Every week, we need to take a long hard look at our squad, and ask ourselves if we want to make any changes....
And even if we do see a pressing case for a change here or there, we then need to weigh that against the possible advantage of saving our transfer - 'rolling' it over to use in a future week. This option achieves greater tactical complexity this season with the new rule that allows us to save up as many as 5 Free Transfers to use at one time. If we ever manage to do that, it would in effect be a 'mini Wildcard', enabling us to conduct a major squad overhaul in one fell swoop (particularly useful as there are a handful of 'premium' players who cost so much more than everyone else that you can't conveniently move them in and out of your squad without making multiple other changes as well).
Then, of course, occasionally multiple changes may seem so inescapable that we have to consider whether it's worth spending points on 1 or 2 extra transfers (a tactic which obviously deserves a whole post of its own one day).
So, what are the conundrums we face ahead of Gameweek 11?
Does anybody need to be moved out because of injury?
Well, no new problems arising in the European games this week, it seems. (Though it's too early to tell if any 'reactions' may yet set in after last night's Europa League and Europa Conference fixtures...)
Oh, Havertz is probably a doubt on 'concussion protocols', after being withdrawn after a clash of heads in the Inter game on Wednesday night.
Konate looked like he might have picked up a serious arm injury last week, but that little scare had blown over in time for him to start - and, yet again, be Liverpool's outstanding defender - in the game against Leverkusen on Tuesday. So, no worries there, hopefully.... unles he now needs a rest.
Cole Palmer has been feeling the effects of Lisandro Martinez's high challenge on the side of his knee at Old Trafford on Sunday, but it doesn't sound too serious (he has been 'spotted in training'?).
Richarlison apparently tweaked his hamstring last weekend; Rice is still suffering from his 'knock' and might again be a doubt; and Sancho has picked up a minor problem this week too. But these all probably have fairly negligible FPL relevance.
Odegaard and DeBruyne are said to be near a comeback, which could shake the FPL world up a whole lot. But my guess would be that they probably won't reappear as starters until after this next international break, will only get token minutes off the bench this gameweek (perhaps slightly longer minutes, if their teams are struggling to break their opponents down...).
Joao Pedro is back in training with Brighton too. Although there are now multiple claims for attention in the forwards-under-6-million category, he could quickly reassert his position among them (and there could be a negative knock-on for Danny Welbeck, if he reclaims penalty-taking duties from him).
Do we have any players who are dropped, or not looking likely to get the starts we hoped for?
Phillips and Alvarez are serving one-match bans for picking up double yellows last weekend.
And Raheem Sterling - still a Chelsea player, only out on loan - is ineligible to play against his parent club this week. (Amazingly, his FPL ownership is not quite ZERO; I suppose his mum still loves him.)
Luis Diaz remains the big head-scratcher in FPL. Gakpo seems to have been preferred over him for the past few weeks; but I've always felt that Diaz fits better into the Liverpool system, is a better finisher, and brings much more energy to the high press. (There might have been a fitness issue underlying his recent omissions. And also possibly a tactical one: teams are tending to target Liverpool's early build-up more aggressively while Kelleher is deputising for Alisson, and the stand-in keeper is often being forced to go long to escape pressure; Gakpo is significantly taller and stronger than Diaz, and thus has a rather better chance of claiming and hanging on to aerial balls down the left flank. If Alisson returns by the end of the month, I suspect Lucho's start will become more secure.) And he just scored a stunning hattrick in Europe. So, my guess would be that Gakpo may get occasional starts in the central forward position, but mainly continue as a super-sub; Diaz surely has to be the preferred (though not, perhaps, invariable) starter on the left. Both of them - as well as Darwin Nunez - will face competition from Jota when he's fit again. The rotation uncertainty alone, unfortunately, makes any of Liverpool's attacking players - apart from the superhuman and undroppable Mo Salah, of course - rather dubious FPL prospects. (Diaz, despite having been on the pitch for barely two hours in the past four gameweeks, is still - by some distance - the fifth highest-performing midfielder of the season. Managers who've been quick to give up on him [myself included!], may come to regret that.)
There's also a lot of chatter around Rico Lewis, after he was dropped last week in favour of Kyle Walker. I'm not panicking yet. All City defenders get rotated sometimes; we know that - the infamous 'Pep Roulette'. And Pep is particularly anxious not to over-stress his younger players, had been saying for a while that he'd like to give Rico a bit of a rest. Also, he may feel obliged to give Walker the occasional run-out, just to keep his match-sharpness up.... and get some value out of his enormous salary. But the veteran right-back actually had a pretty unimpressive game; and City looked much more dangerous after Lewis came on for the last 20 minutes. Pep loves the way that Lewis can slot into midfield so effectively - not just being an extra defensive midfielder, as Stones usually was last year, but moving to the head of the box-four midfield formation; and, when City have sustained possession in the final third, pushing up even further, drifting to and fro along the attacking line around the edge of the opposition penalty area (he's actually playing much farther forward than Gvardiol most of the time). So, I'm reasonably confident that Lewis is going to continue to be an important - irreplaceable - element of the new City system, and will get pretty regular starts. And he's way the cheapest option from any of the top four's defences this year, so is probably worth hanging on to, keeping on the bench for a while, even if he does 'fall from favour' for a few weeks at a time.
March and Minteh (as well as the strangely out-of-favour-this-season Adingra) are back in contention for starts down the right flank at Brighton - which can't bode well for Ferdi Kadioglu (heavily transferred in by The Sheep after scoring that screamer at Anfield).
