Tom Brady has appointed Pete Carroll as the head coach of Las Vegas Raiders.
The 73-year-old has signed a three-year deal with an option for a fourth season, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
Brady was reportedly eager to appoint former Detroit Lions head coach Ben Johnson to the role, but Johnson eventually chose to take over at the Chicago Bears instead.
Carroll has had a year out of coaching in the NFL after departing his role at the Seattle Seahawks but had been working as an advisor at the franchise.
Carroll won the 2013 Super Bowl with the Seahawks – they beat the Denver Broncos 43-8 at MetLife Stadium.
He inherits a team that endured an awful season under his predecessor Antonio Pierce, who was fired by Brady after a 4-13 season in Vegas.
Carroll and his new team have the sixth pick in the NFL Draft and a lot of work to do to rebuild the roster – with immediate questions over who his quarterback will be.
Carroll will help decide who the Raiders take with that pick with John Spytek, who left his role as assistant general manager at Tampa Bay Buccaneers to be the new Raiders GM this week.
Spytek, 44, replaces Tom Telesco, who was fired after just one year along with coach Antonio Pierce.
Brady, a Raiders minority owner, finished his playing career as the Bucs quarterback and is said to have overseen that appointment as well.
He and Spytek were college teammates at Michigan.
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