The Great Fabregas Debate
It seems that the majority of things I have done wrong this season revolve around Fabregas. I have been on the Fabregas band wagon since his stunning appearances in the U-17 World Championship back in 2003 and this sometimes perhaps clouds my judgment. I am therefore only going to make statements below that are based wholly in fact.
Arsenal's run in
By my calculations, Arsenal don't face a single game from here on in where they are expected to score less than one GPG and only two games (@Tot and @Bla) are less than 1.5 GPG. They have 6 games in which they are expected to score at least 2 goals. Compared to the other top teams, we see Arsenal are very well placed:
Expected games scoring 1.5 GPG or less:
The problem is the Arsenal's goals are very fragmented throughout the team with 13 different players already finding the net this year. If we put aside the forwards for a minute and look at the midfield, I think we can quickly cut out Rosicky, Wilshere, Diaby and probably Walcott as either lacking the minutes or attacking prowess to be regular fantasy contributors. I liked Arshavin at the start of the year and while has has been pretty solid this year, he seems to be being rotated more and more with the return of Van Persie and given his high price I am cutting him too. Song has been very good value this year but for the sake of argument here I am going to exclude him as he is a rotation prospect rather than an every week starter.
That leaves, of course, Nasri and Fabregas who are the focal point of this piece. I am intrigued by how the two play together and how this will translate to fantasy points for the remainder of the season.
Positional play
Let's take three games, one in which Fabregas played without Nasri (Bolton), one in which Nasri played without Fabregas (West Brom) and one in which they played together (Tottenham).
Samir Nasri
by Guardian Chalkboards
Cesc Fabregas
by Guardian Chalkboards
Fabregas plays centrally regardless of who else is playing while Nasri is pushed wide to either the right (as seen above) or sometimes to the left when Walcott also plays. This isn't necessarily a bad thing (some of the best fantasy players are wingers) but it does mean you have to be careful which data you are basing your transfer decisions on. Let's look at some numbers:
Fantasy points per game
What drives fantasy points? Well a lot of things, but I like shots as a useful measure for midfielders and it usually illustrates they are in attacking positions, are given license to shoot and are more likely to wrack up bonus points.
Shots per game
Quality Games
I define a quality game as one in which a player adds 6 points or more in a game. Let's look at the percentage of quality games each player has notched:
Conclusions
If you are trailing in your league or want to make a push up the leader board I think Fabregas (7.8% owned) is the best way to achieve this. There is some downside with his injury concerns and the fact he can sometimes take up deeper position but he has top 5 potential and a low ownership which doesn't apply to anyone else right now.
Nasri been more immune to rotation than I expected but his form has declined nonetheless. If you want to go all in on Arsenal he still makes a great pickup and owning him and Fabregas would likely guarantee you at least some kind of return from them each week (if you owned them both you would have enjoyed 9 double digit weeks and just 2 bad weeks when they both played). The issue is whether you can afford Nani and Van der Vaart too who I still regard as close to must own.
I have been premature with Fabregas before but it's time to start taking risks so given his apparent fitness and his good form since returning I think now is the time to bring Cesc back to the fantasy lime light.
Arsenal's run in
By my calculations, Arsenal don't face a single game from here on in where they are expected to score less than one GPG and only two games (@Tot and @Bla) are less than 1.5 GPG. They have 6 games in which they are expected to score at least 2 goals. Compared to the other top teams, we see Arsenal are very well placed:
Expected games scoring 1.5 GPG or less:
- Arsenal 2
- Man United 4
- Tottenham 8
- Chelsea 8
- Man City 9
- Chelsea 8
- Arsenal 7
- Man Utd 7
- Newcastle 6
- Tottenham 2
- Man City 1
The problem is the Arsenal's goals are very fragmented throughout the team with 13 different players already finding the net this year. If we put aside the forwards for a minute and look at the midfield, I think we can quickly cut out Rosicky, Wilshere, Diaby and probably Walcott as either lacking the minutes or attacking prowess to be regular fantasy contributors. I liked Arshavin at the start of the year and while has has been pretty solid this year, he seems to be being rotated more and more with the return of Van Persie and given his high price I am cutting him too. Song has been very good value this year but for the sake of argument here I am going to exclude him as he is a rotation prospect rather than an every week starter.
That leaves, of course, Nasri and Fabregas who are the focal point of this piece. I am intrigued by how the two play together and how this will translate to fantasy points for the remainder of the season.
Positional play
Let's take three games, one in which Fabregas played without Nasri (Bolton), one in which Nasri played without Fabregas (West Brom) and one in which they played together (Tottenham).
Samir Nasri
by Guardian Chalkboards
Cesc Fabregas
by Guardian Chalkboards
Fabregas plays centrally regardless of who else is playing while Nasri is pushed wide to either the right (as seen above) or sometimes to the left when Walcott also plays. This isn't necessarily a bad thing (some of the best fantasy players are wingers) but it does mean you have to be careful which data you are basing your transfer decisions on. Let's look at some numbers:
Fantasy points per game
- Nasri playing without Fabregas: Nasri 6.86 PPG
- Fabregas playing without Nasri: Fabregas 5.33 PPG
- Both playing: Nasri 4.45 PPG, Fabregas 5.55 PPG
What drives fantasy points? Well a lot of things, but I like shots as a useful measure for midfielders and it usually illustrates they are in attacking positions, are given license to shoot and are more likely to wrack up bonus points.
