Urban and Ohio ties

Discussion of the Falcon football team.
Post Reply
Tricky_Falcon
Peregrine
Peregrine
Posts: 2984
Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2004 11:23 pm
Location: The State of Bowling Green

Urban and Ohio ties

Post by Tricky_Falcon »

Mentions BG at the end with a few good quotes from Wingrove.


Meyer has never forgotten Ohio ties
By JOHN SEEWER
and RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press Writers

When Urban Meyer leads Florida against Ohio State in the national championship game, the game will match the nation's top two teams.

It will also pit Meyer's past against his present.

"You walk into my home now and there's a picture of Woody Hayes. There is - a big one, too," Meyer said. "I don't want to tell you I genuflect in front of it, but darn close. That's the way I was raised."
Born, reared and educated in Ohio, Meyer now finds himself trying to destroy the championship dreams of the top-ranked Buckeyes - his favorite team as a kid, and one he helped coach while in college.

In 1986, Ohio State head coach Earle Bruce hired Meyer as a graduate assistant. Something about the enthusiastic, intelligent kid caught his eye.

"He was a very knowledgeable football guy and very conscientious about what he did and how he did it," Bruce said. "I found out he was one hell of a football coach."

Meyer arrived in Columbus having been steeped in Ohio State's traditions, legendary games and performers. He spent two years as a graduate assistant, and picked up a master's at Ohio State.

"It's real special," said Meyer. "I love Ohio State."

Meyer's intensity stood out at an early age while playing football and baseball at St. John High School in Ashtabula, a town that sits along Lake Erie in the northeast corner of the state.

Meyer grew up the son of a chemical engineer and school came first in the family, followed closely by sports.

"He was always very focused," said Don Cannell, the school's former principal. "I'm not surprised he's carried that over to coaching."

On one occasion Meyer's intensity got the best of him.

"He is the only player I've ever had that was thrown out of a game arguing a strike-two call," said Bill Schmidt, his old baseball coach. "It's kind of funny to think about now."

Meyer was a captain of the football team, but baseball was his best sport. Scouts followed his every move during his senior year and he was drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the 13th round.

He struggled in the minors before going off to the University of Cincinnati, where he walked on to the football team in 1984. He saw only limited action, totaling one tackle and two assists on special teams while holding for kicks.

After he was abruptly fired by Ohio State in 1987, Bruce became the head coach at Colorado State in 1990. He never forgot about the bright young assistant and hired him to coach receivers. Meyer had spent two years coaching at Illinois State, waiting for the call.

"He could have been anything. He was a great recruiter, he knew the game of football, he taught the game on the field, he was knowledgeable about how to call plays," said Bruce, now retired from coaching and a football analyst for a Columbus radio station.

After five years with Bruce at Colorado State, Meyer moved over to Notre Dame where he coached wide receivers from 1996-2000.

Bowling Green had an opening for a head coach in 2001 and alumni were asking around for quality candidates.

"I said, 'There's only one. Go get him. He's at Notre Dame,' " Bruce said. "And they went and got him."

Meyer took over Bowling Green in 2001 after seven straight losing seasons, and told his new players that their first priority was going to class.

They didn't get the message and what followed was "the death run," said Ryan Wingrove, a defensive lineman on Meyer's first team.

Meyer had the entire team running sprints and doing push-ups and sit-ups before dawn.

"He was telling us what he thought of us the whole time," Wingrove said with a laugh. "What he said was true and it worked out."

Before the first game, a dozen players left the team. The Falcons finished that first season 8-3 and Meyer was named the Mid-American Conference's coach of the year.

The following season, Bowling Green won nine games and broke into the Top 25. "He had an immense impact, and he was there for only two years," Wingrove said.

Meyer changed the entire culture surrounding Bowling Green's football program. He visited the campus dormitories to encourage students to attend the games and challenged the boosters to get more involved.

"I've never met a guy who paid more attention to every small detail," said Tim Dunn, a member of Bowling Green's booster group. "He made things happen."

After Bowling Green came another successful two years at Utah before Meyer was presented with two jobs - Notre Dame or Florida. After much deliberation, he took the latter, going 22-2 in two seasons including a perfect 12-0 mark and a No. 4 ranking in the final poll in 2004.

Two years later and 21 wins in 25 games, he's got the Gators in the national championship game - against a team from his past.

"Ohio's a great place, man," Meyer said. "It's all about the Buckeyes."
User avatar
Jacobs4Heisman
a.k.a. Capt. Rex Kramer
a.k.a. Capt. Rex Kramer
Posts: 7889
Joined: Wed Nov 10, 2004 7:59 pm
Location: Aliquippa, PA

Post by Jacobs4Heisman »

He grew up about 25 minutes from where I did. My Grandma is still very close with his parents, and she says he was a very polite and honest little boy.

Maybe he learned to whine and lie at OSU. :wink:
Roll Along!
fulch
Egg
Egg
Posts: 74
Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2004 11:01 pm

say what?

Post by fulch »

After Bowling Green came another successful two years at Utah before Meyer was presented with two jobs - Notre Dame or Florida. After much deliberation, he took the latter, going 22-2 in two seasons including a perfect 12-0 mark and a No. 4 ranking in the final poll in 2004.




This is not a very well written paragraph. Doesn't it make it sound ilke he went 12-0 at Florida? Oh, the English teacher in me...


Neat article though.
cbjhack
Chick
Chick
Posts: 227
Joined: Tue Nov 15, 2005 2:53 pm

Post by cbjhack »

"Bowling Green had an opening for a head coach in 2001 and alumni were asking around for quality candidates.

"I said, 'There's only one. Go get him. He's at Notre Dame,' " Bruce said. "And they went and got him."

I having a stinking feeling that the alumni in mind are Bob Sebo and Ed Ferkany. A friend of mine flew to the Motor City Bowl with Sebo. On the way back to Salem, he stopped in Columbus to drop off Ferkany (who lives in Powell), and my friend. Off the plane walks Earle Bruce. Bruce was a friend of both, having coached at Salem around the time Sebo was in high school, and coached with Ferkany at Ohio State. He is close with both of them. He was also close with Paul Krebs.
Tricky_Falcon
Peregrine
Peregrine
Posts: 2984
Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2004 11:23 pm
Location: The State of Bowling Green

Post by Tricky_Falcon »

I wouldn't doubt it. Sebo pays the bills around here.
User avatar
hammb
The Stabber of Cherries
The Stabber of Cherries
Posts: 14434
Joined: Fri Jul 23, 2004 8:21 am
Location: Bowling Green

Post by hammb »

Tricky_Falcon wrote:I wouldn't doubt it. Sebo pays the bills around here.
You think he'd let us borrow about $250,000? That would make an AWESOME Christmas gift!
Post Reply