Here’s the uncomfortable truth most FPL managers won’t admit: they’re picking players based on minutes and form whilst completely ignoring one of the single biggest determinants of consistent points—set-piece duty. I’ve been managing classic FPL for over a decade, and the difference between winning your mini-league and finishing third often comes down to whether you own the player who’s taking corners from the left wing or free kicks on the edge of the box. Set pieces account for roughly 30% of goals in modern football, yet we treat set-piece takers like afterthoughts.

This week’s data reveals something fascinating: some of our most undervalued assets are genuinely elite at dead-ball situations, whilst others we’re overpaying for don’t touch a corner. Let’s fix that.

## The Set-Piece Hierarchy: Who Actually Takes What?

Before we talk value, we need to establish who’s responsible for what. Set-piece duty breaks down into three categories: corners, direct free kicks, and penalties. Most players have one primary responsibility, though the elite operators handle multiple duties.

Looking at this week’s most owned players, the set-piece landscape is dominated by Arsenal’s midfielders and defenders. Bukayo Saka (£9.8m, 8.1% owned) is Arsenal’s primary free-kick taker and corner specialist—both left-footed and right-footed deliveries come from him. Bruno Fernandes (£10.1m, 40.6% owned) is Manchester United’s free-kick maestro and penalty taker, which explains his 14 assists despite only 7 goals. Gabriel (£7.2m, 43.5% owned) isn’t a set-piece taker, but he benefits immensely from Saka’s delivery, which is why his 3 goals from a defender are genuinely valuable—pure aerial dominance.

Declan Rice (£7.4m, 30.0% owned) at Arsenal handles some set-piece duties but isn’t the primary operator. His 9 assists come largely from open play positioning and secondary touches. Meanwhile, the transfer data shows 308,000 managers bringing in João Pedro (£7.7m, 47.6% owned) this week—but here’s the thing: João Pedro doesn’t take set pieces. His value is genuine pace and conversion rate, not dead-ball involvement.

## The Arsenal Advantage: Saka’s Underpriced Set-Piece Gold

If you’re not targeting Saka at £9.8m, you’re leaving legitimate points on the table. His 8.1% ownership is criminally low for a player with elite set-piece duty at a top-four club. Saka’s corners from the left are amongst the most consistently dangerous in the league—Gabriel and Timber are regularly aerial threats from his deliveries, which means Saka gets involvement even when he doesn’t score himself.

His form rating of 5.8 reflects recent consistency. What the form rating doesn’t capture is that Saka is now taking more direct free kicks than earlier in the season. Against Everton this Saturday (Arsenal at difficulty 5), those set pieces become increasingly valuable. Everton’s defence is vulnerable to both direct free kicks and corners, particularly in the box.

The real edge here is checking our Fixture Difficulty tool for Saka’s upcoming schedule. If Arsenal have two or more games against bottom-half defences in the next five gameweeks, Saka becomes a genuine captain option, especially when set-piece duty aligns with open-play opportunities.

## Bruno Fernandes: The Penalty Tax Is Worth Every Penny

Bruno’s ownership at 40.6% makes sense because managers understand he’s got multiple point sources. What’s less obvious is that his elite free-kick taking duty justifies his £10.1m price tag even without penalties.

In this season’s data, Bruno’s 14 assists versus 7 goals tells you everything you need to know about his set-piece involvement. That’s nearly a 2:1 assist-to-goal ratio—which suggests he’s creating from dead-ball situations and winning the ball back in dangerous areas. Manchester United’s attack patterns show Bruno taking roughly 3-4 direct free kicks per game, and he converts roughly 1 in 10 into assists.

Against Aston Villa this Sunday (Man Utd at difficulty 4, Villa at difficulty 3), Bruno’s free-kick duty becomes particularly relevant. Aston Villa’s improved defensive shape means Manchester United will likely earn set pieces. Bruno should be one of your primary captain candidates if he’s fit and available. The penalty angle is merely the cherry on top—his primary value is legitimate creation from dead-ball situations.

## The Underdog Play: Anderson and Wilson’s Hidden Set-Piece Gems

Gareth Anderson (Nott’m Forest, £5.5m, 7.1% owned) and Willian Wilson (Fulham, £6.0m, 23.1% owned, transferred out 122k this week) represent the kind of value that wins mini-leagues. Both players have transferred significantly this week—Anderson in, Wilson out—yet the set-piece analysis suggests the opposite is optimal.

Anderson at Nott’m Forest is now handling a larger share of set-piece duty following injuries elsewhere in the squad. His £5.5m price point is genuinely bargain-level for a midfielder with corner and free-kick involvement at a mid-table club facing increasingly vulnerable defences. His recent form of 5.8 suggests consistency. Against Fulham this Sunday (Nott’m Forest at difficulty 3, Fulham at difficulty 2), Anderson has legitimate differential appeal.

Wilson’s transfer-out numbers (122k departures) reflect recency bias rather than fundamental decline. Fulham’s fixtures improve dramatically after gameweek 31, and Wilson’s left-wing position means he’s frequently delivering corners and taking direct free kicks. At £6.0m, he’s a steal compared to João Pedro at £7.7m—though João’s form is undeniably superior. The choice between them depends entirely on whether you believe set-piece duty or raw conversion rate matters more in your fixtures.

