Fixture summary
Spurs only have three fixtures left, but the run is still worth targeting. They face Leeds at home in GW36, Chelsea away in GW37, and Everton at home in GW38. That gives them an average FDR of 2.67 across the remaining schedule, with two home matches and one away trip.
The clear standout is GW36 against Leeds, rated just 2 for difficulty. GW38 at home to Everton, rated 3, is also very playable. The only real check is Chelsea away in GW37, also rated 3, which is not a fixture to avoid but does lower expectations slightly. From an FPL perspective, the home split matters. Two of the final three are in north London, and that is enough to keep Spurs assets in the conversation for the run-in.
If you are looking for a short-term swing, the best stretch is obvious, home to Leeds now, then home to Everton on the final day. Managers should be planning around those two games first.
FPL implications by position
Defensively, this is not a perfect clean sheet run, but there is enough upside because of attacking full-backs and price points. Pedro Porro is still the headline option. He has 106 points, costs £5.2m, and comes in with the best form of the main Spurs defenders at 5.8. Even if clean sheets are not fully reliable, Porro gives you routes to returns at both ends.
Micky Van de Ven is the value route. At £4.4m with 108 points, he has outscored both Porro and Romero over the season. His recent form is only 2.5, so the upside is lower, but for managers wanting a cheap starter with two decent home fixtures, he remains viable.
Romero looks harder to justify. He is £5.0m, has 91 points, and his form sits at 0.2. That is not enough to back over Porro or Van de Ven. Vicario is similar. At £4.7m and 90 points he is inexpensive, but a form score of 0.0 tells you there is little reason to actively buy the goalkeeper now unless you are specifically targeting Leeds and Everton.
In attack, Richarlison is the standout. At £6.3m, with 108 points and 3.8 form, he combines affordability with direct goal threat. Against Leeds at home he looks like a very strong punt, and the final-day Everton fixture is another spot where he can deliver. If you want a mid-price forward for the final weeks, he is Spurs’ best route.
The midfield names listed are less convincing as priority buys. J.Palhinha at £5.5m with 107 points and 3.2 form does not profile like a high-upside attacking target, even if the price is manageable. Xavi, £6.4m, 80 points, form 3.8, is more interesting on paper, but still feels secondary to Richarlison and Porro. Kudus is listed at £6.4m with 75 points and 0.0 form, which makes him an easy pass for now.
Buy / hold / sell windows
Buy in GW36. This is the week to move early if you want Spurs exposure. Leeds at home is the best fixture in the run, and buying after it means you miss the biggest edge. Porro and Richarlison are the priority buys, Van de Ven the budget alternative.
Hold through GW38. If you buy now, the sensible plan is to keep those assets for the final-day Everton match. Chelsea away in GW37 is not ideal, but it is not difficult enough to force a sale, especially with no standout replacement window in between.
Sell is mostly unnecessary. Existing owners should generally hold. The only exception is if you are carrying lower-upside Spurs defenders like Romero or Vicario and want to shift into more explosive options elsewhere. For attackers, there is no obvious sell point before the season ends.
Verdict
Own selected Spurs assets for the run-in. This is not a blanket buy on the whole squad, but the fixture mix is good enough to invest. Leeds at home in GW36 is the key target, Everton at home in GW38 is a strong follow-up, and the average FDR of 2.67 supports a positive view.
Porro is the best all-round pick, Richarlison is the best attacking buy, and Van de Ven is the budget option. Fade the lower-ceiling names, but do not overthink the top two. Spurs are a team to attack with now, not one to wait on.