Pete Carroll is going to be the next head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders and some of his former players have had interesting reactions.
Raiders hired Pete Carroll, who will return to the NFL, as their next head coach three weeks after firing Antonio Pierce
Pete Carroll left his throne as the NFL’s oldest head coach for exactly 380 days. Now he’s back to reclaim it with the Las Vegas Raiders.
The word “culture” will be thrown around a lot when Carroll and Spytek are introduced, but "continuity" might be the bigger word.
Pete Carroll was announced Saturday as Las Vegas' new coach, with the Raiders hoping that the 73-year-old will provide stability for an organization badly lacking it — even as the oldest head coach in the NFL.
The Raiders have found their next head coach, bringing Pete Carroll back to the NFL in an effort to turn their fortunes around.
Pete Carroll and the Raiders have reached an agreement on a three-year deal with a fourth-year team option to be the team's new head coach, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter.
The Las Vegas Raiders are expected to hire Pete Carroll, who spent 14 seasons leading the Seattle Seahawks, as their new head coach. Carroll, who was a Seahawks adviser this season, has a career record of 170-120-1.
The Raiders have already made it official their new general manager John Spytek and new head coach Pete Carroll. The next step is a formal press conference. And now that is set as well. Monday, January 27 • 11:00 a.
Tom Brady is “running everything in Vegas” as the Raiders’ minority owner, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini said on “The Ryen Russillo podcast.” Las Vegas just made two critical hires in head coach Pete Carroll and general manager John Spytek, whom Brady knew from his time with the Buccaneers and college days at Michigan.
As Patrick Mahomes’s Chiefs host the Bills, Josh Allen has had more roughing-the-passer and unnecessary-roughness penalties called in his favor over the past two regular seasons.