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Fancy yourself the next J眉rgen Klopp? Reckon you could give Pep Guardiola a run for his money?

With fantasy football the dream of managing your own football team can become a (virtual) reality.

Fantasy football is a competition where you can select imaginary teams from the players in a league and score points according to the actual performance of the players.

But what鈥檚 it like to work in fantasy football 'in real life'? We spoke to Holly who has become one of the leading female fantasy football influencers in the UK.

Image caption,
According to its website, Fantasy Premier League has over six million players and is the biggest fantasy football game in the world.

The 29-year-old maths teacher, from Beverley, who runs the Fantasy Football Community (FFCOM), started playing when it still involved ringing up newspapers and submitting your team for the season.

But it wasn't until Holly started to use social media when she was on maternity leave that she thought she might be able to make a career out of it.

鈥淥ver time my account grew and instead of looking at other people鈥檚 advice I was sharing more advice myself,鈥 she said.

"I got the opportunity to write a couple of articles for some websites and that got me thinking, 'where else could I take this?'".

Image caption,
Holly is a maths teacher, mum-of-one and fantasy football influencer. Talk about multi-tasking.

Holly says she wasn鈥檛 sure about entering such a saturated market and was 鈥渨ary鈥 of attempting to give advice, but she says it was her family who encouraged her to try and make a business out of it.

鈥淛ust sort of overnight I had this idea: instead of writing articles on my own website to share advice, I could pull together other people鈥檚 to make a tool to navigate what was already out there,鈥 she explained.

鈥淎nd then having my own website has given me an outlet to share my own advice.鈥

She now runs a series of social media channels and is a popular regular on Sky Sport鈥檚 Fantasy Premier League Show, which is broadcast globally on the Premier League channel.

Image caption,
Holly is a maths teacher, mum-of-one and fantasy football influencer. Talk about multi-tasking.

Holly, who has a maths degree, said she always had a passion for applying her subject in the real world.

鈥淚鈥檝e always loved maths and stats, being able to study historical data, make interpretations from that, looking at odds and predictions, 鈥 she said.

But she stresses that fantasy football is still a game of luck.

There are a number of people out there who have built algorithms to create a team each week, looking at expected probabilities to predict what鈥檚 going to happen, but it鈥檚 real life and you can鈥檛 rely on predictions.
Image caption,
If Bitesize had a fantasy football team...

"We鈥檝e got VAR in the Premier League this season, there鈥檚 injuries that happen, it snows and games get called off.

鈥淟ooking at the data can get you so far, but even the best computers wouldn鈥檛 be able to just win simply like that because there鈥檚 so many different dynamics to the game.鈥

Holly, who has A-levels in Maths, English Literature and Geography, added:

鈥淚f you鈥檇 had told me when I was leaving university that my main income would come from journalism and writing, after a maths degree which involved barely any writing for the whole three years, I probably wouldn鈥檛 have believed you.鈥

Image caption,
If Bitesize had a fantasy football team...

Holly said she hopes Fantasy Football could be something more women could become involved in, and said the growth of popularity and coverage of the women鈥檚 game has helped her.

She added that having more women in the sporting spotlight - whether that be athletes, pundits or referees - has broken down stereotypes, and given her opportunities she might not have had in the past.

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Alex Scott and her fellow pundits give their top tips for breaking into the industry.

Alex Scott: pundit

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