Girish Mahajan (Editor)

2011 NFL season

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AFC Champions
  
New England Patriots

Champions
  
New York Giants

Location
  
United States of America

NFC Champions
  
New York Giants

Start date
  
2011

2011 NFL season inapcachebostoncomuniversalsitegraphicsblogs

Duration
  
September 8, 2011 – January 1, 2012

Site
  
Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Indiana

Site
  
Aloha Stadium, Halawa, Honolulu, Hawaii

Champion
  
New York Giants, New England Patriots

Similar
  
2010 NFL season, 2012 NFL season, 2009 NFL season, 2007 NFL season, 2008 NFL season

2011 nfl season and super bowl predictions


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.

Contents

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).

Further cementing the modern NFL's reputation as a "passing league" 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. (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."

The 2011 nfl season


Labor dispute

In May 2008 the owners decided to opt out of the 1993 arrangement and play the 2010 season without an agreement in place. Some of the major points of contention included openness of owners' financial books, the rookie pay scale, a proposed 18 percent reduction in the players' share of revenues, forfeiture on bonus payments for players who fail to perform, players' health and retirement benefits, details of free agency, the cost and benefit of new stadiums, players' salaries, extending the regular season to 18 games, and the revenue-sharing structure. By March 2011, the NFLPA and the NFL had not yet come to terms on a new collective bargaining agreement, thus failing to resolve the labor dispute. Accordingly, the NFLPA informed the league and the clubs that the players had voted to have the NFLPA renounce its bargaining rights. After the renunciation of collective bargaining rights, quarterbacks Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, and Drew Brees joined seven other NFL players and filed an antitrust suit to enjoin the lockout.

Following the settlement of the Brady et al. v. NFL antitrust suit on July 25, 2011, a majority of players signed union authorization cards approving the NFL Players Association to act as their exclusive collective bargaining representative. The NFL officially recognized the NFLPA’s status as the players’ collective bargaining representative on July 30. The NFL and NFLPA proceeded to negotiate terms for a new collective bargaining agreement, and the agreement became effective after ratification by the players on August 4. The new collective bargaining agreement runs through 2021.

Schedule

The preseason schedule was released April 12, 2011. The Hall of Fame Game, had it been played, would have featured the Chicago Bears against the St. Louis Rams in only the second time since 1971 that the game would have featured two teams from the same conference. Instead, the preseason began with the San Diego Chargers hosting the Seattle Seahawks on August 11; the remainder of the preseason and all other games was played as originally scheduled (with the exception of the preseason Jets-Giants game, which was postponed two days due to Hurricane Irene).

The 2011 season began on Thursday, September 8, 2011 at Lambeau Field, with the Super Bowl XLV champion Green Bay Packers hosting the New Orleans Saints in the kickoff game; the last regular season games were held on Sunday, January 1, 2012. The playoffs started on Saturday, January 7, 2012, and ended with Super Bowl XLVI, the league's championship game, on February 5, 2012 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

Under the NFL's scheduling formula, intraconference and interconference matchups were:

When the league was arranging the schedule in spring 2011, it added some cushion in case the labor dispute lasted into September and the planned start of the regular season. For example, every contest in Week 3 had teams which shared the same bye week later in the season, which would have allowed these games to be made up on what were originally the teams' byes. Weeks 2 and 4 were set up so that there were neither any divisional rivalry games nor teams on bye in those weeks, and every team with a home game in Week 2 was on the road in Week 4 and vice versa. This would have kept the season as fair as possible if those games had to be canceled. These scheduling changes, along with eliminating the week off before the Super Bowl and moving the Super Bowl back a week, would have allowed the NFL to play a 14-game schedule beginning in mid-October while still having the Super Bowl in mid-February.

In a scheduling quirk, the NFC North's Chicago Bears played all four of their interconference games in consecutive weeks: San Diego in Week 11, Oakland in Week 12, Kansas City in Week 13 and Denver in Week 14.

