Pro Pundits

Stats or the Eye Test – Which is better for FPL?

Throughout history, there have been many examples of intense division; Roundheads versus Cavaliers, North versus South, Beatles versus Stones, Leave versus Remain, Laurel versus Yanny, the list goes on.

But few subjects will have inspired the kind of fierce debate than the question of which is better for making FPL decisions; Stats or the Eye Test.

Proponents of the Eye Test; the idea that you need to actually watch football to do well in FPL, or at least that it is beneficial, often view Stats aficionados as nerds and somewhat artificial football fans who would probably be playing Fantasy K-Pop as long as it involved a pivot table.

They are often heard saying things like “Do you even watch football?” in a pejorative tone towards huddles of Stats fans, nervously and nasally talking ‘xG’ in what they believed to be an FPL safe space. 

Supporters of Stats; the opinion that underlying statistical information provides as good if not better view of football for the purposes of making FPL decisions, view proponents of the Eye Test as knuckle-dragging luddites who probably own a Greggs rewards card and reminisce for the ‘glory days’ when watching Saint and Greavsie on a Sunday afternoon was enough FPL research to give you ‘that edge’.

Okay, so all of this is maybe a little hyperbolic for the purposes of creating dramatic tension and, in reality, we all probably sit at least a little across both camps, but the question does remain as to which is better for making FPL decisions; Stats or the Eye Test and this is the question I’m going to try and address here.

The Eye Test

You would think that watching football would be an obvious benefit when it comes to playing a game that involves making football-related decisions and, indeed, many of the best FPL players out there, and several FPL champions no less, credit their success to the amount of football they consume.

It’s true that watching football can offer a lot to your FPL game as it provides the viewer with a broader understanding of football tactics and strategy and how these function, interact or conflict in order to increase or decrease a player’s chances of scoring FPL points.

Much of this is often difficult to pick up in stats alone, an example perhaps being Leicester’s Jamie Vardy (£9.7m) and his famous goal-scoring runs of the past, which occurred despite him seemingly taking barely any shots on goal. 

The manner in which Leicester played, and Vardy’s own style of play, combined to create a scenario where heconsistently overperformed against his stats. Now, you could argue that Vardy is now regressing but, it remains true that, had you been going by underlying stats alone even this season, you mighthave missed out on a run of 14 goals in 12 games.

These statistical anomalies occur at both ends of the pitch. For example, in the past six Gameweeks, Liverpool have allowed more shots than Chelsea and Manchester City, yet they have conceded only a fraction of the goals. Indeed Liverpool have made more defensive errors than all but three other Premier League teams this season and yet they have by far the best defensive record. The fewest defensive errors conceded? Watford.

So, you might surmise from this that you can’t believe stats and you can only really trust your own eyes. But can you actually trust your own eyes? The inherent cognitive biases that can influence an FPL manager’s perspective have been discussed on this site before and they will, in all likelihood, distort our visual perceptions of a player’s performance.

For example, when sitting down to scout a player in a football match, ‘confirmation bias’, or our tendency to search for or interpret information in a way that confirms our existing views or expectations, will almost inevitably come into play. 

If you’ve decided that you want a player, you will probably pay greater attention to the good things that the player does. If you’ve decided you don’t want a player, or it’s difficult for you to get them, you’ll probably focus more on the bad things, or dismiss the good things (like a hat-trick) as ‘unsustainable’.

Then there’s the question of the sample size for the Eye Test and ‘belief in the law of small numbers’ which is the biased belief that a small sample will be accurately representative of the larger picture.

Concluding that a player offers attacking threat and thus “passess the eye test” could, in fact, be credited to as little as one or two memorable instances in the match a person just watched, not to mention that it is just one match and that we have yet to factor in the opposition.

Anyone who has watched a football match and thought “Ooh, Luke Shaw is getting forward a lot…” and brought him in on that basis can probably attest to how misleading our perception can be.

The key problem with the Eye Test is the general uncertainty as to what is actually being tested and, even moreso, what it even takes to pass the test. It has no objective standard and, by any scientific measure, the ‘eye test’ would be considered about as reliable as the average office printer.

Stats

So are stats better? Stats do have some advantages over the Eye Test, in particular that they offer a scalable means of interpreting football matches. Stats can distill hours upon hours of football into easily-digestible and objective data, offering a consistent platform for making decisions.

Stats can offer insights that are effectively invisible to the naked eye and help FPL managers to identify undervalued assets, predict form and, indeed, over-performance in a consistent manner. Stats can boil seemingly impossible questions such as; ‘who is the better Liverpool asset; Sadio Mané (£12.2m) or Mohamed Salah (£12.8m)?’ into objective stats, and they can do it in seconds.

