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Koeman: “Barkley looking for a new challenge” via GrandOldTeam

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Ronald Koeman has confirmed Ross Barkley has declined Everton’s offer of a new contract, insisting he instead prefers to look for a new challenge.

Koeman also admitted he “100% expects Ross Barkley to leave”


Koeman on Barkley "We made a good offer to him to sign a new contract. He declined & told me he is looking for a new challenge" #EFC

— Richard Buxton (@RichardBuxton_) July 26, 2017


Koeman on Barkley "I'm looking to other players and that's my priority – not Ross. It's his decision & everybody knows what the situation is

— Richard Buxton (@RichardBuxton_) July 26, 2017

The post Koeman: “Barkley looking for a new challenge” appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Ross Barkley wants new challenge and will leave Everton, says Ronald Koeman via The Guardian

• Manager says Barkley ‘is not in Everton’s future’ and will be sold
• Midfielder has confirmed he will not sign new contract, Koeman says
Ross Barkley has signalled the end of his Everton career by informing Ronald Koeman that he will not sign a new contract and “is looking for a new challenge”.

The Everton manager has expected Barkley to leave his boyhood club since the end of last season when the midfielder failed to respond to an ultimatum to sign an extended deal. Koeman went further on Wednesday when he confirmed there was no way back for the 23-year-old at Everton and he fully expects the England international to be sold.

Related: Everton should think twice before signing Gylfi Sigurdsson for £50m

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Once a blue… Never mind via GrandOldTeam

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The departure of Romelu Lukaku came as no surprise to Evertonians this summer, the Big Belgian moved to Manchester United for £90m earlier in the window, with many believing he would be the only significant departure from Goodison Park this summer. Well we were wrong, Ronald Koeman stated today in his first press conference of the season that he is “100% Certain” that Ross Barkley will leave Everton this summer.



Gutted, right? Actually no. Ross Barkley has always stated that he is here to stay, be it in interviews, or jumping in to the Gwladys Street when speculation about his future was circulating around social media. Ross’s commitment to Everton has never really been brought in to question, until recently it was rumoured that Ross had declined a contract from Everton, believed to be in the region of £115,000.



Ross broke in to the Everton first team a few years back, and if we are all being honest, he hasn’t exactly improved since then. If I’m being honest, its not his lack of development that has bothered me, its his attitude and the way he has been going about this whole new contract. We all know that Everton have never actually been able to compete with the wages that teams like Chelsea and City can offer, but with recent investment from Farhad Moshiri, Everton now can compete with the bigger teams in terms of wages, and in terms of transfers. In my lifetime I have never been more optimistic as an Everton Fan, we have the money to compete, we have a brand new stadium finally in the pipeline, and we have a world class manager who wants to take this club back to the heights of the 80’s, Why a Young Scouse lad, who has been around the club for so many years would want to leave Everton at a time where there is so much optimism and hype around the club is beyond me. What startles me even more is the fact that Ross actually thinks he could start for any of the teams that are linked with him, He is never getting in that Spurs team with Dele Alli and Christian Eriksen, and he simply won’t fit in to Arsenals side either.



Ross has declined a £115,000 a week contract from Everton, and whilst I could see both Spurs and Arsenal offering around the £125,000/£130,000 figure, He surely knows that he would be a bench warmer and his game time will be even more limited then it would be if he was to stay at Everton should he move down South. With the return of Wayne Rooney earlier in the month, I knew it would be great for all sorts of reasons, none more so then improving Ross Barkley. If Ross really wants to go and sit on the bench for Spurs, rather then spearhead our Attack on the Champions League, then he clearly isn’t this massive blue that he makes out to be.



With the signings of Wayne Rooney and Davy Klassen, and the proposed transfer of Swansea Attacking Midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson in the very near future, it is clear that Ronald Koeman has been planning for life without Ross for a while. It will be a shame to see Ross leave and waste his talent that we al know is there sitting on the bench for one of the teams that finished above us, However if he does not want to be apart of this amazing future that we have going forward at the moment then to be quite honest he simply isn’t the Blue that he has had us all believing he is.

Good Luck Ross, but I know for a fact whilst we are reaching heights we have never seen in the Premier League era, he will be devastated that he decided to move away all for an extra £15,000 a week.

The post Once a blue… Never mind appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Game of the Day: Everton 1-0 Liverpool, 2004 via Everton Arent We

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There are more than a few iconic photographs from Everton’s history, ones which speak a thousand words. So above is a picture about which I will now write a thousand (or more) words. It is a scene that portrays adrenaline-fuelled ebullience at its purest; a joyous pile-on, with a beaming Tim Cahill punching the air. Behind them, a distorted pandemonium, a mass of flailing limbs. The 200th Merseyside derby was petering out into a forgettable episode of a normally gripping drama, after 67 minutes of tepid football. Just a minute later it would become unforgettable. The man at the foot of that ruck is responsible.

