Player Focus: Consistency Leading Hazard to Likely POTY Award
The idea of a player of the year or has always been a rather hoary concept in football, not least because it is a team game. Of course, the very fact it is a team game makes it even more difficult to judge individual performance.
Do a player's fine displays have the same merit if they have no tangible effect on a team's performance? Can that really be considered the same as lifting a side up when it is really on the line? On the other side of things, how much can you divorce an individual performance from the context of the collective he plays in? Is a player generally only able to do it when it's on the line because the quality of his team has put him that close?
Really, the fundamental idea behind an individual award should be whether a player has applied his ability to the point it tangibly lifts a team's level, arguably to a feat that they wouldn't have otherwise reached. That was precisely the case with Luis Suarez last season. Although Liverpool might well have challenged for a Champions League place under Brendan Rodgers, as has been the case this campaign, it seems inconceivable that they would have got close to a title race without the Uruguayan's unique brilliance.
This season, there is no such clear candidate, but there is another complication. There's barely been anyone that's performed at the same consistently high level for the full campaign - or at least the full season so far. There's instead been a lot of half-seasons from the most heavily fancied stars. Yet, despite the fact there is still two months of the campaign to go, the question about the awards has already been broached.
Mauricio Pochettino was asked about it on Saturday, in relation to Harry Kane's form. The 21-year-old striker has been brilliant, but his season still only really started towards the end of November, and only really accelerated in the new year.
Really, the most consistent players - and possibly most influential to their side's league positions - have been David De Gea and John Terry, but the nature of these awards and the voting means neither really has a chance of winning the accolades. So, what about those that the bookies consider most likely; those that have blazed the brightest this season? All, of course, have had lulls. Many have had outright dips.
Perhaps the most drastic has been Cesc Fabregas. He started the season stridently changing Chelsea's entire style almost on his own, only to so badly - and some would say so typically - fade in the new year. Some of the figures are stark. He has declined in almost everything. He hasn't scored at all since the turn of the year, and assists less, with that undeniably linked to how his key passes have dropped from 3.4 per game to 2.1 and his passing accuracy has fallen from 87.5% to 82.8%. He is also a little less involved, playing just 78.5 passes per game compared to a previous of 86.8. In short, he is having nowhere near the same influence, as merely watching his performances indicates.
Sergio Aguero and Alexis Sanchez aren't too far off that type of decline, though. For one, two players that had looked like they could hit supreme goalscoring ratios have badly subsided in that regard. Aguero's scoring rate has gone from 0.93 per match to 0.3, and Sanchez's from 0.55 to 0.33.
Diego Costa, for his part, has actually improved his goalscoring rate. That's gone from 0.83 to 0.86, but it still seems a little detached from his general performances, which felt much more rampaging before Christmas. Well, in that regard, all of his key passes (1.8 to 1.3), shooting accuracy (50% to 43.1%) and passing success (79.2% to 70%) have all gone down. He has generally flagged a bit.
Kane, meanwhile, has gone in the opposite direction. He's accelerated as the season has gone on. Most obviously, his goals per game have shot up from 0.33 to 1.27, but that has naturally come from a context where every aspect of his game has improved. He shoots more, plays more key passes and is generally just so much more accurate. It still says a lot that there was so much to improve.
The one candidate for player of the year who has not seen such oscillations is Eden Hazard. He maybe hasn't gone to quite the levels that Fabregas or Aguero did early on, but he has stayed closest to those levels for the longest time. His contribution has remained consistent throughout, and has come out of a scenario where he is more regularly offering the genuine match-winning moments that Jose Mourinho demanded of him. Sunday's opening goal against Hull City means he now either scores or assists every 1.6 games, compared to 1.7 before the new year. He has also upped his amount of general and key passes, and is even tackling more.
He is one player still taking the season on the same terms as he has done throughout. As such, Hazard remains the outstanding candidate for player of the year. He has been the most consistent, and it is likely to lift his team to a title.
Do you think Eden Hazard should be named PFA Player of the Year? Let us know in the comments below
Hazard play this good due to fabregas's presence, the Spaniard should deserve this award.
Sanchez played from bench and he had substitution in games. My question Hazard had any substitution or he played from bench ??? Noboby not included that in overal rating, Key passes per game and others... Alexis, Costa, Aguero, Fabregas everybody had injury. Hazard had any injury ? No, so he could play all time in the same good level. Aguero after injury - not the same man. Sanchez after injury - not the same man. Costa after injury - not the same man. Penalies ?? Aguero yes, Hazard yes, Kane yes Alexis no, Fabregas nad Costa no. In my opinion : 1. Alexis 2. Kane 3. Fabregas 4. Aguero 5. Hazard 6. Costa
Fabregas or Matic > Hazard Alexis > Hazard Player of the Year ? Matic
@bjj Matic has been pretty poor last couple games, since coming back from suspension
Hazard for me. The main man in Chelsea's attack and has contributed massively to the team. Cesc gets the assists, but Hazard is the man who creates space with his insane dribbling ability.
