Optimism is running rampant around the USC Trojans this summer. The Pac-12 media preseason favorite coached by Steve Sarkisian may be a tad overboard on the optimism scale, but Sarkisian seems to be situated well in leading USC back to the top of the Pac-12 despite what his track record at Washington might suggest. On Friday, Sarkisian was a guest on The Dan Patrick Show (simulcast on NBC Sports Network) and had the chance to talk about his working relationship with his former boss at USC and current Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll.
“He’s an unbelievable mentor to me,” Sarkisian said when asked about Carroll by Patrick. “He’s the reason I’m sitting here talking to you.”
Sarkisian was an assistant for the Trojans three separate times under Carroll, serving as a quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator from 2001 through 2008 (he spent the 2004 season with the Oakland Raiders). Sarkisian left USC to become the head coach at Washington in 2009, where he was head coach through 2013 before coming back to the Trojans to be the new head coach in the post-Lane Kiffin era. While Sarkisian may have a deep respect for Carroll, he said he would have called a different play at the end of the Super Bowl than Carroll did.
“I agree with the decision to throw it. I don’t know, necessarily, about the play call itself because I wasn’t in the game planning. From a tactical standpoint, with three downs to go and only one timeout remaining the correct decision in my mind would be to throw the ball on second down knowing you can run it on third and then you have a run-pass option on fourth.”
In case you forgot how the Super Bowl ended last season, Seattle had a 2nd and goal from the one-yard line with just over 20 seconds to play. Rather than hand off to Marshawn Lynch for what would be a Super Bowl-winning score, Carroll had Russell Wilson throw over the middle, and the pass was picked off by New England’s Malcolm Butler stepping in front of Ricardo Lockette.
Later in the show, after the in-studio interview with Sarkisian, UCLA head coach Jim Mora called in to take issue with Patrick’s assistants saying they would want to play for his crosstown rival. Mora was a guest earlier in the week. It was all in good fun, of course, but you have to love rivalry nuggets like this.