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Save It For The Morning After via GrandOldTeam

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How you feeling? Resolutions are tough things to keep, they require discipline, persistence and often skill. So when you’re manager of Everton and you resolve to make things better and achieve great things then that’s words anyone can get behind, as long as the outcome matches the resolution.

There’s some things that are tough to shake off in the morning and right up there are rum hangovers and derby thrashings the night before. Maybe this is your morning. Perhaps were unnaturally apathetic as guessed what was coming. Perhaps you’re seething and don’t want to be reminded of it, sorry if so, swipe this tab away on your phone.

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In a week where Roberto Martinez was invited to audition to be allowed to continue in his role I’m not sure there’s any coming back from this after just the first act.

It’s been nearly a three year journey but that Everton you witnessed out there at Anfield was a pale shadow of what any Everton should be, as a minimum.

It’s been coming for quite some time so it’s no surprise, Evertonians (well the saner ones anyway) are as rule patient and appreciate context if things are progressing, and sometimes regressing as a process in order to reach a successful outcome.

What we witnessed out there was simply a team lacking in structure, strategy and the most important thing which galls Evertonians: fight.

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This does not in any way give a free pass to the players who at the moment are not performing anywhere near they need to be, there’s far more talent out there on the pitch than the tragic Everton teams that you and I can remember. In all of this it shouldn’t be overlooked. Whether this is a lack of motivation or belief in the Manager, there’s a prerequisite of giving your all at the club and too many are falling below that. Let no fingers be pointed at others or circumstance, they’re culpable equally.

That saying if you take the position responsible managing any team then you’re, wait for it, responsible for that team. That’s why you take the big bucks (football is a rare example of staff earning more than the Manager), the status and the opportunity. When it goes well you take the glory, like turning up at twenty one months ago to a mural of your very own image on the side of our famous ground.

There’s some things, which won’t be popular to read, that he has achieved and amongst them is assembling a talented young team with room to progress and grow. Martinez has also been keenly involved in developing the most talented crop of youth players we’ve had come through in some time. There’s a belief for young players that you’ll get opportunity at Everton and that’s alluring in attracting and keeping the young talent we need to create sustainable success.

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Everton at times can play some fantastic football but the cavalier approach is undermined massively by the soft underbelly and seemingly inability to get the best of a defence that features six internationals. In Premier League standard football it’s a huge weakness and one that’s been exploited far too often to the detriment of Everton’s results.

There’s no denying Roberto Martinez is a nice man and it’s painful to see someone that “gets” Everton trying hard but falling short by quite some distance. However it’s a big bucks sport and sentimentality is a handicap if your goal is sustainable success. We’ve sacked popular Everton Managers in taxis before today. Loyalty is a very admirable trait but there’s a line where it crosses into being to the detriment of what you’re trying to achieve.

There’s a massive game on Saturday for Everton, a game as we grasp desperately to rid ourselves of a statistic that shames this grand old club: 21 years without a trophy.

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It’s the first real test of Farhad Moshiri’s tenure, and what a test it is as you can assume Martinez has the steadfast backing of Kenwright who is still very much in influence at the club. Politics is natural in any company or collective of people but the most successful of those groups overcome the politics through steadfast accurate leadership and progress the company or group on.

It’s pretty plain to see that the players aren’t buying in to what they are being asked to do and if so have little idea or motivation or execute it. Let’s be clear though, there should be little fretting for losing some of our supposed leading lights, if they can’t turn up at Anfield then they’re in no position to sneer at Everton.

There’s a lot of anger about right now and urges of change, on top of that there’s also a large portion of the fanbase that are growing apathetic. It was that same apathy that was prevalent in the early nineties before a last day game against Wimbledon gave an electric shock to the senses, and what we were about to lose.

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Decisions need to be taken to ensure that the regression of this Everton team is halted, and that regeneration can be kickstarted. Not a short term fix like a Tim Sherwood or Paulo Di Canio profile, but someone that can lead Everton forward with a team that demonstrate it on the pitch. The boom bust cycle has been witnessed with predictable levels of failure at the likes of Aston Villa, Newcastle, Sunderland and even Spurs over the past decade or so. Chopping and changing too often is not conducive to consistent success.

Those decisions need to be made and quickly, the Everton that fell into the current manager’s hands are an all round inferior performing unit from the one he inherited. After three years and the players at his disposal that’s damning. Correct me on my history if I’m wrong but I don’t think there’s ever been a crestfallen support our ours like this in anticipation of us appearing in an FA Cup Semi Final. That atmosphere is part of a dangerous cycle which is prohibitive for the club to proceed.

Martinez has long lost the fanbase, a fanbase that has been divided over one thing or another for far, far too long. So what’s the resolution?

Time for something new. Maybe something borrowed. But definitely something worthy of royal blue.

The post Save It For The Morning After appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Nobody invests in regression via GrandOldTeam

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Despite the desperate gloom of the Anfield debacle, and the impending feeling of further capitulation in the semi final on Saturday, we need to remind ourselves of the future.

