One of the greatest college football coaches of all time, Urban Meyer, is not only a TV analyst now, he is a programmer.

Since Meyer won national championships in part because of game-planning it probably makes some sense that Fox called on him when it drafted its schedule.

“I can give them the insider information,” Meyer told The Post.

In the spring, Fox Sports executives picked Meyer’s brain about matchups. For what Fox has dubbed its weekly “Big Noon” broadcast, it had a choice between Ohio State-Cincinnati or Michigan-Army this past weekend.

Ohio State plays a little bigger rating-wise nationally than Michigan, but close games rule the day. Meyer told Fox that strong service academies with a unique triple-option offense can be tough for opponents. He thought Army might give Michigan some trouble.

“It really got our attention,” Michael Mulvihill, Fox Sports executive vice president of strategy and analytics, said.

Michigan needed double overtime to beat Army. The game picked up a 3.4 rating, up 48% compared to Oklahoma-UCLA on the same weekend a year ago.

Two weeks in, Meyer has delivered for Fox on its “Big Noon Kickoff” show. Meyer, Reggie Bush, Brady Quinn and Matt Leinart — all big names — are into it. The show has averaged a 0.7 rating, which is dwarfed by ESPN’s legendary “College GameDay.” However, it is delivering a big-game feel.

Fox has placed Meyer in a role similar to what Jimmy Johnson has filled on its NFL pregame. Meyer thinks Johnson is the best coach on TV.

“My mentor, who has been great to me, is Jimmy Johnson,” Meyer said.

There is always speculation Meyer could return to the sideline. Johnson retired at around the same age as the 55-year-old Meyer is now. Meyer has visited Johnson at his Florida Keys home, where Johnson often welcomes coaches on his fishing boat.

Johnson has talked to Meyer about life after coaching; especially when the juices flow on a Saturday.

“You miss it dearly, and Jimmy Johnson has told me that is never going to go away,” Meyer said. “But you open the next chapter of your life.”

When pressed about what circumstances would make him change his mind and return to the sideline, Meyer deflected.

“I’m not even there,” Meyer said. “I’m not even in that space. My focus is being the best for my employer at Fox. I’m on the phone every day with them. Not so much what we did well, but what we can do better. That’s how I’ve always have been trained. That is my focus.”

Who knows what will transpire, but Meyer really likes teaching the game to viewers.

“I don’t like that, I love that,” Meyer said. “I do believe that is a gift I can give a viewer that maybe no one else there can and bring them into the huddle, bring them into the locker room, bring them into the mindset on how to defend this.

“I think there are so many people out there talking about this game and it is complete theory. They think this is what is going on instead of the testimony of a mindset of a coach or an athlete. That is why I think our show is so good.”