Everton News

Status
Not open for further replies.
Caligula’s Blushes via GrandOldTeam

samallardyceefc-150x150.jpg


This is around take 3 of an article I have wanting to be writing for 10+ days. The initial one was focusing on why I thought Watford didn’t have the incentive to let Silva go. The second was on the dangers of a short term manager. As often happens with life, events rendered both radically out of date, firstly with Watford’s refusal to budge and then two crushing defeats for Everton extinguishing any possibility of an upturn that had been flirted with in the previous 2 games league games.



Before we go any further and though it has been done in many places, David Unsworth should receive enormous praise for how he has handled himself in a challenging period. In truth while I’ve been underwhelmed by his performance on the field what it begins to show is the jump from academy coach to first team manager remains enormous and is not one that can easily bridged, particularly at a club hurtling towards crisis. Unsworth more traditional emphasis on straight talking and hard work seems perfect for young players keen to run through brick walls for a chance at the big time though senior players who have “made it” will not look as fondly upon the dose of honesty they are given. While this for the most part is an unenviable part of modern football, we cannot ignore the concrete reality of where the game is and alongside his desire to focus on playing attacking football rather than looking to re-enforce our defensive prowess it would be not be unreasonable to deduce these were the two central factors in the underwhelming results delivered.



Where he should be commended though, is how he continued at all moments to put himself in front of camera’s, answering questions about his future and the direction of the club in a typically honest way that allowed Everton to be portrayed in a less negative light. Even when it became clear the job was overwhelming him, initially away at Leicester and particularly after the Atalanta and Southampton games, he did not throw the towel in and walk away. When you compare that to the actions of the Everton heirachy, who made no statement of support for him at any time, and didn’t accompany him to any press conference, the stark differences in approach are seen. In simple terms he was hung out to dry for 5 ½ weeks to give the Everton board maximum time to find the best quality of replacement available to the club. As the weeks progressed it had the feel of a disorderly pantomime, with different competing interests groups getting varying message out via different media conduits (though perhaps most importantly none through the official club channels). When the man settled on was Sam Allardyce it is fair to say a level of anger and dejection has descended upon large sections of the fan base. On discussing with different Evertonian’s almost all say they can’t remember an appointment causing such strong and mixed emotions.

None of this is directly Sam Allardyce’s fault and it is important to remember that in all of this. However it is difficult to extend such a courtesy to Everton’s board, and particularly Farhad Moshiri who has spent the last 18 months making numerous promises about what he intends to do with the club, which for the most part have at best been partially met or in a lot of cases not met at all. If he intended to take Everton from being a “Museum” to that of a successful football club, at present he has only moved us from a museum to a poorly assembled joke shop. I suspect his standing amongst Evertonians will be damaged as a result of this episode, damage that so some fans that will be beyond repair.

The result on Wednesday night has helped the feeling across the club immeasurably. In truth it has been a difficult 4 months for all Evertonian’s seeing a season unravel in quicker than any I can remember watching the club, with the only possible comparable one being 1996/7 where we want from potential championship contenders to relegation candidates over a difficult winter. Sometimes a club needs a win, a good win just to get everyone associated with the club happy again. While players are (in my view disgracefully) well rewarded for their efforts, underneath it all they are still human’s. We should be able to switch our emotions on and off easily while at work, but earning lots of money doesn’t automatically allow you to do it. I imagine it’s been a pretty miserable run for them as well, and you can only hope last nights performance can be the ray of light at the end of the tunnel.

When we look at the specifics of the game it is hard to fault anybody for their performance. Martina looked ropey at moments but kept going, Williams gave away a silly penalty but looked far better operating to simple instructions of volleying the ball away (there will be plenty of this). Holgate I felt had his best game for Everton and showed a glimpse of why he could be a Premier League level centre half. Likewise Kenny began to attack with some intent, and while I worry he lacks a yard of pace, his run for the our second goals was very promising.

In the midfield Gana stuck to the task of protecting our back four and the energy, movement and industry of Davies helped him in this. In wide areas Lennon does as he always had and put a shift in without massively influencing the game, while Sigurdsson continues to work hard, at times too hard in searching for quality in the final third. Up front Dominic Calvert Lewin worked extremely hard in the sort of performance that will endear him to the new manager.

All of the above led to a solid team shape and Everton having the better of the game, yet the two key pivotal moments happened in the second half. Having had his crossbar rattled minutes previously Jordan Pickfords penalty save is fantastic. At that moment of the game, a goal going in against us and the teams propensity to ship goals in groups would have meant conceding one so early into the second half would have put the result into major doubt. In truth I have been far more lukewarm on Pickford than many onlookers. While he has been one of the most impressive players, I think there are at least another two levels Pickford can grow too as he moves forward, and this will involve him winning Everton games on a more regular basis in the way De Gea does for Manchester United. The next priority can and will be ensuring he gets more protection in front of him to allow him to feel less exposed.

