23 Reasons Why a
Profile of Pete Carroll Does Not Appear in this Space
LA
Magazine Article Link
23
Reasons Why A Profile of Pete Carroll Does Not Appear in this Space
By
J.R. Moehringer
Photography by Mark Hanauer
1. ACCEPTING HIS LOAN OF A SHIRT MIGHT HAVE
BEEN
Pete
Carroll, head coach of the football team at the University of Southern
California, turns to me one night around 8 p.m. and says he’s got
something to do, somewhere he needs to be. We’re standing outside his
office at Heritage Hall, the redbrick headquarters of USC’s athletic
program, the trophy-filled heart of Troy . I ask Carroll where he’s
going, what he’s doing. He doesn’t answer.
I ask if I can come
along. No, he says, absolutely not. I ask again. Sorry, he says. I
stare imploringly. OK, he says, looking me up and down—but you’d better
change. He rummages through a small wardrobe in the corner of his
office and finds a white polo, which he flips to me like a screen pass.
Put this on.
How come?
Your shirt, it’s blue—you might get shot.
Where the hell are we going?
He walks quickly out of the office.
2. HE OFTEN WOULDN’T LET ME TAKE NOTES, SO SOME
QUOTATIONS ARE APPROXIMATIONS FROM MEMORY
While
wriggling into Carroll's shirt, I hurry to keep pace. It’s not easy.
Carroll’s normal gait is what others might call a wind sprint. Down
some stairs, around a practice field, through a parking lot, we zoom
across campus. He tells me to stow my notebook. It might make the
people we’re meeting uncomfortable.
Who are we meeting?
Look for a blue van, Carroll says.
A blue van?
There,
he says. Sure enough, a blue van is double-parked at the corner, and
beside it stands our driver and escort for the night, a deep-chested,
gentle-voiced man named Bo Taylor. I climb into the backseat. Carroll
rides shotgun.
Along the way Taylor tells me that he and
Carroll do this often. They make late-night journeys through the dicey
precincts of Los Angeles. Alone, unarmed, they cruise the desolate,
impoverished, crime-ridden streets, meeting as many people (mostly
young men) as possible. The mission: Let them know that someone busy,
someone famous, someone well known for winning, is thinking about them,
rooting for them. The young men have hard stories, grim stories, about
their everyday lives, and at the very least Carroll’s visit gives them
a different story to tell tomorrow. Carroll says: “Somebody they would
never think would come to them and care about them and worry about
them—did. I think it gives them hope.”
Few fans of USC,
Carroll concedes, know that he spends his nights this way. He’s not
sure he wants them to know. He’s not sure he wants anyone to know. I
ask what his wife of 31 years, Glena, thinks of these excursions. He
doesn’t answer. (Days later Glena tells me with a laugh that she
doesn’t worry about Carroll driving around L.A., but she drew the line
when he mentioned visiting Baghdad.)
We start in east
South-Central, a block without streetlights, without stores. Broken
glass in the gutters. Fog and gloom in the air. We hop out and approach
a group of young men bunched on the sidewalk. Glassy-eyed, they’re
either drunk, stoned, or else just dangerously bored. They recognize
Carroll right away. Several look around for news trucks and
politicians, and they can’t hide their shock when they realize that
Carroll is here, relatively speaking, alone.
Carroll shakes
hands, asks how everyone’s doing. He marches up and down the sidewalk,
the same way he marches up and down a sideline—exhorting, pumping his
fi st. At first the young men are nervous, starstruck , shy. Gradually
they relax. They talk about football, of course, but also about the
police, about how difficult it is to find a job. They talk about their
lives, and their heads snap back when Carroll listens.
A car
pulls up. Someone’s mother, back from the store. She freezes when she
sees who’s outside her house. Carroll waves, then helps her with the
groceries. He makes several trips, multiple bags in each hand, and the
woman yelps with laughter. No, this can’t be. This is too much. Pete
Carroll? Coach of the roughest, toughest, slickest college football
team in the nation, schlepping eggs and soda from her car to her
kitchen?
Next we drive to the Jordan Downs housing projects ,
one of the most dangerous places in L.A. We find a craps game raging
between the main buildings. Forty young men huddle in the dark, a
different sort of huddle from the ones Carroll typically supervises.
They are smoking, cursing, shoving, intent on the game, but most fall
silent and come to attention as they realize who’s behind them. Pete
Carroll, someone whispers. Pete Carroll? The most famous
sports figure in the city, excluding Kobe Bryant? (Maybe including
Bryant.) Pete Carroll, mentor to Carson Palmer, Matt Leinart, Reggie
Bush, LenDale White—here? A sweet-faced teen named Jerome steps away
from the game. He stares at Carroll, shakes his head as if to clear it.
He says the same thing over and over. Pete Carroll in the ghetto.
Man, this is crazy. Pete Carroll—in the ghetto! Crazy.
Some
time after midnight Carroll and Taylor head for the van. Time to get
back to Heritage Hall, where Carroll will catch a few hours of sleep on
his office floor before his assistant coaches start showing up. A young
man stops Carroll, takes the coach aside and becomes emotional while
explaining how much this visit has meant to him. He gives Carroll a
bracelet, something he made, a symbol of brotherhood and solidarity.
Carroll accepts the bracelet as if it were a Rolex. He’ll wear it for
days, often pushing back his sleeve to admire and play with it. He
gives several young men his cell phone number—something he’s never
offered me—and tells them to call if they ever need to talk. One, an
ex-con, will call early the next morning and confide in Carroll about
his struggles feeding his family. Carroll will vow to help find him a
job. (So far, Taylor says, Carroll has found part-time jobs for 40
young men.)
Driving back to campus, Taylor is bleary-eyed, I’m
half asleep, and Carroll looks as if he could go for a brisk 5K run,
then start a big home improvement project. I ask Taylor if people on
the streets ever seem suspicious of Carroll. Do they ever think he’s
grandstanding or recruiting—or crazy? Taylor says he’s heard almost no
cynicism, though he admits that he was doubtful at first. “Pete was
like, ‘I want to go through the community with you,’ ” Taylor says.
Sure, Taylor told Carroll, assuming it was just talk. Then, late one
night, Taylor’s phone rang.
Hey, Bo, what’s up?
Not much. Who’s this?
Pete.
Pete who?
Pete Carroll. Hey, man, I’m ready, man. When can we go out there?
Taylor
was stunned. Not only did Carroll follow through, but there was
something in his tone. He was asking to visit neighborhoods where
police don’t like to go, and he was asking without fear. “He asked like
he wasn’t afraid,” Taylor says. He turns to look at me in the backseat,
to make sure I’m sufficiently astonished or to make sure I’m still
awake. “He asked that shit like he was not afraid.”
3. HIS LACK OF FEAR SCARED THE HELL OUT OF ME
Carroll
gave up fear long ago. He gave it up the way people give up carbs. Fear
now has no part in his daily life. Fear is like an old, distant friend.
They know each other well, talk once in a while, but they’re not close
like they used to be.
