Turning the corner.

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Let's not get ahead of ourselves, we've done better than we anticipated we would given the run of games, a win at Newcastle makes it a decent December. We've been hampered a bit with injuries hopefully we'll see a few coming back soon to give the second half of the season a good go. Have we turned a corner? Not yet. Let's see where we are come March.
 
The season isnt over yet - however we need to make large ground on those above which means grinding out wins against sides like Newcastle at the weekend if we have faint hopes of Europe/top 7 still this season.

January will also be crucial as imo we need atleast 2 signings to plug the weaknesses in our side + the return of Gbamin to spearhead our push.

Need to take our chances against Newcastle as away from home you cant afford to be wasteful and still expect all 3 points.
 
This isn't a rallying cry. It's not blind optimism. I don't need to spell out who we have managing our club. Today was a step in the right direction. It was a start. Are you happy now? Good. Let's move on.

I'm suggesting that the appointment of Ancelloti will be seen as a pivotal moment in our history. The way he "managed" the game today was fundamentally different to what we've seen before. A turning point.

He didn't make absurd substitutions, he watched his opponent and then made his play, capitalizing on his opponents naivety. We haven't had this tactical masterclass since Kendall, and he was a master.

It's a turning point that opposing managers will fear. It's easy to turn round as an Evertonian and say, it's "Everton that". Incompetence, inadequacy breeds that contempt. If you think Ancelloti is here for easy money and his ticket to Vancouver, you're in for a rude awakening. He's here to win.
 
If everyone In the league is garbage.
How come it was 4 english teams in the European finals last season and the league champions were not one of them.
Does not say much about European football

No it doesn't, what's your point? The so called second best team in the league just humiliated themselves. Our neighbors aren't that special? In my opinion they're lucky to be coming good at the right time when competition is scarce. Of course you may think different. However to suggest that lot aren't getting an easy run, frankly I find that laughable.
 
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No it doesn't, what's your point? The so called second best team in the league just humiliated themselves. Our neighbors aren't that special? In my opinion they're lucky to be coming good at the right time when competition is scarce. Of course you may think different. However to suggest that lot aren't getting an easy run, frankly I find that laughable.
My point is last season that the 4 finalists in Europe were English. Leicester are not the second best team in the league. They were second this season after 19 games. City also tore them apart.
I also would suggest that liverpool currently have an excellent team .
 
schmeical is bog average. Vardy is the difference.

while we were off paying £45m for Siggi they were paying half that for Maddison. While we snapped up Keane for £30m they were off buying Maguire for less money and then resold him for £85m.
While our stop gap was Zouma on loan (which was good business) they shelled out £3m (?) for jonny Evans on a perm who is still bossing it while we have had a shortage of centre backs this season cos our one went back to his parent club...and weve leaked goals massively.
That's a large part of the spine of the team where we made poor decisions compared to them. Hopefully Carlo picks the right player, Im sure he will!
 
70 mins into today's game, I was looking towards the bench. What I saw is Dyche making a flurry of changes. Then it dawned on me, maybe Ancelotti, is waiting for his opposite number to show his hand. I'm not suggesting that's the way it went but we won. For the first time in a long time, I sat there and said to meself, ya know, have faith, this man knows more in his little finger, than you'll learn in a lifetime.

Questioning someone who looks like they have their eyes transfixed by the Goodison headlights, is entirely different than a man who has stared down the most intimidating arenas and won. He played the game like a chess master, waiting to see his opposite move then punishing his opponent. Dyche was schooled today, make no mistake and he won't be the first either.

Kendall was a master when it came to tactical awareness. He received abuse like a dog initially when he first joined and I was one of them. He rubbed the critics noses in the dirt. Shankly coming from Huddersfield had it too. They see things that lesser mortals don't. Sometimes it takes time, there's only so much you can do in two days but to every supporter watching today, we could see the difference. This is a manager who knows what he's doing.

Inevitably we'll see a narrative from the toxic media, "this is Ancelotti's Everton" and they will game him with every top job that comes available. He's "bigger", "wasted", while they conveniently forget, that they basically told him he shouldn't come here in the first place.

If he stays, he could become a legend here, mentioned in the same breath as Catterick and Kendall. And that will be worth more than any millions he has in the bank. After Moshiri's bankrolled nearly half a billion on players, what he has to work with is, de facto poor and a legacy that both Walsh and Brands have to answer for.

Craftsmen don't blame their tools and if anyone can turn this haphazard collection of players to believe in themselves and forge them to their potential, without a doubt in my mind, he's the man to do that. It goes against my grain to see a swallow and call summer but the corner has been turned.
Fantastic post, mate. Sums it up for me. Just to add, there WILL be bumps ahead. It;s at those times we need to believe in him even more.

If he's handed time + cash, this feller as good as guarantees us a massive upturn in our fortunes.
 
I repeat for the umpteenth time, at the start of the season, almost all of us were thrilled with this squad - with the absence of Zouma being noted. They are not bad players and you could see that yesterday. Even without some real first teamers, you could see they all knew what they had to do. For example, Siggy - played his best game in ages, no doubt trying to impress, but also playing to the pattern and fitting in.

Who would have thought that Sidibe would be a sort of winger playing in front of Coleman. most of us it was either/or? Plenty to do - really so much to do - but a very good start against a robustly defensive and aggressive Burnley. Well done Carlo, 9/10 for the first effort.
But the point well made by @Sentinel is that they are 'haphazardly' put together. That's 100% correct. They were not bought to blend a team, just to get positions sorted out. NO thought whatsoever from either Koeman or Brands went into buyong the best part of half a billion quids worth of players.

In the fullness of time, historians of the club will look back at the last three years of Double Dutch madness with revulsion and horror.
 
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