Nice Everton/Moyes Article

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Beamersooner

Player Valuation: Free Transfer
I can't post links because I am a fairly new member, but grantland dot com has a really nice write up on Everton from Friday. Just go to their home page and search Everton.
 


It's not a bad attempt at an overview of our predicament under the present set up. It is a bit too cartoonish at times though (and who in God's name uses words like 'stably' and 'Scotlandish'?!!!).

Aas an outsider looking to describe what's happening to other outsiders it isn't bad. It's just the disregard for our history and tradition and the implication that what's happening now is the natural order of things that rankles.
 
It annoys me when someone who has formed his opinion based on watching us twice a year on television tries to write an in-depth pieces about us.

That whole piece is very much pseudo-intellectualism.
 
I've never heard fans shouting to each other across empty seats since the 70's.
Tosh written by someone who has a half understanding of how the premier league works and absolutely no understanding of our history. But then again he's a yank from a country where their view of history is somewhat different to ours.
 
I've never heard fans shouting to each other across empty seats since the 70's.
Tosh written by someone who has a half understanding of how the premier league works and absolutely no understanding of our history. But then again he's a yank from a country where their view of history is somewhat different to ours.

That football started in 1992?!

Boring, re hashed piece. Portsmouth? Really? At least cite someone like Leeds ffs, and even that's not doing us justice...
 
Marcotti article in the Wall Street Journal: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443615804578042483052626480.html

Following Saturday's 2-2 draw away to Wigan Athletic, Everton was in an increasingly familiar position: close to the top of the table—third, in fact—and only clubs with larger total payrolls above it.

What's new? Starting with the 2006-07 season, Everton has finished sixth, fifth, fifth, eighth, seventh and seventh in successive seasons. Throughout that time, only once—last year, when Newcastle finished two spots above with a marginally lower set of player salaries—has someone spent less than the Toffees on talent and finished higher.
Wages only tell part of the story. What about transfer expenditure? Well, this past summer the club broke even in the transfer market. Over the previous three seasons, it made a profit of nearly $40 million in buying and selling players, a signifier of being a smallish fish that needs to sell off quality players to stay competitive in the giant Premier League pond.
By any measure, this is a club that knows how to get bang for buck, even on a relative shoestring. There are two key ingredients to Everton's success and neither can easily be replaced overnight. One is the club's youth academy, which over the years has produced a steady stream of viable Premier League players. Illustrious alumni include Leon Osman, Richard Dunne, Jack Rodwell and, of course, Wayne Rooney. Osman is still at Everton, while the other three were sold for combined fees of nearly $80 million.
The other factor is the manager, David Moyes. A fixture at Everton's Goodison Park since 2002, he's the third-longest-serving manager in the Premier League after a pair of living legends, Manchester United's Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsenal's Arsene Wenger. As coaches go, he's been described as an "up-and-comer" for so long that, at 49, it begins to carry the slight whiff of a backhanded compliment.
Moyes's tactics appear simple, but in fact are based upon a well-drilled defensive structure. He doesn't pigeonhole players. Defenders such as John Heitinga and Phil Neville have been used in midfield and midfielders like Tim Cahill and Marouane Fellaini have, on occasion, been deployed as forwards. He has made the odd mistake in the transfer market—Diniyar Bilyaletdinov, Per Kroldrup and Andy van der Meyde come to mind—but over a decade, you're going to have the a few misses to go with your hits.
Given his success, the fact that Moyes is still at Everton is something of a head-scratcher. The self-described People's Club has a glorious history. It was founded in 1878, was one of the charter members of the English Football League and has won nine domestic titles: only Manchester United (19), Liverpool (18) and Arsenal (13) have won more. The problem is that the last of Everton's English championships came a quarter of a century ago and the future doesn't look bright.
Think Buffalo Bills, minus the NFL' s revenue-sharing and draft picks, but with the Dallas Cowboys playing less than a mile away.
As the game's business model changes, it's hard to see Everton keeping up. It has not made a profit since 2005, according to publicly available club documents. Last year, the shortfall was $8.7 million, bringing total losses since 2006 to nearly $60 million. It's not an enormous amount, but it would have been even bigger if Everton didn't sell its biggest stars year after year.
The club's base in Liverpool doesn't help matters. It's an economically depressed area with plenty of footballing competition, not least from the red half of the city, Liverpool FC, one of England's two best-supported clubs. Throw in the fact that Manchester United, the Premier League's most popular team, and free-spending Manchester City are less than an hour away, and the potential for growth is fairly limited. The fan base, weaned on success nearly three decades ago, is loyal but inevitably aging.
Then there's Goodison Park itself: it first opened in 1892 and, for all its history, is not the kind of money-printing stadium modern clubs crave. In fact, there has been talk of a move and a new stadium (some have even suggested sharing a facility with Liverpool, which is heresy to some fans but would make financial sense) for the past two decades.
But the problem is Everton simply can't afford it. And club chairman Bill Kenwright has been quite blunt about if for a long time.
"I'm a pauper when it comes to other chairmen," he said in 2008 at the club's general meeting. "I want Everton have a billionaire, but it is not me. My shares have been for sale from the day I bought in."
Given all this, it's logical to ask why Moyes has stuck around. There's a natural progression up the food chain for managers and he seems to have gotten as far as Everton and stopped. Part of it is that there have been fewer vacancies up the ladder. Wenger and Sir Alex have been around throughout his tenure and a move to crosstown rival Liverpool is a non-starter for obvious reasons. That leaves Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur and, since the arrival of Sheikh Mansour in 2008, Manchester City as possible destinations where Moyes might have found significantly more resources to work with.
Moyes could look for a job abroad, but he only speaks English. British managers are also often held in low regard in foreign leagues, and their high Premier League salaries don't help a move to the continent, either. With such a small pool of potential employers and opportunities, you can see why he's still at Everton, much to the joy of its fans.
You wonder what the future will bring and, logically, assume that at some point in the not-so-distant future, the big jobs will open up for him. Wenger is 62, Sir Alex is 70 and there's bound to be managerial turnover elsewhere. The thing is, memories are short in soccer and there's a risk that by the time that happens Moyes will have run out of miracles. If that happens and he stays at Everton, he can take solace from the fact that he's led the club to overachieve valiantly during one of the toughest periods of its history. And that he has postponed what may well be an inevitable decline.
—Gabriele Marcotti is the world soccer columnist for the Times of London and a regular broadcaster for the BBC.
 