Everton went into the 2004/05 season on their lowest ebb, which, considering the plight of the club from 1990 onwards, is saying something. A season of abject failure had concluded with Everton, who closed out the campaign with a thrashing at the hands of pre-Sheikh Manchester City, finishing 17th. Wayne Rooney had gone off to Euro 2004, lit the tournament up, exited it in a storm of controversy and left Goodison Park to join Manchester United. Fellow striker Tomasz Radzinski preferred the bright lights of Fulham, and the only players signed in the summer were Marcus Bent, from Championship side Ipswich, and Tim Cahill from third tier FA Cup finalists Millwall. An outlay of close to £18m less than had been received up front for Rooney did not inspire confidence. A 4-1 home beating at the hands of Arsenal on the opening day left Goodison in a deep gloom.

And yet the Blues went into the first Merseyside derby of the season knowing that victory would lift them above the Gunners into second, and not far adrift of leaders Chelsea. Of their first 16 league games, Everton had won 10, only losing against Arsenal, Chelsea and Spurs, with draws against Man Utd, Newcastle United and Aston Villa thrown in. How had the unfancied Blues done it? Success was all down to a team dedicated to each other, with more grit than the M1 on an icy winter morning. That was encapsulated the week before at Goodison. Twice Bolton led, and twice they were pegged back, before a Radhi Jaidi goal sealed victory for David Moyes’ scrappy side.

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Everton had already claimed six 1-0 wins, plus a 0-0 at Old Trafford. Crystal Palace, Aston Villa and Newcastle could not overcome the Toffees despite all taking early leads. Norwich had wrestled back parity after being 2-0 down, only to be on the wrong side of a winning goal from a team that refused to back down. There were goals across the midfield and attack – Cahill, Bent, Leon Osman, Lee Carsley, Thomas Gravesen, Kevin Kilbane and Duncan Ferguson had all provided at least one. At the other end, Nigel Martyn had rolled back the years with some incredible performances, aided by a no-nonsense defence.

The derby, though, was the biggest task the ragtag bunch of hard-working, strong-willed Blues had faced. Not due to form – Liverpool were a full nine points adrift of Everton, having lost against the likes of Birmingham, Bolton and Middlesbrough – but due to history. David Moyes hadn’t yet enjoyed a win over the old enemy. Everton hadn’t enjoyed any victory in the fixture in the 21st Century. Liverpool had proved themselves a gutsy bunch in midweek when, faced with Champions League elimination, overcame Olympiakos thanks to dramatic late goals from Neil Mellor and Steven Gerrard. The 200th derby was certain to be a hard-fought affair.

Hard-fought it was, though at the expense of excitement. The opening seconds were ominous; Liverpool’s pre-planned kick-off routine came undone as Gerrard swept the ball left straight away, only to gift possession to Osman. End product was to be a thorn in both sides. A Gerrard free-kick was dangerous, but Mellor’s flick-on drifted wide. Everton’s first attack presented them with their best chance of the match. Bent flicked the ball to Gravesen, and then took on the return pass from the midfielder before holding the ball up. That gave Cahill time to dart into the penalty area. Bent’s ball into the middle was excellent, the diminutive Australian was perfectly placed, but the contact necessary to beat Pepe Reina wasn’t forthcoming.

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The game was full of derby grit, but that came with plenty of loose touches and indiscipline. Cahill’s outstretch leg was enough to persuade Gerrard to go to ground and earn a soft free-kick. The dead ball reached Mellor unmarked at the back post and the youngster seemed destined to write his name into the history books for the second time that week, only for Martyn to appear out of nowhere and make a magnificent stop. The ball fell to Gerrard, but the Liverpool talisman’s typically thunderous strike was blocked by David Weir. Sami Hyypia then hooked a volley over the bar. Liverpool were finding Bent to be a handful, likewise the Everton back line and Gerrard, who was at the centre of every Red foray forward. Cahill was an aerial threat too; had he connected with the ball after Chris Kirkland flapped at a Gravesen cross and missed, Everton would have taken a lead into the break.

The second half was one of few chances. Salif Diao launched a half-volley over the bar. Gerrard lined up a free-kick in a dangerous position, but slipped at a critical juncture and launched the ball into the Park End.

An untimely slip? Well, he won’t have to worry about that happening again.

And then, the big moment. Kilbane intercepted a poor clearance and fed the ball to Gravesen. His cross from the left narrowly evaded a leaping Cahill and was cleared, only for Bent to collect and hook the ball to Osman. Osman ran into trouble and tried to return it to Bent, only for his short pass to run past the striker.

