Homepage Update: Why there is a demand for change and the reasons to be optimistic for the future

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The badge was another one. No motto, no ivy leaves, any symbol of achievement or ambition systematically removed from the club. So pleased the fans for once made their voices heard and refused to tolerate the managed decline of this club.
Yeah your right there I've only seen us winning 1 cup as to young to remember the 80s but know the history of the club I meant nil satis nisi optimum to drive us forwards now from us
 
I'm talking off pitch as well as on :)
if the rumours are true of the massive reduction in season ticket sales looks like Moshiri is starting to reap the benefits of his inactivity,for the average punter looking from the outside it looks like we are happy to accept being a "third tier" premier league outfit. 40 points the only target next year
 
Good read @The Esk

I desperately hope you turn out to be right with your predictions for the future. However I personally am struggling to believe that anything that good/exciting is likely to happen to us.

A little shy of three decades of supporting Everton has taught me that, by and large, we rarely get happy endings.
 

Good read @The Esk

I desperately hope you turn out to be right with your predictions for the future. However I personally am struggling to believe that anything that good/exciting is likely to happen to us.

A little shy of three decades of supporting Everton has taught me that, by and large, we rarely get happy endings.

We deserve it mate. We will see it again I'm sure of it. We've suffered enough.
 
if the rumours are true of the massive reduction in season ticket sales looks like Moshiri is starting to reap the benefits of his inactivity,for the average punter looking from the outside it looks like we are happy to accept being a "third tier" premier league outfit. 40 points the only target next year

What do reckon you would happen to season ticket sales if a decent, well known and respected manager was appointed about 10 minutes after the Norwich match?
 
Great stuff, love the rational optimism backed by reason as opposed to the blind optimism of some.

Here's hoping that this revolution works out as well as the American Revolution, giving birth to a new, refreshed and exciting future for those in blue.

And naturally ending in miserable defeat and failure for those wearing red!
 
We deserve it mate. We will see it again I'm sure of it. We've suffered enough.
Couldn't agree more.

Still hard to believe it'll happen - especially that there's any chance of it happening in the short to medium term, as opposed to some vague unspecified "oh it's bound to happen some time" type thing
 
Couldn't agree more.

Still hard to believe it'll happen - especially that there's any chance of it happening in the short to medium term, as opposed to some vague unspecified "oh it's bound to happen some time" type thing

Think thats the bit is the hardest bit to grasp without going all out "its our year" stuff.

Like I reckon most Leicester fans still dont quite actually believe that they won the league. They know they did, they saw it and read about it, but it must still feel not right. Or weird, or something.

@FOXINPEACE , help me out here mate.
 

He is, but look at the quality of the people running his club - we need to recruit the best managers and the best executives. We have the history and stature to do that, I don't believe Newcastle do, or have ever attempted to do so.
How do you reconcile this statement with one of Mr Moshiri's first acts being to promote Elstone to the board ?
 
Why there is a demand for change and the reasons to be optimistic for the future, by the esk

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Looking at Everton at present, on a day by day basis is rather like the tumultuous final days of a fading and failing empire.

Without the arrival of Mr Moshiri, the situation would be extremely bleak, yet although our benefactor has arrived he is yet to stamp his complete authority on the situation nor yet chosen to deliver any detail to the comforting words when he first spoke.

As a result there’s increasing discontent with the existing hierarchy on and off the pitch demanding change on and off the pitch. The timing of all this change is absolutely critical.

I was struck by Dr David France’s comments about football “relevancy”, and I realised he articulated the fear we all have felt, growing as the years have gone by, that we, Everton, have become increasingly irrelevant to the outside footballing world. Dangerously this has occurred when the pace of change within football is increasing at an ever greater rate – so the best resourced teams (money, players and managers) move away from the second tier at an ever increasing rate. Projecting that forward into an unknown but likely to be changed footballing landscape, and there’s a likelihood we’ll be outside the gates, let alone inside and influencing that change.

This is where the demand for change comes from. It’s not driven from an entitlement culture at all, goodness knows the city of Liverpool has just demonstrated in the clearest terms our true qualities of fairness and justice, but also determination and the desire to win against the odds.

Change has to occur both on the pitch and off the pitch.

Let’s start off the pitch and look at the areas where change is required – in the boardroom and at senior executive levels. The board needs to be replaced with ambitious business people capable of articulating and delivering an objective for the club in line with our club motto “Only the best is good enough”.
It means recruiting the best people, at board level, at executive level, and further down the ranks It means injecting new ideas and a new culture of ambition, delivery and success within the club. It has to grasp the size of the opportunity in front of it, and critically understand and appreciate the value of the asset (in footballing terms) it holds. We are a unique footballing asset – one of the most historic sporting institutions in the world that’s not only had success on the playing pitch, but over history has influenced and shaped the game like no other club side. Furthermore we are one of the few clubs left in football that is truly embedded in its local community, adding identity and purpose as well as community assistance to the local environment.