If the penalty save would normally be enough to be the stand out moment in most games, Wayne Rooney clearly saw a different script and this game will be immortalized as Wayne Rooney’s game. While I think Pickford’s performance may have been slightly overated this season I think Wayne Rooney remains hugely underated. When you watch him play, watch how the other players look to pass to him when they are in trouble. It is a key sign indicator of how highly they rate him. He is who they trust with the ball when there is little else on.

He played deeper on Wednesday. I have always felt this would be his best position, and is an area of the pitch which is you get the right energy around you can allow you to play if you are slightly struggling with the rigors of top level football. While the media got on his back, I always felt midfield would be the position that would suit Rooney as he got older, who has the technique, vision and game awareness to dictate the pace of a game. He clearly enjoys getting on the football and starting moves, and is equally as dangerous arriving from deep as he did for his second goal of the night as he is if he takes his starting position higher up. There will inevitably be some who argue he can’t be dropped after that performance, which again I would disagree with as much as those who say he isn’t good enough. He’s a rare talent who needs to be managed properly, played from the start in games where added creativity is needed and introduced from the bench at moments in games where calmness is required. His performance yesterday was reminiscent of Paul Scholes at his best, or indeed aspects of Andrea Pirlo in the way he stirkes a ball, both players who carried on well into their late 30’s when their bodies had long since let them down. If we manage Rooney right, we have that same opportunity with Rooney who’s technique , special awareness and vision matches both of the above player, though there needs to be an acceptance this will be a very different player to the 18 year old all action player who left the club 15 years ago.

The final goal in the hatrick is as good a goal as you will ever see. Savage was right to describe it as a better goal than even David Beckham’s, given the way the ball arrived back at him. Within the context of the game-which was still very much in the balance, it has to go down as a truly memorable Goodison moment to help secure a priceless three points.

After the conclusion of the game, a 4-0 win probably gives a slightly rosier view of our prospects than the challenge Allardyce faces. Much of the discussion around the team very much centres around two competing facts, which can both be true at the same time. The first is that this squad, minus Lukaku (and even without his goals) finished 7th last season and have added 150 million pounds worth of talent to the team. While none have reached the heights hoped, that situation cannot continue indefinitely and when performances improve so to will results. The other, is that we have been hammered (by 3 goals or more) on 7 occasions this season and prior to West Ham had not won a single game by more than the odd goal. We justifiably had the worst defensive record in the league and to put that right would need far deeper change than just waiting for the players to come good.

In truth both of those viewpoints are correct. While one hints at the need for a more progressive manager and the other would lead to a position of the stability of Sam Allardyce what mustn’t be lost is both viewpoints have validity. At times this season Everton have been well off the pace against very ordinary teams (Leicester, Southampton, Atalanta x 2) and it must be remembered that the resounding win over West Ham doesn’t change this. However for Allardyce, this represents an enormous opportunity, working with probably his best group of players yet and having the opportunity in January to recruit further. If he can get his ideas around defensive stability across, integrate Coleman, Bolasie, Barkley and McCarthy back into the first team set up and recruit a centre forward, centre back and left sided player there is clear evidence to suggest if he can slowly move us away from the relegation zone we can build up momentum as the season goes on.

While it would be remiss to say I am supportive of the appointment, it is important that Allardyce like any Everton manager is given a fair chance to win the fans over. The frustration I have is as much with Farhad Moshiri who has promised fans a “superstar on the sidelines” and found Sam Allardyce. Perhaps a more honest evaluation of our standing in the game is now required as a result of this, and action taken accordingly. One of the actions points ought to be the club compiling a list of managers who could be on our radar should we need to remove a manager, so the process can be done in a far more swift and efficient manner next time. The other needs to be a clearing out of the older remnants of the club and building Everton into a competitive force off the field to make us a more saleable prospect for potential managers. There are many suggestions that this process may already be underway, yet the next 6 months needs to be filled with concrete action as opposed to abstract pontification.

One final positive that may come from this appointment, is it should lead to a more joined up approach to player recruitment. Walsh has a strong relationship with Allardyce but also with new Assistant Craig Shakespeare. Where some of the farcical recruitment has been put solely at the door of a breakdown in the relationship between Koeman and Walsh, Walsh now very much has “his man” at the helm and this needs to be reflected in how we conduct our business. I suspect we will more of a domestic focus and potentially a move away from stellar names in January and possibly the summer. It may well be more pragmatic, perhaps throwing some unusual names but crucially people Walsh feels capable of getting over the line and Allardyce feeling he may get the best out of. Some initial names who I think may be targeted may include Cresswell, Van Arnholt, Benteke, Kone and Winston Reid. All have looked impressive under previous Allardyce teams, and if he can get that form out of them again, would greatly improve our 11.

