No it's fine the big game is the one you lose, I get it.
As the Op says we tend to lose the games we lose. It's undeniable.
No, for crying out loud's sake.. It's not.
What some of us are trying to say - and not trying to propel some anti-Moyes statistics or agenda - is that some matches taken on added importance/significance. This usually happens when we're at the business end of a campaign (be it league or cup). It can be those going for the title, or those embroiled in a relegation scrap, or those in the last 4 of a cup. "Pressure cooker", "squeeky bum time" etc. Those kinds of games. I guarantee such soundbites will be used in the next few weekends as clubs battle for glory or doom.
It basically means that Sunderland away for us was an important game, as we needed a result to keep pace and keep in the hunt. Lose, and it's pretty much all over. PRESSURE. If we get the result, then the following game takes on even more significance as we edge ever closer to the final reckoning. Therefore increasing the pressure. Hence, Fulham at home would have been more important in our season than Sunderland away the previous time out.
It doesn't mean that Sunderland away, maybe on the opening day of next season, is going to be equally as important as this season's trip. it'd be a different scenario. Similarly, Saturday's match against Sunderland (can't remember their position at start of play) was more important than a visit to another side in the same league position earlier in the season (eg if Norwich were in the same league spot when we visited them).
Teams will of course win matches over a season. They'll also lose them (unless they're Arsenal in that famous year). Hey, I reckon they'll even draw some, too. The overall record of victories/defeats of course gets you into a position where you either have something to go for, or has put you right in the quicksand as you approach the final half a dozen games. And this is where the pressure hits and marks out the true winners, or those perennial bottlers. Think of your Fergies here; he's a master at this time of year. He seems to get them going when it matters the most. Same for those managers who seem to perform Houdini-like miracles in getting a team out of the relegation mire when all hope seemed to have gone.
When the pressure has been on us, Moyes hasn't ever really delivered. In this sense, it means the business end of things. Not 3rd round cup ties; but semis/final. Not away trips in the Autumn to mid-table sides, but trips in April to mid-table sides. There is a mammoth gulf between the former and latter in both those examples. Moyes - like Fergie and the Houdini masters - will win, lose and draw x amount of matches over the course of a campaign, and quite often his record is better than most.
But the one common denominator with Moyes is his total lack of ability to send a side out when the pressure it at it's greatest - when we're on the verge of something, at the business end of the league or cup campaign - to get a result. We ALWAYS fluff our lines on those occasions.








