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David Unsworth calls on Everton’s dud players to shape up or ship out via The Guardian

• Caretaker prepares for West Ham on Wednesday amid great uncertainty
• ‘They need to say they are not up for it and we will get players who are’

David Unsworth has conceded Everton are likely to replace him at any moment with Sam Allardyce or another long-term appointment and the caretaker manager suggested some of the players he inherited lack the courage to arrest the team’s alarming slump.

Unsworth has overseen five defeats in seven games since becoming Ronald Koeman’s temporary successor on 23 October, with the latest, Sunday’s 4-1 defeat at Southampton, increasing Everton’s desperation to make a permanent appointment. Allardyce is the current favourite and Unsworth, speaking as he prepared for West Ham United’s visit to Goodison Park on Wednesday, said: “There were no guarantees five weeks ago that it would last a week, two weeks [for me.] So as far as I’m aware I will be in charge tomorrow night unless somebody tells me different.

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Sam Allardyce set for Everton post as negotiations edge closer via The Guardian

• Former England manager close to agreeing deal to move to Goodison Park
• Allardyce expected to add Sammy Lee and Craig Shakespeare to coaching staff

Sam Allardyce is set to be named Everton’s new manager after negotiations over him succeeding Ronald Koeman at Goodison Park continued on Tuesday night, with the former Liverpool player and coach Sammy Lee expected to become part of his coaching staff.

The former England manager, who has been out of work since leaving Crystal Palace in the summer, is due back from holiday on Wednesday and is expected to meet Everton’s major shareholder, Farhad Moshiri, to finalise his contract, believed to be worth around £6m a year. Initial talks with Allardyce’s representatives broke down earlier this month but it is understood that Everton returned to the 63-year-old after it became clear Watford were not interested in allowing Marco Silva to leave Vicarage Road.

Related: David Unsworth calls on Everton’s dud players to shape up or ship out

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Big Sam and The Family We’ve Chosen via Everton Arent We

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I remember in Roberto Martinez’s final season—a season characterized by a seemingly endless string of Shakespearean tragedies on the pitch–wondering what we had done to deserve this. From the glow of that first season of his and an apparent return to School of Science ways, El Mejor’s light created a spark of hope in me that I never recalled having at any point under David Moyes. And yet only a couple seasons later, we were an abject failure compared to the lofty standards many of us had begun to internalize. I was left feeling that the 15/16 season was more than just simply a bad season of football. Something felt especially cruel about it all. Like I was being ridiculed by the football gods for having some outsized hope for Everton. Why couldn’t it ever finally work out for us? We were so close. Why couldn’t we build upon that first lovely season? But like many an Evertonian, I comforted myself with the old reliable crutch about being “skint”, believing that there was simply a glass ceiling that couldn’t be broken without a mega-billionaire owner. And despite Farhad Moshiri entering the picture before the demise of Martinez, I had yet to see anything concrete from him that suggested things would change dramatically. Boy, was I ever wrong.

A couple years and hundreds of millions spent later, Everton have hired Sam Allardyce. I find it hard to type these words in nearly the same manner with which I have an almost impossible time using the words “President” and “Trump” together. Sam Allardyce is the manager of Everton. Let it sink in. Don’t ignore that gross feeling. You need to really feel it. Yes, the walking Brexit cartoon whose wine-soaked stench I can detect from across the Atlantic is our new manager. A corrupt punchline of a man who was destined to befoul other, lesser clubs who weren’t a big club like Everton—the same Everton that was simply biding its time before big investment would have it rising like the sleeping giant we’ve all known in our gut that it was.

Yet while I can be mad at Everton for hiring such an infamous turd he is only the wage that a myriad of sins going back years have necessitated. Much like Trump was the reward for years of Americans talking past one another and living in echo chambers and generally not coping well with a changing world around it, Sam Allardyce is the reward for decision after decision and performance after performance that has worn this particular path to hell’s gate. Big Sam may only be a caretaker, but in that “time is a flat circle” sort of way, Big Sam has always been the caretaker just waiting to show us exactly how much worse things could be and how misplaced our faith in this club’s idyllic destiny has been for so long.