"Really, the fundamental idea behind an individual award should be whether a player has applied his ability to the point it tangibly lifts a team's level, arguably to a feat that they wouldn't have otherwise reached". I like ur explanation of the award. With that said, I don't think a body say FIFA subscribe go this opinion, if they did, then how did Xavi and Iniesta make it to the top 3 of at least before Ronaldo around 2012 or 2013? Are they more talented, or score as many goals? What was their overall contribution to Barcelona? I feel they FIFA should be fairer in its awarding. I admire the awarding of players, its fair and on merit. Hazard should be POTY, Kane 2nd, Alexis 3rd, .y opinion.
As the writer said, we have 2 months of EPL yet...but i think Hazard deserves the prize, because he was the most consistent in the league, easily.
Probably not a bad choice, but if I were a betting man, I'd go with Kane. The factors that appear to be taken into consideration are the following (in order of importance - IMO) Performance - Offensive contribution, some consideration to defensive contribution, and most recent performance will be top of mind to voters (that's just human nature) Titles - Winning the league, cups, or coming close plays a big part Nationality - British > European > Rest of the world. Age - Relative performance by age, a younger player with a standout performance will win over an equal performance by an older player. Offensive Performance (goals + assists) - Aguero 23, Kane + Costa 22, Sanchez 20, Fabregas 18, Hazard 17. Overall Kane is 2nd, but first on recent performance. Titles - Hazard, Costa, Fabregas all lead here is they have won a cup, and will probably win the league. Nationality - Kane (English), Hazard (Belgian), Fabregas (Spain), rest SA.
"The one player who has not seen such oscillations is Eden Hazard". Right, Sánchez's decline in average ratings from 7,84 to 7,81 is what I call glaring inconsistency.
Easily the best player in the PL this season. One major criticism from his haters was that he was an "inconsistent" player, but he has done amazingly well to shut that crowd up.
*but AS article says they all lost sometnig (whoscored, add comments editing and possibilty of separating text..)
Very good article. In January i would have chosen Alexis, but he declined, Hazard was playing on similar level to him, Aguero and Cesc, but atricle says they all lost something. Hazard player of the year and Chelsea champions of England ;) BTW I think that Diego Costas season is not that good, he was better last year in Atletico, he doesn't deserve the team of the year imo. That's how i would see it: PFA Team of the year: De Gea - Ivanović, (Terry??? I have no idea, CB's in EPL lack skills since 2012), Baines - Fabregas, Yaya Toure - Sanchez, Hazard - Kane, Aguero PFA Player of the year: 1. Hazard; 2. Sanchez; 3. D.Silva; 4. Aguero; 5. Fabregas; 6. De Gea; 7. Kane; 8. D.Costa; 9. Y. Toure; 10. Cazorla; Honorable mentions: Ivanović, Matić, Giroud, Eriksen, Henderson, di Maria Young PotY: Harry Kane
@Zootball Yaya Toure has been rubbish this year. What league have you been watching?
@What4 No he wasn't, he was just not as good. People tend to look at it this way. Similar thing was with Messi during 2013-14. Everybody tried to rule him out of Ballon dor race, but for me it was obvious that he was still playing on Ballon dor level, just declined a bit.
@Zootball No mate, Toure HAS been rubbish this season. Messi was still 2nd best in the world last year. 7.24 WhoScored rating this season. Cazorla has a 7.64 rating this season, and he should be in the Team of the Year. Baines is also a questionable inclusion. You're just naming 'stars' rather than those who have actually been the best this season.
@What4 That's 7.24 this season for Toure, not Messi obviously.
@What4 He has 7.47. But that doesn't matter, rating on this site is not everything. He hasn't benn rubbish and it is you who must/ve been watching some other league (he was a little rubbish only in first two months, pal)
@Zootball No, his overall rating is 7.24, his league rating is 7.47. Cazorla's league rating is 7.65, which is a bit higher than his overall rating. Most Premier League fans will admit Toure has not been good this season, hell, even a few Man City fans will admit it. Cazorla has been much better this season than Toure. Even Coquelin has been better, with a 7.53 league rating. Don't name Toure just because he's a star.
@What4 I don't know if you noticed, but the article is about premier League, so yes, his rating is 7.47. I don't care what "fans" say, and I don't name him because he's a star. I have my own eyes, mind and a lot of years watching footbal. I'm always trying to be objective at everything i do/judge. If you judge a player only by his rating on whoscored, which is obviosly unaccurate (but helpfull), then you should reconsider your stance.
@Zootball No, I used the WhoScored rating to bring a bit of objectivity into the argument, otherwise it's just my opinion against your opinion, isn't it? And why do you use this site if you don't care about the ratings? Toure's rating of 7.47 is stil lower than Cazorla's 7.65 and Coquelin's 7.53, so that doesn't really help your argument. Anyway, I wonder what objective Premier League fans (i.e. not supporters of Arsenal or Man City) would say.
@What4 Even other football stats websites rate Cazorla higher than Toure (you know what I mean).