Saturday, February 14, 2009

Radiohead impress at the Grammys with USC marching band

Radiohead gave their first-ever Grammy Awards performance backed by University of Southern California (USC)'s renowned marching band at the ceremony held in Los Angeles tonight (February 8).

The band, which won the Grammy for Alternative Music Album, delivered a rousing rendition of '15 Step' - one of the evening's highlights. They were introduced by actress Gwyneth Paltrow, who called them "utterly brilliant".

Earlier in the evening, Sir Paul McCartney performed The Beatles' tune 'Saw Her Standing There' with Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl on drums. Before Radiohead took the stage, McCartney told reporters backstage: "I like Radiohead a lot. I think they're really good. I'm looking forward to seeing them with a the USC marching band tonight."


Friday, February 13, 2009

Carroll's new USC assistants are the best recruits

Scott Wolf LA Daily News

USC compiled another top-five recruiting class this week, but that will not affect the Trojans nearly as much next season as the revamped coaching staff put together by head coach Pete Carroll.

Carroll hired new offensive and defensive coordinators following the departures of Steve Sarkisian and Nick Holt, and also significantly improved the defensive staff. His first choice to replace Sarkisian was former USC assistant Carl Smith, who never worked a day for the Trojans because he was soon hired as an assistant by the Cleveland Browns.

But that turned out to be good luck for the Trojans, because Smith earned mixed marks from players in his one-year stint in 2004, and Carroll responded by hiring former Denver Broncos playcaller Jeremy Bates, who came with the blessing of Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler. Bates could not be less impressive than Smith, so that's an upgrade in itself.

Carroll's new defensive coordinator, Rocky Seto, is also a step forward and more of a team player than his predecessor, Holt.

But first some background surrounding Sarkisian's and Holt's departures.

When Sarkisian took the Washington job, he almost immediately demonstrated how few coaching contacts he had by trying to hire everyone from USC. His recruiting knowledge also appeared limited, with his main strategy consisting of trying to steal some of USC's committed recruits.

Now it should be said that stealing from your friends is known as "competing," in Carroll's book, but there is also a limit. Carroll did not mind that Ed Orgeron tried to hire Sarkisian and Lane Kiffin when Orgeron became the head coach at Mississippi four years ago. But maybe Carroll was OK with it because he knew he would win those battles.

When Holt bolted for Washington last month, it showed a lack of loyalty because Carroll gave him a plum job and salary as USC's defensive coordinator after he was fired as Idaho's head coach. It also did not earn Holt any bonus points that he initially turned Sarkisian down in early December and then changed his mind after the Rose Bowl.

Holt recently called USC and requested some films of USC games. Carroll promptly denied his request. A small incident like that speaks volumes about the relationship.

Sarkisian's exit from USC was better. After all, Carroll championed his protege getting a promotion. But once Sarkisian tried to get USC recruits James Boyd and Simione Vehikite to come to Washington, the game changed.

The USC-Washington game in September will be interesting even if the Trojans rout the Huskies because frayed feelings will make the postgame handshake worth covering.

But back to the new defensive staff. It's not only better, it's in sync.

With Seto doing the game-planning and linebackers coach Ken Norton Jr. doing the yelling, the defensive staff will always be on the same page. That was not the case the past three seasons under Holt.

Seto, having worked under Carroll for the past eight seasons, will not be rankled by the thought of his boss calling the defensive plays. That bothered Holt immensely.

What people forget is that Holt actually called the defensive plays at the outset of the 2006 season before Carroll took over after a few games.

The hiring of defensive line coach Jethro Franklin is another improvement. Franklin is respected by other coaches and was extremely popular with the defensive linemen in his previous stint at USC in 2004. He is also a friend of the father of big-time recruit Devon Kennard, rated the top prep defensive end in the nation. Kennard signed with USC on Wednesday.

The offensive moves will take more time to analyze completely. Bates made his reputation off the loyal admiration of Cutler.