In meetings, practices, pregame talks,
fear is Carroll’s theme. “That’s what we’re all about,” he says, lying
back on the leather sofa in his office one night. “Our entire approach
is to come to the point where we have the knowing that we’re going to
win. There’s nothing to stop us but ourselves. To do that is to operate
in the absence of fear.”
Carroll teams are 65 and 12 over the
last six years. They win 84 percent of the time. They win like the sun
rises and the Santa Anas blow. Strictly by the numbers—84 frigging
percent—he’s the best football coach in the nation, Division I-A or
pro. His players, apparently, operate in a fear vacuum. I, on the other
hand, operate in the constant presence of fear, the ubiquity of fear.
I’m lightheaded with dread at the prospect of profiling Carroll,
because early on I realize it can’t be done, not in any conventional
sense. Carroll’s the acme of unconventional, and thus a profile of him
needs to be radically different. Knowing this creates pressure, a
feeling under the ribs that starts like indigestion and becomes a
persistent, nagging fear, which is then compounded by Carroll’s
noticeably absent fear. Even when Carroll says or does something
inspiring, a frequent occurrence, part of me feels lifted up, but much
of me feels cast down. It’s analogous to the way, no matter how
fascinating you find them, superrich people can make you feel sad.
Also,
a profile is like a football game. Yes, football is used as a metaphor
for just about everything—manhood, America, war, sex, the real estate
market—but it’s a better-than-average metaphor for writing. (In
football, as in writing, your flow is impeded by blocks.) It’s
especially useful as a metaphor for writing about another person.
Football is all about taking something that’s not yours, wresting it
from someone who’d just as soon keep it. In football the coveted thing
is the ball; in journalism it’s the subject’s self, his interior life,
and in a psychic struggle for that prize, Carroll is nearly unbeatable.
He’s too amorphous, too various—too quick. He walks too fast, talks too
fast, runs too deep. Fathoms deep.
His longtime friend Michael
Murphy, cofounder of the Esalen Institute, e-mails me from Russia when
I plead for help with my profile, but his answer only scares me more.
He says Carroll is more complicated than I suspected: “When we talk, we
sometimes turn to sports, but more often to philosophy and the amazing
possibilities of human nature. For awhile we worked together with
Russian coaches and athletes and talked about ending the Cold War….
We’ve discussed Indian philosophy, religious mysticism, parapsychology
as a scientific discipline, and various social causes. I’ve probably
forgotten more topics we’ve explored than the ones I can remember.”
Carroll
is an unnerving inverse of the traditional sportswriter’s dilemma—the
athlete who says nothing and has nothing to say. Carroll says a lot and
has a lot to say. The problem, therefore, isn’t lack of information.
The problem isn’t even too much information. The problem is finding the
right template, the right format for all that information. You can’t
capture a character like Carroll using that dried-up magazine
format—The Profile. (The opening scene that shows our Subject in a
quirky/revealing light; the writerly riff that makes a claim for the
Subject’s relevance; the quotes from friends/family/enemies; the quotes
from the Subject himself; the closing scene that shows the Subject in a
setting that recalls the opening.) With Carroll, I know from the start,
this format won’t work. It won’t feel true. Not even 84 percent true.
People will think I never got close to him. People will say: “Damn,
didn’t you get any access?”
4. HE GAVE ME TOTAL ACCESS
I
first meet Carroll just before the season starts. His team is ranked
number one in the nation. We’re standing on Howard Jones Field, a
fenced pasture at the center of the sprawling concrete campus, and I
make my pitch. I want to write something distinctive, I tell him.
Comprehensive.
Sure, he says, let’s do it. Awesome, he says. (Along with cool
and stuff , awesome is one of Carroll’s words. He
says awesome
so often that I anticipate it, hear it, remember it, whether he
actually says it or not. He’s forever decreeing people and things to be
awesome, and the word is no boilerplate superlative: He
means
that this person or thing is filling him to the brim with awe.) He
promises me total access, and in the days that follow, he’s good to his
word. He waves me into rooms and meetings barred to other reporters. He
lets me eat with him and his assistants. He invites me to watch game
films, sit in on private speeches to players, accompany him on
recruiting visits, travel with the team—live his life. I’m grateful, of
course. I’m aware that a heavy curtain is being drawn back. But I also
see that the real VIP area, Carroll’s soul, remains behind velvet
ropes.
Carroll’s specialty, after all, is defense. He knows
better than most people how to keep opponents at bay, even while
letting them feel as if they’re advancing. On the field he favors the
bend-but-don’t-break style, whereby his teams surrender small nibbles
of yardage but never the big bite. I believe that’s how he treats a
would-be profiler. Not by design, maybe, but by instinct.
In
an unguarded moment Carroll confesses that he made up his mind long ago
about journalists. They’re unavoidable, he says. Like injuries and
agents, they come with the job, and it’s best to “build relationships”
with them. Know your enemy as you know yourself. (Wisdom from Sun Tzu,
the ancient Chinese military strategist, one of Carroll’s spiritual
pillars.) Journalists might help Carroll or flatter him, but they’re
more likely to wound him, something he learned the hard way in Boston,
ten years ago, coaching the New England Patriots. Boston writers were
brutal, he says. They blamed Carroll for not being his predecessor,
Bill Parcells. They blamed him for not being his successor, Bill
Belichick. They blamed him for breathing. Holding back a little,
therefore, isn’t ungenerous. It’s gamesmanship. It’s ball control.
5. THERE’S NOTHING IN MY NOTEBOOKS
Even
when he's not holding back, Carroll crosses me up by repeating stories
and quips to other writers. He’s promiscuously quotable, spreading his
wit willy-nilly . He doesn’t understand, or care, that we’re all trying
to wring something new out of him. He tells me a great story, never
before published, about the time he hit bottom in New England. Unable
to sleep, he flipped on the TV and found a movie about Babe Ruth. He
watched Bostonians booing Ruth and thought: Those are the same
guys who boo me as I come through the tunnel every Sunday, and they’re
booing the greatest baseball player of all time! He was able to
laugh, to lighten up, to feel a connection with the Bambino, which got
him through the hard times. I write it all down. Days later he gives
the same story to The Boston Globe.
I can’t count the
number of times I hear Carroll being pithy with a reporter, e.g., “I
always think something really good is about to happen” or “Sleep is
overrated,” then say the same thing to another reporter a day or two
later. Worse, when he does say something new, something legitimately
juicy, he gives my tape recorder the big eye and says—Off the record.
He goes off the record like Lindsay Lohan goes off the wagon. I like
him (another reason I can’t profile him, shouldn’t profile him), but
I’ll never forgive him for declaring one particularly delicious rant
against a fellow coach—an “asshole” and “a fucking asshole”—off the
record.
More confounding, Carroll’s conversations and private
interactions are note resistant. Looking through my notebooks, I find
page after page of fragments, moments, scenes that seemed poignant or
telling at the time and now feel thin. He might be too evanescent, too
ephemeral. His essential aura might lie outside the ken of shorthand.
For
example, Carroll tells me he suffers from attention deficit disorder .
