1961_vintage
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 21 Sep 2009
- Messages
- 14,587
Allardyce is a far better manager than he's ever given credit for. He's assembled some top coaches on his backroom staff as well. Everton are lucky to have him.
Thanks Sam.
Allardyce is a far better manager than he's ever given credit for. He's assembled some top coaches on his backroom staff as well. Everton are lucky to have him.
Agreed, an anti-climax.Just seen Rugheads goal. Thought it was gonna be alot better than it was, the way everyone was raving about it.
Great hit, but empty net, any pro should be able to do that.
So is Dyche not British?
Burnley were 7th on the 29th.So is Dyche not British?
Allardyce is a far better manager than he's ever given credit for. He's assembled some top coaches on his backroom staff as well. Everton are lucky to have him.
Bolton is the only place he did a good job. Everywhere else since he ranged from average to disaster
Where exactly has he been a 'disaster'?
If you're hired to keep a team up and you keep them up, that's a success.
Where exactly has he been a 'disaster'?
If you're hired to keep a team up and you keep them up, that's a success.
What I see now is that there will be a problem for Everton post Big Sam. He will keep them up but I look at Crystal Palace as an example. After Sam they tried to hire a manager who played a more attractive style in De Boer, but he failed. The problem is they had to go from playing dinosaur football to try to switch to more of a progressive possession style which takes time to do and you won't get the instant results all the time. You can even look at us as an example going from Pellegrini to Pep. The players need time to adapt to the new system. With a club like Everton, with their new owner in Moshiri they have big hopes. Who do they replace Big Sam with and do they have patience if it doesn't instantly go their way?