"Oh would you look at that. Little old Everton are in the top 4 at the moment, what an achievement for them, they must be ecstatic!"

"Tell you what, that Moyes has done a great job at Everton hasn't he? They'd probably be in the Championship without him."

"Moyes has worked miracles to keep Everton where they are. What a great manager."

"Just think of what Moyes could do if he had a bit of money to spend hey!"
 
A worrying description of how outsiders see us.

There's little of note about the past 10 years, neither trophies nor style of play to boast nor heroic stories defying relegation, the story is "existence".

You spin it whichever way you want ie Kenwright "the Blue" patrols the ramparts repelling carpetbaggers and foreign ne'er do wells. His Spartan warrior, Moyes, selflessly stands alongside creating thunder and lightening from rubble and straw and on saturdays turns water into wine.

OR

Kenwright is making stacks of money from his Chairmanship of Everton, his theatre company and public persona absolutely thriving in the reflected light of this Gilt edged institution. Doors that previously were closed open enthusiastically resulting from knowledge of every mover and shaker in the EPL which is a conduit to every media outlet upon the planet.

To give this up costs.

How much? is anyones guess, it's his business and as a business it's got eff all to do with the great unwashed - it's their job to turn up and support no matter - whereas he's a major shareholder and can do what he wants, when he wants.

Including binning AGMs.

Moyes is and has been for some time one of the best paid managers in the world he has the last word on everything playing wise is completely secure and winning stuff is so incidental fans don't talk about it.

In short he has the "work/life" balance sorted better than any comparable millionaire you can mention.

Depends on whether you like fishcakes ....... or something.
 
"Oh would you look at that. Little old Everton are in the top 4 at the moment, what an achievement for them, they must be ecstatic!"

"Tell you what, that Moyes has done a great job at Everton hasn't he? They'd probably be in the Championship without him."

"Moyes has worked miracles to keep Everton where they are. What a great manager."

"Just think of what Moyes could do if he had a bit of money to spend hey!"

I was sick of hearing ****e like this, I really was.

How about, "Where would Moyes be without Everton ?????"

People talk about us and Moyes, as if he has just gone and picked 11 players from a pub team, and got them working well in the prem!!!!!
 
A worrying description of how outsiders see us.

There's little of note about the past 10 years, neither trophies nor style of play to boast nor heroic stories defying relegation, the story is "existence".

You spin it whichever way you want ie Kenwright "the Blue" patrols the ramparts repelling carpetbaggers and foreign ne'er do wells. His Spartan warrior, Moyes, selflessly stands alongside creating thunder and lightening from rubble and straw and on saturdays turns water into wine.

OR

Kenwright is making stacks of money from his Chairmanship of Everton, his theatre company and public persona absolutely thriving in the reflected light of this Gilt edged institution. Doors that previously were closed open enthusiastically resulting from knowledge of every mover and shaker in the EPL which is a conduit to every media outlet upon the planet.

To give this up costs.

How much? is anyones guess, it's his business and as a business it's got eff all to do with the great unwashed - it's their job to turn up and support no matter - whereas he's a major shareholder and can do what he wants, when he wants.

Including binning AGMs.

Moyes is and has been for some time one of the best paid managers in the world he has the last word on everything playing wise is completely secure and winning stuff is so incidental fans don't talk about it.

In short he has the "work/life" balance sorted better than any comparable millionaire you can mention.

Depends on whether you like fishcakes ....... or something.

This.
 
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