2011 Arena Football League season

The 2011 Arena Football League season was the 24th season in the history of the league. The regular season began on March 11, 2011 and ended on July 23, 2011.[1] The Jacksonville Sharks, in their second year of existence, defeated the Arizona Rattlers 73–70 in ArenaBowl XXIV on August 12, 2011 to conclude the playoffs.

2011 Arena Football League season
LeagueArena Football League
Sportarena football
DurationMarch 9 – August 12
Regular season
Season championsArizona Rattlers
Season MVPNick Davila, ARZ
League postseason
American Conference championsJacksonville Sharks
  American Conference runners-upGeorgia Force
National Conference championsArizona Rattlers
  National Conference runners-upChicago Rush
ArenaBowl XXIV
ChampionsJacksonville Sharks
  Runners-upArizona Rattlers
Finals MVPAaron Garcia, JAX
AFL seasons
2011 Arena Football League season is located in the United States
........Gladiators
........Gladiators
Mustangs
Mustangs
Power
Power
Soul
Soul
Force
Force
Predators
Predators
Sharks
Sharks
Storm
Storm
VooDoo
VooDoo
Barnstormers
Barnstormers
Command
Command
Rush
Rush
Talons
Talons
Vigilantes
Vigilantes
Blaze
Blaze
Rattlers
Rattlers
SaberCats
SaberCats
Shock
Shock
American: East, South
National: West, Central

League business

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Teams

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Three franchises that competed in the 2008 season, the Philadelphia Soul, San Jose SaberCats, and Kansas City Command (formerly the Kansas City Brigade), returned to competition in the 2011 season, after an announcement made on June 19, 2010.[2]

Two teams that competed in 2010 relocated and have assumed the history of former AFL franchises. It was announced on August 21, 2010 that the Alabama Vipers would become the Georgia Force,[3] and on September 14, 2010 it was revealed that the Bossier–Shreveport Battle Wings would become the New Orleans VooDoo.[4]

The Milwaukee Iron officially changed its name to the Milwaukee Mustangs on January 27, 2011, taking the name of the original franchise.[5]

The city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was awarded an expansion team on August 20, 2010. The team, named the Pittsburgh Power, was the first AFL team to call Pittsburgh home since the Pittsburgh Gladiators, one of the league's four original franchises. The Gladiators moved to Tampa, Florida and became the Tampa Bay Storm after the 1990 season.[6]

The only team that did not return from the 2010 season was the Oklahoma City Yard Dawgz. Owner Phil Miller made the announcement on October 21, 2010, citing an inability to find minority investors as one reason for the decision to not compete.[7]

Realignment

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With several teams relocating, returning, or leaving, the AFL announced the divisional alignment for 2011 on October 21, 2010. Both conferences each had nine teams placed in two divisions.[8]

ConferenceDivisionTeams
AmericanEastCleveland Gladiators, Milwaukee Mustangs, Philadelphia Soul, Pittsburgh Power
SouthGeorgia Force, Jacksonville Sharks, New Orleans VooDoo, Orlando Predators, Tampa Bay Storm
NationalCentralChicago Rush, Dallas Vigilantes, Iowa Barnstormers, Kansas City Command, Tulsa Talons
WestArizona Rattlers, San Jose SaberCats, Spokane Shock, Utah Blaze

Regular season schedule

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Each team played an 18-game regular season with two bye weeks over the course of 20 weeks, making it the longest schedule in the history of the league. The first game of the season was played on March 11, 2011. The Pittsburgh Power began their inaugural season against the Philadelphia Soul, who played their first game since winning ArenaBowl XXII in 2008.

On July 9, the Spokane Shock and Utah Blaze played in a game billed as the "Joe Albi Stadium Summer Classic". The game was played outdoors at Joe Albi Stadium under normal arena football rules.[9]

Regular season standings

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American Conference
East Division
TeamWLPCTPFPADIVCONHomeAway
(2) Cleveland Gladiators108.5569048424–26–57–23–6
Pittsburgh Power99.5008709724–25–65–44–5
Milwaukee Mustangs711.3898728671–53–84–53–6
Philadelphia Soul612.3339149693–35–64–52–7
South Division
TeamWLPCTPFPADIVCONHomeAway
(1) Jacksonville Sharks144.77811589088–012–08–16–3
(3) Georgia Force[a]117.61110079315–37–55–46–3
(4) Orlando Predators117.61110019334–48–46–35–4
Tampa Bay Storm711.3898029932–64–84–53–6
New Orleans VooDoo315.16782610171–72–100–93–6
National Conference
Central Division
TeamWLPCTPFPADIVCONHomeAway
(2) Chicago Rush135.7229578336–29–37–26–3
(3) Dallas Vigilantes117.611106110076–27–56–35–4
Tulsa Talons810.4448948993–54–74–54–5
Kansas City Command612.3338549743–54–94–42–7
Iowa Barnstormers513.27891611162–65–74–51–8
West Division
TeamWLPCTPFPADIVCONHomeAway
(1) Arizona Rattlers162.88911148365–19–28–18–1
(4) Spokane Shock[b]99.500105710273–36–57–22–7
Utah Blaze99.500108211172–44–77–22–7
San Jose SaberCats711.389102210802–44–76–31–8

Eight teams qualify for the playoffs: four teams from each conference, of which two are division champions and the other two have the best records of the teams remaining.[10]

  • Green indicates clinched playoff berth
  • Blue indicates division champion
  • Gray indicates division champion and conference's best record

Tie-breakers

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  • a Georgia clinched the No. 3 seed in the American Conference based on their greater point differential in head-to-head competition with Orlando.
  • b Spokane clinched the No. 4 seed in the National Conference based on their greater point differential in head-to-head competition with Utah.

