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Tag: Moyes
David Moyes ‘burnt out’ at Everton days after returning to management | Football | Sport
Newly-appointed Everton boss David Moyes is already feeling the strain as he grapples with the team’s goal-scoring crisis, less than a week after taking the helm at Goodison Park. Moyes made his Merseyside return on January 11, stepping in following Sean Dyche’s departure.
This marks a comeback for the Scottish manager, who previously led Everton until 2013 before a disappointing stint at Manchester United. His second tenure at Everton kicked off with a 1-0 home loss to Aston Villa, courtesy of Ollie Watkins’ solitary strike.
The defeat leaves Moyes’ side precariously perched just above the relegation zone, especially as their fellow strugglers also suffered losses. With Everton’s paltry tally of 15 goals being the second-lowest in the Premier League, Moyes faces a significant challenge.
Whether the solution lies in financial support from owners The Friedkin Group or within the squad itself, it’s clear that the task is taking its toll.
“At the moment I have to find a way for the team to get a result,” Moyes admitted post-Villa defeat. “I’ve only been here a couple of days and I’m nearly burnt out looking at how we can score more goals and how we can get players who can do that.
“With the squad we have, everybody is saying ‘How are you going to find that? ‘ If we get someone different that’s OK but we have to find ways within the squad, we have to make goals, score goals and improve our attacking play.
“They are not there trying not to play well. Maybe they are just needing someone to give them a lift and a little bit of quality to make the difference and we are just lacking that at the moment.”
Three of Everton’s 15 league goals this season have been scored by Dwight McNeil, who has also provided three assists. However, a knee injury has kept him out of the last six games, during which time Everton have only managed to score once.
Despite being in the bottom half of the table, Everton boast a strong defensive record, having conceded just 26 goals in 20 matches. Their defence will be put to the test in their next match against Tottenham, who have scored 43 goals this season – the second-highest tally in the league despite their inconsistent performances.
“There’s no magic cure,” said Spurs boss Ange Postecoglou following his team’s defeat to Arsenal. “We need to work hard and go into battle on Sunday and turnaround our fortunes and our season. There are always reasons why things happen but the reality is our results and form in the league has been nowhere near good enough. That needs to change.”
David Moyes ‘burnt out’ at Everton days after returning to management | Football | SportFormer Everton manager David Moyes has reportedly been feeling burnt out just days after returning to management with the Toffees. The 58-year-old recently took charge of the Merseyside club for the second time following the departure of Carlo Ancelotti.
According to sources close to Moyes, the demands of managing a top-flight club have taken a toll on him, with the Scot struggling to cope with the pressures of the job. Despite his initial excitement at returning to his former club, Moyes is said to be feeling overwhelmed by the expectations and responsibilities that come with the role.
Moyes, who has managed clubs such as Manchester United, Sunderland, and West Ham United, is no stranger to the pressures of the Premier League. However, it appears that the intensity of the job has caught up with him once again, leading to concerns about his ability to continue in the role.
Fans of Everton will be hoping that Moyes can overcome his current struggles and lead the team to success in the upcoming season. However, with reports of his burnout circulating, it remains to be seen whether the experienced manager can rediscover his form and guide the Toffees to glory once again.
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Inside David Moyes’ first week back at Everton: A challenge to Dominic Calvert-Lewin, a new job for a fan-favourite and the one training ground change that separates new Toffees boss from Sean Dyche
David Moyes has spent a fair period of his life on the roads around Halewood driving to Finch Farm — but on his approach to Everton‘s training base last weekend, he was a bag of nerves.
The Scotsman, who returned to management exactly 27 years after his first match as the fresh-faced boss of Preston, has taken charge of 698 Premier League games — more than double the next-closest active manager in the top flight. But still, he felt like a man on edge.
Ever since he reversed into his parking spot by the main entrance, though, he has been only moving forward, trying to get the club back on the straight and narrow, just like in 2002. And such is the relentlessness, there has been no time for more nerves.
At 61, Moyes was all but retired. He joked that he considered ‘hanging up his tactics board’ and was at peace enjoying a calm existence since leaving West Ham, going about life at a slower pace from his home in coastal Lancashire, not far from the Open golf venue at Royal Lytham.
But as many veteran bosses have mused, football management is a drug that sucks you back in. For Moyes, it was not management in general — he turned down many potential jobs after departing east London — but managing Everton. He had an itch and needed to scratch it.
‘I am hugely buzzing,’ he told us on Friday. ‘It is something I do, something I love. I might not have done this for any other clubs, this is the only one I think. I am back on the horse.’
