2025/26 David Moyes

Also, Rohl is the most interesting example out of the signings made as initially Moyes seemed to be very happy with him. Unusual for him to big up a new player in press conferences multiple times. Now he's been frozen out, after his best performance.

Loads of different reasons as to why that might be, but as part of the bigger picture it looks odd imo.
Honestly, i think Moyes has a huge ego and and is very easily pissed off...probably trying to emulate SAF...only reason I can see a couple of players Adznou( sorry its been so long since hes been seen, Ive forgotten his name), and Rohl, have good performances and then completely disappear. Somebody is showing them " Im the boss".
 
Boyland mixes with the Everton staff & is paid to report on Everton so it’s interesting to hear his thoughts. He clearly doesn’t see it the way you do.
You can put more concentration on youth signings, but with that you have to keep a good base of experience.

It's never just one or the other..
 
You can put more concentration on youth signings, but with that you have to keep a good base of experience.

It's never just one or the other..
I think the point is that this manager will not develop youth so if you want to go down that road you need a different manager. Ancelott is the same, he wants established players that he can mould into a team.
 
When you see how he rates KDH and Grealish and how hesitant he is to play the other signings it raises big red flags about that summer window business everyone wants to lay at Moyes' feet.

I just don't see him wanting the likes of Barry, Dibling, Rohl, or Aznou but that's what he was given and it's apparent from how he picks his team.
You consistently struggle to comprehend that only 11 players can be on the pitch on the same time, where would Rohl play? Gana and Garner who he is clearly is comfortable with , play in the middle and kdh plays in the ten role. Moyes doesn't pull his preferred players out until the final minutes if they get subbed at all. He clearly brought them in for the future and AFCON. You constantly tried the line that Moyes didn't bring in those players with absolutely no proof just because you have a bias against those players especially Barry , so can't fathom why moyes would sanction such moves . It's futile to even mention how involved Moyes is regarding the transfer process because you opt not to believe regardless of the points made. It just becomes groundhog day on here
 
You consistently struggle to comprehend that only 11 players can be on the pitch on the same time, where would Rohl play? Gana and Garner who he is clearly is comfortable with , play in the middle and kdh plays in the ten role. Moyes doesn't pull his preferred players out until the final minutes if they get subbed at all. He clearly brought them in for the future and AFCON. You constantly tried the line that Moyes didn't bring in those players with absolutely no proof just because you have a bias against those players especially Barry , so can't fathom why moyes would sanction such moves . It's futile to even mention how involved Moyes is regarding the transfer process because you opt not to believe regardless of the points made. It just becomes groundhog day on here

Where would Rohl play? If he was good enough in any of the position he plays, maybe one of them. Play him at right back ahead of the central defender Moyes has favoured there instead? Or if he can't earn a starting spot then why did we bother signing him?

You're speculating as much as I am but you're acting as if you have the facts when you don't. You have no idea how involved Moyes was in their recruitment beyond him saying he has a final say. That line has been interpreted as him hand picking these players that he somehow refuses to play.

The obstinate amongst you want to believe it's because it's just typical Moyes only playing his favourites every week instead of the far more likely explanation of they're not actually better than the players the manager is choosing instead.
 
Where would Rohl play? If he was good enough in any of the position he plays, maybe one of them. Play him at right back ahead of the central defender Moyes has favoured there instead? Or if he can't earn a starting spot then why did we bother signing him?

You're speculating as much as I am but you're acting as if you have the facts when you don't. You have no idea how involved Moyes was in their recruitment beyond him saying he has a final say. That line has been interpreted as him hand picking these players that he somehow refuses to play.

The obstinate amongst you want to believe it's because it's just typical Moyes only playing his favourites every week instead of the far more likely explanation of they're not actually better than the players the manager is choosing instead.
Rohl had his best game against Villa! Then disappeared after Gana returned I've mentioned that even at West ham , Moyes rarely rotated or made subs and I'm not even knocking him by stating that , it's just a feature of his management, he doesn't like utilizing a substantial squad and he prefers to utilize the starting lineup for the majority of the game unless developments on the pitch scream for a change.
 