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Of course, this does not mean that we are forever doomed, but I’m out of the prediction game once and for all. I’ve been wrong about a lot when it comes to forecasting Everton’s fortunes in the Moshiri era thus far. But I’m also not blind. We are firmly and deeply in the [Poor language removed] now. Ambition and being a club to be proud of and all that are secondary to the brutal slog of a relegation fight where “by any means necessary” becomes the only mantra that matters and love of the manager and the players is not required to scale the mountain ahead of us. And while we may loathe Big Sam and all he represents and how antithetical he is to what we’ve always believed we are, he isn’t the only one I’ll have a hard time looking in the eye during this journey.

Without question, there aren’t more than a few players worthy of our affection, either. This sorry lot has personally enriched themselves on the backs of their non-performance and half- assed effort in blue shirts. And while they’ve been done no favors by the utter void of managerial and administrative leadership that suddenly widened after a summer of drunken transfer self-congratulation, far too many of them have gone through the motions without a hint of detectable shame. Which is, of course, the greatest insult in the face of all our caring. This team full of captains (you should count) has found a way to collectively disgrace the proud tradition of those who came before them and made Everton what it is. Their initial looks of dejection early in the season has turned mostly to looks of indifference. There is nothing that aggravates a soul more than when passionate investment is met with persistent indifference. In short, if I’m in pain, they better damn well be, too. At least a LITTLE bit, right?

In a world where many of us look to the club as a light in an increasingly dark geopolitical and social hellscape, seeing another set of ultra wealthy men enrich themselves further off the backs of our collective misery—especially while representing something that is greater than merely a sport to so many of us—stings even more. I learned a long time ago that in sport, no team or set of fans deserve an outcome. We simply demand that in exchange for our support financially, emotionally, etc that we get maximum effort on the pitch and at least a general sense that those wearing a shirt that means the world to us hurt even a fraction as much as we do when things don’t go our way. It’s a relatively simple and straightforward social contract that isn’t unique to Everton and Evertonians, but one that is absolutely sacred to us. Our motto is our standard is all about expecting elite effort and investment of the collective to the best of their ability in striving for excellence. It sounds lofty but ultimately, it’s about giving a [Poor language removed] and acting accordingly. Well somewhere along the way in recent years, that contract has been broken by the club, its management, ownership, and players. And so here we are.

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We as supporters will of course support. The hand we’ve been dealt in the form of Everton may be a bad one at the moment, but there’s no giving cards back. It’s an odd thing, the whole “being chosen by Everton” thing. Unlike almost any other interest in my life that I could see myself walking away from when the cost benefit analysis becomes unfavorable, the idea of walking away from Everton feels about as feasible as walking away without my head. I wish I’d known that before getting into this, but alas there will always be the things that infect our soul in unchanging ways. So I imagine we will learn a lot about our supporters during these tough days ahead—including who the actual supporters are, I suppose. Because anyone claiming they can’t support a club with Sam Allardyce in charge (yes, even him) isn’t a real supporter anyway and they’re probably reading this and wondering what sort of mania could befall a guy living in Oklahoma over an English football team anyway. I get it. “Show me on the doll where Everton touched you,” is about how I’m feeling at the moment, but I am touched nonetheless and once Everton has touched you, blah, blah, blah.

But the story of Everton—our story with Everton—started before we were here and will end long after we’re dead or when a certain orange sherbet-y megalomaniac nukes us all into oblivion, whichever comes first. We all are tasked with carrying our share load a bit farther in this story with each passing season and there have been some who have seen the highest highs and many of you reading this for whom those highs are relegated to books, recollections, and low definition video. And that is just the way it is. We will endure. This is the family we’ve chosen. And family is everything. Especially this one. Because if it wasn’t, we’d be able to move on like reasonable people. Reason and Everton have an awkward relationship anyway, so I’ve given up questioning it. I’m done predicting brighter days ahead. Who really knows? For now we’ll step forward together and stare the battle for survival right in the eye. Even with Sam Allardyce. Because we must.


