
Ian Hartitz breaks down the near-misses for NFL players who came oh so close to fantasy glory in Week 16, including Cooper Kupp and Tony Pollard.

Week 16 has come and gone. Sixteen NFL games brought joy, laughs and tears to football fans and, of course, fantasy football faithful.
Today, we’ll focus on the latter sadness and break down just how close some came to achieving fantasy football glory.
What follows is a breakdown of all the “Sheesh” moments from Week 16. I’ve watched every game and combed play-by-play data to help determine instances when:
First, the one player who dealt with arguably more excruciating sheesh than just about anyone else over the last week…
2023 hasn’t been a year to remember for Kupp. His fantasy managers can probably relate:
The last performance wasn't that brutal … until you watch the film. It’s not a stretch of the imagination to say that Kupp should have had not one but two additional two-yard TDs to his name during the Rams’ Thursday night win over the Saints.
Neither was an absolute layup, but both were still balls that you would expect one of the game’s single-best players to catch more times than not. Here’s to hoping Kupp can rebound in Week 17’s smash spot against the Giants’ 27th-ranked defense in PPR points per game allowed to the position on the off chance that some of his fantasy managers are still alive.
There were roughly six clear dropped TDs in Week 16, which sucks because, you know, football is pretty cool when players make great catches and score points:
Seahawks TE Colby Parkinson also caught a pass in the back corner of the end zone on what should have been a nine-yard TD, but sadly he only managed to get one foot down and showed no awareness to even attempt a toe drag. That said: Kudos to Parkinson for later catching a game-winning five-yard score with just 57 seconds left.
A similar phenomenon happened to Falcons RB Bijan Robinson on what probably should have been a four-yard TD. Sadly, Robinson’s fantasy managers didn’t get a redemption story here.
Getting all the way to the one-yard line but failing to score a TD is objectively a sheeshy feeling — particularly when fantasy managers are forced to watch someone else vulture away the score that was SO CLOSE to belonging to them.

Dec 24, 2023; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Dallas Cowboys running back Tony Pollard (20) rushes with the ball against the Miami Dolphins during the first half at Hard Rock Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports
Here’s the full list of Week 16’s players who managed to get the football within three feet of the goal line, but not quite across the plane, and ultimately didn’t score later on the same drive:
Swift joins Austin Ekeler and Joe Mixon with six such sheeshes this season. That’s a lot of sheesh!
Air yards measure the distance that any given pass travels (wait for it) in the air. Subtracting yards after the catch from every player’s receiving yards total before taking the difference with total air yards helps us pinpoint exactly how much opportunity through the air a player failed to come down with for one reason or another.
Sometimes unrealized air yards are more akin to “prayer yards” because the pass wasn’t overly catchable in the first place, so grinding the ole film helps with identifying those sorts of situations.
Anyway, nine players racked up at least 70 unrealized air yards in Week 16 specifically:
Only five players have racked up over 900 unrealized air yards this season: Chris Olave (1,124), DeAndre Hopkins (1,102), Calvin Ridley (921), Garrett Wilson (917) and Davante Adams (915). That’s a lot of sheesh.
Our previous section helped quantify the most missed opportunities through the air, but there were an additional handful of targets that I can’t help call out because it sure seemed like the following players could have put six points on the board with a bit more accurate pass.
For example, Steelers WR Diontae Johnson got all kinds of open deep on what probably should have been a 69-yard house call … only for Mason Rudolph to sail the pass long and incomplete.
Overall, there were roughly 15 instances where I subjectively believe pass-catchers didn’t receive catchable passes on what would have otherwise been TDs, although differing levels of openness, difficulty of throw and pressure hardly made all of these near misses of the layup variety.
As Benjamin Franklin once said: Not all sheesh is created equal.
While the box score doesn’t account for who to blame on any particular interception, Joshua Dobbs a rocket scientist isn’t always required to figure out that sometimes the QB wasn’t overly at fault.
Specifically:
Fun fact: Fantasy players don’t get rewarded fantasy points for drawing defensive pass interference penalties. Should they? I don’t really think so, but some people disagree with me, so here we are.
The top eight players in most yards gained courtesy of drawing DPI flags were as follows in Week 16:
Additionally, Colts WR Alec Pierce (from the 14-yard line), Jaguars TE Evan Engram (15), Packers WR Romeo Doubs (7), Cowboys WR KaVontae Turpin (4) and Browns TE David Njoku (1) drew DPIs in the end zone to set up their offense at the one-yard line on drives that did not culminate with them scoring a TD.
I think I speak for all of us when I say for one last time: Sheesh.
We’re on to Week 17.
