Tag Archives: urban meyer

Chargers take Urban Meyer shot in savage video

The Los Angeles Chargers have officially raised the bar for schedule release videos – and took some impeccable shots at other teams in the process.

The team revealed their entire 2022 schedule in a hilarious anime send-up, going through all 17 matchups and animating each of their opponents – with varying levels of savagery.

After a pirate ship animation for the Week 1 Raiders matchup and dueling mechas of Patrick Mahomes and Justin Herbert for Week 2 against the Chiefs, the video tackled the Jaguars – the Week 3 opponent – and mocked Urban Meyer in an incredible four seconds. The video showed a jaguar wearing the outfit the former Jaguars head coach wore in the infamous video of a young woman grinding on his lap from 2021, looking sad and alone at a bar.

A side-by-side view of the Chargers’ schedule release and the infamous Urban Meyer video
Youtube; Twitter

The incident was the most embarrassing one from Meyer’s tenure in Jacksonville, though it was not the one that got him fired less than a full season in (a report that he physically kicked ex-Jaguars kicker Josh Lambo was). The Chargers’ social media team, however, had no problem wading into the controversy.

Nor did they have a problem mocking the Browns and Deshaun Watson. Los Angeles plays Cleveland in Week 5, and in the video, the music stops and a graphic appears that says: “Redacted on advice of our lawyers.”



The Chargers’ graphic for their Week 5 matchup against the Browns
YouTube

It refers to the Browns trading for Watson and signing him to a $230 million extension, despite 22 women accusing him of sexual misconduct. The trade was executed after Watson was cleared of criminal charges, though he still faces numerous civil suits over the allegations.

While the Chargers weren’t too mean to the Chiefs, they jabbed fellow division rival Broncos by animating Mile High Stadium burning down after Russell Wilson wears a “Let Russ Cook” headband. They also took a shot at Antonio Brown’s brief tenure with the Raiders, showing a dumpster that said “AB’s discarded helmets.”

The Chargers mock Kyler Murray and the Cardinals
YouTube
The Chargers mock the Raiders
YouTube

For the Cardinals matchup, they mocked Kyler Murray deleting all of his social media posts. For the Seahawks, a gravestone for the “Legion of Boom” defense. For the Colts, a literal “quarterback carousel” that showed the QBs the team has gone through in recent years: Matt Ryan, Carson Wentz, Jacoby Brissett and former Chargers QB Philip Rivers.

All in all, it was a brilliant two minutes that put every other team’s schedule release video to shame.

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“A Spectacular Faceplant” – Rich Eisen on Urban Meyer’s “Colossal Failure” with the Jaguars – The Rich Eisen Show

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  3. “Get Me Outta Here!” – Chris Long on What Jags’ Must Be Thinking about Urban Meyer | Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
  4. The MMQB’s Albert Breer on Whether Urban Meyer Can Save His Job with Jaguars | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
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  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Urban Meyer’s daughter Gigi furious after firing: ‘This is war’

Urban Meyer’s turbulent tenure in Jacksonville may have come to an end, but it appears the fallout has only just begun.

Gigi Meyer, the daughter of the now-former Jaguars coach, posted a series of fiery messages Thursday on her Instagram Story in support of her father, who was axed after 13 games into his first season with the team.

Urban Meyer’s daughter, Gigi Meyer, defended her dad Thursday on Instagram.
Instagram

“The spirit of the enemy is in full force battle mode in this world & in people. This is war. But like I said… We all know who wins in the end 🙏🏻 ✝️,” Gigi wrote.

In a separate message, Gigi continued, “The enemy (aka the world) REALLY doesn’t wanna see good people win. & you can argue whether my dad is a ‘good person’ or not based on what you see in the media (super reliable source of info as we know) Anyone who truly knows us knows how incredible he is as a person. & the world hates any platform we have, so he’s going to create chaos to destroy it. Little does he know he’s making it stronger. It’s not over. Keep watching.”

Gigi Meyer’s messages Thursday on Instagram followed dad Urban Meyer’s firing as the Jaguars head coach.
Instagram
Gigi Meyer posted a series of Instagram Stories on Thursday, including family photos of the former Jaguars coach.
Instagram

Meyer, who was hired as the Jaguars head coach in January, was fired Thursday amid an ever-growing pile of controversies. The latest transgression came Wednesday, courtesy of a Tampa Bay Times piece, in which former Jaguars player Josh Lambo accused Meyer of kicking him during an August practice.

Jaguars owner Shad Khan announced early Thursday morning that Meyer had been let go.

One of Gigi Meyer’s Instagram Stories from Thursday.
Instagram
Gigi Meyer shared a photo Thursday with former Jaguars coach Urban Meyer at her wedding.
Instagram

“After deliberation over many weeks and a thorough analysis of the entirety of Urban’s tenure with our team, I am bitterly disappointed to arrive at the conclusion that an immediate change is imperative for everyone. I informed Urban of the change this evening,” Khan said in his statement. “As I stated in October, regaining our trust and respect was essential. Regrettably, it did not happen.”

