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Is Lukaku Really a Fantasy Football Troll?

Over the last few seasons of Fantasy Premier League I have been a regular owner of Romelu Lukaku and have generally been a very satisfied customer. He is an incredible young footballer and his Fantasy performance is already close to elite level.

But it seems that many FPL managers do not share my enthusiasm, and frequently label the giant Belgian as a ‘troll’ due to the suggestion that he too often fails to deliver expected attacking returns against minnows.

I have always felt that this was unfair. In general, I believe he scores when I expect him to, he blanks when I expect him to and he delivers Fantasy points at a level that matches or slightly exceeds his price.

I have long wondered why he has such a bad reputation and whether there was anything statistical to back this up or if it was just an emotional reaction on the part of some frustrated owners when, occasionally, he blanks against a lowly side.

So I set out to see if I could clarify once and for all if Lukaku is indeed a troll by comparing some key data points against other prominent  forwards. I chose to compare him with Sergio Aguero, Wayne Rooney, Harry Kane and Diego Costa- four of the most relevant forwards in the game over the last five years and players that in the most part are still competing with the Belgian for spots in our teams.

My sample includes Lukaku’s Premier League career from 2012/13 onwards, Aguero’s from 2011/12 onwards, Costa and Kane from 2014/15 onwards and Rooney from 2011/12-2015/16. I have included this season’s data up to Gameweek 22.

Data Analysis

 To start with, here is the basic data for the five players included in the sample:

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Minutes Played12471738757991256712262
Starts (Sub)137 (23)83 (6)71 (3)141 (10)146 (20)
Goals72594776113
Assists3313154237
Bonus Points978251131137
Fantasy Points765512408813975
YC/RC11/09/021/025/116/1


Given the variance in minutes played between the players, these numbers aren’t greatly useful on their own so I chose to look at individual statistics based on time played rather than overall numbers.


LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Minutes per Goal173125123165108



Unsurprisingly, Sergio Aguero is a runaway leader here and Lukaku trails in last place. Not a great start for the Belgian.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Minutes per Assist377568386299331



Wayne Rooney leads the way here possibly due to a couple of seasons playing in a deeper role and a less ruthless playing style. Lukaku is more than competitive in this metric which goes some way to dispel the common accusation that he is a selfish player.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Minutes per Point16.314.414.215.412.6



While Lukaku again trails the pack, he is reasonably close to his competitors when it comes to how many points he scores while on the pitch. If we take into account his cheaper price, these numbers are more than acceptable.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Minutes per YC1039820272502766



The Belgian comfortably leads the way in this one. While yellow card count may not seem the most relevant of data points, the reduced risk of red cards, suspensions and lost bonus points caused by regular bookings can be extremely problematic and Lukaku certainly does not troll us in this department.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Points Per Game4.785.755.55.385.87



Again, Lukaku trails the pack here but his 2012/13 season at West Brom does not help his cause, having made 15 of his 35 appearances as a substitute. Overall, 14% of his Premier League appearances have been as a sub, which puts him behind Kane (6%), Costa (4%), Rooney (6.6%) and Aguero (12%) and brings his PPG down a fair bit.

So far things don’t look too great for Lukaku but it’s important that we put all this data in context. Firstly Lukaku (23) is significantly younger than Aguero (28), Costa (28) and Rooney (31) and only a couple of months older than Kane. The fact that he can even come close to these guys at his age is impressive. Harry Kane, by the way, is a complete freak.

Secondly, he has played for weaker teams in the Baggies and the Toffees,  than his opponents in the sample. Here we can look at the average position each of these players’ teams has finished in the league while they have been playing for them (not including 2016/17 data):

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Average League Position8.7545.53.82



We can also look at the average amount of goals each team has scored while the five players in our sample have played for them (not including 2016/17 data):

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
Average Team Goals55.2563.5667083



Clearly Lukaku is at a big disadvantage playing for West Brom and Everton in the past five years and this should be taken into account when looking at his overall statistics.

Now we can look at what % of his team’s goals each player has scored over the full sample including the current season.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
% of Teams Goals Scored28%34%26%22%24%



This is impressive for Lukaku. He has clearly been playing for less potent teams and been shouldering the goalscoring burden quite significantly.

