BREAKING from Adam Schefter — Pete Carroll Is One and Done with the Las Vegas Raiders
It ended faster than anyone expected. One season. One gamble. And now, one quiet exit.
According to Adam Schefter, Pete Carroll’s time as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders is officially over. No dramatic press conference. No fiery confrontation. Just a decision made behind closed doors—leaving behind questions, disappointment, and a lingering sense of what could have been.
When Pete Carroll arrived in Las Vegas, hope followed him. Not the loud, reckless kind—but the cautious hope that comes when a proven leader walks into a broken room. A Super Bowl–winning coach. A culture builder. A man known for energy, optimism, and belief. Raider Nation wanted to believe that this was the start of something new.

For a moment, it felt possible.
Carroll talked about accountability. About reconnecting the locker room. About restoring pride to the silver and black. Fans listened. Players bought in. The expectations weren’t small—but they were real.
And yet, the season unraveled.
Losses stacked up. Close games slipped away. Confidence wavered. The identity Carroll promised never fully took shape. Each press conference felt heavier than the last. Each Sunday carried more pressure. The Raiders weren’t just losing games—they were losing time.
Behind the scenes, sources say Carroll felt it deeply.
Those close to the team describe a coach who stayed late, replaying moments over and over. A coach who refused to blame players publicly. A coach who shouldered the responsibility, even when the answers weren’t clear. Pete Carroll had always preached belief—but this time, belief wasn’t enough.
When the decision was made, Carroll didn’t fight it.
Instead, he spoke.
In a private moment, away from cameras and headlines, Pete addressed the people who mattered most to him: the fans who trusted him.
“I know what you expected when I came here,” Carroll said, his voice noticeably strained. “And I know I didn’t give you the season you deserved.”

Those words weren’t prepared. They weren’t polished. They came from a place of disappointment—his own.
“I’m sorry,” he continued. “Not because we didn’t try—but because trying isn’t what this organization is about. Results matter here. And I didn’t deliver them.”
It was a rare moment of vulnerability from a coach who built his career on confidence and positivity.
Carroll spoke about the players—young men who fought through criticism, injuries, and constant noise. He spoke about the city of Las Vegas, about how he felt the passion of Raider Nation from the moment he arrived. And then, quietly, he admitted what hurt the most.
“I truly believed we were closer than it looked,” he said. “That’s the part that stays with me.”
There was no bitterness. No excuses. Just acceptance.
For the Raiders, this chapter closes as quickly as it began. One season that will be remembered not for triumph, but for uncertainty. A reminder that pedigree doesn’t guarantee success—and that rebuilding is rarely linear.
For Pete Carroll, this ending feels different from the rest.

This wasn’t a long fall. It was a sudden stop.
At this stage in his career, every opportunity carries more weight. Every decision feels more final. Carroll knows that. Those around him say he hasn’t talked about retirement—but he hasn’t talked about the future either.
Right now, he’s sitting with the loss.
One season. One chance to change a franchise. One goodbye that came before the story could fully unfold.
Raider Nation is left with mixed emotions. Some feel disappointed. Some feel angry. Others feel sympathy for a coach who never stopped believing, even when the results said otherwise.
But everyone agrees on one thing: this wasn’t how it was supposed to end.
As the news continues to ripple through the league, Pete Carroll’s final words to Las Vegas echo louder than the headlines:
“I’ll always respect this organization. I’ll always respect the fans. And I’ll always wish I had more time to make it right.”
Sometimes, in the NFL, time is the only thing you never get back.




