Pete Carroll says it’s “all but impossible” for Nate Robinson to return to football

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The Seahawks recently gave former NBA player Nate Robinson a tryout. That appears to be the limit of the team’s interest in him, at least for now if not for good.

“I think it is all but impossible,” coach Pete Carroll told reporters on Tuesday regarding Robinson’s chances to make it in the NFL. “It is as hard as you can possibly get. He is 32 as well, I don’t know if anyone could do it, but if anyone could it might be Nate. He is a versatile athlete and a great competitor.”

Carroll nevertheless praised Robinson’s tryout, explaining that “[h]e looked really quick, caught the ball really well and he is an amazing athlete.”

If Robinson had opted for football over basketball, Carroll seems to think Robinson could have made it in pro football.

“He could play on both sides of the football back in the college days,” Carroll said. “There is no telling what kind of athlete he could have been at the position, whether he was a receiver or DB. I think he would have done both, but he is such a phenomenal basketball player he had to go that way and his heart was really there. Football was kind of his first sport he would tell you, but obviously basketball was a great avenue for him to follow.”

Carroll added that Robinson wants to “investigate his options” as he decides what’s next for his basketball career, whether that comes in the NBA or  in another basketball league. If he chooses to further investigate the football option, Carroll thinks Robinson has “a lot of work to do.”

With an abundance of players a lot younger than Robinson who’ve already put in the work, it’s hard to imagine Carroll or any other team giving Robinson the option of playing on an NFL team.

18 responses to “Pete Carroll says it’s “all but impossible” for Nate Robinson to return to football

  1. Isn’t that just a nice way of saying he wasn’t that good. If he came in and played lights out and coaches thought he could contribute more over someone else wouldn’t they sign him. If he came in running a 4.25/40 and could run routes and catch a ball they’d be all over him.

  2. “nobody has lost more playoff games than Pete the cheat! nobody!”

    Actually I believe the Peyton Manning led Colts lost more than Carroll’s collective playoff losses. And if Pete has more the Colts are probably 2nd.

  3. What reality do you get your stats on Pete Carroll losing playoff games. The guy is a winner on on levels of football.

    The headline is misleading. Carroll is never negative – he was asked what are the chances of someone making NFL after 10 years away, he said its near impossible but if anyone could Nate Robinson would be the guy.

  4. thebirdofprey says:
    Jun 15, 2016 9:44 AM

    The headline is misleading. Carroll is never negative – he was asked what are the chances of someone making NFL after 10 years away, he said its near impossible but if anyone could Nate Robinson would be the guy.
    —————————

    The headline quoted Pete Carroll. Can’t get any less misleading than that. He also said that Nate Robinson “might” be the guy.

  5. Nate is a legend in the Seattle area. I think they gave him a try out just on his reputation alone. That said, we see quite a few athletically gifted players that have played only small amounts of football every year. Most don’t make it. The fundamentals of pro football are not something you pick up over the summer, or something that comes back to you after 10 years. These guys that are competing are training 50 weeks a year. They watch film all through the off season. If you want their job, you have to come ready to rock.

  6. PC will never approach the Vikes’ post-season losses, so I wouldn’t get too upset over it.

  7. “nobody has lost more playoff games than Pete”

    Pete Carroll’s NFL play-off record is 9-6. Those 6 losses don’t even put him in the top 20 of play-off losers.

  8. Why are people citing “playoff losses” as a metric for how bad a coach is? That is idiotic. The best coaches get to the playoffs every year. Winning the Super Bowl even once is a daunting task, so those guys lose a lot. And the good ones have jobs forever, so they keep going back and often losing. Bill Belichick has 10 more playoff losses than Marc Trestman because Trestman had two bad seasons in which he didn’t even make the playoffs, and will not (or should not) be a head coach again. Belichick is likely looking at four or five more playoff losses before he is done.

    The coaches with the most playoff losses, in order: Don Shula, Tom Landry, Marty Schottenheimer, Mike Holmgren, Andy Reid, Chuck Knox, Bill Belichick, Tony Dungy, Bill Cowher, Dan Reeves, Chuck Noll, Bill Parcells, Marv Levy, Paul Brown, and then, amusingly, Dennis Green.

    Yeah, those guys all stink.

  9. I trust Carroll on player evaluations. Hes got total control of everything in Seattle and he turned that team around big time. If he doesnt think Robinson can play, he probably can’t. He wouldnt be a star anyways if he could. Think of all the track stars that come to the NFL and dont do anything, they are fast and try to play special teams but are pretty much worthless when they cant block or tackle. Being fast is great, it takes alot more to succeed against guys who can slow you down.

  10. ariani1985 says:
    Jun 15, 2016 9:33 AM
    nobody has lost more playoff games than Pete the cheat! nobody!
    ___________________

    nobody posts more false stuff here. nobody

  11. “It is as hard as you can possibly get. He is 32 as well, I don’t know if anyone could do it.”

    Jerry Rice was 42 when he joined the Seahawks, during which he set a career NFL record for combined net yards on MNF against the Cowboys. He finished that game with 8 catches for 145 yards and a TD.

    Granted, nobody can compare to Jerry F. Rice, but we know somebody has done it…

  12. too bad….the guy was a d-bag with the Fuskies, would have been nice to torch him twice a year.

  13. Pete did the guy a solid for his history with the city and with UW. But the Hawks employ DBs over 6′. He didn’t have a chance in Seattle. Hell of a competitor and basketball player, though. Hopefully there’s a team that’ll invite him to camp.

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