Analytical Guide to Fixtures GW1 – GW8
This article looks to review the importance of a team’s fixtures and how to use rotation in a slightly different way to the existing tools and opinions available on FPL selection.
The highlights (for the opening 8 GW’s) are:
Attacking
– Arsenal and Man United look the strongest of the big teams
– Southampton and Swansea are good for mid priced teams
– Leicester and Bournemouth are likely to be the best budget teams (and both rotate well with Crystal Palace)
Defending
– Chelsea are the stand out team defensively
– Southampton and West ham are good for mid priced teams
– Leicester and West Brom are the best budget options (and rotate well with West ham and Southampton)
In general
– There are some teams that have very strong fixtures and so don’t need to be rotated (Chelsea and the attacks of Arsenal, Man Utd and Man City)
– There are a few teams I would steer well clear of for the first 8 weeks (Newcastle, Watford, Norwich)
– Always remember that some players can be fixture proof; regardless of the team they play for.
– Always have an Exit/Entry strategy in place as team fixtures change, the bargains become obvious and Aguero becomes fit.
If understanding how I got to these conclusions is of interest then read on… otherwise good luck this year.
The importance of rotation for your FPL team….
with analysis on the opening 8 GW’s of the 2015/16 season.
There are some very good fixture analysers (and opinions) out there in the FPL community. Some of them are very helpful for team planning when used correctly. The one thing I have consistently found is that they place too much reliance on rotating pairs, both home and away, (e.g. Newcastle and Sunderland) and less emphasis on the quality of the opposition. Personally I would rather have Stoke away to Sunderland than Newcastle at home to Everton…
An important omission from this article (one for another day) is the importance of having an entry and exit strategy for all your players. Injuries happen, bargains become available, standout players shine, transfers happen and big game players become fit again. Be mindful on this as long term planning is key to a successful season and all poor teams have a couple of good players… Although 2 wildcards does help.
For the purpose of this analysis (and how I like to pick my team) I have a few criteria I like to follow. These are:
– Always separate a team’s attacking potential from its defensive potential.
– Form, playing style, player’s average ability all factor into a team’s potential.
– Don’t underestimate the positive (and negative) impact of transfers/injuries.
– Playing home and away have an impact as well (but it’s not the most important thing).
– Big Teams can have bad fixtures.
– Small Teams can have good fixtures.
– Every team no matter how bad has a couple of standout players (there is an ‘I’ in some teams).
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The opening 8 fixtures
I have chosen to look at the opening 8 fixtures for this year’s season, as you have to plan, but beyond 8-10 weeks is too far in FPL. Remember to factor in your weekly transfers as the fixtures shift and with it so do the fortunes of your budget teams. Having a banked transfer always helps and avoids unnecessary point’s hits.
The opening fixtures look like this:
Based on the opening 8 fixtures I would expect the league table to be ordered something like this:
(*Please note that this reflects the teams overall ability and ,as mentioned above, to get a team’s true potential for FPL you need to break them out into attacking potential and defensive potential.)
Focussing on the overall fixtures could lead to some incorrect assumptions around which FPL players to choose. While on face value the above table suggests it is best to steer clear of the bottom 5-6 teams there is definitely value in some of them. Going on just the overall view of the teams we can see the following likelihood of the teams having positive opening results:
When we split out the teams attacking and defensive ability and look to rotate you can find a lot of value in those bottom (budget) teams. The “Pulis affect” at West Brom is one I particularly like for their defence (especially when rotating with Southampton or Palace).
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Looking at the top 6 teams we can see that for all of them their attacks are likely to do well. However all, except Chelsea, are likely to have a harder time defensively.
In order to achieve an optimal FPL return it is clear that you need to adopt a balanced approach between players from the big 6, mid table and budget teams. The key to the latter 2 is rotation pairs.
To identify which teams you should pick players from it is important to know, defensively and offensively, who needs to rotate and who will stand on their own.
Attack rotation need:
No Rotation
– Arsenal, Chelsea, Man City, Man Utd, Tottenham
Low Rotation
– Liverpool, Southampton
Rotate
– Villa, Bournemouth, Palace, Everton, Leicester, Stoke, Swansea, West ham
Avoid (unless stand out bargain is obvious)
– Newcastle, Norwich, Sunderland, Watford, West Brom
Defence rotation need:
No Rotation
– Chelsea
Low Rotation
– Arsenal, Man City, Man Utd, Southampton
Rotate
– Villa, Bournemouth, Palace, Everton, Leicester, Liverpool, Stoke, Swansea, Tottenham, West Brom, West ham
Avoid (unless stand out bargain is obvious)
– Newcastle, Norwich, Sunderland, Watford
So focussing on the teams with a rotation need who do they rotate well with?
Each team with a rotation need has 2-3 good options. Rotate 1 is the best but in all cases the rotation sees a big positive impact. Team type determines if they are a big 6 (1), mid table (2) or budget team (3) so aiming for budget rotations frees up more cash.
Attacking Rotations:
Defensive Rotations:
There are clearly plenty of options available in both attack and defence. Personally I recommend rotating budget teams with a mid-table team or another budget team. For my defence I will be looking at a combined cost of £9-9.5million per pair. For my attackers I will look to rotate based on my available funds once I have 8-9 of the team selected.
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As a case study we could take newly promoted Bournemouth and look to rotate them with the best budget/Mid table team.