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David Moyes accepting of what he cannot change with West Ham’s squad via The Guardian

The former Everton manager is keen to re-employ the methods which worked well for him through much of his 11-year spell in charge at Goodison Park

David Moyes was hoping not to talk about Everton but the subject was difficult to avoid before his latest return to Goodison Park. “I’ll tell you this one,” West Ham’s manager said as his mind drifted back to the final day of the winter transfer window in 2013. “It was my last year. I think Everton were a striker short of being top four. You were still needing somewhere like £10m or £15m to get a top striker. We had £1m left. Tony Henry, who’s here, was involved in it, probably more so than anybody. He says: ‘There’s a boy at Barnsley who’s not bad.’”

John Stones was the boy in question and instead of getting that top striker Moyes’s final signing for Everton ended up being a young centre-back from Barnsley who joined for £500,000 and left for £47.5m to Manchester City two and a half years later. That was often how it had to be for Moyes during his 11 years at the club and the point behind the story was that there were plenty of times when all that scrimping and saving forced him to be more creative in the transfer market. “It focuses you differently,” he said. “You have to find a way of getting a talent which might go on.”

Related: David Moyes tells David Unsworth to carry on as a manager after Everton

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Everton v West Ham via GrandOldTeam

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Well, well, well, after so much promise and optimism coming into the season who would of thought Everton would find themselves taking on West Ham in a relegation six-pointer in November.

David Unsworth is set to take charge of his eighth game in the managerial hot seat, but if reports are to be believed then it could be Rhino’s last, with ex-West Ham boss Sam Allardyce looking to be back in the frame to take over.

But if it is to be Unsworth’s last game he will be desperate to improve on his record, with five of his seven games ending in defeats – shipping 20 goals in the process!

The Hammer’s find themselves in the bottom three, just the two points behind Wednesday nights hosts, without a league win since the back end of September, a run which has seen the end of former Everton defender Slaven Bilic’s reign at the club and the Croatian since been replaced by former Everton manager, David Moyes. A 2-0 loss to high-flying Watford and a draw against Leicester so far for the Scot.

A good omen, or a massive jinx depending on how you look at it, since Moyes left Everton he has come up against the Toffees four times, losing all four and every game has ended with the Blues picking up a clean sheet.

West Ham United: Who are their main threats?

Although he hasn’t found the back of the net so far this campaign, Andy Carroll will be licking his lips in anticipation for a side who have conceded nine in their last two outings. A man whose food and drink is winning headers, the 6ft4 Englishman will have seen Charlie Austin’s identical double against a frail Everton defence and the 28-year-old will fancy his chances of opening his 2017/18 account when he lines up against the Blues.

Tricky Argentine attacker Manuel Lanzini has all the qualities to drag a lacklustre West Ham outfit to the wins they desperately need, a danger from set pieces, something the defence will have to consider. Mostly operating from the left, whether it be Jonjoe Kenny or Cuco Martina who get the nod, they’ll have a big job on their hands stopping the West Ham man.

Team news

Javier Hernandez wont feature, the Mexican is yet to feature under Moyes, having picked up an injury before his arrival. James Collins and last season’s top scorer, Michail Antonio, are doubtful for the Hammers.

Leighton Baines and Michael Keane both left the St. Mary’s pitch injured, so the English pair are doubts for the clash. Tom Davies is eligible after suspension and Oumar Niasse is facing the last of a two-game ban.

Both sides are in dire need to stop their respective rots, with a win for either team going along way in their fights to avoid the dreaded drop – a loss will be nothing short of catastrophic, neither side can afford to not get the much needed three points.

Up the Toffees.

The post Everton v West Ham appeared first on GrandOldTeam.


