Week 4 discipline report
Calls, Discipline, Week 4
Saturday, October 8, 2011 – 12:30 pm | leave a comment
by Ben Austro
Total through Week 3: 19 fines, $235,000.
Zebra Blog fine meter
$
3
6
0,
0
0
0
FINES
2
8
SUSP
0
- Patriots defensive lineman Richard Seymour, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness and $7,500 for facemask foul.
- Patriots safety Patrick Chung, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness.
- Ravens defensive tackle Haloti Ngata, $15,000 for leading with helmet on a tackle. The hit resulted in a fumble returned for a touchdown, which should have been nullified by penalty.
- Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness.
- 49ers tackle Anthony Davis, $25,000, two leg whip penalties.
- Bears safety Brandon Meriweather, $20,000 for a helmet-to-helmet hit (as a repeat offender).
- Eagles defensive end Jason Babin, $15,000 for a hit to the quarterback’s neck.
- Redskins special teamer Niles Paul, $20,000 for hit on a defenseless receiver.
This week: 9 fines, $125,000
Total through Week 3: 19 fines, $235,000.
Zebra Blog fine meter |
|||||||
| $ | 3 | 6 | 0, | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| FINES | 2 | 8 | SUSP | 0 | |||
- Patriots defensive lineman Richard Seymour, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness and $7,500 for facemask foul.
- Patriots safety Patrick Chung, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness.
- Ravens defensive tackle Haloti Ngata, $15,000 for leading with helmet on a tackle. The hit resulted in a fumble returned for a touchdown, which should have been nullified by penalty.
- Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey, $7,500 for unnecessary roughness.
- 49ers tackle Anthony Davis, $25,000, two leg whip penalties.
- Bears safety Brandon Meriweather, $20,000 for a helmet-to-helmet hit (as a repeat offender).
- Eagles defensive end Jason Babin, $15,000 for a hit to the quarterback’s neck.
- Redskins special teamer Niles Paul, $20,000 for hit on a defenseless receiver.
This week: 9 fines, $125,000
The EverBank Field grounds crew made a glaring error when painting the lines on the field, but ultimately one that would confuse viewers, not the officiating crew.