...just checked, Allardyce is now generally odds-on to be our next Manager. Dyche remains a short price, as far as the bookies are concerned it’s between the two.
True. We want manager who would be here for long term. Short term fix will naturally occur if/when we get the right man in. Who it will ne. ..we just need to trust our board on that one and back them.We must avoid this short-term thinking when appointing the new manager.
The possibility of relegation, at this stage in the season, should NOT be a consideration when deciding on the manager.
Reasons:
• We have TWENTY-EIGHT league matches left to play. i.e. a possible 84 points left to play for.
• We have the January transfer window to invest in the players required to balance the squad and turn this around.
• There are worse teams than us in the division: Crystal Palace, Swansea, West Brom, West Ham, Bournemouth.
• We have some very good players in the squad (Pickford, Coleman, Gueye, Schneiderlin, Sigurdsson, Bolasie) who would walk into most teams.
If we appoint with the short-term in mind, we'll only end up looking for another new manager at the end of the season. That would then be FIVE managers since Moyes.
I always took pride in the fact that we were different as a club; that we looked for long-term, sustainable success rather than the quick fix.
I hope that we see past this sticky situation we find ourselves in at present and look to the long-term when picking the new boss.
I keep thinking Big Sam would be better than Moyes, then remember that during his time here, Moyes's teams outperformed Sam's teams practically every year on similar shoestring budgets. . Look what you are doing to me Everton!
Your quick...just checked, Allardyce is now generally odds-on to be our next Manager. Dyche remains a short price, as far as the bookies are concerned it’s between the two.
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