This season's International Series game featured the Chicago Bears and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Wembley Stadium in London on October 23, with the Buccaneers serving as the home team. The Bears won 24–18. It marked the Bears' second game played outside the United States in as many years, as they were a part of the Bills Toronto Series in 2010. The Buccaneers previously appeared in the International Series in 2009. One week later on October 30, the Buffalo Bills defeated the Washington Redskins in the Bills' annual game at Rogers Centre in Toronto by a score of 23–0. Although this was within the bounds of the 2011 CFL season, neither of the two Southern Ontario CFL teams was playing on the same day, and both played away games that weekend. The 2011–12 season also marked the 20th anniversary of the Bills and Redskins meeting in Super Bowl XXVI.

The Detroit Lions hosted their first Monday Night Football game since 2001, when they faced the Bears on Columbus Day/Canadian Thanksgiving (the Detroit-Windsor market straddles the U.S.–Canada border). Detroit defeated Chicago 24–13 for the team's fifth straight win, the most Lions wins to start a season since the team's glory years in the 1950s, continuing a streak that has been seen as a pleasant surprise for Lions fans, after over a decade of mediocrity.

The 2011 Thanksgiving Day slate featured the Super Bowl Champion Green Bay Packers winning 27–15 on the road against Detroit and the Cowboys coming back to defeat the Miami Dolphins 20–19 at home. The Thanksgiving nightcap on the NFL Network showed the Baltimore Ravens defeating the San Francisco 49ers 16–6 at home; this was the first Thanksgiving game for the 49ers since 1972, the first ever for the Ravens, and a game that put first-year 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh against his brother, Ravens head coach John Harbaugh.

Christmas Day fell on Sunday. The TV contracts state that the majority afternoon games are played on Christmas Eve (Saturday) and hold one game is held over for Sunday night. The Packers defeated the Bears, 35–21, on Christmas evening on NBC.

New Year's Day 2012 consequently also fell on a Sunday, and the NFL played its entire Week 17 schedule that day. The major college bowl games usually played on New Year's Day, as well as the NHL Winter Classic, were instead played on Monday, January 2. For the second straight year, Week 17 only featured divisional match-ups.

The New York Giants visited the Washington Redskins on September 11, 2011, the first Sunday of the regular season, to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks in which Washington, D.C. and New York City were both targeted, as well as the first such anniversary since the killing of Osama bin Laden. Due to the proximity of Baltimore with Washington as well as the proximity of Pittsburgh with the site where United Airlines Flight 93 crashed, the Pittsburgh Steelers visited the archrival Ravens at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. It marked the first time the two teams played in a season-opening game since 2003, as their heated rivalry usually prompts their games to be scheduled later in the season. There had been some speculation that the Giants and their same-city rival, the New York Jets, could have played each other that day since the two were scheduled to play each other in 2011; the Jets were the designated home team at MetLife Stadium in the matchup which had been predetermined due to the NFL's scheduling formula. However, the Jets instead hosted the Dallas Cowboys.

Scheduling changes

The following regular-season games were moved by way of flexible scheduling, severe weather, or for other reasons:

  • Week 10: The Lions–Bears game was moved from 1:00 pm EST to 4:15 pm EST.
  • Week 11: The Titans–Falcons game was moved from 1:00 pm EST to 4:15 pm EST.
  • Week 13: The Colts–Patriots game was moved from the 8:20 pm EST time slot on NBC Sunday Night Football to 1:00 pm EST on CBS. The Lions–Saints game, originally scheduled at 1:00 pm EST on Fox, was flexed into the 8:20 pm slot on NBC, in place of the originally-scheduled Colts–Patriots game. The Ravens–Browns game was changed from 1:00 pm EST to 4:05 pm EST. The Broncos–Vikings game was changed from 4:05 pm EST to 1:00 pm EST, and aired on Fox instead of CBS because Fox had only two games in the early time slot. This was the first time that the league moved an interconference telecast to the home team's Sunday afternoon regional broadcaster.
  • Week 14: The Raiders–Packers game was moved from 1:00 pm EST to 4:15 pm EST.
  • Week 17: By way of flexible scheduling, the following games were moved due to playoff implications during the final week of the regular season: The Cowboys–Giants game, originally scheduled at 1:00 pm EST on Fox, was selected as the final NBC Sunday Night Football game, which decided the NFC East division champion. The Buccaneers–Falcons, Ravens–Bengals and Steelers–Browns games were all moved from 1:00 pm EST to 4:15 pm EST.
  • Regular season standings

