Take a look at my guide to voting in the 2017 general election, originally published by the Daily Mirror:
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/need-polling-card-vote-uk-10576714?service=responsive
Stream of Details
By Tom McMahon.
Monday, 12 June 2017
Wednesday, 17 May 2017
Foul play finds a home online with General Election looming
The Crown Prosecution
Service last week confirmed it will not press charges against members of the
Conservative Party over expenses relating to their “battle bus”
in the run-up to the 2015 general election.
While Jeremy Corbyn admitted he was
“surprised” by the CPS's decision, it is perhaps more startling
that this was an electoral
controversy focusing on traditional, offline campaign tactics.
Intrigues around recent overseas elections suggest that any foul play
is now much more likely to be conducted by digital means.
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Old School: The Conservative Battle Bus of 2015 |
With
Britain heading to the polls again in a little over three weeks' time, the prospect of online
subversion is already looming as a threat to the integrity of the general election. Facebook has been sufficiently concerned to
place a
full-page advert
in a number of British newspapers, providing ten tips on how to spot
“false news” online. Behind the scenes, meanwhile, the site has
also removed
tens of thousands of bogus accounts
in a plan to tackle what it describes as “spam, misinformation or
other deceptive content”.
Fake
news first came into the public consciousness in the wake of Donald
Trump's victory in last year's US Presidential race, with an array of
outlandish news stories circulated on social media. An article
reporting that Pope Francis supported the Republican candidate's
campaign was a particularly successful hoax, receiving almost
a million shares on Facebook.
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Pope Francis: Not actually a Republican |
Trump's
team, while not openly condoning the dissemination of fake news, have
acknowledged the power of social media as an electoral influence.
Gary Coby, the Republican Party's director of marketing, enthuses: “If
you are on Facebook, I can match you and put you in a bucket of users
that I can target”.
While
Trump's campaign spent around
$70 million on Facebook advertising
to hammer home key messages, it has also been widely alleged that a
more underhand digital campaign was secretly underway, in collusion
with Russian hackers.
FBI
director James Comey's dismissal this week, against the backdrop of
the
Bureau's ongoing investigation into links
between the Trump campaign and Russia, has done little to quell
suspicion. The FBI probe centres on Kremlin-sanctioned e-mail hacks
against the Democrats which destabilised the party's White House
campaign, and Trump's security advisor Michael Flynn has already been
dismissed after covering up his meetings with Russian officials.
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Departed: Former Trump security advisor Michael Flynn |
A
similar hack on the eve of run-off voting in France also threatened
to derail Emmanuel Macron's successful Presidential race, with
Macron's team claiming that hackers added
fabricated messages to “five entire mailboxes” of stolen e-mails.
Cybersecurity experts have since attributed
the breach
to the APT-28 hacking group, who have been linked with Russian
military intelligence and also orchestrated last year's leak of
Western athletes' medical records.
Thursday, 6 April 2017
'A Sunday in Hell' - The 2017 Paris-Roubaix Preview
There’s a trend for endurance events at the moment.
Established challenges such as marathons and triathlons are complemented by a
new wave of quasi-military assault courses, with millions of plucky
participants signing up to events with names like Spartan Race, Tough Mudder and
the unfortunately-departed BattleFrog.
While a combination of corporate team discounts, and the
opportunity to clamber over and under obstacles while shouting encouragement in
clipped tones to your colleagues was always likely to find an audience among
Britain’s Russell Group-educated elite, these rigorous races do at least
provide a positive impetus to train towards a fixed goal.
However challenging these weekend events must be, however,
and despite their uniformly macho branding, I’ve yet to see one labelled as ‘A
Sunday in Hell’.
![]() |
Paris-Roubaix: a unique challenge |
That title belongs to the Paris-Roubaix, a one-day cycling
race in northern France which takes place every April. This Sunday sees the 117th
edition, with a field of 200 riders from 25 teams undertaking a 257km course, finishing in a sprint around Roubaix’s
concrete velodrome.
