Urban Meyer has heartfelt ties to both Ohio State and Notre Dame. The former Buckeye coach expects "an incredible game" in the CFP championship.
Urban Meyer feels terrible for a Penn State player who won't experience Thursday's Orange Bowl. Before the College Football Playoff, quarterback Beau Pribula made the "impossible decision" to enter the transfer portal.
Meyer becomes the eighth coach from Ohio State to be voted into the College Football Hall of Fame joining other Buckeye greats Howard Jones (1910), John Wilce (1913-28), Francis Schmidt (1934-40), Woody Hayes (1951-78), Earle Bruce (1979-87), John Cooper (1988-2000) and Jim Tressel (2001-10).
TV20 had the chance to sit down with Meyer to discuss his career, the changes in college football, and what the Hall of Fame means to him.
Former Florida football coach Urban Meyer, who has ties to both OSU and Notre Dame, offers prediction for CFP title game
Thankfully, the golf cart carrying the Ohio State delegation to the media room following their win over Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff championship game wasn't going very fast when it crashed into the wall. Everyone on the cart was perfectly fine. Day's face during the incident, though, said it all.
with a spot in the College Football Playoff championship game on the line. While they’re wearing different colors and are hoping for drastically different results, they’re apparently united by at least one thing: a strong distaste for Urban Meyer.
Ex-Ohio State coach Urban Meyer, who won three national titles, including one for the Buckeyes, has been voted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
Florida officials had discussed inducting Meyer to open the 2022 season, with the Gators hosting Utah and Meyer expected to be coaching nearby with the Jacksonville Jaguars. But Meyer’s NFL tenure ended in scandal after 13 games in 2021, so the timing would have been somewhat awkward.
Urban Meyer is part of a star-studded class set to be enshrined into the College Football Hall of Fame later this year. The National Football Foundation announced Wednesday that Meyer, who was born in Toledo,
Nick Saban, Urban Meyer, Michael Vick and Michael Strahan headline the 22-member College Football Hall of Fame 2025 class