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Procrastinators Unite! (Tomorrow, Like…) via GrandOldTeam

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I’d make a great Everton owner.

That’s not just your typical pig-headed ‘know-it-all’ football supporter statement. I actually believe I’d be a good fit.

Why? Because I’m the sort of guy who’d pull 3 consecutive all-nighters to finish university coursework that I’d had months to complete.

I’ll wait until the very last minute before getting my act together and leaving the house in a morning for work.

I have big dreams and grand plans, but end up spending most nights in my undies playing FIFA instead of actually taking action towards achieving said ambitions.

It took me 5 full weeks to get angry enough to even contemplate writing this article, and even then, 3 half-arsed sittings to complete it.

There’s always tomorrow, isn’t there? That’s the dangerous thing.

And here’s the point: the fact that Everton STILL find themselves managerless 5 weeks after sacking ruddy-faced Ronald Koeman somehow manages to be both profoundly shocking and completely unsurprising.



Shocking because this is the age of ruthless Premier League efficiency, of football clubs as huge business entities, of decisive billionaire owners with masses of business experience.

Unsurprising because, of course, this isn’t a new phenomenon. As one of the unfortunate Evertonians to reach football maturity at the exact point in history when the Blues decided that winning silverware wasn’t worth the hassle anymore, I’ve been conditioned to recognise that nothing is ever simple or straightforward for this hapless organisation. For all our prestige as a club, for all the pats on the head for being ‘well-managed,’ and ‘a proper club,’ we somehow manage to make a bigger mess of this stuff than most other clubs could dream of. And by ‘this stuff’ I mean basically everything. Signing players, selling players, sacking managers, appointing managers. EGM’s, AGM’s, new stadia.

Personnel have been and gone. Our deep-rooted institutional dawdling has been blamed on numerous individuals, from Peter Johnson to ‘Dithering Davey,’ Chairman Bill, Steve Walsh, Ronald Koeman and now Farhad Moshiri, who looks to be a perfect fit for the board of dilatory directors on which he apparently doesn’t have a seat.



But while names and faces change, one thing remains constant: Everton take ages to ‘do stuff.’

Looking back over my life as an Evertonian, it strikes me that nothing has ever actually been simple. Every time we’ve ‘bought big,’ we’ve pinched pennies and scrimped and saved until the deals were minutes from collapse. Mysterious hold-ups and delays have plagued, at a conservative estimate, at least 90% of incoming transfers I can remember. The interminable gap between ‘poised to sign’ and ‘confirmed signing’ must be at least twice as long as it is for any other club, and probably even longer, as rumours swirl of failed medicals and rival clubs ready to hijack bids.

This has just been the Everton way for as long as I can remember. From the Andrei Kanchelskis saga of 1996, a transfer that rumbled on for weeks over a £1m sell-on fee owed to Shakhtar Donetsk; right through to the weeks, and I do mean weeks, it took us to sign Gylfi Sigurdsson for fourty-five times that figure in August this year. All part of one continuous, clumsy narrative.

And to understand just how deeply ingrained this trait is, you need only rewind the clock twenty years and compare it to where we find ourselves now. In 1997, after Joe Royle’s departure from the club, Everton’s supposed sugar-daddy owner was in the process of wading his way through an ambitious shortlist of would-be managers at home and abroad, being met with rejection at every turn as the process became increasingly panicked. Optimism and ambition gave way to fear, and anxiety, and the road ultimately led to a brutal relegation dogfight that we somehow survived. Deja vu?

‘Nothing will be the same’ was the mysterious promise made by the club in its marketing materials. Maybe it should have been ‘Some things never change?’

Everton’s penchant for hesitation has now landed us in a situation where, ahead of what even the most optimistic Blue would acknowledge as a relegation six-pointer, David Unsworth will be in the dugout once again – despite 9 goals conceded in 2 games, and a broken demeanour that suggests he is utterly desperate to get back to coaching the under-23s. Who would bet against him being in charge for the Huddersfield game on Saturday, as well? It’s as if those in charge of the club have no sense of the passing of time.

