
Ian Hartitz breaks down the the top-five greatest individual playoff stretches since 2000 ranked from No. 1 to No. 5, including Cooper Kupp, Hakeem Nicks, and more.

“Big-time players make big-time plays in big-time games.”
Santana Moss was right then and he’s right now. Regular-season success is cool and all, but legends are truly made when players manage to ball out when the lights shine brightest in the playoffs.
That brings us to today’s goal: Remembering the top-five greatest individual playoff stretches since 2000 ranked from No. 1 to No. 5 based on my own personal agenda (and stats, but yeah). These were truly some great days to be great.
Larry Legend lived up to the name during his magical 2008 postseason run. Somehow, Fitz caught 30 of 42 targets for 546 yards and seven (!!!) scores in four incredible playoff performances.
No one in NFL history has more receiving yards (546) or receiving TDs (7) than Fitz during a single playoff run — and the eye test was somehow even better than the numbers.
While the Cardinals would ultimately fall just short due to some Ben Roethlisberger-Santonio Holmes heroics, Fitzgerald’s postseason stretch for the ages has stood the test of time and deserves to be considered one of — if not THE — single-best playoff runs the game has ever seen.
Kupp’s historic triple-crown 2021-22 regular season somehow got even sweeter in the postseason when he went NUCLEAR in four consecutive matchups.
A Cardinals defense that had limited him to his worst performance of the season back in Week 4? Five catches, 61 yards and a TD.
What about the Buccaneers, who had allowed the fifth-fewest points per game and hadn’t allowed a QB to clear 300 yards since September? 9-183-1 – including an unbelievable last-second bomb to clinch the win.

Feb 13, 2022; Inglewood, CA, USA; Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Cooper Kupp (10) catches a touchdown pass over Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Eli Apple (20) in the 4th quarter in Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports
Surely a 49ers squad that had already beaten the Rams twice and was widely considered one of the game’s best units could limit him? 11 receptions, 142 yards and a pair of scores.
And just when you thought the man couldn’t soar any higher: Kupp posts an 8-92-2 performance against the Bengals, caught the game-winning score and won f*cking Super Bowl MVP.
Overall, his 478 receiving yards and six scores are second all-time to only Fitzgerald during a single playoff stretch. Of course, the ring and postseason hardware makes everything that much sweeter for Kupp, who shined brightest when it mattered most.
If you thought Flacco’s 2023 campaign was good, wait until you get a load of what he managed to pull off during four consecutive Ravens victories during their Super Bowl-winning 2012-13 campaign.
The most memorable throw from the entire ordeal was Flacco’s miracle 70-yard TD to Jacoby Jones which probably should have been intercepted by Broncos S Rahim Moore if we’re being honest with ourselves.
Regardless, Flacco found a way to out-duel Andrew Luck, Peyton Manning, Tom Brady and Colin Kaepernick in four consecutive weeks. Mind you, Kaepernick was just one game removed from putting up his own legendary playoff performance against the Packers (263-2-1 passing, 16-181-2 rushing).
Overall, Flacco joins Patrick Mahomes (2021), Joe Montana (1989) and Kurt Warner (2008) as the only QBs to ever throw for at least 11 TDs in one playoff stretch — and Montana is the only other one to do so with *zero* INTs along the way. The performances understandably helped fetch Flacco a six-year, $120.6 million deal in addition to his fancy new ring and Super Bowl MVP trophy.
While Nicks didn’t enjoy an overly long period of high-end success at the NFL level, he was a problem for secondaries of all shapes and sizes during his 2010 (79-1052-11) and 2011 (76-1192-7) campaigns.
The (then) third-year receiver kept his momentum up in a major way in the latter year’s postseason, catching absolute fire on his way to racking up 444 total receiving yards — the third-most in a single postseason stretch EVER.
Nicks largely dominated on his way to posting 6-115-2, 7-165-2, 5-55-0 and 10-109-0 receiving lines — most memorably scoring a pair of long TDs (including a Hail Mary!) in Lambeau.
Eli Manning understandably gets most of the credit for that Giants’ Super Bowl run, and the game’s defining throw was caught by Mario Manningham. Still, Nicks’ three games with 100-plus receiving yards leaves him in elite company with 2008 Larry Fitzgerald (4) and 2020 Travis Kelce (3) — the only players in NFL history with at least three such performances in a single postseason.
Yes, Tom Brady was the MVP of this playoff run and certainly rose the tide for all parties involved.
Also yes, there’s a reason why Fournette will forever be known as “Lombardi Lenny” and will never have to pay for a drink in Tampa Bay again.
The postseason stretch is on the shortlist of the game’s very best postseason runs in recent history. Overall, Fournette’s 448 total yards are the eighth-most by any RB ever during a single postseason run:
The only relatively down performance came against Green Bay, but even then Fournette managed to supply his signature postseason play with a ridiculous 20-yard tackle-breaking jaunt to the end zone.
No absolutely monster performances, but at the end of the day only Terrell Davis (1997), Marcus Allen (1983), Thurman Thomas (1990) and John Riggins (1982) racked up more total PPR points than Fournette during a single postseason run … ever.

