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Pete Carroll's Seattle Seahawks in NFC driver's seat entering bye
By Michael Silver
NFL Media columnist
Published: Nov. 18, 2013 at 12:19 p.m. Updated: Nov. 18, 2013 at 05:19 p.m
The time had come to speak to his players about the task at hand, as Pete Carroll does virtually every Saturday night during the NFL season, but the Seattle Seahawks' relentlessly upbeat coach called an indulgent and understandable audible.
Descending a staircase at the team hotel to find the nearest television set, Carroll took a walk down memory lane: He watched the USC Trojans, a program he rebuilt into a national power before leaving amid a cloud of impending NCAA sanctions, recapture a bit of the old magic by closing out a thrilling upset of No. 4 Stanford.
"I loved it," Carroll said Sunday night, a couple of hours after the Seahawks had rolled to a 41-20 victory over the Minnesota Vikings at CenturyLink Field, improving their NFL-best record to 10-1. "Our meeting started late because I wanted to get to see that guy kick the winning field goal. I was just really excited for Coach (Ed Orgeron) and everyone else. It was awesome."
If ever a coach was going to be forgiven for a delay of game infraction, it was this one on this night. While Seahawks Richard Sherman and Doug Baldwin (who lost a bet to Carroll) might not have been thrilled with their alma mater's defeat, Carroll's enthusiasm sets the tone for the franchise, and his popularity among his players rivals that of Batkid among San Franciscans.
In his fourth season in Seattle, Carroll has assembled an NFL team of his dreams -- a chillingly efficient, potent, unflappable and well-rounded outfit that appears to be nowhere close to peaking. In dispatching the Vikings on Sunday, the Seahawks welcomed back three offensive line starters (center Max Unger and tackles Russell Okung and Breno Giacomini) and rolled out, at long last, their prized offseason acquisition: electrifying playmaker Percy Harvin.
Harvin, acquired last March in a blockbuster trade with the Vikings, underwent hip surgery Aug. 1 and began the season on the physically unable to perform list before returning to practice last month. He only touched the ball twice in his debut, but that was enough to send a resounding message to the NFC's other Super Bowl contenders.
Rest of article and video at link-->Pete Carroll's Seattle Seahawks in NFC driver's seat entering bye - NFL.com
By Michael Silver
NFL Media columnist
Published: Nov. 18, 2013 at 12:19 p.m. Updated: Nov. 18, 2013 at 05:19 p.m
The time had come to speak to his players about the task at hand, as Pete Carroll does virtually every Saturday night during the NFL season, but the Seattle Seahawks' relentlessly upbeat coach called an indulgent and understandable audible.
Descending a staircase at the team hotel to find the nearest television set, Carroll took a walk down memory lane: He watched the USC Trojans, a program he rebuilt into a national power before leaving amid a cloud of impending NCAA sanctions, recapture a bit of the old magic by closing out a thrilling upset of No. 4 Stanford.
"I loved it," Carroll said Sunday night, a couple of hours after the Seahawks had rolled to a 41-20 victory over the Minnesota Vikings at CenturyLink Field, improving their NFL-best record to 10-1. "Our meeting started late because I wanted to get to see that guy kick the winning field goal. I was just really excited for Coach (Ed Orgeron) and everyone else. It was awesome."
If ever a coach was going to be forgiven for a delay of game infraction, it was this one on this night. While Seahawks Richard Sherman and Doug Baldwin (who lost a bet to Carroll) might not have been thrilled with their alma mater's defeat, Carroll's enthusiasm sets the tone for the franchise, and his popularity among his players rivals that of Batkid among San Franciscans.
In his fourth season in Seattle, Carroll has assembled an NFL team of his dreams -- a chillingly efficient, potent, unflappable and well-rounded outfit that appears to be nowhere close to peaking. In dispatching the Vikings on Sunday, the Seahawks welcomed back three offensive line starters (center Max Unger and tackles Russell Okung and Breno Giacomini) and rolled out, at long last, their prized offseason acquisition: electrifying playmaker Percy Harvin.
Harvin, acquired last March in a blockbuster trade with the Vikings, underwent hip surgery Aug. 1 and began the season on the physically unable to perform list before returning to practice last month. He only touched the ball twice in his debut, but that was enough to send a resounding message to the NFC's other Super Bowl contenders.
Rest of article and video at link-->Pete Carroll's Seattle Seahawks in NFC driver's seat entering bye - NFL.com