Mikkel Damsgaard - Brentford
Brentford midfielder Mikkel Damsgaard has gradually rebuilt momentum after difficult injury periods earlier in his career. He is now a key part of the team’s attacking structure.
Damsgaard operates centrally far more often now, receives progressive touches consistently and has become one of the team’s primary creative outlets between the lines.
His numbers still do not fully reflect how influential he has become, which is exactly why he could begin next season underpriced. That matters enormously in FPL.
Players who combine chance creation, set-piece involvement and secure minutes without carrying premium pricing are usually among the best value assets in the game.
Brentford’s long-term commitment to him also matters after the club handed him a contract extension through to the end of the 2029/30 season.
If his finishing output improves even slightly next season, Damsgaard could become one of the smartest midfield differentials in the game.
Yankuba Minteh – Brighton & Hove Albion
Yankuba Minteh has gradually adapted to the physical and tactical demands of Premier League football while retaining the directness that made him such an exciting young prospect.
The Brighton & Hove Albion star is the type of winger who constantly attacks defenders, carries the ball aggressively and gets into high-value shooting positions rather than simply recycling possession.
Those players generally become dangerous FPL assets once their decision-making stabilises.
Brighton’s attacking system creates opportunities for wide forwards to thrive because their structure prioritises overloads, rotations and transitional speed.
Minteh may not start next season as a guaranteed pick, but he is the type of player whose ownership could explode after three or four strong performances.
Managers who identify that leap early could gain a major advantage before the broader FPL market reacts.
Rodrigo Muniz - Fulham
Rodrigo Muniz previously became a popular short-term FPL solution, but there is still a sense that his ceiling has not fully been reached yet.
The Fulham striker continues to develop into a more complete centre-forward and now looks increasingly comfortable leading the line consistently in the Premier League.
Muniz is unlikely to enter 2026/27 priced alongside elite forwards due to his injury-ravaged season, but he has many of the underlying traits managers want from budget strikers.
He attacks crosses aggressively, generates strong penalty-box volume and increasingly benefits from Fulham’s structured attacking play.
If Fulham continue building around his strengths and maintain their attacking consistency, he could be one of next season’s most effective mid-priced forwards.
Keane Lewis-Potter - Brentford
Keane Lewis-Potter has spent much of his Brentford career drifting on the edge of becoming relevant without fully breaking through. That may finally be changing.
The former Hull City player has become increasingly trusted tactically because of his versatility, pressing intelligence and ability to operate in multiple attacking roles.
That flexibility often becomes extremely important over a long FPL season because it protects game time even when systems shift.
Lewis-Potter is finishing this season showing more confidence attacking defenders directly and arriving in dangerous positions more consistently.
Brentford’s attacking style naturally creates opportunities for players willing to make aggressive runs into central areas.
If he begins next season classified as a midfielder while continuing to play advanced attacking minutes, he could become one of the strongest budget players in the game.