
In honor of Winnipeg Jets' comeback win, here are some of the most shocking finishes in sports history
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Here are some other memorable, out-of-your-mind endings that encapsulate how something that seemed to be lost was suddenly, and almost inexplicably, won:
Duke vs. Houston, 2025 NCAA Men's Final Four
Exactly one month ago, Houston overcame a 14-point deficit in the second half to defeat Duke in the Final Four in San Antonio. Although the Cougars went on to lose to Florida in the title game, the Blue Devils' late collapse is the finish most will remember from this year's tournament.
Duke not only coughed up a double-digit lead — including a six-point advantage with less than a minute remaining — but struggled to score in the final three minutes as everything fell apart. The Cougars ended the game on a 9-0 run. 'Somehow we ended up winning,' Houston guard L.J. Cryer said afterward.
Atlanta Falcons vs. New England Patriots, Super Bowl LI
Atlanta seemed like it was cruising to the first Super Bowl title in franchise history. Instead, the Falcons found themselves on the wrong side of the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history. Matt Ryan led Atlanta to a 28-3 lead in the third quarter before the Tom Brady-led Patriots scored 25 unanswered, including 19 in the fourth quarter, to force overtime. A short touchdown run by James White gave New England its fifth Super Bowl victory.
Dave Wottle, 800 meters, 1972 Olympics
In the final of the men's 800-meter race at the 1972 Munich Olympics, David Wottle looked every bit the underdog. Wearing a tan cap and dead last in the field on the first lap, Wottle seemed more like a fan who'd made his way onto the track rather than a medal contender. Then he began to make his move.
Wottle passed one competitor after another on the second lap and kicked hard as he came to the final 100 meters. He caught and passed Evgeni Arzhanov of the Soviet Union right at the finish line, finishing off a thrilling run for the gold medal.
New York Mets vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 6, 1986 World Series
On the brink of their first title in 68 years, the Boston Red Sox instead found disaster. Having already squandered a one-run lead in the bottom of the ninth inning, the Red Sox were up 5-3 in the bottom of the 10th with no one on base and two outs. But Gary Carter, Kevin Mitchell and Ray Knight all singled, making the score 5-4 and putting the tying run at third base. A wild pitch by Bob Stanley scored Mitchell, tying the game at 5-5. Then came a moment that immediately etched itself into baseball lore. Mookie Wilson hit a slow-rolling groundball that went through the legs of Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner. Knight scored from second and Shea Stadium erupted into pandemonium. The Mets went on to win Game 7 for the second World Series title in franchise history.
Houston Rockets vs. San Antonio Spurs, Dec. 9, 2004: Tracy McGrady scores 13 points in 35 seconds
Even the broadcasters counted the Houston Rockets out. But with the San Antonio Spurs leading by eight points with 35 seconds left in a 2004 regular-season game, the game's outcome seemed inevitable. But someone forgot to tell Tracy McGrady. Smothered by defenders, McGrady hit consecutive 3-pointers, getting fouled on the second for a four-point play. On Houston's next possession, he took an inbound and swished another 3. Then he grabbed a loose ball, dribbled the length of the floor and swished a pull-up, game-winning 3-pointer to help the Rockets edge the Spurs.
Buffalo Bills vs. Kansas City Chiefs, 2021 AFC divisional playoff game
In the 2021 AFC Divisional round, the Buffalo Bills were feeling good when a 19-yard touchdown pass by Josh Allen gave them a 36-33 lead with just 13 seconds remaining. But for Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, that was enough time.
Two quick completions got Kansas City into field goal range and a 48-yard field goal by Harrison Butker sent the game into overtime. The Chiefs got the ball first in overtime, Mahomes drove them right down the field, tossing an eight-yard touchdown pass to Travis Kelce to clinch the victory and shock Allen and the Bills.
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U.S. men win the 4×100-meter freestyle swimming gold at 2008 Olympics
In what is considered one of the greatest Olympic swimming relay races of all time, the United States needed a stunning anchor leg by Jason Lezak to win gold at the Beijing Olympics. After Michael Phelps and Garrett Weber-Gale had given the U.S. men the lead halfway through the race, France's Frédérick Bousquet overtook Cullen Jones on the third leg and gave the French team an advantage heading into the final leg. Lezak initially lost ground but then swam the fastest split in the event's history (46.06 seconds) and out-touched France's Alain Bernard at the wall to give the U.S. gold in a record time of 3:08.24.
