The Kansas City Chiefs' divisional rival, the Las Vegas Raiders, have hired Pete Carroll to be their next head coach.
Pete Carroll, as a result of being hired by the Las Vegas Raiders, will have to face Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs at least twice per NFL season. That will be one of the central and most
Pete Carroll and Sean Payton have done something only 18 other men have done in the entire history of the National Football League.
The Las Vegas Raiders adding head coach Pete Carroll to an AFC West that already includes Andy Reid with the Kansas City Chiefs and Sean Payton with the Denver Broncos is a dominant conversation right now. But Jim Harbaugh and the Los Angeles Chargers don’t need to worry about Carroll and the Raiders nearly as much as the hype makes it seem.
Former Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady has his hands heavily involved in the Las Vegas Raiders rebuild and he along with new head coach Pete Carroll see eye-to-eye on the franchise's quarterback needs.
His time with the Seahawks saw him draft and develop Russell Wilson into his franchise quarterback and with the passer set to become a free agent following a one-year stint with the Pittsburgh Steelers, it didn’t take long for speculation linking Wilson with a move to the Raiders to emerge.
Coach Andy Reid said his Kansas City Chiefs were "lucky" to win a "game of inches" against the Buffalo Bills, referencing a controversial call that confirmed a fourth-down defensive stand in the AFC title game.
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.
Longtime New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick suggested that the Vince Lombardi Trophy, given annually to the Super Bowl winning team, should be renamed after quarterback Tom Brady.
Jalen Hurts bucked decades of history just by getting back to the Super Bowl after losing his first trip there as a starting quarterback.
Temple student Tyler Sabapathy has died from injuries he sustained after falling from a light pole during a celebration of the Philadelphia Eagles' Super Bowl berth, the school announced. He was 18.