Scout Reports
3 September 2025 129 comments
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Transfer deadline day saw Tottenham Hotspur complete the season-long loan of Paris Saint-Germain forward Randal Kolo Muani (£7.0m).

The France international almost extended his temporary stay at Juventus, only for talks to break down, allowing Spurs to swoop.

So, what impact will the 26-year-old have in Fantasy Premier League (FPL)?

We’ll take a look during this Scout Report piece.


HISTORY

Until recently, Kolo Muani was one of Europe’s most highly sought-after young strikers. Born in Paris, he came through the ranks at Nantes, for whom he scored 21 Ligue 1 goals in the two seasons before joining Eintracht Frankfurt in 2022.

SEASONCLUBDIVISIONSTARTS (SUB)GOALSASSISTS
2024/25Juventus (loan)Serie A13 (3)81
2024/25Paris Saint-GermainLigue 12 (8)21
2023/24Paris Saint-GermainLigue 113 (13)65
2023/24Eintracht FrankfurtBundesliga2 (0)10
2022/23Eintracht FrankfurtBundesliga31 (1)1514
2021/22NantesLigue 134 (2)125
2020/21NantesLigue 135 (2)98

His sole year in Germany was so impressive – rattling off 26 goals and 17 assists in all competitions – that PSG lured him back to his home city with a £78m offer.

However, just like Hugo Ekitike (£8.7m), Kolo Muani struggled to find a pathway into the French giants’ lineup. One-and-a-half seasons brought eight goals and six assists in 36 league appearances, of which only 15 were starts, so he joined Juventus on loan in January.

The Frenchman thrived in Turin, scoring eight league goals in 16 outings, plus a couple of Club World Cup strikes.

At international level, Kolo Muani has 31 caps for Les Bleus, netting on nine occasions. Yet his most memorable moment wasn’t great. In the 2022 World Cup final, he had the chance to score at the very end of extra time and write his name into folklore. To his eternal regret, the shot was saved by Emiliano Martinez (£5.0m) and France went on to lose on penalties.

PLAYING STYLE

Juventus’ failure to renew Kolo Muani’s loan was an absolute godsend for Spurs. After losing out on targets like Eberechi Eze (£7.5m) and Morgan Gibbs-White (£7.5m), they were about to fall short again. But adding both him and Xavi Simons (£7.0m) dramatically upgrades their attacking options.

Kolo Muani should be well-suited to the Premier League, too. He’s quick off the mark, difficult to knock off the ball and calm in front of goal.

Furthermore, he is adept at coming short to link with onrushing midfielders, as well as arcing his runs when racing on to through balls. Able to shoot with both feet, he comes alive in the penalty area and has excellent close control.

If one major drawback needs identifying, it’s that Kolo Muani can sometimes go quiet when confronted by low-block opponents. But if Thomas Frank can perfect a transition-based style of football, we might see the best of him.

FPL new signings 5

Above: Graphics courtesy of Sofascore

Being two-footed allows him to drift all over the pitch. His pace and skills are sometimes deployed on either flank, but his best work comes from a central position.

FPL new signings 6

Above: Graphics courtesy of Transfermarkt

When used as the main striker at both Juventus and Frankfurt, he averaged 0.5 goals per game. Additionally, his one Bundesliga season showcased some creativity, adding 14 assists to his repertoire.

WHERE KOLO MUANI FITS IN AT SPURS

FPL new signings: Simons brings creativity to Spurs' midfield 2

If Spurs want a rapid, powerful forward with an eye for goal and the ability to link up play, then they’ve landed on the right player.

Frank likes to use a 4-3-3 formation and has so far deployed Richarlison (£6.7m) up top, supported by Brennan Johnson (£7.1m) and Mohammed Kudus (£6.6m).

We’ll now likely see Simons play in their number 10 role and Kolo Muani compete for minutes as their main centre-forward but, of course, the north London side needs to juggle Premier League football with Champions League occasions.

WILL KOLO MUANI BE WORTH BUYING IN FPL?

These arrivals could bring bad news for owners of Richarlison and Johnson, but Kolo Muani is definitely one for FPL watchlists, considering Spurs’ incredibly welcoming next six matches.

FPL new signings: Simons brings creativity to Spurs' midfield 4

Confirmation of his role in their system and how often Frank shuffles his attacking riches still needs clarification, but there is no doubt that, with Kolo Muani, the head coach has a potentially explosive weapon at his disposal.

At this moment, however, it’s a classic ‘wait and see’ in FPL.

129 Comments Login to Post a Comment
  1. Koflok
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 13 Years
    3 months, 2 days ago

    Play
    A) Reijnders
    B) Mateta (-4)

    1. Mother Farke
      • 1 Year
      3 months, 2 days ago

      A. Palace could be without Sarr and Pino, no Eze anymore either. - who is creating for Mateta? Not worth the -4.

  2. Bobby Crush
    • 11 Years
    3 months, 2 days ago

    Arsenal fans, am I right in thinking that Eze will be first choice in the left forward slot?

  3. FPL Sanky
    • 2 Years
    3 months, 2 days ago

    I.Sarr to Paqueta for free? Paqueta feel like a cheaper Bruno who actually plays No.10 and plays for a better team than Bruno

    1. FPL Sanky
      • 2 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      Also to add, his celebration is much better than Bruno

    2. Camzy
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 15 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      Paqueta was in a number of my early drafts. After GW1 I was thanking my lucky stars I didn't go for him but since then I actually wish I had trusted my instinct on him. Looks like a good mid-priced option and has some DC potential as well.