    Playoff seeds are marked in parentheses and shaded in green

    Tie-breakers

  • a Miami finished in third place in the AFC East based on a head-to-head sweep over Buffalo.
  • b Baltimore clinched the AFC North title based on a head-to-head sweep over Pittsburgh.
  • c Cincinnati clinched the AFC 6 seed instead of Tennessee based on a head-to-head victory.
  • d Denver clinched the AFC West title instead of San Diego or Oakland based on record versus common opponents (5–5 to San Diego's and Oakland's 4–6).
  • e San Diego finished ahead of Oakland in the AFC West based on better conference record (7–5 to 6–6).
  • f Philadelphia finished in second place in the NFC East based on a head-to-head sweep over Dallas.
  • g Atlanta clinched the NFC 5 seed instead of Detroit based on a head-to-head victory.
  • h San Francisco clinched the NFC 2 seed instead of New Orleans based on better conference record (10–2 to 9–3).
  • * Indicates overtime victory

    Rule changes

    The following are rule changes that were passed at the league's annual owners meeting in March. All changes went into effect once the labor dispute was resolved.

  • Changes were made regarding kickoffs to limit injuries. First, kickoffs will be moved from the 30 back up to the 35-yard line, repealing a 1994 rule change. In addition, players on the kickoff coverage team cannot line up more than 5 yards behind the kickoff line, minimizing running starts and thus reducing the speed of collisions. Other changes were also proposed, but a number of players and coaches expressed concern they would actually significantly reduce, if not eliminate, the number of kickoff returns. Proposals that would have brought touchbacks out to the 25 instead of the 20, and eliminated all wedge blocks were not adopted. Despite this rule, the Bears kicked off from the 30-yard line twice in their preseason game against the Bills.
  • All replay reviews of scoring plays during the entire game can now be initiated by the replay booth official. Coaches will no longer have to use one of their challenges if a scoring play occurs outside of the two-minute warning. Because the play is now "unchallengable" by coaches, attempting to do so will result in a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, which several coaches were flagged for during the season.
  • Nicknamed the "Boise State Rule", all playing fields must remain green, and not be in another color like the blue turf at Boise State's Bronco Stadium, unless approval is granted by the league. This was passed in response to a few sponsors who requested to change the colors in a few stadiums.
  • The following rule changes were adopted at the NFL Owners' Meeting on May 24, 2011:

  • Hits to the head of a passer-by an opponent’s hands, arms or other parts of the body will not be fouls unless they are forcible blows, modifying the existing rule that any contact to a passer's head, regardless of the reason, is penalized as a personal foul (15 yards).
  • Players will be prohibited from "launching" (leaving both feet prior to contact to spring forward and upward into an opponent or using any part of the helmet to initiate forcible contact against any part of the opponent’s body) to level a defenseless player, as well as "forcibly hitting the neck or head area with the helmet, facemask, forearm or shoulder regardless of whether the defensive player also uses his arms to tackle the defenseless player by encircling or grasping him.", and lowering the head and make forcible contact with the top/crown or forehead/"hairline" parts of the helmet against any part of the defenseless player’s body. Offenders will be penalized 15 yards for unnecessary roughness and ejected from the game if the contact is deemed flagrant.
  • A "defenseless player" is defined as a:

  • Player in the act of or just after throwing a pass.
  • Receiver attempting to catch a pass or one who has not completed a catch and hasn’t had time to protect himself or hasn’t clearly become a runner. If the receiver/runner is capable of avoiding or warding off the impending contact of an opponent, he is no longer a defenseless player.
  • Runner whose forward progress has been stopped and is already in the grasp of a tackler.
  • Kickoff or punt returner attempting to field a kick in the air.
  • Player on the ground at the end of a play.
  • Kicker/punter during the kick or return.
  • Quarterback any time after a change of possession (i.e. turnover).
  • Player who receives a "blindside" block when the blocker is moving toward his own end-line and approaches the opponent from behind or the side.
  • The league has instructed game officials to "err on the side of caution" when calling such personal foul penalties, and that they will not be downgraded if they make a mistake so that they will not hesitate on making these kinds of calls.

