Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman is not a fan of his team’s play-calling.

Shortly before quarterback Russell Wilson connected with wide receiver Doug Baldwin on a 1-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter, Sherman could be seen shouting on the sidelines.

“I don’t like it when we throw the ball at the 1 [yard line],” Sherman told reporters. “We throw an interception at the 1. Luckily it went incomplete, and I wasn’t going to let them continue to do that.”

Them? Who’s them?

“I was letting Pete know,” Sherman said. “I was making sure Pete knew that we’re not comfortable with you throwing the ball at the 1.”

That would be Pete Carroll, Sherman’s head coach.

“One hundred percent, 100 percent,” Sherman answered when asked whether it was standard operating procedure to question — let lone confront — his head coach. “We go out there, we sacrifice, we battle. We don’t give away our battle, you honor our sacrifice.”

Carroll had said during his postgame press conference that the jawing on the sideline was between Sherman and wide receiver Doug Baldwin. He never mentioned himself.

“What was said in there, it doesn’t matter,” Carroll said. “I know you’d love to know more. You’ll probably figure out more, but I don’t care. But right now that was one of our guys who has as much emotion and passion for this game as you could ever want. And sometimes it goes one way where you’ve got to reel it back in.

“And he did exactly that. He did a nice job of coming back to poise and finished the game really well.”

Well enough to land himself a head coaching position one day?

“I’m always available,” Sherman replied. “Make sure the pay is right.”