Rohl had his best game against Villa! Then disappeared after Gana returned I've mentioned that even at West ham , Moyes rarely rotated or made subs and I'm not even knocking him by stating that , it's just a feature of his management, he doesn't like utilizing a substantial squad and he prefers to utilize the starting lineup for the majority of the game unless developments on the pitch scream for a change.
He's had one good game in his Everton career. He had cameos where he looked useless also.

Moyes sees him every day. I trust Moyes has a better reason for not playing him rather than simply playing favourites.
 
He's had one good game in his Everton career. He had cameos where he looked useless also.

Moyes sees him every day. I trust Moyes has a better reason for not playing him rather than simply playing favourites.
That's the thing with him. When he first came in he looked great in cameos, then other games he looked shocking. Clearly he has something, but he also needs to develop and adapt to the league.
 
Interesting perspective from Sporting Life's website:

David Moyes must be in the Premier League's Manager of the Season conversation​


By Ryan Baldi
Football
Wed March 11, 2026 · 2h ago

There is something deeply on-brand about the fact that the job David Moyes is doing at Everton this season has largely slipped beneath the noise.

If the Premier League awards were decided by volume alone, the Scot would barely register. There are shinier stories elsewhere: title races, tactical revolutions, wunderkind coaches and teams with goal tallies that look like telephone numbers.

Yet quietly, methodically and with a very Moyesian refusal to panic, Everton have drifted into the edge of the European conversation.

And it is starting to feel like the sort of achievement that deserves rather more acknowledgement in the Manager of the Season debate than it currently receives.
https://ads.skybet.com/redirect.aspx?pid=17678472&lpid=16&bid=1487
Context matters. It always does with Moyes.

When the campaign began, Everton were not widely tipped to spend March glancing upwards at the continental places. A solid mid-table season would have been considered respectable; a scrap in the lower half would hardly have surprised anyone.

After all, this was a club that finished 13th the previous season and was still adjusting to new ownership and a new stadium environment.

Yet here we are in early March with Everton sitting eighth in the Premier League table and still within touching distance of the European spots. Their recent 2-0 win over Burnley left them just five points behind sixth place, the sort of proximity that turns an outside hope into a plausible objective.

The immediate temptation is to search for the obvious explanation – a prolific striker, a tactical revolution, a burst of financial muscle. Everton have none of those things.

In fact, their campaign has been defined by the opposite.
David Moyes

David Moyes' Everton are eyeing up the European spots
Start with the attack. Everton’s joint top league scorers have just six goals each this season. That is not a typo and it is not the statistical profile of a side charging toward Europe.

In most Premier League seasons, clubs in the top eight can rely on a forward approaching 15 goals by this stage. Brentford, led by the 18-goal Igor Thiago and who sit one point above Everton, are a prime example of that.

Moyes, by contrast, has had to construct an entire season around the absence of a reliable goal machine.

The result has been a team that spreads responsibility across the pitch. Goals come from midfield runs, set pieces, second balls, the occasional moment of improvisation. Centre-backs chip in. Midfielders arrive late. Forwards share the burden without dominating it.

It is messy, occasionally frustrating and undeniably effective enough.
Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in action for Everton

Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in action for Everton
Then there is the matter of injuries.

Everton’s most glamorous attacking outlet this season was the loan arrival of Jack Grealish, whose early performances hinted at a renaissance. He quickly became a creative hub in Moyes’ system, contributing goals and assists while drifting across the attacking line.

That story ended abruptly when Grealish suffered a foot injury requiring surgery that ruled him out for the remainder of the campaign.

For many sides, losing their primary creative spark halfway through the season would trigger a slide down the table. For Everton it has instead prompted a recalibration.

If anything, Moyes has doubled down on the sort of pragmatic adaptability that defined his first spell at the club.
everton

'Everton remain extremely difficult to beat'
It helps, of course, that Everton remain extremely difficult to beat. Moyes’ team concede barely more than a goal per game while scoring just 1.17 themselves, numbers that reflect a side built on organisation rather than spectacle.

