Right, so someone brought up Léo Bonatini, and it got me thinking. It’s funny how you sometimes dive back into a player’s stats, not just for the raw numbers, but to kind of relive a period or settle a thought in your own head. It wasn’t about some big project, more a personal itch I had to scratch.

My Little Stats Investigation
It all started when I was chatting with a mate, you know how it is, talking about strikers who had that one good season, or a promising spell, and then things just… changed. Bonatini’s name popped up, specifically his time, I think it was with Wolves, that first season he was there. My memory was a bit hazy – was he a consistent scorer, or was it more a flash in the pan? Did he contribute much else?
So, what I did was sit down and decide to really dig into it. I didn’t just glance at a summary. I started pulling up his records, season by season, trying to piece together the narrative the numbers told. I was looking for things like:
- Goals, obviously. But also, when did he score them? Bunches? Spread out?
- Assists. Was he a team player or just a poacher?
- Appearances versus starts. Was he a key guy or more of an impact sub?
- His record at different clubs. You know, to see if there was a pattern.
I spent a fair bit of time sifting through the data you can find online these days. You have to be a bit careful, of course, make sure you’re looking at reliable sources, but the information is out there if you look. I was cross-referencing a bit, trying to get a full picture. It wasn’t like I was building a complex model or anything, just trying to satisfy my own curiosity, really.
What I Reckon I Found
And what I found, or rather, what I confirmed for myself, was interesting. Without getting into the nitty-gritty numbers, because that’s not the point here, it was more about the feel I got from looking at his career path through the stats. There were definite peaks, that’s for sure. Moments where you could see, “Ah, that’s when he was really flying.” And then other periods where things clearly weren’t clicking, for whatever reason.
The main thing I took away wasn’t just about Bonatini himself, but about how we fans remember players. Sometimes our memory plays tricks on us. A player might have a really hot streak for a few months, and in our minds, that expands to an entire brilliant season. Or vice-versa. Going back and properly checking the stats, line by line, helped me ground my own recollections. It’s like, yeah, he had that period which was pretty good, and the numbers back it up to a certain extent, but then you also see the other side of it.

It’s a useful exercise, I think. Not just for settling pub debates, but for understanding the game a bit better, the ebbs and flows of a player’s career. It’s easy to just remember the highlight reels. The stats, when you take the time to actually go through them, give you a bit more of the full story, the grind, the less glamorous parts. It’s a good reminder that behind every player, there’s a whole journey, and the stats are just one way of trying to map it out.
So yeah, that was my little practical session with Léo Bonatini’s stats. More of a personal deep dive than anything world-changing, but it sorted out a few cobwebs in my own footballing memory bank, that’s for sure.