JobForTheMoyes
Player Valuation: £50m
At least they can 73.2% of the time.Stats can be made to look however you want them to look.
At least they can 73.2% of the time.Stats can be made to look however you want them to look.
Moyes teams played some really good stuff towards the end of his first spell.“Manchester United first for goals from sequences of two or fewer passes with 40”.
Everton
In the previous seven seasons, Everton scored more than three goals from sequences of at least nine passes just once — six in 2020-21 under Carlo Ancelotti. They are on five in 2025-26, showcasing the kind of build-up play few associate with them or David Moyes.
Their opener in the 3-0 win over Chelsea in March will be remembered for Beto’s deft finish, but it was the result of a nine-pass move across 29 seconds from a Vitalii Mykolenko throw-in. Michael Keane, James Tarkowski, Jake O’Brien, Idrissa Gueye and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall were all involved before James Garner set up Beto.
Only Leeds (14) have generated fewer shots from sequences beginning in the defensive third and lasting five or fewer passes than Everton’s 17. Their charge for Europe is being helped by greater composure on the ball and a quality midfield.
How long do you expect the next manager to stay for? Young managers like Iraola and Glasner only seem to have around for 2/3 year anyway and would be off straight away if a better job came up. Moyes can give us at least two more season of stability/progression and hand over a strong squad to a younger successor. Martinez mark-II hopefully but better. But we need a stable base first. Changing now could set us back again.
SOCCERNOMICS
You are putting in far far too much work for a simple game of Football
Be sure to enlighten us with your findingsI didn’t write it just read the summaries of key findings.
I have ordered a copy off eBay though so will give it a go.
I think most would agree that he is not the future, but the agreement would also need some context on what you class as the future.
You say he has come in and done a good job. How long can he do a good job for? I don't personalty have a time frame in mind but I am content/happy with him staying for the next couple of years, if we are seeing improvements in the whole set up, while at least finishing 5th-7th in those years. Hopefully higher, but we have to consider that shooting for the moon very rarely comes off long term. There has to be a long term plan, and there is a possibility that Moyes for 2/3/4 years is that long term sustainable plan.
If you feel we need to go for a younger manager now, then fair enough. I am not saying that this will 100% fail, I just see the risks as greater than what they would be if we considered Moyes to be a factor in sustainable growth on and off the pitch over the next few years.
With the caveat that in Moyes first spell he consistently overachieved from a net spend/wages perspective so we know he can do it.Interestingly (to me anyway) if there is such a high correlation between the players wage bill & league position then I am now thinking that it doesn’t really matter who the manager is in terms of progressing consistently over a medium term.
It then comes down to increasing income to be able to pay more wages and then appointing a manager who can attract the players who are paid high wages
Some may do better or worse in individual seasons (eg Spurs at the moment) but over a medium term clubs positions will revert to their salary base.
This means it’s all about the money which I suppose we all know really & is rather depressing![]()
Fair enough, its the financial rules which have been in place over the last few years. Profit & Sustainability.
Those clubs with massive revenue streams like City, RS, chelsea, Spurs and Arsenal are allowed to sign the top players for big fees and pay them enormous wages
We dont have the same revenue so have not been allowed to spend as much.
The way around that is typically to:
1: Sign young players and develop them like Brighton or Bournemouth. E.g Garner and Branthwaite for us.
2: Sign undervalued players like Brentford. Like Ndiaye for us.
So, to your point if you remove signing young players then your only option is to find undervalued players.
Those clubs have sold to reinvest over and over again. If we had their success in both 1 & 2 above then we could have built low cost squads to compete at the top.
Hope that clears things up why posters (like me) want to see young players signed. Not to mention its nice to watch players develop as well of course.
This summer the rules change to 85% of revenue so as you can imagine we're still way behind the curve.
Not only raging, it will be "fake news" time.Davek will be raging!
Keep up the positivity BlueThese next 3 games will go along way to how fans think about how we progress or not under Moyes
Liverpool (not a good record against them)
West Ham (We should beat them, but will they want to stay in prem more than we want Europe?)
Man city (Europe now a distant memory)
Over to you Davey show us you have changed
Moyes teams played some really good stuff towards the end of his first spell.
These next 3 games will go along way to how fans think about how we progress or not under Moyes
Liverpool (not a good record against them)
West Ham (We should beat them, but will they want to stay in prem more than we want Europe?)
Man city (Europe now a distant memory)
Over to you Davey show us you have changed
With the caveat that in Moyes first spell he consistently overachieved from a net spend/wages perspective so we know he can do it.
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