Florian Wirtz and inside-the-box havoc š§µ
Florian Wirtz, patience, and a goalkeeper unicorn
Social media is a dark place this week.
Thereās an endless stream of sickening news about the Epstein files, and, to make things worse, people on FPL š have started calling for āattacking contributionsā to be added alongside DEFCONs.
Look, I can take a lot, but enough is enough.
Letās dive into two feel-good stories to restore your faith in humanity.
Florian Wirtz and waiting for good things
I have a confession to makeāI was among those who hypedĀ Florian WirtzĀ during the pre-season, only to watch him struggle for several months afterwards.
I simply underestimated how quickly heād adapt to Premier League football during the period when Liverpool were fighting their inner demons, finding their rhythm, and facing a fair share of bad luck. At the same time, this was probably the worst possible outcome, and the chances of him having a solid floor from the get-go were pretty high.
About half a year later, heās finally the version of himself I was so keen on.
Actually, for quite some time now.
Since the end of November, heās firmly among the very best Premier League midfielders.
He dominates advancedĀ goal probability addedĀ models that measure how his touches with the ball influence the teamās likelihood of scoring (and of not conceding). He shows the passing ability youād expect from him before the season.
All those passes from both half-spaces and through-balls when launching counters are what youād expect from him. However, his distribution inside the box is what really made him a value in FPL.Ā While the average Premier League midfielder has about 40% accuracy in the box, Wirtz is at 70%ā¦
And while Mohamed Salah (or Antoine Semenyoāthose who watched recent games will agree) still struggles to complete his 1-on-1, Wirtzās dribbling is a joy to watch. The same goes for his long-distance carrying.
It was clear that the moment he started arriving in good goal-scoring positions, heād become an FPL option. And he did. Since last Novemberās gameweek (GW13), he has taken 23 shots, generated almost 4 xG, and scored 4 goals. The good news is that he took 74% of those shots inside the box, mostly centrally.
Hereās his shot map across the season:
Although heās not taking set pieces, he has a high volume of open-play passes into the box, many of which lead directly to a shot.
I often praise his intelligence, and Iāll say it again: at the moment, thereās probably no midfielder who can find such good pockets of space to receive the ball.
When you watch Liverpool next time, focus on this.
Itās a symphony.
Oh, and heās still only 22ā¦
Regarding FPL, thereās no issue with his performances or the upcoming fixtures; rather, heās difficult to fit into many structures, as heās priced at Ā£8.3 million (and still in just 13.7% of teams when I write this).
There areĀ Bruno Fernandes,Ā Bryan Mbeumo/Matheus Cunha, orĀ Antoine SemenyoĀ (a bit of caution needed here). Itās also hard to snubĀ EnzoĀ andĀ Rice.
But heāll continue to tick along:
I love storytelling and⦠good stories.
This one certainly is.
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Stefan Ortega: The unicorn
There were definitely some interesting deals in the Premier League during the winter transfer window, and I discussed some of them here on Data Dribble, likeĀ JĆørgen Strand Larsen and RayanĀ last week, or theĀ new West Ham strikersĀ before that.
Manchester City were active, signing both Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guéhi while sending Oscar Bobb to Fulham.
Liverpool have spent Ā£60 million on a 20-year-old centre-back,Ā Jeremy Jacquet, from Stade Rennais.Ā
Some familiar faces, likeĀ Tammy Abraham,Ā Pascal Gross, orĀ Douglas Luiz,Ā are back in the Premier League.
And Wolves assembled a new boy band called āThe Gomes Fourā.
But let me tell you, Tuesdayās deadline day was a huge letdown. Iād expected a little more in a World Cup year.
Despite that, one caught my eyeā¦
If you read my content regularly, youāve probably already heard me say that goalkeepers are the most unpredictable players of all. You never know when the bad, and I meanĀ really bad, season hits them. LikeĀ Djordje PetroviÄ, who can be the best shot-stopper in Ligue 1 one season, but then be unable to save a shot travelling at 4 miles per hour in the Premier League the season after. And many more of them. It happens to most of them across all the European leagues.
Stefan Ortega is different.
He didnāt play much over the last three seasons, totalling about 2,300 minutes for Manchester City, but he was great in most games. Heung-Min Son would agree:
When it comes to shot-stopping, his 5-season spell at Arminia Bielefeld was full of fantastic performances. In one or two seasons, he was closer to average than world-class, but there wasnāt a single poor season.
If anyone here remembers his time at TSV 1860 München, feel free to let me know.
Now heās Nottingham Forestās keeper, joining them until the end of the season, and Matz Sels is doubtful⦠What if Ortega starts this week and then keeps starting for the rest of the season?
Sure, heās 33 years old and hasnāt played a competitive game for quite some time, but heās Stefan Ortega.
The unicorn.
Iām kinda rooting for him.
Earlier this week, I delved into Double Gameweek 26.
Although the boring version of it happened, thereās still so much to uncover about Arsenal:
Is Jurriƫn Timber worth it?
Triple Arsenal defence or Declan Rice?
How did Rice become the 3rd-highest-scoring MID, and is that sustainable?
And much more!
BONUS:Ā As I analysed both scenarios, thereās a substantial section covering Chelsea, Everton, Leeds, and Bournemouth. The kind of information you wonāt find anywhere else, and it will help you in FPL or sports betting. And I mean it.
In the latest edition of theĀ Thought ProcessĀ series, I discussed other nuances of handling Arsenal, Elliot Anderson quietly racking up points, and, foremost:
ā Mbeumo vs Cunha, and one thing most people overlook.
See you next week!












Great breakdown of Wirtz's evolution this season. The stat about 70% accuracy inside the box compared to the 40% average is kinda insane when you think about it. I've watched him find those pockets of space and its like he knows where defenders will be before they do. That patience during his adaption period is paying off big time now.