There is some suggestions this is in effect 6 month deal for Allardyce. I think Moshiri may be more pragmatic than that. If the proposed off the field changes are coming, and the potential of additional investment arrives he may well feel the stability that will likely come from Allardyce and his team, as well as a the unity between him and the DOF may mean he looks to extend that to a period of 18 months. The amount paid out on managers fees has been an enormous drain and avoiding a huge pay out for Allardyce must be a consideration. Much of this will depend on the performances of the team over the next 6 months and Allardyce showing he is capable of having them challenging the top 6 sides next season in his cameo this season.

There is little doubt it is a humiliating episode for Everton. I also question the sense in sacking Koeman if Allardyce would have been the answer, as in all likelihood when players returned I too think Koeman would have turned it around. However you do have to let people live and die by their decisions, and if Allardyce can see an uplift in performances the decision will have been justified. What remains an urgent priority is that Steve Walsh and the club are strong enough to safeguard the careers of many of the talented young players, and not allow Allardyce to move them on for short gain. It’s not realistic to expect Calvert Lewin, Kenny, Banningime, Davies, Vlasic and Lookman to feature every week but most have potentially exciting careers at Everton and at worst will spend a short period of time learning about the other side of the game which should help the education moving forward.

I want to end on two quick points. Firstly, there is an FA Cup that needs winning in the New Year.

Secondly it is important as games go on we all remember we are all Evertonians and we have a variety of opinions. Some people are going to be badly wrong on Allardyce, either because he does well, or because he does badly. Whatever the outcome it doesn’t make anybody a bad person. I appreciate my own twitter feed has been something of a shrine of misery over the last few days, and I apologise unreservedly if anyone feels I have taken out anger on them, any anger I had was squarely at the doors of the clubs board. I understand why people wanted Allardyce, though I took a different view of it. Some fans will not be able to come on board with this, which is their right, just as for some fans this is the ideal appointment long term, which again is their right to hold that opinion. Where possible, lets try to keep discussions civil and in the nicest way possibly hope all of my own reservations over Sam are proven wrong.

The post Caligula’s Blushes appeared first on GrandOldTeam.


Read Full Article

Continue reading...
 
Unsworth via Everton Arent We

Unsworth.jpg



It’s a great night, not for me but for the club. Every player was committed. I asked them to be men tonight. If you can stand up there and fight in times of trouble, that says a lot.”

After what has been a tumultuous six weeks in the life of every Everton fan, a win against a struggling West Ham side in the unforgiving Premier League was as big as it gets at the moment.

Relief was the overriding emotion. Indeed, we as Evertonians have all appreciated just what a mess this season has been. With the very real threat of slipping into a relegation battle, a big win was exactly what we needed. If we felt the relief, I can only imagine what David Unsworth has been feeling after the last month.

Unsworth entered as Caretaker Manager and was left with a uninspired, unbalanced Everton team – not to mention a mentally weak, confidence stricken side. What he inherited was not his fault, yet he was asked to somehow drag these misfits out of the mess Ronald Koeman had left.

Not an easy challenge – I don’t care who you are, when you have no top-level management experience and have to start with games at Chelsea, the home of the Champions, Leicester, the home of the previous Premier League Champions and at Lyon, who were Europa League Semi-Finalists last year, miracles do not happen.

Chelsea.jpg


The Watford game felt like a must win, and at 0-2, the worst was feared. Yet we fought back and got the result. Luck played it’s part and thankfully a late penalty didn’t deny us the 3 points. Unsworth steadied things for what we thought would be his last game as Caretaker. The International break gave us two weeks and in that time, surely we would appoint the new permanent manager? It didn’t happen.

David Unsworth would never decline the opportunity to manage the first team again, but in reality, a decision was needed and he can’t be faulted for a lack of direction of those at Boardroom level. While almost cutting a lonely figure, particularly in press conferences, he didn’t shirk the responsibility nor refuse the challenge. In the meantime, after a battling point at Crystal Palace, what followed probably extinguished any chance Unsworth had of keeping the job – an abject defensive display against Atalanta before what can only be described as the worst Everton performance this century at Southampton.

The board in a clear state of panic hired Sam Allardyce. A man who they must feel can guarantee Premier League safety, thus ensuring Everton reap the financial rewards the top-level can bring. Whilst it is fair to say that Unsworth showed tactical naivety and inexperience, the hiring of Sam Allardyce was not down to Unworth’s ineptitude, but rather the lack of backbone in the first team squad. They let him down massively and forced the appointment of someone who was categorically not first choice.

In a piece where I want to praise David Unsworth, dwelling on players and their complete lack of guts is not the intention and won’t be talked of anymore; other than to say – if Kevin Mirallas ever wears an Everton shirt again, he should count his blessings. He doesn’t deserve the privilege after that Southampton game.

