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Do Everton have too many players? And not enough? via GrandOldTeam

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Do Everton have too many players? And not enough?

So, it’s the summer and I’m officially bored. I’ve not watched a football match for over a month and now the endless search for news amongst the rumour columns is beginning to get to me.

But, like the rest of you, I continue to read them and try and picture what Everton’s season is going to look like: dreaming and worrying in equal measure.

The reason for this is the sheer quantity of players we currently seem to have in some positions and the apparent lack of quality we have in others. At the time of writing Everton have 27 players who could be looking for first team football next season and we continue to be linked with more.

So who is going to play, who should be sold and who is going to be left to rot?

Let’s take a look:

Goalkeeper



This is a nice easy one to start with. Pickford has clearly been signed to be number one (and has been given the jersey), so it’s all about Stekelenburg and Robles. I strongly suspect Robles wants first team football somewhere, so he should be on his way for a nominal fee. Stekelenburg will probably be satisfied with some cup appearances. Done.

Defence

Here we seem to be lacking in the full-back area. When Coleman is back, he will undoubtedly be first choice on the right and the little I’ve seen of Kenny leaves me wanting to see him get some football in the meantime. Holgate has shown he’s a good footballer, but also not a full-back.

On the left there is still just Leighton Baines. A great player for Everton, but didn’t look the same last year and there’s no one to replace him if he gets injured. Maybe this should be make or break for Luke Garbutt at Everton this season?



As for the centre-halves, we seem to have a few too many. Keane and Funes Mori are the standout players for me, but I don’t see Koeman being able to keep the four senior centre-backs all happy. Then, with Holgate and Connolly both demonstrating that they deserve some time on the pitch to develop, the manager is going to be left with a number of decisions to make.

Conclusion: Potentially require a left-back and should ship out one of the old boys from the middle.

Midfield

This is one place where Koeman could do some trimming and also make a little money. McCarthy is not good enough with the ball and is well down the order behind Schneiderlin, Gueye, Davies and even Barry. We should have sold him a few years ago when Arsenal were prepared to chuck a load of money our way, but there would still be some suitors out there who would part with a little cash.



As for Besic, I like him a lot, but he is just injured too often and needs to be at a club where he can guarantee himself some playing time for the periods that he’s fit for. Everton cannot offer him that.



This just leaves Kieran Dowell. He’s rated highly at Everton, but there’s a number of players in his way before he’s running out at Goodison.

Conclusion: End of the line for McCarthy and Besic and consider a loan move for Dowell.

Attack

There’s no getting around it – we simply have too many attackers and we still need more. Even if we assume that McGeady and Niasse will be gone soon, that still leaves nine (yes, NINE!) players looking to fill what will probably be three attacking positions. Of these nine, only Lookman and Calvert-Lewin are youngsters, so there are sure to be some unhappy faces around Finch Farm.

However, the plus side for the players is that all these places are currently up for grabs, but who will get the nod from the Dutchman?

First we have Bolasie, who is expected back at around Christmas time. Upon his return to full fitness, I would think he’s the only nailed-on starter.


Koeman will be looking for more players to ease the burden of such a big chunk of goals being lost.

Arriving from abroad we have Ramirez and Klaassen. Both are currently unproven in the Premier League and that matters. It’s still the toughest league in the world and they’ll certainly need some time to adapt. Ramirez has an advantage in that he can play as an out-and-out striker, but Klaassen has strong competition from a couple of boyhood blues…

The older of which is a certain Wayne Rooney. There are a number of non-playing reasons why this is a good signing, but I can’t imagine that’s the main reason for Koeman bringing him back. He’s at Goodison to play.



Then we have the on-going saga of Ross Barkley. He doesn’t seem to want to stay, we kind of want to keep him and no one wants to buy him. For me, he should not be on the pitch until a contract is signed. If no one buys him, then some time with David Unsworth might make him come to his senses – especially with the World Cup in a year’s time.

This leaves us with Mirallas and Lennon. Mirallas was finally given the opportunity to shine last season, but never really took it. It’s still not clear if he’s a winger, a forward or should be behind the striker. I don’t know, he doesn’t know and Koeman doesn’t know. As for Lennon, everyone is glad to see that he’s bounced back, but he’s never truly been good enough. 15 years after his professional debut he still has no real end product and that simply is not going to change.

Conclusion: A striker who guarantees goals is still required; the Barkley issue has gone on long enough; let Lennon leave if someone wants him – I’d even let him go for nothing.

