Opinion
24 January 2017 872 comments
Mark Mark
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Blossoming mid-price strikers, failing midfield royalty and free-scoring backline options appear to be directing us to another round of formation dancing. Here are the lessons learned from Gameweek 22…

Sanchez’ sulks bought him his eight points…
Hunched on a Liberty Stadium bench, head in hands and hidden under a training jacket, Alexis Sanchez made his feelings known when he was hooked in the Gameweek 21 win at Swansea City.

Eight days later, Sanchez remained on the Emirates pitch with both Olivier Giroud and Mesut Ozil withdrawn late on. In their absence, it was the Chilean who stepped up to cheekily chip home his “Panenka” spot-kick to send the stadium and the 18.5% of Fantasy Premier League managers who captained him, into rapture.

There was undoubtedly good fortune behind the belated Sanchez return, but you have to wonder just whether his reaction in South Wales was a factor in the decision behind keeping him on the pitch to seize his moment.

Wenger’s reluctance to deal with the South American’s scorn and the press’ line of questioning thereafter, may now be a factor in his late-match thinking.

Coutinho needs more time…
In contrast, Liverpool’s own treasured South American asset seemed all too willing to earn early respite.

Making a first Premier League since his Gameweek 13 ankle injury, Philippe Coutinho departed the Anfield pitch before the hour-mark, as Liverpool sought new impetus to see off a rejuvenated Swansea City.

The Brazilian was unmistakably muted on his return. Two dribbles, one cross, one chance created and not a single attempt on goal – even when restricted to less than an hour, these are not the kind of numbers we associate with Coutinho’s season.

Instead, it was compatriot Roberto Firmino who stepped up, abruptly reversing his own 10-Gameweek decline with a brace of goals that diverted attention his way.

Confidence in Coutinho has already suffered a blow. Having recuperated almost 200,000 lost owners over the last two Gameweek intervals, he is now about to suffer another small decline, with Saturday’s curtailed comeback casting doubt among those who leapt early hoping for an instant reward.

New blood has revived the ailing Swans…
It’s fair to say that we’d written Swansea City’s trip to Anfield off as a rout: five goals were expected, but few would have predicted that the visitors would claim three of them.

But, unlike Sam Allardyce at Selhurst Park, it appears that Paul Clement has quickly inspired a reversal of fortunes in South Wales.

Astute new signings have helped matters. Both Martin Olsson and, in particular, Tom Carroll, appear natural fits for the Swans.

Having spent a prolonged loan period with the club, Carroll, in particular, took little time to lift energy levels in midfield and, priced at just 4.2, he now appears an obvious route for those pursuing a cheap, bench-warming fifth option.

But Swansea’s assets can be far more than that.

Sigurdsson’s goal, his first since Gameweek 15, issued a reminder of his ability and importance to the cause, just as sales of the Icelander began to gather pace.

Now, with four favourable opponents scheduled to arrive at the Liberty Stadium, the complexion has changed.

Sigurdsson’s appeal has a new sheen, fuelled by fresh optimism created by the new blood, both on the pitch and in the backroom.

Llorente and Carroll are doing their bit for the 3-4-3…
Fernando Llorente is another component of a potential revival for Swansea.

Two goals at Anfield, his first strikes away from home, were unexpected. Similarly, Llorente’s record of seven goals and two assists over his last ten Gameweeks has crept up on us – he is now a very real consideration, particularly for those ignoring Sigurdsson’s midfield charms.

Andy Carroll joins Llorente in leading a revival of the mid-price striker. A brace on Teesside took him to four goals in his last four Gameweeks and dismissed the perception that West Ham would struggle to hurt opponents with Dimitri Payet off the menu.

Combined, the pair have made strides to force a re-assessment of the 3-4-3 set-up.

When Charlie Austin’s shoulder gave way, we appeared bereft of options that bridged the gap between the proven heavy-hitters and the budget enablers. Now both Carroll and Llorente have demonstrated the talent and form to fill that void and, suddenly, a three-man attack is back on the wishlist.

