Premier League Player of the Season: Rice, Gabriel and Bruno Fernandes
Bruno Fernandes is threatening assist records, Gabriel Magalhaes has anchored the best defence in the league, and Declan Rice has been present and dominant for all of it. Who should win the award.

The Premier League Player of the Season debate has a habit of throwing up the wrong answer in the final stretch, and this year it's already getting complicated.
Declan Rice is the betting favourite. Gabriel Magalhaes has arguably been the best defender in the league all season. And Bruno Fernandes, somehow, is being mentioned in the same breath, leading the assists chart with 16 and threatening Kevin De Bruyne and Thierry Henry's all-time single-season record of 20.
All three have a strong case but they're not the same, and sportsbuzzfeed.com explains exactly why.
Start with Fernandes, because his numbers demand it. Sixteen assists in 27 league appearances at this stage of the season is genuinely extraordinary, and the fact that he's done it for a Manchester United side that has been inconsistent, injury-hit and managerially chaotic for most of the campaign makes it more impressive, not less.
The Portuguese leads all United players in more than 20 separate statistics, which tells you something about the gap between him and everyone else at Old Trafford.
Under Michael Carrick, who replaced Ruben Amorim in February and moved Fernandes back into a number 10 role after months of using him deeper, Bruno has been the closest thing English football has to a guaranteed return every single week.
But here's the problem with the Fernandes case. The award has an unspoken but consistently applied rule, and the data from the last decade backs it up: it goes to the best player on the best team.
Phil Foden won it in 2023-24 as City took the title. Erling Haaland won it twice. Mohamed Salah won it twice in title-winning Liverpool campaigns. When the award has deviated from that pattern, it's usually because a player has been so transcendently dominant that the argument becomes impossible to ignore regardless.
Fernandes, as good as he's been, hasn't reached that threshold. United are chasing a top-four finish. His peers at Arsenal and others are chasing history.
Which brings you to Gabriel. The 28-year-old Brazilian centre-back has been the heartbeat of Arsenal's defensive record all season, and that record is historically good.
The Gunners have conceded shots on target in league games, fewer than any other side in the division. No centre-back in the league comes close to Gabriel's numbers for blocks and clearances, and Arteta himself said earlier in the season that the defender “dominates both boxes like a world-class attacker and a world-class defender,” which isn't the kind of praise a manager reaches for lightly.
Arsenal fans serenade him with chants that might be the warmest tribute any player has received this season. On his best days, he's the best defender in the league and it's not even close.
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Maybe injury complicates things a bit. Gabriel missed a long stretch after picking up a knock during the November international break, and while he's back and playing now, the interruption matters when you're comparing him to players who've been present and dominant across the full campaign.
The award rewards consistency as much as quality. David Raya, for instance, is the only Arsenal player who hasn't missed a single Premier League minute this season, which is part of why the Spaniard is one of the other names worth considering.
Gabriel has been magnificent, but he's missed some games.
Rice, for his part, has been available for virtually every minute of Arsenal's season, leads the league's set-piece statistics as the primary dead-ball taker, balances defensive work with seamless transitions into attack, and is the one player in Arteta's squad who touches everything.
When he goes off, Arsenal look different. When he's carrying a knock, the whole structure feels slightly less secure. Arteta built his midfield around Rice's specific combination of physical dominance and technical intelligence, and the numbers reflect it.
Patrick Vieira won the award in 2000-01 as Arsenal's midfield engine in a title-chasing side. Claude Makelele never won it, partly because voters struggled to quantify what he brought to Chelsea's dominance in that era, and that remains one of the award's more glaring blind spots. Rice is somewhere between those two: a player whose defensive contributions are visible and measurable, whose attacking output has genuinely improved this season, and who carries Arsenal in a way that Fernandes carries United but with a better team around the former West Ham captain making the case stronger.
With seven games to go and Arsenal nine points clear, the title race is effectively done barring something extraordinary. And if the award goes, as it usually does, to the best player on the champions, then the question is simply which Arsenal player has been most central to what they've built.
Gabriel has anchored the best defence in the league. But Rice has been present for all of it, touched more of it than anyone else, and done so while making fewer headlines than either of them. That's usually the player who deserves it most.
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