Homepage Update: What Did We Expect?

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Jim Keoghan

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What Did We Expect?
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This is what a relegation threatened season looks like. That’s what I told my son when he recently quizzed me about why Everton were so [beep] (I’m paraphrasing here).

When the drop zone exerts its gravitational pull, achieving escape velocity is always difficult. Back in November, prior to the West Ham victory, a time when Everton looked to be truly in the mire, a friend of mine (a Red) pointed out that ‘you only need a few wins and you’ll be clear’. To which I replied ‘True, but sides who are in the bottom eight, don’t just keep winning.’ And that’s just what’s happened. After our Allardyce honeymoon period (three words that should never go together), the club, quite expectedly, has hit a bump in the road.



When you’re down near the bottom, you’re down there for a reason; usually a toxic mix of poor management, poor players and low confidence. A change to one of these elements can bring around an improvement in fortunes. But that side, the one that struggled and seemed unable to get a win, defend competently or forge a coherent attack is still there, lurking. It does not completely go away but merely lies dormant. And it doesn’t take much for it to wake up. A few defeats, a poor run, a slight slide down the table and it emerges once again.

Escaping relegation, and that is exactly what Everton’s season has become about, will likely characterise the remainder of this campaign. At the moment, it might remain only a distant one, but dropping is still a possibility. There are 36 points left on the board at the time of writing and Everton need 12 to be comfortably safe.



While that might sound easily achievable, bear in mind that even good clubs drop points. And Everton are not a good club. Over the remaining months, the Blues will lose games and draws will occur. So we can expect that from those 36 points left, a good chunk will be lost. How many will dictate how uncomfortable the closing weeks of the season will be.

For those confident that safety should be a doddle, Everton have past form when it comes to late season collapses. Take a look back at the 90s, the era that for many fans is most strongly associated with the spectre of relegation, and you can find four examples of the club absolutely ballsing up the final months of the season. In 93/94, 96/97, 97/98, 99/00, Everton’s points haul from the final twelve games, if mirrored this season would be enough to ensure that the club would enter the final week of the campaign in a very precarious position. Death spirals might not be common, but they do happen.

I’d bet good money, that whoever pushed for Allardyce to be appointed (over a manager like Silva) is somebody who has lived through relegation threatened campaigns before. Somebody who recognises that more than anything, such seasons are a grind, where a manager will be constantly trying to stop that dormant, under-performing side from waking up. And that tends to take a manager of a certain ilk, a manager who understands the battle that will be constantly taking place, who appreciates that until you hit that magic forty point mark, you’ll never be free from its threat.



Nobody watching Everton at the moment could be happy with what they see. In terms of the football being played, this is arguably one of the least attractive Everton sides to watch in a generation. Stodgy, uncreative, tentative, conservative and clearly lacking in confidence, the side is currently as far away from the ‘School of Science’ as it’s possible to be.

But should we have expected anything different? When we hired Allardyce, we hired a specialist, a man with a stellar reputation for suppressing those dormant sides that threaten to reawaken when form dips. At Blackburn, Sunderland and Palace, he successfully (if not always attractively) ground out results and made sure that the side that had got those clubs into trouble rarely appeared (even when, inevitably, results did not go their way.)

With half the season remaining when he was appointed, a blip was inevitable. And at the moment Everton are certainly not in a good place. But there are few managers better or more experienced than Allardyce at negotiating such blips and ensuring that the Everton of the late Koeman-era does not return and stay.

Having been hired to save the club, Allardyce will do whatever it takes to do just that, however ugly. We as fans might not like it but it can’t come as any surprise. Our desire to see something more exciting, to see exhilarating football, to watch Everton attack with verve, will be of no concern to a manager whose primary remit is to keep this club in the top flight.

We might not like it but I suspect that with an unbalanced squad, a group of players that possess fragile confidence and a rapidly improving chasing pack beneath us, exhilarating football will be off the menu for some time to come.

Back in November, Everton could have gambled and gone for a manager with a more cavalier approach to the game. But the club didn’t. It played it safe and went with a manager who excels at playing it safe. And as soon as the club did that, it was clear what kind of football we were going to get.

The real problem for Everton will be what happens next season. To use a medical analogy, right now, the club is in intensive care, with Allardyce probably the ideal man to provide treatment. But do you entrust someone skilled at triage to manage your rehabilitation in the longer term? If Everton survive, which most think likely, the club will face a big decision in the summer. Does it initiate yet another regime change, which could yield success or possibly prove destabilising, or hope that Allardyce can change what he has become.

The club and the fans are in for an interesting summer.
 
The club needs s clearout from top to bottom
Kenwright , Elstone FSA need to go
A new top notch CEO with experience of getting a big project completed needs to be brought in
A new commercial director needs to be brought in and kitbag and other sponsors shifted
A new DOF with the experience and more importantly the power to make the changes needed brought in.
The DOF should be told the style of play Moshiri wants and to get a manager and players to suit the system
That’s why if Brands is a target he needs to be brought in 1st Feb so he has 4 months to analyse the squad and see who needs to go and who stays.
Give Walsh a New defined role as head scout , he worked well at Leicester in that role and there’s no reason it can’t work for us
A new manager needs to be brought in and given time and money to change things around.
 
Good write-up mate.

