Thursday, February 18, 2016

The 2011 NFL season was the 92nd regular season of the National Football League. It began on Thursday, September 8, 2011, with the Super Bowl XLV champion Green Bay Packers defeating the Super Bowl XLIV champion New Orleans Saints 42–34 at Lambeau Field and ended with Super Bowl XLVI, the league's championship game, on February 5, 2012, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis where the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots 21–17.
Due to a labor dispute between league owners and players, a lockout began on March 11 and ended on July 25, lasting 18 weeks and 4 days (130 days). Although it initially threatened to postpone or cancel the season, the only game that was canceled was the August 7 Pro Football Hall of Fame Game.
The 2011 season saw an unprecedented amount of passing offense: Four of the six highest passing yardage totals of all time were established: No. 1 Drew Brees (5,476), No. 2 Tom Brady (5,235), No. 5 Matthew Stafford (5,038) and No. 6 Eli Manning (4,933).[1]
Further cementing the modern NFL's reputation as a "passing league"[2][3][4] was the fact that, for the second consecutive year, the league overall set a record for most average passing yards per team per game, with 229.7, breaking 2010's record by more than eight yards per game.[5] (For comparison, the league-wide average rushing yards total finished the 2011 season at 57th all-time.)
A subplot of the 2011 season was determining who would have the worst record, and therefore "earn" the right to the No. 1 overall pick in the 2012 draft. Stanford senior quarterback Andrew Luck was seen as the best quarterback prospect in years. Fans of some teams that started the season with numerous losses (notably Indianapolis) were openly rooting for their teams to "Suck for Luck." Taken from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_NFL_season

Final Stats:

Team Record






Green Bay Packers 15 1






New England Patriots 13 3






New Orleans Saints 13 3






San Francisco 49ers 13 3






Baltimore Ravens 12 4






Pittsburgh Steelers 12 4






Houston Texans 10 6






Detroit Lions 10 6






Atlanta Falcons 10 6






Cincinnati Bengals 9 7






Tennessee Titans 9 7






New York Giants 9 7






San Diego Chargers 8 8






New York Jets 8 8






Oakland Raiders 8 8






Denver Broncos 8 8






Philadelphia Eagles 8 8






Dallas Cowboys 8 8






Chicago Bears 8 8






Arizona Cardinals 8 8






Kansas City Chiefs 7 9






Seattle Seahawks 7 9






Miami Dolphins 6 10






Buffalo Bills 6 10






Carolina Panthers 6 10






Jacksonville Jaguars 5 11






Washington Redskins 5 11






Cleveland Browns 4 12






Tampa Bay Buccaneers 4 12






Minnesota Vikings 3 13






Indianapolis Colts 2 14






St. Louis Rams 2 14















Playoff Games







Week Day Date
Winner/tie
Loser/tie PtsW PtsL
WildCard Sat 7-Jan boxscore Houston Texans
Cincinnati Bengals 31 10
WildCard Sat 7-Jan boxscore New Orleans Saints
Detroit Lions 45 28
WildCard Sun 8-Jan boxscore New York Giants
Atlanta Falcons 24 2
WildCard Sun 8-Jan boxscore Denver Broncos
Pittsburgh Steelers 29 23









Division Sat 14-Jan boxscore New England Patriots
Denver Broncos 45 10
Division Sat 14-Jan boxscore San Francisco 49ers
New Orleans Saints 36 32
Division Sun 15-Jan boxscore Baltimore Ravens
Houston Texans 20 13
Division Sun 15-Jan boxscore New York Giants @ Green Bay Packers 37 20









ConfChamp Sun 22-Jan boxscore New England Patriots
Baltimore Ravens 23 20
ConfChamp Sun 22-Jan boxscore New York Giants @ San Francisco 49ers 20 17









SuperBowl Sun 5-Feb boxscore New York Giants N New England Patriots 21 17









Most points per game: 35







Green Bay Packers
















Fewest Points allowed per game: 14







Pittsburgh Steelers

























Regular season ran from 9/8-1/1







Playoffs ran from 1/7-2/5
















Best Division: AFC West







Worst Division: AFC West







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