Pro Pundits
24 March 2023 158 comments
Simon March Simon March
Share:

Our top team of Pro Pundits and Hall of Famers write about all things Fantasy Premier League (FPL) throughout the season.

Only Premium Members are able to read every single one of these pieces, so sign up today to get full access not just to the editorial content but all of the other benefits, from hundreds of Opta stats to a transfer planner.

Here, former FPL champion Simon March asks if it’s time to think differently about upcoming fixture runs.

FPL team reveal: Why I've picked Vardy over Haaland and Kane

Many of us believe that form follows fixtures when it comes to FPL and, thus, it follows that a good run of fixtures signals a good time to invest in a player or team.

Seeking out and exploiting these stretches of matches has been the conventional logic for years but is it really the best approach? Should we be pursuing the reliable returns that we expect from these runs, or are we actually better off chasing bigger singular scores, even if they come at the expense of consistency?

These questions will be the focus of this week’s article.

‘A RUN OF GOOD FIXTURES’

FPL review: Salah ends goal drought, Gakpo off the mark

Historically in FPL parlance, a ‘good run of fixtures’ usually refers to around four-to-six consecutive opponents with seemingly low difficulty. This run will appear as a ‘sea of blue’ in the Season Ticker and is gold dust for FPL managers as it hints that our assets will score well for the foreseeable future.

A good run of fixtures might elevate a less-fancied asset, given the even-less-fancied nature of their opposition and it might give us even greater confidence in our big-hitters and captaincy options. This is, for the most part, how most of us usually look at fixtures.

That said, the practice of targeting good fixture runs will inevitably get undermined at several points in a season when the returns don’t reflect expectations. For example, Mohamed Salah (£12.8m) scored 21 points in what was expected to be a difficult fixture for Liverpool at home to Manchester United in Gameweek 26, which was immediately followed by him scoring zero points at Bournemouth. This neatly encapsulates both sides of the coin.

However, following fixtures remains a popular strategy because it offers a level of objective rationale to base decisions on. Aberrations will occur but a match against a team ranked lower in the table will usually offer better opportunities to score than being against a higher team. Therefore, more fixtures versus the former type of team than the latter will increase the expected payoff.

With a consistent run of fixtures broadly considered as the ideal, most fixture tickers, when ordered by difficulty, will place teams with the highest proportion of good (‘blue’) fixtures at the top, inevitably drawing our focus towards them.

In contrast, teams with difficult (‘red’) outings or fixtures that alternate in difficulty will be ranked towards the bottom of the ticker, usually signalling that these teams should be avoided.

THE ‘BIG WINS’ STRATEGY

Yet there are disciplines, tangential to FPL, where a different approach is often adopted. Most top poker players don’t try to win every hand or even every good hand, they instead try to maximise their payoff from only their very best ones.

Similarly, in investing, it is accepted that the majority of a trader’s success will come from a relatively small number of their trades. This is especially the case in early-stage venture capital investing where investors will make, say, ten fairly risky investments with the expectation that maybe one or two will pay off in such a big way that it’ll more than make up for their greater number of failed transactions.

The upshot of this approach is that you can fail, lose and be wrong most of the time yet still succeed. When operating under conditions of uncertainty, such as FPL, an approach based on the acceptance that not everything can be controlled and that mistakes will be made may well be the most pragmatic.

Investing legend Peter Lynch once said of stock picking: “If you’re terrific at this game, you’re right six times out of ten.” George Soros famously made over £1 billion in a single trade shorting the British Pound on ‘Black Wednesday’ in 1992. He stated that: “It doesn’t matter how many times you’re wrong or right but how much money you make when you’re right.”

These perspectives are quite different from how we typically pursue success in FPL. We’ll celebrate the odd 100-pointer when they occur but we wouldn’t see a relatively poor Gameweek as being a necessary step for a better one in future. But, ultimately, if scoring 40 points in one Gameweek helps you score 90 in the next, you’ve still outscored the ‘consistent’ return of getting 60 points both times. Yet most of us optimise toward the latter model.

