ARTETA. And lack of financeHoof!
ARTETA. And lack of financeHoof!
5 years should have been his maximum tenure. Just enough time to steady the ship by making us defensively responsible again, but not enough time for him to impose his culture of football on us. Unfortunately he stayed 11 years and the legacy is evident in a generation of supporters that's come through who cant understand that the game can be played in a different manner than just being solid. Martinez is having to drag this club kicking and screaming back to its traditions because of it. People say he inherited a very good squad off Moyes. Maybe, maybe not. But he also inherited a massive headache in the shape of the need to redesign Everton with a style of play equipped for football in the 21st century - a massive task and one that he's going to have to keep working on.Moyes - right man at the right time.
Also:
100% this.
Lack of finance doesn't impose restrictions on progressive ideas on how to play football.ARTETA. And lack of finance
I agree mate - we compromised on ambition to gain stability and then waited too long to remove the shackles (partly due to the fear of removing our safety blanket, which is what Moyes had become).5 years should have been his maximum tenure. Just enough time to steady the ship by making us defensively responsible again, but not enough time for him to impose his culture of football on us. Unfortunately he stayed 11 years and the legacy is evident in a generation of supporters that's come through who cant understand that the game can be played in a different manner than just being solid. Martinez is having to drag this club kicking and screaming back to its traditions because of it. People say he inherited a very good squad off Moyes. Maybe, maybe not. But he also inherited a massive headache in the shape of the need to redesign Everton with a style of play equipped for football in the 21st century - a massive task and one that he's going to have to keep working on.
So your telling me ,you along with every other person in the ground couldnt see them doubling up on Hibbert from the first ten minutes, what did he do about it?Chelsea final? We were missing our three best players and got battered by by probably the best side in Europe at the time (one kick away from beating Guardiola's Barcelona in a game they dominated). But yeah sure Moyes 'bottled' it whatever.
Cracking post.I loved Moyes when he was here, but the benefit of hindsight allows me to be more even-handed these days.
Most people wouldn't dispute that he was exactly what we needed at the time he came in. We were full of overpaid crap players, most of whom were the wrong side of 30 and we were sliding towards relegation - it would have happened eventually, whether it was that season or in the next couple.
Moyes provided stability, made sensible buys and provided a good framework for someone else to build on.
He had his faults - an inherent negativity, tactical pragmatism and a defeatist attitude being chief amongst them, but he certainly did more good than harm. He outstayed his welcome though (something I'd have argued against at the time). The style of football could be boring (although he had periods, inspired by Baines, Pienaar, Osman and Arteta, where we played some lovely stuff, in fairness) and the "knife to a gun fight"-type comments only served to dampen expectation levels of our fanbase - maybe this was deliberate, maybe this was just his mentality, I don't know. What I do know is that Everton were in an infinitely better place when he left than we were when he came here. He deserves credit for that, especially since he was rarely ever afforded the luxury of spending big and had to endure a number of transfer windows where simply couldn't afford to buy anyone.
Had a good eye for a player, even if it seemed he was sometimes dithering over things.
We were ready for a change though (and in hindsight were maybe 3 years before) and we were ready for a manager like Martinez who has less inhibitions than Moyes and an infinitely more positive outlook.
What I find difficult to forgive is that he simply belittled us and was incredibly disrespectful in his comments about the club who employed him for 11 years when he got to Man Utd. He'll disagree, I'm sure, but he must realise that he would never have got those hostile receptions at Old Trafford and Goodison when he was at Utd if it weren't for his comments during that Baines/Fellaini transfer saga.
"Everton fans see a direction that their team is going in but they need to remember I signed a lot of them"
"But to be fair to him Roberto is doing a really good job keeping things going at Everton"
"I told Roberto that I left such an organised team behind that they could play without a manager and still win"
I'd like to think in time we'll all be able to forgive the negative stuff, as we seem to have done with Rooney.
We played when he let them off the leash...which he did on a few occasions...then bottled it and had them in defensive set up again.
For me, the signature Moyes move at Everton was for the team to push up when the GK had the ball > work it to the halfway line > chip a long diagonal ball forward to the edge of the opposition box > feed off the second ball that Cahill/Fellaini provided.
It was dire stuff. The whole league knew what they had to do most of the time: ship balls out of the box/edge of the box. Pienaar/Baines was just about the sum total of our commitment to football under him. A dire football coach, IMO.
When someone manages a football club for over 10 years, it's very rare that you'll be able to conclude a 100% agreeable narrative
That's a lot of time to do many things people like and also do many things people dislike
When you look at Moyes entire tenure, it's a definate mixed bag
Some good bits and some bad bits
Overall though, I think he did more good for us than harm. Considering how bad things COULD have been during the 00's for us, the outcome we go from Moyes looks much better in hindsight.
No one's mentioned the Cup Final or the numerous Semi Finals yet. He was 1 or 2 games away from becoming a bonafide hero. Thus are the margins in football

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