The Day

Belichick, Carroll meet as Patriots visit Hawks

- By TIM BOOTH AP Sports Writer

Seattle — When Bill Belichick replaced Pete Carroll as head coach in New England 20 years ago, neither could have guessed two decades later they'd be viewed as two of the better coaches during that span.

Yet here they are, leading their teams into tonight's matchup between Belichick's Patriots and Carroll's Seattle Seahawks. It's a primetime showcase featuring two of the league's premier franchises, directed by two of the league's most respected coaches.

“You can't sustain this long and be consistent and win a lot of games for this long unless you got your act together, your game, how you play this game, how it works and all,” Carroll said.

“Neither one of us are fly-by-night guys. There's a real fundamenta­l connection that we were raised right by the people we grew up under. But I do think also it's a lot easier to stay with it when you win. It's hard if you get your butt kicked week in, week out. Hard to hold onto your jobs and these opportunit­ies.”

They may be separated by 3,000 miles and have met in the regular season just twice since Carroll returned to the NFL in 2010. But the admiration is obvious for what each has accomplish­ed in their tenures with their current teams.

And while that admiration was clear when their teams met in the Super Bowl nearly six years ago, it seems to have only grown since.

“You're just trying to do a good job in the situation that you're in. The fact that we're still coaching and our paths are still crossing, I guess we've done pretty well or somebody would have replaced us,” Belichick said. “I have a ton of respect for all that Pete's accomplish­ed, both at Seattle, USC, and other places in his career as well.”

Sunday's matchup between the 69-year-old Carroll and 68-year-old Belichick will bring together the two oldest coaches currently in the NFL and teams both seeking 2-0 starts after each had impressive debuts in Week 1. Seattle rode the arm of Russell Wilson in one of his best career games, throwing for 322 yards and

four touchdowns in a 38-25 romp over Atlanta.

New England leaned on the legs of Cam Newton and a refreshed run game in a 21-11 win over Miami.

“Everybody's talking about me and Cam. I'm thinking about coach Carroll and coach Belichick,” Wilson said. “Two of the oldest guys in the game 69 and 68. That's the interestin­g matchup here.”

Mixing it up

It was no secret the Patriots would run the ball more from the quarterbac­k position this season with Newton taking over for Tom Brady.

That was the case in their Week 1 win over Miami as Newton racked up 15 carries and a team-high 75 yards rushing. But offensive coordinato­r Josh McDaniels hinted the Patriots could vary their game plan against a Seahawks defense that presents a much different look.

“I know we did some things that we really haven't done much of around here for a long time, or maybe ever,” McDaniels said. “We're going to be in the same boat that we always are, which is we try to adjust appropriat­ely, (and) change week to week based on what we think gives us the best chance to have success.”

Sound of silence

One of the loudest venues in the NFL will be silent for Seattle's home opener. No fans will be allowed in CenturyLin­k Field for at least the first three home games for the Seahawks. For a fan base that in the past has created seismic activity inside the stadium, it's a significan­t absence for the home team.

Heavy heart

For the second time in his career, Belichick will be coaching a football game just days after the death of a parent.

Belichick's mother, Jeannette Belichick, died Monday of natural causes in Annapolis, Maryland. His father, Steve Belichick, died in 2005 two days before New England hosted New Orleans. The Patriots won that game, 24-17.

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