When weighing up the transfer of Manchester City’s Sergio Aguero and Crystal Palace’s Mile Jedinak at a cost of 17.6 in Fantasy Premier League (FPL) against drafting in Aguero’s team-mate David Silva and Arsenal striker Olivier Giroud for exactly the same price there is logically only one winner given Jedinak’s absence in the Asia Cup and Giroud and Silva’s form.
But when I put this question earlier this week to many Fantasy managers the response was unanimously in favour of Aguero. Some wanted Aguero and Palace’s Jason Puncheon (although that’s cheating because it’s more expensive) and some went as far as saying they’d take Aguero plus anyone. This has prompted me to put forward the case against Aguero being an essential part of your winter Wildcards.
Captaincy Fallacy
Let’s take the big issue first. “Aguero is the best captain option you can have. Take the armband and stick it on Aguero every week.”
Let’s assume that a non-Aguero team will have Alexis Sanchez and Diego Costa as alternative armband options. A reasonable assumption, I think, given that you don’t have Aguero’s 12.5 price tag to cover. I have therefore compared the effect of captaining Aguero every week with the result of captaining either Costa or Sanchez. To be more than fair to Aguero I have completely excluded Gameweeks 16-20 when he was injured but included all the weeks when either Costa or Sanchez were unfit to play. This means that Sanchez’ nine points in Gameweek 16 and Costa’s 11 in Gameweek 18 have not been counted.
To further take bias out of the comparison, I have always selected whichever of Costa and Sanchez had a home fixture irrespective of how many points they scored. And when they were both home or both away I have taken the one who was playing the lowest ranked opponent. This means that Costa’s 12 points in Gameweek 3 have not been included either.
The result of this:
Points from captaining Aguero: 107 over 17 weeks
Points from captaining Sanchez/Costa based on home and away or ease of opponent: 163 over 17 weeks.
Mull that over for a minute. Â These are not figures that I have manipulated to fit my argument.
Poor Value
Right, so if we discount the captaincy as an imperative for Aguero, what else is there? After you take that out then value in terms of points per game per 1.0 cost is probably the next measurement. Â Here are a few comparisons:
John Terry: 0.73 points per 1.0 cost per game
Sanchez 0.60Â points per 1.0 cost per game
Costa 0.56Â points per 1.0 cost per game
Aguero 0.50Â points per 1.0 cost per game.
That’s looking at premium players only. Budget options like Downing or Austin will be way ahead of these numbers. Once again, these figures do not suggest Aguero is essential.
The other common reason to have Aguero (and usually captain him) is simplicity. It gives you a simpler decision to make each week.
Conclusion
In conclusion I want to emphasise that I am not saying Aguero is a bad choice. He’s obviously a good one. You have to spend your budget somewhere and having all lower cost players will not help because even though they may deliver high points per 1.0 cost per game you will leave millions unspent in the bank. A fit and healthy Aguero is certainly a good captain option (though by no means automatically the best in any given Gameweek) and I’d certainly rather spend 12.5 on him than on Robin van Persie. Although it is also true that the Argentine hasn’t been the most reliable on fitness either; 1528 minutes played last season and 1944 the season before is not encouraging.
My argument is not that he is a bad choice but simply that he is not essential. Even if you are among the top 1,000 managers, where Sanchez’ ownership (44%) and Costa’s ownership (64%) outweigh Aguero’s (51%). Although as a top 1,000 manager and probably having a high transfer value you may very well want all three.
There is more than one way to skin a cat and going without Aguero, especially for players with a lower transfer value at Wildcard time, is surely something to consider.