    Game-day testing

  • Game-day testing for performance-enhancing drugs. The NFL is adding game-day testing for performance-enhancing substances but not recreational drugs this season under the new collective bargaining agreement.
  • Media

    This was the sixth season under the current television contracts with the league's television partners: CBS (all AFC afternoon away games), Fox (all NFC afternoon away games), NBC (17 Sunday Night Football games and the kickoff game), ESPN (17 Monday Night Football games over sixteen weeks), NFL Network (eight late-season games on Thursday night and Saturday nights), and DirecTV's NFL Sunday Ticket package. These contracts run through at least 2013. ESPN extended its contract for Monday Night Football on September 8, during the opening week of the season. The new contract extended the rights for eight seasons, giving the network rights until 2021. The new deal, valued between $14.2 billion and $15.2 billion, also gave them rights to expanded highlights, international and digital rights, the Pro Bowl beginning with the 2015 installment, and possibly a Wildcard playoff game. Also, the league announced a nine-year extension with CBS, Fox and NBC on their current contracts starting with the 2014 season.

    The 2011 NFL season version of "musical chairs" brought some changes. At CBS, Dick Enberg officially retired (he now does San Diego Padres games for Fox Sports San Diego and its predecessor, 4SD), and Marv Albert replaces him, coming over from Westwood One radio. Gus Johnson has also departed CBS and will begin calling play-by-play for Fox, mostly college games as well on FX. ESPN lost both of their sideline reporters from 2010: Michele Tafoya to NBC, where she replaced the departing Andrea Kremer, and Suzy Kolber reduced the number of games she covers to work on ESPN2's new NFL32 show, which she is hosting. ESPN, who had reduced the roles of its sideline reporters in recent years in response to NFL rule changes, used only one sideline reporter for each game of the 2011 season; among the rotating reporters include Kolber, Wendi Nix, Ed Werder, Sal Paolantonio, and Rachel Nichols.

    On December 22, 2010, the league announced that its national radio contract with Westwood One, which was acquired by Dial Global in the 2011 offseason, had been extended through 2014. The league also extended its contract with Sirius XM Radio through 2015. In addition to these contracts, and in a first for an NFL team, the Dallas Cowboys signed a deal to allow for nationwide broadcasts of all of its home and away games broadcast on Compass Media Networks, in addition to its existing local radio network. Compass also acquired exclusive national broadcast rights to both the International Series and Toronto Series contests.

    The league did not announce plans to compensate their media partners had the season been shortened or canceled as a result of the work stoppage. NBC had ordered several low-cost reality television shows for the 2011–12 TV season in the event that Sunday Night Football could not be played, but other networks had not made public any contingency plans in the event NFL games could not be televised (in the case of CBS and Fox, the Sunday afternoon time slots could have been left unfilled and turned over to the affiliates, likely to be used for time buys by minor and extreme sports organizations, or locally programmed infomercials or movies as they are during the offseason). A work stoppage could have potentially cost these networks billions of dollars in ad revenue and other entertainment platforms that depend on the games being played. (Under the NFL's television contracts, the networks must still pay the league a rights fee regardless of whether or not the league plays any games; a March 2 ruling states that this money must be put into escrow and not be spent.) Meanwhile, the United Football League had set aside a portion of their television contract for their 2011 UFL season, as a potential package of replacement programs for the networks; while CBS and Fox briefly negotiated with the UFL regarding the package, neither network committed to carrying the games, forcing the UFL to postpone its season by a month.