MAKING BIG BETS IN FPL

The best budget players for a Double Gameweek 29 Bench Boost

So, what might this ‘Big Wins’ approach look like in FPL? First and foremost, it would involve looking at fixture runs differently. Rather than being concerned about the number of ‘red’ matches, we’d focus on targeting the bluest of the ‘blue’, irrespective of how difficult the fixtures immediately surrounding them might be.

Then, to fully embrace this model, we throw everything at those matches. Aim for several assets alongside a captain, irrespective of such tertiary concerns as effective ownership.

The obvious downside to this approach is that putting all our eggs in a few very small baskets places enormous pressure on such fixtures and, if they don’t pay off, we risk torpedoing our season.

Alternatively, the upside is that it can massively pay off and, whilst the approach will still be too risky for some, it’s worth remembering that pursuing a ‘low-risk’ strategy that follows good fixtures can often restrict us.

In a game where it is becoming increasingly difficult to differentiate ourselves from the more informed masses and the template squad, radically rethinking how we look at fixture runs might be a viable route to achieving that goal.

CONCLUSION

My personal philosophy when it comes to FPL is that consistency is the best differential. As much as I enjoy the odd huge score, I also enjoy the grind and can put up with short-term rank stagnation provided that I eventually get to where I want to be by the end of the season. For me, FPL is a challenge of self-discipline as much as anything and I am very much somebody who follows the fixtures.

This consistency-oriented approach tends to be the pervasive model among dedicated managers and is often only departed from when moments of radicalism become necessary. Perhaps they need to make up ground late in the season or, with very little to lose, decide they may as well take some bigger risks.

I know of FPL managers with very different levels of risk tolerance but I can think of few, if any, who follow this high-risk, high-reward approach to fixtures as their core strategy, thus it is difficult to hypothesise exactly how it might play out over a whole season.

The ‘big wins’ strategy is, however, a widely-adopted and often effective strategy in other disciplines such as investing and in poker, where proponents have accepted that failure will occur more often, thus it’s better to focus on maximising the big payoff when wins do happen.

In contrast, much of the conventional FPL strategy is focused on minimising failure, often at the expense of maximising payoffs. That an approach is ‘unusual’ is never reason enough to adopt it – especially when that approach inherently involves high risk – but the growing frustration within the FPL community about how difficult it is to outperform the average means now may be the time to try something different.


VIDEO LATEST



158 Comments Login to Post a Comment
  1. Best GK Pairing
    Wild Card this!
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 16 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    What would be the best goalies combo until the end of season?

    1. mdm
      • 13 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Kepa/Raya

    2. More Cowbell
      • 15 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      I like Kepa and Steele, but if you'd need your free hit to address the blank in 32

      1. Wild Card this!
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 16 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        That’s my current combo, as I’m using FH in GW32 almost certainly.

      2. Prinzhorn
        • 4 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        If any Brighton fan here could give more inside info about odds Steel will remain n1 until the end of season, that would be amazing.

    3. Admiral Benson
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 5 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Kepa/Steele (with FH32)
      Kepa/Raya (no FH)

      1. Arteta
        • 10 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        I agree.

    4. House Frey Wedding Planner
      • 7 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Most likely going the rest of the season with Kepa and De Gea

    5. Patio Kev
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 11 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Steele and Iverson and use the budget you save elsewhere

    6. _Make
      • 8 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      A route into that Brighton defence for just 3.9m is too good to pass up, for me. Some might say that the Brighton keeper is ... a bargain

    7. Eze Really?
      • 11 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      i would like to know when fixtures clash. If Kepa and Steele have the same DGW's the value is reduced. I have Kepa and Steele and sure I did the right thing.

  2. mdm
    • 13 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Which options would you choose for a BB? 2FT

    A. Zinc to Shaw
    B. Martinelli to Bruno/Maddy
    C. Kane to Isak

    Thanks.

    1. More Cowbell
      • 15 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      A for me.

    2. Botman and Robben
      • 9 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      A

    3. Prinzhorn
      • 4 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      A

    4. Admiral Benson
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 5 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      A
      Keep second FT to monitor Haaland (if you still have him)

  3. FPL Daniel
    • 16 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Man, this is a stellar article, the best one written here all year. Thanks for that, I really enjoyed it reading it.