I don't think you penned it as a justification of the appointment of Allardyce, and I don't see it that way, but you were spot-on in encapsulating the fears amongst some that would have contributed to him getting the job.

I can remember the 90s all too well. You can argue about how best to set up a team to win matches, but that is an argument for another day.

Let's just ensure we don't go down and get this horrible, wretched, appalling season over with and start over from as close to a blank page as we can.
 

I've been looking forward to the end of the season since the Stoke game finished.

And I'm not excited for the summer either, no Europa League excitement, no actual money (possibly due to FFP - or no profitable assets!!). And everyone is completely sceptical about any signings as we all had our hopes up for the last regimes signings.
 
..I fear the real problem for Everton could be what remains of this season.
Exactly eggs
We don’t look like winning too many games at present
Even the 4 or 5 wins we need seem beyond us.
If we struggle to get a draw against a poor WBA at home then where are the goals and point coming from
Unless there’s a miraculous turnaround it’ll be squeaky bum time come April.
Swansea’s win over the RS May kickstart their season
 
Balanced and sensible view. Surely we cannot continue to be soooooo poor ? Can we ?
If it was me I'd have worked out by now who isnt up for it in the dressing room, assembled my troops and nucleus of a team and then play them week in and week out until season end.

A trip away should ensure bonding, sometimes I think Sam has had too many players to choose from, the riches he isnt used to. Therefore has become Sam the tinker man instead of what he has done previously in sticking with a trusted few.

I expect to see DCL back and we should then stick with those that can fight.

Pickford
Kenny
Holgate
Jagielka
Rooney
Sigurdson
Walcott
Tosun
Gana
Davies
Niasse

(This isnt a first 11 by the way just players I believe have fight in them)

Bin off Schniederlin and his terrible attitude etc
 
Before Allardyce came in we were arguably one of the worst teams in the division. We had the worst front line and probably the worst defence too with a huge injury crisis. We said then that it would be a battle to keep this team up. Allardyce’s early form perhaps left fans wanting more but the underlying problems are still there: we are still missing 3/4 of our first choice back 4 through injury, the front line has only just been bolstered in the last 2 weeks with Tosun and Walcott, the attitude and confidence of the squad is still rock bottom.

We shouldn’t be surprised. In Martinez’s second season we were in a battle even when we had one of the league’s best strikers plus Barkley and Stones. It took the likes of Osman and the signing of Lennon to get to safety. We hit horrible form under Koeman too in the middle of his first season before a lack of pressure and the emergence of Davies allowed for good form in the summer.

The root cause of the whole thing is a lack of investment in the squad and poor recruitment. As soon as Moyes left we went from having a stable squad of top 6 players full of internationals in a prime age range to Martinez’s version of dads and lads. Then Koeman botched it even further by selling the good lads, keeping the even older dads and buying more rubbish to go with them.

Everywhere you look across the squad there’s either a kid, an old man, or a player who doesn’t want to be here. Allardyce has looked to remedy this with Tosun and Walcott but until we have that calibration of player in every position we won’t trouble the top 6 again.

Jags Williams Baines too old and slow for prem football. Martina not good enough. Kenny too young. That leaves Coleman (not fit) Keane (injured out of form) and Holgate (prob too young too) as your only decent defensive options in the whole squad.

Before Tosun and Walcott came in DCL and Niasse were our front line. That’s the worst in the league!

Sam is dealing with successive managers failures and one of the poorest squads on the league regardless of the money spent on it. He needs a break to be allowed to save this season then start to rebalance the squad. Perhaps why he was given an 18 month contract.
 
There is a lot of specious reasoning in saying that managers who specialise in relegation fights exist.

Do we think of Pochettino as a relegation fighter? No, because when he came in at Southampton he won enough games that we forgot they were in trouble.

Was Moyes a relegation fighter in 2002? No, he was a young manager from the lower leagues.

To use the doctor analogy I see Allardyce as a doctor good at keeping patients alive in intensive care, but I see other doctors who would have their patient walking by now by fixing the underlying problem rather than keeping them in an induced coma.
 

Excellent write up.

I think a lot of our fans were in denial at the time of his appointment, and some of them are still in denial now, or just can't get past their clear dislike/bizarre hatred for him to see that he has a tough job on his hands with this injury ridden, low in confidence, mess of a team that he has inherited from the previous regime.

That's not to say he's been great because he hasn't. But for me, he has had a mixed start, with a great run initially and that has turned in to a poor run, with awful football. The awful football and negativity is the thing that has bothered me about him recently because our results against the likes of United at home, and Liverpool (Cup) and Spurs away were always going to be around the points total we achieved. We've been losing games to those sides for decades, with far better sides than this one.

It's the games against the poorer sides where he needs to sort it out, getting back to grinding out the wins he got against the Huddersfield's and Newcastle's in his early period.
 
Over egging the pudding in terms of how badly off we were when Allardyce took over. We were not his usual "patient", not by a long chalk. We had many paths to recovery.

Allardyce usually comes into clubs with a group of players incapable of finding feet and is able to justify the brand of football he insists on playing. Cynically he's arrived here and suggested that our players (who have proven they can play possession based football in the past) are the ones to blame for now being poor in possession when he knows it's his tactics that leads us to losing the ball.

Now the clash of culture between him and the players is the greatest threat to our season.

Wrong manager, wrong time, wrong club.
 

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