All in all, my big concern is that some of our fine youngsters are not going to get enough playing time thanks to some of our aging, but more experienced, players. People will point to the extra games we’ll have due to European football, but I don’t see it being enough to keep all the names above happy. I’d be glad to see a few faces moving towards the exit doors in order to create the space for the club to grow.

But, alas, these are not my decisions and nor are they yours. So I guess we’ll all keep scouring the Internet for information until 12th August when we’ll get our first idea of what the new-look Everton side will be.

Onwards, Evertonians…

The post Do Everton have too many players? And not enough? appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Everton’s Midfield Maestro via GrandOldTeam

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5 Alternative Midfielders Everton Should Sign Instead Of Splashing The Cash On Gylfi Sigurðsson.

We’ve all been glued to our seats since Mid-June, after noticing Everton had spent more than £10 Million and signed 4 players before the transfer window opened and one player has been mentioned more times than then players brought in.

Icelandic midfielder Gylfi Sigurðsson was by far the captain that steered Swansea’s relegation ship clear of the drop, and has ever since been linked with a move away from Wales. Everton throughout the last 2 months have been top of that list and have even seen 2 bids for the 27-year-old rejected. Forcing Swansea to demand £50 Million for their star man.
However we have picked out 5 alternatives that could save Everton a few pennies and still get a good player.

#5 Emil Forsberg (RB Leipzig) Value: £32 Million

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Voted Swedish midfielder of the year in 2014 and 2016, winger, Emil Forsberg has been taking the Bundesliga by storm at RB Leipzig, with his stunning ability and one of Europe’s deadliest free kicks. The versatile winger is blessed with plenty of trickery, dribbling skills and excellent vision to pick out passes. Forsberg would however come at a price believed to be around the £32M mark but would fit well in the winger roll at Everton or even as a N.10.

The post Everton’s Midfield Maestro appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Game of the Day: Everton 7-1 Sunderland via Everton Arent We

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David Moyes won 218 of his 518 games in charge of Everton – arguably, it was win number 100 that was his best. It was November 2007, and Sunderland had come to town looking for three important points in their relegation scrap. They left with their tails firmly between their legs, having been given an almighty hiding. A goal-hungry Goodison crowd had been given a rare treat.

Everton, certainly in the – I’m sorry about this – “Premier League era”, haven’t tended to be the sort of side that dishes out thrashings. Get thrashed? Maybe. But Blues are made to wait for the royal blue machine to churn up some poor footballing chum. When it happens, it’s worth the wait. And then Everton ruin things by releasing a DVD.

Moyes’ Toffees had in fact never scored more than four in game since the Scot’s arrival in 2002. They had conceded seven against Arsenal, but the best the Blues had offered were 4-0 defeats of Leeds, Crystal Palace and Luton. A good beating, it seemed, was overdue. Moyes himself alluded to it, claiming after the Sunderland win that, having seen the side’s performances in training and matches, he had foreseen such a result.

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Thanks to cup competitions, Everton were in decent form. The Blues had won five on the bounce – though only two of those goals were in the league – before a dramatic Tim Cahill overhead kick sealed a 1-1 draw at Stamford Bridge. There was plenty of attacking talent available to Moyes, with Andy Johnson returning from injury, and Mikel Arteta replacing Tony Hibbert in the starting line-up was a clear indicator that Everton would be on the front foot from the off.

It took 12 minutes for the floodgates to open. A bouncing long ball bamboozled Sunderland summer signing Paul McShane, and Yakubu was given the license to chance his arm. Luck was on the Nigerian’s side, as a weak effort spooned off the lunging Danny Higginbotham, over Craig Gordon and into the net. If the first goal was simple and scrappy, the second was the opposite. Yakubu released Arteta on the right with an incisive pass, and the Spaniard held the ball up before releasing Phil Neville with a clever flick. Neville chipped a ball in to the penalty area for Cahill, whose bouncing touch was somehow not pounced upon by any of the four Sunderland defenders in the vicinity. Cahill fired his effort past Gordon to complete the flowing move.

Kenwyne Jones was ploughing a lone furrow for the hapless Sunderland, and a driven effort saved by Tim Howard was all the visitors could muster in the opening 40 minutes. The Sunderland midfield was butter, to which Arteta, Osman, Carsley and Pienaar were hot knives. Even Nuno Valente got in on the act, charging through the middle and feeding the South African on the left before continuing his run. Pienaar slipped the ball down the wing for the left-back, received the return ball, and opened his body to drive a first-time shot into the far corner.

