For the money Kone is rumoured to be costing I'd sooner see Everton bring in Darren Bent. He's the same age and is a much more consistent finisher.
Kone would have been great under Moyes, but I'd hoped the plan for next season would be to get the striker on the end of chances rather than have him focus on creating space for midfield runners. It could still work out well though; he was very good at Levante and decent enough at Wigan.
Generally 4-4-1-1, but played a lot of 4-2-3-1 and a bit of 4-4-2. I read here all the time that Moyes is so tactically stubborn, and it really couldn't be further from the truth.
You're wrong I'm afraid. Moyes played 4-4-1-1, it was basically 2 banks of 4 with Fellaini and Jelavic expected to do everything. Martinez played with 3 genuine attackers for much of last season and when he played 4-5-1, it was 4-2-3-1 which is the way so many teams play these days. The 3 behind the striker should be attacking players, not Phil Neville x 3
You're wrong I'm afraid. Moyes played 4-4-1-1, it was basically 2 banks of 4 with Fellaini and Jelavic expected to do everything. Martinez played with 3 genuine attackers for much of last season and when he played 4-5-1, it was 4-2-3-1 which is the way so many teams play these days. The 3 behind the striker should be attacking players, not Phil Neville x 3
I think Whelan has become our new communications officer
Expect Bill to come out with a soppy story of how Kone has 'been touched' by Everton and how he'gets us' next week.
C'mon Kone ed slot it boss for us.
Generally 4-4-1-1, but played a lot of 4-2-3-1 and a bit of 4-4-2. I read here all the time that Moyes is so tactically stubborn, and it really couldn't be further from the truth.
We've played hte same system away from home for hte past 10 years, Moyes' away record is absolutely dreadful, that is being stubborn and not changing/adapting to the circumstances. Refuses to change a system until 70-80mins in a game in order to rescue a point, or scoring a goal and doing his usual sit back and hope for a clena sheet. In 04-05 we could that, we had hte players, the work rate to do so, now sitting on a lead doesn't work, hence the dropped points against Norwich (4), Fulham (2), Spurs(2), Newcastle (2). Unless we are behind, Moyes has never told his team to have a real go for the win when the score was 1-1, 2-2 or whatever. It's stubborn, he didnt realise that at 1-0, attacking a team can be better than sitting back and trying to hold out.
I am not totally against this signing although it is a bit like going back to the years of Walter Smith. At the end of the day, I do feel we need more options up front other than the misfired Jelavic and the ineffective Anichebe. However, no matter the transfer fee is £5m or £6.5m, this deal is totally against the blueprint of our survival policy (and business sense) for the last 11 years, which is to buy potential younger players and selling them while their stocks are high. Of course no one knows exactly how much transfer fee we have this season but our past records indicate that we spend an average of £3m net per season. Hence, normally £5m exceed our transfer net spend which represent a huge sum given the budget of this club.
Some posters use Distin as the counter argument. I do not think Distin is a good example to justify the fee in this deal because defenders tend to go from strength to strength after 30 (Weir, Stubbs and Distin were prime examples) while strikers tend to go downhill after 30 especially they will lose pace gradually. When Lescott was sold for £22m resulting a £17m profit, Moyes had about a day to find a ready made stop gap CB so he went for Distin despite he was 31. In our current situation, Martinez has more than 2 months to look for reinforcement on striker and now he acts quickly to purchase Kone. The conclusion is that Martinez may deem Kone is so good to do a job at Everton that he cannot think of anyone for the consideration of £5m. We need to respect his decision and judge after Kone is given chances to show what he can do.
The jury is still out as to whether this transfer is a good one given the transfer fee and the age of Kone. There are always pros and cons. Kone strikes me as a journeyman but looking at his past records, his strike rate was actually decent aside from his Sevilla years. Let's hope Kone will not suffer a PL second season hangover and goes on to do well for Everton.
Spot on mate.
Kone on 6.5M is far from cheap and unless he can produce the goods of Baines and Fellaini combined it does not make much business sense. As I said Martinez's recruitment is his weak point (and shows attention to stats alone cannot replace scout talent).
Yet this "attacking style" yielded 8 fewer goals than Everton scored and resulted in 33 more conceded.
I'm all for supporting the new manager but lets not pretend Wigan under Martinez were anywhere near the level Moyes got Everton playing at, other than the one cup game.
I am not totally against this signing although it is a bit like going back to the years of Walter Smith. At the end of the day, I do feel we need more options up front other than the misfired Jelavic and the ineffective Anichebe. However, no matter the transfer fee is £5m or £6.5m, this deal is totally against the blueprint of our survival policy (and business sense) for the last 11 years, which is to buy potential younger players and selling them while their stocks are high. Of course no one knows exactly how much transfer fee we have this season but our past records indicate that we spend an average of £3m net per season. Hence, normally £5m exceed our transfer net spend which represent a huge sum given the budget of this club.
Some posters use Distin as the counter argument. I do not think Distin is a good example to justify the fee in this deal because defenders tend to go from strength to strength after 30 (Weir, Stubbs and Distin were prime examples) while strikers tend to go downhill after 30 especially they will lose pace gradually. When Lescott was sold for £22m resulting a £17m profit, Moyes had about a day to find a ready made stop gap CB so he went for Distin despite he was 31. In our current situation, Martinez has more than 2 months to look for reinforcement on striker and now he acts quickly to purchase Kone. The conclusion is that Martinez may deem Kone is so good to do a job at Everton that he cannot think of anyone for the consideration of £5m. We need to respect his decision and judge after Kone is given chances to show what he can do.
The jury is still out as to whether this transfer is a good one given the transfer fee and the age of Kone. There are always pros and cons. Kone strikes me as a journeyman but looking at his past records, his strike rate was actually decent aside from his Sevilla years. Let's hope Kone will not suffer a PL second season hangover and goes on to do well for Everton.
Wasn't Jelavic meant to be around the £5m mark, or perhaps even more? Perhaps this £5m isn't all up front like it wasn't in that deal. Having thought about it a little more, the worrying over the price is a bit premature.
To use the Jelavic example again, that deal was funded by the sale of Bily. This deal isn't funded by any outgoings at all, as far as we know. So already there's less risk there. Add to that the fact that Jelavic hadn't been proven in the premier league, whereas Kone has and in an uber gash team. Also, Jelavic had an utter car crash of a season last year and we still went up a league placing and that price tag has been long forgotten. We'll be alright, like.