      1. Dubem_FC
        • 10 Years
        3 months, 2 days ago

        In fanteam, Bowen is classed as a midfielder. Paqueta was £5.5m at the start, didn't want to double up. Wish I did.

  4. Mayor of Flair
    • 11 Years
    3 months, 2 days ago

    Is this WC too incredible?

    Dubravka
    Gabriel Guehi Senisi
    Salah Gakpo Bruno Reijnders
    Isak Pedro Gyokeres

    Don't worry about the bench

    1. Gommy
      • 15 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      Incredible is not the word I'd use to describe it.

      Dubravka will almost certainly concede and Isak won't start. Bruno/Reijnders may nullify eachother. Gyokeres isn't convincing.

      Long term, it may not be bad at all.

      1. Mayor of Flair
        • 11 Years
        3 months, 2 days ago

        Thanks... I think?

        More focus put on the medium term rather than this GW

        1. Gommy
          • 15 Years
          3 months, 2 days ago

          Sorry if the response wasn't as positive as you hoped.

          If the focus is was on the medium term than you need to provide your bench too, I'm afraid.

          Your bench will be more crucial than you think if Isak doesn't come on from the bench v Burnley, but also because your starting the keeper with the worst fixture - so its hard to understand how he'd be your no1 choice.

          1. Mayor of Flair
            • 11 Years
            3 months, 2 days ago

            Ya fair points, thanks for the response!

    2. The Son-dance Kid
      • 7 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      It's more incredulous than incredible (due to having no flexibility with no bench). Don't underestimate the value of a good bench

  5. Camzy
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 15 Years
    3 months, 2 days ago

    If I were to WC this week I'd go for smth like this:

    Petrovic Dubravka
    Munoz Tosin VdV Rodon Ekdal
    Salah Gakpo Semenyo Reijnders 4.4m
    Haaland Pedro Mateta

    When Isak becomes a factor, Mateta > Isak funded by selling Salah for Saka for Arsenal's good run of games then the leftover funds can be used to buy an Arsenal defender for one of the 4.0s. Mind you, I'm not planning to WC yet. Feel my team is decently balanced and can wait until 7.

    1. claretparrot
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 7 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      WC in 7 for me too, with FTs working towards getting Haaland in for GW6.

      Best laid plans...

    2. Gommy
      • 15 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      Looks good with a solid foundation to work with.

      Mine would look like this with a similar strategy for change around GW7:

      Raya (Dubravka)
      Virgil | Cucu | Guehi (Senesi, VdV)
      Salah | Gakpo | Grealish | Semenyo (Kudus)
      Pedro | Mateta | Evanilson

      1. Camzy
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 15 Years
        3 months, 2 days ago

        This sort of draft is too balanced for my liking. Lots of money on the bench every week and no Haaland. I think Haaland is the premium to own this year even over Salah so I'd want him in or at least have a plan to get him by GW6.

        1. Gommy
          • 15 Years
          3 months, 2 days ago

          Sorry, I did actually mean GW6, not GW7, that's my intended target for bringing Haaland in and Salah out. I agree with the opinion on Haaland but I'm prepared to live without him for the next 2 - I'm sure many others will be too.

          Not an awful lot of money on the bench as you might think either as there will always be a £4m GK and 2 x £4.5m Defenders filling 3 of those spots. The final spot being a £6.5m-£7m MF/FW which isn't extortionate.

          And the balance you see is by design, to segway the use of the first WC immediately into a BB the following week. Bench fodder will gradually integrate from then onwards.

          1. Camzy
            • Fantasy Football Scout Member
            • 15 Years
            3 months, 2 days ago

            That's a lot on the bench for me. You have effectively 3.5m more on the bench every week than the minimum. That is the difference between a player like Saka and Sarr.

            Since I've used my BB, I want the minimum on the bench as much as possible and trust that consistently putting more money on the field will yield superior results over time. If for the entire course of a season you have 3.5m more on the pitch every week, assuming you optimize for the best value picks you can have, you will come out on top in the vast majority of seasons.

            1. Camzy
              • Fantasy Football Scout Member
              • 15 Years
              3 months, 2 days ago

              If you trimmed your bench majorly, you'd be able to afford Saka over Grealish in a straight swap. Or Gyokeres over Evanilson if you're being a bit more modest. Over the season, I'd be very confident that Saka and Gyokeres will do better than the other two.

              1. Gommy
                • 15 Years
                3 months, 2 days ago

                I appreciate the responses but you’re overthinking the unknown a fair bit there.

                As I say, the balanced squad is very short term and very temporary and only geared towards optimising the BB the following week, that I and many others wouldn’t ever use this early in the year, but can now with the extra chip.

                My strong success over the years does demonstrate a cheap bench and that will be the model I’ll shape back to very quickly.

                Thanks again though, all the best.

  6. CoracAld2831
    • 4 Years
    3 months, 2 days ago

    People say Xavi Simons will likely take set pieces of Porro.

    Is Porro a potential sell/downgrade now?

    1. The Son-dance Kid
      • 7 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      If true, it certainly lessens his appeal. I wouldn't sell just because, but if and when you need funds, Porro is where you'd look to

    2. Camzy
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      • 15 Years
      3 months, 2 days ago

      Porro is probably most people's best defender in terms of fixture and potential. Why would you use a transfer to move him on? Maybe you can ditch him on WC but I see absolutely 0 reason to do it otherwise.

  7. Waletek
      3 months, 2 days ago

      Who score more points Tosin or Guehi