“Self-diagnosed,” he says, kidding, but I concur with his joke
diagnosis. Besides leaving half his sentences (and meals) unfinished,
he’s in constant motion, tapping his foot, jiggling his leg, swaying to
music, playing drums on tables and dashboards. He’s also endearingly
absentminded. For the longest time he had no e-mail, because he
couldn’t remember his password. He misplaces his cell phone charger. He
loses his keys, locks himself out of his office. (Twice in one 24-hour
span.) Days after our drive around South-Central, we bump into Taylor
at a charity event. Carroll tries to introduce us. We both look at him,
bewildered. I gently remind Carroll that the three of us just spent six
hours together.
But then this. I’m watching him watching film.
In one hand he holds a laser pointer, in the other a remote control,
which freezes the action, runs the play backward and forward at diff
erent speeds. Without taking his eyes from the screen, he casually asks
Nick Holt, his defensive coordinator, how things went at the doctor.
Holt, sitting to Carroll’s right, grunts that a thing on his skin is
precancerous and will need to be removed. Like the players on the
screen, Carroll abruptly stops, midmotion. He stares at Holt,
unblinking, gauging Holt’s level of concern. He stares until Holt lifts
his head from what he’s reading and looks Carroll straight in the eye.
“It’s nothing,” Carroll says.
“Yeah,” Holt says, and shoots Carroll a grateful grin.
No
earthshaking words. No grand gesture. Just a sudden payment of
attention, despite an attention debt, because attention is the thing
most needed. Just a focus of his personal laser, as in his hand. In my
notebook it says:
It’s
noth—
Doesn’t blink. Doesn’t jiggle leg
Just stares
In my memory it feels like much more.
6. THERE’S NOTHING ON MY TAPES
On
two separate occasions, though I aim the tape recorder at Carroll’s
mouth, I later discover nothing on the tape but sibilant mumbles. I
hear his voice, then a rustling, then silence, then garble garble—it’s
spooky. The tape recorder is brand-new. It was the most expensive one
they had at Radio Shack. It picks up my voice fine. When Carroll
speaks, the recording sounds like an articulate man gagged and locked
in the trunk of a car.
7. I’M UNABLE TO DESCRIBE CARROLL’S APPEARANCE WITHOUT
SOUNDING GAY
Most
football coaches are bald, pear-shaped sourpusses. They look like
Southern sheriffs, circa 1954. But Carroll is a Hollywood fever dream,
a hybrid of Knute Rockne and a rock star. (Folk rock.) He looks like a
man who spends his days in the sun. Not the bad sun, the sun of
Marlboro Men and aging soap opera actors, but the good sun, the sun of
tennis pros and yachtsmen. He’s not leathery, just burnished. His eyes
are bright Caribbean blue, and the browner his skin gets, the bluer his
eyes turn. His nose is slightly zigzag. It breaks left, then right, a
runner in the open field, and his chin is jutting, prominent, always
pointing the way forward.
His hair, however, might be his
signature feature. A puffy palette of white, silver, and gray, it
reminds you sometimes of Bill Clinton, other times of Dick Van Dyke.
Now you see follicular intimations of Richard Gere, now you see flashes
of Phil Donahue, now a fleck or two of Jack Kemp. A journalist friend,
when I mention that I’m writing a profile of Carroll— before I realized
I couldn’t write a profile of Carroll—says the coach has always seemed
to him the paragon of kicked-back cool, the Burt Bacharach of coaches.
It’s a fine, and fittingly hair-focused, comparison.
He’s
taller in person than on TV. Stalking a sideline, he’s always dwarfed
by that phalanx of giants in his private Praetorian Guard, but walking
the campus he’s taller than most students he passes. He’s also in
better shape. He dresses in concealing layers—a blousy polo shirt over
a white body shirt, khaki pants— but when he changes in his office,
when he’s standing there shirtless, you notice the definition. A USC
strength coach says Carroll is a workout fiend, always looking for new
ways to get the heart rate up and the body fat down. He lifts weights,
boogie-boards under the pier at Hermosa Beach, and after an exhausting
morning of meetings and interviews and speeches, he likes nothing
better than to run the floor hard with a pickup basketball team. A
doctor told him long ago that his knees are bad, bone-on-bone bad, and
he should never play basketball again. He doesn’t go to that doctor
anymore.
Every year on Carroll’s birthday he vows to throw a
football as far as he is old. When he turned 56 in September, he made a
point of going out to the field in the morning and chucking the rock 56
yards. He takes visible pride, disarming pride, in telling me that his
ball landed with several yards to spare. There is the trace of a smile
on his lips as he tells me. There is always the trace of a smile on
Carroll’s lips. His effectiveness as a motivator begins and ends with
that smile, which is sincere, unrestrained, and wide, though he mixes
in half smiles and smirks when being sarcastic. More than the smile,
it’s specifically the prospect of a smile that seems to fuel the many
people orbiting Carroll all day. They are prepared to go to great
lengths, endure significant pain and inconvenience, to earn one of
those Carroll high-beamers, and they brighten visibly upon receipt.
They become flustered. They turn the colors of a Pacific sunset. They
titter.
Many TV and movie stars hang around Carroll. (On his
desk is a Jack Bauer action figure given to him by Kiefer Sutherland
for his birthday, and he sometimes plays with it while talking to
visitors.) One star, however, is known to giggle uncontrollably around
Carroll, according to eyewitnesses. The eyewitnesses don’t blame the
star, really. Carroll’s smile just has that effect.
More than
charismatic, more than charming, Carroll’s smile represents a break
from tradition. Football coaches aren’t supposed to smile. There’s no
crying in baseball? There’s no smiling in coaching. Football coaches
are supposed to snarl and growl and look chronically constipated.
Football coaches are supposed to make Dick Cheney look like Mr. Haney.
Football coaches aren’t supposed to flash you a smile that makes you go
all goosey and forget your dignity. Or your next question.
8. HE WORE ME DOWN
These are some of the things Carroll doesn’t do:
Eat.
Drink.
Sleep.
Pee.
Vacation.
Think negative .
That
is, I haven’t seen him do any of these things, not the way most people
do them, with regularity. I, however, do all these things, sometimes at
the same time, and following Carroll around, therefore, doing
everything he does, not doing anything he doesn’t do, I’m always
hungry, tired, thirsty, and need to find a men’s room. He pushes me to
the limits of my endurance, until I’m barely able to function.
After
we’ve spent the night cruising South-Central, after Carroll has
catnapped on the floor of his office, I expect to find him exhausted
the next morning. I want to find him exhausted. Instead he
looks as if he’s slept ten hours, eaten a heart-healthy breakfast, then
enjoyed a 90-minute deep-tissue massage.
It’s emotionally as
well as physically demoralizing. Under the best of circumstances,
emasculation is a major concern when hanging around the USC football
team. Heritage Hall is a hypermasculine, phallocentric environment, and
with your little notebook, and your nettling questions, and your trick
knee, you can’t help but feel like Woody Allen’s kid brother. It
doesn’t help that, while interviewing the defensive star, you hold the
tape recorder above your head and wish there were a step stool handy.
But when the head coach outworks you, outlasts you, when the head coach
grinds you into a fine dust, you feel like Dakota Fanning.
