2024/25 Sean Dyche - Sacked

Status
Not open for further replies.
I was in favour of sacking Sean Dyche, I thought his limited ambition and his slavish adherence to a system irrespective of the ability or inclination of the players to play in that way was always going to cause us real relegation problems. I do recognise and credit him for last season, there is no doubt that he worked wonders for us given the points deduction etc. However this season his system wasn’t working and he didn’t have the vision to change it.
 

Saved the club for two seasons when there was no one else at the club...including a board or owners.

But no, let's not say anything good about him.

Im not gona keep rattling on about him now. But just to say there is an argument the first season staying up with 45 minutes left he could have got that done a few games before. I praised him for last season. He's undone some of that this season though. Awful tactics. Awful approach. Awful arrogant pre and post match interviews where he put the blame on everyone but himself.
Thank God the new owners saw sense and kicked him out early enough to give us a chance. Burnley left him to do to much damage in 2022 before sacking him. He got them relegated. Thankfully the new owners never let him do that here.
 
Was looking through the Leicester forum last night and thought to myself, what a critical moment it was for us as a club staying up in 22/23 and them going down.

They went from a club who won the 2/3 big domestic trophies in the last decade and competing in the CL/Europe, to one who had to sell all its best players, reduce its scope of achieved growth and essentially become a championship level club, consequently becoming now a yoyo club trying to break the glass ceiling to become a PL club again and that's not looking good.

Ill never not be grateful to Sean Dyche. ;)
 

Was looking through the Leicester forum last night and thought to myself, what a critical moment it was for us as a club staying up in 22/23 and them going down.

They went from a club who won the 2/3 big domestic trophies in the last decade and competing in the CL/Europe, to one who had to sell all its best players, reduce its scope of achieved growth and essentially become a championship level club, consequently becoming now a yoyo club trying to break the glass ceiling to become a PL club again and that's not looking good.

Ill never not be grateful to Sean Dyche. ;)
I see where people come from when they appreciate Dyche for keeping us up and I don't disagree, however I do think a lot of managers could have done the same job last year when Luton finished on a total of 26 points.
 
I see where people come from when they appreciate Dyche for keeping us up and I don't disagree, however I do think a lot of managers could have done the same job last year when Luton finished on a total of 26 points.

Its called and unknown, known mate.

What's a known, known, is he did with a - 8, having to manage that skip fire and level of uncertainty going through that PL procedure all season, with severe limits.

Again will never not be grateful. ;)
 
Last edited:

Wish he'd been able to leave after Bournemouth, would be looked at much differently now.

I think it all took at a toll on him the proceeding couple of years, more then he, we or club realised, i think he simply ran out of capacity if im being honest. When the writing was on the wall over his contract after the takeover, i think that was again another mental blow - very hard to stay motivated and not feel a sense of injustice with all that had gone on before.

Ultimately and i said it at the time, when it became clear we were talking to Potters camp, his position became untenable - i think at that point he went to the board and wanted to part ways. I don't think you can manage with authority in those circumstances, he knew it and he had to go.

Still will never not be grateful to him. ;)
 
I think it all took at a toll on him the proceeding couple of years, more then he, we or club realised, i think he simply ran out of capacity if im being honest. When the writing was on the wall over his contract after the takeover, i think that was again another mental blow - very hard to stay motivated and not feel a sense of injustice with all that had gone on before.

Ultimately and i said it at the time, when it became clear we were talking to Potters camp, his position became untenable - i think at that point he went to the board and wanted to part ways. I don't think you can manage with authority in those circumstances, he knew it and he had to go.

Still will never not be grateful to him. ;)
An injustice for what, he should really have been sacked a couple times during his tenure here, only saved by absent owners.
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Welcome

Join Grand Old Team to get involved in the Everton discussion. Signing up is quick, easy, and completely free.

Shop

Back
Top