Hold On – 2024 Week 2

September 27, 2024

By Noonefromtampa

Through week three, 626 penalties have been enforced in 48 games for 7,156 yards yielding an average of 6.625 penalties per team per game. Washington has been called for 20 total penalties which is slightly over the league average at 6.67 penalties per game. They are tied for 14th most penalties along with Chicago.

The top 5 penalized team across the league are:

  1. Baltimore – 31
  2. Cleveland – 29
  3. Houston – 28
  4. Miami – 27
  5. Green Bay – 26

The top 5 penalty calls across the league are:

  1. Offensive Holding, 127 times
  2. False Start, 119 times
  3. Defensive Pass Interference, 49 times
  4. Illegal Formation, 35 times
  5. Defensive Offside, 34 times

Week 3 Summary

Cincinnati – 5 accepted penalties (0 declined) for 16 yards, gave up 1 first down via penalty

Washington – 3 accepted penalties (0 declined) for 28 yards, gave up 1 first downs via penalty

This is the summary of penalties committed by each team:

By Penalty:

Penalty Washington Cincinnati Grand Total
Defensive Offside 0 1 1
Defensive Pass Interference 1 0 1
Defensive Too Many Men on Field 0 1 1
False Start 2 1 3
Illegal Formation 0 1 1
Illegal Use of Hands 0 1 1
Grand Total 3 5 8

By Unit:

Team Defense Offense Grand Total
Washington 1 2 3
Cincinnati 3 2 5
Grand Total 4 4 8

By Player:

Against Player Penalty Accepted
Washington D. Brown False Start 1
N. Igbinoghene Defensive Pass Interference 1
Z. Ertz False Start 1
Cincinnati A. Mims False Start 1
Unnamed Defensive Too Many Men on Field 1
A. Iosivas Illegal Formation 1
G. Pratt Defensive Offside 1
C. Taylor-Britt Illegal Use of Hands 1

Season Totals:

Player Accepted Declined
S. Cosmi 2 1
Z. Ertz 2 0
N. Allegretti 2 0
E. Forbes 2 0
N. Igbinoghene 2 0
C. Lucas 1 0
N. Bellore 1 0
Defense 1 0
B. Sinnott 1 0
F. Luvu 1 0
C. York 1 0
C. Ferrell 1 0
D. Brown 1 0
Special Teams 1 0
O. Zaccheaus 1 0
A. Wylie 0 1

Thoughts

The team and coaches did a great job of cleaning up the red zone penalty issue that plagued the team in week 2. They still had two false start penalties, but they did not impact the team too negatively. Interestingly, both penalties were not on the offensive line; instead, they were committed by Zach Ertz and Dyami Brown.

The special teams unit did not commit any penalties this week either. The long return by Austin Ekeler was not called back like his touchdown was.

 

Sources: nfl.com, nflpenalries.com