    Naming rights agreements

    The following stadiums received new naming rights:

  • April 27: The Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, home of the Oakland Raiders, was renamed Overstock.com Coliseum, and later shortened to O.co Coliseum. The Raiders' home field has undergone several name changes in its history, including Network Associates Coliseum (1998–2004) and McAfee Coliseum (2004–2008).
  • June 20: Qwest Field, the home of the Seattle Seahawks since 2002, was renamed CenturyLink Field. Qwest's naming rights to the Seahawks' home field was set to expire in 2014.
  • August 16: INVESCO Field at Mile High, the home of the Denver Broncos, was renamed Sports Authority Field at Mile High. Invesco Ltd. held the original naming rights to the Broncos' home field since it opened in 2001, and Invesco's naming rights agreement was set to expire in 2021. Sports Authority, a sporting goods retailer based in Englewood, Colorado, took over the naming rights, and agreed to pay $6 million per year for the naming rights to the Broncos' home field.
  • August 23: Life insurance company MetLife purchased the naming rights to the New Meadowlands Stadium, the new home field of the New York Jets and New York Giants that opened in 2010, renaming it MetLife Stadium. The life insurance company signed a 25-year, $17 million per year agreement with the Jets and Giants for the stadium's naming rights.
  • October 4: German automaker Mercedes-Benz purchased the naming rights to the Louisiana Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints. The Saints' home field was officially renamed the Mercedes-Benz Superdome prior to the Saints' Week 7 home game vs. the Indianapolis Colts.
  • In addition, the San Diego Chargers' home field, Qualcomm Stadium, was temporariy renamed "Snapdragon Stadium" for a ten-day period from December 16–25, which included the team's Week 15 home game vs. the Baltimore Ravens, as a marketing tie in for Qualcomm's Snapdragon brand.

    Uniforms

    The first Sunday of the season fell on the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks. To commemorate that event players, coaches, game officials and sideline personnel all wore a special stars and stripes ribbon bearing the dates "9/11/01" and "9/11/11" as a patch or pin. Players were also allowed to wear special red, white and blue gloves and shoes.

    The Buffalo Bills introduced redesigned uniforms on June 24, 2011. Early rumors fueled by a Madden NFL 12 trailer featuring a Bills throwback uniform had indicated the team would be adopting the uniforms the team wore between 1975 and 1983; the final product indeed resembled those uniforms, with some minor adjustments. The new uniforms (which marked the first redesign since 2002) were unveiled at a fan appreciation event at Ralph Wilson Stadium. The Bills wore their white "away" uniforms in their week nine home game against the New York Jets as part of a whiteout promotion; the last time the team had worn their white uniforms at home was in 1986.

    The New England Patriots' uniforms bore a patch bearing the initials "MHK" in honor of team owner Robert Kraft's wife Myra Kraft who died of cancer in July. The Patriots wore their red throwback uniforms in their week five game against the New York Jets. They wore their white throwback jerseys at home against the Dallas Cowboys in week six, thus forcing the Cowboys to use their navy jerseys for the only time all season and the first time since 2009. As per tradition, the Cowboys wore their throwbacks on Thanksgiving Day (November 24) at home against the Miami Dolphins.

    The St. Louis Rams wore their throwback uniforms in week 8 against the New Orleans Saints; the date was determined by fan voting.

    The Baltimore Ravens wore their black alternative jerseys twice in 2011: with black pants against the Jets and with white pants against the 49ers.

    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers wore their orange throwback uniforms during week 13 against Carolina.

    The Oakland Raiders wore stickers featuring "AL" on their helmets after owner Al Davis died on October 8, 2011.

    This season was the last in which the Denver Broncos wore their navy blue jerseys as their primary jersey, as the team has designated their orange jerseys—the team's alternate home jersey since 2002—as their new primary home jersey color, beginning with the 2012 season. The move was made due to overwhelming fan support to return to using orange as the team's primary home jersey color, which harkens back to the days of the Orange Crush Defense, as well as John Elway's return to the organization as the team's executive vice president of football operations. The team had considered making the switch for the 2011 season, but were too late to notify the NFL of the changes. The team's navy blue jerseys, which had been their primary home jersey since they were first introduced in 1997, will become the alternate jerseys which will be worn in one or two home games each year.

    This season was the last in which the Seattle Seahawks wore their pacific blue (or "Seahawks blue") jerseys as the team's home jersey, as the team changed their home jersey color to dark navy for the 2012 season.

    End of the Reebok Era

    This was the last season that Reebok exclusively supplied uniforms and sideline caps along with performance and fan apparel for all 32 teams in the league, as Nike and New Era now have the rights to manufacture on-field uniforms and fan apparel, with Nike handling uniforms and performance apparel, and New Era with on-field caps. For Reebok, this ends a 10-year exclusivity association that began in 2001.