Now we can turn our attention to what I will call ‘Troll Metrics’, data points that we can relate specifically to so-called trolling. The first thing we will look at his how often these guys actually get onto the pitch. The following table looks at what percentage of pitch time each of these guys has played compared to what would have been possible. For example, Lukaku has played 12471 minutes out of a possible 15660 since 2012 which equates to 80%.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
% of Possible Mins Played80%84%65%73%64%



This is very positive for the Belgian. There is nothing worse than players who are constantly benched, rotated or injured. Having played an impressive 80% of all available minutes in the last 4 and a half seasons, Lukaku is a long way from being a selection headache, especially when compared to other notorious ‘trolls’ such as Theo Walcott, Raheem Sterling and Kevin Mirallas. When we combine his durability with his excellent yellow card record, we have a very reliable player who is unlikely to cause us Saturday afternoon heartbreak.

Probably the most common accusation aimed at Lukaku is that he never performs when expected to. According to folklore, you will bring him in for a run of great fixtures and he will go on a blanking spree but as soon as you transfer him out he will haul in some unlikely fixture.

The first thing we can examine here is how often he scores in home games as we will generally expect more goals in home fixtures than away games.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
% of Goals Scored at Home54%46%54%59%54%



Here we see that the only player who could be accused of trolling is Harry Kane. Lukaku’s 54% of goals scored at home is perfectly standard.

We can also look at how many of his goalscoring returns occur in home games.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
% of Returns at Home54%40%55%57%56%



Once again, Lukaku’s numbers are totally standard and it is only Kane who is proving more difficult to predict.

Finally, and perhaps most interestingly, we can take a look at who Lukaku tends to score against and how this compares to the other premium forwards. For each season played, I have broken down the teams in the league into 3 categories; those who finished the season in the top 5, those who finished in the bottom 5 and those who finished in the middle 10 positions (For 2016/17 I have gone with the current league positions as of 22nd Jan). I have then calculated the % of goals that each player scored against each group of teams. If Lukaku is to live up to expectations as a master troll, we should see a smaller % of his goals scored against the weaker teams than the other 4 strikers in our sample. We might also expect a slightly higher % of goals scored against top 5 sides.

LukakuKaneCostaRooneyAguero
% of Goals Scored vs Top 515%15%15%13%17%
% of Goals Scored vs Middle 1033%35%33%35%31%
% of Goals Scored vs Bottom 552%50%52%52%52%



Given the sample size of approximately 550 games of football, these numbers are remarkably similar across the board. And as regards Lukaku being an unpredictable goalscorer, there is nothing to back it up.

Conclusion

Do not believe the hype. There is nothing to suggest that Romelu Lukaku will troll you more than any other premium forward. As long as you have realistic expectations and don’t expect double digit FPL points hauls every week, the Belgian is a relatively stress-free player to own. He scores predictably and consistently, gets very few bookings, has never been sent off and misses very few games through injury or rotation. He also provides a decent amount of assists and bonus points, which helps provide consistent and stable returns.

When we take into account his age, experience and the fact that he has played most of his Premier League football for two teams that are not even close to challenging for the title, his exploits over the last five years have been extremely impressive. While his gross statistics maybe fall slightly behind the other players listed, when we account for the fact that he is usually significantly cheaper than the other four players (Harry Kane’s freak debut season apart) he appears to represent excellent value when the fixtures are kind.

My own personal theory as to why he is considered such a troll is simply that people expect too much from Lukaku, especially when giving him the armband. Captaining a sub-10m player in a mid-table side is a punt no matter the opposition.

If you put the captaincy on Big Rom and he didn’t perform then it was a gamble that didn’t pay off. It doesn’t mean you got trolled.

So lay off the big man, let him do his thing and don’t expect miracles. There are far bigger headaches in this game than Romelu Lukaku.

108 Comments Post a Comment
  1. Desperately Seeking Dusan
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 12 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    This article ignores points in relation to cost (unless somehow I've skipped over that). Many comments say he's a risk because he's a sub 10 striker but only just and not significantly different from a Costa or Kane. I'd be interested to see the variation in his points because it feels like he does nothing and then gets a bunch of points over 3 or 4 games before blanking again. I wonder how he compares with 7-8 million range strikers like a Defoe. I always feel if I play three strikers I (in previous seasons) want a super premium Aguero, then another high price striker like an Ibra this season and if I then put in Lukaku it feels like I use up a lot of money for a player who doesn't return as well as a premium midfielder with a Defoe type. Basically, I'd be interested in seeing how the value for money stats compare if there is a way and the standard deviation or variance of returns.