"Some of the things he did were amazing to watch," Cutler said. "He was always watching other teams and coming up with new ideas for our offense."

A word of warning: Sometimes NFL coaches find bringing their ideas to college football difficult. Neither Paul Hackett nor Karl Dorrell ever seemed to make the West Coast offense work in college.

However, Bates is not being asked to create a system. He is being asked to adapt to USC's system. So far, the feeling around USC is that while his personality might be a bit awkward off the field, he does have great coaching skills and relates to players on the field.

Carroll also upgraded the staff by hiring a special teams coach. It doesn't really matter how good or bad Brian Schneider was with the Raiders. He is a special teams coach, which USC has lacked since its last national title.

Perhaps Carroll realized how important special teams will be next season after star quarterback Mark Sanchez went against his wishes and turned pro. The Trojans, who break in a new kicker and punter next season, will not be expected to overwhelm teams offensively, at least not early in the season. Maybe Schneider can teach Joe McKnight not to fumble the ball on punt returns.

The Mark Sanchez interview

Michael Lev OCRegister.com

Four weeks after Mark Sanchez’s emotional and awkward departure from USC, we had a chance to catch up with the soon-to-be-pro quarterback as he prepared for next week’s NFL scouting combine.

(Photo by Jebb Harris, The Orange County Register)

(Photo by Jebb Harris, The Orange County Register)

It was his first extended interview since announcing Jan. 15 that he would enter the 2009 draft.

While munching on grapes between workouts at the Velocity Sports Performance training center in Irvine, the typically upbeat Sanchez talked about the aftermath of that strange news conference, his relationship with Pete Carroll, his combine preparation and a host of other subjects.

Here’s Part 1 of 3 of our conversation:

Q: Were you surprised how the press conference took on a life of its own in the media after it was over?

Sanchez: I don’t think anybody expected it. I don’t know if Coach expected that. I definitely didn’t. But it was one of those situations where the media kind of took things and made a real negative spin on it. While I absolutely respect Coach’s opinion, I have to go with my own gut and my own feeling. It’s a deeply personal decision. I think he understood that.

The biggest point I can impress on anybody is how supportive he’s been since. It’s just one of those things that came out and looked more negative than it really was. I’m the biggest Coach Carroll supporter there is. He’s been great to me. I wouldn’t be in this position without him. I didn’t take it negatively at all. We moved on instantly. I talked to him hours after the press conference. I was just like, “Man, I think this thing’s blown up more than I think it really should. It’s not that big of a deal.” While we might have disagreed on one opinion, one decision, I love everything about the program and him.

Q: Do you wish you had done anything differently? You specifically waited for him to come back from vacation.

Sanchez: No, not at all. I wanted him to be there. I wanted to do it in the most respectful way. I think that’s what I did. I think Coach just expressed one feeling. I think a lot of that was just his competitive nature coming out. I took that as a form of respect. He wants me on his team. That’s a very good coach, asking me to come back. That was something in itself. And I don’t think a lot of people thought of it that way.

Q: So it hasn’t affected your relationship with him at all?

Sanchez: No. Absolutely not. I’m going to be one of the first guys back to practice, watching games, calling him and texting him and asking him how everything’s going.

Q: Even though you knew he disagreed with you, did anything about the way it unfolded surprise you? For example, Pete not sitting down for the Q&A.

Sanchez: No, that was just the way things played out. I don’t think it was anything he planned or I planned. It’s just the way it happened. I took it in stride. We’re both great (now). I’m happy.

Q: Have you had any second thoughts about the decision itself?

Sanchez: Not at all. Never. I feel real good (about it).

Q: But you do miss USC, your teammates, that environment.

Sanchez: I made that clear in the press conference. Regardless of what my decision’s going to be, my heart’s going to be at this university. I love every part of it, the school, the football. It’s been everything I could have dreamed of and more. I just feel like this is my best chance to move on. I’ve been in school for four years. I’ve accomplished quite a bit on the field. My experience, while some people might say (it’s) inexperience, I’ve played against the best competition every day in practice, with the best coaches, pro schemes, pro defensive schemes. There ain’t any better experience out there.

