Gameweek 4: Preview – Written by @NiallHawthorne The Great British Bake Off is back, The X-Factor starts this weekend and the celebrities in the new season of Strictly Come Dancing have all been revealed. The children are going back to school and the sun has set on Summer 2018. Fantastic. For this is where the […]
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Arsenal, Liverpool and Watford make the Gameweek 3 Preview
Aug 24
Gameweek 3: Preview – Written by @NiallHawthorne I read with a mix of incredulity, horror and disdain an article about FPL on a very popular men’s website this week (I won’t name them, but it does aptly rhyme with D’oh!) which lauded the concept of Fantasy Football itself, while lambasting and mocking the actions of […]
Crystal Palace vs Liverpool: Confirmed Lineups
Aug 20
Lineups from 7pm Crystal Palace: Hennessey, Wan-Bissaka, Tomkins, Sakho, van Aanholt, Townsend, Milivojevic, McArthur, Schlupp, Benteke, Zaha Subs: Guaita, Ward, Kelly, Kouyaté, Meyer, Sorloth, Ayew Liverpool: Allison, TAA, VVD, Gomez, Robertson, Milner, Wijnaldum, Keita, Salah, Firmino, Mane Subs: Karius, Clyne, Henderson, Fabinho, Sturridge, Shaqiri, Lallana Click Play below as our very own @FantasyYIRMA breaks out in […]
Gameweek 2: Fantasy Football Preview
Aug 17
Originally posted on FantasyYIRMA – Fantasy Football FPL:
Gameweek 2: Preview – Written by @NiallHawthorne With GW1 firmly behind us, the FPL community is split into three camps: 1. Those who are happy. They’re the smug gits who haven’t stopped telling you about how well they did last week. You all know one, and if…
What do you get if you mix Fantasy Football and Supergrass??
Aug 17
Pretty sure the question “What do you get if you mix Fantasy Football and Supergrass??” is infrequently asked at best.. To celebrate the return of the Fantasy Premier League we’ve put together our own fantasy football song – FPL Alright! Many thanks to Ash @FPLHints for the idea, @NiallHawthorne for helping with lyrics and everyone […]
Gameweek 2: Fantasy Football Preview
Aug 16
Gameweek 2: Preview – Written by @NiallHawthorne With GW1 firmly behind us, the FPL community is split into three camps: 1. Those who are happy. They’re the smug gits who haven’t stopped telling you about how well they did last week. You all know one, and if you don’t, you are one. 2. Those who […]
Fantasy Premier League: 7 Key Tips to Avoid FPL Burnout
Aug 10
One of the reasons why FantasyYIRMA.com is going into its 7th season is the community of people I’ve met and befriended along the way. I’ve quite literally met 1000’s of people across the world via the ridiculous world of Fantasy Football. @FPLHints is someone I stumbled across back in the very beginning and it’s been […]
We Didn’t Start Mo Salah…Sorry
Aug 8
To celebrate the launch of the new Fantasy Football season, our very own preview writer extraordinaire Mr. Niall Hawthorne has written and performed his song for the summer… “We Didn’t Start Mo Salah” I want it noted that I did not commission this musical… piece… nor did I encourage it… however it’s here now and […]
Manchester United, Liverpool and Wolves make the Gameweek 1 Preview
Aug 8
Gameweek 1: Preview – Written by @NiallHawthorne As a lovely young man named Marshall Bruce Mathers III once wrote: ‘Guess who’s back. Back again. YIRMA’s back. Tell a friend’ Oh yes indeed, we are very much back and salivating at the thought of the 2018/19 Premier League season. This is the best moment of the […]
Off the Mark: Why Premier League experience counts in the battle at the bottom
Take a look at the three teams currently residing in the Premier League relegation zone, and indeed at West Brom, the team just outside it. What have they got in common?
The Baggies, Sunderland, Cardiff and Fulham all replaced their managers during this season – Fulham did it twice – and all four men now in charge of those respective clubs are currently in their first ever Premier League managerial role. Talk about being thrown in at the deep end.
