How, it wasn't a cup game..dyche would have won that on Sunday
How, it wasn't a cup game..dyche would have won that on Sunday
No, you have a blend. The massive clubs will come in for the best players, which is where you get a few massive fees. The very good guys who are maybe not quite this level form the backbone of the group. You then have younger players who graduate into the first team.
Moyes had no strategy at Sunderland - he was there for just a season and had very little input into signings and none of his own coaching staff.
Basically we will have the handful of top players who will leave for massive fees to the biggest clubs. Then we’ll have the very good players who form the backbone of the team and spend most of their prime years here. Then we’ll have the younger players who come up and refresh the group.
Moyes was never a guy who went out and signed older players as a rule, outside of a few pragmatic acquisitions.
Players like Fellaini, Baines, Arteta and Coleman were all young when they signed.
What people seem to want is for loads of signings around the 21-year-old range and I just don’t think it’s practical
Add another number on, no one will notice.A gaffer who runs a 37-year-old into the ground for 111 minutes in a Derby is hardly the man to build a project for the future, is he?
Spot onEverton needs to be a club that wins trophies, plays in the champions league, wins derbies, and wins big games against big opposition. Couldn’t care less about the age profile of the team.
Moyes does not understand this unfortunately. He’s very good at moving a team from the bottom of the table to pushing for Europe, he’s not very good at getting over the line in any meaningful way.
That's very misleading as one manager has had the best part of 55-60% of that 25 years in charge, others had miniscule time in comparison. Equally, one manager had time to build his own squad rather than work with what he inherited which is pretty much what most of the rest did.I think that's true mate. But in the last 25 years, which manager has had us closest to qualifying for Europe regularly etc?
A gaffer who runs a 37-year-old into the ground for 111 minutes in a Derby is hardly the man to build a project for the future, is he?
I think that's true mate. But in the last 25 years, which manager has had us closest to qualifying for Europe regularly etc?
That word is doing some heavy lifting.
As it stands: 4 times in 12 seasons.
Honestly of all the decisions recently this was one of the most baffling. I don’t know what days he’s looking at to justify that 36 year old Gueye with 100 minutes in his legs is less likely to make a mistake than a completely fresh Iroegbunam Armstrong Rohl or Alcaraz
They were off the back of playing PSG in midweek and as usual through our refusal to use subs correctly we ended up looking like the team blowing out our backsides by the end of the game.
He said "closest to qualifying for Europe regularly" not "qualifying for Europe regularly".
Sophistry.
I mean it's not, is it? We were regularly around the European spots under Moyes.
What does 'closest to European qualification' mean? Does 10th count, for example?
It's too vague.
Moyes qualified us for Europe 4 times. That's it.
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