Clean sheets and narrow wins have become their currency.

Everton rarely overwhelm opponents with attacking fireworks. Instead they squeeze games until opportunities appear, trusting discipline and defensive solidity to keep them alive long enough for the moment that decides the result.

That approach has delivered some quietly impressive outcomes. The 1-0 win away to Aston Villa in January was a classic example: controlled, stubborn and ruthlessly efficient.

Victories like that do not dominate highlight packages, but they are precisely how unfancied teams drift toward European contention.
Thierno Barry scores for Everton against Aston Villa

Thierno Barry scores for Everton against Aston Villa
There is also the subtle improvement compared to last season. Everton have collected more points from the same fixtures than they managed a year ago, one of the more notable turnarounds in the division.

It is the kind of incremental progress that tends to be overlooked in a league addicted to instant transformation.

And perhaps that is the key point about Moyes. His work rarely arrives with fanfare. It accumulates.

Week by week Everton have nudged themselves into a position that looked improbable in August. The squad is not packed with superstars, the goals are shared rather than concentrated, and the season has already absorbed a significant injury blow. Yet the team remain organised, competitive and stubbornly difficult to dislodge.

In many ways it feels like a throwback to the Everton Moyes built during his first tenure at the club. Those sides rarely captured the imagination of neutrals either. But they finished high in the table with alarming regularity, powered by a collective understanding of roles and responsibilities.
David Moyes

David Moyes should be in the Manager of the Season conversation
The modern Premier League tends to reward spectacle when it comes to individual accolades. Managers who reinvent systems or unleash high-scoring attacks naturally dominate the conversation.

Yet there is another form of managerial excellence: extracting the maximum from a squad that appears to lack obvious advantages.

That is precisely what Moyes is doing.

Everton may or may not reach Europe by May. The margin between eighth and sixth remains thin and the run-in will test their depth. But the mere fact that the question exists is itself the achievement.

For a club that began the season with modest expectations, coping with injuries and operating without a prolific scorer, the possibility of European football represents remarkable progress. It is the product of consistency, clarity and the sort of understated competence that rarely trends on social media.

Which is exactly why Moyes deserves his place in the Manager of the Season conversation.

Quietly, stubbornly, and very much in his own way, he has earned it.
 
Interesting perspective from Sporting Life's website:

David Moyes must be in the Premier League's Manager of the Season conversation​


By Ryan Baldi
Football
Wed March 11, 2026 · 2h ago

There is something deeply on-brand about the fact that the job David Moyes is doing at Everton this season has largely slipped beneath the noise.

If the Premier League awards were decided by volume alone, the Scot would barely register. There are shinier stories elsewhere: title races, tactical revolutions, wunderkind coaches and teams with goal tallies that look like telephone numbers.

Yet quietly, methodically and with a very Moyesian refusal to panic, Everton have drifted into the edge of the European conversation.

And it is starting to feel like the sort of achievement that deserves rather more acknowledgement in the Manager of the Season debate than it currently receives.
https://ads.skybet.com/redirect.aspx?pid=17678472&lpid=16&bid=1487
Context matters. It always does with Moyes.

When the campaign began, Everton were not widely tipped to spend March glancing upwards at the continental places. A solid mid-table season would have been considered respectable; a scrap in the lower half would hardly have surprised anyone.

After all, this was a club that finished 13th the previous season and was still adjusting to new ownership and a new stadium environment.

Yet here we are in early March with Everton sitting eighth in the Premier League table and still within touching distance of the European spots. Their recent 2-0 win over Burnley left them just five points behind sixth place, the sort of proximity that turns an outside hope into a plausible objective.

The immediate temptation is to search for the obvious explanation – a prolific striker, a tactical revolution, a burst of financial muscle. Everton have none of those things.

In fact, their campaign has been defined by the opposite.
David Moyes

David Moyes' Everton are eyeing up the European spots
Start with the attack. Everton’s joint top league scorers have just six goals each this season. That is not a typo and it is not the statistical profile of a side charging toward Europe.