Of course, certain stats are better than others. I’ve spoken before in this column about the significance of opportunity over ability for predicting goal scoring form and others have highlighted the strong correlations between stats such as ‘big chances’ and ‘shots in the box’ and goal scoring returns.

Stats such as xG and xGC, while not quite perfect, offer an instructive basis for making predictions and, with the introduction of things such as player heat maps, stats are offering an ever more complete view of a football match.

 1

Stats are also accessible. You don’t need to know your Lindeberg from your Lyapunov or your chi-squared from your psi-squared to make good use of statistical data. This site itself collects, distils and refines stats into many easily-usable forms and offers things like the Rate My Team tool which allows managers to just plug players in and let an algorithm do the rest. Stats in FPL have never been so plentiful, accessible or user-friendly as they currently are.

So, stats are better then? Well, not necessarily as many of the aforementioned challenges that problematise the Eye Test also apply here too. Anyone who has ever run two players through the Comparison Tool has probably experienced the tendency to cherry pick the stats that support the player who, deep down, they really wanted to get in the first place (confirmation bias again). 

Indeed, the value of stats are highly conditional; you need to be looking at the right stats, in the right volume and in the right context. For an example of how misleading stats can be, just look at any early season bandwagon and how they came to be thus. Typically they involve people making judgements on a player based on one or two matches with little consideration given to factors such as to the opposition, the player’s level of motivation, the possibility that they are an unknown quantity and thus harder to mark and, broadly, the conditions for sustainability of the form that they demonstrate.

Stats are also very easy to skew. Players who have exceptional games, sendings off, injuries, all these things and many more can disproportionately influence how player or team stats might appear. Despite the developments in xG, I’ve yet to see any stat that can reliably distinguish between a striker having an off day and a goalkeeper having a worldie as well as the Eye Test can, so we’re still some way, I think, to being able to fully and reliably ‘watch’ a match purely in the form of numbers, Matrix-style.

Football, I’d argue, is a much more challenging game to quantify statistically when compared to more linear, turn-based sports such as baseball (which has practically had its genome mapped it is so statistically rich) given the number of variables at play and, while it might seem like there are ‘too many’ stats in FPL, the lack of depth in those stats is actually a pretty big challenge to their utility. In FPL, we are almost always looking to make judgements on sample sizes that would be too small for any valid statistical test. In fact, it’s probably only when we get to this stage of the season where stats offer anything approaching reliability. So, when we talk about stats in FPL, we are really only ever talking about something that is directional and probably never conclusive.

Conclusion

A combination of both the Eye Test and Stats is the right way to go

Inevitably, there are advantages and disadvantages to both Stats and the Eye Test and both rely enormously on how we use them and the extent to which we can control the influence of our biases while doing so. Because neither the Eye Test nor Stats can tell the entire story individually, we have to conclude that it is the combination of both that is ideal. 

Having said that, I do think that it is significantly easier to remain objective when looking at stats versus a football match because stats tend to provoke far less emotion than the act of watching football does. I also think that we are moving towards a point of sophistication in stats where the marginal benefit of watching football versus just using stats will probably be quite small, possibly to the point where it may even be detrimental from an FPL-perspective.

What do I mean by this? Something people tend to find interesting about my FPL-winning season is that it came despite me watching almost no football at all that year (out of circumstance I stress, not because I don’t like watching football!).

The assumption is, generally, that this would be a huge disadvantage, however, I’ve come to believe that it may actually have been a big advantage. Because I wasn’t watching football, I was able to make all sorts of decisions that I’d normally struggle to make. I never worried about picking players playing against the team I support, I never picked a player because I wanted to feel more invested in a game I was watching and I never conflated what I wanted to happen with what was objectively more likely to happen.

Because I wasn’t watching, none of this really mattered.

Not watching football stripped much of the emotion and many of the biases from my decision process, leaving just the cold hard facts. I wouldn’t want to live like that forever, but I can’t deny that it probably helped that season.

It’s unlikely that many managers will stop watching football for the sake of their FPL team but we can become more conscious of the emotions and biases that might affect our use of the Eye Test, and indeed Stats, for making FPL decisions and seek to manage or compartmentalise these things.

If you use Stats, make sure you’re remaining objective and that you’re looking at the right stats, in a large enough quantity and in context. If you are an Eye Test aficionado, mentally separating the football that you watch for entertainment or team loyalty and the football you watch for research may improve your game. And if you are an Eye Test ‘purist’ who eschews stats entirely, you might want to consider giving them a shot or risk handing an ever growing and ever more accessible advantage to your opponents.

1,279 Comments Post a Comment
  1. Kevin Twine
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 12 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    VVD or Robertson?

