Fixture summary
Leeds only have three fixtures left, but they are all playable from an FPL perspective. The run is Spurs away in GW36, Brighton at home in GW37, and West Ham away in GW38, with every match rated FDR 3. That gives Leeds an average FDR of 3.0 across the remaining schedule, which is about as neutral as it gets.
The split is one clear home fixture and two away trips. Brighton at Elland Road in GW37 looks like the standout if you are targeting a one week punt, while the away games are still usable because neither Spurs nor West Ham are intimidating enough to rule out attacking returns. There is no true green patch here, but there is also no red flag fixture that forces a sale.
For managers planning final transfers, this is more of a steady hold run than a major target run. Leeds assets are viable if they are already in your squad, and selective buying makes sense if you want budget starters with decent floors and some upside.
FPL implications by position
At the back, this is not a schedule to chase clean sheets aggressively. Three straight FDR 3 fixtures suggest Leeds defenders are more about value and appearance points than explosive defensive upside. Still, budget options have a place in final gameweek benches and rotations.
Struijk at £4.4m has 106 points and a form figure of 3.2, which makes him a reasonable fifth defender if you need minutes. Bogle, also £4.4m, has 94 points and stronger recent form at 4.5, so he is probably the more interesting pick if you want some attacking threat. Rodon is cheaper at £3.9m and has 101 points, but his form of 0.5 is the obvious warning sign, so he looks like the least attractive route right now.
Midfield is where Leeds become more interesting. Okafor stands out immediately. At £5.6m, with 109 points and a huge form figure of 10.2, he is the best upside pick in this squad and the one who can punish non-owners over a short horizon. Aaronson is another credible budget option at £5.4m, with 122 points and 3.2 form, while Ampadu offers excellent season-long output for £4.9m, 118 points, and 4.0 form. Stach has the highest points total among Leeds midfielders listed, 132 points for £4.8m, but a form number of 2.5 suggests he is more of a value hold than a priority buy.
Up front, Calvert-Lewin is the key name. At £5.8m, with 126 points and 4.0 form, he is priced perfectly for managers needing a third forward who can start every week. In a final three-match run where fixtures are consistently average, that kind of secure budget forward profile is useful. He does not need elite fixtures to justify minutes at that price.
Buy / hold / sell windows
Buy now, if you are targeting Leeds at all. There is no reason to wait, because the fixture run does not materially improve later and there are only three deadlines left. Okafor is the best aggressive buy, Calvert-Lewin is the safest structural buy, and Bogle is the defender to consider if you need a cheap starter.
Hold existing Leeds attackers through the end. The fixtures are stable, all FDR 3, and there is enough goal potential in all three matches to justify patience. This is especially true for Okafor, Aaronson, and Calvert-Lewin.
Sell
Verdict
Leeds are more own than fade for the run-in, but mostly in attack. The all-3.0 FDR schedule is good enough to support holds and selective buys, without being good enough to justify a defensive stack. Okafor is the standout punt, Calvert-Lewin is a sensible budget forward, and Bogle is the best cheap defender. If you are undecided, the correct stance is not wait, it is buy the attackers you trust and leave the defence alone.