If
I shut my eyes and try to picture my time with Carroll, one scene comes
quickly to mind. It’s late. He’s pacing outside his office, glancing at
a game on TV, tossing a football to himself, talking to me and several
assistant coaches all at once. Suddenly and unaccountably he leans
against a leather chair and starts doing pushups. Slumped in a chair,
eyelids heavy, I can’t help wondering if he might secretly be using
crystal meth.
Carroll’s wife says that when he does sleep, he
sometimes shoots awake in the middle of the night, seized by
inspiration. A new play, a new solution to some Xs and Os problem.
Carroll likens his mental state to the movie Phenomenon. He
says he feels something like that John Travolta character, whose mind
is racing with ideas and flashes of insight. I remind Carroll that at
the end of the movie, doctors discover that Travolta’s character has a
tumor. Carroll says something to the effect that I’m carrying the
metaphor too far.
While watching Carroll in practice one day,
I’m vaguely thinking I need to start taking vitamins more regularly.
He’s smiling, throwing the football, chewing a wad of gum, inspiring
everyone, pumping everyone up. He’s 14 years older than I am. His job
is harder than mine. His hours are longer. His path is strewn with
greater hurdles—Cal and Oregon, to name two. But here he is, on the
balls of his feet, running and jumping, leaping through the air while
happily blowing his whistle. Baryshnikov as a Baywatch
lifeguard.
I think: Maybe if I had a whistle.
9. I APPLIED CARROLL’S COACHING METHODS TO MYSELF—NO LUCK
When
he’s not helping them conquer their fear, Carroll is preaching to his
players about fun. He urges them, if they do nothing else, to have fun,
because fun is a natural antidote to fear and a prime motive for most
of the things we do.
People who know him best invariably seize upon fun
to describe Carroll, either saying it’s fun to be around him or that
he’s forever having fun. His emphasis on fun comes mainly from his DNA
but also from his reading, specifically W. Timothy Gallwey’s The
Inner Game of Tennis,
a 122-page book with a cult-like following. (The latest edition
features a foreword by Carroll.) Using tennis as a prism through which
to view all human endeavor, Gallwey says we focus too narrowly on
results. “The three cornerstones of Inner Game,” he tells me,
“are Performance, Learning, and Enjoyment . Usually people put
Performance first, and Learning and Enjoyment are almost absent.”
If
we focused more on Enjoyment and Learning, Gallwey says, we’d perform
better and we’d be a lot happier: “You look at a child. He learns while
he plays. Anything he tries to do, or win at, he’s playing, he has a
wonderful time doing it. They’re not separate things for a child. That
means to me these things are inherently built into human beings. Most
human beings, you have to coach what’s already inherent—that is, the
drive of excitement to learn and keep learning, and the drive to enjoy.
It gets really covered up when winning is everything. I agree with
Lombardi: Winning is everything. It’s just what your definition of
winning is.”
Defensive end Lawrence Jackson, cocaptain of the
team, says he struggled last year, recovering from an injury, fighting
to play his way back into shape, until Carroll gave him a copy of
Gallwey’s book. Jackson’s game, and his life, changed. “He was telling
me to settle down and kind of get back to having fun,” Jackson says of
Carroll. “Who knew that it was going to come down to 120 pages of a
book?”
I study The Inner Game of Tennis. I try to have
fun with my Carroll profile. But I’m caught in a trap. The more I learn
about Carroll, the more there is to learn. The more time I spend with
Carroll, the greater the pressure. As pressure increases, enjoyment
decreases. As enjoyment decreases, performance plummets.
Sensing
my rising tension, Carroll can hardly conceal his pity or his
amusement. He asks what my plans are for the week. I tell him I’ll be
reading about him, thinking about him, trying to figure out how to
synthesize all I’ve seen, heard, and read. He smiles and says something
that, unless I’m hearing things, sounds like “Poor guy.”
10. HE’S NOT FINISHED
Carroll
dislikes “goals.” He doesn’t use the word, makes a face when I use it.
So let’s say he’s undertaken two enormous tasks, and he can’t be judged
fairly—or profiled—until he succeeds, fails, or quits.
His
first task: Turn USC into the grandest college dynasty ever. Not this
week’s number one team but history’s. “To win forever,” he says, and
before this year he looked to be well on his way. He’d won back-to-back
national championships and come within 19 seconds of another. (He still
goes over critical decisions in that 2005 championship game against
Texas, when the Trojans had the lead late but couldn’t bottle up mighty
Vince Young.) He put together a 2007 team that was fast on defense,
loaded on offense, the heavy favorite to win the third championship of
the Carroll Era.
Then came week five and a series of disturbing setbacks.
There
was the inexplicable collapse against Stanford, the most improbable
loss by an “overdog” in college football history, according to
oddsmakers. There was the flare-up of an old scandal surrounding Bush,
the virtuoso former tailback, who stands accused of taking $280,000 in
improper payments while a student athlete. (Should Bush be found
guilty, the NCAA could levy hefty fines against USC.) There was a rash
of injuries on offense, decimating a corps that was supposed to
dominate and sidelining John David Booty, the starting quarterback, who
cracked a finger on his throwing hand. Suddenly, people were
questioning the invincibility of USC and its coach.
Carroll’s
second task, however, is even more lofty and less likely to be finished
soon. Having achieved job security for the first time in his life, he’s
expanded his work to include the city beyond USC. Some want to save the
world—Carroll wants to coach it. He’s launched a foundation, A Better
LA, aimed at motivating on a large scale, at ending violence in the
inner city, and he now takes time each week to think and talk about
problems other than what to call on third and long. With any coach
who’s still coaching, drawing conclusions can be hard. His legacy is
always in flux; it hinges on what happens next Saturday. But when a
coach is remaking himself into a social activist, when he’s just
beginning the task for which he may one day be best remembered, firm
statements feel that much more ridiculously premature.
11. A PROFILE WILL BE BETTER IN FIVE OR SIX YEARS WHEN THIS KID IS
ACTUALLY PLAYING FOR USC
On
a recruiting swing through the city, Carroll drops in at a private high
school. He asks to see a faculty member, a woman whose son is a touted
prospect. The mother emerges from her office and frowns. She recognizes
Carroll immediately and knows why he’s here. She brusquely explains
that all the men in her family played for USC’s hated rival, Notre
Dame, and that’s where her boy is almost certainly going. Carroll says
he knows all about the boy’s Notre Dame pedigree. He’s been well
briefed. But he came anyway, he tells the mother sheepishly, because he
likes a challenge. He smiles. The mother scowls.
Carroll is a
master at recruiting. His life is predicated on competition, and he
particularly enjoys competing for people, kids, prospects,
which is how dynasties are made. (College football geeks have ranked
Carroll’s last five recruiting classes among the best in the nation.)
Sometimes, when talking to a recruit and his parents, Carroll can
barely contain his enthusiasm. “I know what I’m offering,” he tells me.
“They can’t even conceive. They don’t—they can’t possibly understand
how special—.”
Booty remembers his first recruiting visit to
USC. Carroll won him over in seconds. “Acted like he’d known me my
whole life,” Booty says. “Just coming up, giving me a high five,
hugging my parents. It was one of the best experiences I’ve ever had
meeting a college coach. I’ve met just about every coach—hands down, he
was the best.”
