Regular readers will know I regularly stress the importance of correct team structure, in particular a very cheap fifth midfielder. Indeed, to the bemusement of many I went through the second half of the season with Liverpool’s much maligned midfielder Lucas Leiva (4.2) in my team. But could now be the time to break the cheap, fifth midfielder template?
FIXTURES
Fixtures for the start of the season are rather unusual; generally this season it is the poorer teams that have all the best fixtures early on. While the likes of Liverpool have a combination of very difficult games interspersed with some easy ones. My normal strategy of picking the same four premium midfielders from good clubs, each week, suddenly doesn’t look so great as they will be forced to play in very tough away games early on.
This season there could be a better way. Spend a little extra on a fifth midfielder, from one of the lower clubs and use them for their good early fixtures, allowing the other more expensive midfielders to be benched when on a tough fixture. Naturally, someone like Eden Hazard would never be benched, but third or fourth midfielders such as Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson or James Milner could be.
WILDCARD CHANGES
The initial Wildcard now has to be used in the first half of the season, so I am now even more likely to be using it early on, quite possibly during the first international break after Gameweek 4 and maybe even earlier. That being the case, team structure can be adjusted then, once we know who the best minimum-priced midfielders are. There may be no rush to start this season with a 4.5 midfielder.
ALL-OUT-ATTACK CHIP
Arguably the weakest of the new one-off boosters introduced in FPL is the all out attack chip, which allows Fantasy managers to select a 2-5-3 formation for one week only. Perhaps the start of the season, when cheap midfielders have good fixtures, could be an ideal time to use this. But once I bring in this season’s version of Lucas it will be too late to make the most of it.
GENEROUS TRANSFER BUDGET
This season it seems the game has been fairly generous to us; it is fairly easy to pick a decent team early on, without the need for too much penny-pinching. Spending an extra million on the fifth midfielder could well be a luxury we can now afford, at least until the first Wildcard. Also this season there are no stand-out 4.5 options in midfield, who are capable of bringing in the sort of returns that last season’s cheap budget midfield hero, Burnley’s George Boyd, managed.
CONCLUSION
At this stage I am keeping an open mind and ruling nothing out. It is too early to fix plans just yet. Pre-season injuries and player form could yet open up opportunities for a decent 4.5 midfielder to step forward. Meanwhile, heavy-hitter transfers in could put more strains on the budget, making a 4.5 mid more appealing.

