Ohio, Urban Meyer and college football playoff
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.
Urban Meyer has won national championships as ... dominance is over after the Big Ten placed two teams in the College Football Playoff semifinal — Ohio State and Penn State — and finished ...
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, the third-winningest coach in Division I history who led Ohio State to a national championship, three Big Ten Conference titles and seven wins over Michigan during a seven-year tenure as head coach,
Meyer's inclusion means that five consecutive full-time Buckeye head coaches have achieved the game's ultimate honor.
The College Football Playoff is in uncharted territory and injuries are piling up, forcing teams to manage a survival of the fittest gauntlet.
Oh, the bilious anger with which Ohio State football fans chanted their coach’s name after a 13-10 upset loss to mega-rival Michigan at Ohio Stadium to end the regular season. Only they didn’t chant “fire” at all, but rather a different four-letter F-word.
The National Football Foundation announced the members of the 2025 College Football Hall of Fame class Wednesday, which featured some of the game's greatest coaches and players of all time. The class is headlined by Nick Saban and Urban Meyer among the four coaches selected,
Urban Meyer is 1-1 picking Notre Dame games the last two games. How does he see the national title game going against Ohio State?
Nick Saban, Urban Meyer, Michael Vick and Michael Strahan headline the 22-member College Football Hall of Fame 2025 class
Meyer was born in Toledo, Ohio, and went to college at Cincinnati. He said being a Buckeye fan is born in the blood of residents in Ohio.