Everton’s search for a new manager isn’t far off MY first priority, and I have a full-time job and a family. It’s keeping ME awake at night, but the fact that every day brings nothing but further silence suggests that sense of urgency might not be shared by those in charge of the train set.



Sam Allardyce looks likely to be the chosen candidate (although even today, 5 weeks on, we’re still apparently talking to 3 candidates) and I’ve seen a lot of anger directed towards him. With respect, though, I see Big Sam not as the cause, but the effect. Getting mad at him is like directing your anger at the fire instead of the arsonist. We might as well get behind him and support his team because, if nothing else, it’ll all just be more fun that way. He’s a product of circumstance, the circumstance being that ‘Everton’ have stalled and mismanaged, and failed to buy the last 3 pieces of Koeman’s bizarre impressionist jigsaw puzzle. That failure has somehow plunged our bright new dawn back to the days of Mitch Ward and Carl Tiler like some sadistic Delorean time machine.

Whatever happens in the coming weeks and months, you can guarantee, and I mean guarantee, that the least likely phrase you’re likely to hear from the roving reporter outside Finch Farm on the 31st of January 2018 will be this: ‘We’re expecting a quiet night at Everton, who got all their business done early.’

Up the procrastinating, incompetent, dilly-dallying Toffees.

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Everton v West Ham Preview via Everton Arent We

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[Poor language removed] hell.

That’s your preview opener, but how else can you describe Everton’s season lunging from [Poor language removed] to shitter? Read on to not learn anything much. Or better still go swerve anything Everton related and make a start on all them things you procrastinate about.

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The Southampton game was an abject crisis ridden Everton shouting for help. This isn’t deserved on David Unsworth however it’s the big boys league so there’s not much room to cry about it, but instead to find some sort of never-to-be-forgotten formula to stop Everton being relegated.

When it’s all said and done though let us never, ever forget the shithouses wearing the badge of Everton out there. Some (OK, me) have long cried about the balance of power swinging too firmly to the players and our current malaise bears testament to it. Some of them clearly don’t give a [Poor language removed] and there’s little comeback. After all if we sink there’ll be some other tragic [Poor language removed] ready to launch a new signing on fee and riches upon their grandchildren through the means of some hideous trickle down economics.

Try finding a redeeming feature in this Everton side right now. Something to cling to. Nah, me neither.

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We’ve been in this position before but buried it deep. You’ll maybe recall two particular seasons in the nineties. Also maybe 2001/02, when were sinking fast before we were rescued by a fresh faced new manager.

That fresh face has turned into a perma-frowned leathery moon, and is back with his awkward unconvincing smile that reveals easy incisors, but this time he’s here to [Poor language removed] us over.

Not that it’s the first time he’s [Poor language removed] us over. After been giving a generous see off with full guard he then turned around and tried to snake two of our best players at the time on the cheap. That wasn’t it for me, I mean everybody has their fall out of love moment with David Moyes. What was yours? Mine was him playing a reserve team at Anfield while just behind them in the league and shipping an easy hat trick to that [Poor language removed] cocksplash Gerrard. Back in those heady days of only conceding 3 at Anfield.

I was reading loads tonight about the rivalry between Crystal Palace and Brighton, and how it come to pass. I didn’t see a mention of our weird little rivalry with West Ham – maybe because I suppose it’s only really one way distaste from their side. And how our illusion of amicability was crushed by an alright tackle from James McCarthy on some little French blert they were in love with, who then promptly [Poor language removed] them right off. That tackle promoted their collective mask to slip, and while every club has it’s blerts on social media (@thechicoazul mate) there was a [Poor language removed] avalanche of cringe pointed in our direction from their little pie mash eating weasels. Certainly took me by surprise as prior to that I’d seen a really proud club with ace local support trying to go about things in the right way, as much as modern footie will allow you.