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Great moments are made simply by the right people appearing at the right time. Bent wasn’t on hand to collect the ball, but Lee Carsley was. His shot was precise, curled past Kirkland, who was perhaps distracted by Cahill standing directly in front of him. Not for long, though. Cahill was soon gone, wheeling away in pursuit of Carsley, who was quickly mobbed. Soon the bald head of the Ireland international was all that was visible as the delirious Blues piled on. There were plenty of reconstructions amid the bedlam in the stands. It was a picture-perfect moment.

It was almost as if both players knew the definitive moment of the match had come and gone. Cahill fluffed his lines after a corner caused panic, before Gerrard thundered a strike wide of the post when it seemed a certainty he would score. Another wonderful Martyn save denied Gerrard, then Alan Stubbs fired a low free-kick narrowly wide. Jon Arne Riise cleared off his own line, as did Cahill. The tit-for-tat couldn’t last forever, and after some tension, the final whistle blew.

It marked a special moment in Everton’s recent history. Carsley had claimed the derby for his own, and it was one that took Moyes’ Blues 12 points clear of their great rivals. Everton were second, the highest they had been in a post-August Premier League table. We are still waiting for something to better it. Quite literally, days do not get better than this. That iconic image is a constant reminder of one of the best days in recent memory.

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The Rise of Moshiri’s Everton via GrandOldTeam

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Farhad Moshiri has been at Everton for little over a year, yet it feels this summer is now the starting to resemble the football club Moshiri wants Everton to look like.

In any business takeover you have to view a change of ownership or direction not as one big singular event, or indeed a series of unconnected events but rather a process. This feels especially true of Moshiri’s Everton where he has looked to evolve processes rather than rip up and start again from scratch. Those awaiting a “Robinho” moment as with Manchester City, or the sort of spending Abramovic initiated at Chelsea (estimated with “football inflation at 1 billion in the first 2 years) will likely be disappointed and perhaps miss the point slightly. There may yet be a stand up event, yet what is more significant is the continued evolution and development which looks to have stepped up a gear this summer. While the approach has it’s drawbacks (I for one would like to see faster and more radical change) this does have to be balanced with the idea that Evertonians are very proud of tradition, on overhauling at a slower pace may be more beneficial and appealing to sections of the fanbase.


Continued evolution and development which looks to have stepped up a gear this summer

That being said if events are what you after, we have had no shortage of important moments over the last 18 months, though because most don’t relate to the most accessible part of the football club (player recruitment) they are sometimes overlooked by fans and indeed the media. One example may be that season tickets prices have been reduced and held down, particularly so for younger Evertonians which has resulted in an unprecedented demand for tickets. Thursday nights Europa league qualifier has sold out after a few days with days in advance. There was talk at the start of the summer that we had 30k season ticket holders with 12k more on a waiting list, goodness knows how many more wanting season tickets following some high profile signings. This is a long way from the days where our average attendance veered between the low to mid 30 thousands.


Thursday nights Europa league qualifier has sold out after a few days with days in advance

The easy thing to do would have been to put prices up, yet they have withstood that demand which to me seems a sensible strategy for the long term of the club. Sharing a city with Liverpool FC who’s owners seem itching to want to continue to raise prices (and in a working class city like Liverpool) ultimately price out huge swathes of potential fans (including the next generation) I am happy to sacrifice a little on gate revenues to benefit the club in it’s rooting in the local community. The longer term solution, a new ground has had terrific progress, with us seemingly moving ahead to a prime location on Liverpool Waterfront. There needs to be other articles underpinning the significance of this yet we can all agree this is a massive advancement. While these developments may not be as glamorous as new signings it significance should not be understated.


he longer term solution, a new ground has had terrific progress, with us seemingly moving ahead to a prime location on Liverpool Waterfront

The argument that nothings changed at Everton is not so much wrong, but it is indicative of looking at events through a prism based closely around player recruitment. Undoubtedly there are many similarities with this our transfer business before and after Moshiri, particularly in his first summer. We have sold players and bought players yet I would urge caution in calling it sell to buy. That you sell and buy successfully doesn’t automatically make one dependent on the other. As for the summers business while it’s fair to say none of the signings are “marquee” (to the level of say Van Dijk) when taken collectively it’s hard not to be impressed.



To add balance to the debate though, we should note over the last 12 months we have added; Southampton’s Manager, Leicester City’s Head of Recruitment, Burnley and Crystal Palace’s best player, Swansea and Ajax’s captains as well as potentially their best player to follow. This is unimaginable for Everton of 3 years ago. We would not have had the funding in place nor the compelling story to sell to attract these players. There has been a clear strategy for the types of player we are looking to attract and a plan that has been executed with no shortage of haste. Individually Keane, Pickford, Klaasen, Onyekuru and Sandro may be reasonable understated pieces of business but when placed together it is indicative of a club moving in the right direction.



