BREAKING: Penn State has reportedly hired former Ohio State HC Urban Meyer to be their next head coach, per multiple sources. 🤯🤯🤯
Nittany Lion’s Wild Twist: Penn State Reportedly Hires Urban Meyer in Shock Move
The Big Ten just got a seismic shock that could rewrite its power structure. On November 4, 2025, multiple sources confirmed that Penn State has hired former Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer as its new head football coach, a jaw-dropping move that’s sent the college football world into a frenzy. The official announcement is expected within days, but the reactions are already pouring in like a White Out blizzard—fans ecstatic, rivals enraged, and analysts scrambling to recalibrate the landscape. Meyer, the three-time national champion whose 187-32 career record includes stints at Bowling Green, Utah, Florida, and Ohio State, steps in amid Penn State’s turbulent 2025 (3-5, 0-5 Big Ten) following James Franklin’s midseason ouster on October 14. “This is the hire that changes everything,” one SEC scout told The Athletic. “Urban’s a proven winner—Penn State’s getting a rocket, but will it explode or launch?” As #MeyerToPennState trends with 2.4 million posts and betting odds shift overnight, reactions are massive: Ohio State fans in mourning, Nittany Nation in rapture, and the Big Ten bracing for a rivalry reborn with rocket fuel. Is this the comeback of the decade… or the most controversial decision in Penn State history? One thing’s certain—this story’s developing faster than a Meyer spread offense.
The Hiring: From Rumor to Rocket in Record Time
The whispers started as a rumble during Penn State’s bye week after the October 14 firing of Franklin amid a three-game skid (losses to Texas A&M, 0-4 UCLA, unranked Northwestern), but by November 2, they thundered into reality. Athletic Director Pat Kraft, under fire for the $49 million buyout and a $200 million athletic budget strained by NIL demands, reportedly met with Meyer in a nondescript Columbus hotel on October 31—hours after the Nittany Lions’ 38-14 drubbing at Ohio State. Sources close to the negotiations (speaking to ESPN’s Pete Thamel) say Meyer, 61 and a Fox Sports analyst since his 2018 Ohio State retirement, “lit up the room” with visions of a “Nittany Renaissance”: a five-year, $7.5 million annual pact with incentives tied to playoff berths, plus a $10 million NIL war chest for “Ohio State 2.0” recruits. “Urban’s not coaching—he’s conquering,” one booster said. “He wants Hartline as OC—Brian’s his guy from Columbus.”
Meyer’s arc? Arc of ambition. The three-time natty winner (two at Florida, one at OSU) amassed 187-32 (.854 win %) across 17 seasons, turning Utah into a Fiesta Bowl force (2009), Florida into SEC terror (2006-08), and OSU into a 2021 CFP finalist. His 2018 OSU exit? Shadowed by a bar spat with a fan and family fatigue, but Meyer’s since thrived on Fox, his “Urban Meyer Hour” podcast pulling 1.2 million weekly listeners. Penn State’s appeal? “It’s home—JoePa’s legacy, but mine to reignite,” Meyer reportedly told Kraft, nodding to his 2003-10 assistant stint under Paterno. The deal? Done by November 3: Rhule and Cignetti extensions elsewhere (Indiana, Nebraska) opened the door, and Meyer’s “no NIL experience? No problem—I’ll build it” sealed it.
The Legacy Lift: Meyer’s Magic and Penn State’s Makeover
The Reactions: From Frenzy to Firestorm
X? Earthquake epicenter. #MeyerToPennState: 2.4M posts, memes of Meyer’s scowl over Paterno’s glasses: “From JoePa to Urban-pa—dynasty 2.0?” Fans: “Urban vs. Harbaugh? Big Ten bloodbath!” (890K likes). Critics: “Sandusky shadow? Rhule riskier,” (321K retweets). Alumni: $1.2M NIL surge in hours.
The Dawn: A Rocket for the Renaissance?
Meyer’s not a hire—he’s a hurricane. Penn State, scarred by Sandusky (2011 sanctions) and Franklin’s near-misses (4-17 vs. top-10), pivots to Rhule’s redemption? No— Meyer’s the rocket. USC on November 9? Tune-up. Michigan November 29? Vendetta. In Happy Valley’s hollow, where pain forges the proud, Urban’s arrival isn’t reaction—it’s revolution. We Are… reloaded. And the Big Ten? Trembling. 





