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Moyes Out ( Released )
- Keep dreaming
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Moyes Out ( Released )
"Posted the same last year. Nothing has changed, except win don't win matches anymore. I'm fed up, we can do much better"
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Re: Moyes Out
Even when we lose to Blackburn and Leicester - both of which I think are inevitable - he won't get sacked.
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Re: Moyes Out
"pdcwhu 10:35 Sun Nov 6 If we can't expect to at least set up to try and beat Palace at home, what games will we be targeting to win this season?"
Re: Moyes Out
"We could lose midweek and Saturday, I doubt he's going anywhere. Still got credit in the bank with the dildo's, even though the fans finally seemed to be losing patience with him today."
Re: Moyes Out
"Sack Moyes now before he gets us into the bottom 3 come 5pm next Saturday Would need Southampton to win at the bin dippers, Bournemouth and Everton to draw and us lose by 14 goals to Leicester, for that to happen. I'm worried."
Re: Moyes Out
If only there was a person whose sole focus was all about organising and facilitating those players to play well... Improving their weaknesses and taking advantage of their strengths. Hmmmm
Re: Moyes Out
He's lost the fans and the players. Despite being the last dinosaur that the press seem to love only one way this is going: the sooner the better.
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Re: Moyes Out
"This is a brilliant article from These Football Times dated 31/01/2018 which I think is the definitive take on Moyes abilities as a manager, A longish read but nail on head and no mistake. It's a corker! DAVID MOYES: THE REAL SOCIEDAD DIARIES 31/01/2018 by LUCI KELEMEN THE DIVISIVE FOOTBALL nomad from Glasgow is back in the Premier League. After a slow and steady building job at Everton, it seemed like David Moyes' managerial career has nosedived after taking the poisoned chalice and succeeding Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United, and then finally relegating Sunderland. Despite what initially seemed like an appointment made out of desperation, he's been doing a solid job at West Ham so far. Of course, this little run-down is missing a crucial link from the chain, the adventure far away from the Premier League's limelight ""ì an interesting but ultimately fruitless stint at Real Sociedad that may be able to tell us something about the future prospects of the former Preston boss. It seemed like a practical joke. Then again, any job in the beautiful game would have been deemed as such after he crashed and burned in front of the whole world at Old Trafford. Still, it was an unexpectedly adventurous development, the Scotsman agreeing to a job in LaLiga without knowing the language, going as far away from his comfort zone as possible in search of redemption. Cold Manchester nights were replaced with a battle against relegation under the palm trees with La Real. It was quite the change for the club as well; their previous manager, Jagoba Arrasate, had been groomed for a long time to take over the job, managing the youth team for over two years before becoming assistant manager for the senior side. After Philippe Montanier left for Rennes, it must have seemed like a culmination of years of long work for him to pick up the mantle. It was under his stewardship that the team made it to the Champions League, eliminating Lyon in the playoffs, however they finished last in the group, collecting only one point. They picked up that one in a 0-0 draw against Moyes' Manchester United. It's safe to say that no one would have expected the Glaswegian to end up in the other dugout in a year's time. While Arrasate's early performances earned him a contract extension in April 2014, he was sacked in November after an alarmingly poor start to the season. Enter David Moyes ""ì the third British manager to lead Real Sociedad after John Toshack's 1987 Copa del Rey win and Chris Coleman's six-month spell in 2007. There were sceptics, of course ""ì as Phil Ball put it, ""if you look at what he's done since 1993 when he signed as a player for Preston, he's moved in the radius of about 60 kilometres""ù. Still, not many clubs can say that they successfully picked up an ex-United manager, and maybe that was part of what led to the new manager bounce at the Spanish club. His tenure began with a goalless draw away against Deportivo, which the team followed up with a confident 3-0 victory at home over Elche soon after. The first two months of his tenure were genuinely excellent, and results like the eventual two Basque derby draws and an improbable win over Barcelona seemed to indicate something great. Even before Moyes' appointment, the club had been referred to as a Spanish Everton of sorts, both due to being a stable, well-run mid-table outfit, and the general lack of transfer funds. The stadium, however, differed greatly from Goodison Park, with a massive running track meaning less contact with the fans and a much more muted atmosphere. They finished the season in 12th place. It was a case of mission accomplished, but it was clear that this wouldn't be enough the next season. La Real harboured greater ambitions, and they had the warchest to underpin them: their goal was to return to continental football, and after missing out on transfers in the January window due to paperwork delays, they provided Moyes with enough money to put together the most expensive squad in the club's history. Asier Illarramendi made his return from Madrid for a record-high fee, while Ger√≥nimo Rulli was brought in as goalkeeper. Both are still at the club ""ì the latter's topsy-turvy career involved a buyout by Manchester City with the team subsequently loaning him back to the Spanish side, then giving up on him altogether last January ""ì while Brazilian striker Jonathas was meant to supply the goals on the other end of the pitch. He scored seven goals in 27 appearances before promptly being shipped off to Rubin Kazan. It was expected that Moyes' Premier League connections would allow him to continue his excellent track record of spotting buried treasure at Everton, but the wage differences were way too big to make things work. Still, he was optimistic as the new season was approaching, at least as much as he seemed capable of being: ""I don't want expectations to be too high,""ù he said, adding that. ""We've got to establish ourselves in the top half of the league and move in the right direction. We have to do it year on year, layer on layer, like we did with Everton. The difference here is that the philosophy demands that there cannot not be wholesale changes, but it has similarities with Everton ""ì a good academy, good foundations, a solid support, a proud tradition.""