Players are ranked below based on the average minutes per goal that their on-field contribution produced. This is was to try and show the overall importance of a player's presence beyond goals and assists in terms of their overall effect on the attacking success of the team. I've split into pre and post Cabaye
Not sure how to insert this as a table as apologies for the horrific formatting. Minutes per goal are shown in brackets, and rankings are in the order of with Cabaye, without Cabaye and total. (Premier League games only). Will update with the full list later, players to add are Anita, Cisse and De Jong.
Player
Cabaye 1st (50.3) 1st (50.3) N/A
Remy 2nd (57.4) 4th (56.4) 1st (61.4)
Shola 3rd (71.2) 7th (65.3) 2nd (83.2)
Gouffran 4th (75.3) 2nd (55.5) 6th (139.8 )
Ben Arfa 5th (76.6) 3rd (55.8 ) N/A
Sissoko 6th (77.8 ) 6th (62.6) 4th (128.2)
Tiote 7th (92.0) 9th (75.5) 3rd (125.1)
Key points worth noting;
1. The shift in the effectiveness in attacking tactics is obvious post-Cabaye. The strategy which Pardew was able to make work for him was direct football to a big strong target man. By sidelining HBA he was either left with no players capable of creating chances or was not able to give them effective on-pitch strategies to break down opponents (either way he is culpable)
2. Only one of the top 5 are still with the club. Was it a good idea to let 2 of those players leave for no fee?
3. The fact that Tiote was the 3rd most important player to our ability score goals in the second half the season illustrates how much we capitulated once one goal went in (we were less likely to concede the first goal with Tiote fit)
4. I thought Cisse was a better player than the stats illustrate, being 9th only ahead of Luuk de Jong and behind Vurn is pretty indefensible.







![Scorecast Champ 25/26 + [redacted] Tunisia Scorecast Champ 25/26 + [redacted] Tunisia](./images/ranks/wc26-colly.png)