Carlo Ancelotti: 'Deadwood, mismanagement & a total rebuild' - is this his biggest challenge?

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in that thread 'where did it all go wrong' I thought it's bill kenwright, and of course I admire his love for Everton, but I always always picture his glazed eyes face where it seems like he just goes into a blue - hazed funk and thinks ''oh Everton its going to be amazing' ...and this is what has happened time and again

Quote: The club has been mismanaged with the managers appointed. How did Marco Silva get the Everton job? Where on his CV in the Premier League did it say he was right for that job? He took Hull City down and faded at Watford after a good start.

I just feel like Kenwright thought ' yess I see a young Mourinho in him, he'll transform with us, a Moyes-Mourinho-Martinez hybrid' let's do it Farhad
By the way, it also counts for this - Rooney could have been a great idea, but with Klassen, Barkley, Sigurdsson as well?!
Who will take Sigurdsson, Fabian Delph, Cenk Tosun, Theo Walcott and even Alex Iwobi, signed for an eye-watering £34m from Arsenal on deadline day last summer?

It feels like it's a well written summary of this forum
 
I read this article this morning, seems like many people identify with it, I’m surprised, when I read it I thought it was stating the massive obvious and what we talk about here every day. Is it because it’s the BBC. Surprised it’s gotten such traction.
 
“a midfield that is arguably the worst in recent Everton history”

Somehow Carlo has to get some energy into our midfield. A couple of solid, honest performers on the cheap will do to start.
We've had some bad midfields, they might not have been the most gifted, but they tried?

This current midfield doesn't try, it gutless, there's no heart and this makes it the worst for me.
 
I read this article this morning, seems like many people identify with it, I’m surprised when I read it I thought it was stating the massive obvious and what we talk about here every day. Is it because it’s the BBC. Surprised it’s gotten such traction.

same, thought that this morning as well
 

I just hope Carlo really did do his due diligence and fully understood the job ahead before taking it.

If he did, then I have to take my hat (if I wore one) off to him for taking the job (huge salary aside).

If he's at home now with a glass of scotch in front of him and head in hands at thought of the task ahead, next season we might then suddenly be looking at the trapdoor beneath our feet and not the glass ceiling we once struggled with above our heads.
 
I don’t think we can be fixed. The club’s like a recovering crack head, it’s trying to sort itself out, but the damage is already done.

It will need a gargantuan, on field leader to change the malaise of the club.

The bold new era, and capture of an 'elite manager' in Koeman, began with him having a 2 week holiday before signing and then his first meaningful action, was to tell Lukaku he would waste his career if he stayed at Everton. I despise that oaf.

That poison, after the tedious end of Martinez has potentially killed the club. The club is closer to relegation and oblivion than the Champions League, and that is down to the disgraceful mismanagement from top to bottom.

The best players consistently leave, or threaten to. That has to change.
We have no on field leader. THAT has to change.
The players don't appear to care, laughing at mistakes and shrugging shoulders at terrible decisions. See the above point. THAT has to change.

The task ahead is massive. It needs a catalyst, or 3. Leaders, REAL leaders, who have a fighters mentality and will run through a brick wall and never know when they are beaten. I don't think we need an entire team overhaul, but just a few to string a side together, and start pulling in the right direction.

This Summer genuinely is the most imperative ever. The current side is capable of relegation. With no fans at Goodison and the appalling away record these clowns have, that could be a very real prospect.
 
Have to say, I thought in the context of recent events in Beirut it was either in very poor taste, or shows it was drafted several weeks ago and not amended.
To relate that I can only assume you live in Hebden Bridge.
 
You look at any of the top sides in this league and they're hardly blessed from 1 to 11 with great players. Carlo needs to build a good team where all the pieces fit and I agree with Ratters, that'll take 4 key areas to get right.
 

I thought this was worth it's own thread. A very decent read: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/53662458


Carlo Ancelotti arrived at Everton in December, the perfect answer to owner Farhad Moshiri's long-held ambition to have his own "Hollywood manager" in the north-west.

One of only three managers to win the European Cup/Champions League three times alongside Liverpool's Bob Paisley and Real Madrid's Zinedine Zidane, Ancelotti was taking on a different type of assignment after being sacked by Napoli.

Everton required major renewal whereas Ancelotti's previous speciality had been as a facilitator of world-class players, earning the label 'the diva whisperer' for his ability to soothe the ego while coaxing stellar performances from high-maintenance personalities.

His early coaching days were at Reggiana and Parma in Italy - but does Everton represent his hardest job?

Kevin Ratcliffe, Everton's most successful captain after leading them to two titles, the FA Cup and European Cup Winners' Cup in the mid-1980s, told BBC Sport: "Your first job in management is always your toughest because you are trying to make your mark and prove yourself but this might be his toughest since.

"In the past he has maybe plugged holes and had great players but Everton have got big, big holes and no great players. It is really a total rebuild."

Everton's season ended with dismal performances, especially away to Wolverhampton Wanderers and at home to Bournemouth, but Ancelotti's overall results offered some encouragement and ensured safety with a Premier League finish of 12th.

'Unfit for purpose' - what are Ancelotti's priorities?
Ancelotti's priorities were laid bare in a painful last few games, particularly in a midfield that is arguably the worst in recent Everton history, with Tom Davies and Andre Gomes struggling badly and Gylfi Sigurdsson flouting his billing as a £45m creative influence.

This key area needs a complete overhaul.

Everton's current midfield is unfit for purpose, lacking energy while offering little supply to strikers Richarlison and Dominic Calvert-Lewin and no protection for Ancelotti's defence.

Ratcliffe says: "When Everton played against teams that had more energy, they struggled.

