Bruno Fernandes has 12 Premier League assists this season. Although still eight off the record for a single campaign, 20 doesn’t feel out of reach for the Manchester United captain.
Manchester United have spent the vast majority of Bruno Fernandes’ time at the club battling mediocrity or failing to meet expectations – and yet, he’s managed to establish himself as one of the Premier League’s very best, maybe even one of the competition’s all-time greats.
Fernandes has had his critics, sure, but when it comes to consistency of performance, influence and impact, no other Man Utd player has come close to him since he joined the club almost exactly six years ago.
In fact, he’s almost certainly been their best player in the post-Alex Ferguson era, and in some respects he keeps getting better.
His form this season, or perhaps more specifically since October, could be regarded as his highest level at United when it comes creative influence. The Portugal star has enjoyed a run we just haven’t seen from him before – which is saying something – and it’s put him in a position where he may fancy his chances of challenging a certain record.
The most assists a player has ever recorded in a Premier League season is 20. Thierry Henry managed it in 2002-03, and Kevin De Bruyne repeated the feat in 2019-20; Fernandes is on 12 and potentially has another 14 matches to play this term.
Kevin De Bruyne assists 2019-20
Bruno Fernandes assists 2025-26
We should acknowledge that “assists” isn’t always the best metric to value player creativity, but when we’re talking about record numbers and a player who we all know is an immense creator, it’s a little more worthy of taking at face value.
So, he’s got 14 matches to get eight assists to match the record, nine to break it. That sounds tough, but not impossible.
In fact, there are actually quite a few examples of players tallying nine or more assists in a 14-game Premier League spell within a single season.
Working this out can be a little murky because a player might appear to have several such runs in a single season, but many of them could overlap with each other at various points. So, we’re only acknowledging the point at which players recorded their biggest assists tallies over a 14-game period.
There have been 39 instances of players getting nine or more assists within a 14-game window in a single season, including Fernandes himself at this very moment. All of his 12 have come in his last 14 Premier League matches.
PL most assists in 14-game spell
Maintaining a certain level when it comes to assists can be extremely difficult, though. The obvious reason for that is it’s a metric that’s also highly dependent on another player.
That works in two ways as well. A player could benefit from making a two-yard pass to someone who then scores from 35 yards, just as their figures could be negatively impacted by a teammate missing a sitter when the player lays the ball on a plate for them.
That’s why assists – especially over shorter periods – can be a little misleading.
So, sure, eight assists in 14 matches might not sound out of reach, but Fernandes’ 12 so far is well beyond his 5.9 expected assists (a model that measures the likelihood of a given pass becoming an assist), suggesting he’s been a little fortunate already.
Bruno Fernandes xA
The assertion that assists are difficult to rack up consistently over a full campaign is supported by the record being only 20 when the goals record is 36. Furthermore, most of those who share – or got close to – the assists record have enjoyed specific purple patches.
When Henry set the record in 2002-03, his output was helped massively by a hot streak at the end of the season in which he set up eight goals in his last five appearances.
Kevin De Bruyne equalled that record in 2019-20 and certainly can’t be accused of being inconsistent. However, he began the campaign in blistering form, tallying nine assists in his first nine outings – that was followed by a run of none in seven.
Probably the most remarkable example is Mesut Özil. In 2015-16, Arsenal’s German maverick reached the turn of the year having amassed an outrageous total of 16 assists; the record appeared to be his to lose, but then he managed just three in 17 league outings from 1 January 2016 onwards, enduring a nine-game run without a single one.
And of course, it was only this time last year when we were wondering about Mohamed Salah’s chances of breaking this very same record.
Salah had teed up 13 goals for teammates prior to New Year’s Day 2025, but his form dipped in the second half of the campaign compared to the first, recording five assists after the turn of the year and none in his final six games of the season.
Of the players to reach 18 or more assists in a single Premier League season, Frank Lampard (18 in 2004-05) can probably stake a claim for being the most consistent over the full year.