Before leaving campus Booty knocked at
Carroll’s door and told him he’d decided to play for USC. “I didn’t
even go home to think about it. I told my dad, ‘This is where I want to
be.’”
Carroll tries everything, but the mother refuses to warm
up. It’s not just that Carroll coaches the Enemy; the mother clearly
doesn’t like the idea of her son leaving home, ever. She cringes at the
thought of handing him over to any coach, no matter the school. He’s
14, she tells Carroll, pleading. He’s a baby, she says. Carroll tries
to reassure her. In the soothing voice of a suicide hotline operator,
he says that he realizes her boy’s young and college is years off . He
simply wanted to introduce himself. No big deal, no pressure. But when
the time comes to choose a school, he adds, he hopes she’ll at least
consider USC. Come to the campus for a visit.
The mother nods,
thanks Carroll, then walks him—no, escorts him—to the front door. As
Carroll crosses the street, the mother yells: Good luck with the
season! Hope you have at least one loss!
Carroll turns to me.
What’d she say? Hope you have green moss?
Hope you have one loss.
He squints. Still doesn’t get it.
In other words, she hopes you lose to Notre Dame.
Really? That’s what she said?
We
climb back in the car. Ken Norton Jr., Carroll’s linebacker coach,
drives to the next school. Carroll turns up the radio. Humming along to
an R&B song, he stares out the window, lost in thought. All at once
he brightens. Hey, he says. At least she wants us to win 12 games!
That’s what she’s saying, right? She hopes we win 12 games. That ain’t
so bad!
12. THE THREE RULES DON’T ADD UP
Shortly
before arriving at USC, Carroll sat down and drew up three rules, three
basic imperatives that are central to his view of coaching. The three
rules are among the first things a freshman learns when he steps on the
USC practice field. The three rules must be memorized, internalized, or
the player is out. The three rules are:
1. Protect the team.
2.
No whining. No complaining. No excuses.
3. Be early.
No
matter how many times I add them up, the three rules look to me like
five rules. I feel like a malcontent, a contrarian, for raising the
point, for even noticing, but I can’t help it.
Also, something
inside me rebels against Rule No. 2. (No. 4, by my reckoning).
Something inside me bridles at any blanket prohibition of excuses, for
reasons that by now should be obvious.
13. NO MATTER WHAT I WRITE, IT WILL BE WRONG
I
could write that Carroll failed as a head coach in the National
Football League, that he didn’t hit his stride, didn’t find himself,
until he returned to college ball. It’s the most common knock against
him, and his NFL record (33-31) was less than dazzling. But I could
just as easily write that Carroll deserved more time, that he was done
in by idiot fans and trigger-happy NFL owners who didn’t recognize his
strengths. Given more time, Carroll would have become one of the best.
“He never really had a chance to establish himself,” says Boomer
Esiason, who quarterbacked for the New York Jets when Carroll was the
coach. Esiason calls the day Carroll got fired “the saddest day of my
professional life. I basically went from a Ph.D. to an elementary
school education in about 15 minutes.”
I could write that
Carroll was too soft on his players in the NFL—it might be the worst
charge that could be leveled at a football coach. It’s been leveled at
Carroll plenty, and he winces when he repeats it. But I could just as
easily write that Carroll’s positive attitude, his native optimism and
idealism, find more receptive ears among young players, who haven’t yet
become cynical, who don’t play for money.
I could write that
Carroll’s restoration of USC’s glory, his resurrection of a prowess and
cachet that date back to the 1920s, is one of the most impressive
achievements in the annals of college football, so fast and dramatic
that it borders on miraculous. Carroll took a team that had become a
nonfactor, that hadn’t won a national championship in 22 years, and
turned it into a machine. His stars made a habit of collecting Heismans
as if it were their birthright— three winners in four years, a feat no
other school has achieved. No one would have dared say I was
wrong—until this season. When USC fell to Stanford, you could hear the
critics clearing their throats, rehearsing their revisionist histories
and eulogies of the Carroll Era. Maybe the magic is gone, they said.
Maybe Carroll benefited from a crew of talented assistants, they said,
guys like offensive mastermind Norm Chow, who left to become offensive
coordinator for the Tennessee Titans, and Lane Kiffin, who left to
become head coach of the Oakland Raiders, and Ed Orgeron, who’s now
coaching the University of Mississippi.
Just wait. Another few
losses, another season or two without a championship, and the critics
will get louder. Carroll was overrated, they’ll say. He got lucky,
they’ll say. He came along at the same moment as a rare cluster of
once-in-a-lifetime players, they’ll say. He’s lost his Trojan mojo.
Carroll
knows what they’ll say, and when he hears it, when he feels that he’s
losing the players, losing the fans, losing momentum, or just losing,
he might leave. Regardless of the contract extension he signed in 2005,
details of which he declines to discuss, he’s not likely to stay where
he’s not wanted, or where his message is no longer working. “I never
want to coach again when it’s not like this,” he says. “I won’t hang on
for dear life. I love winning so much that I can’t imagine being here
when it’s any other way.”
I could write that, even if he does
leave, he’ll never go back to the NFL, where he was booed and labeled a
failure. “There’s no way,” he says, and Esiason agrees. “I don’t know
if there’s nirvana for Pete Carroll—but I know it’s not in the pros.”
And yet. When I press Carroll, I can’t help feeling that he hedges.
“There’s no franchise, there’s no ownership, there’s no philosophy,” he
says. “The only thing it would give me would be credibility. That
you’re the best in the world.”
14. I STILL DON’T KNOW HOW TO CASUALLY AND SMOOTHLY
INSERT THE OBLIGATORY BIO MATERIAL, WHICH IS WHY I’VE WAITED THIS LONG
He
was born in San Francisco, September 15, 1951, and grew up in nearby
Marin County. A boisterous, happy household, by several accounts. His
father was a liquor wholesaler, his mother “the life of the party,”
Carroll recalls. Dad was “competitive,” Mom was “loving, really kind.”
His mother died in 2000, his father in 2001.
He takes after
them in equal measure, he says, though at least one friend disagrees.
“His mom was really his heart,” says Dave Perron, a buddy who played
college ball with Carroll. “She just lavished so much love and
affection on him that made him feel confident about himself.” His
father wore the gear, the sweatshirts and hats of every team Carroll
ever coached. “Because I got fired and kicked around so much,” Carroll
says, “he had about eight closets full of stuff .” Still, Perron
insists, “his core, his soul, comes from his mother.”
Carroll
attended Redwood High School, where he played three sports. He
continued playing football through college, first at the College of
Marin, then the University of the Pacific, where he transferred in his
junior year. He starred at free safety.
After graduating with
a degree in business administration , he went out for the World
Football League, but an injured shoulder kept him from making the team.
“They might not say it was the shoulder,” he confesses. He
briefly tried his hand at selling roofing materials. He was miserable.
