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lostinamerica

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sportsline.com
4.8.05

http://www.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/8367708


If it all blows up in his face, if the golden boy somehow fails this time, they won't be able to say Urban Meyer didn't cover himself.

Besides the obvious goodwill, there's another reason Florida's new coach has bonded with the sororities and fraternities on campus.

"If they know the players by name and there is some issue that shows up on June 15 at some nightspot, it's not us against them," Meyer said. "It's everybody pulling together."

That's a reference to the embarrassing scuffle between football players and Pi Kappa Phis last September. Former coach Ron Zook was summoned by athletic director Jeremy Foley to break up the fight in probably the most embarrassing moment of Zook's tenure.

Besides the obvious transition, there's another reason Meyer has kicked butt in spring drills: a lack of discipline. Meyer won't say it out loud, but there was a general breakdown in that key component before he arrived. Florida led the SEC in penalties last year (106). It lost games late. It lost to Georgia -- and Mississippi State. Most of all, it lost its swagger.

"I don't even know who you are," he told one player early on, "but if you run like that again, you're off the team."

Meyer now knows the player, who is still on the team.

Then there is the obvious comparison to Steve Spurrier. Just as confident, bordering on cocky, Meyer, 40, is almost a younger version of the Ol' Ball Coach without the twang.

But, of course, Meyer has himself covered. He won't buy into the hype surrounding his arrival, not yet. This is the biggest job of his life. One day he might come out in a visor, not-so-subtly run up scores and dominate the SEC with his personality and offense.

"If you hear that about three or four years from now, that's a positive," he said. "Right now, it has no meaning to us."

As with all hot, young coaches, the worst thing Meyer can do right now is coach a game. For fans, Saturday's spring game is as much a coming out as it is about getting a look at Chris Leak in Meyer's unique spread option.

They want to see how Meyer carries himself, how he uses the precious Leak. How he takes the Spurrier legacy from the last coach (Zook) to the next generation.

He's a guy, "you'd love to sit down and have a beer with," Foley told the Tampa Tribune.

Thanks for the rose petals, but Meyer is ahead of them all. It's that sense of urgency that lifted Bowling Green from MAC afterthought to 17 victories in two years. The same goes for Utah, which went from mid-major to major player in the BCS.

Yeah, he has won with other coach's players, but the key is he has won. Bruce Weber and Roy Williams got to Monday's national championship game in basketball with other coaches' talent. Winning trumps all the other hands in this business. And Zook left Meyer loads of talent.

"That's a great football team," Zook said in St. Louis before that championship game.

Meyer is a detail guy. He didn't get this far cutting corners. Everything about Florida football will be buffed to a brilliant sheen when the Gators kick off against Wyoming on Sept. 3.

He has established a leadership committee of players to enhance team chemistry. Players -- and students -- have been made to memorize the school song. That's a little bit proactive for Gator Nation, 35 percent of which -- according to one Internet poll -- thinks Meyer will win a national championship within two years.

To be honest, the whole Leak thing is blown beyond all proportion. Fans are concerned that Leak, mostly a drop-back passer in the past, will be made into an option guy like Alex Smith.

Did anyone realize that Leak is arguably a better athlete and thrower than Smith? And good coaches do tweak their systems to fit their talent. Expect Leak to be better than Smith and chase a Heisman this year.

"That's the burning question I get asked a lot," Meyer said. "The question is: Is he athletic enough? Of course he is."

A pep rally (for a spring game?) was planned for Friday night. Orange and blue wristbands will be sold for $1 each with 50 cents of it going to the Children's Miracle Network. The losing color in the Orange and Blue game will join players in planting trees for a community service project on April 16.

"He's been amazing," said Jonathan Clouser, a senior at Pi Kappa Tau.

Meyer has come a long way in a hurry from Bowling Green, where one sorority girl asked him what the school colors were. Utah is part commuter school where 300-400 students were showing up for home games. Because of Meyer's momentum, those students number in the thousands and have a name -- MUSS (Mighty Utah Student Section).

That strategy of interaction hasn't changed.

"A year ago, there was a big fight," Meyer said of the frat altercation. "Across the country, that's what the perception is. One way to alleviate perception is, the coach gets around."

Speaking of perceptions, Meyer has had to shoot down reports that he ran a play near the end of the Fiesta Bowl specifically to show Gator Nation what was coming.

"I knew the entire country and Gator Nation was watching the game," Meyer said. "No, that wasn't (true). People at Utah would go berserk."