ù It wasn't to be: they started the season with two goalless draws, followed by a 1-0 defeat against Real Betis. Next up was a 3-2 defeat at home against Espanyol. Still, the performances weren't as bad as the two points from four games suggested. After four more matches, they were on six. ""Moyes go home""ù rang the chants from the terraces. They were courteous enough to translate it for him. By the time of his sacking, his team ranked 14th for shots on goal and dead last for shots on target. The idea was to implement a more British style at the club: ""I want to play fast, the ball moving, energy,""ù as he put it. Instead, the end result was confusion on the pitch. His failure had just as much to do with on-field developments as everything that went on outside of the stadium, including a clash of cultures and personalities with a man that, despite his repeated assertions to the contrary, didn't bend enough. The language barrier was ever-present throughout his tenure, and he clearly didn't make a big enough effort to get past it. He was widely ridiculed when he stated in one of his early press conferences that members of the B team ""have been training with me uno, dos, tres, cuatro times, but I have not seen them play.""ù It was understandable back then, but he was still using an interpreter by the time of his eventual sacking. Aitor Karanka made a very similar journey the other way around, his decent command of the English language stemming from daily two-hour lessons. Moyes stuck with weekly ones, his rationale being that ""a bollocking in any language sounds the same""ù and that speaking in broken Spanish would just undermine his authority. Instead, it was his general demeanour and body language that eroded his leadership, with players complaining about him literally pointing the finger at them in training as he gave instructions. Not that he was completely ineffective in getting his message across; wearing imaginary glasses against Villareal was enough to get him sent off in a contentious Copa del Rey tie, a move that fans loved, but one that still couldn't ease the sense of isolation. His offers of a post-match glass of wine to the opposition managers were rarely accepted in Spain, and it was impossible to shake the feeling that he remained a Scotsman in San Sebasti√°n ""ì a legal alien of sorts ""ì staying in the same hotel throughout his whole tenure. As he put it at the time: ""I don't miss that much from home, though I lived within an hour of perhaps 25 professional football teams. But I do miss those midweek nights looking for players and watching opponents all around the north-west. I'd see my dad who'd watch games around Preston.""ù His difficulties in adapting seemed especially odd considering how he had apparently undertaken a lot of research before his interview with Sociedad president Jokin Aperribay, who was so impressed by the Glaswegian that he overruled his sporting director's wishes to bring in Pepe Mel as Arrasate's replacement. In a way, it was a single game that sealed his fate. While the fans and the board were equally concerned about the shaky start to the season, it seemed like Moyes' head wasn't yet on the chopping block. However, the team's performance against Las Palmas was so terrible that it seemed to instantly turn everyone against him. They lost 2-0 to a side that had only won a single game before that in the league, with La Real clearly inferior to the underdogs. The sharks were out for blood, and the Spanish commentariat had a field day with the proceedings. It was written in the local media that it wasn't the result that caused such heartache but ""the image presented by the team""ù and that Moyes, despite all his statements to the contrary, ""still bears the impression of someone who has only just arrived and doesn't understand the club, the players, the league, the city, the opponents, the referees, the languages, the stadia, the timetables.""ù It was a damning indictment. Even then, the club's president gave himself a few days to cool off, but couldn't find a good enough reason to keep him around. The announcement was scheduled for Sunday evening, but Moyes' flight was cancelled, so it had to be made on Monday instead: an appropriate metaphor for his failure if there ever was one. If he lasted a day longer, he would have made it a whole year at the Basque club. In the end, despite his successful firefighting efforts in the early part of his short tenure, his record is inferior to his immediate predecessor, and the Scot only won 12 games out of 42 while in charge. While the Hammers are unlikely to face Las Palmas any time soon in a competitive fixture, the owners should probably cast on eye on Moyes' Spanish adventure and be careful when deciding how long a contract extension he deserves, even if he successfully guides West Ham to a midtable position. The short-term stabilisation doesn't guarantee that he'll be able to keep a previously sinking ship afloat in the long run. By Luci Kelemen https://thesefootballtimes.co/2018/01/31/david-moyes-the-real-sociedad-diaries/"
Re: Moyes Out
"Slaven was a nice guy , Zola a gent , even Grant was a modest character. Ultimately they all failed and had to go . Most of us felt a sense of sympathy at the time , maybe less so for Grant , who was humiliating sacked in an away dressing room . Not so this arrogant , condescending prick . Get him out now ."