Muhammad Ali vs. George Foreman, 1974
In what is now known as the Rumble in the Jungle, Muhammad Ali utilized the rope-a-dope strategy against George Foreman to wear him down and win the heavyweight title. Coming into the match, Ali had lost two matches to opponents whom Foreman had easily defeated, and many felt he was past his prime, especially against such a fearsome fighter.
The early rounds seemed to confirm that. Foreman went on the attack, with Ali leaning against the ropes and absorbing his punches. But as the fight went on, Foreman began to tire. By the eighth round, he was punched out and Ali was still fresh. He came off the ropes and knocked Foreman out, an iconic moment in Ali's singular career.
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Stroud, Houston Texans : 11th Round (QB17) I considered recycling a player from the 2025 surprises piece (Trevor Lawrence), the All-Breakout Team (Bryce Young), or the All-Renaissance Team (Jordan Love), but you already know they're solid picks, so here's a new one: post-hype "sleeper" C.J. Stroud. After clocking in as the fantasy QB8 in points per game his rookie season, Stroud took a big step back last year, finishing as the QB28 with 5.4 fewer fantasy points per game. He saw a discouraging drop-off in touchdown rate and yards per attempt, threw more than twice as many interceptions and rushed for zero touchdowns (after scoring three as a rookie). So which version of the young QB should we expect in 2025: the "next great star" from Year 1 or the "What happened to him?" fantasy bust from Year 2? Let's consider the environment. In both seasons so far, Stroud lost his starting receivers for various stretches of time. But in 2024, that included five missed games from WR1 Nico Collins and nine missed games from WR2 Stefon Diggs. In the six games both receivers were active at the start of the season, Stroud averaged 54% more fantasy points per game than he did the rest of the year. While health remains fickle, Houston picked up the reliable Christian Kirk and two intriguing Iowa State rookies in Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel to bolster their depth. Meanwhile, Stroud was also sacked 52 times last year (second-most in the NFL) after taking just 38 sacks in 2023. His offensive line earned PFF's seventh-worst overall grade and was almost completely reworked for 2025 (of the starting five, only RT Tytus Howard remains). Ultimately, Stroud is one of the league's best young quarterbacks, and another year of development should help hone him further. 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RB2 Braelon Allen, New York Jets : 12th Round (RB45) The drumbeat for Braelon Allen in "deeper" fantasy circles is impossible to ignore, so it's always surprising to see his ADP still stuck down here in the double-digit rounds. He's gaining steam as a 1B to Breece Hall's 1A, in both training camp and preseason. The word among insiders is that he's beloved by the coaches, too talented to ignore and potentially in for a monster year. Oh, and he's 6-foot-1, 235 pounds, with a 96th percentile PlayerProfiler speed score. Allen is just about the only creature on the planet to draw frequent comparisons to Derrick Henry (maybe outside of a rhinoceros). The "worst case" for Allen, based on all the signs, is that he's one of fantasy's best handcuffs, with 20-touch-per-game upside if Hall were to suffer an injury. 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However, with Joe Flacco at the helm in 2024, Downs saw an elite 27% target share and averaged 7.0 receptions, 64.9 yards and 11.7 fantasy points per game. Only five wide receivers saw more targets per game than Downs did with Flacco: Ja'Marr Chase, CeeDee Lamb, Puka Nacua, Malik Nabers and Davante Adams with Aaron Rodgers. Downs saw eight or more targets in an absurd six of seven games with the aged QB. In the eight-game span quarterbacked primarily by Flacco from Weeks 4-11 (basically half the season), Downs was the WR17 in half-PPR points per game. On the season, regardless of QB, he saw a target on 27.9% of his routes, fourth-highest in the league behind Nacua, Nabers and Nico Collins. Getting the picture? Now, Jones isn't Flacco — and no one should project Downs for nine or more targets per game following this news — but he's a much better solution for every Indy pass-catcher than Richardson would have been. Nabers was just an 11-target-per-game sponge with Jones last year, and we've seen stretches of WR1 volume from guys like Sterling Shepard, Golden Tate and Wan'Dale Robinson with Jones at the wheel. All of this bodes well for Downs, who's gearing up for a career year in just about every relevant statistic. He's probably the "sleepiest" lock for triple-digit targets in all of fantasy, and has legitimate WR2 upside if he and Jones