All of this needs preserving, but also needs to be utilised in taking the club forward. We can use our historic status in the game to improve our relevancy in the future, but only through having the strategy and most importantly the right people to deliver that. This must be a key priority.

Commercially, and there are no surprises here, we under-perform so badly, and once more can only be changed by implementing the right strategies, having the right people implement them, and putting the resources into them. I’m sure Mr Moshiri needs no lessons from me on this score.

Similarly the stadium issue requires resolution, but that’s a long term project which eventually (perhaps in 12-18 months) will be determined and delivered. However again the right people have to run the project and deliver in terms of vision and final product on budget and within the designated time set.

Ultimately, despite the desire for a world class stadium and seamless commercial offerings from the club, we’re Evertonians because we want to see football played in the “Everton” style, we want to be competitive, and we want to win our share of trophies including the greatest prize of all, the League, or the Premier League as it now is. As Neville Southall said at the weekend, we need to start every season aiming to win the League – how long is it since (i) that’s been our objective and (ii) there’s been a realistic chance of it happening? Perhaps with Leicester’s success those chances will increase.

Of course, the biggest issue on the pitch is the management situation. Let’s get it straight – Martinez will not only be released from the club at the season end because of the last two seasons, he will be released because he’s not of the calibre to take this club to where we want to be, and where our ambitions lie. Continuation of his tenure would only extend the wasted opportunity, resulting this summer in the breaking up of a promising squad with genuine talent and prospects, the inability to attract leading talent despite the resources being available for the first time in a generation, more deterioration in our competitive position relative to our peers, and the prospects of another season of the soulless, shapeless, incomprehensible playing style of the last few months.

I have no doubt that Mr Moshiri is aware of this, and is currently planning and seeking a replacement. Our hope, and I believe this is accurate, is that we are starting at the top of the managerial talent ladder with the genuine prospect of recruiting one of these candidates.

Once the management and coaching team is resolved then the recruitment and retainment process can really start. I’m not going to speculate on who we might bring in, there’s many more people better qualified than me to do so, nevertheless the expectation is extremely high. The hope is we bring players who not only have the talents to bring us success, but also buy into the club, and the nature of the project, the opportunities, and the rewards before them.

Is this a blindly optimistic piece of writing at a time when the club seems anything but? Well, it’s optimistic for sure, but it’s also build on the understanding that serious businessmen do not buy into clubs without having an ambition and an understanding of the necessary changes and resources required to make the ambition a reality.

To conclude I’m struck by one thing – throughout our history, when Everton have resources and talent available to us we taste success. We’ve now got the resources, we need to bring in the talent on and off the pitch, and yes we’ll taste success once more, not just a fleeting glimpse as in the past, but success built on a sustainable platform, building further success for the future.

This season is a right off, discard it, forget about those who have not delivered for us in the past and look forward to our future.

Nil Satis Nisi Optimum

The post Why there is a demand for change and the reasons to be optimistic for the future appeared first on GrandOldTeam.
I would love to get invited on to the board!
 
Good read @The Esk

I desperately hope you turn out to be right with your predictions for the future. However I personally am struggling to believe that anything that good/exciting is likely to happen to us.

A little shy of three decades of supporting Everton has taught me that, by and large, we rarely get happy endings.

You should have piped up earlier mate - if you are after happy endings you've just got to know where to look (oh and how much you've got to spend). :D

I've got 2 decades on you and count myself fortunate to have been through some good times and I know that it was snatched away from us by a coming together of circumstances outside our control - we have unfinished business there and it would be great to be back in that mix - However - I do get your point and it has been far too long since we had what was an oh so far too brief a taste of in the 80s - try to relax :coffee: have yourself a brew and keep the faith! Hopefully the good times are on the way back :cheers::celebrate:
 
How do you reconcile this statement with one of Mr Moshiri's first acts being to promote Elstone to the board ?

Fair question, but consider the following - Elstone was already a board member but not a director. His appointment as a director means that should he still be a director at the time of the AGM his appointment is subject to shareholder approval. I believe his appointment as director is relatively inconsequential, it is his performance as CEO that has to come under scrutiny and ultimately will be his downfall.

I am certain the whole executive level of Everton's management will be replaced over the next two years, if not sooner.
 
Fair question, but consider the following - Elstone was already a board member but not a director. His appointment as a director means that should he still be a director at the time of the AGM his appointment is subject to shareholder approval. I believe his appointment as director is relatively inconsequential, it is his performance as CEO that has to come under scrutiny and ultimately will be his downfall.

I am certain the whole executive level of Everton's management will be replaced over the next two years, if not sooner.

The shareholders indicated a modicum of disappointment in recent performance ...

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