….as is a fading Hazard….
Eden Hazard’s form is compounding that particular shift in thinking.

A big spend on a five-man midfield relies on heavy-hitters firing and, while Sanchez has delivered a relentless tide of points, Hazard has hit the buffers and has done little to justify his price tag.

That’s bad news for 3-5-2 zealots, who now find themselves turning to cheaper replacements and wondering where the liberated funds can be spent.

With Payet out of the picture and Kevin De Bruyne and Mesut Ozil not yet trusted to punch their weight, Hazard’s malaise is a big issue that will likely drive to a big spend in defence or, more likely a regression back to 3-4-3.

Coleman’s finishing can outpace Baines as a wing-back…
Everton’s defence are at least presenting prosperous options to suggest that a four-man backline could prove profitable.

Seamus Coleman has made the biggest strides.

Locked in an ongoing head-to-head with team-mate Leighton Baines in vying for our attention, the Irishman has embraced his new wing-back role to deliver heavy returns.

Three successive clean sheets have been accompanied by a goal and an assist, as Coleman’s energy and finishing ability overshadows the craft and spot-kick potential offered by Baines.

More touches, more passes received, more crosses – Coleman has swamped Baines over the recent three-match spell and, reveling in a new freedom to join the attack, his potential contribution makes greater spend and numbers in our defence a viable approach.

A Baggies defensive double-act can’t be dismissed…
Tony Pulis’ rearguard are also adding to the allure of a four-man backline.

An erratic provider of clean sheets, the Baggies nonetheless possess two assets in Chris Brunt and Gareth McAuley that have the potential to override such shortcomings supply double-digits. A fact so beautifully illustrated by Gameweek 22’s returns.

While the Sunderland shut-out was a first since Gameweek 12, the fixture list remains a strong ally over the month ahead, suggesting that further defensive points can go hand-in-hand with Brunt and McAuley’s continued attacking promise.

One of the pair looks as essential as it gets and, as Saturday demonstrated, covering both could even prove a worthwhile strategy.

Hull are no pushovers….
While Hazard’s Gameweek 22 failings provided much frustration, it should noted that Hull City were a far more resilient opponent than billed.

It’s clear that, like Clement at Swansea, Marco Silva has been quick to make his mark with the Tigers.

There is new discipline and belief in the camp and, in Harry Maguire, they appear to possess an unlikely new backline barrier that is capable of dominating attackers and lending a considerable presence to the attack.

Abel Hernandez has shown willing and a composure in front of goal, while Lazar Markovic could be a canny acquisition.

Sadly, his arrival on loan could merely be compensation for the loss of Robert Snodgrass – easily Hull’s key Fantasy asset to this point.

Nonetheless, Silva’s intervention has seen Hull shake off whipping boy status and, while Zlatan Ibrahimovic will contest for the Gameweek 23 captaincy, a haul in a waltzing Manchester United Old Trafford victory may just be a stretch.

Mark Mark created the beast. He's now looking to tame it.

872 Comments Login to Post a Comment
  1. Tabbara
    • 9 Years
    9 years, 2 months ago

    Hi guys
    my team is :

    Foster Stekelenburg
    Baines Brunt Jones Alonso Holgate
    Alli Philipps Stanislas Pogba Capoue
    Kane Ibra Defoe

    Transfer
    A:In Jakupovic and Lukaku for defoe and steklenburg (-4)
    B: In Sanchez and crouch for Pogba and Defoe (-4)
    c:Other
    Thanks

    1. Jamesdoakes
      • 9 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      I ihink just a Pobra replacement is needed to Sanchez but now this squad is not that bad.

      1. Tabbara
        • 9 Years
        9 years, 2 months ago

        thinking keep him just for the hull fixture going with sanchez will tight my choices in attack,but i dont know if lukaku will score against stoke dont know really who to go with

        1. Jamesdoakes
          • 9 Years
          9 years, 2 months ago

          Oh I almost mistyped it sorry for that. By the way a great Alexis can always offer a better value than a situational Pogba. If you will hold him for the Hull match is still okay.