The course itself is generally very flat, lacking even the short-but-steep
inclines common in other spring classics such as the Tour of Flanders, but the
cobbles, or pavé, that cover 53km of the course make Paris-Roubaix a notoriously difficult
ride. British cyclist Roger Hammond once described the experience of riding the
pavé as “bone-shattering chaos”, and cyclists as decorated as Fabian Cancellara
and George Hincapie have been humbled by the cobbled roads in the past.
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Man down: muddy cobbles get the better of Cancellara in 2016 |
The pavé are particularly hazardous in the wet weather that typically
prevails near the Belgian border in spring, as mud on the primitive roads
reduces traction even further. This year’s forecast is for sun before and
during the race, but in the drier years the peloton has to contend with plumes
of dust rising up from the cobblestones, prompting French writer Louis Nucera
to compare the 1980 edition of the race to a desert crossing.
Such a troublesome riding surface has turned the humble pavé
into an icon of the race, with the winner receiving a mounted cobblestone as
their trophy. Belgian rider Tom Boonen already has a personal collection of
four of the stones, and Sunday marks the 36-year-old’s final chance to overtake
compatriot Roger de Vlaeminck as Paris-Roubaix’s most successful rider.
While retirement beckons for Boonen, the next generation of
cycling superstars will be looking to spoil his farewell race. The reigning
world champion, Slovak sprinter Peter Sagan, is the bookies’ favourite to add a
first Paris-Roubaix victory to his crowded collection of palmeres but may still
be recovering from a mild crash in last weekend’s Tour of Flanders. 2016 winner Mathew Hayman, while a hardy competitor, may at 38
years old lack the raw pace needed to lead from the front again, particularly
on a dry course.
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Greg van Avermaet has started 2017 in fantastic form |
Perhaps the best bet would be to back BMC's Belgian rider Greg van
Avermaet to collect his first cobblestone on Sunday. The 31-year-old claimed a
bronze medal in the 2015 Paris-Roubaix and comes into this year’s race in
sparkling form, having won the Gent-Wevelgem and Omloop Het Nieuwsblad one-day
events already this season, beating Sagan on both occasions.
While van Avermaet should be confident ahead of the race, the
‘Hell of the North’ is always liable to spring a few surprises, with changeable
weather and jagged cobbles just some of the variables. No matter who prevails
in Roubaix’s velodrome on Sunday afternoon, they will certainly have earned
their victory.
Wednesday, 22 March 2017
Theresa May's Mask Slips in Grammar Schools Discussion
After Monday’s announcement that Article 50 will be
triggered on 29th March, and before the horrifying scenes that
unfolded around Westminster Bridge and Parliament Square on Wednesday afternoon,
Theresa May had a brief window of opportunity in which to focus on running the
country.
The NHS might be in crisis and the Scots may be making a
dash for the Second Referendum lifeboats, but Prime Minister’s Questions at
noon on Wednesday gave Theresa May the opportunity to promote her pet project:
the repeal of a 1998 law outlawing the building of new grammar schools.
Jeremy Corbyn, these days the only leader operating out
of North London capable of making Arsene Wenger look popular, pressed the Prime
Minister on the wisdom of spending £320 million to open the floodgates for new
grammars, when her government’s funding squeeze has already imperilled the
finances of some 9,000 state schools. Reciting a letter from Eileen, a headteacher
who has seen her staff reduced to purchasing their own stationery for primary
school classes, it was a well-directed line of questioning from Corbyn, who
looked re-energised by the latest round of internecine squabbling within the
Labour Party.
With Corbyn pressing the Prime Minister on whether budget
cuts would result in “larger class sizes, shorter school days, or unqualified
teachers”, May pointed to grammar schools as one of the “choices” that will
enhance opportunities “for every child”.