In most Premier League seasons, clubs in the top eight can rely on a forward approaching 15 goals by this stage. Brentford, led by the 18-goal Igor Thiago and who sit one point above Everton, are a prime example of that.

Moyes, by contrast, has had to construct an entire season around the absence of a reliable goal machine.

The result has been a team that spreads responsibility across the pitch. Goals come from midfield runs, set pieces, second balls, the occasional moment of improvisation. Centre-backs chip in. Midfielders arrive late. Forwards share the burden without dominating it.

It is messy, occasionally frustrating and undeniably effective enough.
Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in action for Everton

Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in action for Everton
Then there is the matter of injuries.

Everton’s most glamorous attacking outlet this season was the loan arrival of Jack Grealish, whose early performances hinted at a renaissance. He quickly became a creative hub in Moyes’ system, contributing goals and assists while drifting across the attacking line.

That story ended abruptly when Grealish suffered a foot injury requiring surgery that ruled him out for the remainder of the campaign.

For many sides, losing their primary creative spark halfway through the season would trigger a slide down the table. For Everton it has instead prompted a recalibration.

If anything, Moyes has doubled down on the sort of pragmatic adaptability that defined his first spell at the club.
everton

'Everton remain extremely difficult to beat'
It helps, of course, that Everton remain extremely difficult to beat. Moyes’ team concede barely more than a goal per game while scoring just 1.17 themselves, numbers that reflect a side built on organisation rather than spectacle.

Clean sheets and narrow wins have become their currency.

Everton rarely overwhelm opponents with attacking fireworks. Instead they squeeze games until opportunities appear, trusting discipline and defensive solidity to keep them alive long enough for the moment that decides the result.

That approach has delivered some quietly impressive outcomes. The 1-0 win away to Aston Villa in January was a classic example: controlled, stubborn and ruthlessly efficient.

Victories like that do not dominate highlight packages, but they are precisely how unfancied teams drift toward European contention.
Thierno Barry scores for Everton against Aston Villa

Thierno Barry scores for Everton against Aston Villa
There is also the subtle improvement compared to last season. Everton have collected more points from the same fixtures than they managed a year ago, one of the more notable turnarounds in the division.

It is the kind of incremental progress that tends to be overlooked in a league addicted to instant transformation.

And perhaps that is the key point about Moyes. His work rarely arrives with fanfare. It accumulates.

Week by week Everton have nudged themselves into a position that looked improbable in August. The squad is not packed with superstars, the goals are shared rather than concentrated, and the season has already absorbed a significant injury blow. Yet the team remain organised, competitive and stubbornly difficult to dislodge.

In many ways it feels like a throwback to the Everton Moyes built during his first tenure at the club. Those sides rarely captured the imagination of neutrals either. But they finished high in the table with alarming regularity, powered by a collective understanding of roles and responsibilities.
David Moyes

David Moyes should be in the Manager of the Season conversation
The modern Premier League tends to reward spectacle when it comes to individual accolades. Managers who reinvent systems or unleash high-scoring attacks naturally dominate the conversation.

Yet there is another form of managerial excellence: extracting the maximum from a squad that appears to lack obvious advantages.

That is precisely what Moyes is doing.

Everton may or may not reach Europe by May. The margin between eighth and sixth remains thin and the run-in will test their depth. But the mere fact that the question exists is itself the achievement.

For a club that began the season with modest expectations, coping with injuries and operating without a prolific scorer, the possibility of European football represents remarkable progress. It is the product of consistency, clarity and the sort of understated competence that rarely trends on social media.

Which is exactly why Moyes deserves his place in the Manager of the Season conversation.

Quietly, stubbornly, and very much in his own way, he has earned it.
Oh some people are not going to like that headline
 
That's the thing with him. When he first came in he looked great in cameos, then other games he looked shocking. Clearly he has something, but he also needs to develop and adapt to the league.
Pretty difficult to acclimate to the league when exiled on the bench or does he have to get accustomed to premier league benches before he can regularly be on the pitch?
 

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