Did anyone give other cause to consider dropping them?
Vicario continues to be in great form as a shot-stopper, but his 'assertiveness training' appears to have achieved indifferent success so far; Villa nicked their goal by successfully bullying him at a corner, leaving him off-balance, behind his goal-line, failing to make any attempt to claim the ball in the air, and then flapping at the first goal-attempt.... presenting a sitter to Morgan Rogers. And Spurs are likely to be even more vulnerable on the counter-attack while they're missing Van de Ven; so, I'd venture that those 3.7% of managers who've selected the Italian keeper at the moment... probably need to reconsider. Son's early withdrawal shouldn't be too much of a concern; Ange insisted that he was only taking him off to avoid any risk of re-injury. It should, however, give pause to anyone who was thinking of making him captain (or Triple Captain - good grief!) for this week's appealing fixture against Ipswich. If his health is that fragile, the limited minutes are likely to go on for a few more weeks. And Maddison...? Great player, but somehow hasn't quite been clicking with Spurs at the end of last season and the start of this; and now his manager no longer seems to consider him an essential starter... Ouch. (Maybe there was some undisclosed fitness issue behind his recent omissions or withdrawals. Or maybe there was some subtle tactical reason for them. Perhaps he'll be back in Ange's good graces soon....? But I wouldn't touch Madders with a bargepole at the moment.)
I've always felt Garnacho looks much less dangerous when playing on the left (he loves being able to cut inside from the other flank, so that he can have a crack at goal on his stronger foot - just like Saka). And his frequent disinclination to track back in defence was becoming particularly conspicuous in the Chelsea game - with teammate Casemiro berating him for his indolence near the end of that. And if Amorim wants to play anything like the system he's used at Sporting (although he's recently said that he won't...), I just don't see how Garnacho's going to fit into that. So, I'd suggest the optimistic Manchester United fans who've included him in their squads (over 10% of all Fantasy managers, incredibly; he's the third most picked player from the club at the moment, only a smidge behind Mazraoui and Dalot).... need to rethink that.
And there might be growing doubts about Emile Smith Rowe's minutes, or even starts, after Harry Wilson's spectacular return to the Fulham side on Monday evening. (I'm going to keep the faith a little longer. But it is another worrying uncertainty thrown into the mix...)
Not many people ever gambled on Enzo Fernandez; and it had slipped my attention that he's only got minutes off the bench in the last three games (and has failed to impress in those appearances). With Caicedo and Lavia now looking so formidable as the central double-pivot, it's difficult to see how the Argeninian finds any place in the regular starting eleven now.
Did anyone play so well, you have to consider bringing them in immediately?
Well, the whole of the Nottingham Forest defence! And the whole of the Bournemouth defence (especially Kerkez and Zabarnyi). And the whole of the Fulham defence (especially Robinson and Tete). And even perhaps... the whole of the Crystal Palace defence (especially Guehi and Munoz).... although they still look very vulnerable at the back; and without Eze, they're not likely to create much danger at the other end, and will be coming under even more pressure at the back.
Gordon and Isak - and Newcastle in general - finally seem to be getting back to something like their best again, after a slight spell in the doldrums. And they've dropped in price by 200-300k after the recent period of general disillusuionment with them, so now seems an opportune time to buy them back.
Rutter and Ayari have looked outstanding for Brighton in the last few games. Kadioglu might be tempting, if he proves able to keep the start... Not because he scored a goal last week: that's unlikely to be happen again soon, if ever. But a cheap defensive player who plays a very advanced role for a decent mid-table side who have a great fixture-run (after this week) - that's definitely worth bearing in mind. (Although I'd rather have Welbeck, Verbruggen, Rutter, and maybe Joao Pedro from Brighton at the moment.)
Harry Wilson turned in perhaps the performance of the week, with his stunning late double to claim the points for Fulham against Brentford. But over the past year, he doesn't seem to have been a preferred starter for Marco Silva even when fully fit, and since he's only just back from a long lay-off, I wouldn't expect him to be challenging for a regular start too quickly.
The Sheep, of course, have been getting terribly excited about Dominic Solanke finding his scoring boots at last. But Spurs's inconsistency this year, and his tendency to drop quite deep in link-up play (while inevitably sharing the goals with Son and Johnson and a few others), and the tricky upcoming fixture run (City, Chelsea and Liverpool in the next six after this weekend, as well as far-from-easy Fulham and Bournemouth) make him look a very dubious pick to me. With the plethora of strong performances from low-priced strikers this season (a possibility I anticipated in my pre-season recommendations), there's really no reason to consider any in this upper-mid price category; and if you do, Solanke is not (yet) a convincingly better prospect than Mateta and Havertz, and a considerably less tempting pick than Isak or Jackson.
Although there's now a bewildering range of potential picks in this segment, I think Bournemouth's Evanilson is starting to invite consideration for a budget forward pick too.
Cunha is another Sheep favourite in this category, after a few very lively performances recently, and another assist last week. However, I can't help thinking that, as he mostly seems to be playing in quite a deep supporting role now, rather than as an outright forward, he is only likely to produce assists, not claim many goals of his own. Strand Larsen, as the primary goalscorer, looks likely to me to produce a few more FPL points - for quite a lot less money. Although all Wolves picks look very risky while their defensive form is still so shakey.
BEST OF LUCK, EVERYONE!