Game Week 6 is in the books, and yet some of the highest performers are still under-owned in Draft Fantasy. Here are a few of the most intriguing players that might still be available in your standard scoring league.

Oumar Niasse, FWD, Everton

No two ways about it, this year’s new look Everton squad has been struggling for goals. Sandro Ramirez isn’t a central striker, and neither is an aging and embattled Wayne Rooney.

When Oumar Niasse came on against Bournemouth, it was almost as if the answer was staring Ronald Koeman in the face the whole time: play the Senegalese striker more often. He rescued the team with his brace and was the hero in securing the win over the Cherries.

Draft Fantasy managers could have a gem in their squads if they pick Niasse up now and he gets a run of games. He should. Just four goals on loan at Hull City last year, but the current opportunity feels right.

The competition around him has not shown and Everton need a spark. Plus, Kevin Mirallas is being put back into the fold, Tom Davies is developing, and even Yannick Bolasie and Seamus Coleman are ahead of schedule in their rehabilitation.

Niasse is currently less than 1% owned, but at least he was available in Draft Fantasy – the official game somehow forgot to add him.

Next up: Home to Burnley, away to Brighton, home to Arsenal.

Tomer Hemed, FWD, Brighton

If you missed out on the big name forwards in you draft, you’ve been put at a serious disadvantage thus far. The crop of strikers available to you has been maddeningly inconsistent, and you are forced to throw darts or just live with the meager points that come with playing time.

Enter Tomer Hemed, Chris Hughton’s current first choice at Brighton. The Israeli forward has 29 goals in 85 appearances for the Seagulls, most recently notching the winner over Newcastle, a fitting start to the Jewish new year. He’s as little owned as Niasse, so available virtually everywhere.

Hemed has two goals and an assist in this campaign, but Draft Fantasy managers should make sure there isn’t any retrospective disciplinary action for an alleged stamp on DeAndre Yedlin before deciding if they should bring him in.

If he plays next Sunday, he will be hoping keep the celebration going after Yom Kippur ends at sundown on Saturday. If he rests or is charged for violent conduct from the previous match, keep him in mind for later.

Next up: Away to Arsenal, home to Everton, away to West Ham.

Lukasz Fabianski, GK, Swansea

This column has not prominently featured goalkeepers much, but Lukasz Fabianski has been really great lately. Aside from his one point performances against Watford last match, he had 8, 4, and 7 the previous three games. The Pole’s total of 27 is actually fourth best at his position, belying his ownership of just 24%.

Draft Fantasy managers new to the format should also bare in mind that Fabianski has been a mainstay for several years now, usually managing to pick up save points when the clean sheet eludes him.

The Swansea defense offers some value as well in Kyle Naughton playing wingback, and Alfie Mawson a danger from set pieces, but the least risk seems to reside with the ‘keeper. Fabianski could be a decent replacement for Tom Heaton or Asmir Begovic owners.

Next up: Away to West Ham, home to Huddersfield, home to Leicester.

Phil Jones, DEF, Manchester United

Frankly, it is staggering that Phil Jones is still only 25% owned. I can only apologize that this post is featuring him several weeks too late. He’s the sixth highest scoring defender in standard play thus far with 31 points, and is playing some of the best football of his career. He may very well be already taken if you are in a competitive league, but he has far outperformed his ownership.

As much stick as he has gotten in the past, he’s just about the defensive MVP to date when you consider what was expected of him, and what he has delivered. Spare a thought for Huddersfield’s Zanka at 14% ownership and 29 points, but Jones’ place at Manchester United should fare much better over the full course of the season.

Victor Lindelöf and Chris Smalling will rotate in if United continue to stay in multiple competitions, but Jose Mourinho seems pleased with Jones’ partnership with Eric Bailly and has seemingly settled on the pairing in Premier League fixtures. He’s healthy, has played every minute of every the regular season, and should be much, much higher owned. It is that simple.

Leroy Sané, MID, Manchester City

I have nothing but pity and sympathy for the owners who dropped Sané before last weekend. He’s 46% owned, which means he’s not widely available, but you should scour your free agent list to see if he was somehow dropped in your league because he could be a game changer.

At least a few managers saw him only as a super-sub. Disappointingly, Sané had been played at wingback a few games ago, and started the season with meager returns four points total in three matches before exploding off the bench to score twice against Liverpool during GW4. Then, back to a short cameo against Watford to frustrate again.

But now, the young German has worked his way back into Pep Guardiola’s good graces, and he should start a run of games as he did last Spring. Sané had two goals in a midweek start, then a goal and two assists last Saturday against Crystal Palace.

If there was ever any doubt, and there was only ever very little, it is abundantly clear that Guardiola’s side will score an insane (inSané?) amount of goals this year.

City have a very deep squad, so just don’t forget to monitor injuries and minutes played in other cup competitions so you have an idea of who will play where it counts for Draft Fantasy managers. Get a piece of the action if you still can.