Salk on Seahawks: What Carroll actually stated in response to the QB question

In 13 years of observing Pete Carroll as the coach of the Seattle Seahawks, I can’t imagine how many different words I’ve used to describe him – and that doesn’t include some of the (mostly disparaging) things I said about him when he coached the Patriots or the doubt cast when he was at USC.

Pete is a complicated person and, as I’ve come to realize over time, a tremendous coach.

We have spent so much time outlining his penchant for building culture, his dedication to his philosophical view on a balanced attack, and his relentless positivity. But one quality we probably overlook is his patience. Pete isn’t beyond making changes, but by and large, he tends to give a long leash before doing so.

All of that is a long way of saying that I don’t see Pete making an abrupt change at the quarterback position.

No, Geno Smith has not played well this season, and his play hasn’t been worthy of a team with designs on advancing beyond their first-round playoff exit of last season. But whereas it’s easy for those outside of the Seahawks’ building to have a hair trigger, Pete tends to view a broader picture and has more patience than most.

With all that being said, I was admittedly shocked that Pete answered a question on Monday about what it would take for him to make an in-season change at the quarterback position.

As I was asking the question, I was fully expecting him to dismiss it out of hand. I expected him to tell me that wasn’t relevant and that they were nowhere close to that conversation. Which would have been fine. Sometimes you ask questions in an interview assuming they won’t get much of a response. But when he chose to offer a thoughtful answer, I took that as meaningful.

His answer in no way suggested he is anywhere close to making a change. He said it would be “obvious” if that was ever necessary and spent the rest of the time pointing out the issues the team is having in play calling, protection, and communication. Those are all ways of pointing to everyone except Geno as the culprit.

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