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Yet this is Everton we’re talking about. Even a thrashing can’t be simple. On the cusp of half-time, Grant Leadbitter and Carlos Edwards had efforts saved by Tim Howard. Somehow, Jones was still allowed to collect the loose ball and feed Dwight Yorke, who made no mistake. Yorke’s reward for scoring was to get hooked by Sunderland manager Roy Keane at half-time, with the Trinidadian and Dickson Etuhu replaced by Danny Collins and Ross Wallace. It seemed to have worked. For the opening 15 minutes of the second half, Everton were kept at bay.

After an hour of neat football, the Blues broke Sunderland down with one of the most route one goals Goodison has ever seen. Joseph Yobo, ambling out of his penalty area under no pressure whatsoever, elected to lump the ball forwards. McShane didn’t judge the flight of the long ball correctly, but Cahill did. A deft touch took him inside McShane, and a cool finish made it 4-1. It should have been 4-2 minutes later, but Michael Chopra inexplicably missed with the goal at his mercy.

It just wasn’t McShane’s day. Arteta wandered into the penalty area and laid the ball back for Osman, whose effort was parried by Gordon. The ball bounced off the hapless Irishman’s knee and fell for Yakubu, who swivelled and planted a shot into the left-hand corner. At 5-1, Sunderland had given up the ghost. Even their own attacks were turning into Everton goals. A poor Jones pass was intercepted by Phil Neville, and the Everton captain’s tackle-cum-clearance-cum-killer ball was latched onto by the returning Johnson. The striker tore past the static Mackems and neatly chipped the ball over Gordon. There was time for one more, arguably the best of the bunch. Osman started near the halfway line, slalomed through the Sunderland defence, held off a series of weak challenges, and tucked away a seventh Everton goal.

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7-1. It could have been eight, if Everton had been awarded a penalty when Arteta was brought down clumsily in the second half. The Toffees’ biggest league win since 1996 was in part thanks to Sunderland’s incompetent defending, but it would not have been possible without some attractive, often outstanding, attacking play. Keane said afterwards: “No matter who had played Everton today they would have had a battering.” Cahill, Osman and Pienaar were all impressive, but it was Arteta’s midfield magic that doomed Sunderland to a serious beating.

David Moyes claimed at the time that the win was the best in his five years at the helm. There were few in the six years following that could challenge it. All that remains to be seen is when the next Everton hiding will be dished out.

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Romelu Lukaku: Manchester United’s plan B but a very José Mourinho striker | Jonathan Wilson via The Guardian

Lukaku can fulfil two vital roles in a Mourinho side: holding up the ball and threatening on the counterattack in the manner of Didier Drogba
As a coup de théâtre, Manchester United’s swoop for Romelu Lukaku was rather magnificent. A much-needed striker was acquired, Wayne Rooney was offloaded and José Mourinho’s last two clubs were left looking a little foolish – Chelsea as they failed to land a player who had seemed almost certain to join them since January and Real Madrid as they vainly held out on their valuation of Álvaro Morata. From a football point of view, though, the deal raises as many questions as it answers.

Assuming Morata was plan A for United – and unless United were playing some implausible double game he surely was – it is a significant change of tack to turn to Lukaku. They are very different players and the hop from one to the other reinforces the idea United’s transfer policy is based on buying individuals and then fitting them together rather than setting out with a coherent strategy. Or at least it would if Lukaku were not – whatever tensions may have existed between them in the past – such an obviously Mourinho style of striker.

Related: Everton’s Romelu Lukaku is a traditional No9 who could play in any era

Related: José Mourinho backs Romelu Lukaku to succeed at the ‘biggest club’

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£40m Bid Made via GrandOldTeam

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Everton have made a £40m bid for Gylfi Sigurdsson, according to The Telegraph.

The journalist with the exclusive, who also called Jordan Pickford’s £30m transfer to Everton – claims Sigurdsson is not boarding Swansea’s flight to the United States today and is heading back to South Wales for talks with chairman Huw Jenkins.

Apparently Swansea are yet to acknowledge the offer but Everton are confident that it will be enough to secure one of Ronald Koeman’s top targets.


