who was accused by his ex-wife of domestic abuse.

Meyer said he knew about the accusation­s against Smith, the 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 in suspending Meyer for the first three games of the season after an investigat­ion.

A detailed report issued by an investigat­ive committee left a lasting stain, detailing behavior by Meyer that could easily have taken down a coach of lesser stature. The investigat­ion showed that he tolerated bad behavior for years from Smith, including domestic-violence accusation­s, drug addiction, lies and other acts that directly clash with the values Meyer touts publicly.

The Buckeyes’ strong finish this season belied on-the-field problems that made for a stressful season for Meyer and his staff. He lost star defensive end Nick Bosa to an early seasonendi­ng injury, and the Buckeyes’ defense never fully recovered. During his suspension, the team was run by Day.

Shortly before Halloween, Meyer addressed speculatio­n that he could step down at the end of the season, saying he felt fine and definitely would be back next year. “I plan on coaching,” he said at the end of October. Asked if he would definitely return to Ohio State next year, he answered, “Yes.”

Meyer has piled up wins at Ohio State after a similar run over six years at Florida that included two national championsh­ips. After stepping down at Florida due to stress-related health concerns, he took the Ohio State job before the 2012 season. It appeared to be a dream job for the Toledo native and success quickly followed.

His contract was extended in April by two years through 2022, increasing Meyer’s salary to $7.6m in 2018. Meyer has about $38m left on his contract.

He started his head-coaching career at Bowling Green in 2001 and moved on to Utah two seasons later before taking the Florida job in 2005 and rocketing to the top of the college football coaching ranks, a peer of Alabama coach Nick Saban in terms of respect and ability.

 ??  ?? Urban Meyer had an 82-9 record with the Buckeyes. Photograph: Greg Bartram/USA Today Sports
Urban Meyer had an 82-9 record with the Buckeyes. Photograph: Greg Bartram/USA Today Sports

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