This new quartet aren’t alone amongst the 20 managers at the 20 clubs in the top division in the land.
Tottenham’s Tim Sherwood and Swansea’s Garry Monk are also in their first Premier League roles, actually their first managerial roles full stop. Monk and Swansea, who always had a decent enough points cushion from the moment they dispensed with Michael Laudrup, picked up a good win over Norwich last time out but had gone winless in nine before that, whilst the less said about Sherwood’s tenure at Tottenham the better. We probably said enough last week, anyway.
There’s also Manuel Pellegrini, but the money available to him at Manchester City ensures that he’ll never truly be a failure on a grand scale. He’s been told to win the Premier League, and he’s got City into a good position to do just that. And besides, he’s vastly experienced elsewhere.
It is at the bottom of the division where this lack of experience in the vagaries of the British game can be shown up though.
At this stage of the season when every point needs to be scrapped for and every goal seems to be worth double, having that knowhow of this division is only going to stand you in good stead.
Of course some of these managers aren’t novices. Fulham’s Felix Magath has been in charge of plenty of clubs in his homeland, including Bayern Munich, whilst West Brom’s Pepe Mel took Real Betis into the Europa League this season.
Both have been good managers elsewhere and both will probably go on to be so again, but are they the right men for their clubs at this particular time? Magath was out of work for 18 months before being jettisoned into Fulham. What sort of preparation can he have done for the role?
It’s a different story for Cardiff’s Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Sunderland’s Gus Poyet.
Solskjaer, an extremely decorated player thanks to his storied spell with Manchester United, doesn’t want a Premier League relegation on his stellar CV, and in truth he never really should have been given the chance to. Hopefully there will be a good manager in there somewhere, and he started off well in his native Norway, but this really isn’t the time to be taking a punt on someone.
Of the quartet of clubs we’ve mentioned, Sunderland perhaps have the best man for this sort of situation in Poyet, who cut his managerial teeth at Brighton. Defeats such as the one against West Ham on Monday won’t help though, and his side now face a huge challenge to climb out of trouble given their difficult away fixtures.
The chairmen at these four clubs must be looking at the jobs that the likes of Tony Pulis, Mark Hughes and Steve Bruce have been doing this season and feel more than a little envious – that’s indeed if Vincent Tan is capable of emotion. Indeed, there’s a good argument to suggest that Crystal Palace are the only Premier League club to have benefitted from a mid-season managerial change in this campaign.
This isn’t supposed to be a tub-thumping rally cry backing the mediocre British manager, they’ll always find jobs somewhere regardless, but gaining that experience of this division and this culture seems vital to success in the Premier League, look at Roberto Martinez, Mauricio Pochettino and Brendan Rodgers. Don’t look at David Moyes, as it will ruin the argument.
This season’s relegation battle seems to be all about who can arrest poor form first, as none of the teams involved are particularly inspiring.
And when they need points more than ever before, shouldn’t club chairmen have gone with the tried and tested to try and pick them up?
Heads you lose, Pardew
Ever since Alan Pardew’s headbutt on Hull’s David Meyler, Newcastle have scored one goal in four matches, conceding eight.
It is another worrying run in a 2014 which featured eight winless matches prior to a small turnaround and three wins in four, but as their players appear to have gone on a collective holiday judging by the non-performances against Everton and Southampton, surely it is time for a “conscious uncoupling” between Pardew and his vanity project.
The Premier League wants its old, entertaining Newcastle back.
Everton and Arsenal to share spoils
We’re massively in profit now thanks to Peter Odemwingie scoring the only goal of Stoke’s victory last week, and this time we are turning our attentions to Sunday’s big meeting between Everton and Arsenal.
In a huge match in the context of a top four finish, the Gunners will be looking to show the improved form they displayed in the second half against Manchester City last week, and they can build on that to earn a point at Goodison Park to keep Everton at arm’s length.
The draw is 9/4 with BetMcLean.com, whilst it’s a tempting 11/2 for the match to finish 1-1.