Another sensitive subject: Meyer did use Utah film to show Florida receiver recruits. But only a small amount, he said, "to see how they fit in. ... We try to be very respectful."

That recruiting resulted in a top 10 class that will try to be a part, at some point, of Florida's first SEC title since 2000. It can be argued that the program was sliding before Zook arrived. But it was where Meyer always wanted to be, especially when he compared offers from Notre Dame and Florida side by side. Everything came up Gator.

Bottom line: There was a better chance to win now and for the long term.

"I became a fan in the 1990s," Meyer said. "I loved watching Florida play. It was the style, it was the fans, it was The Swamp, it was everything about it."

Meyer is ahead of them all. While his star has risen, his family has been almost transient. The life of a coach, sure -- there is a personal price to pay. Since 2000, the fam has lived in South Bend, Ind.; Bowling Green, Ohio; Salt Lake City; and Gainesville.

What none of the adorers know is that this is where Meyer is going to plant his flag. Apparently, he's going to retire here or ... or what?

"It's hard on your family," Meyer said of all the moving. "I promised them that won't happen again."


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lostinamerica

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Oct 10, 2001
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Gatorsports.com
4.18.05

http://www.gatorsports.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050418/GATORS01/50418012


There were two players in the middle. One was from offense, the other from defense. Circling them was the rest of the team, one side wearing blue jerseys, the other wearing white. The two players in the middle were face to face, waiting for the signal to start.

They plunged at each other; the fans on the sideline could hear the loud pop of helmets and pads colliding. The surrounding players cheered as the two in the middle battled for supremacy.

After a few seconds, the two players crashed through the circle. The player in the white jersey was knocked on his back as the player in the blue jersey emerged victorious, jumping and yelling as his fellow offensive players joined him in the celebration. The winner was junior wide receiver Andre Caldwell. He had out powered his opponent.

Head football coach Urban Meyer looked on, smiling at his players. He congratulated Caldwell on his victory. The celebration was short lived, as Meyer called out two new players to compete in the drill.

During his first spring as the University of Florida?s head coach, Meyer changed the face of spring practices. The offense still practiced, the defense still practiced and there were still hits, drills and scrimmages, just as there have always been at UF.

The difference Meyer brought in was competitiveness.

?Practices are much more competitive,? said junior defensive end Jeremy Minsey. ?This is completely new.?

The ?new? aspect that Meyer added to spring football was introducing a winner-loser mentality to common practice drills.

According to Minsey, Meyer made it about pride.

?It feels great to win,? Minsey said. ?It feels crappy to lose. It is great for competitiveness.?

Drills and scrimmages were no longer about simply trying to run the routes, making hits or completing passes. Meyer transformed the attitude into a man versus man situation. Players had to beat the guy on the other side of the ball.

?If there is not a winner or loser, why the hell do we do this?? Meyer said. ?Sometimes I find myself getting bored during practice, so maybe it is just for me."

Senior wide receiver Dallas Baker said he was skeptical of Meyer?s coaching style at first.

?At first I thought it was weird,? Baker said. ?Having that competition makes everyone tougher.?

Baker went on to say that when the team had scrimmages every two weeks, the players didn?t care if they won or lost.

?Now its everyday,? Baker said. ?You don?t want to lose.?

The most notable example of Meyer?s practice techniques this spring has been the Circle of Life drill, used throughout spring practice to toughen up the players.

?(Meyer) criticized us about not being tough enough, but this drill is a really high intensity drill and will get us better, get us hitting a lot harder and get us to be a lot more physical team,? Caldwell said. ?But you go out there and you just bring it, you see how much you?ve got and see how much you can tolerate. You just try to punish the person you?re going against.?

?When I?m called, my object is just to win,? Caldwell said. ?I want to out-power the guy and out-technique him and just show him why I?m a very tough guy.?

?I?ve done really good in it. I?ve worked hard in the weight room and it?s showing off. I?m driving through other players,? Caldwell said.

Junior linebacker Billy Latsko said the drill has helped the competitiveness of the team. ?It gets us fired up,? Latsko said. ?It?s pretty awesome. The coaches get us fired up.?

The Circle of Life is not the only drill Meyer has used to up the competitiveness of his team. During spring practice, the Gators had winner-loser days.

On those days, the offense would scrimmage against the defense with the offense having a goal to accomplish, like gaining five yards or making into the redzone. If the offense was successful, that team would get a point. If the defense stood firm, the defense scored that point. At the end of the scrimmage, the team with the most points won, and the losing team ran.

