Farhad Moshiri

7+ Years On... Your Verdict On Farhad Moshiri

  • Pleased

    Votes: 110 7.8%
  • Disappointed

    Votes: 1,298 92.2%

  • Total voters
    1,408
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I'm just so excited to see the back of the 'old guard' too. This is a treble win for me; Martinez gone, his useless gang of backroom no-marks, and the door shown to liabilities such as Osman, Pienaar, Hibbert and Gibson.

Hopefully the new manager knows enough to want rid of Kone, Niasse, McGeady and Oviedo ASAP and is then given real funds to make his mark on the squad. Exciting times are coming!
 

What is Moshiri goals for our club?

-PL survival or the PL title
-Net spend of £20m or £100m
-Goodison Park or a new ground
-Global Brand or Selected markets
-World class business execution or mgt efficiency
etc

It,s time we found out.

I have a feeling he won't be doing much talking mate... Let his actions speak for him so to speak.

I might be wrong on that, but its the feeling am getting
 
What is Moshiri goals for our club?

-PL survival or the PL title
-Net spend of £20m or £100m
-Goodison Park or a new ground
-Global Brand or Selected markets
-World class business execution or mgt efficiency
etc

It,s time we found out.
We would like to find out, but I don't understand why it is time now or if there is a deadline.. Moshiri is working to his to his timetable.

I think a more interesting question at the moment is when Moshiri decided that Roberto Martinez was not going to be manager going forward.
Moshiri may well be a good poker player as he never gave any indication as to his feelings about the manager.

Regarding global markets or world class business execution , surely that is something that will happen organically if the club becomes more successful. It is not possible to simply flick a switch and suddenly we are in a different financial league.

The preparatory work for stadium and product development(Everton FC brand) will all be going on quietly in the background.
I think most changes will be incremental and it will only be after a few years when we look back that we will realise how much the club has changes.

The ground will be the exception , but at the moment we simply have no idea what the preferred about is about that.
 
We would like to find out, but I don't understand why it is time now or if there is a deadline.. Moshiri is working to his to his timetable.

I think a more interesting question at the moment is when Moshiri decided that Roberto Martinez was not going to be manager going forward.
Moshiri may well be a good poker player as he never gave any indication as to his feelings about the manager.

Regarding global markets or world class business execution , surely that is something that will happen organically if the club becomes more successful. It is not possible to simply flick a switch and suddenly we are in a different financial league.

The preparatory work for stadium and product development(Everton FC brand) will all be going on quietly in the background.
I think most changes will be incremental and it will only be after a few years when we look back that we will realise how much the club has changes.

The ground will be the exception , but at the moment we simply have no idea what the preferred about is about that.

You know lots of people laughed at his statement when he first joined, but it finished with "Everton winning football matches".

That in itself could have served warning for the future that if we aren't upto his standards then he will do what is necessary. Reading between the lines with what @The Esk has been saying, you would assume his has (or his board rep) taken more control without upping his stake and will be leading the charge from now on, with the formality of taking up the share options he has.

He is also form the sounds of it strengthening his position by bringing someone else onto the board.

I don't expect a Manifesto from him tbh, if he continues to do things efficiently quietly and pushing us on from "plucky everton" i will be happy.
 
You know lots of people laughed at his statement when he first joined, but it finished with "Everton winning football matches".

That in itself could have served warning for the future that if we aren't upto his standards then he will do what is necessary. Reading between the lines with what @The Esk has been saying, you would assume his has (or his board rep) taken more control without upping his stake and will be leading the charge from now on, with the formality of taking up the share options he has.

He is also form the sounds of it strengthening his position by bringing someone else onto the board.

I don't expect a Manifesto from him tbh, if he continues to do things efficiently quietly and pushing us on from "plucky everton" i will be happy.

agreed mate. As always imo actions will always speak louder than words.

I feel Martinez could and should have been binned a lot sooner and that was a mistake on his part, one where I think he rectified immediately after Sunderland when he probably trusted his own judgement and making the correct call to sack him, for Bobby's sake as much as our own as well.

I don't need him chatting bollocks in the press every other week, we've had that enough over the years with false promises.
 

he does come from the same part of the world as
What is Moshiri goals for our club?

-PL survival or the PL title
-Net spend of £20m or £100m
-Goodison Park or a new ground
-Global Brand or Selected markets
-World class business execution or mgt efficiency
etc

It,s time we found out.

You will find out.
 
Bit on him here from Dominic King: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...an-turns-dust-story-promised-sad-way-end.html

Making the decision on Martinez:
For that reason, Moshiri — who acquired a controlling 49.9 per cent stake in February — felt compelled to act. The initial idea was to let Martinez stagger through to the end of term and then make the change but, given how abject the displays at Leicester and Sunderland were, plans were changed.

The future:
It was a sad way to end a story that promised much. In many ways, the way Moshiri has acted may be the first sign that Everton — one of the bastions of English football — are heading away from their traditional past to an era where change is frequent.

What is clear, however, is that Moshiri is ambitious and he will give the new man — Ronald Koeman is favourite — a transfer kitty that has never been seen before at Goodison Park. Moshiri has come to this corner of Merseyside to win. And Martinez was not the man to give him what he wants.
 
I have a feeling he won't be doing much talking mate... Let his actions speak for him so to speak.

I might be wrong on that, but its the feeling am getting

Yes, I mean everyone remembers that time when Abramovich was hanging off Ken Bates's shoulder declaring 'What a Manager!'

The best and most ruthlessly ambitious owners of football clubs and businesses in general do not make gushing fools of themselves on tv.

'Where are you? Let's be avin' you' as relegated Delia would say.
 

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