    Pre-season

    The uncertain labor issues and the possibility of a lockout were speculated to have a minimizing effect on coaching changes prior to the 2011 season, with owners predicted to be more hesitant than usual to hire a high-price, high-profile head coach. Nevertheless, eight coaches were fired either during or immediately after the 2010 NFL season, compared to three in the year prior; only one of the new hires (John Fox) had ever been a head coach in the NFL prior to their hirings or promotions. However, Leslie Frazier, and Jason Garrett did get some experience as interim coaches during the 2010 season, with Garrett being successful in his debut season, going 5–3 in his tenure, improving the 1–7 Cowboys to a 6–10 season.

    In-season

    The following head coaches were replaced in-season:

    Records and milestones

  • Most points in the Kickoff Game, single team: 42, Green Bay (vs. New Orleans, September 8, 2011)
  • Most points in the Kickoff Game, total: 76, Green Bay (42) and New Orleans (34) — September 8, 2011
  • Longest kick return (tie): 108 yards, Randall Cobb (Green Bay vs. New Orleans — September 8, 2011)
  • Longest field goal (tie): 63 yards, Sebastian Janikowski (Oakland vs. Denver — September 12, 2011)
  • Most combined passing yards in a single game, broken twice:
  • 933, Tom Brady (New England, 517) and Chad Henne (Miami, 416) — September 12, 2011
  • 1,000, Matthew Stafford (Detroit, 520) and Matt Flynn (Green Bay, 480) — January 1, 2012
  • Most yards thrown by a rookie quarterback in his first game: 422, Cam Newton (Carolina vs. Arizona)
  • Most passing yards, rookie, season: 4,051, Cam Newton, Carolina
  • Most yards thrown by a quarterback, first two games of the season, broken twice:
  • 854 yards, Cam Newton (September 18, 2011), Carolina, stands as record for a rookie
  • 940 yards, Tom Brady (September 18, 2011), New England Patriots
  • Most consecutive second-half drives to end in touchdowns: 5, Buffalo (vs. Oakland, September 18, 2011)
  • Largest point margin prior to a successful comeback in consecutive games, modern era, broken twice:
  • 18, Buffalo (18 vs. Oakland, 21 vs. New England)
  • 20, Detroit (20 vs. Minnesota, 24 vs. Dallas)
  • Most field goals of 50 or more yards, single game (tied twice):
  • 3, Sebastian Janikowski, Oakland (54, 55, and 50; vs. Houston, October 9, 2011)
  • 3, Josh Scobee, Jacksonville (54, 54, and 51; vs. Baltimore, October 24, 2011)
  • Highest net punting average for a season: 43.99 yards, Andy Lee, San Francisco
  • Longest game-winning punt return touchdown in overtime: 99 yards, Patrick Peterson, Arizona (vs. St. Louis, November 6, 2011)
  • Most punt returns in a season for touchdown (tied): 4, Patrick Peterson, Arizona
  • Most punt return yards by a rookie in a season: 699, Patrick Peterson, Arizona
  • Most field goals in a season: 44, David Akers, San Francisco
  • Most points in a season without a touchdown: 166, David Akers, San Francisco
  • Most rushing touchdowns by a quarterback in a season: 14, Cam Newton, Carolina
  • Most passing yards in a season: 5,476, Drew Brees, New Orleans.
  • Tom Brady, New England (5,235) and Matthew Stafford, Detroit (5,038) also passed for more than 5,000 yards marking the 4th and 5th times an individual has reached that milestone in NFL history, and the first time more than one person has done it in a single season.
  • Fewest turnovers in a season (tied): 10, San Francisco
  • The 2011 Saints broke many offensive records on January 1, 2012:
  • Most net yardage of offense in a season: 7,474
  • Most net yards passing: 5,347
  • Most completions: 472
  • Highest completion percentage (team) for the season: 71.3
  • Fewest fumbles in a season: 6
  • Most first downs for the season: 416
  • Most passing first downs in a season: 280
  • Most kick-offs resulting in a touchback, season: 62
  • Highest third down conversion percentage: 57.9%
  • The 2011 Raiders also broke a few records:
  • Most penalties, season: 163
  • Most yards penalized, season: 1,358
  • Most all purpose yards in a season: 2,696, Darren Sproles, New Orleans
  • Most receiving yards by a tight end in a season, broken twice:
  • 1310, (Jimmy Graham, New Orleans vs. Carolina)
  • 1327, (Rob Gronkowski, New England vs. Buffalo)
  • Most games, 300+ yards passing, season: 13, Drew Brees, New Orleans
  • Most consecutive 300+ yards passing games: 7, Drew Brees, New Orleans
  • Punt return touchdowns, career: 12, Devin Hester, Chicago
  • Most consecutive games, 100+ passer rating, season: 12, Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay
  • Highest passer rating, season: 122.5, Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay
  • Most field goals of 50 or more yards, season, all teams: 90
  • Highest field goals of 50 or more yards percentage, season, all teams: 63.8
  • Highest completion percentage (individual), season: 71.2, Drew Brees, New Orleans
  • Longest pass completion (tied twice):
  • 99, Tom Brady, New England (vs. Miami, September 12, 2011)
  • 99, Eli Manning, New York Giants (vs. New York Jets, December 24, 2011)
  • Most consecutive games, 2+ touchdown passes (tied): 13, Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay
  • Most times finished in the first place: 23, New York Giants
  • Playoff records & milestones

