Fantasy Premier League has existed long enough now to have a genuine history â eras, dynasties, outliers, and players who didnât just score points, but defined how the game was played.
Looking back across the top 100 individual FPL seasons ever recorded, a clear story emerges: FPL greatness isnât random. It clusters. It forms patterns. It reflects tactical shifts, managerial eras, and the evolution of the Premier League itself.
This is the definitive retrospective on the 100 greatest FPL seasons of all time.
đ 1. The Salah Era: A Dynasty Without Precedent
Even in a list of 100 elite seasons, one name towers above the rest.
Mohamed Salah appears more than any other player â and by a distance.
His seasons include:
- 344 points (2024/25) â the highest ever
- 303 points (2017/18) â still the secondâhighest ever
- Multiple 230â260 point seasons
What it meant for FPL: Salah didnât just dominate â he reshaped the game. Captaincy became predictable. EO became a weekly chokehold. The template was built around him for nearly a decade.
In any historical list, Salah is the immovable centre of gravity.
đ„ 2. The Haaland Shockwave
When Erling Haaland arrived, he didnât just join the list â he detonated into it.
His 272âpoint debut season is the greatest forward season ever recorded.
And he followed it with:
- 239
- 217
- 181
What it meant for FPL: Haaland introduced a new problem:
What happens when a forward scores like a prime midfielder?
He created the first true âpermaâcaptainâ since peak Salah.
âȘ 3. The KaneâSon Golden Age
The top 100 list reveals something easy to forget:
Spurs had one of the most productive FPL duos in history.
Harry Kane:
- 263
- 242
- 217
- 192
Son Heungâmin:
- 258
- 228
- 213
- 178
What it meant for FPL: This was the era of the doubleâup. If you didnât own both, you were behind.
đ” 4. The KDB Creative Peak
Kevin De Bruyneâs 2019/20 season (251 points) remains:
The greatest creative midfield season in FPL history.
His other seasons â 209, 196, 183 â cement him as the most consistent nonâSalah midfielder in the dataset.
What it meant for FPL: KDB was the first midfielder whose assists alone could carry a season.
đĄ 5. The Rise of the New Generation: Palmer, Saka, Ădegaard
The top 100 list shows a clear shift in the last five years:
Young midfielders are taking over.
Cole Palmer:
- 244
- 214
Bukayo Saka:
- 226
- 202
- 179
Martin Ădegaard:
- 212
- 186
Gabriel Martinelli:
- 198
What it meant for FPL: The Premier Leagueâs tactical shift toward inverted wingers and creative 8s has created a new wave of highâoutput midfielders.
đŁ 6. The Forgotten Monsters
The top 100 list brings back some seasons that were outrageous at the time but often overlooked now.
Examples:
- Eden Hazard â 238 (2018/19)
- Jamie Vardy â 210 (2019/20)
- Andrew Robertson â 213 (2018/19)
- Trent AlexanderâArnold â 210 (2019/20)
- Emiliano MartĂnez â 186 (2020/21) â the greatest GK season ever
- Danny Ings â 198 (2019/20)
- Jarrod Bowen â 206 (2021/22)
What it meant for FPL: These seasons were metaâdefining at the time â and the top 100 list gives them the respect they deserve.
đ§± 7. The Positional Breakdown
The top 100 seasons reveal a clear hierarchy:
Midfielders dominate.
They account for roughly 60â65% of the list.
Why?
- Goals + assists
- Clean sheet point
- Bonus bias
- Penalties
- More minutes
Forwards are streaky.
Only a handful break 230+:
- Haaland
- Kane
- Vardy
- Aubameyang
- Watkins (228)
Defenders are rare but spectacular.
Only a few defenders crack 200:
- Robertson (213)
- Trent (210)
- Cancelo (201)
- Laporte (177)
Goalkeepers barely appear.
Only MartĂnez (186) makes the elite tier.
đ 8. The Club Eras
The top 100 list mirrors Premier League dominance.
Liverpool (Salah, Mane, Trent, Robbo)
The Klopp era is everywhere.
Man City (KDB, Haaland, Foden, Cancelo)
The Guardiola era is even deeper.
Spurs (Kane, Son)
A twoâman dynasty.
Arsenal (Saka, Ădegaard, Martinelli)
The Arteta era is rising fast.
Chelsea (Hazard, Palmer)
Two generational talents, a decade apart.
đ 9. The Evolution of FPL Through the Top 100
The list tells the story of how FPL itself has changed:
Early 2010s:
Forwards dominated (SuĂĄrez, RvP, Aguero).
Midâ2010s:
Creative mids rise (Hazard, Eriksen, Mahrez).
Late 2010s:
Fullâbacks explode (Trent, Robbo).
2020s:
The SalahâHaaland era â captaincy becomes predictable.
Midâ2020s:
The youth takeover â Palmer, Saka, Ădegaard.
đż 10. The AllâTime Mount Rushmore (Based on the Top 100)
If you build a monument from this dataset, the four faces are:
- Mohamed Salah â The GOAT
- Erling Haaland â The Destroyer
- Harry Kane â The Metronome
- Kevin De Bruyne â The Architect
These four define the shape of the top 100 more than anyone else.
Brought to you by Copilot & JAM-IE
Share this content:




Leave a Reply