When he got wind of a job opening on the coaching staff at his alma
mater, he pounced on it. The pay was nothing, but he didn’t care. While
studying for his master’s in sports psychology, Carroll worked as a
graduate assistant with the team, coaching the school’s receivers and
pass defenders. At 25 he married Glena, a fellow jock. (Volleyball.)
She was one of the first female athletes to earn an athletic
scholarship from the University of the Pacific. They have two sons and
a daughter.
In 1977, Carroll signed on as a graduate assistant
at the University of Arkansas, under Lou Holtz. He soon advanced to the
level of assistant coach, first at Iowa State, then Ohio State. In
1980, he caught on as defensive coordinator at North Carolina State.
Three years later he returned to Pacific as assistant head coach and
off ensive coordinator.
Carroll broke into the NFL with the
Buffalo Bills, in 1984, coaching the defensive backs. From Buffalo he
moved to Minnesota, coaching backs for Bud Grant’s Vikings. In 1990, he
jumped to the New York Jets, as defensive coordinator, and in 1994,
when he was 43, he became the team’s head coach. He was young for such
a big-time job, and the word wunderkind got hung on him,
sometimes flatteringly, sometimes sarcastically.
The
wunderkind went 6-10 his first year and got fired. Carroll recalls
sitting across from team owner Leon Hess. It felt, Carroll says, as
though he were “staring into the eyes of Satan.” He spent the next two
years with his hometown 49ers, building a ferocious defense. The
playbook was a mess, a mélange of schemes and ideas that went
back
years, he says. No one could tell where anything had come from, who was
the originator of what—like a polygamist’s family album. His ability to
unravel, decipher, and streamline the book won him praise from many in
the organization, including Bill Walsh, his shining hero. (Months after
Walsh’s death, Carroll keeps a Walsh voice mail in his cell phone and
listens to it every time he clicks through his saved messages.)
In
1997, Carroll landed the job of head coach in New England. His first
year was his best. The Patriots won ten games and captured the AFC East
crown. His next two years saw a slight but steady drop-off . Owner
Robert Kraft said publicly that firing Carroll was a tough call, but
David Halberstam, in his bestselling book The Education of a Coach,
says Kraft had grown enamored of Belichick and was eager to shed
Carroll.
Most
often Carroll sloughs off past failures. Now and then, however, his
voice darkens and his tone betrays the residual pain. Over takeout one
night—I devour mine, he picks at his like a supermodel—Carroll says his
time in Boston inoculated him against criticism. “I’ve already been
dead,” he says. “You can’t kill a dead man.”
It was late 2000,
just when he felt he’d recovered from the trauma of New York and New
England, that USC fired its coach. The school had been to only one Rose
Bowl in ten years. Fans were clamoring for a recognizable name with a
sparkling résumé. Carroll knew he was a long shot. School
officials had
a list of three or four candidates, and he wasn’t on it. But to
everyone’s surprise, Carroll aced his on-campus interview with USC
athletic director Mike Garrett. Overnight he was the front-runner.
After
weeks of drama and intense public speculation, Garrett introduced
Carroll as the new coach shortly before Christmas. The announcement was
wildly unpopular with alumni, writers, and fans. “I’m not mad at Pete
Carroll,” wrote Los Angeles Times columnist Bill Plaschke.
“I’m mad at USC for hiring him.”
A
shaky start seemed to validate the anti-Carroll voices. His first
season opened with a big wet thud—two wins, fi ve losses. Although
Carroll believed this was his last chance at coaching, he didn’t panic.
As always, he expected something good to happen, and it did. The
players began to mesh. The three rules took root. From 2001 until the
present, USC has been the nation’s dominant team. At one point the
Trojans owned a streak of 34 straight victories, spread over three
seasons. But it was also the way they won. The 2004 muscling of
Michigan in the Rose Bowl. The 2005 systematic demolition of Oklahoma.
The 2005 “Bush Push” thriller against Notre Dame.
Carroll
takes particular pleasure in the change at Los Angeles Memorial
Coliseum. For those first few months of his tenure, the stadium was
half full. Now every home game brings 92,000 dressed in cardinal and
gold, the kind of hard-core fans who make “Tribute to Troy” the ring
tone on their cell phones, who know what Palmam qui meruit ferat
means, who proudly wear pins that read IN PETE WE TRUST.
15. HE DOESN’T SPEAK ENGLISH
He
speaks in Joycean sentences composed of Xs and Os and arrows. He draws
up elaborate problems—on dry-erase boards, in a code of symbols and
squiggles that might as well be ancient Sumerian—solves them,
reconstructs them, then erases them, and starts again. He turns to his
assistant coaches one night, all of them sitting in high-backed leather
chairs, eating homemade cookies and milk. “How can it be this easy?” he
says, drawing up another play to stymie the next opponent. They dunk
their cookies, laugh. Thousands of these problems take up the neurons
of Carroll’s brain. (There are more than 900 plays in USC’s playbook
alone.) The names of the plays convey their esoteric quality, names
like “Mash Two Trips Right 99 Y- Stick X-Snap” and “Trips Right Z-Short
12 Track F-Seal.” You can’t profile someone unless you speak his
language, and you can’t hope to profile Carroll unless you know the
difference between Amigo Burst and Zombie Right, or the relationship
between the Mike, the Will, and the Sam, or the glorious history of the
Seven Diamond, or why Carroll and his assistants sometimes
spontaneously and simultaneously cry out “Tokyo!” And you can’t
understand such things without years of study.
One afternoon I
watch Carroll enjoy a private eureka moment with his assistant Rocky
Seto. While analyzing data on their next opponent, they realize that
the defense has a tendency to react the same way every time it’s faced
with one situation. Leaping to the dry-erase board, Seto points to a
series of numbers and says, “They run all their spiders from the right
hash!”
You don’t say.
On another occasion Carroll lets
me sit in a corner as his offensive coordinator, Steve Sarkisian,
briefs players about the next defense they face. Everything Sarkisian
says is Top Secret, but Carroll knows I might as well sit in on a U.N.
Security Council session without headphones that provide translation. I
lose the thread—and, briefly, consciousness— somewhere in the middle of
the following Sarkisian speech: “I want to make sure we’re clear when
we’re running seal zone plays and when we’re running our regular zones,
when we’re making slow calls, when we’re running power, and when we’re
blocking with Ds and Cs, and when we’re making slappy calls. Big in
this game, on first and second downs, guys, is our play action passing,
whether it’s off the bootleg pass, 13, 12 boot, A 42, A 43, our Nakeds,
Rose and Lee, and A 26, and A 27…80, 90….”
16. I CAN’T
CONCEIVE ANY EXPLANATION FOR WHY THIS BEAUTIFUL CARROLL ORCHESTRATED
MOMENT WASN’T NATIONAL NEWS, WHICH MAKES ME QUESTION ALL MY JUDGMENTS
ABOUT CARROLL
The first quarter of the first game of
2007. Carroll’s team is preoccupied, heavyhearted, mourning their
beloved placekicker, Mario Danelo, who died in January after falling
from a cliff in San Pedro. (Danelo was drunk, but police still don’t
know why he fell.) The players have honored Danelo with an emotional
pregame ceremony and with a moment of silence before kickoff , but it’s
not enough. After USC scores its first touchdown, Carroll sends just
ten men onto the field to kick the point after. One man is
missing—Danelo.
