Which players were selected for the expert's EPL weekly best XI?

Following each round of English football games throughout the campaign, expert commentator Troy Deeney shares his team and coach of the Week.

Presented here are the most recent choices. Do you agree? Tell us using the response area at the bottom.

Goalkeeper

Alphonse Areola (West Ham): The Hammers were close to being six goals down at Bournemouth without him. Key display, delivered and displayed real class. Some top goalkeeping to earn them a 2-2 draw. Losing would have damaged their campaign.

Defenders

Daniel Munoz (Crystal Palace): He's in the running for player of the season. Fans mention about Arsenal players. He has been the standout player by far.

Murillo (Nottingham Forest): You'd have been a crazy Forest fan to say 'Murillo nets and we'll beat Liverpool 3-0 at Anfield'. You'd have got long shots on that. He was excellent. He's becoming a powerhouse. He is truly a tough opponent. I'm happy to watch him perform like last season.

Malick Thiaw (Newcastle): I saw him multiple matches last year in Italy for AC Milan and he struggled due to errors. But at Newcastle he's impressed greatly. He's been immense power and forceful and appears graceful. It seems he has discovered a spiritual home.

Ferdi Kadioglu (Brighton): Not typically a left-back, leaning towards a attacking-minded in attack. He is a excellent acquisition for Brighton. Few are astonished at them finding another gem from obscurity? Many felt releasing Pervis Estupinan it was odd but the club is aware what they're doing.

Engine room

Sander Berge (Fulham) and Elliot Anderson (Nottingham Forest): Alike in style and they are selected for the shared purpose. Their teams won, all discuss about the goalscorers, but absent these individuals the squads falter. They excel. They disrupt opposition, they support going forward.

Eberechi Eze (Arsenal): The current star. A lot of followers, including my son, expressed skepticism about his ability as the man to lead them to success. Three goals in the north London derby and supporters now wish to make a statue of him. Finishing, poise, he dominated. The top performer on the pitch.

Morgan Rogers (Aston Villa): Perhaps this represents thing that I agree with Thomas Tuchel on - he has got to a point now where it will prove very difficult to drop Morgan Rogers. My view was he began well this campaign, I think he seemed somewhat presumptuous and thought he maybe secure a transfer to Chelsea, and likely desired it, but he appears to have settled down. Two superb finishes clearly versus Leeds dragged his team from behind. He was the difference maker.

Attackers

Callum Wilson (West Ham): I noted he seemed lacking his typical form. It seemed he was slower. But wow. Simply phenomenal. He was excellent. Phenomenal in his approach and in his dual goals.

Harvey Barnes (Newcastle): A particularly intriguing player. He performs strongly, often more effective as a substitute, but due to Gordon's absence so he is required to feature. He failed to convert a key opening against Manchester City at 0-0 with his simplest attempt. But to have the mental fortitude to enter into tough scenarios and score twice was great.

Boss

Sean Dyche (Nottingham Forest): He steps in and outperforms Arne Slot. A excellent strategy. It could have been several more for Forest and all would agree.

What's your view with the picks? Which players deserve your top lineup? Tell us via the feedback area following.

Jeffrey Fisher
Jeffrey Fisher

Tech enthusiast and gadget reviewer with a passion for exploring cutting-edge innovations and sharing practical insights.