He took the money and ran -- to Tampa

You aren't just USC's football coach, you're a crossover star who gets the red-carpet treatment all over Los Angeles. You've coached multiple Heisman Trophy winners and have filled Heritage Hall with national championship trophies.

But an NFL team from Florida beckons, and you're attracted to the challenge and money associated with coaching at the next level.

What are you going to do, John McKay?

FOR THE RECORD

USC football: An article in Friday's Sports section about former Trojans coach John McKay said he was replaced during the 1975 season by John Robinson. McKay finished the season for the Trojans, coaching them to victory in the Liberty Bowl. Robinson replaced him the following season.


The answer: Leave USC -- and wind up regretting it for the rest of your life.

"My dad told me that, looking back on it, he knew within the first week he got to Tampa that he'd made a mistake," said J.K. McKay, the former Trojans receiver whose father became the first coach of the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1976. John McKay died in 2001.

Pete Carroll is at a similar crossroads. His success as USC's coach has attracted the interest of NFL teams, and he recently met in Costa Rica with Miami Dolphins owner Wayne Huizenga.

While saying during a news conference this week that he had no plans to leave USC, Carroll seemingly left the door open a crack by talking glowingly about Huizenga and the Dolphins' "one-voice" philosophy, which affords the coach maximum control. Later the same day, however, he told The Times that he definitely was staying with the Trojans.

Regardless, speculation about Carroll's immediate future will not go away until all of the NFL jobs are filled. Then, assuming he stays with the Trojans, the talk will start up again next January.

Many people believe that Carroll will wind up back in the NFL at some point, determined to prove he's a better pro coach than his record in three seasons with the New England Patriots and one with the New York Jets indicates. He was 33-31 as an NFL head coach.

"I think with Pete there's the fact that he started in the NFL and -- he's never said this to me -- but I sense that he feels he didn't have a fair shot because he didn't have the control that supposedly he's being offered now," McKay said. "He's a very competitive guy, just like my dad was, and that's what makes him so great at SC."

Under John McKay, the Trojans won national championships in 1962, '67, '72 and '74. He coached Heisman winners O.J. Simpson and Mike Garrett, and his teams played in eight Rose Bowls.

In a story that ran Oct. 27, 1975, The Times reported that the newly minted Buccaneers were considering McKay as their first coach and were offering a five-year contract worth $2 million, counting fringe benefits.

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