Meyer said Sunday his gut feeling was that he would be coaching the Gators next fall. He acknowledged the possibility of having a procedure to alleviate chest pains that started four years ago, but would not say if he had a heart condition. He insisted he didn't have a heart attack and refused to say whether doctors told him he needed to step away or risk greater damage.
Meyer will coach Florida though Friday night's Sugar Bowl against No. 4 Cincinnati, then turn things over to Addazio.
"Continuity is the issue here," Addazio said. "That's my role. My role's to come in here and keep a great program on a great course and keep continuity."
The 50-year-old Addazio said the transition should go smoothly because of is his relationship with Meyer and because he has so much in common with his boss.
"We're both driven, but different personalities," Addazio said. "At the end of the day, we share a lot of the same interests. Family is most important, love of players, drive to want to get it the best it can be, intensity, energy, juice. Those are real common traits."
Addazio and Meyer learned that early on, even in their first meeting more than a decade ago.
Addazio was an assistant at Syracuse, and Meyer was at Notre Dame when they crossed paths on a recruiting trip to Central Bucks West High School in Pennsylvania.
"We were just laughing about it a week ago," Addazio said. "The only two idiots to get up as early as we did to watch their early morning workouts were Urban Meyer and Steve Addazio."
They both showed up around 6 a.m. to evaluate an offensive lineman and ended up eating dinner together later that night. A few years later, they were on the same staff in South Bend, Ind.
"We became good friends," Addazio said. "You're attracted to guys who in your mind see it the way you see it, and he was an O-line coach coaching receivers. It was just the best thing to watch. We laughed, had a lot of fun and spent a lot of time together.
"We're both different kind of cats."
Maybe that's why Addazio's promotion, even if it's only temporary, was so well received.
"The team has so much respect for him," Tebow said. "We're so excited that he got this opportunity, this position, and everybody's behind him. I think it's just going to be a rallying cry to go out there and do well for coach Addazio and make him look good. He'll handle the pressure and I think everybody's behind him 100 percent."