Meyer came under first this past fall, when he opted to stay in Ohio instead of flying home with the team after a Week 4 loss to the Bengals. Video later surfaced on social media of the coach in a Columbus bar with a woman who was not his wife. In recent days, Meyer was also at the center of a damning NFL.com report, alleging that he belittled his assistant coaches. Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer said Sunday that Meyer told him, “Yes, absolutely I’m had on my coaches. I get on them.”

Gigi Meyer posted about dad Urban Meyer’s passion for his family Thursday on Instagram.
Instagram

In additional Instagram posts also shared Thursday, Gigi defended her father’s character, sharing photos of Meyer embracing his players on the field, as well as his family.

“This ‘bully’ always says ‘family is everything,’” Gigi wrote. “Always forced us on stage to be in pics with him bc he couldn’t enjoy the moment without us.”

Gigi added in a separate Instagram Story, “Always spoke about the power of LOVE & FAMILY with his platform. Never once cared about the money he made & his fame.”

Urban Meyer coaches the Jaguars on Nov. 7, 2021.
Getty Images

“This isn’t about peoples opinions. I don’t care,” Gigi penned in a later post. “But when there’s lies & ppl full on after my family … Then I have a problem & I won’t stay quiet.”

The Jaguars, who enter Sunday’s game against the Texans at 2-11, will be coached the rest of this season by Darrell Bevell, the team’s offensive coordinator.



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Jaguars fire Urban Meyer after 13 games, countless missteps

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Urban Meyer never fit in the NFL.

His mottos. His methods. Even his moods seemed to go against what’s considered normal behavior in a league filled with professionals and grown men. He rubbed just about everyone the wrong way: assistants, players and eventually his bosses.

Meyer’s tumultuous tenure ended after just 13 games — and two victories — when the Jacksonville Jaguars fired him early Thursday because of an accumulation of missteps.

Owner Shad Khan made the move hours after former Jaguars player Josh Lambo told a Florida newspaper Meyer kicked him during practice in August. It was the latest black eye — adding to an already lengthy list of embarrassments — for the three-time national championship-winning college coach who failed miserably to make the transition to the NFL.

“After deliberation over many weeks and a thorough analysis of the entirety of Urban’s tenure with our team, I am bitterly disappointed to arrive at the conclusion that an immediate change is imperative for everyone,” Khan said in a statement. “I informed Urban of the change this evening. As I stated in October, regaining our trust and respect was essential. Regrettably, it did not happen.”

Meyer joins former Atlanta Falcons coach Bobby Petrino as college coaches whose NFL careers flamed out in stunningly swift fashion. Petrino resigned in December 2007 to take over at Arkansas. He was 3-10 at the time.

Meyer went 2-11 in his partial season, and the Jaguars really started to unravel on the offensive side of the ball following the team’s bye week. They averaged a measly 9.1 points in Meyer’s final seven games, which ended with a five-game skid.

Offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell will serve as Jacksonville’s interim head coach for the final four games, beginning Sunday against Houston (2-11).

Meyer’s biggest issues came off the field, where he tried to handle a professional team like he was on a college campus. He splashed slogans and catchphrases around the facility, instilled gimmicks in practice and repeated his misguided belief that coaches coach for players and players play for coaches. He brought in motivational speakers and kept blaming assistants for the team’s mounting losses instead of the guys actually on the field.

One of Meyer’s most damning decisions came following a Thursday night game at Cincinnati in late September. He chose to stay behind with family instead of flying home with his team and then got caught on video the following night behaving inappropriately with a woman at a bar in Columbus, Ohio. Khan publicly reprimanded Meyer then, saying he needed to regain the owner’s trust and respect.

Bailing on his players showed just how out of touch Meyer was with NFL norms. And it was just one of many head-scratching choices for the 57-year-old coach who found success at every college stop: Bowling Green (2001-02), Utah (2003-04), Florida (2005-10) and Ohio State (2012-18).

Meyer simply never made the proper adjustments to the pro level.

Lambo’s claim seemingly proved too much for Khan, who two days earlier said he didn’t want to make an impulsive decision on the coach’s future.

“What’s different about this thing is you have losses and you have drama,” Khan said then.

The Jags had way more drama than victories.

Lambo provided the latest when he told the Tampa Bay Times that Meyer kicked him while he was stretching at the start of a practice. Lambo, the team’s place-kicker to open the season, said he told Meyer “don’t you ever (expletive) kick me again” and said the coach responded, “I’m the head ball coach, I’ll kick you whenever the (expletive) I want.”

Meyer released a statement through the team denying the incident happened the way Lambo described it.

“Josh’s characterization of me and this incident is completely inaccurate, and there are eyewitnesses to refute his account,” Meyer said.

Lambo said he reported the kick to his agent, who contacted the Jaguars’ legal counsel the following day.

“Jaguars legal counsel indeed acknowledged and responded immediately to the query made by Josh Lambo’s agent Friday, August 27, 2021,” the Jaguars said in a statement. “Counsel offered to speak with Josh, or to assist Josh in speaking with coaching or any other football personnel, if he was comfortable with her sharing the information. Any suggestion otherwise is blatantly false.”

