Goalkeeper: Jordan Pickford (Everton)
The Everton goalkeeper made five saves to guide his side to a clean sheet against reigning Premier League champions Chelsea.
Right-back: Serge Aurier (Tottenham)
Aurier had more touches of the ball than any other Spurs player against Burnley (80) and was a constant outlet down the right, creating two goalscoring chances.
Centre-back: Phil Jagielka (Everton)
The experienced defender made more clearances (14) and blocks (5) than any other player on the pitch against Chelsea.
Centre-back: Davinson Sanchez (Tottenham)
The Colombian put in a strong performance to ensure that Spurs did not fall victim to Burnley's impressive home form at Turf Moor.
Left-back: Fabian Delph (Manchester City)
Delph completed 95.2% of his 83 passes against Bournemouth and made more tackles (4) and interceptions (4) than any of his team-mates.
Right wing: Juan Mata (Manchester United)
The Spaniard scored twice to put his side on the brink of victory, only to see Leicester City strike late on to claim a point. His first strike was a precise finish into the far corner, whilst the second was a stunning free kick.
Centre-midfield: Joe Allen (Stoke City)
The Wales midfielder scored and assisted in a Premier League game for the fist time in his career as the 'Potters' swept past West Brom.
Centre-midfield: Philippe Coutinho (Liverpool)
The Brazilian opened the scoring with a clever header against Arsenal and has now been involved in 16 goals in 11 away games in all competitions for Liverpool.
Left wing: Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting (Stoke City)
The bosman signing scored once and laid on another as Stoke eased the pressure on boss Mark Hughes.
Striker: Sergio Aguero (Manchester City)
The Argentine scored two headed goals in the same game in one of Europe's top five leagues for the first time in his career, leading City boss Pep Guardiola to laud the striker.
Striker: Harry Kane (Tottenham)
Kane's hat-trick against Burnley drew him level with Alan Shearer with 36 Premier League goals in a calendar year. No player has ever scored more.