  4. notlob legin
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Great article Simon thank you

  5. More Cowbell
    • 15 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Thoughts on best strategy here?

    a) Gabriel, Odegaard > Shaw, Bruno (-4) (would require a hit to get Haaland in GW30)
    b) Gabriel, Odegaard > Shaw, March (-4) (leaves me enough ITB to do Toney > Haaland in GW30 for free)
    c) Gabriel > Shaw and play Odegaard on bench boost

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

      Leeds Home is a good - good fixture. I'd go C.

    2. Wild Card this!
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 16 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      B

    3. House Frey Wedding Planner
      • 7 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      B

    4. Conners
      • 6 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      I'm in a similar situation, except with Zinc and Martinelli.

      Arsenal have a good fixture in 29, but some tough games afterwards and no DGWs.

      I'll probably end up doing B. I think it looks like the best long term move with an eye on the fixtures and DGW's.

      Obviously I will FH in 32 (assume same for you).

  6. Prinzhorn
    • 4 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    We expect Haaland to be fit for L'Pool fixture? Bench Boost giving me headaches owning him rn.

    1. Admiral Benson
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 5 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      His dad ain’t sure:

      Alfie Haaland on @ErlingHaaland's fitness for #ManCity vs Liverpool: "Firstly, I'm not a doctor, and secondly, I think it's 'touch and go', yes. You can't just go two weeks without training and then jump right into a fight. There must be a progression there..."

  7. ElliotJHP
    • 13 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Really good read Simon.

    I think the risk tolerance becomes more apparent in seasons like this where with hits, you can attack gameweeks individually. quite enjoy focusing on the big change weeks whether it be a double or a blank. I usually play the game with consistency but will look to add more risk next season. The consistent approach will become more of a grind with the information available to an evergrowing number.

  8. Haaland injury update (Mar 24)
    footballcandy
    • 9 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    So Haaland has been checked at a hospital in Barcelona. This is a report from a Norwegian broadcaster:

    "The message the "whole" football world is now waiting for is whether the 22-year-old will make it to the big game against Liverpool on April 1. It is Manchester City's first match after the national team stay:

    "- Firstly, I'm not a doctor and secondly, I think it's "touch and go", yes. You can't just go two weeks without training and then jump right into a fight. There must be a progression there. They can gamble on it, but if he doesn't get proper training with the team, then he won't play." - Alfie Haaland

    https://www.tv2.no/sport/pappa-alfie-i-stort-tv-2-intervju-erling-har-vaert-pa-sykehus-i-barcelona/15607316/

    1. JBG
      • 7 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Basically wait and see... what we already knew.

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

      Haaland, come to Utd if you read this mate

      1. El Presidente
        • 6 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        ah ah ah

    3. ᶠᶦˡᵗʰʸLucre $$$
      • 10 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      This was never a standard "international injury" - these qualifiers are huge for Norway.

  9. FCSB
    • 9 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Early thoughts on what to do here, didn’t captain Saka so need to make up some ground (Arsenal players currently just on the bench as single GWers):

    Kepa
    Chilwell Trippier Botman Estupinan
    Rashford March Mitoma
    Watkins Toney Kane

    Raya Saka Odegaard Zinchenko

    1FT, 6.1itb

    1. BB, who are priority transfers?
    2. Save FT, keep BB for later, bench headache…

    Thanks

    1. Admiral Benson
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 5 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      You got to BB that. It’s not a priority, but Ode to Bruno gets you very close to what a FH team would be this week (plus you have bench in play)

    2. Arteta
      • 10 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Well, you're seriously underestimating what Arsenal can do versus Leeds at home. Bench Gunners at your own peril.

      1. Arteta
        • 10 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        I would definitely activate BB chip in your situation and wait with the transfers until the last day.

    3. dunas_dog
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      1. Ødegaard to Bruno and Zinchenko to Shaw

  10. CMB
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 10 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Great article 🙂

  11. Admiral Benson
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 5 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Excellent article as always Simon

  12. Prinzhorn
    • 4 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Kepa
    Trippier - Chillwell - Schär - Mings
    Rashford - Mitoma - March - Saka
    Toney - Haaland

    Sanchez - Odegaard - Gabriel - Kane

    2FT. 2.6itb

    OG plan was: Sanchez -> Steele and Gabriel -> Shaw
    now with Haaland (probably) unavailable
    should I

    Sanchez -> Steele and Haaland -> Isak
    ?

