Fantasy Premier League managers are staring at the same dilemma this week:
Stick with Erling Haaland⦠or twist?
Manchester City travel to Elland Road on Saturday ā the city of Haalandās birth ā and on paper, it feels like a poetic captaincy opportunity. The Norwegian remains the highest-scoring player in FPL this season. When in doubt, you back the robot.
But this isnāt a normal week.

City are set to blank in Gameweek 31 due to fixture scheduling, meaning every one of their players will score zero points that round. No appearance points. No bonus. Nothing.
And suddenly, the £14.8m question looks heavier than ever.
Haaland began the season priced at Ā£14m. His rise to Ā£14.8m means selling him now ā only to buy him back for a potential double gameweek later in the campaign ā could be painfully expensive.
FPL expert Prasun Singhal sees the trap clearly.

āIf you want him back for the run-in, which could include a double gameweek, it will be so much more expensive to do,ā he explains.
Even if Haaland hasnāt looked like the unstoppable force of early autumn, premium alternatives arenāt exactly banging the door down either.
Mohamed Salah hasnāt scored in nine weeks.
Bukayo Saka will also blank in Gameweek 31 because of the Carabao Cup final.
Burning transfers to shuffle between premiums could backfire.
But thereās another side to the argument ā and itās statistical.

In his past nine starts, Haaland has returned more than six FPL points just once. He has only one open-play goal in his last 10 games.
For a near-Ā£15m asset, thatās concerning.
Chris Sutton isnāt convinced this weekend is straightforward either.
āLeeds are excellent at home,ā he warns. āIt was close earlier this season.ā
Thereās even a narrative subplot. Leeds were his father Alf-Inge Haalandās former club. Does that add motivation ā or pressure?
āI may go elsewhere [as captain],ā Sutton admitted.

So where do managers pivot?
One increasingly popular route leads to Manchester United.
Under Michael Carrick, United have looked revitalised. Thereās greater clarity in roles. Attacking cohesion has improved. Confidence is returning.
United host Crystal Palace this weekend before facing Newcastle and Bournemouth either side of an Aston Villa clash.
Carl Anka highlights Benjamin Sesko as an intriguing differential, even if he isnāt guaranteed to start every match. Meanwhile, Bruno Fernandesā return to a natural number 10 role has reignited his output.

āHis output is always going to be good,ā Anka insists.
And then thereās Casemiro ā a surprising set-piece threat. With United frequently targeting the back post, heās becoming an under-the-radar goal contributor.
Statman Dave adds another layer of data:
āOnly Morgan Rogers to Ollie Watkins has scored more combinations than Bruno Fernandes to Casemiro.ā
Two of Fernandesā assists from open play have gone to Sesko. The partnerships are forming.
And then thereās Bryan Mbeumo ā another name being floated for managers considering a midfield reshuffle.

The core dilemma remains brutally simple:
Do you hold the most explosive striker in the game ā even through a blank week ā betting on long-term upside and double gameweek potential?
Or do you cash in now, spread the funds, and attack the short-term fixtures aggressively?
Haaland at Elland Road feels cinematic.
But FPL isnāt about sentiment.
Itās about timing.
And this might be one of the defining decision points of the season.
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