find productive chemistry early on. WR2 Marvin Mims Jr., Denver Broncos : 13th Round (WR60) Marvin Mims Jr. has made a splash as a returner through two seasons (two Pro Bowl nods and an All-Pro selection) and managed to score six receiving touchdowns last year, but he's totaled just 61 catches and 880 yards over that span and was the WR41 in 2024 (even with the touchdowns). So why the excitement? Because Mims could be primed for a classic Year 3 wide receiver breakout. Mims ran just 196 routes last season, but was targeted on 25.5% of those routes and averaged 2.57 yards per route run. Among the 130 wideouts to hit 150+ routes, those metrics ranked 13th ... and fourth, respectively. The only receivers to average more YPRR were Puka Nacua, A.J. Brown and Nico Collins. And it seemed head coach Sean Payton finally recognized it the last three weeks of the season, when Mims jumped from 10 to 18 routes per game, and proceeded to rack up 16 catches for 216 yards and four touchdowns. Bo Nix really turned it on towards the end of his rookie year and is a favorite to continue that progression into 2025. Mims' only real target competition in Denver — should he start seeing significant snaps — is Courtland Sutton (not a true target hog for most of his career) and tight end Evan Engram. All Mims needs is opportunity, and he could very quickly become what Brandin Cooks once was for Payton in New Orleans: a small-but-speedy deep threat with the ability to land between low-end WR2 and fringe WR1 in fantasy. Tight End TE Tyler Warren, Indianapolis Colts : 10th Round (TE14) After using Brenton Strange as my All-Breakout tight end, I'm pivoting to a less "sleepy," potentially league-winning tight end in Colts rookie Tyler Warren. Clearly, the decision to start Jones has made an impact, as Warren is the second Indy pass-catcher to make the All-Sleeper Team ... and for good reason. All of their ADPs have been depressed by the "threat" of Richardson, and all will likely rise over the next couple weeks before the season. Fortunately, Warren still squeaks past the threshold as I write this, making him an easy pick. A year ago, Brock Bowers was the TE11, in roughly the eighth or ninth round, by Yahoo ADP. Back in 2023, Sam LaPorta was the TE24 all the way down in the mid-teens. Both finished as the No. 1 tight end in fantasy as rookies. And while I'm not projecting that for Warren, it has set a new precedent for uber-talented, highly-drafted tight ends in Year 1. Warren was the 14th overall pick in April (one spot later than Bowers in 2024), is a 6-foot-5, 256-pound athletic specimen of near-Gronkian proportions and just posted one of the best tight end seasons in college football history. Specifically, 104 catches, 1,233 yards and eight receiving touchdowns on a 31.4% target share ... oh, and 218 yards and four touchdowns as a rusher, just for kicks. He's drawn comparisons to Jeremy Shockey — who was the fantasy TE4 as a rookie — and will very likely fit into the elite tight end tier for most of the next decade. It's just a question of whether he does it in Year 1. Warren will not remain a sleeper for long, but he makes the team without hesitation here in August. FLEX RBs Javonte Williams & Jaydon Blue, Dallas Cowboys : Williams - 143 (RB42) / Blue - 166 (RB49) Some would say that having two guys in the All-Sleeper FLEX is cheating. I say it's intelligently hedging, and allowing you, the reader, to make the pick you prefer. Plus, it's a FLEX. As in flexible. Options. You get me. Right now, heading into Week 3 of the preseason, Javonte Williams figures to be the opening day starter for the Cowboys, while fifth-round rookie Jaydon Blue profiles as the pass-catcher and change-of-pace back. However, the depth chart remains more or less wide open, which is why both backs are being drafted this late. If Williams does secure the starting job, he'll be the cheapest RB1 in all of fantasy, playing in a borderline elite offense. Considering he's been held out of preseason action alongside other key starters like Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens and Jake Ferguson, his chances are looking better by the minute. Meanwhile, Blue is set to make his preseason debut against Atlanta on Friday, after working through a foot/ankle injury the past couple weeks. The injury deflated what was a growing sense of sleeper hype earlier in the offseason, but he's probably the most explosive back on the depth chart and has three-down upside if Williams flops. Unless Miles Sanders sees a Year 7 resurgence (doubtful), one or both of these running backs should have value in the Dallas offense. Feel free to pick your favorite, or honestly just scoop up both until we get clarity in Week 1. Odds are you'll get an unheralded RB2/RB3 out of it, as we did with Rico Dowdle last season (RB24).