By combining West Hams defence (options at £5.0m) with Bournemouth’s (options at £4.5m) we will be likely to rival that of Man City’s and Arsenal’s £6m defenders. In attack choosing Players such as Bournemouth’s Matt Ritchie (On Pens) and Palace’s Patrick Bamford (championship player of the season) you can fill up 2 attacking slots for less than £12m freeing up cash to get the all important heavy hitters. This might not seem a lot but it’s the difference between Oscar and Hazard in your team. And you get 7-8 good to great fixtures in the next 8 weeks:
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Conclusion:
There are plenty of options available for team rotations in the opening 8 game weeks. By aiming for budget options you can end up with 1 or 2 extra, and very important, heavy hitters.
In attack I recommend:
– 3-4 players from Man Utd, Arsenal, Chelsea and Man City.
– 1 player from a mid table team (or looks cheap) who has big potential (e.g. -Bolasie/Milner/Tadic/Schneiderlin)
– 3-5 players from mid table and budget teams that rotate well (and ideally take pens or set pieces)
In defence I recommend:
– A nailed on Chelsea defender
– 2 budget keepers who rotate well
– 2 pairs of budget/mid table defenders who rotate well (e.g. Southampton/West Brom and West Ham/Leicester)
Important additions:
– Every team has a stand out player (or two), from defence and attack, who suck up most of their teams points (e.g. Janmaat at Newcastle and Sigurdson at Swansea). These guys can be almost fixture proof as the heavy hitters.
– Plan for injuries, transfers, the fixture landscape changing and spotting the season bargains early. Banked transfers help to react to these.
Following all of this you have a great chance to get a head start on your mini-league rivals.
Good luck for the season and if you like what you have read then please follow –
And many thanks to the following for the proof read and recommendations –
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Time for bed. See you guys tomorrow!
WTF? Not a big Afellay fan but at 5.5m he’s a f-ing steal.
This changes everything.
IF he plays he will be assist/goal king. FFS. Good player, but terrible attitude. Great technique, somethng you don’t see often in the EPL.
Those opening fixtures though. Maybe after GW 5.
Mehehe, Liverpool at home? Spurs away? Arsenal away will be hard but he’s also the type of player that wants to show himself in these big type of games. He was with Oympiakos in the CL, scored 2 goals and had 1 assist in 4 games.
Steven Berghuis for Watford at 6.0m and Afellay at 5.5m, that’s just crazy. Lens at 6.5m I get.
Hi Raz – insight into that comment if you can please? No idea on Afellay game-time just yet as he’s barely featured for the teams he’s been at for the last 4 years so I’m not convinced at all but the other 2 interest me greatly. Especially Lens.
Lens is actually a very viable option. Afellay is interesting if he plays. Lens is interesting because he can be used as a striker (like Depay) and as winger. Think he should be able to get loads of assists, lot of speed, very direct and a goal treat. Afellay hasn’t play regularly because of injuries, not because he sucks. His attitude might suck though. If he plays, he can excel and shine, that’s for sure. Probably one of the more gifted players in the EPL. How he got wasted after he left PSV is beyond me. At Barca he really wasn’t that bad. Things took a turn for the worse when he went out on a loan to Schalke04 and he felt himself to be great, to almighty. When he was with the Netherlands at the European Championships him and RvP that’s when RvP lost my trust) separated themselves from the rest of the group. Look at me, I play for Barca, I’m used to play with Messi/Iniesta BS. Dude def. has potential and talent though. Sighs.
Lens should do good and Berghuis is a rookie, anything can happen. He just started the get his shit together after years of dwelling.
Thanks Raz, confirms what I thought ref Lens. Interested in him. Few will have him.
It’s a new competition so you never know. HIs stats are similar to that of Wijnaldum when he played for PSV. With difference that Wijnaldum probably was on more set pieces, Lens wouldn’t be.
Sort of tried putting Lens out of my mind but I just noticed their great run of fixtures. Maybe I have to think it over.
I’ve got Lens on my radar too Raz, but I’ve already got Defoe as my 3rd striker. No chance I’m having 2 attacking players from Sunderland 😉
Indeed. Defoe might actually not be such a bad idea. Watford is Deeney but Watford needs to go up in a competition. Defoe should def. score more goals with Lens supporting him. Why did he only play 1500 minute last season again? Did he come in January or was he injured? I forgot. :p
Sunderland’s opening fixtures are much better than Watford’s. Defoe signed in January.
Second goal for Barca. Costa off injured doesn’t sound good. Went straight down into the dressing room too
Comments about my team please?
For sure either one of them or both might no appear in starting XI talking about SOTONS double defenseive coverage
Boyz
The double Southampton in defence is risky. Neither are long term prospects.
Midfield and strikers look good to me.
Yes, I agree. Thinking about changing Mane with Milner or Henderson (1M in bank).
Change Targett to a defense to 5M, or change Yoshida to a defense to 5,5M.
My mind says Henderson because he is cap and will prob take penalties and play a lot, at the same time I think Milner would take corners and be more aggresive on the pitch. Meaning Henderson would have a more defensive role.
What do u guys think?
Thanks for input.
boyz
That sounds sensible to me.
Hey Guys!!!!!!!!!!!! I am back after a long few months.
What can be done with these peeps.
Suggestions would be welcome.
kaumil
Welcome back mate – be sure to vote on the Community Team article.
Your team is obviously now dependant on Costa injury news. More to come from that soon I think.
I think Lallana may find himself rotated so you could plump for Milner or Henderson who are performing well in pre-season.
Diouf is a player who scores goals in the PL but is often overlooked. Have you done research on his previous gametime/fixtures? Not even sure what price he is but Stoke should be improved this season but to add to that they have signed a few players in the forward positions so rotation could also be key here.
Overall looks decent if Costa makes it OK.