Four weeks after Mark Sanchez’s emotional and awkward departure from USC, we had a chance to catch up with the soon-to-be-pro quarterback as he prepared for next week’s NFL scouting combine.

Here’s Part 2 of 3 of our conversation at the Velocity Sports Performance training center in Irvine:

Q: What areas are you focused on the most in your workouts and preparation?

Sanchez: They haven’t been targeting anything that they felt was a weakness. They just wanted to sharpen everything up and fine-tune everything. After a long season, you get into a routine of light workouts. This puts a little tone on your body. My quickness is good. My speed’s been good. The velocity on the ball feels great. I’ve never thrown the ball better.

Q: Your trainer said they’re working on your balance, your hips and your core.

Sanchez: Absolutely. All that stuff falls to the wayside during the season. You just don’t have the hours in the day; you’re trying to get ready, to game-plan and all that.

Q: Do you plan to do everything at the combine?

Sanchez: I’m training to do that. But whatever they think is best, my agents and everyone involved. I’m working out do everything. So we’ll see.

Q: Your knee hasn’t been an issue?

Sanchez: Not at all. It’s strong. We knew it was healed right when I was coming back. It was a partial sublux of the patella. It came right back in pretty much on its own. I was doing stuff the next week. To be able to come back that fast, and even now, to have the strength I have in it is great.

Q: Pete Carroll harped on the experience factor, as have others. How do you plan to overcome that?

Sanchez: I’m not here to prove anybody wrong. I’m here to make this decision right for me. Just because you threw 65 percent all season doesn’t mean you can’t throw 80 percent in the Rose Bowl, you know what I mean? It’s a number. I’m excited about my opportunity, and I think I have a great chance to do it.

Q: Do you feel like you have to sell yourself to NFL teams?

Sanchez: It’s like a job interview. In any job interview, you want to look the best, you want to appear in your best form. That’s what Velocity’s all about, that’s what Coach (Bob) Johnson’s all about. All the feedback and assistance I’ve been getting have been top-notch.

Q: It doesn’t seem like you’d need interview training. What have you learned from doing that?

Sanchez: Just like the football, it’s about fine-tuning. Making your answers the best possible. I have an idea what people want to know, and (now the goal is) to provide it in the most honest way and the best way possible. I’m trying to get a job, really. That’s what it is. This is my chance to shine and perform.

Four weeks after Mark Sanchez’s emotional and awkward departure from USC, we had a chance to catch up with the soon-to-be-pro quarterback as he prepared for next week’s NFL scouting combine.

Here’s Part 3 of 3 of our conversation at the Velocity Sports Performance training center in Irvine:

Q: You really seem to be in your comfort zone here. You’re close to home, working with your high school coach, Bob Johnson …

Sanchez: Ultimate comfort zone. It’s perfect. A uniquely perfect fit for me, with Athletes First, Dave Dunn, my brother (Dunn and Sanchez’s brother, Nick Jr., are serving as his agents), Bob Johnson, Velocity. It’s all been right here. I’m in an apartment in Aliso Viejo and loving life. Going to school Monday (and) Wednesday. I’m having fun with the whole process.

Q: Are you still driving that same car?

Sanchez: It’s right out front. ‘01 Honda Accord, baby. The Black Pearl.

Q: Are you going to upgrade?

Sanchez: I don’t know. The Black Pearl’s been good to me. She’s been a good sport. We’ll see. I’m not worried about it. I want to do well at the combine first, pro day, all that.

Q: Describe what a typical day for you has been like since you started training.

Sanchez: Get here at 8 o’clock in the morning. It’s all speed and agility work, quickness — your start in the 40, all the shuttle drills and stuff. Then we break at close to 10 and get your meals in. Head over to Mission Viejo around 11 (for) chalkboard, film, mock interviews, things like that. Then around noon, throwing. I get to throw with Patrick (Turner). That’s another thing that couldn’t be better. Work with Coach Johnson on footwork, arm strength, everything. Then come back down here about 2:30. The afternoon is power and lifting, just to keep up your strength and endurance. It’s been fun so far. I love every part of it.