Re: Moyes Out
Leicester will tear us apart. Barnes against Kehrer is gonna be laughable. We're an east side to beat. Let our CB's have the ball and within 3/4 passes you'll have to back. It's criminal he has built a side so bad at passing a fucking football.
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Re: Moyes Out
"Pedro 9:44 Sun Nov 6 I'm not sure mate, I think many outside the club have started to realise. You can't be as shit as we have been for that long and it go un-noticed. We've scored 12 goals in 14 games this season. Let that sink in. You can't be the 3rd highest transfer spenders on the planet, and have that sort of return. It is completely unacceptable. I said on here before the Wolves and Fulham game that the worst thing that could happen was we scraped wins in those, whilst still playing the same brand of football. That's exactly what happened, and here we are, looking shitter than ever."
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Re: Moyes Out
"The only surprise in yhis game was that we scored a goal in the first half. We scored first unbelievable. The rest of yhe game was exactly as I and many predicted slow, predictable etc. Sack Moyes now before he gets us into the bottom 3 come 5pm next Saturday. Because the Leicester game will be nil points again the way we set up and the way they are playing at the moment."
- MaryMillingtonsGhost
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Re: Moyes Out
"Takashi Miike 9:31 Yep, agree with all that fella. However, when (if) Kretinsky takes over...."
- Takashi Miike
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Re: Moyes Out
"of course not, he'll hope we nick something against leicester and the dissent will alleviate by the time the world cup has finished. his tactics will still be there when it restarts so why wait?"
Re: Moyes Out
Eerie Good post. Agree fans have been very patient since the jan transfer window / Kidderminster and poor form in league in 2022 Europe had been a nice distraction but as Moyes says the league is the bread and butter No doubt other fans and match of the day will blame our fans for turning today. They will say we have been spoilt etc. the stats don't lie though.
- MaryMillingtonsGhost
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Re: Moyes Out
"Once you lose the crowd... I completely understand why it has taken some people so long to accept what has been obvious for so long. Regardless of what some pillocks say, we're not a fickle fanbase. Given how horrendous our form has been for 10 months now, I think we've been very patient. So many mistakes have been made by this manager, there's no point going over them anymore. It started with the shambles that was the January transfer window, and we've barely put a foot right since, bar a couple of good results in Europe. When you're in a bad run of form, which we mostly have been for those 10 months, you look for signs and how it can turn around. Anyone with half a bit of football nous could tell there has been fuck all to indicate how it'll turn around. This manager is from the keep it tight, don't concede, rely on a bit of luck school of managing. It's ok when your luck is in, like it was for a while, but once everyone else cottons on, the team becomes so fucking easy to play against. There is just so, so much he's getting wrong. And it's now got to a point where even those that don't really know their football have realised. And that really is the beginning of the end. Penny to a pound Benrahma doesn't start against Leicester."
- Takashi Miike
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Re: Moyes Out
this 'he'll be safe until kretinsky' shit is on a par with the 'wait until after the world cup' nonsense. the dwarf cսnt can't afford to sit in his high chair and hope things suddenly change
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Re: Moyes Out
We'll bring in someone far bigger than dyche . We're hardly paupers as a £180m summer spend indicates .
Re: Moyes Out
We have Kretinsky and new owners will be coming next year so there's 0 chance Moyes stays after this season. Even less chance we sign Dyche
Re: Moyes Out
"Bielsa the one. high energy, high press, full on passing side. They score 2 (we concede on average 2 anyway) but he'll coach us to score 4."
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Re: Moyes Out
The worry for the club has to be the amount of empty seats . Fans being fickle will forgive shit football if there winning to an extent . But as soldy says we are so bloody boring to watch it's unbelievable. I'd rather watch a box set of tenko than the shite Moyes is serving up .