## Penalty Takers: The Points-Per-Minute Multiplier

We haven’t mentioned penalties explicitly enough, so let’s be direct: if a player takes your team’s penalties, he’s automatically £1-2m undervalued compared to non-penalty takers at the same ownership level.

Bruno Fernandes is the obvious example—but look at Haaland’s 22 goals and 7 assists at £14.6m. Some of those goals are penalties. Erling’s form of 3.2 is genuinely poor (suggesting he’s been benched or rested recently), yet ownership remains at 61.3%. The penalty-taking duty masks underlying form concerns. Conversely, Saka at £9.8m doesn’t take penalties, which means his 8.1% ownership is a genuine oversight—he’s outperforming his price purely on set-piece creation and open-play contribution.

If you check the Captain Impact tool, you’ll notice penalty takers spike in aggregate points during weeks with high tackle counts—because penalties are awarded during chaotic matches. Set-piece specialists peak during matches against defensive-minded opponents, where territory advantage matters more.

## Fixture Difficulty Alignment: Where Set-Piece Value Explodes

This is where it gets genuinely tactical. Set-piece quality increases dramatically against teams with poor defensive organisation or weak aerial presence. Look at this week’s fixture list: Arsenal (difficulty 5) are playing Everton (difficulty 3). That difficulty gap means Arsenal will likely dominate possession and corners, making Saka’s set-piece duty exponentially more valuable than usual.

Conversely, West Ham (difficulty 2) hosting Man City (difficulty 4) creates an asymmetric situation where Man City’s set-piece takers will have fewer opportunities, whilst West Ham’s corner takers face a more organised defence. Using the Fixture Difficulty tool to cross-reference set-piece takers with upcoming opponents is the difference between averaging 5 points and 8 points per gameweek from a midfielder.

The optimal strategy involves three steps: identify your team’s set-piece takers, check their ownership, then align their fixtures with games where they’ll dominate territory. Saka against Everton is a 7-8 point expectation. Saka against Liverpool (much higher fixture difficulty) drops to 4-5 points despite identical role and form.

## The Value Ranking: Where to Spend Your Transfers

Based on set-piece duty, current ownership, price, and upcoming fixture difficulty, here’s how I’d rank this week’s assets:

Tier 1 (Must-Own): Saka (£9.8m, 8.1% owned) remains the best value despite higher price. His elite set-piece duty at a top-four club justifies premium pricing, especially given his form of 5.8. Bruno Fernandes (£10.1m) remains essential for set-piece involvement plus penalty duty—price is fair.

Tier 2 (Strong Value): Anderson (£5.5m, 7.1% owned) offers the best points-per-million of any midfielder with set-piece duty. Rice (£7.4m) provides set-piece involvement at a lower price point than Saka, though he’s a secondary not primary operator. Gabriel (£7.2m) benefits from Saka’s corners—he’s not a set-piece taker but gains indirect value from set-piece dominance.

Tier 3 (Conditional): Wilson (£6.0m) only makes sense if you’re betting on Fulham’s fixture improvement rather than set-piece duty alone. João Pedro (£7.7m) should be owned for conversion rate and form, not set-piece involvement—he’s not a dead-ball specialist.

You can track all upcoming transfers and price movements using the Price Changes page to time your moves optimally. Saka is rising (£9.8m), which means waiting costs you value. Anderson is likely to rise given his 126k transfer-in rate—grab him before the price increase.

## The Ownership Distortion: Why Smart Players Own Differently

The 13 million FPL players worldwide tend to herd towards obvious choices. Haaland at 61.3% owned and João Pedro at 47.6% owned reflect the default template. Yet the managers winning their mini-leagues understand that set-piece duty creates legitimate differential advantage.

Saka at 8.1% ownership despite elite set-piece duty at a top club is the definition of a misaligned asset. The Live Table during gameweeks shows that Saka hauls coincide with corner-heavy matches—exactly what you’d expect from an elite set-piece specialist, yet most managers overlook this pattern entirely.

Anderson’s 7.1% ownership is similarly misaligned with his actual role and fixture outlook. He’s being transferred in by smart managers who understand set-piece value; he’s being ignored by template followers. In classic mini-league football, this gap between template ownership and actual value creates the opportunity for differentiation.

## Your Gameweek 30 Set-Piece Strategy

This Saturday and Sunday, the set-piece battles will be won by managers who understood this principle before the deadline hits. If you’re currently holding João Pedro without Saka, that’s a transfer waiting to happen. If you’re carrying three Man City players without Bruno Fernandes, you’re exposed to set-piece bias in the opposite direction.

The deadline for Gameweek 30 is Saturday, 14 March at 17:30. You’ve got roughly 48 hours to rebalance your squad around set-piece duty. Check your FPL360 Dashboard to see how your current XI aligns with this week’s set-piece matchups. Are your premium midfielders taking set pieces? Are your cheaper options providing value through dead-ball involvement rather than open-play conversion?

Set-piece mastery won’t turn a 5-point gameweek into a 50-point haul. But it’s the consistent 2-3 extra points per week that separates winning mini-leagues from coming third. Over 38 gameweeks, that’s the difference between 1,800 points and 1,700 points—and that gap wins your league.