![]() |
Theresa May set out her vision for education on Wednesday |
After the Leader of the Opposition converted an open goal by querying the value for money of new grammars when existing schools are
struggling to afford pencils and notebooks, May hit back that Labour’s Shadow
Home Secretary and Shadow General Attorney had both sent their children to private
school, while Corbyn himself had benefited from a grammar school education. In
the Prime Minister’s eyes, this was “typical Labour – take the advantage and
pull up the ladder behind you”.
May’s response was at first glance a stinging retort, and
was cheered by the Tory benches, but her lunging attempt to expose Labour
hypocrisy actually served to expose the utter folly of expanding the grossly
outdated grammar school model.
Her tone, focusing on the “the advantage” of private and
selective schools, removed the pretence that these schools can function as part
of a “diverse” and universal suite of education options. Her words cleared the
smokescreen of parental choice, and laid bare the fundamentally elitist agenda
of her proposed reforms: grammar and private schools – with their advantages in
teaching quality, funding and academic prestige – are for the parliamentarian
class, whether they happen to be coloured red or blue. All other schools are to
be consolation prizes.
Corbyn noted that even former Education Secretary Nicky
Morgan (by comparison a progressive rose between the retrograde thorn thickets
of Michael Gove and Justine Greening) couldn’t bring herself to support the
proposals of her party, noting in The Guardian that “all the evidence is clear that grammar schools damage social
mobility”.
More than this, however, May’s personal slights against the
Labour frontbench offer a preview of British society once grammars have been
reintroduced to mainstream British education: a new dividing line of privilege
between the “academic ” (officer class) and the “vocational / technical”
(proletarian) streams of schooling. It will be a society in which the middle class
grammar school students will progress smoothly to Britain’s elite universities,
accompanied by a cohort of working class quota-fillers for the PR managers to
focus on, while the rump population can quietly shift to second-class schools
and pursue second-class qualifications in preparation for second-class careers.
With contemporary Britain already bitterly divided along
economic, regional and cultural schisms, the temptation to further divide the
population by educational background must be resisted.
Friday, 17 March 2017
Karanka Suffers Mentor Mourinho's Fate as Third Season Syndrome Bites
As they slumped to a deflating, demoralising 2-0 defeat at home to Manchester City, Aitor Karanka’s Middlesbrough side had finally come
full circle. Just over two years after a famous, fully deserved FA Cup win at the Etihad marked the high point of the Basque manager’s reign, Boro crashed
out of the cup against the same team, by the same scoreline. Four days later,
Karanka is out of a job.
Sunday’s loss at the Riverside felt heavier, more
comprehensive than the eventual two-goal margin suggested, with Boro bamboozled
by the swashbuckling speed and skill of City’s Leroy Sane, David Silva and
Raheem Sterling. On home soil, Boro mustered just 31% possession. Their beleaguered
goalkeeper, Brad Guzan, was named man of the match. Top scorer this season with
just seven goals, Alvaro Negredo replaced injured January signing Rudy Gestede
in the first half, only to turn in another study in isolation as Boro’s sole
striker.
![]() |
Aitor Karanka left Middlesbrough on Thursday |
Such anaemic attacking performances had become the norm
under Karanka, with Middlesbrough’s failure to score in each of their last four
league fixtures contributing to the club’s slide to 19th in the Premier
League table. Boro still boast the fifth-meanest defence in the top flight,
even in spite of a winless run stretching back to before Christmas, but the
side’s lack of menace in attack eventually convinced Steve Gibson that Karanka
was no longer the right manager to stave off relegation to the Championship.
While Gibson will have thought long and hard over the
decision to replace Karanka, there is a certain inevitability to the former
Real Madrid assistant manager’s departure in his third full season on Teesside.
Indeed, Karanka’s reign at Middlesbrough has clear echoes of the problems his
friend and mentor, Jose Mourinho encountered in his third seasons at Real and
in his two spells at Chelsea. Although played out on different stages, the
narrative arc of promising beginning, glorious middle and fractious ending can
be seen in each of these three-act tenures.