Slowly the crowd realizes what’s happening.
They see the holder kneeling in an empty backfield—a sort of missing
man formation . Murmurs ripple through the crowd, then a cheer goes up.
It grows louder. The play clock runs down, the refs whistle the play
dead. USC is penalized for delay of game. The ball is moved back five
yards. At last Danelo’s replacement trots onto the field and boots the
ball through the uprights. The symbolic gesture, which perhaps has
given some extra comfort to Danelo’s family, sends chills around the
Coliseum and further cements the bond between coach and players.
17.
I CAN’T EXPLAIN THE AMERICAN FASCINATION WITH FOOTBALL COACHES, A
PREREQUISITE FOR PUTTING CARROLL IN HIS PROPER HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL
CONTEXT
Americans have always felt a deep reverence for
their Lombardis and Halases, their Landrys and Bryants, their Rocknes
and Strams. The American love of coaches goes back 110 years, and it
says something about who we are and where we stand as a culture, the
way we lap up gossip about them, chart their up-and-down careers,
YouTube their tantrums. We thrill to watch them throw clipboards, pound
lecterns, grab face masks , berate writers—so long as they win. Hell,
we love them even if they don’t win, so long as they’re good and crazy.
When Mike Gundy, head coach of Oklahoma State, suffered a public
nervous breakdown in September, when he spent his weekly press
conference bullying a female columnist for something fairly innocent, I
expected him to be hospitalized. Instead he was lionized. Writers and
fans praised Gundy for “backing” his players. Recruitment at Oklahoma
State spiked. Parents wanted to pack up their sons and send them to
live with this lunatic.
Maybe we love coaches because deep
down we long to be coached. Whatever we do, we’d like to do it better,
and we go weak at the knees for the man of passion who vows to kick our
ass until we do our best. Even some of our cultural icons are actually
coaches in disguise. What is Oprah but a coach to tens of millions of
women?
Or maybe some deep, virulent strain of cultural
bellicosity underlies our football coach fetish. We’re a warlike
nation, on a war footing, and if football is our weekend simulacrum of
war, football coaches are our stand-ins for four-star generals—and God
knows we swoon over generals. (More than one in four U.S. presidents
was a former general.) Given our atavistic fondness for field marshals
and chieftains, it’s a wonder more coaches don’t run for high office.
Then again, why would they voluntarily submit to such a drastic cut in
pay and a still sharper decrease in power?
Carroll believes he
knows why we love coaches, why the epic coaches have become American
icons. “They were themselves,” he says. Great coaches, he says
excitedly, know themselves. What about coaches who fail? “They
don’t know themselves,” he says. “So they act in accordance with what
they think they should be acting like, as opposed to finding out who
they are so they can act directly in connection with the essence of who
they are.”
18. CARROLL MIGHT BE GOD, OR THOR, AND EVERYONE KNOWS
THAT NEITHER GOD NOR THOR CAN BE PROFILED
While
coaching the Jets, Carroll got his hands on some strange reading
material, stuff that was really “out there,” he says. He was seeking
the philosophers’ stone, the idea or set of ideas that would help him
reach players and also find meaning in his life. He befriended a blind
woman, a “futurist,” who read crystals in her spare time and
experienced strong visions whenever Carroll was near. “We had kind of a
cool friendship. I was learning about Native American stuff .”
Carroll
stumbled on a concept called “Long Body,” a way the Iroquois thought of
the tribe. One feels pain, all feel pain. One triumphs, all triumph.
Long Body. He began applying this idea to football. “Things were
occurring,” he says. “I didn’t know—I had a meeting with players and
coaches, and I was telling them about this Iroquois concept. Connection
of the tribe. They live together, they hunt together. They become one.
So I’m telling them about this concept—this is really far out—and
I say, ‘As we go through this camp, go through this season, we’re going
to get so close, we’re going to connect in this true fashion. Long
Body. It’s going to take us to places we’ve never been before.’ And at
the end of my talk I say, ‘As we get through it, I’ll explain it more
to you, and I know this to be true so much right now that thunder will
strike—’”
At that moment, Carroll says, he struck a table with his fist and a
clap of thunder shook the building.
His coaches, he says, turned white.
I turn a little pale myself.
“At bed check,” he says, laughing, “I found guys curled up, reading
their Bibles.”
As
with many gods, and most holy men, Carroll endured the archetypal Time
of Suffering, followed by the mandatory Period of Exile, then the
classic Journey Through the Wilderness, culminating with the
all-changing Epiphany. It happened this way. After being fired by New
England, Carroll retreated to his office in Massachusetts, to read and
reflect. He thought his coaching career might be over. That is, he did
and he didn’t. He still believed, deep down, something good was about
to happen. He still believed he was a winner who simply hadn’t won yet.
John Wooden told him so. Carroll read one of the UCLA basketball
coach’s books and learned that the man who won ten national
championships in 12 years didn’t win any in the first 16 years of his
career. His dry spell gave Carroll comfort.
During his exile,
Carroll also tried his hand at a column for the NFL’s Web site.
Something about the discipline of writing every day made him look
inward, a thousand miles inward. A logjam loosened; the universe got
clearer. Eventually it all came pouring out, his principles, his
beliefs. He wrote and wrote, page after page, caught in the grip of
inspiration. He laid out the Carroll Doctrine, a battle plan, a battle
cry, a manifesto, stressing the value of Fun, Competition, and Practice
in helping athletes “self-actualize.” In other words, know themselves.
An athlete who knows himself, Carroll says, is unstoppable. The Soul is
the Zone that every athlete must strive to enter. Before a big game,
Carroll is likely to remind his players to be themselves. “Be who we
are. Don’t make shit up, ever!” He says this to his men before their
game against Nebraska, a street fight in which they put 49 points on a
stunned Husker team that thought it had improved.
I ask Carroll if I can read this manifesto. Carroll says he has no idea
where it is. He might not have written it, per se.
What?
It
might have been a dream, he says. What matters is that he woke one day
and knew himself. He had himself down cold. He was ready to go forth.
He was ready to win.
19. TO WRITE A PROFILE THAT’S
ACCURATE, I’D BE OBLIGATED TO DESCRIBE A BIZARRE AND HUMILIATING
CONTEST OF WILLS BETWEEN THE COACH AND ME
Carroll is
part camel. It’s the only explanation. After a morning of meetings,
followed by a speech to a booster group, we return to campus. It’s
unseasonably warm. I fantasize about a dozen glasses of cool water
lined up before me. Looking at my watch, I calculate 18 hours since
he’s ingested any type of liquid. I couldn’t be more parched if I were
trailing around after T.E. Lawrence. I mention my ravenous, desperate
thirst to Carroll. He sighs, guides me to a minifridge in the assistant
coaches’ locker room, grabs me a cold Gatorade. My mouth waters as I
start to unscrew the cap.
Aren’t you going to have one? I ask.
Nah.
Really?
I hesitate.
Well, I say, I’m not having one until you do. I set down the Gatorade.