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

      I will BB this GW btw.

      1. Admiral Benson
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 5 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        Goalie transfer and then wait for team news next Saturday morning (City is first game so we should get a leak). Risky with site crash etc…….

  13. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Subway Socceroos are about to kick off against Estupinan. Here we go. Time for anthems.

    1. ElliotJHP
      • 13 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Rah rah Estupinan
      Ecuadors attacking full back man
      It'd be a shame if he carried on (to the full 90 mins)

      Ooh those pesky Aussies

    2. JBG
      • 7 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      A red card for Estupinan would be nice FPL wise, haha.

  14. Count of Monte Hristo
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    A great article that.

  15. Geriatric Unathletic
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 15 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Simon, great article and certainly thought provoking for someone like me who finds themselves somewhat chasing this season. Like you say possibly a method to adopt when it feels/becomes necessary, rather than a long term strategy perhaps :).

  16. Arteta
    • 10 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Lovely Friday read. Thanks Simon!

  17. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Ecuador enjoying most of the possession. Socceroos absorbing the pressure. Pressure makes diamonds as well all know.

  18. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Poor free kick by Estupinan, easily dealt with by the sandwich-sponsored men in green and gold.

    1. Lord.
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 10 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Excellent commentary. Can you also organise a fast steed to get him back to the Kingdom once the jousting is over?

  19. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Sooooccceeerrooooooos 1-0. Jackson Irvine, St Pauli club captain, scores!

  20. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Six inch chicken strips on malted rye for everyone!

  21. A more customisable fixture ticker?
    _Make
    • 8 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Very good article.

    I wonder if part of the 'problem' (if there is indeed a problem) is that the fixture ticker is *so* easy to read it can lull us into a false sense of security or insecurity. I put a lot of thought into the opposition stats which make an opponent 'easy'/'tough', and a lot of research has led me to think of 'shots in the box conceded' as a consistent indicator of the strength of a defence. This stat is interesting to me because it doesn't seem to be demonstrate too much team mentality bias - a team can defend with eleven men behind the ball and not advance over the halfway line, or it could hold an aggressive high line, press relentlessly and push forward at every opportunity. If they are conceding the same number of shots in the box then they are probably defending equally well/poorly.

    But.. whilst attacking this particular stat on particular occasions has served me very well in the past, I tend to use this, and other metrics as a tie-breaker in specific instances. What I really should be doing - what all of us should be doing - is putting together my own tickers to reflect our own preferences when it comes to targetting team attacking and defensive prowess (or lack of it). It is just too easy to look at the ticker, see the aforementioned "sea of blue/red" and make decisions as a result, without thinking critically about the stats which are used, the biases in the mind of the person or algorithm which maintains it, and lag times and recency biases.

    Actually, with that in mind, if you're reading this Geoff I would love FFS to add the premium feature of a more customisable ticker: being able to choose which stat(s) get taken into account in your fixture tickers, and the number of matches worth of past data behind these stats. I think that would be a game changer for many of the more engaged managers.

    1. The Mentaculus
      • 4 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      That's exactly what I've done this season actually - make a manual fixture ticker to try consider specific matchups - e.g. giving Spurs & Liverpool a much flatter ranking of fixtures since they struggle to break down a low block but can perform well on the break against tougher opposition. Also scaling by quality of team's attack a bit more - e.g. if Everton have a bright blue fixture like BOU, I'll upgrade the fixture difficulty slightly compared to if it were Brighton facing Bournemouth. Can't exactly say that its been helping my OR as yet, but I think I'll stick with it

      1. The Mentaculus
        • 4 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        Also just to add - cheers Simon, an interesting read. I love a good poker analogy & there's real substance to this one about the discipline of not trying to win every hand (/GW) and maybe riding out the odd tough fixture to get to the juicy ones in the middle.

      2. _Make
        • 8 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        I'm definitely going to try the same thing next season! You know this already but you have a method - it's sensible.. stick with it. You need lots of data to know whether you're doing things right and when you need to make tweaks.

    2. fusen
      • 13 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      This is a good point. Historical fixture tickers do seem like they are stuck in a bit of a 'pre-stats' era.