  2. New Post
  3. DrunkPhilosophy
    • 11 Years
    9 years, 2 months ago

    Heaton Pickford
    Alonso Brunt Baines Holebas Amat
    Sanchez Alli Lallana Phillips DeRoon
    Costa Defoe Ibra
    1 FT, 1.9 itb

    A) Holebas --> Walker/Rose will have a benching headache every week in defense.
    B) Lallana --> Eriksen

    Will have to wait for more news about the blanks and hope Spurs just crash out of the cup 🙂 but what would you do?

    1. white heart pain
      • 15 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      B

  4. Kanteisking
    • 9 Years
    9 years, 2 months ago

    He all any advice on how to improve this? 0.3ITB

    Grant
    Baines, Alonso, Jones
    Alli, Sanchez, Lallana, Phillips
    Zlatan, Costa, Kane
    Subs : Jaku, Nyom, Chambers, Davies

    Thanks!

    1. Jamesdoakes
      • 9 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      I don't think that's necessary.

    2. white heart pain
      • 15 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      great team

  5. white heart pain
    • 15 Years
    9 years, 2 months ago

    Heaton
    Alonso Jones Love
    Sanchez Haz Alli Lallana Philips
    Ibra Costa

    Pickford Barnes Pieters Amat
    0 bank

    Need help, want lukaku but not sure how to get?

    A) Barnes, Lallana, Philips, Jones > Lukaku, Davies, De Roon, Holgate = -12pts
    B) Costa > Lukaku
    C) Hazard, Barnes > Davies >Lukaku = -4pts
    D)This week Lallana, Jones > Holgate, Davies the next week Philips, Barnes > De roon, Lukaku = -8pts

    1. deny_vazquez
      • 9 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      C. Out Hazard, Barnes, In lukaku davies

  6. jdp219
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    9 years, 2 months ago

    Looking at my 2FTs (and 2.0 ITB) and thinking of some (potentially) big changes. First, my current squad:
    Foster / Grant
    Alonso / Ake / Rose / Baines / Amat
    Lallana / Phillips / Sanchez / Stanislas / Alli
    Diomande / Giroud / Ibra

    Transfer options I'm entertaining:
    1 - Giroud & Diomande out; Costa & Crouch in = 0.0 ITB
    2 - Giroud, Diomande, Ake out; Lukaku, Crouch, Funes Mori in = -4 hit, 0.3 ITB
    3 - Diomande & Lallana out; Crouch & Eriksen in = 0.6 ITB
    4 - Giroud, Lallana, Ake out; Kane, Zaha (too early?), Brunt in = -4 hit, 0.7 ITB

    If you couldn't tell, I'm all about differentials at this point. Have some catching up to do. Thanks in advance.

    1. jdp219
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 9 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      The more I think about it, the more I like option 4.

    2. kUwe Inc.
      • 14 Years
      9 years, 2 months ago

      For 2ft i prefer to get rid Ake & Diomande maybe for Chambers & Crouch, plus if you dont mind taking hit, upgrade either Lallana/Giroud.
      Based on your option, i will go 3. Ake to Chambers next gw

      1. kUwe Inc.
        • 14 Years
        9 years, 2 months ago

        Avoid taking hit if you could field strong 11

  7. 1Banksy
    • 10 Years
    9 years, 2 months ago

    30th December at 19.53 2016 was a dark day. Sold Kane and Llorente to get Sergio and Anichibe. I made the switch to the 3-5-2 for the first time. Despite not being in my squad got the points from Kane for his haul vs Watford but Anichibe got injured before he had the chance to play. Sergio got a goal off the bench on his return to my side as captain but since then nothing from my new strikers. Anichebe now out again, I have sold Hazard and gone back to 3-4-3. If only I could go back to the 30th and get a Llorente brace, a Kane hatty rather than Sergio and a fat criple.