davek
Player Valuation: £150m
OK let's put these to bed Dave
1)Martinez is being judged on the following criteria (i) he inherited in his own words "a great platform" from which to progress - we haven't progressed we've moved backwards in absolute and relative terms (ii) he's added well to the squad (just to show balance, as I say he has some skills) so the squad has improved but sadly results have not and there's no evidence in the PL of any change to this trend; (iii) the PL landscape has changed, the glass ceiling that existed predominantly in Moyes' days no longer exists due to a combination of increased investment in a wider number of clubs, the decline of previous incumbents in Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and this season Manchester City, and the tactical astuteness and man management skills of managers such as Ranieri, Pochettino and Bilic. The glaring omission in contenders is our very own Everton.
2) As I've stated on many occasions our current squad is strong enough to compete in the current race for CL positions, that's almost universally acknowledged across the football community - I do not differ from that point of view at all. However I also realise that we must invest further and restructure the squad to increase our competitiveness particularly (i) if we wish to move from a top 4 challenger to a title challenger, and from a CL qualifier to a CL knock-out stage contender, and (ii) in the light of other clubs' spending plans, we must invest and restructure just to stand still. To not do so would mean in relative terms we move backwards - something we saw time and time again in the dark days of no funding being available for squad development under Moyes.
Now should we do this under a manager who has failed to fashion results out of our existing talents and has proven to be unable to compete at the higher levels our current squad suggests, let alone, an enhanced squad at even higher levels, or should we use our new purchasing power to acquire more skilled, more experienced, already proven management who can not only retain existing talent, but enhance and add to it?
It's a no brainer. It's not personal - we'll all wish Martinez the very best, and if he manages to secure a FA Cup win he'll be part of our folklore forever, but he's not the man to take us forward in the current environment and make the best of the opportunities ahead of us.
I cannot be clearer than that - I'm not asking you to agree necessarily as you're clearly of a singular view that Martinez is the man to achieve all we wish for, but you must accept the logic of the position I and many others propose.
That does not put matters to bed. In fact it merely propels you forward into the thicket of contradictions you've entwined yourself in.
1/ The "great platform" you mention was Moyes' legacy: the platform was the greatest team since the 80s (the one before this greatest team since the 80s). Was he remotely ever being shuffled to the exit for failing to land the CL spots on a regular basis (your criteria?). But Martinez - contra to your analysis - did progress that squad forward in terms of its ability to compete in the PL, results wise, and in terms of the level of performance from a football point of view. Were the results maintained? No, but its wrong to baldly state progress hadn't been achieved. As for the squad being improved but him not being able to maximise it: well we've been here above - you concede yourself that no possible incoming manager can achieve a CL spot with the squad. So where's the critique there in terms of dismissing the incumbent manager for not reaching it with this lot? Nowhere. The "glass ceiling" claim: this churn that the PL has gone through in the last season hasn't been to Everton's favour and its 'a chance blown'. The opposite case can more persuasively made that the churn is a result of many teams now being capable of mounting a challenge for top four places in the new financial reality, which has occurred in tandem with loss of form amongst the usual cash doped elite. There has been no window of opportunity - it was a narrower gap to get through, in fact.
2/ This at first read seemed like a restatement rather than anything new. But it's worse than that, it's an attempt to upshift the stakes. Amazingly (in relation to a team that's only recently put a realistic CL points total together) you now say that investment into the squad is required not merely to secure or get near a CL spot, but to win the title...and, wait for it...a CL knock out stage team!!! FFS mate. I know you were caught on the horns of the dilemma you placed yourself on trying to justify giving RM the push, but that is just Alice in Wonderland stuff. Lol.
Yeah, it certainly is a no brainer!!!