These international breaks are a killer. Normally weād be spending Friday afternoon rinsing our brains for Scout Picks but today weāre left hanging, having to ponder another weekend without the ride on the gameweek rollercoaster.
The temporary boredom got me thinking. I started to analyse the Fantasy managers Iād known, the Fantasy manager Iāve been in the past, and the one Iād become.
Iād read throwaway articles where football managers had been put in boxes ā pigeon holed for our convenience. Could we indulge in such pointless merriment with Fantasy Football managers too? Too damn right we could.
If you can’t find yourself amongst this lot (I’ve been at least two of these in my time) – we’re pretty certain you’ll recognise one or two of your mini-league rivals.
The Reluctant Scholar
A self-proclaimed expert in the beautiful game ā heās the guy in the office who always has an opinion and is keen to promote themselves as a football academic. They religiously rise for the āSunday Supplementā but eagerly dismiss Soccer AM as āladdishā and āvulgarā. In truth, they wrestle with an unnatural fascination with Helen Chamberlain and struggle to understand some of the long words that Brian Woolnough comes out with.
They will likely see Fantasy Football as ridiculously trivial; in reality itās a threat to them. Theyāll show willing at first, paying a great deal of attention to their initial squad selection but then, once they are outside the early front-runners, theyāll see it as a slight on their credentials as an āexpertā. Theyāll then dismiss it as a distraction, something they donāt have time for, and reject all theories that their early season “form” is down to a lack of knowledge or foresight.
When next season comes around, theyāll try to convince you that they’ll come good as they have time to take it more seriously. Once they invest as much time in it as you, theyād almost certainly destroy you and you puny team. They wonāt ā theyāll do exactly the same all over again but smugly point out that Oliver Kay is amongst their followers on Twitter.
The Part Time PeteāØ
Typically they show a fleeting interest in football. Often a āsupporterā of Manchester United or a Chelsea fan who has yet to notice that Jose Mourinho has left, theyāll have enough in their locker to pick obvious Fantasy targets but will struggle for the hidden gems.
Sadly, this type of Fantasy manager can be hugely frustrating since, on occasions, their propensity to pick big names can pay off spectacularly. If the cards fall kindly for them, they can be early season pacesetters who will enjoy their moment in the sun and, for just a period, begin to put in that extra bit of effort. Start badly however, and these guys will fall by the wayside ā get easily frustrated by a few Wayne Rooney blanks and ā after a short burst of knee jerks, with transfers flying aimlessly, ultimately give up until next season.
The Assistant ManagerāØ
An extremely dangerous opponent – not least because of the damage they can do to your reputation should they finish above you. In the classic case, they’ll be a very unlikely threat to the mini-league crown and you’ll be naive enough to write them off immediately for someone who will be far too distracted to threaten.
However, they’re actually just a puppet. A figurehead for a Fantasy Football mastermind pulling their strings behind the scenes and orchestrating decisions with a baffling level of precision.
The early signs will be obvious – the inclusion of some players with strong pre-season form, an uncharacteristically wise early transfer. If you can keep them in mid-table, the evil genius shaping their season may lose interest. Should they hit the top early on however, the prospects aren’t good – the lure of Fantasy Football glory by proxy will likely have kicked in. Youāre heading for humiliation.
The Director of FootballāØ
Frankly, youāre not sure who this guy is when you see the league table. You think he works in IT ā the guy who brought your monitor around last summer. Thereās no obvious signs that they even liked football. No club crest on his mug. No interest in the banter aired. Youāre pretty certain he spends his nights raiding in Azeroth, rather than down the pub in front of the Monday kick-off.
In reality the guy is a football genius ā those years spent shivering on the sidelines, clutching a carrier bag, running the line for the school team while the ābig boysā take the glory and the girls were spent wisely. While his peers stacked bedroom shelves with pointless junior trophies, he filled his with Rothmans Football yearbooks. Heās got spreadsheets informing him on his next nine transfers and heās already cracked your cache and has the password to your team. Youāre pretty much his plaything.
The Tracksuit ManagerāØ
As far as experience is concerned, this guy will initially appear well-versed. Sadly, however, his success in the past may have been founded on the ineptitude of others and a half-arsed Fantasy game that requires very little expertise beyond a fortuitous initial selection.
Theyāll start the season by talking the talk and then, as the weeks of missing Match of the Day due to Saturdayās ābeering and leeringā, theyāll begin to fire off excuses for their miserable mid-table slide to obscurity.
Tales of injury problems ā claims that Florent Malouda should be playing and the classic ā āthis game is not as good as the one I used to playā will be presented as excuses.
Unfortunately, once the cracks are gaping, they could then proclaim that Fantasy football is for geeks and dismiss those who have time to take it seriously as āsaddoesā; they may even dig up the old āStattoā moniker.
Donāt fret about this. Theyāll spend the next Saturday night, and each one thereafter, inebriated before going home for further “self-abuse” in front of the Hollyoaks Omnibus on Sunday, that plays out on their inappropriately massive flat panel bought on credit.
The Loyal Fanatic
Ferocious football supporters, these guys seem an obvious threat for the mini-league crown. They greedily swig football news with their morning coffee, drinking down the latest transfer rumours and tittle-tattle. Theyāre clued up, merchandised up and fully prepared for season ahead.
Thereās one problem however – theyāre so wrapped up in their own team, theyāre blinkered to the potential of everything else around them.
Theyāll definitely recruit their own teamās new centre-forward, and probably a defender too. Theyāll also draft any former favourites who may have flown the nest out of some ridiculous emotional attachment. They wonāt shift from their stance and the very idea of signing players from their teamās bitter rivals evokes nausea. They really donāt care that heās scored two consecutive hat-tricks ā he wears red and thereās no place for that in their team.
As a famous lord of the Sith once said ā āyour faith in your friends is your weaknessā. Will they take heed? Of course they bloody wonāt ā theyāve got the clubās wooly bobble hat pulled over their eyes and ears.
The Diligent UnderperformerāØ
They study the form. The fixtures. The combinations. They know who rotates with who, and when. All in all, they know their stuff. If asked for advice, they dish out the sensible options and always have reason to back this up. Yet when it comes to making their decisions, theyāre their own worst enemy; thereās this voice in their heads that persuades them that the nailed-on, obvious option is all of a sudden too safe. If thereās a stroke of genius up for grabs, theyāll desperately try to reach for it, often ignoring the bleedinā obvious in the process.
Their knowledge becomes a hindrance rather than a help; it sparks unnecessary risks creating scenarios that could cover them in glory should they come off. Fantasy football is often a simple game but they laugh at such a theory, their logic is never flawed. Their position never top.
The Born Again Christian GrossāØ
They used to play a bit. Back when it was in the paper. When they werenāt tinkering with Championship Manager on the Amiga, they were phoning through their Fantasy transfers and plotting their next move. Then distractions took over. A career. A relationship. A child. Evil life trinkets that diverted them from the path of glory.
Now their eyes have been opened; suddenly a monster has been created. That one email requesting participation in the mini-league has sparked something uncontrollable. The kid hates him. āRelationsā with the wife are limited to birthdays and anniversaries and the job went to pot when Graham was promoted. This guy is back in the game and the hunger and enthusiasm is insatiable.
Itās as if Fantasy Football offers a crumb of comfort as he battles to hold off an early mid-life crisis. They canāt afford a Porsche and having an affair scares the life out of him. Winning the mini-league though ā that would be pretty good. That would show āem.


