
Ian Hartitz breaks down the near-misses for NFL players who came oh so close to fantasy glory in Week 2.

Week 2 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 on all the “Sheesh” moments from Week 2. I’ve watched every game and combed play-by-play data to help determine instances when:
First: The Top-Three “Sheesh” Moments of Week 2.
The 49ers have scored 33, 35, 21, 37, 37, 38, 41, 19, 30 and most recently 30 points in Purdy’s non-injured 10 career extended appearances, winning each and every one along the way.
Mr. Relevant has obviously been a big reason for this success accounting for multiple TDs in all but two of those games along the way.
And yet, Purdy did indeed sheesh two potential chunk TDs during the 49ers’ Week 2 win over the Rams.
Both Brandon Aiyuk and Deebo Samuel were more than open enough to at least pick up a big gain, and more likely put six additional points on the board.
It would have been a lot cooler if Purdy made those throws, but the second-year QB has still thrown the ball downfield well as a whole this season. Don’t fret, 49ers fans: You seem to be in very good hands.
Trevor Lawrence and company might have won Sunday’s matchup against the Chiefs by three scores if the teams decided to play with one-foot-inbounds college rules.
Overall, there were *four* different instances of Jaguars WRs coming down with the football in the end zone, but on each occasion they weren’t able to get both feet down inbounds.
These misses aren’t squarely on T-Law, Zay Jones or Calvin Ridley. Rather, it’s a combination of the execution just not quite being good enough to score six points against a Chiefs defense that made life difficult all afternoon.
Great job by the Chiefs secondary, but Sunday was objectively a sheeshy afternoon for Jaguars fantasy managers.
If an offensive player fumbles the football into the end zone and then the ball goes out of bounds, the defense gets possession at the 20 yard line.
Personally, I think this rule is fair. Hold onto the football near the most precious area of the field if you care so much about keeping it, ya know?
Okay, quit yelling at me: Most hate this rule — especially Jefferson’s fantasy managers after getting got on his near 31-yard TD.
Fantasy managers shouldn’t be crying too hard considering the stud WR still posted an 11-159-0 receiving line on the evening. That said: Sheesh.
These players managed to get the football within three feet of the goal line, but not quite across the plane. Sadly, they did not score on the same drive:
“Congrats” to Swift for being the only player in the NFL with two-such instances of this in 2023.
We’ll continue to keep a season-long leaderboard going here, but for now all fantasy managers can say is: Sheesh.
TDs usually get nullified by penalty for a good reason, but that doesn’t make the roller coaster of adrenaline any less sheeshful for fantasy managers to deal with.
No TDs were nullified by penalty in Week 1, but in Week 2 there were a whopping five such instances.
*Law and Order Music*
These are their stories:
Falcons QB Desmond Ridder did a great job extending the play before lobbing the football into the back of the end zone to an open Mack Hollins, who seemingly kept his toes in bounds for the 12-yard TD.
Or did he? Further review zeroed in on whether or not Hollins’ heels landed out of bounds while corralling the pass.
You can be the judge, but ultimately the NFL said no score, and the Falcons had to settle for a field goal.
The Saints’ stud second-year WR made an absolutely spectacular circus catch on Monday evening, but his night could have been even bigger with *just* a little more precision along the sideline.
Fantasy managers initially celebrated a 16-yard TD… only for further review to show that Olave had indeed just barely stepped out of bounds on his way to the end zone.
As Al Pacino once famously said: (Fantasy) Football is a game of inches.
Defensive pass interferences can be finicky and don’t always occur in instances when the targeted receiver would FOR SURE make the catch.
That said: They are very annoying for fantasy managers to deal with when the result could’ve, should’ve, would’ve been a chunk gain — and maybe even a TD.
The top five players in most yards gained courtesy of drawing DPI flags were as follows:
Also note that Falcons TE Kyle Pitts, Jaguars TE Evan Engram, Seahawks WR Tyler Lockett and Cowboys WR Jalen Tolbert drew shorter DPI penalties that were close enough to the goal line or in the end zone to position their offense at the doorstep.
Although in this particular case, it’s hard to fully blame QB Zach Wilson.
Yes, Garrett utilized some silky-smooth route-running to break wide open from 16 yards out just before halftime.
Also yes, Zach’s (potentially accurate) pass was swatted down at the time of release by Cowboys DL DeMarcus Lawrence.
Great defensive play by the Cowboys, but sheesh oh sheesh it sucks to see a route like this go to waste.
While the box score doesn’t account for who to blame on any particular interception, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that sometimes the QB isn’t to blame.
There were roughly five such instances in Week 2:
It’s probably also fair to give some slack to Russell Wilson, who clearly had some miscommunication with his receiver on the sideline pick.
Two key drops stood out over the weekend on plays that coulda, shoulda, woulda been six points:
First, Chiefs TE Travis Kelce caught one TD in his return to action, but the future Hall of Famer suffered a rare drop on what should have been a 10-yard score in the fourth quarter. Kansas City settled for a field goal on the drive.
And secondly, Bengals WR Tyler Boyd let a perfectly thrown potential three-yard TD slide right through his hands in the back corner of the end zone. Luckily, Joe Burrow immediately regrouped and hit Tee Higgins for a score on the very next play.
There were some other inopportune drops throughout the week that prevented chunk plays, albeit not TDs:
It’s also tough not to be at least a little critical of Chargers WR Joshua Palmer failing to get his second foot down on what had the potential to be an eight-yard TD in the corner of the end zone, as well as Giants WR Isaiah Hodgins letting a potential six-yard score go through his hands.
We also saw stud Bengals WR Ja’Marr Chase get a potential nine-yard score RIPPED out of his hands on the way to the ground — not a drop, but certainly a play fans are used to seeing him make.
Air yards measure the distance that any given pass travels (wait for it) in the air. So if Lamar Jackson throws a b-e-a-utiful 50-yard bomb to FB Patrick Ricard, who then takes the ball into the end zone for a 75-yard TD: We have just 50 air yards despite the gain being for 75.
Unrealized air yards are a good way to see which pass-catchers had a lot of fantasy-friendly opportunities in a given week, but simply couldn’t get the job done (job done).
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.

Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Mike Williams (81) can't catch up to an overthrown pass while defended by Tennessee Titans cornerback Tre Avery (23) during their NFL game at Nissan Stadium Sunday afternoon, Sept. 17, 2023.
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.
The following 11 players racked up at least 70 unrealized air yards in Week 2:
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.
Pressure, openness and other extenuating factors vary; none of these were complete layups. That said, fantasy managers undoubtedly jumped out of their seats for a whole lot of nothing when they happened.