    1. Maddamotha
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Robzz

    2. Goooo Rickie
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 4 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Rob if you don't need that cash elsewhere.

    3. Botman and Robben
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Robbo

    4. RamaJama
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 11 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Might as well go Gomes and save A lot of cash, as both VVD and Robertson’s attacking returns seems to have drought out A long time ago:

      Robertson’s attacking returns: 1 assist last 13 games

      VVD only 1 attacking Return the last 12 matches, A goal, but still, worth the price difference over Gomes?

  2. Maddamotha
    • 7 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Greenwood, Maddison > Jimenez, Traore for a -4 good moves?

    1. Kevin Twine
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Yeah quite like that

  3. Mince n Tatties
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 10 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Robbo

    1. Mince n Tatties
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Oops - reply fail to Casanova

  4. The SK
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 6 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Best FWD under 6.0 for GW27-28?

    1. Goooo Rickie
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 4 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Shane Long? Jay Rodriguez?

    2. Kevin Twine
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Shane Long probably. Scraping the barrel in that price bracket though. There’s Jota at 6.1 if you can stretch to that

  5. Koroko990
    • 4 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Henderson
    Taa van dijk dunk
    Cantwell salah kdb mooy
    Dcl ings aguero

    Button lundstrom soyuncu sarr

    2 ft and 0.2m

    Thoughts?

    1. JT11fc
      • 5 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Sarr - Traore? Save other ft

  6. diesel001
    • 7 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Personally think eye-test is better than stats, but you have to have the time to use the eye-test. You have to watch the full 90 mins of games and watch every game. Otherwise you are not seeing the whole picture. Highlights are heavily edited and don't always give the full picture. If you are only watching 2/3 games out of 10 then how do you know there are not better options from the games you have not watched?

    Reality is most people don't have the time required to use the eye-test and so stats are the more practical choice.

    1. Maddamotha
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Personally I mostly use eye test, and go for proven players. As the article suggests stats can be dismissive.

    2. The Knights Template
      • 10 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      I go for the players that got big scores the previous week. I'm not doing too well.

  7. bitm2007
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Has to be the eye test, you need them to see the stats !

    1. andy85wsm
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • Has Moderation Rights
      • 13 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      You don't, just create a table in the members area 😉

  8. n14mul
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 6 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Nice article.....some good valid points on either side..

    Thank you Sir

  9. JT11fc
    • 5 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Who scores more points?
    1. Jiminez

    2. Shane Long +4

    1. n-doggg
      • 11 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Debatable this week. Over the next 3-4, obvs jimi

      1. JT11fc
        • 5 Years
        4 years, 2 months ago

        Thanks, hoping to get away with getting Jimi next week to avoid the hit

  10. Fernando Torres
    • 12 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Is FH31 the best strategy? I've only got 3 gw 31 players atm including everton players.

    1. Ed
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      What's happening gwk 31?

      1. FPL.team
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 7 Years
        4 years, 2 months ago

        Not alot which is the problem. Only 2 games on currently.

    2. antis0cial
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Maybe if you only have 3, but if you can stretch to 5-6, with the games currently going on in 31, FH probably isn't worth it, save for a double.

  11. Ed
    • 12 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Is it worth getting rid of Vardy now? Feels like the time to let go may have been missed..

    1. n-doggg
      • 11 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      I’m holding. Great fixtures now and not like there are loads of options

    2. The Knights Template
      • 10 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Def a hold

    3. Sterling Archer
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      were almost through the bad patch, keep the faith

    4. Shineonme
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      After this eek vardy has great fixtures. I'm actually bringing him in next week

    5. Dybala10
      • 6 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Exactly, hold as their fixtures turn.

  12. farmerfat
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 8 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    My opinion is that I always use eye test before stats.
    If I have a 50/50 decision on captaincy or looking at two players to bring in, then I compare with stats.
    I think both are important and each person is different.

  13. Goooo Rickie
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 4 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Coin flip

  14. Rolls-Royce
    • 10 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Stats are a by-product of the eye test. Simples.

  15. n-doggg
    • 11 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Stats puts them on my radar but eye test pushes me to transfer in

  16. Goooo Rickie
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 4 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Fleck (BRI), Almiron (cpa), Digne (ars), Tosun (NEW).

    Pick one.

    1. The Knights Template
      • 10 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Almiron

    2. JT11fc
      • 5 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Fleck has easiest fixture, Digne could return tho

  17. BENOIT
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 8 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Struggling to afford Jiminez.

    Holgate & Maupay -----> Saiss & Jota?

    2 FT.

    1. Jässi
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Only Holgate to Saiss IMO, Jota nowhere near as good as Jiminez.