He
warns me not to make it a competition. If I make it a competition,
he’ll die before he takes another drink. (Later he explains it this
way: “What I am is a competitor. That’s what I am. My whole life,
everything I can ever remember, I’ve been competitive—competitive for
friendships, competitive for love, competitive for sports, competitive
for heroship, competitive for everything and battling for everything.
When I throw my gum away, I’m trying to land it on the line.”) Clearly
I don’t want to get into a thirst-off with this man. Nothing good can
come of that. I take a sip of Gatorade. The cool orange flavor runs
down the back of my throat, and I almost weep with pleasure.
That night I get a text message. I don’t recognize the number. But it
doesn’t take long to fi gure out who it’s from.
still haven’t had anything to drink.
20.
I COULDN’T FIGURE OUT HOW TO WORK THIS IMAGE INTO THE TOP OF A PROFILE,
SO I COULD RETURN TO IT LATER, ESTABLISHING IT AS AN EVOCATIVE SYMBOL
OF CARROLL’S ETHOS
He loves music. The computer in his
office is always playing something, usually his favorite radio station,
KFOG, in San Francisco. He lives from song to song—John Legend, Stevie
Wonder, the Grateful Dead—so it’s perfect that Heritage Hall sits 20
feet from USC’s music school. Whenever Carroll walks to or from
practice he passes through a wall of music.
Not music,
actually, but scales, exercises. Students sit outside at all hours,
rehearsing on their cellos and oboes and French horns. They unwittingly
provide a sense of perpetual overture and underscore a central tenet of
Carroll’s coaching—practice, practice, practice.
“One thing
I’ve learned, which I was taught a long time ago but didn’t grasp at
the time, is the power of practice,” Carroll says. “The discipline that
comes from practice, that allows you to transcend the early stages of
learning and take you to a point where you’re freefl oating and totally
improvising. Through the discipline, the repetition, you become free.”
21. HE ALREADY HAS HIS OWN PERSONAL BOSWELL PROFILING HIM
MINUTE-TO-MINUTE
Ben
Malcolmson, a 22-year-old former player, sits at a tiny Bob Cratchit
desk outside Carroll’s office, ready to drop everything and follow
Carroll to the next talk, practice, team meeting. Malcolmson takes
careful note of everything Carroll says, then blogs it instantly, with
photos, on his popular Web site, uscripsit. com, which he launched
earlier this year with Carroll’s help. Thousands of people visit the
site every day.
It’s an experiment few coaches would be open
enough to permit, and it’s a life-changing adventure for Malcolmson,
who might be the most ardent Carroll fan of them all. “I’ve learned a
lot from him about eliminating all negatives,” Malcolmson says. “That’s
something that’s going to stick with me the rest of my life.”
Malcolmson
recalls last season, when USC lost to Oregon State, the team’s first
regular season loss in three years. No one knew what to do, what to
feel. Everyone looked to Carroll to tell them, to guide them through
the pain: “I was thinking—I can’t wait to get [there] Monday, to know
how to feel.”
22. AT SOME POINT, I LOST THE CAPACITY FOR CYNICISM
Carroll
is standing in Salon E at the Omaha Marriott, the night before the
Nebraska game, when he spots 14-year-old Ryan Davidson. (A USC alum
introduced them four years ago.) Carroll hugs Ryan, asks how he’s
feeling, then invites him to sit up front with the offensive linemen
while Carroll addresses the team.
Davidson looks painfully
small, wedged between linemen who outweigh him by 200 pounds. But they
all pat him on the back, talk with him, go out of their way to make him
feel welcome. He beams. He radiates joy.
This is precisely why
Ryan’s father, Kirby, brought the boy here, all the way from their home
in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. Ryan is due to have surgery in four days,
Kirby says. Doctors will remove two new tumors on his brain, a third
recurrence of the brain cancer first diagnosed when he was six. “We
found out two months ago it had come back,” Kirby says.
Carroll
bounds to the front of the room. Before talking about tomorrow’s game,
before giving the team its last-minute instructions, he asks them to
welcome their honored guest. The players give Ryan a thunderous
ovation, which can be heard down the hall and out in the lobby.
At
the game, Ryan and Kirby are Carroll’s guests on the USC sideline. They
watch alongside Will Ferrell and Keanu Reeves. During the postgame
press conference, they try to stay out of the way, but again Carroll
spots Ryan.
Hey, Carroll says. Come up here, Ryan. I need you up here with me.
While
answering questions, Carroll wraps an arm around Ryan. “He was up there
with Coach a good ten minutes,” Kirby says later. “Anybody I’ve shown
that videotape to—you can just tell the feeling Coach Carroll has for
Ryan. He held on to him really tight and never let go.”
23. MY REACTION TO THE STANFORD DEFEAT MAY DISQUALIFY ME
AS AN OBJECTIVE OBSERVER, EVEN MORE THAN MY ACCEPTANCE OF A FREE SHIRT
Seated
next to me at the black-tie event is a USC student. He takes a call on
his cell phone, then closes it and turns to me. USC lost, he says.
No, I say. Impossible.
My friend just called me, the young man insists. Final score—Stanford
24, USC 23.
We both stare at the floor. The first home loss in 35 games? To a
41-point underdog?
I’m surprised by how the news affects me.
The
next day I watch clips of Carroll’s press conference. He calls the loss
“crushing.” I blanch. That’s not the Carroll I know. That’s not a word
I’ve ever heard him use. If Carroll is crushed, I’m further than ever
from understanding him. More important, if Carroll is crushed, we’re
all in trouble. If Carroll is crushed, if his ideas about Fun,
Competition, and Practice can be swept away by one loss, what chance do
the rest of us have to connect with our inner Carroll, to coach
ourselves, to inspire ourselves, to go forth and win?
I drop by
Heritage Hall weeks later. Middle of the night. I find Carroll huddled
in the war room, watching film with his assistants. He gives me a big
smile and seems to be in better spirits. His players are getting
healthy, and they’ve just delivered a mega-statement in South Bend,
skunking Notre Dame, 38-0, for the first time since 1933.
He
takes me into his office, asks me how the profile’s coming. I tell him
that I decided I couldn’t write a profile of him, so I wrote about all
the reasons why I couldn’t. He laughs—as if he’s won something. Which
makes me laugh.
He asks when we saw each other last. Before
Stanford, I remind him. His face changes. No more laughter. No more
smile. Stanford. Not even the trace of a smile. Stanford. He starts
replaying the game for me, describing the interceptions, the fatal
miscues, the wrongheaded decisions. Stanford. He reaches for a black
baseball bat and tests its weight, swings it hard at a phantom fastball
as he recounts the final harrowing plays. The fourth-down conversion.
The stomach-churning touchdown.
I was so pissed off , he says. I’m still pissed off . I’ll always be
pissed off.
Really?
Well—he smiles. I want to feel pissed off . I harvest that pissed-off
feeling.
He
talks excitedly about the next opponents, the remaining schedule. The
smile grows. The bat slices quicker through the air. He lists the
things that are about to start falling into place, the good things that
are about to happen. I lean back. I listen. I smile.
I don’t know if I believe. But, hard as I try, I can’t think of a
single reason not to.
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