    1. wowBOBwow
      • 7 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      I did want to factor cost into the article but it's very difficult as the prices change throughout each season.

      Pound for pound I'm pretty confident he is on our with his rival strikers. Obviously Kane's debut season was an anomaly and Costa this season was underpriced due to Chelsea's unusual season prior but aside from that I think he has been fairly priced for his whole fantasy career.

  2. Lets Talk About 19 Baby
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Own personal experience Lukaku has been my biggest fantasy football Troll.

  3. Pompel
    • 10 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Great article - just brought him in for the second time this season!

  4. Bezzer
    • 8 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    I used the triple captain on him for a DGW last season only to get 2 blank gameweeks. He's got a long way to go to rebuild my faith...

    This weeks blank wasn't a good start!

    1. Soyislam
      • 8 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      Same here.. I used the triple captain on him for a DGW last season too xO

  5. Kanteisking
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Thoughts on the team and any improvements? 0.3ITB

    Grant
    Baines, Alonso, Jones
    Alli, Sanchez, Lallana, Phillips
    Zlatan, Costa, Kane

    Subs : Jaku, Nyom, Chambers, Davies

    Thanks!

    1. Johnny Leghorn
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 7 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      No disrespect but it's really nice to read comments on the article isn't of rating some randoms team...again. This site you used to be a conversation board of tactics, potential players and observations. It's now become 80% of people asking for the masses to rate their team. Theres an app for that. Go with your gut, devise your own a tragedies, make it your own team!

  6. aquavit
    • 14 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Time and again I've bought Lukaku, most recently last week (because of the Costa kerfluffle), and time and again he's blanked, most recently last week. Now that Costa's back and scoring, bye bye Lukaku.

  7. rogerbarton
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Initial thoughts on Hazard + Gabriel > Ali + Rose (+ £0.4m)?

    Could upgrade to Walker or a Chelsea CB too.

  8. Firminooooo
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 8 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Lukaku is now in my team. I will sue your ass if he blanks in one of the next games.

  9. BristolJim
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 14 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    What a fantastic article!

  10. Robben Mee Blind
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Great article, cheers. Lukaku has been in my team for large portions of each of the last 3 seasons and overall he's been very reliable and a good go-to option. I'll likely be getying him in again soon. Knowing when to get rid is often tricky though- sometimes I've held on for just a bit too long when Everton were in a poor run of form

  11. Eddie
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 11 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Great article. Love the stats.

  12. minges
    • 12 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Wow!! A lot of work must have gone into this. Amazing!!

  13. marcomatrix23
    • 8 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    for me, lukaku is good pick although sometimes he didn't deliver when we expect him to haul
    also, he tends to blanks for long period of time and then hauls
    maybe, that's why he was called TROLL :p

    about captaining, i'm pretty lucky when i captained lukaku
    like vs bournemouth last season (if i'm not mistaken)
    or vs sunderland earlier this season

    and luckily, i'm avoid TC him last season when DGW

  14. Gnu
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 14 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Absolute brilliant piece of work and well presented for an easy read (I like that 🙂 )
    Perfect timing as well as he's on the radar.
    I've owned him many times and served me well although I do get left with a sense of frustration when he blanks a couple of times so this is an interesting and enlightening read.
    Thank you.

  15. Samurai Blue
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 11 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Fantastic article!

  16. Werkself
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 10 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Thanks for this. My net takeaway is that I really feel good about bringing in Kane this week.

    1. wowBOBwow
      • 7 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      Haha, yep I bought Kane into my own team immediately after finishing the article. I was amazed quite how impressive his numbers are.

    2. Postman7
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 7 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      Agreed. Lukaku simply doesn't compare to these other premium players, but the article is also right in highlighting that he is cheaper, on a weaker team etc, so the expectation of what he might do is probably also too inflated.