Lambo was released after he missed his first three field-goal attempts to start the season.

Lambo’s allegation came on the heels of an NFL Network report which said Meyer created tension with multiple run-ins with players as well as assistants he allegedly called “losers.” Citing unidentified sources, the report detailed a heated exchange between Meyer and veteran receiver Marvin Jones that stemmed from Meyer criticizing receivers by saying they weren’t winning enough one-on-one matchups or getting enough separation.

“I would just say this: There was something that was brought to my attention that I didn’t like too well,” Jones said Wednesday, his first public comments since the report was published Saturday. “I approached him about it and we talked and we handled it like grown men. And that’s all I have to say about that.”

Jones denied threatening to leave practice over the argument.

“I mean, shoot, when you lose, you’re always going to be the center of attention in a negative way,” Jones said. “That just is what it is. That’s all I have to say.”

Other issues for Meyer:

— He hired strength coach Chris Doyle in February despite accusations of racist behavior and then had to let him go a day later because of a pending lawsuit.

— Jacksonville was fined $200,000 and Meyer docked $100,000 on July 1, a punishment that stemmed from an early June practice in which the league deemed receivers and defensive backs had too much contact during 11-on-11 drills.

— Meyer signed 2007 Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Tim Tebow to play tight end, an experiment that ended with Tebow looking lost in the preseason opener against Cleveland.

— Meyer held a fake QB competition between Trevor Lawrence, a generational prospect, and Gardner Minshew in training camp. Meyer and general manager Trent Baalke traded Minshew to Philadelphia, where he’s a backup to Jalen Hurts.

— The NFL Players Association launched an investigation after Meyer said vaccination status factored into the team’s roster decisions.

— He repeatedly mishandled running back James Robinson, allowing the team’s most consistent offensive player to get benched twice following fumbles and botched trying to explain why Robinson got pulled and how long he remained on the sideline.

All the drama became too much for Lawrence.

“I do think that has to change and that’s something that we need to work on for sure,” Lawrence said Wednesday. “You can’t always be in the headlines. You just got to go play football, and that’s where we’re trying to get, and I have no doubt we’ll get there.”

___

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Chris Doyle, Urban Meyers controversial Jaguars hire, resigns

Coach Chris Doyle has resigned from the Jaguars a day after new head coach Urban Meyer made the controversial decision to hire the former college assistant for his staff.

Meyer, who was hired last month for his first NFL job, announced late Friday night that Doyle had resigned from his position as director of sport performance after the backlash his hiring created. Diversity group the Fritz Pollard Alliance had strongly criticized Jacksonville for Doyle’s hiring.

Doyle was the head strength and conditioning coach at the University of Iowa until 2020, when he and school agreed to part ways after he was accused of making racist comments and bullying players.

“Chris Doyle came to us this evening to submit his resignation and we have accepted,” Meyer said in a statement Friday. “Chris did not want to be a distraction to what we are building in Jacksonville. We are responsible for all aspects of our program and, in retrospect, should have given greater consideration to how his appointment may have affected all involved. We wish him the best as he moves forward in his career.”

Some black players at Iowa accused Doyle of telling them he was going to “send them back to the ghetto” if they did not meet his standards, among other remarks, according to USA Today. An external review of the situation concluded “a small group of coaches” demeaned players and “the program’s rules perpetuated racial or cultural biases and diminished the value of cultural diversity.”

Chris Doyle on the sidelines with Iowa.
AP

Doyle, in a statement made last June, defended himself by saying, “I do not make racists (sic) comments and I don’t tolerate people that do.”

Meyer initially defended the hiring at press conference on Thursday, saying he was “very confident” there would not be issues with the 52-year-old Doyle.

“I’ve known Chris for close to 20 years,” Meyer said, going on to say his “relationship” with Doyle began when the two were at the University of Utah together. The only problem with Meyer’s recollection is that Doyle worked at Utah in 1998 and was already strength and condition coach at Iowa when Meyer began his two-year run as Utah head coach in 2003.

“Really, he was doing sports performance before sports performance became a high priority in college sports,” Meyer said. “So I’ve known him, I’ve studied him, we’ve had a relationship. I vetted him thoroughly, along with our general manager [Trent Baalke] and owner [Shahid Khan].”

Many took issue with Doyle being hired, including Rod Graves, executive director of the Fritz Pollard Alliance. The organization, named after the first African-American coach in the NFL, is made up of coaches, scouts, and front office personnel committed to equal opportunity in professional sports.

“At a time when the NFL has failed to solve its problem with racial hiring practices, it is simply unacceptable to welcome Chris Doyle into the ranks of NFL coaches,” Graves, a former Jets executive, said in a statement on Friday. “Doyle’s departure from the University of Iowa reflected a tenure riddled with poor judgment and mistreatment of Black players. His conduct should be as disqualifying for the NFL as it was for University of Iowa.

“Urban Meyer’s statement, ‘I’ve known Chris for close to 20 years’ reflects the good ol’ boy network that is precisely the reason there is such a disparity in employment opportunities for Black coaches.”

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