| FTBL SEC’s most, least penalized teams over last 5 years

PhillyGirl

Member
http://www.saturdaydownsouth.com/sec-football/sec-penalties-last-five-years-2014/

Penalties are one of the most frustrating aspects of college football. They can ruin drives and become momentum killers.

The SEC has some of the most penalized teams in the country every single year. Why? Sure, much of it has to do with the lack of discipline, while some of it has to do with the loud stadiums teams play in weekly.

Which SEC teams have been the most and least penalized over the last five years? Here’s a breakdown, from the least to the most:

Rank Team G Pen Pen. Yds Pen/G Yds/G
1 Alabama 67 301 2,444 4.49 36.48
2 Kentucky 62 313 2,670 5.05 43.06
3 Miss State 64 331 2,718 5.17 42.47
4 Tennessee 62 345 2,735 5.56 44.11
5 Ole Miss 63 354 2,905 5.62 46.11
6 Vanderbilt 63 363 2,871 5.76 45.57
7 South Carolina 66 368 2,979 5.58 45.14
8 Arkansas 63 391 3,092 6.21 49.08
9 Auburn 66 396 3,438 6.00 52.09
10 LSU 66 433 3,423 6.56 51.86
11 Georgia 67 438 3,453 6.54 51.54
12 Florida 65 490 3,859 7.54 59.37
Missouri* 26 139 1,062 5.35 40.85
Texas A&M* 26 161 1,425 6.19 54.81
*Reflects two years in the SEC

Takeaways:

  • Alabama has committed the least amount of penalties despite playing more games than every other team not named Georgia. The Tide is the only team to average under five penalties per game. Florida fans would tell you the Gators average that per offensive drive. How does Alabama continually commit the least amount of penalties?
  • Florida is holding true to their billing as continually the SEC’s most penalized team over the last five years. Florida wins national championships being the most penalized team, and they also finish 4-8 being one of the most penalized teams. What gives? Florida averages over 7.5 penalties per game, and they have committed 52 more penalties than the next closest team in Georgia. Florida finished 102nd, 114th and 89th committed in the country in the number of penalties under Muschamp’s teams.
  • Of the teams that won BCS championships since 2006, only Alabama is even in the top eight. Auburn, LSU and Florida are outside that range, committing six penalties or more per game. So, how big of an effect do penalties really have? Teams that have won championships not named Alabama haven’t had an issue with it.
 
I've wanted to look deeper into this for several years now and just haven't made the time—it would take a lot.

If there is a desire to compare teams and penalties, there needs to be a more thorough breakdown on what penalties have been called, not just the total number. If there are an inordinate number of penalties called on judgement calls (IE: pass interference) on one team versus the other I could see reasoning for people questioning why does one team have fewer than another.

If a team has double the amount of penalties versus their opponent, and those penalties are false starts, illegal formations, etc., that has nothing to do with the alleged bias often voiced by fans across collegiate football.

—Color me shocked to see UGA fans bring up Dial's hit on Murray. :sarc:
 
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