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And Then Pete Carroll Decided to Call Plays …

February 1st, 2015 · 1 Comment · Football, NFL, The National

I saw the final three quarters of the Super Bowl, missing none of the scoring, after coming out of an AC-induced coma at about 4 a.m. UAE time.

I never once thought Seattle would win, not until they got to the 1-yard line with 26 seconds left to play in a 28-24 game, and even then I was  uneasy.

Perhaps from seeing a few too many games coached by Pete Carroll, who is a guy I love but not the best in-game coach in football, which may come as news to him. But Pete never should get in a game of wits with the profession’s brightest boys, such as Bill Belichick, the Dark Lord of NFL coaches.

(The fourth-and-2 at the 2006 Rose Bowl is still fresh in my mind, LenDale White a yard short while best-player-in-the-nation Reggie Bush watched from the sidelines.)

So, I wrote about what probably was the most evenly contested Super Bowl, with the biggest gut-punch ending, for The National.

Several hours later, I’m still annoyed that the Seattle Seahawks did not win and, moreso, that the New England Patriots did.

That comment piece is below.

And then Pete Carroll decided to do some play-calling, which is never his strongest suit.

It produced perhaps the most remarkable conclusion to any of the 49 Super Bowls, the Seattle Seahawks one yard and 26 seconds from victory on Sunday, until their coach sent in a play he likely will regret the rest of his life.

I spent more than a little time around Pete Carroll in a previous decade, when he was the coach of the University of Southern California’s Trojans.

He is one of my favorite sports figures: Sunny, energetic, sincere, genuinely interested in other people. If Pete Carroll were introduced to you on Monday he would remember your name on Tuesday, and if you knew him for a month he might well inquire after the welfare of your family.

Those personality traits, which add up to that rarest of human qualities, charisma, put him in good stead for most of his career. Employers like having him around. Football players want to play for him. He has been hired three times to lead NFL teams, and won a Super Bowl, and coached USC for nine years, winning three college national titles.

He likes his teams big and fast, and he assembled the biggest and fastest team in the NFL, an overtly physical group that overpowers opponents with minimum subterfuge, which is how Carroll believes football should be played. (See: last year’s Super Bowl: Seattle 43, Denver 8.)

As good a coach as he is, and he is a very good coach, he has two flaws: he indulges his players, which sometimes leads to indiscipline; and he refuses to concede he is not the cleverest man in his profession.

When the Seahawks reached the New England 1-yard line with 26 seconds to play, he should have done the obvious: give the ball to battering-ram Marshawn Lynch to pick up those final three feet and secure a victory over the New England Patriots.

Lynch already had run for 102 yards, and only two of his 24 carries had not produced a yard. And if Lynch did not get into the end zone on the first try, the Seahawks could use their last timeout and give him another crack as the game ended.

Instead, Carroll and his offensive coordinator, Darrell Bevell, agreed on a pass play. They over-thought a simple situation, which is what not-quite-as-clever coaches often do. Carroll has been there before, failing to get a championship-clinching first down against Texas in the 2006 Rose Bowl when LenDale White came up a yard short while USC’s best player, Reggie Bush, watched from the sideline.

Carroll’s overly ornate explanation was that he wanted to bleed the clock down to almost nothing, so the Patriots would not have time to get a field goal. A quick pass, then, and maybe a touchdown but, if not, Lynch with two cracks at banging into the end zone.

The Seahawks looked confused before the play began, with two players shifting from one side to the other before the snap, an ominous portent.

The ball was meant to be thrown by Seattle’s Russell Wilson to Riccardo Lockette, running a slant route, albeit into a crowd of players. Instead, New England cornerback Malcolm Butler, who had been watching Wilson’s eyes, jumped into the spot where the ball was supposed to meet Lockette’s hands and intercepted the pass in one of American sport’s greatest “what the …?” moments.

Game over. Instead of Seattle winning 31-28, it ended New England 28-24.

Carroll’s fateful decision impacts the legacies of at least four prominent actors in the drama.

New England’s Bill Belichick is now without argument the top coach of this century, with four Super Bowl championships. Tom Brady gets the 21st century Best Quarterback title with those same four victories.

Russell Wilson, previously charmed, now threw The Interception, and Pete Carroll is forever the man who called The Wrong Play in the 49th Super Bowl, the one he should have won.

The final indignity? The Patriots and owner Robert Kraft fired Carroll as New England coach after the 1999 season, despite two play-offs appearances in three years to replace him with a smarter guy. Bill Belichick.

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1 response so far ↓

  • 1 Doug // Feb 2, 2015 at 11:01 AM

    Incredibly stupid. If you must throw a pass in that situation it has to be a deep fade so that only your receiver has a chance to make the play. In terms that Pac 12 fans will know, the Seahawks pulled a Washington State move and “Couged it” — snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

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