![]() |
Mentor: Karanka was assistant to Jose Mourinho at Real Madrid |
Taking over from Tony Mowbray at 16th-placed Boro
in the November of 2013, Karanka tightened up the defence and steered the side
to the safety of 12th place in Championship table at the end of the
season. He began to impose a physical, but nonetheless possession-based playing
style on the team, too, exemplified by the January signings of towering centre
back Daniel Ayala and portly playmaker Lee Tomlin.
It wasn’t until Karanka’s side had their first pre-season
under their belt, however, that the side really started to sparkle. Of the
Spanish Armada signed in the summer of 2014, only Kike Garcia would shine on
Teesside, but Karanka’s other signings proved astute at Boro romped to 4th
place in the Championship. Adam Clayton added bite to the midfield alongside
the craft of Grant Leadbitter, while Chelsea loanee Patrick Bamford was a
revelation. A lightweight but wonderfully deft forward, the 21-year-old Bamford
scored 17 league goals and had a hand in many more on his way to Championship
Player of the Year. Boro’s lack of Premiership guile would be cruelly exposed
in a 2-0 play-off final defeat to Norwich City, but Karanka’s first full season
had brought the good times back to the Riverside.
![]() |
Patrick Bamford led Boro to the play offs in Karanka's first season |
Mourinho’s first-season successes at Chelsea are
well-documented, with a league title in 2004-05 and a third-place finish in
2013-14, but he also made a promising start with Karanka as his assistant manager at
Real Madrid in 2010-11. Succeeding Manuel Pellegrini, Mourinho led Los Merengues to victory in the Copa del
Rey, ending a three-year trophy drought in the process, although a 5-0 league
hammering to Barcelona revealed the gap still to be bridged between the two
sides.
The similarities between Karanka and Mourinho’s second
seasons are similarly striking, with notable triumphs for the two managers in
Madrid and Middlesbrough alike, as well as in West London. In Karanka’s second
full season, his Boro side went a step further than his first campaign,
claiming automatic promotion as runners-up in the Championship. The defence, in
the Mourinho mould, was nigh-on impregnable as Ben Gibson emerged as a perfect
partner for Ayala in the back line. There were memorable moments, too, with a
3-0 win at Brighton in December a particular a highlight, as Boro ended their
hosts’ unbeaten record in some style.
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Boro achieved promotion in Aitor Karanka's second season |
However, it could be said that even as he steered his team
to promotion, Karanka’s faults were already beginning to emerge. With Bamford
and Tomlin both trying their luck in the Premier League, goals, flair and
creativity were at a premium, as Boro managed to score five fewer goals than
the previous campaign but still finish higher in the table. Indeed, no side in
the Championship’s top six scored fewer than Middlesbrough that season.
The manager’s signings began to become increasingly erratic,
too, with puzzling continental prospects (Julian de Sart and Kike Sola,
anyone?) linking up with grizzled Championship veterans such as Jordan Rhodes
and David Nugent. Only Gaston Ramirez, brought in on loan from Southampton in
January, was an unqualified success in adding seven goals from midfield.
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Underwhelming: Kike Sola failed to make an impact on Teesside |
Most troublingly, there were signs of underlying unrest on
the training ground and in boardroom, with Karanka storming out of training to“consider his future” and leaving Steve Agnew to manage the team away to
Charlton Athletic.
While Karanka did return to win promotion with
Middlesbrough, Jose Mourinho’s second seasons have been similarly successful,
although often tinged with the same grinding pragmatism. Despite winning titles
in both of his second seasons at Chelsea, it is worth noting that in both of his
second seasons at Stamford Bridge, his side have been “Champions elect” by
Christmas before slowing down considerably on the final straight. The Frank
Lampard-inspired 2005-06 vintage saw their lead over Manchester United cut by
half in an awful March, while the Hazard-Costa axis of 2013-14 had a similar
late-season wobble punctuated by draws and scrappy victories, as the January
addition of Juan Cuadrado curtailed the fine form of Willian and Oscar.