Q: How much more classwork do you have left at ‘SC?

Sanchez: Two classes, graduate in May.

Q: You’re still on track for that, even with all the training?

Sanchez: Oh yeah. Definitely. Teachers have been great about working things out with my schedule and being open, understanding where I’m coming from and how important it is to get my degree. It’s something I promised and told my parents that I would do regardless of my decision.

Q: It took Troy Aikman something like 20 years to get his degree.

Sanchez: It’s one of those things, if you don’t do it now, you can say you’re going back, but you just get busy. I’d rather knock it out now. It’s so close already. I love being up there. I feel like I’m already ingrained in Annenberg. I love every part of it. So I might as well do it.

Sunday, February 08, 2009

From Jim Leyland to Mike Tomlin: The 10 Coolest Coaches in Sports

Author's note: This article was originally published here at www.aarontorres-sports.com)

The word cool is one of the most relative, subjective adjectives in the English language. What’s cool to one is by no means cool to others.

But as sports fans, we are surrounded by cool. The cool young player, the hip veteran, the flashy rookie. Coolness permeates from LeBron James’ pores, Manny Ramirez’s swing, and Roger Federer’s backhand. We see it every time another athlete dates a model or shows up at a Hollywood event.

Coolness is all over sports. Except in coaching.

Coaches are the anti-cool, guys who spend long hours in the office, whine to the media, and, in many cases, appear to have poor hygiene. NFL coaches are workaholic grumps, baseball managers are usually portly and easily winded even on a short stroll from the dugout, and the guys in charge in the NBA usually look better suited to sell you a ’94 Mitsubishi than teach the intricacies of the pick-and-roll.

But not all coaches are like this. There is a rare, select breed that can elicit a premium response from his players on the field while also appearing right at home in the press room. Guys who can make a speech and get every guy on his couch ready to go to battle for them.

They’re few and they’re far between, but they’re out there. Here are the 10 coolest coaches in sports.



10. Terry Francona, Boston Red Sox

I’ve got to admit, I’ve had my beefs with Francona in the past, and most certainly will in the future. I think he changes pitchers too often and could use his bench more efficiently.

But he’s also won two World Championships in five years, where they hadn’t won any in the 86 years prior to his arrival. And in Boston, winning championships is the only way to get yourself on the front page of newspapers.

Francona will never be known as one of the astute minds of the game, but that’s not his prerogative. With his incessant dugout shaking and constant stares into the distance, he looks like someone who’s just seen a ghost, not the manager of the most consistent team in baseball over the past half a decade.

He’s more of a friend to his players than stern figurehead: think of Francona as the 35-year-old on your street who still lives with his parents and plays video games with the neighborhood children. Not an authority figure, but not quite on the other side of the coin either.

But as the players change, and the egos—Nomar, Pedro, Manny—continue to get shuffled out of town, the wins keep piling up. The Red Sox were one win away from a World Series berth a season ago, despite the constant Ramirez drama and nagging injuries to David Ortiz and Josh Beckett. They were a team that was literally held together by athletic tape and bubble gum. And they were also held together by Terry Francona.

9. Urban Meyer, Florida football

More than any other sport, college football has a wide variety of personalities, all with varying degrees of success. While Pete Carroll hangs out in the California sunshine all week, Meyer is a calculated Midwesterner, who, in the course of four seasons at Florida, has completely changed the dynamic of the sport.

Meyer burst onto the college football landscape in 2004 as the head coach of the University of Utah, which went undefeated that season, routing an over-matched Pitt team in the Fiesta Bowl. Meyer parlayed that season into a gig at Florida, arguably the best and perhaps most stressful job in the sport. It took the new coach just two years to wrap up his first National Championship—albeit with someone else’s players—and win a second this season.

