The object of this study is to find our whether there are differences between the forms of violence exerted by sportsmen and those represented within sports areas. Three hundred competitors from five sports disciplines (karate, basketball, table tennis, swimming and shooting) were approached and filled out a questionnaire. Results showed (1) sportsmen do not exert the same forms of violence depending on the sport and that there are similarities between the forms of violence in sports and those represented in the sporting field which supports the "homological assumption" [Bourdicu, 1979]; (2) the frequency and degree of the forms of violence relate to one another and differentiate sports significantly, thus confirming the influence of their level; and (3) a cross-matching of the forms of violence and their level shows an uneven distribution of the sports in three "classes". Therefore, these overall results show that the forms of violence, their frequency and their degree are particularly effective variables when accounting for differences in "relations" violence in sports and among sportsmen.