In Mourinho’s defence (no pun intended), his second season
at Real Madrid was more or less faultless: a La Liga title won with record
totals in points and goals, and denied a place in the Champions League final
only by the iron law of Bayern Munich winning a penalty shoot-out.
![]() |
Mourinho, Ronaldo and co romped to the La Liga title in 2011-12 |
If the Real Madrid exception proves the rule, it’s now
possible examine the point where Karanka and Mourinho’s teams really fall
apart: the third season.
In Karanka’s case, it is more excusable, with Middlesbrough
moving up to the Premier League and lacking the resources of the league’s
biggest spenders. Even discounting Boro’s relative lack of financial muscle in
the top division, however, the Spanish coach has made some unusual signings and
transfers throughout this campaign. From summer’s sale of rangy winger Albert Adomah
to Aston Villa, to the recent reticence to play Ayala since his return from
injury, Karanka has made a number of odd calls.
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Influential: but Albert Adomah was sold after promotion |
Perhaps the most egregious omissions are those of Bamford,
who re-signed on a permanent deal in January, and Ramirez. While Negredo
remains a dangerous finisher in the penalty box, he has recently been starved
of service, with only the erratic Adama Traore and the static Cristhian Stuani
for support. Asked about Bamford’s absence recently, Karanka only commented
that he needed “18 fighters” for matchdays, which makes the initial decision to
purchase the talented, but rather laconic forward hard to explain.
Similarly to his mentor, Karanka also found himself at odds
with the club’s ownership in his third season. He recently bemoaned the lack of
investment in the squad, despite Gibson sanctioning January moves for Bamford
and Gestede, who cost £5.5 million and £7 million respectively.
In the third season of Mourinho’s first spell at Chelsea,
the problem was more with who the Stamford Bridge hierarchy did bring in,
rather than who they failed to. Andriy Shevchenko, a personal favourite of
Roman Abramovich, rocked up about three years past his devastating peak, while
young stars Salomon Kalou and John Obi Mikel largely flattered to deceive.
Khalid Boulahrouz, meanwhile, didn’t even manage to deceive.
![]() |
Frosty: Mourinho struggled to get the best out of Andriy Shevchenko |
Mourinho added an FA Cup in 2006-07 but Chelsea lost out to
Manchester United in a tight title race, unable to keep pace with the firepower
of Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney. By September, he had departed in the
wake of a 1-1 Champions League draw with Rosenborg in front of a half-full
Stamford Bridge.
At Real Madrid, Aitor Karanka looked on as his mentor’s
third season unravelled into trophyless catastrophe, with the infamous eye-poke
on Tito Vilanova a particularly embarrassing nadir for club and manager alike. Even Real's own players felt the Portuguese’s ire in his final season at the
Bernabeu, with Pepe slammed in the press and replaced in central defence by a
19-year-old Raphael Varane after he dared to question the wisdom of dropping
club legend Iker Casillas.
John Terry was scapegoated in similar fashion after Chelsea
made a poor start to their title defence in 2015-16, with Mourinho slipping into a deep paranoia in towards the end of his second spell at Stamford
Bridge, accusing his squad of “betraying” him before eventually departing in
December. Referees, opposition managers and club physio Eva Carneiro were all
blamed for defeats, with Mourinho keen to look anywhere except the mirror when apportioning
blame.
![]() |
Departed: but Karanka's replacement can still keep Boro up |
While the symptoms of third season syndrome have brought the
same managerial morbidity to Aitor Karanka as suffered by his mentor Mourinho,
Middlesbrough do at least have a chance of retaining their place in the Premier
League. Sitting just three points behind
17th-placed Crystal Palace, and with a superior goal difference to most of their relegation rivals, whoever takes charge of Boro for the remaining 11
games of the season will feel confident of securing survival after reviewing
the fixture list. Home games against Burnley, Sunderland and a comfortably
mid-table Southampton look eminently winnable, as do trips to Swansea and Hull.
If the shackles that seemed to grip the side in the last
months of Karanka’s tenure can be loosened, Boro might be able to start
planning dreaming of how to avoid their own third season syndrome in the top
flight.
