I'd love for us to hit the plateau that Moyes did with Everton.
Quote from: Toronto Villa on May 22, 2016, 07:23:12 PMI'd love for us to hit the plateau that Moyes did with Everton.Me too. I think people are ignoring what an absolute state we're in. If, within five years, we're regularly finishing 6th in the top flight I'll be pretty happy.
Quote from: PaulWinch again on May 22, 2016, 07:41:47 PMQuote from: Toronto Villa on May 22, 2016, 07:23:12 PMI'd love for us to hit the plateau that Moyes did with Everton.Me too. I think people are ignoring what an absolute state we're in. If, within five years, we're regularly finishing 6th in the top flight I'll be pretty happy.We got a take before where there was lots of talk about breaking into the top 4, after 3 top 6s in the first four years this site was full of people complaining about MON. That's the point, Moyes for 2-3 seasons would be ok, after that is the problem.
Quote from: PaulWinch again on May 22, 2016, 07:41:47 PMQuote from: Toronto Villa on May 22, 2016, 07:23:12 PMI'd love for us to hit the plateau that Moyes did with Everton.Me too. I think people are ignoring what an absolute state we're in. If, within five years, we're regularly finishing 6th in the top flight I'll be pretty happy.This may interest you, Everton fans discuss the possibility of Moyes returning to Goodison. Clicky
"Stabilised us but couldn't take us any further"
It is interesting this idea of defensive and dour football. Apart from 1 season where they averaged jut over a goal a game at home, in nearly every season he was at Everton they were over 1.5 goals on average at home each week, with his last 4-5 seasons edging up over 1.7. In 6 of those seasons they would have been safe from home points alone pretty much, with a further 2 over 30 points in that time. Defensively they were exceptional too. For all the worry about his style of play, and formations, and being rigid, if he came here it would be a massive coup, because he is a very, very good manager and could be very stabilising in the long term. Any manager that can come in and get us over 30 points a season at home to start with gets my vote. Going back to the shots think Chicago raised, between 06 and 12, his team averaged over 10 shots at goal per game at home scoring around 33 a season, only dipping below 30 once in that time. By contrast, we only nudged over 30 once in that time. Basically, compared to what we have seen in the last even 10 years, Moyes has done better, with at times less resources, and scored more goals while conceding less doing it. He is 53 in a couple of weeks. If we don't get him this time, we are shooting ourselves in the foot.
Quote from: SamTheMouse on May 22, 2016, 07:04:50 PMQuote from: Monty on May 22, 2016, 06:41:27 PMI don't want to be misunderstood, so I'll start off by saying that I think Moyes is a very good candidate for the immediate job that needs doing. He'll do it in his own way, about which more later, but I'm sure he can get us organised, focused and promoted, which is the most important thing. Make no mistake, we're in Purgatory at the moment, and need to get out of it as soon as possible, and nothing else matters this season...I know what you mean Monty. As you say, there is an opportunity here to really adopt a new sort of ethos at the club, a more progressive approach. And while I have a lot of time for Moyes, and I would most certainly welcome him as a capable manager, there's something vaguely MON-esque about him. To me, he's a bit conservative.The thinking man's Alex McLeish.
Quote from: Monty on May 22, 2016, 06:41:27 PMI don't want to be misunderstood, so I'll start off by saying that I think Moyes is a very good candidate for the immediate job that needs doing. He'll do it in his own way, about which more later, but I'm sure he can get us organised, focused and promoted, which is the most important thing. Make no mistake, we're in Purgatory at the moment, and need to get out of it as soon as possible, and nothing else matters this season...I know what you mean Monty. As you say, there is an opportunity here to really adopt a new sort of ethos at the club, a more progressive approach. And while I have a lot of time for Moyes, and I would most certainly welcome him as a capable manager, there's something vaguely MON-esque about him. To me, he's a bit conservative.
I don't want to be misunderstood, so I'll start off by saying that I think Moyes is a very good candidate for the immediate job that needs doing. He'll do it in his own way, about which more later, but I'm sure he can get us organised, focused and promoted, which is the most important thing. Make no mistake, we're in Purgatory at the moment, and need to get out of it as soon as possible, and nothing else matters this season...
I thought Everton didn't score many under him? The season they finished 4th especially, didn't they only score 40 goals or something?