To West Ham. Colossal this. Not the occasion, because we’ll have much bigger and more important games in our future. In our current state however, with the hiring of Allardyce, Craig Shakespeare and Sammy Lee, not to mention the hysteria surrounding fans (isn’t Twitter great lads?), West Ham was going to be more nerve racking and tense than it ever deserved to be. Sammy Lee in an Everton tracky in the home dugout though. Sammy Lee.

Rhino.jpg


How good was that pre-match press conference? Without sounding sycophantic, I was proud of David Unsworth. He maintained professionalism and composure, while having the bravery to call out those who let him down. He asked for fight and pride. He showed that whatever his role in the future, he was up for the scrap. In what has been a six week circus at Goodison, he maintained all that is good about our club.

West Ham was a brilliant victory and maybe with more time, Unsworth would of grown into the role and at least guided us to respectability. Time is not of the essence in a cut-throat league though and I’m glad his last hurrah in this spell ended with an emphatic win.

He made it clear he wanted the job full-time but he steps down firmly remaining an Everton hero. I felt watching his post-match interviews that he looked drained and exhausted and there was a sense of relief that the pressure is somebody else’s now. He has no doubt learnt a great deal, and I would love it if it worked out for him one day as a permanent Everton manager.

He goes back to the U23’s and let’s not forget what a magnificent job he did there. The best reward we can give and the best way to show we value his efforts, is to see if we can raise the attendances for reserve games – especially as it’s free for season ticket holders. There are some great kids at that level, who we should be proud to have and proud that we have a great man leading them.

Rooney-Unsworth.jpg


A big thank you Rhino. He didn’t ask, need or deserve things to be what they were, but he stepped up, as only someone who loves the club would. His efforts won’t be forgotten amongst fans. In an uncertain future, at least we know there’s someone there, who’ll always stand up and have our back.

Up the Toffees.


Read Full Article

Continue reading...
 
November GOT Player of the Month via GrandOldTeam

EFCPLAYERS-150x150.jpg


Another topsy-turvy, far from dull month for the Mighty Blues has been confined to the annals of history, a month that saw three losses, one draw and two victories, and an interesting spread of the voting for this months GOT Player of the Month.

David Unsworth remained in charge throughout November, probably longer than he had originally expected and certainly longer than the fan base expected following the dismissal of Ronald Koeman. While the man nicknamed Rhino concentrated on the players and the game schedule, the fan base were glued to bona-fide and social media sources, desperate for tangible news of who would be getting the role.

Once again, we played six games and as well as the mixture of results, we saw a real mish-mash of both team and individual player performances. Some were good, many were distinctly average while the rest varied from anywhere between disappointing and frankly diabolical, but we won’t dwell on the negative, the GOT PotM is intended to be something of a celebratory moment as we build inexorably toward the big prize – the GOT Player of the Season.

November saw the largest number of players used in one month so far this season with twenty-five including a first appearance of the season for Joel Robles and a brief home debut for young defender Morgan Feeney. Just two players featured in all six games – Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Jonjoe Kenny.

Four players won individual matches, Wayne Rooney, Gylfi Sigurdsson, with two games apiece for both Oumar Niasse and Beni Baningime.

Again, we’d like to stress that your votes really do count and would encourage you to vote as quickly as possible due to the compressed nature of the fixture list this season, polls will/may only be open for a few days due to the next game coming very quickly afterwards.

And so to the result and as is customary… in reverse order and third place, congratulations go to the ever improving Jonjoe Kenny.

In second place and benefiting from a memorable first Everton hat-trick in the thrashing of West Ham was Wayne Rooney.

And the GOT Player of the Month for November with over 33% of the votes cast, a quite amazing figure given he was ineligible for the two Europa League games and very harshly banned for two games… picking his second monthly award is…

Oumar Niasse.

The post November GOT Player of the Month appeared first on GrandOldTeam.


Read Full Article

Continue reading...
 
Struggling Gylfi Sigurdsson embodies Everton’s malaise for Sam Allardyce via The Guardian

• Manager admits Icelander’s protracted record move was never straightforward
• ‘You need a greater mentality because the demand is higher for Everton’

Sam Allardyce believes Gylfi Sigurdsson has struggled to cope with the pressure of playing for Everton and the manager plans to bring in a sports psychologist to address the mental frailties of his new charges.

The Icelander became Everton’s £45m club record buy, making him £17m more expensive than any previous signing at Goodison Park, when he arrived from Swansea in August and Allardyce feels he has found it difficult to adjust to the demands of life at a higher-profile club.

Related: Record-breaking Sam Allardyce is off to a flying start at Everton

Continue reading…

Read Full Article


Continue reading...
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Similar Threads

Welcome

Join the Everton conversation today.
Fewer ads, full access, completely free.

🛒 Visit Shop

Support Grand Old Team by checking out our latest Everton gear!
Back
Top