Homepage Update: A New Years wish for Big Sam...

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AndyC

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A New Years wish for Big Sam...
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Written on the back of a number of conversations with my older brother, a lifelong Blue who longs for artistry as well as industry from Everton Football Club.

Sam Allardyce has done well in his still short time at Everton, remarkably well, you could even say he’s worked a miracle.

A team that had forgotten how to defend now does, and does it extremely well. Nothing flash, nothing fancy and sometimes ruggedly, they simply defend and protect a young goalie who’s rapidly regaining the form we expected of and hoped from him.

This was exactly what was expected of him, this is his trademark, we pretty well knew he’d pass this test, although maybe not quite so quickly.

The real and acid test for Sam Allardyce is... can he get Everton to play and play as Evertonians want Everton to play?

The solid base is now there, what Evertonians now want to see is their team leave the dressing room, take the field and play the opposition off the park and play with a swagger, a style, the School of Science swagger and style.



Right now, there are but a handful of teams truly going out there with that ethos to their game… Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal, Spurs, (whispers it) Liverpool, and to a lesser but nobler, more honourable extent given their lack of financial clout, lowly Bournemouth. These teams play with a conviction, a belief, they express themselves.

Not since his time at Bolton has Sam Allardyce had or even been offered the chance to play ‘expressive’ football. His forte for defensive solidity, grinding out results and escaping relegation are what’s kept him top of the ‘never likely to be out of work for too long’ listing as there’s always someone desperate for those qualities and often not too much more.

I posted a comment on the Grand Old Team forum a few days ago to the effect that maybe, just maybe the immediate impact of Sam Allardyce upon Everton has taken everybody, including Sam, totally by surprise, such is the startling change in fortunes.

Seven unbeaten games and only two goals conceded is quite staggering given what had gone on before he appeared at Goodison for the West Ham game. And even the most anti-Sam Evertonians are surely grateful for the effect he’s had? Perhaps we should be sufficiently grateful to afford him the time to re-discover the qualities that saw him take Bolton into Europe all those years ago.

A great deal now depends upon his right hand men Sammy Lee and Craig Shakespeare, and perhaps even moreso Steve Walsh to provide the absolute best in encouragement, support and signings to enable Sam to work as staggeringly effectively with the midfield and forwards as he has the defence.

It’s also not stretching things too far to suggest this current Everton squad is the best he’s ever had to work with, and given the turn around in Everton’s financial position, the budget he may have available from Monday onwards would suggest any strengthening is hardly likely to be bargain basement shopping.



Watch and listen to Sam Allardyce in his press conferences and you see and hear a manager who talks well, talks sensibly, patently understands the challenge that he now faces and who rarely gets flustered.

I’ll be perfectly honest, I really want Sam Allardyce to take up this challenge and succeed. Of course there are doubts and doubters that he can and will, but this is the best opportunity he’s ever had since leaving Bolton and he’s not stupid, he knows this too.

We will need to be patient, it can’t happen overnight, certainly not in the manner of his defensive miracle. The platform his first few weeks has given us should be such that he can and more importantly must want to change the ethos from defensive satisfaction to that of offensive expression.

Being fans is a very personal thing - but that's what my brother and I would like to see from Everton, and begging his pardon and experience and expertise this is what we wish Sam Allardyce to make his New Year resolution for 2018 - the discovery of the joy of offensive expression.

https://andycostigan.wordpress.com/2017/12/28/the-joy-of-offensive-expression/
 
First

And I am happy with Sam so far but no excuses once the "Window SLAMS shut" other than to play football
 

I actually feel very comfortable with a team who, if needed, can shut down a game and grind it out. But I agree, to kick on we need to be able to dictate a game.

Is Allardyce the man to contour a team who can mix these two qualities? The jury is out.
 
Sam Allardyce has done well in his still short time at Everton, remarkably well, you could even say he’s worked a miracle.
I agree he's done well Andy, but the only hint of a miracle I've seen was in the derby. Now that was an achievement and the reaction of Klopp in the aftermath was classic TV, and also classic Allardyce. He showed the arrogance and conceitedness that made me hate him over the years, but this time he was doing it for us and it was brilliant.

Apart from the managers own man management and organisational skills, in my opinion you can point to 3 areas that aided and abetted his excellent start. Firstly, by hook or crook, Unsworth stumbled across a system that worked in the game against West Ham. Allardyce had the good sense to run with virtually the same set up for his first 6 games. Secondly, apart from the Liverpool and Chelsea games, our opponents have all been struggling themselves so he couldn't really have asked for a kinder fixture list. And thirdly (and one can only hope this continues) he's lucky. Or rather, since his appointment, Everton have rode our luck, in practically every match.

Now I'm the first to admit that I didn't want him here. But I want Everton to succeed so, by association, I also want Allardyce to succeed. To be deemed a success though he does, as you point out, need to get Everton playing a more attractive style; at least in some of the games against the so called lesser teams. Which is why I feel he missed a big opportunity against Albion on boxing day, a team bereft of confidence and goal threat and without a win in 4 months.

Hopefully, some of our injured players will return soon and be as effective as they were before their injuries. Hopefully, he will also be able to bolster our squad in key areas such as attack and left back in January. The return of Coleman and Bolasie alone would greatly enhance our counter attacking capabilities.

So far, I would say that Sam Allardyce has done a good job, rather than a great job. I've actually agreed with the majority of what he's said in his pressers and TV interviews, and he's kept faith with the younger players a lot more than I expected. If he can get us playing some good offensive togger whilst keeping us relatively secure at the back, and get us up to 7th in the league by the season end, then I'd say he's earned the right to see out his contract and be given a proper go at the transfer window in the summer.
 
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