  18. Jässi
    • 7 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    McCarthy - 4.0
    TAA - VVD - O'Connell - Rico - Sidibe
    Salah - De Bruyne - Martial - Grealish - Traore
    Jimenez - Vardy - Ings

    2 FT and 1.4 ITB, I want to save one FT this week but don't really know what to do with the other and whom to bench this gameweek?

    Who to transfer this week:
    A) Sidibe to Saiss
    B) Grealish (because he'll blank gw28 and has bad fixtures after it) to Harvey Barnes
    C) Grealish to Zaha (bad form but great fixtures coming and will not blank)

    Who to bench this week:
    1) Traore
    2) Grealish
    3) Vardy

    1. Shineonme
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Traore

    2. kamdaraji
      • 14 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      vardy without a doubt

  19. Brosstan
    • 9 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Eye test is the best if you have the footballing brain and tactical knowledge to realize when a team has made a tactical change that certain players will profit from before the change shows up in terms of improved stats for the player.

    Personally I don't rhi

    1. Brosstan
      • 9 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Don't think I watch enough games especially from the lower sides to use the eye test effectively so have to rely on stats for many decisions

  20. Hazardous1983
    • 13 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    what to do with this

    mcarthy (button)
    taa robbo stevens (lundstram lacselles)
    kdb trarore grealish salah (c) (perez)
    ings auba jimi

    2 ft and 0.4 in bank

  21. Rinseboy
    • 12 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Best move here this week? Thanks guys!

    A - Son and Firmino to Mane and DCL -4
    B - Son to Martial
    C - Son to Traore
    D - Son to Richarlison

    Pope
    TAA Stevens Stephens Boly
    KDB Salah Barnes
    Jimi Ings Firmino
    Henderson Mooy Fernandez Son

    1. teneighty
      • 9 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      A or B. I'm usually not a hit-taker so I would probably go B myself but I can definitely see A pay off over a couple of gameweeks.

      1. Rinseboy
        • 12 Years
        4 years, 2 months ago

        thanks mate. yeah might even captain Mane too if A

    2. Shineonme
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      B

  22. teneighty
    • 9 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Current team:

    McCarthy
    TAA - Digne - Lundstram*
    Grealish - Salah - KBD - Son*
    Vardy - Ings - Jimenez

    Subs: McGovern, Rico, Soy, Hayden

    Would you do Lundstram + Son -> Gomez + Traore for a hit?

    1. Jebiga
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      boly, not gomez

      1. teneighty
        • 9 Years
        4 years, 2 months ago

        Don't fancy a double Liverpool defence? Their next 5 five look so tasty for CS.

  23. Bury94
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 6 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Play Pope (Bou) or Henderson? (Bri)

    1. Karan14
      • 8 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Hendo

    2. Indio
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Henderson.

  24. Jebiga
    • 12 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Should i play DCL or Boly ?

    1. teneighty
      • 9 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      I would play DCL.

    2. Indio
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Close, but I'd play DCL.

  25. Johnny Drama
    • 7 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Any chance DCL outscores Ings in the next four GWs? Or is it time to switch?

    1. Brosstan
      • 9 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      No chance, Ings fixtures are golden

      1. Johnny Drama
        • 7 Years
        4 years, 2 months ago

        His underlying stats aren't 😉

    2. Indio
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 12 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      There's always that possibility, but Ings' fixtures and track record so far suggests he'll rack up more points.

    3. The Bad Seed
      • 6 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      I'm on both.

      With DCL everything is possible.

    4. Shineonme
      • 7 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Ings will.outscore DLC over next four imo

  26. Indio
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 12 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Anything wrong with Sidibe > Boly?

    (Planning Redmond and Auba > Barnes and Jimmy next week)

    TAA, VVD, Lunds, Sidibe, Rico
    Salah, Grealish, KDB, Cantwell, Redmond
    Auba, Vardy, DCL
    (1 FT; £0.6M ITB.)

  27. Karan14
    • 8 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Any Aguero owners who have Jimenez & Ings too?

    What are you planning to do with him this week I dont see any standout replacement I want?

  28. drughi
    • 14 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Mane (C) who´s with me ?

    1. drughi
      • 14 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      plus Targett>Boly a sensible transfer ?

    2. Goooo Rickie
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 4 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Yes

    3. JT11fc
      • 5 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Me most likely

  29. The Senate
    • 5 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Would you rather sell Alli or Zaha for Traore?

    (Could sell both for a hit but who to bring in?)

    1. Goooo Rickie
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 4 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Zaha all day long

  30. Botman and Robben
    • 7 Years
    4 years, 2 months ago

    Play Henderson or McCarthy?

    Back line of TAA Aurier Boly (Rico Soy)

    1. Goooo Rickie
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 4 Years
      4 years, 2 months ago

      Hendo