David Moyes was nervous as he prepared for his first day back at Everton – there is no time for nerves now
Moyes was at peace enjoying a calm existence since leaving West Ham and close to retired
Everton was the one team he couldn’t turn down returning for – ‘the only one, I think’, he said
Back in the saddle, back at the club he holds dearly in his heart and thought he had missed his chance to return to. So, how did his first week unfold? The first thing that struck Moyes was the number of staff in the building.
When he left for Manchester United in 2013, it was a tight-run operation — now there are hundreds patrolling Finch Farm and the country lane adjacent to it often acts as an overspill parking area, such is the volume of staff.
Moyes mused he is bad with names and will forget many of them at the beginning, but he has warmly impressed everyone. That starts with the first-team squad but extends to all, such as the groundskeepers he stopped to chat to or security team who Moyes has greeted.
One of his first decisions was to promote club legend Leighton Baines from Under 18s manager to a member of his first-team staff, and head of academy goalkeeping David Lucas is also understood to be stepping up to the senior set-up with Jordan Pickford’s blessing.
Pickford, it is worth saying, was personally recommended to Everton’s late chairman Bill Kenwright by Moyes after the pair worked together at Sunderland. These moves, Moyes believes, will not only help bridge the gap between a stuttering academy — there is a lost generation of academy kids as many have been sold to help funds — but also help him have people on his side early on who richly understand the club for good and bad.
Former Liverpool midfielder Charlie Adam is one name under consideration as a set-piece coach after he departed Fleetwood just before Christmas. Watching Aston Villa’s Tyrone Mings dominate Everton’s forwards on corners on Wednesday, it is clear that new role is needed.
It will be a quirk if a former Liverpool player comes in, especially as ex-Toffees defender Johnny Heitinga is part of Arne Slot’s Liverpool staff — much to Moyes’s regret, as the Dutchman left a memorable mark as part of his West Ham backroom team.
Alan Irvine will join up with the coaching staff in the coming days, with Billy McKinlay already in situ and taking a hands-on approach in training. Moyes was going through requests regarding potential staff last Saturday and sounding out contenders.
One of his first decisions was to promote club legend Leighton Baines (right) to first-team staff
Jordan Pickford (pictured) also gave his blessing for head of academy goalkeeping David Lucas to step up
Ex-Liverpool midfielder Charlie Adam is one name under consideration as a set-piece coach
The manager has also held meetings with most players. The messages to the stars have been described as ‘focusing on positives’ — but Moyes has not been afraid to lecture the squad, in a productive way, about their obvious shortcomings.
They did not need telling that improvements on the pitch were needed. The record of one win in the last 12 league games highlights that — plus the damning statistic that they have scored a goal in just two of their last 11 games ahead of Sunday’s visit of Tottenham.
So Moyes didn’t need to be a rocket scientist to know that one of his first ports of call should be Dominic Calvert-Lewin. He challenged the striker, who has scored two goals in 20 league games this term, to start to deliver and get into the six-yard box more.
The boss has leaned on club captain Seamus Coleman, the injured Irishman who took charge with Baines as caretaker boss when Sean Dyche was sacked. Instead of showing Coleman the ropes, as Moyes did upon signing him in 2009, the roles were reversed.
One of Moyes’s quips has been how he wishes he could find some more gems for £60,000, Coleman’s transfer fee when he joined from Sligo Rovers. He desperately wants new faces.
Such is the way of the world in 2025, any £60,000 buys will not be happening. The club is in a much better state when it comes to transfer dealings after being cleared of any more breaches of financial rules, plus the new ownership — but it is still far from easy to find deals.
Dyche often would say managing Everton is like ‘juggling sand’ and that dealing with negative noise of fans is like ‘sticking your fingers in a burst dam’. Fans grew tired of his style of football, but the former Burnley boss was a wordsmith.
Moyes is targeting several players this window and has spent many hours already in the recruitment room but will not act for the sake of it. One problem Everton have is the rule that they can only have two domestic loanees on their books.
Moyes has challenged misfiring Dominic Calvert-Lewin with getting into the six-yard box more
He has leaned on club captain Seamus Coleman, who Moyes signed for the club back in 2009
Jack Harrison is one of two domestic loanees at the club, with Moyes desperate to add bodies
One of those slots is taken up by energetic winger Jack Harrison, a favourite of Dyche’s due to his off-the-ball work despite a subpar attacking output, and the other by Armando Broja, who is out injured for at least two months with parent club Chelsea digging their heels in over recalling him.
That means loans for players in this country are off the table for now. Former Chelsea, Arsenal and Fulham star Willian has been offered to the club among others such as Lyon winger Ernest Nuamah. But Moyes also understands that transfers will not solve everything, and a lot of the work will be done on the training pitch with a focus on addressing their attacking problems.
Sources say Moyes’s sessions centre much more on attacking drills, whereas Dyche focused on shape and solidity. Players are said to have already taken to the new regime and are enjoying the daily work more.
