When
Dick Nolan was hired as head coach of the 49ers in 1968, he hired Meyer to tutor the team's offensive backs. After one year, Meyer departed to accept a similar role with the
New York Jets, reuniting him with Namath. Despite coming off a win in
Super Bowl III, the Jets were never able to recapture their magic during Meyer's four years with the team, with major injuries to Namath serving as a major culprit. On February 6, 1973, Meyer left the Jets to accept the position of offensive coordinator with the
Los Angeles Rams, reuniting him with
Chuck Knox, who had worked with him at Wake Forest. During four frustrating years, the team reached the
NFC Championship Game three times, but lost on each occasion. Meyer became an
NFL head coach when he was appointed by the 49ers on April 19, 1977, succeeding
Monte Clark who had been forced out earlier that month as a result of losing a power struggle to general manager
Joe Thomas. Following a
5–9–0 campaign, he was fired on January 10, 1978, and replaced by
Pete McCulley who had actually been Thomas' first choice for the position before settling for Meyer. He returned to coaching nine weeks later as the offensive coordinator with the
Chicago Bears under new head coach
Neill Armstrong. The Bears reached the postseason once in Meyer's three seasons, with the veteran coach resigning on December 24, 1980. Meyer returned to the college ranks for the next two years, serving as offensive coordinator for
Tulane University. When former mentor Chuck Knox became head coach of the
Seattle Seahawks, he hired Meyer as an assistant on February 24, 1983, where he was quarterbacks coach Seahawks through the 1991 season. He helped guide the Seahawks to the 1983 AFC Championship game and the 1988
AFC West Division title. ==Finland|Europe coaching career==