Wednesday, 5 August 2015
FPL Week Zero - The Defenders
Like Diego Costa, the blog is battling to be ready for the start of the season. Unlike Diego Costa, the blog will not be partaking in any experimental treatments involving horse placentas or painkilling injections.
After last week's magnum opus on Fantasy Football's bargain goalkeepers, I've been bogged down with that grimly ironic ailment: the summer cold. Summer colds are awful. The sun shines without compassion as green phlegm congeals around your windpipe and your sinuses swell to painful proportions. The August heat only serves to exacerbate the burn of your headache. You can't drink cough medicine in the office without people thinking you're a "dirty sprite"-sipping codeine addict.
Nevertheless, you can rest assured that I won't be leaving my FPL preview unfinished. The new season beckons, the pitches are prepared, and the loudmouths at work want buy-in money for their Fantasy league. In the immortal words of the great American poet Young Jeezy, let's get it.
Part Two - Defenders
In real football, defenders are the foundations upon which great teams are built. Ideally, they're rugged athletes who can mark their man, win headers and play the ball out from the back. They're competent but unflashy and know how to work as a unit. However, none of this really matters in Fantasy Football, which rewards an odd blend of bruising centre-halves like John Terry (177 points last season) and cavalier full-backs in the Leighton Baines (139 pts) mold.
Those two FPL perennials, along with the freakishly excellent Branislav Ivanovic (179 pts), have been excluded from my selection. Feel free to take a look at that trio, but brace yourself for the hit on your wallet.
My first choice in defence is Jose Holebas, who at just £4.5m takes on the role of Budget Baines this campaign. The Greek left-back averages approximately a goal every ten games throughout his career, and is always a pacy attacking outlet for the national team. Add in his Champions League pedigree from stints at Olympiakos and AS Roma, and Holebas represents a good punt, particularly with just 0.6% of managers selecting the defender. "Differentials" like this are vital in grabbing unexpected points, and it certainly beats having John O'Shea back there.
Keeping up the bargain-basement flavour (tastes like chorizo) of my backline is Stoke's Philipp Wollscheid, my official Irrational Confidence Pick. The German centre-half, also priced at 4.5, is a cheap way in to a Stoke backline which managed nine clean sheets last term. When fit, Wollscheid was first choice alongside Ryan Shawcross after arriving from Bayer Leverkusen in January, and the twice-capped defender should make more of an impression in his first full season.
Picking a Tottenham Hotspur defender fills me with trepidation, but the next spot at the back must go to Belgian thoroughbred Toby Alderweireld, newly signed from Atletico Madrid. 5.0 is a fantastic price for a defender who was outstanding on loan for Southampton last season, clocking up nine clean sheets in just 25 games. It also bodes well for Alderweireld's minutes that Spurs' other options alongside Jan Vertonghen at centre-half are footballing luminaries Eric Dier and Federico Fazio. The 47-times capped international can also fill in at right-back, although the rampaging Kieran Trippier (5.5) should be first choice after joining from Burnley.
While FPL crams all defenders under the same positional umbrella, it only feels right to have a proper balance of centre-halves and full-backs, and Chelsea's Cesar "Dave" Azpilicueta is one of the league's best in the latter role. With Felipe Luis returning to Spain after an underwhelming spell at Stamford Bridge, Azpilicueta goes into 2015/16 as the champions' undisputed first choice at left-back. Along with 13 clean sheets, his herky-jerky runs into the opposition half mustered three assists last season. He's relatively cheap, too, at 6.0. To put that into context, noted shithouse Gary Cahill is priced at 6.5, despite earning less points than Azpilicueta last year. It's a no-brainer.