Upon arriving in the swamp, Meyer vowed to have the fastest team in college football and he’s got it. There’s no one close. The Gators fly around the field on defense and blow past people on offense. Defensive tackles chase down the oppositions running backs, while Florida’s skill position personnel run circles around the other team. Now everyone’s recruiting 5-foot-10-inch jitterbugs for their backfields rather than the power guys who were getting scholarships three years ago.

And those 290-lb. defensive linemen? Boring! Get me somebody that’s 265 lbs. and runs a 4.5 40. With Tim Tebow and the entire defense returning for another season, Florida will again be the favorite to win the National Championship. But it’s not only Meyer’s players who are the fastest around; their coach is blowing by the competition too.

8. Jim Leyland, Detroit Tigers

No list of the coolest coaches would be complete without Jim Leyland. He’s the quiet guy at the end of the bar, cigarette lit, whiskey in hand, not saying a word. From your vantage point, he doesn’t appear to be taller than 5’6", but you’ve got this nagging feeling that if you look at him the wrong way you’re going to get a pool stick over your head.

That attitude and image is what has made Leyland one of the premier managers in Major League baseball for the past 23 years. It started with Bonds and Bonilla in Pittsburgh, progressed to the Florida Marlins and their 1997 World Series championship, and wound through Colorado before ending up with the Detroit Tigers.

While he’s only got that one ring, respect follows Leyland like the stench of a hard days' work. Even now, in his mid-60s, Leyland commands respect and gets it. In his first year in Detroit, the once-struggling franchise found its way to the World Series, and no small reason was Leyland. While the Tigers struggled in 2008, better times are to come; Leyland wouldn’t have it any other way. He's a perfect fit for the city.

With a cigarette in mouth (he actually used to smoke in the dugout until it was banned) and a fungo in his hands, Leyland is ready to lead the Tigers back to the top of the AL Central. Don’t the sound of that? Go talk to the short guy with the mustache over there.

7. Mike D’Antoni, New York Knicks

Defense has never been a buzz word for cool in the NBA; it’s about as hip as playing Go Fish with your grandma. But it wasn’t until D’Antoni came along that defense went from uncool to a legitimate four-letter word.

In his four full seasons as head coach of the Phoenix Suns, D’Antoni’s teams averaged 58 wins per season under his offensive philosophy of “seven seconds or less,” which essentially meant that he wanted his team to have the ball up court and a shot hoisted within seven seconds of gaining possession. Sure, the Suns never won a championship, but in the process D’Antoni’s offense made Steve Nash—a middle-of-the-road NBA point guard for most of his career—into a two-time NBA MVP, and took good players like Amare Stoudemire and Shawn Marion and turned them into superstars.

More importantly, it made the NBA fun to watch again. After years of being subjected to watching the Spurs and Pistons grind their way to a lot of 88-81 wins, here came a team and coach which wanted to push the ball, score a lot of points, and get fans on their feet.

D’Antoni and Phoenix parted ways this past spring, and the coach found his way to New York, where basketball and winning haven’t gone hand-in-hand since the Patrick Ewing-Pat Riley era of over a decade ago. Sure, the Knicks aren’t ready yet to compete for a championship, but they’re playing competitive basketball with the spare parts of David Lee, Nate Robinson, and Al Harrington that Donnie Walsh has been able to scrap together.

In the process, the team has been able to shed a lot of bad contracts and even worse egos, all with the intention of making a run at LeBron James in 2010. Whether the Knicks get him or not, only time will tell. But if you were looking for an indication of how James would fare in D’Antoni’s system, you got it Wednesday night when the King had a 52-point, 10-rebound, 11-assist explosion playing against the Knicks in Madison Square Garden.

The bottom line is this: James is already sewing up a Hall of Fame career and will likely go down as one of the Top 10 players in the sports history. But if he wants to go down as the best ever, there might only be one place do it, and with one man—D’Antoni—as his coach.