A season that has promised much has mirrored Martinez’s near three years here, initial hope and progress followed by the most severe and almost inexplicable regression.

At the beginning of March, Mr Moshiri made a short but promising introductory message in the Chelsea match programme.

In that statement he commits to “ensure that the Club recaptures the glory days of the past and builds sustained success in the future”

Clearly this reference covers many areas both off field and on field.

Given his record of achievement in business, it’s natural to assume both the resources and expertise are made available to resolve the stadium and the commercial issues which have been such a drain on our ability to compete equally this past 25 years.

Similarly, on the pitch, resources and expertise is required to take our existing squad and add to it to achieve Mr Moshiri’s and our (the fans) ambitions.

Let’s examine this more carefully though. I have no doubt the resources will be made available to retain and build the squad dubbed as Everton’s “finest in many years”.

The problem, as has become all too apparent is in the management and coaching of this squad. The regression we, the fans, have seen in every aspect of a professional football team (tactics, spirit, fitness, desire to win) can only lay at the feet of the management team who have steadfastly refused to acknowledge such problems, and change strategy to overcome them.

The result is a team bereft of any positive characteristic – talent, belief, desire, completely drained from a very talented group of players.

My point in this short article is to say that Mr Moshiri will have seen this as clearly as you and I. He’s made the most public investment of his career, one that he will be determined to succeed both financially and on the pitch. Categorically therefore he will not see Martinez and his coaching team as part of the solution, and it’s just a question of when he believes is the right time for them to go. Is that before or after the semi-final? I don’t know – my thoughts are it will be after.

So to conclude, Mr Moshiri is committed to our footballing success, he is talking to the best management talents available, in the short term we’re suffering in a way I hoped I’d never see, but I’m positive the changes will be made in the next hours, days or weeks. We’ve a great deal to look forward to – I believed him when he said “most importantly, Everton is about great football and winning matches”

That can’t be done without management and coaching changes, he knows that, it will happen be it in hours, days or the next few weeks.

The management team will soon be history, let’s get behind the players and shirts and do our bit for a semi final victory.

The post Nobody invests in regression appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Everton were humiliated against Liverpool and are in a mess ahead of their FA Cup semi-final… but is Roberto Martinez the only man to blame for club’s failure this season? via Daily Mail

In a season of lows, Everton somehow managed to hit a new one in Wednesday's Merseyside derby. Here, Sportsmail takes a look at those responsible for the club's two-year slump.
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Everton did not have a single shot on target against Liverpool and Roberto Martinez has presided over worst derby defeats for 34 years… stats that shame the under-fire boss via Daily Mail

Everton's faltering season plumbed new depths on Wednesday night as they suffered a crushing defeat against local rivals Liverpool to leave manager Roberto Martinez fighting to save his job.
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Martinez – “Nobody deserved to experience that” via Royal Blue Mersey

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Post-match quotes from the Everton manager

Just when you thought this season couldn't get feasibly any worse, it did, and how.

Everton capitulated in horrendous style as they crumbled to a 4-0 loss at Anfield in the return leg of the Merseyside Derby. Here's what hapless manager Roberto Martinez had to say about the debacle.


"Nobody deserved to experience that – no fan or player deserved to be in that situation or chain of events. We need to move on quickly and repay our fans with a proper performance and showing in the semi-final of the FA Cup.

"That game is so close to us that I don't think we should dwell on this one for too long because you have to focus on Saturday. It was a horrible experience for everyone connected to the football club.

"We need to regroup and make sure we have that opportunity to give the fans what they deserve – a chance to get in the final.

"It was a game that probably changed on the two actions that we didn't defend well enough in the period before half time. Clearly we lost concentration. For the first 40 minutes we had a different focus, a different way about us. We gave them a soft cushion of two goals that just before half time was a massive blow."

On the straight red card that defender Ramiro Funes Mori received for his stamp on Liverpool forward Divock Origi, Martinez defended the Argentinian, saying there was no intent to injure there.


"We tried to regroup and the first action is the red card. From that point on the game becomes a non-event and a horrible, horrible experience especially with the big game we have around the corner.

"Ramiro tries to win the ball, that was his intent. He doesn't try to hurt the player or contact the player. It is a mis-timed challenge – it could have been a yellow card, it could have been a red card. I can understand why the referee gave it. Probably Ramiro got carried away with the emotion of the derby.

"Everything that could have gone wrong, went wrong. At half time we lost Gareth Barry through injury and then John Stones falls victim to illness with some stomach cramps. We already have Phil Jagielka injured in that position and we ended up with two midfielders in those positions.

"It's Gareth's groin so he is very doubtful. He felt it very close to half time so we'll see the extent of it. Maybe he came off at the right time."

So it looks like Stones will be okay for the Wembley game on Saturday, but could possibly see one of the midfielders deputizing in next to him at center half.


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