Which means the Super Bowl champion Carroll is now the oldest head coach in the league by far. The San Francisco native will turn 74 in September when the 2025 NFL season begins. The next-oldest coach, Andy Reid, will turn 67 in March — assuming he returns to the Chiefs for another year.
The Las Vegas Raiders have landed on their next head coach, with the team set to hire former Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll to fill their vacancy. When Carroll takes the sideline for the Raiders in Week 1,
With Pete Carroll set to become the head coach of the Raiders, he's also set to become the oldest head coach in NFL history.
It’s official: Pete Carroll is the new head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. The Raiders announced on Saturday afternoon that Carroll has officially become their head coach, a comeback to the NFL after many assumed his head-coaching career was over after he was fired by the Seahawks a year ago.
It's out with the old and in with the new in Las Vegas, but the new happens to be pretty old. The Raiders reportedly agreed to hire Pete Carroll as their head coach on Friday, bringing the Super Bowl-winning coach back to the NFL a year after he was surprisingly ousted by the Seahawks.
Former Seahawks coach Pete Carroll and the Raiders agreed to a three-year contract with a team option for a fourth year, according to a report.
Pete Carroll, whose storied football career is rooted in Stockton, is headed back to an NFL sideline with the Raiders.
Pete Carroll confirmed Tom Brady was "intricately involved" in the Raiders' coaching search. The hiring of ex-Brady Michigan teammate and
Carroll will be 74 this fall, becoming the oldest head coach in NFL history 12 months after Seattle fired then paid him.
No head coach has stuck with the Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders for a while. Pete Carroll will try next, after agreeing to a three-contract with the team, ESPN reports. Carroll, who is one of four head coaches to have won a college football national title and a Super Bowl,
Bill Belichick will have to utilize his own stage at North Carolina to prove the seven hiring teams this cycle right, or dreadfully wrong.