Everton have made a £40m bid for Gylfi Sigurdsson and are hopeful of concluding a deal. Sigurdsson not on #Swans trip to the US today #efc

— John Percy (@JPercyTelegraph) July 13, 2017
Gylfi Sigurdsson Player Profile via Tom Ferguson


Following the arrival of Dutch international Davy Klaassen, it is clear what Ronald Koeman wants…

More goals and creativity from all over the pitch.

Gylfi Sigurdsson fits the bill.

With 49 caps for his native Iceland, he has picked up a respectable 15 goals.

In what was a truly abysmal Swansea City side, Sigurdsson managed to grab himself nine goals and a very impressive 13 assists.

A key factor why the Swans retained their top division status.


Gylfi Sigurdsson has been involved in 51.1% of Swansea's 43 Premier League goals this season:

13 assists
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9 goals ⚽

Pure end product. pic.twitter.com/NONYGHuT1d

— Squawka Football (@Squawka) May 18, 2017

At 27, Sigurdsson is coming to his peak. He stands at 6ft1 and is as capable with his left foot as he is with his right.

His ability to be deployed in more than one position is a massive plus.

With Ross Barkley’s future up in the air, he would be the perfect replacement.

A Steven Pienaar shaped gap has plagued Everton since the demise of the South African. Sigurdsson is a man who can make the left hand side his own.

After putting aside a troublesome experience at Spurs, he has thrived off becoming the main man in a side. A team built around the former Reading ace is vital to getting the best out of him.

Lacking leaders has troubled the Blues’ ranks for a number of years.

Sigurdsson was handed the captain’s armband and led by example on more than one occasion en route to saving Paul Clement’s outfit from the drop.

An issue with Everton has been the lack of danger and productivity from set pieces.

Since the questionable decision to remove Leighton Baines from dead ball duties there’s been no true excitement from the Goodison faithful when getting that free kick on the edge of the 18-yard-box or a corner.

Gylfi is the man to change that. A serious threat to anyone’s goal when given the chance to whip it in or line up a shot at goal.


No player has scored more free-kicks (6) in the Premier League since 2012/13 than Gylfi Sigurdsson.

Pinpoint precision.
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pic.twitter.com/OWIoIOYcVS

— Squawka Football (@Squawka) April 30, 2017

Up the Toffees.

The post £40m Bid Made appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Swansea Confirm Sigurdsson News via GrandOldTeam

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After news of a £40m from Everton for Sigurdsson broke this morning, Swansea City have confirmed reports he has pulled out of the Swansea squad for their pre-season tour of the USA amid uncertainty over his future.


We can confirm that Gylfi Sigurdsson will not travel with the squad for our pre-season tour of the USA. pic.twitter.com/8qgAQewUG3

— Swansea City AFC (@SwansOfficial) July 13, 2017


Having played v Barnet last night, Gylfi did not feel in the right frame of mind to travel due to the current uncertainty over his future.

— Swansea City AFC (@SwansOfficial) July 13, 2017

The post Swansea Confirm Sigurdsson News appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Swansea Reject Everton’s £40m Sigurdsson Bid via GrandOldTeam

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Swansea City have rejected Everton’s £40m for Gylfi Sigurdsson , according to Sky Sports.

News broke this morning that Everton bid £40m for Gylfi Sigurdsson, prompting Swansea to confirm Sigurdsson had withdrawn from their pre-season tour of the USA amid uncertainty over his future.

However, Swansea are desperate to hold on to their key man and Sky Sports report Everton’s bid has been turned down.


BREAKING: @SwansOfficial reject £40m bid from @Everton for Sigurdsson – Sky sources. #SSNHQ pic.twitter.com/s6aAotHfMn

— Sky Sports News HQ (@SkySportsNewsHQ) July 13, 2017

The post Swansea Reject Everton’s £40m Sigurdsson Bid appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Everton set to increase bid and sign Gylfi Sigurdsson after Swansea reject £40m via The Guardian

• Swansea value midfielder at £50m and deal should be struck before next week
• Sigurdsson not travelling with Swansea for their pre-season tour of US
Swansea have rejected a £40m bid from Everton for Gylfi Sigurdsson. They value the midfielder at £50m and further negotiations are expected which will likely end in the player moving to Goodison Park before next week.

Sigurdsson has not travelled with the Swansea squad for a pre-season tour of the United States. The club said on their Twitter feed that “Gylfi did not feel in the right frame of mind to travel due to the current uncertainty over his future”.

Related: Everton determined to sign Gylfi Sigurdsson despite Swansea’s £50m price tag

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