Rounding off the defence is Manchester United's Matteo Darmian, an attacking right-back recently arrived from Torino. Like Azpilicueta, he's a full-back who plays "off the wrong foot", in this case a left-footer on the right flank. Darmian, who shone for Italy in last summer's World Cup, is set to be first choice at Old Trafford after Rafael's departure to Lyon and will be given licence to get forward under Louis van Gaal. While not that regular a goalscorer or assist-maker in Serie A (six goals, 11 assists in 150 games for Torino), the Premier League should suit the athletic 25-year-old, and 5.5 is a fine price for a starting full-back in a Champions League side. For context, consider the likes of Nacho Monreal, Steven Caulker and Aleksandar Kolarov are available at the same price.
Join me very soon (too soon) for part three of the preview, where you'll find out my midfield picks, and sign up to my league with the code 382422-233533
After last week's magnum opus on Fantasy Football's bargain goalkeepers, I've been bogged down with that grimly ironic ailment: the summer cold. Summer colds are awful. The sun shines without compassion as green phlegm congeals around your windpipe and your sinuses swell to painful proportions. The August heat only serves to exacerbate the burn of your headache. You can't drink cough medicine in the office without people thinking you're a "dirty sprite"-sipping codeine addict.
![]() |
Like Ledley King, the blog is struggling for fitness |
Part Two - Defenders
In real football, defenders are the foundations upon which great teams are built. Ideally, they're rugged athletes who can mark their man, win headers and play the ball out from the back. They're competent but unflashy and know how to work as a unit. However, none of this really matters in Fantasy Football, which rewards an odd blend of bruising centre-halves like John Terry (177 points last season) and cavalier full-backs in the Leighton Baines (139 pts) mold.
Those two FPL perennials, along with the freakishly excellent Branislav Ivanovic (179 pts), have been excluded from my selection. Feel free to take a look at that trio, but brace yourself for the hit on your wallet.
![]() |
Fantasy Force: Leighton Baines |
Keeping up the bargain-basement flavour (tastes like chorizo) of my backline is Stoke's Philipp Wollscheid, my official Irrational Confidence Pick. The German centre-half, also priced at 4.5, is a cheap way in to a Stoke backline which managed nine clean sheets last term. When fit, Wollscheid was first choice alongside Ryan Shawcross after arriving from Bayer Leverkusen in January, and the twice-capped defender should make more of an impression in his first full season.
![]() |
Spurs will reunite Toby Alderweireld and Jan Vertonghen |
While FPL crams all defenders under the same positional umbrella, it only feels right to have a proper balance of centre-halves and full-backs, and Chelsea's Cesar "Dave" Azpilicueta is one of the league's best in the latter role. With Felipe Luis returning to Spain after an underwhelming spell at Stamford Bridge, Azpilicueta goes into 2015/16 as the champions' undisputed first choice at left-back. Along with 13 clean sheets, his herky-jerky runs into the opposition half mustered three assists last season. He's relatively cheap, too, at 6.0. To put that into context, noted shithouse Gary Cahill is priced at 6.5, despite earning less points than Azpilicueta last year. It's a no-brainer.
![]() |
Matteo Darmian: United's new right-back |
Join me very soon (too soon) for part three of the preview, where you'll find out my midfield picks, and sign up to my league with the code 382422-233533
Tuesday, 28 July 2015
FPL Week Zero - The Goalkeepers
Like most of my SMS messages, I'd like
to open this blog post with an apology. I apologise that I've been
away for so long. I've been working hard in a new job and moved to
London, where distractions abound. I also apologise that the blog's
new focus on Fantasy Football is not reflected in a pithy pun in the
website URL. 'Let Me Be Your Fantasy', 'My Beautiful Dark
Twisted Fantasy', and 'Notorious FPL' were all considered, but
it was felt they lacked the combination of oblique pretence and
literary sincerity that 'Stream of Details' offers.
I do not and shall not, however,
apologise for the new subject matter. Among fans of the Premier
League, Fantasy Football is the great leveller, a common denominator
which lets obsessives of all shades test their wits against each
other. It pits the Walkabout loudmouth in his gold-lettered 'Champions 20' United jersey against the Sid Lowe-worshipping,
Raumdeuter-advocating football hipster, only for them both to
be beaten by the guy in your office who looks up Betfair clean sheet
odds and openly admits to preferring rugby. It is the acid test for
pub bores, counters of blocks and interceptions, and people who punch
the air after seeing that Marcin Wasilewski has got an assist. It is
played by over three million people and I absolutely love it.
