Monday, January 11, 2010

Pete Carroll resigns from USC for Seattle Seahawks

After a controversial deal struck while The Seattle Seahawks were simultaneously interviewing Minnesota Vikings Defensive Coordinator Leslie Frazier, Pete Carroll resigns from USC as head coach and is expected to officially become the Seattle Seahawks next head coach on Monday, according to the LA Times and The LA Daily News.

The LA Times reports that Pete Carroll came to agreement on a 5-year $35 million contract.

The news that Pete Carroll was desired as the next head coach of the Seahawks surfaced as far back as last Thursday and was reported that Friday. But to comply with an NFL rule known as "The Rooney Rule", the Seahawks would have to interview with at least one minority candidate.

After saying no to being the minority candidate because he believe the Seahawks wanted Pete Carroll anyway, Minnesota Vikings Defensive Coordinator Leslie Frazier said "yes" at the behest of the Fritz Pollard Alliance (FPA), which looks at NFL Rooney Rule compliance performance. The FPA was under the impression that because Seahawks CEO Tod Leiweke reportedly said to the FPA they would not give general manager duties to Carroll, that meant Carroll was not "the guy" preferred by the Seahawks.

The FPA was wrong.

While Leslie Frazier never got a real shot at a job that wasn't his to start with, soon-to-be former USC Head Coach Pete Carroll gets a job and deal he reportedly wanted, else he was going to remain with the University of Southern California. Pete Carroll returns to pro football and a won-loss record that is the reverse of the one at his storied tenure with USC.

Pete Carroll's NFL record is 33-31 in four seasons with the New York Jets and the New England Patriots, and 1997 with the New England Patriots. At USC Pete Carroll's record was 97 wins, 19 losses. A list of Pete Carroll's accomplishments at USC and posted at Wikipedia is worthy of review:

Two BCS Championship Game appearances (win over Oklahoma, and a loss to Texas in 2005)
Two national championships, including the AP 2003 national championship and the undisputed 2004 national championship.
Seven consecutive Associated Press Top-4 finishes
A record six BCS bowl victories
A record seven consecutive BCS bowl appearances
A record seven consecutive years as Pac-10 Champions or Co-Champions
A national-record 33 consecutive weeks as AP's No. 1-ranked team
A winning record of 97–19 (85.6%), including 16–2 against traditional rivals Notre Dame and UCLA
A NCAA record of 63 straight 20-point games
Twenty-five All-American first teamers
53 players selected in the NFL Draft, including 14 in the first round.[49]
Three Heisman Trophy winners (Carson Palmer, 2002; Matt Leinart, 2004; Reggie Bush, 2005)
Four Top-5 recruiting classes
Win streaks for home games (34) and Pac-10 home games (22).
In 2007, USC became the first NCAA FBS team to achieve six consecutive 11-win seasons.[50] In 2008, USC added an unprecedented seventh consecutive 11-win season.
28–1 in the month of November
Only team in history to win three consecutive Rose Bowl Games


With all of this, why leave USC and a job Carroll once said he not leave for the NFL? The consensus is that Pete Carroll wants to make up for his first two failures in the NFL.

Stay tuned.

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