Statistics

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Final statistics[11]

Passing

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PlayerComp.Att.Comp%YardsTD'sINT'sRating
Nick Davila, ARZ42760470.7%4,91611710127.6
Aaron Garcia, JAX40256271.5%4,95311617125.4
Nick Hill, ORL38757867.0%4,7589717119.5
Tommy Grady, UTA38358365.7%4,36810712119.1
Dan Raudabaugh, DAL36058764.6%4,7419017118.3

Rushing

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PlayerCar.YardsAvg.TD'sLong
Derrick Ross, DAL1676223.73937
Nick Hill, ORL3912754.9939
Johnnie Kirton, CHI3662093.21415
Bobby Reid, TUL3131410.11339
Bernard Morris, PIT463126.8443

Receiving

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PlayerRec.YardsYPGTD'sLong
Anthony Jones, DAL1712,232124.04243
Donovan Morgan, PHI1681,959122.43746
Jesse Schmidt, IOW1302,171120.65543
Troy McBroom, TUL1211,747116.53144
Rod Windsor, ARZ1561,830114.43644

Awards

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All-Arena team

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Offense
PositionFirst teamSecond team
QuarterbackAaron Garcia, JacksonvilleNick Davila, Arizona
FullbackDerrick Ross, DallasChad Cook, San Jose
CenterRandy Degg, JacksonvilleBrennan Carvalho, Arizona
Offensive linemanAdam Tadisch, Cleveland
Richard Ranglin, Kansas City
Mark Lewis, San Jose
Devin Clark, Arizona
Wide receiverRod Windsor, Arizona
Anthony Jones, Dallas
Jesse Schmidt, Iowa
Maurice Purify, Georgia
Donovan Morgan, Philadelphia
Reggie Gray, Chicago
Defense
PositionFirst teamSecond team
Defensive linemanAnttaj Hawthorne, Arizona
Tim McGill, Tampa Bay
Caesar Rayford, Utah
Dusty Bear, Dallas
Derrick Summers, Jacksonville
Mike Lewis, Utah
Middle linebackerCliff Dukes, Tampa BayTim Cheatwood, Cleveland
Jack linebackerKelvin Morris, ChicagoMarlon Moye-Moore, Orlando
Defensive backRayshaun Kizer, Orlando
Micheaux Robinson, Jacksonville
Vic Hall, Chicago
Andre Jones, Milwaukee
Virgil Gray, Arizona
J.C. Neal, Tulsa
Special teams
PositionFirst teamSecond team
KickerCarlos Martinez, GeorgiaFabrizio Scaccia, Arizona
Kick returnerPJ Berry, New OrleansVirgil Gray, Arizona

All-Ironman team

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On August 8, 2011, the All-Ironman team was announced, with P. J. Berry of the New Orleans VooDoo being named the Ironman of the Year.[12]

PlayerPositionTeam
P. J. BerryWR/KRNew Orleans VooDoo
Reggie GrayWR/KRChicago Rush
Jeff HughleyWR/KRJacksonville Sharks
C.J. JohnsonWR/KRGeorgia Force
Marlon Moye-MooreFB/LBOrlando Predators
Jason SimpsonDB/KRChicago Rush

Playoffs

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Conference SemifinalsConference ChampionshipArenaBowl XXIV
         
1Jacksonville63
4Orlando48
1Jacksonville64
American Conference
3Georgia55
2Cleveland41
3Georgia50
A1Jacksonville73
N1Arizona70
1Arizona62
4Spokane33
1Arizona54
National Conference
2Chicago48
2Chicago54
3Dallas51

Conference semifinals

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ConferenceDateKickoffAwayHomeFinal scoreGame siteRecap
AmericanJuly 298:00 p.m. EDTOrlando PredatorsJacksonville SharksJacksonville, 63–48Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena[13]
NationalJuly 298:30 p.m. EDTDallas VigilantesChicago RushChicago, 54–51Allstate Arena[14]
NationalJuly 2910:00 p.m. EDTSpokane ShockArizona RattlersArizona, 62–33US Airways Center[15]
AmericanJuly 313:00 p.m. EDTGeorgia ForceCleveland GladiatorsGeorgia, 50–41Quicken Loans Arena[16]

Conference finals

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ConferenceDateKickoffAwayHomeFinal scoreGame siteRecap
NationalAugust 610:00 p.m. EDTChicago RushArizona RattlersArizona, 54–48US Airways Center[17]
AmericanAugust 88:00 p.m. EDTGeorgia ForceJacksonville SharksJacksonville, 64–55Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena[18]

ArenaBowl XXIV

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DateKickoffAwayHomeFinal scoreGame siteRecap
August 128:30 p.m. EDTJacksonville SharksArizona RattlersJacksonville, 73–70US Airways Center[19]

References

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