![]() |
Artist's impression of a FPL gamer |
My blog will be weekly and will break
down the previous gameweek in detail, before picking out useful
signings for the next round of matches. Bear in mind that I had
Diafra Sakho in my FPL team from as early as gameweek six last
season. As a trade-off, however, you will be subjected to at least
400 words of prose on a diverse range of topics. You'll laugh, you'll
cry, you'll wonder about the mental health of a single 24-year-old
with a full-time job who spends his free time detailing how Joel
Ward's ability to step into midfield makes him a valuable budget
addition to your defence.
A quick note – this blog will only
cover the official Premier League Fantasy game. For those of you
playing The Sun's version, I applaud your commitment to fighting the
European single currency and suggest you take a look here before demanding a refund. The rest of you, enjoy part one of
my season preview.
Part one – The Goalkeepers
Goalkeepers have traditionally been
somewhat isolated figures: lonely specialists standing on the
periphery of a team game. It is a role has always bred mavericks,
from Colombian 'keeper Rene Higuita and his kidnapping conviction to
former Hereford shot-stopper David Icke, now best known for his
'unconventional' views on the royal family. Albert Camus, meanwhile,
was a standout goalkeeper at youth level.
David Icke - the Hereford United years |
However, this eccentricity seems to be
fading from the art of goalkeeping. Perhaps it stems from
implementation of the backpass rule, forcing goalkeepers to use their
feet like anyone else, subliminally bringing their personalities into
line with the rest of the dressing room. Look at the new breed of
sweeper-keepers: identikit beanpoles with good feet and zero
charisma. There's Joe Hart and Manuel Neuer, the school bullies who
cried when they couldn't get a game outfield; Courtois and
Pantilimon, built in a lab out of discarded limbs from the 1980s
Boston Celtics team; and then you've got Brad Guzan. Could Brad Guzan
tell you anything interesting about Brad Guzan?
Liverpool's Simon Mignolet, then, with
his degree in Political Science from the Catholic University of
Leuven, might be seen as the Premier League's only concession to a
more off-the-wall era of goalkeeping. His footwork is similarly
retro, as time and again he uses both feet with equal skill to hammer
the ball out for throw-ins halfway inside the Liverpool half. This
poor distribution, coupled with a number of high-profile gaffes last
season, should have made Mignolet's position as the Reds' number one
untenable by now. Can you recall a single great Mignolet game?
![]() |
Liverpool's Simon Mignolet: Garbage? |
He clings on to his role between the
sticks, however, as surely as he fails to cling on to any lofty back
post cross. Like a Tory government, he impresses nobody but survives
through fear of the alternative. Seeing off the challenge of Brad
“safe hands” Jones last season, he will be quietly confident of
remaining ahead of highly-rated youngster Adam Bogdan in the Anfield
pecking order this campaign. Game time is guaranteed.
Quietly and inconspicuously, he keeps
clean sheets too. The Belgian stopper somehow oversaw 14 shut-outs
last season, joint-highest in the league. Considering he will be
enjoy the luxury of playing behind a genuine right-back this season,
his 5.0 price tag looks a bargain.
![]() |
A rose between two thorns |
My alternative suggestion is
Newcastle's Tim Krul, with the Netherlands international representing
a very solid rotation option at 4.5. In contrast to Mignolet, Krul is
all about the glory games. Right from his debut as a 17-year-old
against Palermo to his 14-save freakshow against Tottenham, Krul has
put up shows of defiance to which General Custer himself might
aspire. Unsurprisingly, playing behind the likes of “Iron” Mike
Williamson and Paul Dummett, these clean sheets don't come around as
regularly as Fantasy managers might like, but when they arrive they
tend be accompanied by Bonus and Saves points.
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