"If I look at that midfield there is no legs. Where is the energy, the composure on the ball?"

Is Pickford now a serious problem?
England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, undisputed number one since his £30m move from Sunderland three seasons ago, had a dreadful campaign highlighted by a series of high-profile blunders.

In the past three seasons, he is top of the list for mistakes by Premier League keepers that have led to goals with 10, alongside Asmir Begovic. He had an outstanding first season on Merseyside but there is no doubt he has regressed to such an extent his England place is now up for debate.

Ratcliffe said: "Have a look at his competition. It's not very good.

"The people he trains with are not making him better. He should be improving. He needs more pressure on him.

"He has had Maarten Stekelenburg, Jonas Lossl and young Joao Virginia as his competition. I wouldn't want any of those reserve goalkeepers playing on a regular basis for Everton. It might sound harsh but standards must be high."

Ancelotti must solve years of mismanagement
Ancelotti agreed a four-and-a-half-year deal worth a reported £9m per annum. It will take much of that term to turn this dysfunctional Everton around.

Since majority shareholder Moshiri bought into Everton in February 2016, he has sacked Roberto Martinez, Ronald Koeman, Sam Allardyce and latterly Marco Silva.

Dutchman Marcel Brands is now working alongside Ancelotti as director of football.

This will be a key element of Everton's summer but will there have to be compromises in what Ancelotti has already called a "beautiful relationship"?

Brands looks to bring in younger players to develop, increasing in value. Will Ancelotti still want the more hardened professionals to toughen up this mentally fragile Everton?

The word from inside Everton is that Ancelotti is "totally aligned" with Brands and the board on how they will approach this transfer window.

Ratcliffe said: "Recruitment has let Everton down. They have spent over the odds and paid ridiculous wages for average players.

"The club has been mismanaged with the managers appointed. How did Marco Silva get the Everton job? Where on his CV in the Premier League did it say he was right for that job? He took Hull City down and faded at Watford after a good start.

"You look at Gylfi Sigurdsson being signed for £45m. He was signed as a number 10 and is then played on the left wing because Everton already had two number 10s in Wayne Rooney and Davy Klaassen. Where was the thinking there?"

Ancelotti and Brands now have a bloated squad where so much deadwood has been assembled some cynics have suggested the club's Finch Farm training HQ is in danger of being labelled a fire hazard.

Who will take Sigurdsson, Fabian Delph, Cenk Tosun, Theo Walcott and even Alex Iwobi, signed for an eye-watering £34m from Arsenal on deadline day last summer?

How long will Ancelotti's rebuild take?
Ancelotti, with his usual measured wisdom, has talked about "evolution" rather than revolution but there is still serious urgency required in this transfer window.

A long, tough road lies ahead.

He has been promised total support in the markets within the parameters of Financial Fair Play.

It is not, though, as simple as that.

"Everton have been spending money on players without having a top-class manager," says Ratcliffe.

"Ancelotti is a top-class manager but the biggest problem he has got is trying to recoup some of the money Everton have spent. This will take more than a year.

"He has to look right down the middle. They need an authoritative centre-back, a dominant midfield player, a striker and another wide man.

"It is also difficult to see where the leaders are when they are losing games."

And this is why, after years building a reputation as one of the most decorated coaches in the history of the game, Ancelotti now faces a different, herculean task.

....Ancelotti must solve years of mismanagement....

...How long will Ancelotti's rebuild take?...


The two key points are here above.
Mismanagement - this will continue, its ingrained.

Time; due to not being allowed to do a proper job. Ancelotti will walk in 18mths or so.
Oh they'll jazz it up as some other reason, but that will be it.

I hope I'm wrong, but based on past form that's broadly how I seen it going, if there's a way to 'k it up, they'll find it.

And for those who think...Moshiri has too much invested to bailout, think again...accountants, especially Billionaire Accountants have Nothing in their own name, it will, in some convoluted accounty wounty way, devolve onto the Club as Club Debt.
At best he could sell his shares for more than he paid.
At worst he'll sell it for a tenner

Disclaimer; None of this may happen, but with Everton you never can tell...and thats the problem.
 
Whether we like it or not, they've got a realistic model for transformation, albeit with more money and a better starting point.
What gets me each time though is that new managers instantly improve teams, in many cases, Lampard has just done it, so did Arteta, and that's why it makes you think sometimes Everton is kind of unmanageable or impossible. Silva was bad, but THAT bad? Forget Allardyce and Koeman but how is it that there's no sustained improvement in decent managers coming in?

When John Henry bought the RS I knew they would eventually win tthe league under him. Why? He does what works. He built his hedge fund on well established principles that anyone competent in the financial arena will understand (trend trading) and applied the same sort of principles to his baseball team and now at Anfield. Compare that with Kenwright who operates feom the hip and has no idea what he is doing.

If you want a manual for how to do suceed you can do far worse than study the techniques used by John Henry.
 
People saying we need a leader on the pitch... If the bozos that make up our playing squad won't even get their backsides in gear for a manager like Ancelotti, as we saw during the restart, then a fellow player would have no effect unless he was going round gripping people up against the walls in the changing room.
 
People saying we need a leader on the pitch... If the bozos that make up our playing squad won't even get their backsides in gear for a manager like Ancelotti, as we saw during the restart, then a fellow player would have no effect unless he was going round gripping people up against the changing room walls.
I can live with that...its tried and trusted - and works

Nobby Stiles told the tale of how, in the changies before the kick off of the World Cup Final, Ramsey's assistant, Harold Shepherdson - a big unit iirc, did exactly that to Nobby...'you're not going to let Alf down are you?' all Nobby could manage due to the hand round his throat and his feet barely touching the floor, was to shake his head.
 

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