Pete Carroll confused by Mychal Kendricks suspension

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The Seahawks signed linebacker Mychal Kendricks knowing that he would be facing punishment for his guilty plea to federal insider trading charges. But with Kendricks suspended indefinitely pending a more definite punishment at some point down the road, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll is justifiably confused.

“How do you define indefinitely?” Carroll said to reporters on Wednesday. “I don’t know. We pressed that. What does that mean? It means indefinitely. We don’t have a sense for what’s going to happen right now and they couldn’t give us any, so we know nothing moving forward.

“A month ago, or when we signed him up, we thought that there would be a time when there would be somewhat of a length of the suspension that wasn’t indefinite. I don’t know what that means. We thought it was going to be two, three weeks or something like that. I don’t know what’s happening now with that.”

It appears that the NFL would like to use its prerogative to suspend Kendricks indefinitely to justify delaying a final decision until Kendricks is sentenced in January. But that would result in Kendricks missing at least 12 games, twice the baseline suspension for crimes of violence, like domestic assault.

33 responses to “Pete Carroll confused by Mychal Kendricks suspension

  1. Appealed and denied means he is gone until the NFL lets him back. How a white collar crime can be treated more harsh than a DV charge is beyond understanding?

  2. C’mon Pete. You coached in college. Indefinite suspension means the game after the home opener against Northwest Central Tech A&M.

  3. You were naive to expect the league to make any damn sense regarding punishment. That’s what happens when owners prop up a commissioner who is entirely lost and tone-deaf. A child could run this league better.

  4. To quote Bugs Bunny… what a maroon! First, being a ski patrol supervisor and dolphin trainer, he should be smart enough to know the definition of indefinite. Secondly, the league has used the exempt list in the past to suspend players who haven’t been found guilty of a crime… he should have known what he was getting into.

    But, he also knew nothing of his USC sanctions before he “quit”.

  5. Until they say the suspension is over! How more clear than can they make it? Are you senile? Maybe it’s time for you to retire too!

  6. Why not just let him play out the season. He’s likely going to jail in Jan. so the NFL will have plenty of time to decide his punishment after that.

  7. C’mon man, it’s the Seahawks. Of course they’re going to bring the hammer down. How many rule changes have they made since Seattle’s defense started dominating under Carroll’s coaching? Small market teams cannot be allowed to win over the big market money makers (SB 40). Plain and simple. This doesn’t surprise me one bit.

  8. per the NFL’s Arbitrary Rulebook “indefinite suspension” for white collar crime means “until we feel the public forgets most of us could be charged with the same crime”

  9. “We thought it was going to be two, three weeks or something like that.”

    Seriously dude?! You didn’t think for a second that just maybe, possibly, potentially this situation could be a lot messier than that?

  10. Roger Godell must have video of him violently carried out the insider trading. If not, it would have been only a 2 game suspension.

    Insider trading gets you an indefinite suspension in the NFL but Ray Lewis parlayed murder all the way to the Hall of Fame. …

  11. Anybody want to take shots at Pete for some reason immediately turning around and signing him when they had just found out he’d be doing hard federal time??? That’s kinda dumb.

  12. tdubdizzle
    Oct 3, 2018, 8:42 PM EDT
    The NFL claims they are a non profit. Thus is weird.
    —————

    They gave this non-profit status up in 2015.

  13. What ever happened to “NOT GUILTY, UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY”?
    So he pleaded guilty, to what extent ? He could just get the minor sentence , depending on his role.
    But the NFL “No Fun League” ….[cough goodell] ,has there own set of rules it’s called ..
    they change with EVERY PLAYER,EVERY TEAM, DEPENDING ON HOW I FEEL AT THE MOMENT.

    Let the man play ball till he is sentenced , not like the seahawks will be in the playoffs anyways

  14. Pete Carroll is a turd. The only reason Kendricks was even on his team was because another team cut him in the face of the charges and the Seahawks lacked the scruples to care about playing a guy who was facing potential prison time. He knew this was likely when Kendricks was signed and shouldn’t pretend otherwise now.

  15. bigdogsolec
    —————-
    He is guilty of a federal crime, and plead guilty to it, and will likely be sentenced to prison for it… this is far different than someone who is innocent until proven guilty like Elliott, Gordon, etc, etc, etc…

  16. LOL!
    All of you pointing out whether Carroll understands the definition of indefinite…well you must know he’s just trolling the league standards regarding domestic violence vs. any non-violent crime, right?

  17. But that would result in Kendricks missing at least 12 games, twice the baseline suspension for crimes of violence, like domestic assault.

    You make it seem like insider trading is a minor thing, even though a lot of victims lose everything they own.

  18. redsoxu571 says:
    October 3, 2018 at 11:17 pm
    Pete Carroll is a turd. The only reason Kendricks was even on his team was because another team cut him in the face of the charges and the Seahawks lacked the scruples to care about playing a guy who was facing potential prison time. He knew this was likely when Kendricks was signed and shouldn’t pretend otherwise now
    ______________________________________________________________________

    The team that cut him, the Browns new he faced these charged when they signed him. They cut him because the Browns owner’s business is facing Fraud charges for similar white collar crimes. Don’t kid yourself that the browns are some upstanding organization.

  19. patsaredone says:
    October 4, 2018 at 5:16 am
    But that would result in Kendricks missing at least 12 games, twice the baseline suspension for crimes of violence, like domestic assault.

    You make it seem like insider trading is a minor thing, even though a lot of victims lose everything they own.
    _______________________________

    The only victims from insider trading are potential investors who did not have the same advantage to invest. Kendricks received information from an investment banker when corporate mergers were about to happen. He would buy stock in one of the merging companies, then sell it for a profit on the open market. The people who bought the stock, were going to pay the price they paid regardless of Kendricks selling it. Its not a ponzi scheme or something where he stole directly from people. I bet he gets 1 year or less in a minimum security white collar crime prison.

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