Getty Images
|
A fixture of the Barnett speech was an anecdote that was charming for both its brevity and its self-deprecatory nature. Barnett would tell the audience that one evening, so pleased with himself for having led the Wildcats to Pasadena, he shot up in bed and awakened his wife.
“Honey,” Barnett asked, “do you know how many truly great coaches there are in college football?”
To which his devoted but honest wife replied, “One less than you think.”
Which brings us to the head football coach of the Florida Gators. On Thursday evening, Urban Meyer, age 44, will lead his football team into Dolphin Stadium to face Oklahoma in the BCS Championship Game. Considering all that Meyer has accomplished in the past five years, is this a man who could pilfer Barnett’s anecdote and tell it with any semblance of plausibility? Has humility passed Urban Meyer by?
Since 2004 Meyer has performed the following feats:
Meyer has yet to clean the Augean stables in a single day, but then he’s still young.
In the past half-decade, Meyer has not only fulfilled the promise that he displayed at Bowling Green at the outset of the decade; he has compiled a resume surpassed in all facets by only one man, Pete Carroll of USC (one more reason why a USC-Florida title game would have been the most captivating match up possible). The Ashtabula, Ohio, native is more than just successful, however; he is caricature-proof.
Think about it. Joe Paterno has the age thing. Bobby Bowden has “dadgummit”. Mark Mangino is portly, Mike Leach is eccentric and Mack Brown has that honey-baked drawl. Charlie Weis is “the Jersey guy,” Greg Schiano is chopping wood somewhere, Jim Tressel is trying on a vest and Pete Carroll is leading more cheers than the Song Girls. Ty Willingham is/was holding one elbow in his hand, his other hand pursed against his lips in contemplation. Ron Zook just went water skiing, holding the rope in one hand and swinging a kettle ball with the other. Rich Rodriguez just unleashed an expletive stream, Nick Saban just burned a hole through you with his stare and Les Miles just hit on 16.
And then there’s Urban Meyer, whose definitive trait is … perfection.
Begin with the features. How many head coaches — How many people? — are handsome enough to anchor the evening news? And not the local news, the national news. Meyer looks as if he just walked off the top of someone’s wedding cake.
Having spent the first two dozen years of his life in Ohio, Meyer’s accent is distinguishable by being indistinguishable. He is married and if you round up 2.5 children, you get three, which is equal to the number he has. He has yet to endure and/or author an embarrassing YouTube moment, and the nearest he has ever come to ignominy is when a message he texted to then-high school senior Tim Tebow became public knowledge.
What once sounded outlandish has now come to pass. And, OK, the Gators still do not average 50 points per game, but in the rugged SEC, 45 points per game will do.
Miami coach Al Golden says the worst is behind him, but his headaches figure to continue now that former booster Nevin Shapiro, now in jail, says his involvement with the Hurricanes program will result in stiff penalties.
CFT: Jordan Jefferson makes it clear he wasn't happy with LSU's game plan in the Tigers' BCS Championship Game loss to Alabama.
Video |
Coaches primed for big game Jan. 7: Florida coach Urban Meyer and Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops tout their teams ahead of the National Championship game. |
CollegeFootballTalk headlines |
Video: Football from NBC Sports |
Memphis fulfills BCS dream Tigers officials thrilled to announce that school has been accepted to join the Big East Conference in 2013. |
Slideshow |
NBCSports.com |
Slideshow |
more photos |
Slideshow |
NBCSports.com |
Slideshow |
NBCSports.com |
Slideshow |
NBCSports.com |
Gators win BCS Championship Game |
No. 1 Florida 24, No. 2 Oklahoma 14 |
Special feature |
BCS interactive matchups For the nitty gritty on Thursday's BCS Championship Game, NBCSports.com contributor Joey Johnston breaks down the starters for No. 1 Florida and No. 2 Oklahoma. Click on a player for analysis of how each will impact the game. NBCSports.com |