The thing with Everton is generally, even when they're not winning they put up a fight.They might lose by the odd goal here and there and as a fan you can rationalise that just a bit of tinkering here and there or a bit of luck will change things around for you.When you have performances like today, Liverpool, Blackburn, B-lose in the cup and even Tottenham the other day -when we couldn't beat a team playing with 10 men for the majority- it's harder to make the leap that it'll all click into place soon.
I thought Pires was quite good against Blackburn, Spurs and even today when he came on. He does the job he's supposed to probably even more so than some starting players but he doesn't have the legs to replace them. He has just given a bad impression against Arsenal when he started, which was way too much for him, leading to a lot of people getting on his back, unfairly so in my opinion.
Perhaps all the intrigue at villa park these past few months will spawn a work of art to match 'The Damned United'? There sure as hell is enough material there, and enough gaps in what we actually know to be filled by an active imagination.
Quote from: TheSandman on December 28, 2010, 08:33:27 PMI thought Pires was quite good against Blackburn, Spurs and even today when he came on. He does the job he's supposed to probably even more so than some starting players but he doesn't have the legs to replace them. He has just given a bad impression against Arsenal when he started, which was way too much for him, leading to a lot of people getting on his back, unfairly so in my opinion.If you want to keep possession in your own third when the other team have one toe in the post match bath then he's just the man.
There is a line of thought put forward by one of my sons that none of this is Houllier's fault but the fault of Martin O'Neill.The theory goes that O'Neill saw what was coming down the turnpike in the 2010/11 season and jumped ship. This theory is borne out by the fact that the whole of the calendar year of 2010 we have played crap. We finished last season on our knees and put it down to exhaustion. Perhaps O'Neill was standing close enough to the outfit he had put together, including the misfits he had paid massively over the odds for, to see they were about to implode. The ship he jumped from hit the rocks at Newcastle and has been sinking ever since.Perhaps none of it is Houllier's fault.Still got to go though. Of all the managers in the Premiership the one you would least want when the skin and hair starts flying in relegation fights is Gerard Houllier. Too nice too cold too much the school swot and not enough the school bully.