6. Les Miles, LSU football

Miles is a relative newbie to the pantheon of cool coaches, but my guess is that he’ll be here for some time. With his trademark purple windbreaker and perfectly-positioned LSU cap, The Mad Hatter (as ESPN’s Rece Davis has named him) is one cool customer.

And, he's cool in the toughest situations. In his early time in Baton Rouge, Miles was often denied credit for his successes, as his wins were simply the byproduct of Nick Saban’s players. But that changed in fall 2007, as Miles entered the season with the No. 2-ranked team in the country and a realistic shot at a national championship. In the tightest game of the early season against Florida, Miles rolled the dice time and time again, converting five of five fourth downs in the game and sealing the first of many big wins on the season.

Two weeks later, rather than setting up for a potential game-winning field goal in the closing seconds against Auburn, Miles again went for it, and Matt Flynn completed a touchdown pass to Demetrius Byrd. The pass sealed a Tigers victory with one second left. LSU went on to win the 2007 National Championship and solidify Miles’ fate as one of the coolest coaches in the game.

While 2008 was a struggle, there’s little doubt the Tigers will be back on top. They recently secured the top high school recruiting class of 2009 and players continue to come to Baton Rouge to play for LSU. Time and wins will tell if Miles can stay on this list, but if the youth of America think he’s the coolest coach in the SEC, than who am I to disagree?

5. Jim Calhoun, Connecticut basketball

All right, I’ll be honest, this is a bit of a homer pick. Calhoun isn’t cool like so many others on this list because of his look or the way he dresses.

He’s more like the old man at the deli that returns his soup because it’s too cold, only to complain when it’s returned because he burned his mouth. Calhoun is never happy, whether it’s in regards to the referees, his players or himself. That’s just the type of personality he is.

But I can say from personal experience that when he walks in a room, you stand up straight, put your shoulders back and listen. He walks with the confidence of a rock star, but will give you a hardened stare that makes even the toughest 20-somethings freeze in their tracks. It’s the reason that in an era of young coaches with slicked-back hair making promises of playing time and NBA glamour to young kids, they still flock to Calhoun.

He knows how to get in your head, break you down, chew you up, and spit you back out an NBA-ready player. Caron Butler, Ray Allen, Emeka Okafor, and a host of others all came to Storrs with virtually no fanfare, but Calhoun turned them into bonafide professional superstars—and millionaires in the process.

And even at the age of 66, he keeps on ticking, as he has UConn currently ranked No. 1 the country. Did I mention he’s also survived cancer scares on two separate occasions? If that isn’t cool, I don’t know what is.

4. Joe Maddon, Tampa Bay Rays

By nature, baseball managers aren’t supposed to be cool. They sit in a pile of sunflower seed shells all summer and spit tobacco juice on themselves while gnats circle overhead. Heck, there’ve been games where I thought Charlie Manuel was napping, and others where I was certain that Joe Torre was dead.

Which is what makes Maddon so cool. With his thick-brimmed glasses and quick wit, Maddon is the anti-manager. He’s got a chiseled face, athletic build, and rides his bike on road trips. But more important than his looks is that his players swear by him. While Terry Francona is likely to use six pitchers in an inning and Torre the same pitcher six days in a row, Maddon keeps a calm demeanor and lets his players play.

This guy is so relaxed, I always expect television cameras to pan to the dugout and see Maddon managing in a Hawaiian shirt and Birkenstocks. If you’re looking for fiery speeches and thrown water coolers, you’d better search somewhere else. Maddon is more adept to quote Voltaire or Gandhi in his motivational speeches than Casey Stengel or Connie Mack.

Regardless, the Rays respond to the 54-year-old, as after years of being the punch line in Major League Baseball Tampa Bay won the American League East and played in the World Series in 2008. How that performance will be topped in 2009 remains to be seen. But if there’s one man that has the answer, it will certainly be Maddon, the manager who seems to have it all figured out...with a little help from Mother Teresa, of course.