‘It’s only a week, but he’s been spot on since he’s come in,’ said defender Jake O’Brien. ‘His messages have been very positive. I think he just wants to start playing more, get a bit more possession. It’s all been positive, you can see his ideas he’s trying to implement.’
O’Brien was signed from Lyon in the summer for £17million but played just 34 league minutes under Dyche. Moyes appreciates the attributes of the 23-year-old, such as his pace — and fellow summer buy Jesper Lindstrom could play more, too.
Moyes liked Lindstrom when he was playing at Eintracht Frankfurt and is planning to give the Dane more chances after he was limited to mainly substitute appearances. He told Lindstrom he preferred him on the right wing rather than the left, where he had been playing.
But overall, the Scotsman has been focusing on improving the culture and atmosphere. He has talked about how this season will be ‘nip and tuck’ in terms of safety again, and in his first months he is ‘sticking an Elastoplast’ over Everton’s problems.
Soon, the cuts of a decade of mismanagement on and off the field will start to heal. Moyes, by his own admission, is no magician — but he knows this club better than most and his quest to improve their fortunes is well under way.
David Moyes has wasted no time making his mark in his first week back at Everton. The former Toffees boss has already set out a challenge to star striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin, as well as making a new job offer to a fan-favourite player.Moyes has reportedly told Calvert-Lewin that he wants him to become more clinical in front of goal and to work on his finishing during training sessions. The young striker has been in fine form this season, but Moyes believes he can take his game to the next level with some additional coaching.
In a surprise move, Moyes has also offered a new role to veteran midfielder Leon Osman. The former Everton captain is set to join the coaching staff and will work closely with Moyes to help develop the team’s midfield players.
But perhaps the most significant change Moyes has made so far is a tweak to the training ground routine. The new boss has introduced a more intense training regime, with a focus on high-intensity drills and physical conditioning. This is a departure from the more relaxed approach favored by former manager Sean Dyche, and Moyes believes it will help the players reach their full potential.
Overall, Moyes’ first week back at Everton has been filled with challenges and changes, but the players seem to be responding positively to his methods. With the team looking to climb up the table and secure European football next season, Moyes will be hoping his new approach pays off.
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Everton 0-1 Aston Villa: David Moyes’ return ruined by Ollie Watkins winner in Premier League
Some 4,266 days since last taking charge of an Everton home match – a 2-0 victory over a side he would later go on to manage in West Ham – Moyes was back in the dugout at Goodison Park and witnessed the monumental job he has walked in to.
Moyes, 61, is the oldest manager currently in the top flight and he will need to use all those years of experience as he attempts to keep the Blues afloat come May.
Dyche managed to salvage survival on two occasions, but having won only three times this season Moyes faces a colossal task to ensure the club maintains its proud record of being ever-present in the Premier League.
Goals win games, and Everton have not claimed enough victories because of their struggles in putting the ball in the back of the net – they have scored just 15 times in 20 games this term, with only bottom side Southampton faring worse with 12.
Moyes said on Monday that Calvert-Lewin needs to get his scoring boots back on, but the striker has now gone 16 games without a goal, a run stretching back to September, and had plenty of chances to give his boss a winning return.
The first was flashed wide after he made a good run, but he showed signs of a player bereft of confidence when another opportunity fell to him inside the box, unable to sort his feet out quickly enough before stabbing a meek effort at goal.
His best opportunity came deep in added time when Jesper Lindstrom fed a pass to Calvert-Lewin in front of goal, but the forward scooped a first-time shot over the crossbar from eight yards out, much to Moyes’ and the crowd’s dismay.
Villa kept Everton largely at arm’s length after scoring, leaving the hosts with one win in their past 11 games and failing to score in nine of those.
Everton’s hopes of a successful return for manager David Moyes were dashed as they fell to a 1-0 defeat against Aston Villa in the Premier League. Ollie Watkins’ second-half goal was enough to secure all three points for the visitors and spoil Moyes’ homecoming.Despite dominating possession for much of the game, Everton were unable to find a way past Villa’s resolute defense. The visitors, on the other hand, were clinical in front of goal, with Watkins pouncing on a defensive error to score the only goal of the match.
Moyes, who was making his first appearance at Goodison Park since returning to Everton for a second spell as manager, will be disappointed with the result. The Scot will now have to regroup and prepare his team for their next challenge as they look to climb up the Premier League table.
Villa, on the other hand, will be delighted with their performance and the three points earned on the road. The win sees them move up to fifth in the league table and continue their impressive start to the season.
Overall, it was a frustrating day for Everton and Moyes, but Villa will be celebrating a hard-fought victory as they continue to impress in the Premier League.
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