  • Most offensive yards in a single playoff game: 627, New Orleans (vs. Detroit, Wild Card January 7, 2012)
  • First quarterback to reach 400+ yards in two consecutive postseason games: Drew Brees, New Orleans (First time: 2010 vs. Seattle; 2nd time: 2011 vs. Detroit – both Wild Card games)
  • Most first downs (tie): 34, New Orleans (vs. Detroit, Wild Card January 7, 2012)
  • Most receiving yards in a playoff debut: 210, Calvin Johnson, Detroit (vs. New Orleans, Wild Card January 7, 2012)
  • Most consecutive playoff games lost (tie): 7, Detroit Lions
  • Tim Tebow's game-winning pass to Demaryius Thomas for Denver (vs. Pittsburgh, Wild Card January 8, 2012) set several records:
  • Longest scoring play in a playoff overtime: 80 yards
  • Shortest time of a drive in regular and postseason overtime: 11 seconds
  • Quickest win in overtime: 11 seconds
  • Most playoff appearances: 31, New York Giants
  • Most completions to start a super bowl: 9, Eli Manning
  • Most touchdown passes in a single playoff game (tie): 6, Tom Brady, New England
  • Most league championship game appearances: 19, New York Giants
  • Most Super Bowls Started as QB (tie): 5, Tom Brady
  • Record for most yards per completion (31.6) in a NFL playoff game Tim Tebow
  • 3rd player in NFL playoff history to pass for 300 yards, and rush for 50 yards. Tim Tebow
  • Most Super Bowls lost (tie): 4, New England Patriots
  • Most playoff games won starting QB (tie): 16, Tom Brady
  • Players of the Week/Month

    The following were named the top performers during the 2011 season:

    Offense

  • Most points scored: Green Bay, 560 (35.0 PPG)
  • Fewest points scored: St. Louis, 193 (12.1 PPG)
  • Most total offensive yards: New Orleans, 7,474
  • Fewest total offensive yards: Jacksonville, 4,149
  • Most total passing yards: New Orleans, 5,347
  • Fewest total passing yards: Jacksonville, 2,179
  • Most rushing yards: Denver, 2,632
  • Fewest rushing yards: New York Giants, 1,427
  • Defense

  • Fewest points allowed: Pittsburgh, 227 (14.2 PPG)
  • Most points allowed: Tampa Bay, 494 (30.9 PPG)
  • Fewest total yards allowed (defense): Pittsburgh, 4,348
  • Most total yards allowed (defense): Green Bay, 6,585
  • Fewest passing yards allowed: Pittsburgh, 2,751
  • Most passing yards allowed (defense): Green Bay, 4,796
  • Fewest rushing yards allowed (defense): San Francisco, 1,236
  • Most rushing yards allowed (defense): Tampa Bay, 2,497
  • References

    2011 NFL season Wikipedia