No, he makes a stronger claim than that.
States of affairs only require an explanation if we have some contrary expectation, some reason to be surprised that they hold.
...
There is no reason, within anything we currently understand about the ultimate structure of reality, to think of the existence and persistence and regularity of the universe as things that require external explanation.
States of affairs only require an explanation if we have some contrary expectation, some reason to be surprised that they hold.
That's certainly a requirement for that state of affairs being evidence for anything, but it's not so clear for requiring an explanation, mostly because there seems to be no rigorous sense of what "requiring an explanation" means in the first place.
Does the Universe Need God? (essay by Sean Carroll)
In this essay, Sean Carroll:
Dissolves the problem of "creation from nothing":
Uses Bayesian reasoning to judge possible explanations:
Correctly describes parsimony in terms of Kolmogorov complexity:
Discusses "meta-explanatory accounts":
Points out the theory-saving in and the predictive issues of God as a hypothesis:
See also his blog entry for more discussion of the essay.
Edit: added the bullet point about "meta-explanatory accounts."