Which players has made the expert's Premier League weekly best XI?

Every round of top-flight matches throughout the campaign, expert commentator Troy Deeney shares his team and manager of the Week.

Below are the latest selections. What's your opinion? Let us know with the comments form further down.

Shot-stopper

Alphonse Areola (West Ham): West Ham were close to being six behind at Bournemouth without him. Crucial performance, delivered and displayed some quality. Excellent keeping to secure a 2-2 draw. Losing might have ruined their entire term.

Defenders

Daniel Munoz (Crystal Palace): He's up there for player of the season. Many discuss about Arsenal players. He's been the best performer by far.

Murillo (Nottingham Forest): One would need to be a crazy Forest fan to say 'He scores and we'll beat Liverpool 3-0 at Anfield'. The odds were long shots on that. He performed brilliantly. He is turning into a force. He is truly a challenge. Pleased to observe his form similar to before.

Malick Thiaw (Newcastle): I saw him several occasions earlier in Italy for AC Milan and he struggled from his faults. Yet now he's been dominant. He displays immense power and forceful and looks elegant. It seems he has discovered a spiritual home.

Ferdi Kadioglu (Brighton): Not usually a left-back, rather a attacking-minded going forward. He has proven to be a wonderful signing for Brighton. Who would be surprised at them unearthing more talent from obscurity? Many felt when they got rid of Pervis Estupinan it raised eyebrows but the club is aware more than us.

Central players

Sander Berge (Fulham) and Elliot Anderson (Nottingham Forest): Similar players and they're in for the shared purpose. Their sides were victorious, everyone will talk those who netted, but absent these individuals the squads falter. They excel. They break up play, they join the offense.

Eberechi Eze (Arsenal): The man of the moment. Many Arsenal fans, such as family members, were questioning about his ability as the man to lead them to success. A hat-trick in the local rivalry and currently fans desire to make a statue of him. Finishing, poise, he controlled the game. The best player on the pitch.

Morgan Rogers (Aston Villa): Maybe this is point of agreement with Thomas Tuchel on - he is at a point now where it's going to be extremely tough to bench him. I didn't think he began well the term, I believe he was a little bit entitled and believed he could secure a transfer to Chelsea, and probably wanted that, but he has found his footing. Two superb finishes obviously against Leeds helped his club when trailing. He proved decisive.

Strikers

Callum Wilson (West Ham): I said he seemed lacking his normal self. He appeared as if he'd lost a yard. Yet amazing. Words fail me. He was excellent. Outstanding in his movement and in his dual goals.

Harvey Barnes (Newcastle): A particularly intriguing player. He plays well, often more effective when introduced, but with Gordon sidelined so he has to play. He failed to convert a great opportunity against Manchester City at 0-0 with his easiest shot. But to have the inner resilience to put himself in challenging moments and score twice was impressive.

Manager

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 these choices? Who makes your top lineup? Have your say using the feedback area following.

Patrick Torres
Patrick Torres

A passionate software engineer with over a decade of experience in full-stack development and a love for teaching others.