3. Phil Jackson, Los Angeles Lakers

Come on, you knew the Zen Master was going to be on this list. You know, that whole five spirits becoming one routine. The one that sees players meditating in silence before games, the aroma of scented candles filling players' nostrils, and positive thoughts channeling through their minds.

Or something like that. Jackson is a unique cat. He does things his own way. At the beginning, we were all a little skeptical, as he happened to be the guy on the bench during Jordan’s six championship seasons and got three more rings with the most dominant center of our generation in Shaquille O’Neal.

But after taking a leave from the Lakers and seeing them flounder in his absence, Jackson came back to L.A. and proved his doubters (me being No. 1) wrong. They’ve made the playoffs in each of his three seasons back, including the NBA Finals in 2008. Sure, they lost to the Celtics, but look at who this guy is winning with. Take out Kobe, Pau Gasol and Andrew Bynum (who never seems to be healthy), and you have an aging Lamar Odom and journeymen Trevor Ariza, Luke Walton, and Sasha Vujacic.

More importantly, while his methods have been a bit zany at times, they continue to produce results. And in an era in the NBA where the inmates run the asylum, Jackson has not only been able to handle hotheaded stars like Jordan, Shaq and Kobe, but thrive with them. And did I mention that during his time in Los Angeles, Jackson has dated Jeannie Buss—Lakers owner Jerry Buss’ daughter—and still kept his job?

There’s no doubt that this guy's tactics are a little strange. But they work for him, and produce championships. What’s cooler than that?

2. Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers

We all know that he became the youngest coach to win a Super Bowl, but let's be honest, Tomlin was cool before it was even cool to be cool. Got it? No? Than we’re going to run up stadium stairs until you do.

Just kidding, but if I scared you imagine what it’d be like to play for Tomlin. In an era where coaches are taking on more of a role of substitute teacher than disciplinarian (cough, Wade Phillips), Tomlin is an old-school exception, as even at his tender of age of 36 he lays down the law. Grown men—some older than he—listen. He has taken one of the hardest jobs in professional sports and made it look easy, winning a championship in just his second year. And he has done it with the swagger of Terrell Owens and the confidence of Bill Parcells.

What’s so cool about Tomlin is that five years ago he wouldn’t have even been given a head coaching opportunity. But with the chance he was given, he’s broken down all the barriers in his way (age and race discrimination), and, in the process, changed the way head coaching searches are done. Guys like John Harbaugh and Rex Ryan, young, career assistants with no head coaching experience, were never given jobs. Now, because of Tomlin, they’re the only guys being hired.

There will come a time—and my guess is sooner, rather than later—when a movie will be made about Tomlin. And although the Steelers coach has a striking resemblance to Omar Epps, I still think Denzel Washington is fit for the leading role. Besides the fact that he has already played a football coach in a movie (Remember the Titans), who better than to play the coolest coach in the NFL than Washington, the coolest man in Hollywood.

1. Pete Carroll, USC football

What’s so cool about cool is that different guys do it different ways, but all end up on this list together. While Tomlin is like an overprotective father staring down his daughter’s boyfriend, Carroll is like the cool uncle who always slips you a $100 bill and is dating a model half his age.

In an era where virtually every school is competing on an even playing field, it was almost universally agreed upon that the dynastic era of college football was over.

Only no one told Pete Carroll.

The Trojans are 88-15 under Carroll’s watch and have not lost more than two games since his first season in Troy. Players from all over the country flock to L.A. to play for a Carroll, a guy who’s as enthusiastic about his job as your 16-year-old hostess at T.G.I. Fridays. In a sport where coaches demand control like Eastern European dictators, Carroll is the anti-Bill Belichick, opening his practices to the public and the game day sidelines to celebrities like Snoop Dogg.

Seriously, could you see Charlie Weis using one of his players as an April Fool’s joke? Or Nick Saban letting Will Ferrell show up to practice in a superhero costume to motivate his team? Of course not, but that’s because there’s only one Pete Carroll. The coolest coach in all of sports.