He set up 10 goals in the first half of the season and eight in the second. The most games he went without an assist was four, enjoying a steady supply throughout 2004-05.
Top PL assisters - Bruno Fernandes chases history
Jonathan Manuel / Data Analyst
Setting up another eight or nine goals this term certainly isn’t beyond Fernandes, though.
His record of 12 in 21 matches means he’s averaging 0.57 assists per game. If we extrapolate that over the rest of the campaign and assume he plays in all of United’s remaining 14 fixtures, he’d get to 21.7 – given you can’t get 0.7 of an assist, let’s just call it 21.
With that in mind, he has a slight margin for error if he wants to hit – or surpass – 20.
But as we’ve already noted, he’s setting up goals at a rate that’s double his xA per 90 (0.29) and potentially unsustainable. If his output was to fall in line with his xA for the rest of 2025-26, he’d find himself on 16.9 assists, so several short of the record.
It’s obviously impossible to definitively predict how Fernandes’ final months of the season will go, and his underlying numbers for the campaign to date are clearly muddied somewhat by playing for three different head coaches, particularly given Ruben Amorim’s system was considerably different to what’s come since.
However, Fernandes certainly has some reasons for optimism.
Firstly, United have started life under Michael Carrick pretty well, racking up three successive league wins to build some momentum and belief.
United have been a far better attacking force this term than they were in 2024-25, but if they carry on putting chances away like they have in Carrick’s first three games, Fernandes’ colleagues will give him every chance of boosting his tally.
Man Utd xG 2024-25
Man Utd xG 2025-26
Additionally, that momentum may even extend to Fernandes himself, so instrumental has he been of late. Granted, his rate of assists may be considerably more than his xA as we’ve said, but if we divide his 2025-26 season into three equal splits of seven matches, the most recent split has been by far his most productive in terms of the value of his chance creation. He’s averaged 0.46 xA across his last seven outings, up from 0.19 across the previous seven and then 0.18 over his first seven.
And finally, United have been playing significantly fewer matches this season than is normal for them, and they only have league games left in 2025-26. Those facts, combined with a brief injury absence around the turn of the year, have contributed to Fernandes playing just 2,145 minutes across all competitions this term as of 4 February.
Bruno Fernandes Minutes Played at Man Utd
Jonathan Manuel / Data Analyst
That is comfortably his fewest at the same point across his six full seasons at the club. There’s an argument he’s probably never been fresher heading into the final stages of a Premier League campaign. Fatigue and fitness problems have rarely been an issue for him at United, but there’ll surely be no harm in the captain having extra recovery time.
Some might even point to United’s change in system helping Fernandes’ chances. While he hasn’t been seeing that much more of the ball in advanced areas than before, that could well be heavily influenced by the fact they’ve faced Arsenal and Manchester City since Amorim left.
Either way, his open-play chances created per 90 figure has swelled from 1.9 to 3.4, which does suggest he’s having more creative influence since returning to a number 10 role, potentially helped by there being an extra body in United’s midfield.
Whether Fernandes can equal or break the assists record, there seems little doubt he’s as sharp as ever, needing just two more assists to set a new personal best (14) in a single Premier League season.
As United’s future inevitably becomes a major topic of discussion again over the next couple of months, Fernandes will most likely be drawn into the matter again, as he was last year when a departure seemed plausible.
He remains an incredibly valuable asset even given the fact he’ll turn 32 next September. But that won’t always be the case.
It may come to a point where United have to decide whether the money they could get from selling him is more valuable than what he offers on the pitch. Considering he’s a player whose game has never been dependent on pace, it could be he remains a key cog for several years yet.
Assists record or not, then, the fact it even looks remotely plausible underlines Fernandes’ extraordinary output and further emphasises how impressive his consistency has been in a turbulent environment throughout his time at Old Trafford.
Premier League Stats Opta
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