By One Measure, The Saints Were The Most Violent Team In 2011
Reuters has crunched some numbers, and come up with one way to measure just how aggressive the Saints defense was in 2011, a year played under their bounty system. By taking the number of total penalties and identifying the percentage of "violent penalties"—that is, unnecessary roughness, chop blocks, late hits; etc—they determined that New Orleans was the biggest offender in the league.
A whopping 37 percent of flags on the Saints were for safety-related penalties. To put it in perspective, the Raiders, the most penalized team overall, only scored 20 percent. The Saints also led the league with 1.6 "violent penalties" per 100 players, nearly twice as much as the league average of 0.84.
It's not a perfect metric, and it doesn't prove anything—a late hit can be the result of sloppy play just like a false start—but you better believe if the Saints weren't leading the pack, they'd be using that info in their defense.
Insight: In bounty seasons, Saints among NFL's most violent [Reuters]
Three NBA Playoff Teams Likely to Be Eliminated Early
UFC Winnipeg Betting Picks: Best Bets for April 18th Card
Why the NBA Must Fix Its Draft System to Stop Tanking
Friday April 17th Expert MLB Betting Picks, Predictions
NFL IQ AI Test: How Accurate Is NFL's New AI Chatbot?
Five Golfers Most Likely to Win Multiple Majors in 2026
- NHL Betting Picks April 16: Top Plays for Final Regular Season Games
- MLB Picks Today: Best Bets for Diamondbacks vs Orioles and Cubs vs Phillies
- NBA Play-In Picks: Best Bets for Warriors vs Clippers and Magic vs 76ers
- NBA Play-In Player Props: Donovan Clingan, LaMelo Ball Headlines Best Picks
- Tuesday April 14th MLB Betting Picks and Expert Predictions
- Sunday NBA Betting Guide: Top Picks for Bucks, Lakers, Timberwolves
- 2027 NCAA Title Odds: Michigan, Duke Lead Early Betting Favorites

