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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Seahawks lock up coach Pete Carroll with extension

Bob Condotta Seattle Times
RENTON, Wash. – The Seahawks announced Friday they have signed coach Pete Carroll to a new three-year contract, keeping him with the team through the 2016 season. And while general manager John Schneider later insisted the length of the contract sort of just happened as Carroll and the team negotiated, it was hard to miss its significance. In a much more hushed manner a year ago, Schneider also agreed to a new deal with the Seahawks through the 2016 season. Carroll’s new contract assures the two men who arrived in 2010 with a bold plan to remake the Seahawks into an NFL power – then accomplished it with a speed that few could have imagined – will remain together in Seattle for at least three more seasons. “(What) this commitment does for us (it means) John and I will be together for a long time,’’ Carroll said during a news conference at the team’s complex. “And we are thrilled about that.’’ Carroll and Schneider shared the podium during the news conference, which they jokingly referred to as a “love fest’’ as they lobbied compliments back and forth. Schneider agreed with an assessment of Carroll as one of the best coaches in football history; Carroll said Schneider should one day be regarded as one of the game’s greatest general managers. Through the laughs, though, each also made it clear they understood that Seattle’s ascension has been a group effort. “To see these guys come together over the last four seasons and the fact that we have an opportunity to keep it going is such a cool thing,’’ said team president Peter McLoughlin. “What Pete said about John in terms of what kind of a general manager he is in our sport, and all sports, is really true. He’s got a unique talent. “And Pete is a great motivator and a great coach. So it’s fun to be a part of it. It really is.’’ Carroll had no plans on leaving the fun any time soon. Still, Carroll was entering the final season of his original $35 million, five-year deal he signed upon arriving in 2010, and Schneider said it was “a huge priority’’ to make it clear that Carroll will stay put, as much for the message it will send to players as anything else. “We’re trying to take care of our own people and keep our core of young players together,’’ Schneider said. “But where do you start? You start at the top.’’ Other than the length, the team did not release details of the new deal. But the word around the league is that it could make Carroll as well-compensated as any coach in the NFL, possibly in the same $8 million-per-year range as New England’s Bill Belichick, who is regarded as the highest-paid coach in the league.