With the goals flying in this season, skysports.com wants to hear your thoughts on all-out attack.
With the goals flying in this season, skysports.com wants to hear your thoughts on all-out attack.
The general consensus appears to be that the 2009/10 season has the potential to be the most enthralling in Premier League history.
The so-called big four have not had things entirely their own way, with a number of promising upstarts threatening to tip the applecart.
Fixtures which would have been considered 'bankers' just a few years ago are now perilously difficult to call, with the gap between the haves and have nots shortening all the time.
That has ensured that the top flight title race is as open as it has been for years, with numerous teams harbouring realistic ambitions of taking the crown.
The 2009/10 campaign has also seen the floodgates open in spectacular style, with goals galore plundered against defences billed as the best in the country.
A staggering 257 goals have already been scored this term, and there is the promise of many more to come.
Arsenal set the tone on the opening day as they fired six past Everton, and the Gunners have since repeated that feat against Blackburn.
Liverpool knocked six past Hull City on home soil in September, while Sunderland hit five against Wolves at the Stadium of Light and Manchester United ran riot at the DW Stadium as they trounced Wigan 5-0.
The all-out attack approach has certainly helped to raise the entertainment levels in the Premier League, but has it been welcomed by the fans?
Are you prepared to write off a few shaky moments at the back providing your chosen troops are razor sharp at the opposite end of the field?
Ossie Ardiles and Kevin Keegan favoured the gung-ho approach during their days in charge of Tottenham and Newcastle, respectively, during the 90s, but both failed to land coveted silverware.
Is there then a case for the defence - literally - which suggests that while goals are what football is all about, the surprisingly open nature of the game at the moment is not likely to breed success in the long run.
Skysports.com wants to hear your opinion on the matter, so send us your thoughts using the feedback form below and we will publish a selection of the best comments.