Suddenly the field has cleared again.
Having appeared to be awash with options and configurations up front, Harry Kane is now surely established as the undisputed primary target in attack.
And while Romelu Lukaku toiled in another four-goal victory for Manchester United, the other contenders for our frontlines have lost some ground.
Alvaro Morata’s early withdrawal against Manchester City has temporarily de-railed his burgeoning reputation and Fantasy ownership.
Confirmed as a hamstring issue by manager Antonio Conte, we must now wait on a further prognosis before we can be clear if this is a setback that will knock the Spaniard out.
Thankfully, Conte appears to be playing down the problem but the Morata bandwagon has hit the buffers for now.
With Sergio Aguero sidelined with a rib injury, Kane and Lukaku seem largely unchallenged heading into the break.
Despite his seven goals in as many Gameweeks, that’s a scenario that flatters Lukaku.
With news breaking post-deadline that the Belgian was struggling with a knock sustained in training, the initial thoughts were that he could miss today’s meeting with Crystal Palace.
He started and completed 90-minutes, but was subdued and failed to deliver the anticipated threat to a beleaguered opponent.
Kane, in contrast, was a menace from the first kick against Huddersfield until Spurs shifted down the gears in the second period.
But, typically this season, Lukaku could and should have matched Kane’s two-goals. He rolled a big chance wide before converting a tap-in from Anthony Martial’s centre.
Maybe the Belgian wasn’t fully fit but, in terms of the “eye-test” and pure performance, Kane demonstrated that he is on a different level at present.
My captain selection – switched to Lukaku overnight – was steered by the fears that Palace would capitulate, with the Terriers perhaps presenting a tougher opponent to Spurs.
To an extent that was true. United had more shots and had five big chances to Spurs’ two.
But Lukaku simply did not expose the Eagles frailty and help himself to the big score that I and many others hoped for and expected.
With United’s schedule now stiffening, Lukaku will doubtless suffer some sales, but those losses would be far more severe were it not for the setbacks for Morata and Aguero.
He may well survive in squads with Manchester City’s Gabriel Jesus perhaps the most viable and “secure” alternative left standing to partner Kane in our forward lines.
With talk of Aguero returning in four weeks or less, a move for Jesus could also be a short-term measure, aimed at capturing Man City’s plum home encounters with Stoke City and Burnley.
But given that they sandwich a Champions League tie with Napoli, it will be interesting to see if Pep Guardiola attempts to manage the minutes of his only out-and-out striker.
Arguably, those jostling with Kane and Lukaku for our attention have failed to build their case heading into the internationals.
Kane looks untouchable, and while Lukaku is nowhere near as devastating, he continues to prove effective. That might be just enough for now.
6 years, 8 months ago
Evans to Otamendi a good move this week? Also what to do with Chalobah?