      You basically go "Well Manchester United are better than Crystal Palace so this is easy for United" without, as you've mentioned, taking it account pretty much any of the actual proper recent behaviours of both teams.

      I'd be surprised if this isn't one area someone tries to improve, considering the sheer volume of sites trying to one up each other in usefulness nowadays

  22. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Bugger, 1-1. Felix Torres scores off the bonce.

    1. _Make
      • 8 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Unlucky for some

  23. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Ecuador playing a nice possession-based game. Interesting to note the Ecuadorian keeper seems to have some sort of growth behind his ear. Will monitor.

  24. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Maru Nabil, young Australian of the year (2022) scores for the Subway Socceroos, 2-1. Jackson Irvine forces the mistake as the Ecuadorian lollygaggers try to play out from the back.

    1. _Make
      • 8 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Time to step it up a gear, Pervis. Really give it your all out there; run yourself into the ground. It's fine if you need a few weeks to recover.

      1. JBG
        • 7 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        Booooo! Booo this man!

        1. _Make
          • 8 Years
          2 years, 8 months ago

          Look, I'm a passionate Ecuador fan, that's all.

          I can't hear your 'boos'.

          Not least because I am in Ecuador.

  25. Ze_Austin
    • 7 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Is Sarmiento injured?

  26. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Nice to see Matt Ryan hasn’t had a howler yet, but I expect it’s coming.

  27. Willesden Mariner
    • 7 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2023/03/23/geoff-shreeves-role-threat-sky-sports-target-content-creators/

    Sky is considering the recruitment of 5 football "content creators" to replace specialist football reporters. They should look at top FPL pundits/content creators, with broadcasting experience, such as Gianni and Holly.

    1. The Knights Template
      • 12 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Are they looking for armoured football commentators?

    2. Philosopher's Stones
      • 5 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      Are they gonna get a small fee?

  28. The Knights Template
    • 12 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Estupinan acrobatics, does a big sommersault while trying to score an own goal!

    1. Conners
      • 6 Years
      2 years, 8 months ago

      He's just celebrating having the most misspelt name in FPL history.

      Estupanan
      Estupian
      Estupinian
      Estupanian

      1. Arteta
        • 10 Years
        2 years, 8 months ago

        No one can beat Firmino, Frimino, Firminho, Friminho, Firminio, Friminio, Firmnio, Firmion, Frmino, Firmio,...

  29. Better off with a pin and a…
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 13 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Interesting article, thanks Simon - always enjoy reading these more philosophical approaches. 2 observations, though; the game has a relatively high trading cost to change players. This makes targetting individual fixtures harder than targetting runs of fixtures; it's just too expensive to keep chopping and changing players for one really good fixture so it makes sense to look at runs of good fixtures where one of them may well be the really high-payoff one. Using captaincy to chase the really big wins might be the better strategy.

    I think it depends on how possible it is to predict points based on a single fixture. It ought to be possible to try and analyse this by looking at how players' points actually do correlate to fixture difficulty in the past. My guess is that the ability to predict points in a single gameweek is almost zero, but the ability to predict over a longer run is probably much better; "Haaland will score more points than Isak this week" is less likely to be true then "Haaland will score more points than Isak over the next 10 gameweeks" and "Haaland will score more points than Isak over the whole season" is much more likely to be correct. I'm not aware of anyone ever looking at this mathematically, but understanding our ability to accurately predict over different time ranges ought to influence our decisions?

    On a side note, be a little careful of comparing financial investment approaces and FF. There are some similarities, but investing has 2 features FF doesn': the ability to scale bets carefully based on the predictive power you believe you have at any point in time - each of our bets is of a single fixed size (you either have 1 Haaland or you don't - captaincy is the only way to modify this slightly) and more flexibilty over your time horizon while we're quantised into gameweeks. Soros' bet on sterling in 1992 was pretty opportunistic and short-term - more like being able to buy and sell players in realtime as the games are in progress. In the long term Berkshire Hathaway has made bigger and more consistent returns by buying and holding high-quality assets over longer periods which might be a better model for FF.

  30. boc610
    • 13 Years
    2 years, 8 months ago

    Tuchel to take over at Bayern aka City exit champions league