Your daily dose of Premier League insights - powered by data, driven by AI. From top transfer tips to captain picks, we break it all down in under 10 minutes.
Welcome to Who Got The Points, the daily FPL podcast that cuts through the noise. I'm Archer, and in the next seven minutes, you're getting everything you need to lock in your Gameweek Fifteen team before Saturday's eleven AM deadline. We're talking transfers in, transfers out, differential picks, and your captaincy call. Let's go.
Rapid-fire news bulletin. First up, Arsenal kept a clean sheet against Brentford in Gameweek Fourteen, and David Raya made it eight clean sheets this season. Arsenal face Aston Villa away in the early Saturday kick-off, a tough test but the defence looks solid. Second, Newcastle's Bruno Guimaraes came off the bench at half-time against Spurs and scored within minutes. He's now on four goals and four assists this season. Newcastle host Burnley this weekend, a fixture that screams attacking returns. Third, Crystal Palace centre-back Marc Guehi had a monster fourteen-point haul in Gameweek Fourteen with an assist, clean sheet, and maximum bonus against Burnley. He's now on eighty-three points total and faces Fulham away on Sunday. Fourth, Aston Villa's Amadou Onana scored and earned two bonus in their four-three thriller at Brighton, banking eleven points. Villa host Arsenal in Saturday's early game. Finally, Bukayo Saka came off the bench for Arsenal and scored in twenty-nine minutes against Brentford. His fitness will be crucial for the Villa clash.
Top three transfers in. Number one, Bruno Guimaraes at six point eight million pounds. Ownership has rocketed to nine point four percent with over four hundred thousand managers bringing him in this week. He played just forty-five minutes in Gameweek Fourteen but scored and grabbed a bonus point for seven points total. The key stat? Four goals and four assists across thirteen appearances with seventy-one total points. Why buy? Newcastle host Burnley this weekend, and then face Sunderland in Gameweek Sixteen. Two excellent fixtures for a midfielder in red-hot form who's also on set pieces. Verdict: Essential. Bruno is a must-have midfielder for the next two gameweeks minimum.
Number two, Harvey Barnes at six point four million pounds. Just two point seven percent owned but sixty thousand net transfers in this week. Barnes played sixty-five minutes against Spurs, earning a clean sheet for three points. His season numbers are impressive: three goals, forty-four total points, and averaging three point one points per game. Why buy? Seven point two expected points against Burnley this weekend is elite. Barnes operates high up the pitch, gets into dangerous positions, and Newcastle's attack is firing. With fixtures against Burnley and Sunderland coming up, he's a brilliant differential. Verdict: Good. If you need a mid-priced midfielder with explosive potential, Barnes is your man.
Number three, Kieran Dewsbury-Hall at just five point zero million pounds. Four point eight percent owned with nearly a hundred thousand transfers in. Played the full ninety minutes in Everton's one-nil win at Bournemouth, picking up a clean sheet for three points. Season stats show five clean sheets, three goals, two assists, and fifty-eight total points. Why buy? Eight point zero expected points for Gameweek Fifteen against Nottingham Forest is outstanding for a five million pound midfielder. David Moyes has revitalised Everton, and Dewsbury-Hall is a key part of that resurgence. Budget enabler who actually plays and delivers. Verdict: Essential for budget teams. At five million pounds, he's a no-brainer.
Top three transfers out. Number one, Bruno Fernandes at nine point zero million pounds. Still nineteen point six percent owned but seventy-five thousand net transfers out. Played ninety minutes against West Ham but blanked for just four points. His form over five games is five point five, but the eye test says he's struggling under Ruben Amorim's system. The key stat? Just two goals and five assists all season from a nine million pound midfielder. Why sell? Manchester United's attacking output is poor, Fernandes isn't getting the returns, and at nine million pounds, you can upgrade to players like Mohamed Salah or downgrade to fund premium attackers elsewhere. Wolves away on Monday night isn't a terrible fixture, but the underlying numbers don't justify his price. Verdict: Sell if you need funds. Hold if you're using your transfer elsewhere, but he's not essential anymore.
Number two, Bukayo Saka at ten point one million pounds. Eighteen point one percent owned with slight net transfers out. Came off the bench against Brentford and scored in just twenty-nine minutes for six points. That's elite efficiency. Season total of sixty points from twelve games. Why sell? Well, you shouldn't. This is a false sell signal. If Saka was benched due to rotation or minor injury management, he'll likely start against Aston Villa. Arsenal have excellent fixtures coming up, and Saka is their most dangerous attacker. Verdict: Keep. Unless you're wildcarding or have insider team news suggesting a long-term injury, hold Saka. He's too good to dump.
Number three, Mohammed Kudus at six point five million pounds. Sixteen point six percent owned with twenty thousand net transfers out. Played eighty-six minutes for Spurs in their two-two draw with Newcastle, grabbed an assist and two bonus for seven points. Now on sixty-two points total with two goals and six assists. Why sell? It's not that Kudus is bad, he picked up seven points in Gameweek Fourteen. But Thomas Frank's Spurs face Brentford this weekend, then Nottingham Forest and Liverpool in the next two gameweeks. Kudus is consistent but not explosive, and you might want to pivot to Newcastle or Arsenal assets with better fixtures. Verdict: Hold. He's delivering steady returns. Only sell if you're chasing specific fixtures or need to fund a premium.
Differential picks under ten percent ownership. First, Harvey Barnes at two point seven percent. We covered him earlier, but I'll repeat: six point four million pounds, seven point two expected points against Burnley, three goals already this season. Absolute bargain. Second, Enzo Le Fee from Sunderland at just four point nine million pounds. Only zero point five percent owned but fifty-four total points already. Picked up five points in Gameweek Fourteen with an assist and a clean sheet at Liverpool, playing seventy-nine minutes. Two goals, three assists, and three clean sheets this season. Sunderland travel to Manchester City this weekend, not ideal, but at four point nine million he's an enabling midfielder who actually delivers. Third, Amadou Onana at four point eight million pounds. Zero point seven percent owned but scored and got two bonus in Gameweek Fourteen for eleven points. Aston Villa host Arsenal on Saturday. Onana is a defensive midfielder who's pushing forward more under Unai Emery. Two goals this season from just nine starts. He's a true punt, but if you're chasing rank in mini-leagues, four point eight million for a midfielder who scored eleven points last week is spicy.
Captaincy pick: Bruno Guimaraes against Burnley. Newcastle are flying, Burnley are struggling, and Bruno is on set pieces with four goals and four assists already. If you don't own Bruno, Mohamed Salah against Leeds is the obvious choice, but Bruno offers differential captaincy upside with over six expected points. One key tip: don't panic sell your Arsenal defenders after one tough fixture. They face Wolves in Gameweek Sixteen and have excellent fixtures through Christmas.
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That's your Gameweek Fifteen blueprint. Lock in those transfers, set your captain, and let's get those green arrows. Subscribe at whogotthepoints.com for daily FPL insights. Good luck, and we'll see you tomorrow.