This Sergio Aguero chap looks a good option.
Twenty goals in 25 starts last season; heβs scored 24 and 26 goals in his two previous campaigns.
Priced at 11.4, cheaper than heβs ever been – he looks useful.
Of course, we all know this, itβs just that todayβs devastating hat-trick at Watford has provided us with an almighty jolt and left us questioning our logic.
Seven days ago I wondered whether we will ever need look beyond the Harry Kane/Romelu Lukaku combination up front.
In true βknee-jerkβ fashion, a week later, Iβm now left asking if we can afford to overlook Aguero.
We canβt beat ourselves up; our reservations to this point were understandable.
Pep Guardiolaβs plans with the Argentine, working in tandem with his apparent darling Gabriel Jesus, were shrouded in uncertainty.
Aguero has started up with Jesus in four of five Premier League matches. However, he was dropped to the bench at Bournemouth β a decision that appeared to confirm our fears that we could not rely on Aguero and Pep.
But todayβs treble took Aguero to four goals since the south coast βrestβ and the impact has been instant.
Over 74,000 have already moved to acquire Aguero, with Lukaku the major fall guy. The Manchester United striker has lost over 16,000 owners to his City rival before heβs even kicked a ball in Gameweek 5.
Some are clearly convinced, and the rest of us are left wondering if we should follow suit. Cityβs fixtures are more than enticing, and the prospect of watching Aguero run riot clutching FPL armbands is a petrifying thought.
Indeed, the only consolation today was that Agueroβs ownership remains relatively modest. He was part of just 502,000 squads ahead of Gameweek 5, and captained by 39% of those managers.
His 20-points will still make waves across mini-leagues and ranks, but itβs surely the least impactful hat-trick of Aguero’s illustrious FPL career.
But the haul hit even harder as a result of Kaneβs bitterly disappointing blank.
Almost a million (20.1%) of FPL managers trusted Kane with the armband and were left frustrated by Spursβ inability to breakdown a stubborn Swansea at Wembley.
Everything β the form, fixture and the statistics β all pointed to Kane being the Gameweekβs must-own, high-scoring option.
But thereβs that logic again.
The same thought patterns that can perhaps persuade us that David Silva, Kevin De Bruyne or Gabriel Silva can cover Agueroβs future tallies.
Maybe, like a good few struggling Premier League managers, we just need to go back to basics.
Selecting Aguero in your Fantasy Football team used to be our rule number one. It was our basic instinct.