Shots per game
- Nasri playing without Fabregas: Nasri 4.4 shots per gane
- Fabregas playing without Nasri: Fabregas 1.7 shots per game
- Both playing: Nasri 1.9 shots per game, Fabregas 3.0 shots per game
Quality Games
I define a quality game as one in which a player adds 6 points or more in a game. Let's look at the percentage of quality games each player has notched:
- Nasri playing without Fabregas: Nasri 57% QG
- Fabregas playing without Nasri: Fabregas 33% QG
- Both playing: Nasri 27% QG, Fabregas 55% QG
Conclusions
If you are trailing in your league or want to make a push up the leader board I think Fabregas (7.8% owned) is the best way to achieve this. There is some downside with his injury concerns and the fact he can sometimes take up deeper position but he has top 5 potential and a low ownership which doesn't apply to anyone else right now.
Nasri been more immune to rotation than I expected but his form has declined nonetheless. If you want to go all in on Arsenal he still makes a great pickup and owning him and Fabregas would likely guarantee you at least some kind of return from them each week (if you owned them both you would have enjoyed 9 double digit weeks and just 2 bad weeks when they both played). The issue is whether you can afford Nani and Van der Vaart too who I still regard as close to must own.
I have been premature with Fabregas before but it's time to start taking risks so given his apparent fitness and his good form since returning I think now is the time to bring Cesc back to the fantasy lime light.
Comments
anyways... i was looking for a email for you but i guess i will just say it here....
this is an amazing blog! and i enjoy reading your opinions but it hurts my eyes because of the high contrast white type on dark green. after reading a post if you look away you can still see lines of black and white ghosting over your eyesight (and im only 27). again i think you have great content and would love to continue reading but please either make the text a slight grey or make the background not so dark. or both.
oh and one more thing... i still have robinson on my team, hart is playing so im not too worried but i wanted to pick up a cheap quality keeper. my thoughts before he got injured was al-habsi but now im thinking either gordon or foster... any thoughts?
thanks!
-jaime
You made a good argument for Fabregas and I took your advice to make the switch from Nasri... I REALLY hope he stays healthy. I also contemplated moving Lampard back in because he looks to be fully fit now and coming back into form, but couldn't find a good way to fit in his 12.4m
Here's the "new and improved" squad:
Gordon / Al-Habsi
Vidic / Bardsley / Coleman / Foley / Gouhouri
Fabregas / VDV / Nani / Adam / Parker
Tevez / Berbatov / Carroll
* I Really contemplated selling Carroll for Dudley Campbell, but I would have taken a HUGE salary hit because I bought Carroll so early. That may be a future transaction if Carroll doesn't return in good form after injury.
As we know arsenal are rampant away. Tevez is unpredictable at home, its such an easy fixture i could even see tevez rested (dzecko!?). It would be so typically fabregas to do the absolute business at upton park.....take the gamble with me Chris?
Foster
Baines, Evatt, Djourou
VDV, Bale, Nasri, Adam, Fabregas
Berbatov, Tevez
Reserves: Krull, Elmander, Onouha, Rafael
Also recs on Carroll, bought him for 5, can sell for 5.6, would pay 6.3 to buy him back?
I too plan to do Bale > Nasri this week both because of Arsenal’s fixtures and because I fear for Bale’s rotation/injury after a long gruelling season already.
For your keeper, as you know I normally employ a rotation system but given the amount of spare cash people have this year Joe hart is a nice option. Using my predictions City face tricky games in GW24, 27, 30, 32 and 38. Teams with good fixtures in these weeks include Sunderland, Chelsea, Man Utd, Arsenal and Stoke. Of these I like Gordon as the best value, followed by Fabianski.
Mike – the squad is looking good. I’m not a huge fan of Wolves defense but they have picked up of late so Foley is probably an okay pickup. I also think there could be better found than Parker who has gone very cold but he is usually fairly consistent so I could understand if thought he might come good again (his fixtures are only okay mind).
Re Caroll, if you are sat on a large profit and have waited this long I think it’s worth waiting another week or so, providing you are comfortable with your starting XI over the next week or two. For your keeper pair, be careful with matchups such as GW24 when Gordon visits Blackpool and Al Habsi goes to Arsenal (both tough places to keep a clean sheet). I will be posting the best keeper pairs tonight in case you wish to make the move before the next deadline.
Leo – I haven’t looked at the data yet but I would imagine the two picks of the week could well be Fabregas and Tevez (given MnU’s tricky trip to White Hart Lane). You are right in saying Tevez has been inconsistent at home and while i think he will play, he is risky. I may too roll the dice with Cesc once I’ve looked at the data.
Sean – nice analysis. ‘Finishing position’ is indeed key as the heat map can’t necessarily show this. It only takes one stroll into a good position and you’ve got your 7 points. I would agree that Nasri > Bale for the rest of the year but would still argue Fab > Nasri (in pure points, Nasri still probably better value)
Not sure if you’re using your wildcard soon but you need to be careful with your squad in that Djorou and Rafael are rotation risks and Krul is now benched. With Onouha’s injury (though he is back soon) a shock resting of a Vdv or Tevez might leave you with 10 men. Djorou is tough to replace for the money – possibly Danny Simpson? Rafael is good value providing you have a sub to come in when he’s dropped for his brother, Smalling, Neville etc.
Softcoal - this is just an omission on my behalf. I don't track every player as it takes too long so I add people as and when they become fantasy relevant. Not sure why Dempsey and Barton wouldn't appear as they have been relevant all year. I will add those listed, and if anyone has any others please let me know.
Well, I just dropped Nasri for Cesc. I had planned the transfer before reading 'The Debate" but the facts put me over the top.
Still not sure what to do with Carroll. Can I afford to drop him, or can I not afford to keep him?
Also, I blew it last week picking up two Blackpool defenders. What was I thinking? Now I've got an issue in the back: Konchesky, Evatt and Crainey! I'm not willing to spend 4 points, so it will have to wait until next week (GW 24).