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I’m willing to put this aside if they pipe down and just come and watch the footie without trying to “banter” us. They’ll probably beat us anyway like so there’s no need for one more set of mouth breathing bellwipes playing us in England.

No one gives a flying [Poor language removed] if you are the second cousin removed of the Krays lads. But then there’s that air of overcompensation with a lot of West Ham fans. Maybe it’s size anxiety, maybe it’s the acute parochialism that engulfs the club. We’ve got some of that at Everton but we’re not trying to make out that Purple Aki rocks up at our family christenings. It’s also a fact that there’s not a single West Ham fan who is over 5 foot 9 inches tall. Check it out tomorrow in and around the ground. Also pay attention to how they can’t walk normally, how their stride has feet pointing 10 to and 10 past. Smoking that bifter all the way to the [Poor language removed] tip. Landan innit mate. Salt of the earth. Absolutely reeking of Vosene and Joop.

The [Poor language removed] bastards think they invented football because they had a couple of players playing for England’s solitary tournament win, which was achieved by playing every game at home and aided by an incredibly fortunate referee’s decision. It was as though Frank McAvennie played 1 to 11 that day. Not that you’d hear them chatting about it, like the lad who’s just got a Range Rover on lease and can’t wait to get the branded keyring out and on the table before he’s even sat down.

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Then along popped Gold and Sullivan, genuinely odious little creeps and none more so than the weird little smurf one with his Soviet hat. If your mate turned up in that before the game there’s no pride amongst your bunch if you hadn’t got him so para he’d flushed it in the first pub. Then the pair of them blagged an all paid for stadium and started doing cross armed gestures for photos. Some project director marketing hyper [Poor language removed] then convinced them to put LONDON in their badge and because they finished top half that season they started thinking some sleeping giant was awoken and Zidane was licking their door. All this despite them never ever winning even one league title.

All things considered these little chimney sweep [Poor language removed] have to be crushed. It’s just a shame they’re playing Everton or we would get to enjoy it.

Some of their players who may or may not make it on the pitch against us:

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Carroll – Imagine paying £35 million for a fat Pontin’s Chippendale seven years ago.

Chicharito – he’s a little shithouse, something dead snide about him that I’m paranoid only I can see while everyone thinks he’s alright because he’s only wee and it’s a well known fact that all Mexicans are sound. Because there’s no better social profiling of 110 million people than the barman on your all inclusive keeping the bright blue cocktails coming for the occasional one dollar bill thrown his way.

Lanzini – I’d have him for driving our promotion charge next season.

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Noble – little pumpkin headed shithead who can’t wait to swing 40 yard nothing balls over to his full back and take the applause. Leaves his captain armband on in the shower. One little distasteful afterbirth who needs a much worse tackle than the McCarthy one that spawned all this needless partisanship.

Collins – swerve the hard man act if you look like Richard from Guess Who.

Reid – why the [Poor language removed] didn’t we buy him?

Hart – even if we do get relegated with Pickford punching the vital goal into his own net then I will still hold zero regret that we managed to swerve this repugnant bass voiced sneering blow dried shithouse.

Now’s a good time to play them as they’re still celebrating the royal engagement, the southern tits.

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Genuinely can’t be arsed talking about our bunch but in a nutshell what an underwhelming sack of spanners. I’m gonna give the young lads a pass as they deserve so much better to look up to when learning the ropes in the top flight.

It’s not a good combination when you can’t score goals unless they’re exceptional or lucky, and when Charlie Austin – the fat slag – makes the same near post run and scores twice with it in 5 minutes. What did Einstein say the definition of madness was? Tell Michael Keane and his mates that. Anyway, [Poor language removed] them.

And so it passes that 5,737 days from David Moyes’ debut as Everton manager that he returns hoping to put the sword into the man who gave him the perfect start with a goal after 30 seconds. Another man tasked with saving a listless Everton heading for relegation.

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And here we are.

I didn’t even mention Sam Allardyce and Sammy Lee.

[Poor language removed] hell.


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