Quarterback coach Dan Mullen has been with Meyer since he was at Notre Dame in 1999 and said he has great confidence in the head coach?s ability to get the most out of his players.

?The reason he?s the best head coach I?ve been around is because he gets the players to work hard,? Mullen said. ?Everybody wants to win. If you don?t win, change something, get better, win next time.?

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lostinamerica

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Oct 10, 2001
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Orlando Sentinel
4.10.05

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/spor...10041005apr10,1,7736842.column?coll=tf-gators


GAINESVILLE -- There was a massive pep rally Friday night.

A radio station in Jacksonville did a two-hour pregame show Saturday morning.

The first half was nearly over, and there were hundreds of fans still outside standing in line to get tickets. Except there weren't any more tickets. So fans actually bought blank slips of paper to get them into the stadium.

"Unbelievable," longtime University of Florida ticket manager Bill Holloway said of the record 58,498 fanatics who showed up for the Gators' spring scrimmage on a sunny, honey of a Saturday afternoon. "Until today, we've never had a spring game where we didn't print enough tickets."

Marino Casem, the old coach at Southern University, had it right. He once said: "On the East Coast, football is a cultural experience. In the Midwest, it's a form of cannibalism. On the West Coast, it's a tourist attraction. And in the South, football is a religion, and Saturday is the holy day."

And, so, the flocks made the pilgrimage to Gainesville on Saturday to see the unveiling of a young Catholic coach who is named after eight popes. The only thing missing from this coronation was the white papal smoke rising out of UF's Century Tower to announce the new leader of Gator Nation.

There was such giddiness over the unveiling of the Urban Meyer era Saturday, that UF's administration had a chef cooking up made-to-order omelets for the media in the press box. For Ron Zook, I believe we were served stale corn flakes and cold Pop-Tarts.

This is the euphoria football fans should have when a new coach comes aboard, but UF missed out on the joy last time. It should be noted that the second-biggest spring crowd (39,500) came in Zook's first year, but the atmosphere then was entirely different.

When Zook took over, fans congregated to bury their illustrious past. On Saturday, they converged to brim over a glorious future.

So far, Meyer has done everything Zook couldn't do. He has patched and puttied the fissures and factions that formed after Steve Spurrier bolted to the NFL. Here's all you need to know: The Lakeland Gator Club was forced to move a recent meeting into an abandoned airplane hangar to accommodate the nearly 1,000 fans who wanted to hear Meyer speak.

Not only has Meyer aroused the fans, he has rallied the campus behind the team with several initiatives aimed at integrating the players with the student body. As the joke goes, Meyer is trying to kindle a relationship with fraternities. Zook tried to pick a fight with them.

"There's a perception around here that our players are all thugs," Meyer says. "That's not the case at all, and I want our students to know that."

Meyer also wants former UF players to know they are always welcome to return to the green, green grass of the home field and become a part of the program again. He has written personal letters and made phone calls to dozens of Gator greats, and hordes of them watched the game from the sideline Saturday.

Jack Youngblood and John Reaves were there from the Ray Graves era. Danny Wuerffel and Shane Matthews were there from the Steve Spurrier era. Kerwin Bell and Neal Anderson were there from the Galen Hall/Charley Pell era.

"It's nice to feel wanted again," Reaves said.

Anderson, who lives in Gainesville but hasn't been to a UF game in years, said, "This is the first time I've ever really felt welcome around here. In the past, it seemed like there was no effort on the part of the program to reach out to the former players."

When asked why he has opened up his arms and embraced the past, Meyer replied bluntly: "Because it's the right thing to do. When a player invests four or five years of his life at a place, he should be treated special."

If ever Meyer had a question about whether coaching at Florida would be different than his previous jobs at Utah and Bowling Green, it was answered Saturday. The spring game crowd was 12,000 more than the biggest home crowd to ever watch Meyer coach a game. Quite a difference from when Meyer interviewed at Bowling Green and the AD asked him: "So, what are your plans to sell more tickets to the football games?"

Oh, how Gator fans adore their new golden boy right now, but, then again, it's only spring. A few losses this fall, and Meyer will suddenly transform from "the hot, young coach who turned Utah into a national power" into "a flash in the pan who is in over his head."

"You lose four or five games here, and you've got some issues," the new coach says.

Somewhere, the old coach must be shaking his head knowingly.

The shiny, new Urbanator will only have issues if he loses a few games.

The ol' Zooker had issues before he ever coached one.

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