      Kane is simply a must have. And then given the season we're having, its a straight toss up between Costa & Ibra for the 2nd premium. Or maybe even both if you want to go big up top!
      (that's what I have ended up doing this week, as I was getting too frustrated with Hazzy to keep holding...)

  17. djpete
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 11 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Interesting article, will certainly bear it in mind. I'm not sure I agree with how some of the data is measured but maybe you're right and it's just about expectation.

    Anyway, it was well worth it for 'Harry Kane, by the way, is a complete freak'.

  18. Ghost10
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Thank you for the amazing research and simple way it's laid out!

    Will be bringing him in next week as a planned transfer, and then bringing in Tom Carroll the following week as a 5th mid to free up funds in case I need to do Lukaku —> Costa after Everton’s good fixtures. If Lukaku keeps scoring though, then I may ignore Costa indefinitely.

  19. tisza
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Got burnt by him on DGWs in particular last season.
    Had him for 10 games at beginning of this season and averaged 7PPG.
    Do worry when people are checking whether to see he's smiling or not during games as a factor in buying him in.
    can see him coming back in.

  20. Az
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • Has Moderation Rights
    • 14 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    An excellent, well researched article - thanks!

    I particularly like,

    "My own personal theory as to why he is considered such a troll is simply that people expect too much from Lukaku, especially when giving him the armband. Captaining a sub-10m player in a mid-table side is a punt no matter the opposition."

    I think this is a great point. Even top sub-10m players like Ozil, Eriksen, Coutinho all have a risk of burning you and Lukaku is no different.
    get him in and stick with him would be my vote, but keep the captains on the premium picks.

  21. tisza
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    one of the things that tends to hold people back from Lukaku is that Everton don't seem to have been particularly profilic as a team over last few seasons.
    Don't seem to have been a team that often score more than 2 goals per game compared to the other big sides.

    the other stat that would have interesting in this comparison is the number of times the players had scored more than one goal per game.

  22. The Cloud Watcher
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    I've always considered Lukaku a personal troll, and yet there he is, in my team right now!

    Given that he has 117 points so far this season (currently 4th best for strikers) it's clear he is a consistent scorer. I think my problem is that I never hold him long enough to benefit from that consistency. Given Aguero's issues this season, I will hopefully stick with Lukaku long enough to benefit for the rest of the season.

  23. Annie
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 11 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Hmm, maybe. Last season they scored 3 in more games than anyone. Depends who you're comparing player wise, Lukaku is the best player at his price point.

  24. Celt Abroad
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 11 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    I held him for three months last season, in a period where he had three double gameweeks. He didn't score any goals. Burnt by this experience, I vowed not to have him this year. He scored regularly. Troll.

    1. Postman7
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 7 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      What he just said!

  25. Pep bites Kun
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Very nice article MGPT. Relevant stats and an easy read at the same time. You obviously put a lot of work into this, so many thanks for your insight.

    It puts a different spin and clears my thinking of him as an attacking force. Every day's a school day 🙂 Cheers!

  26. tm245
    • 12 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Nice work - thought the graphic on how often strikers score against the different sides in the table was really interesting information. Cheers for the hard work.

  27. Page 302
    • 8 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Great stuff! One question about the last stats table: Did all those strikers really score around 50% of goals against the bottom 5? That's massive... I mean, if you recalculate it per team, it would be three times more than against other teams!

    50% spread over bottom five
    vs
    50% spread over the rest

    1. L S P
      • 8 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      that's a mistake actually which hasn't been corrected yet. Scroll through p1 comments to see the correction from OP.

  28. GreatCarragherReef
    • 8 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Fantastic article- potentially the best community one i've read. Cheers MGPT

    1. wowBOBwow
      • 7 Years
      7 years, 4 months ago

      Thank you!

  29. Postman7
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    In my 8 seasons playing FPL, I cannot think of a more frustrating player to own... Promises so much, delivers so little.
    I have fallen prey to this on innumerable occasions, and as a consequence near the end of the 2014-15 season I decided I can never own him again.

    He could go on a 3 sequential hat-tricks spree and I still wouldn't even look at him as an option. Feel so much better for not having that headache hanging over me every week!

  30. GGBuffon
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 7 Years
    7 years, 4 months ago

    Great article with really good data research!
    Thank you