Undoubtedly last summer was a difficult one for recruitment. The easy thing to do would have been to panic. In my more angry moments I had drafts calling for heads on a plate, while others wanted a marquee signing to show intent, yet the calmness shown by Moshiri in allowing those he trusted and recruited to go about their business has partially began to bear fruit this window. In leadership if you show patience, perseverance and preparation, or put more simply consistency you will rarely go wrong and from the top of the club we have began to demonstrate those values.

As indicated above, perhaps the most impressive aspect though is not the player recruitment, but whats been happening in other areas of the club. There is a belief from most that what happens off the field and on the field are unrelated. In many ways they appear in that way so it’s an understandable belief. You can achieve well on the field if you are doing badly on it, and many clubs who are well run off the pitch can have a bad season. Yet you feel each is a counter weight to the other. Only for so long can you punch above your weight on the pitch. As we saw under Moyes’s Everton, as we bucked the trend off the pitch but got further away from top teams on it, eventually it would catch up with us. Each summer felt like a pull on us, dragging us further away from bad teams as we lost players and couldn’t recruit the right ones to improve us.

Currently I feel the reverse process is happening. Much of the excellence and significance off the field is only just being translated onto player recruitment. While it is frustrating to have such a gap, it is a good problem to have!

One of example of this is my statement last summer that a new ground on the Waterfront would be a bigger and more important statement than Mourinho as manager. While undoubtedly the narrow contours of seasonal performance on the pitch Mourinho would have got more headlines however the hurdles required to overcome a stadium stadia and medium to long term benefits are greater. Likewise the biggest news of this summer for me is the partnership with a Chinese bank which is underpinned by the Chinese state and the biggest bank in the world, who have extended a credit facility of 60 million pounds to Everton.



While some will understandably say a 60 million credit facility is not so groundbreaking we again have to factor it in as part of the process that Moshiri is looking to complete. I don’t believe an initial credit facility in the end goal but a stopping point on a journey. However if again we take a second to consider what it means in actuality; that Everton are now in formal agreement and partnership with the worlds largest bank underpinned by the Chinese state. As Everton seek inevitable further investment as the club grows either the relationship with such an institution will open enormous indirect and direct opportunities. While there is no inevitability on the question of whether they definitely invest or not, one thing we can safely say though is it will be a very real question they have considered on entering initial agreement with Everton.



The partnership in the same manner the USM FF sponsorship, the Council backed SPV and the acquisition of the City most famous piece of real estate the Liver Building from Moshiri places Everton very centrally amongst some of the global elites. Moshiri is showing not just a remarkable understanding of how to stretch assets and liquidity to maximise Everton’s fortunes but with each deal opening more opportunities with each agreement. Everton now have powerful stakeholders and partners who are very keen to deliver not just a state of the art stadium but have a top class team gracing the stadium. Again the scale cannot be downplayed here, we have Russia’s wealthiest man (worth anywhere between 13-5 billion) the largest bank in the world, and a conglomerate of investors worth 50 billion as well as local government council. At the very least all have the desire, capability and connections to help grow Everton the brand and potential in the future invest into the club.

The other striking aspect of the above deals is the speed with which they were completed and announced, with very little conjecture from well informed “ITK” Evertonians and local or national media. It presents a picture of a club that is increasingly efficient in it’s operations, knows where it is going and can deliver on it quickly. Perhaps most crucially the speed with which substantial deals are being done and the acceleration in how frequently they are coming up suggests a significant and insatiable momentum s the wheels start to turn.

The link that has been the most talked about above is inevitably the Usmanov link, Russia’s wealthiest man and minority shareholder at Arsenal. There is a scale of opinion on his involvement at Everton that tends to range from he is running the show behind a conduit to he has no interest or involvement with the club. I tend to fall in the middle in my opinion, feeling there is currently a separation but there is every possibility that he will come on board in the future.

When Moshiri invested into Everton I thought there were 4 broad possibilities. Worst case for Everton would be that it was a stalking horse for Arsenal, a threat to Kroenke to get him to sell. Given Moshiri’s involvement in the club and community buildings such as the Liver building this would seem unlikely. The second was that Moshiri decided to strike it out alone (this is very much what the public position is). The third is that Moshiri and Usmanov “always work together” as he said after the announcement of the USM sponsorship deal, either immediately or in the future. Some speculate they may build an “Arsenal of the north” in “footballs Hollywood” around the time of completion of the ground. The final option is Moshiri and Usmanov look to work alongside other forces to develop a globally dominant force, bringing on board perhaps Chinese investment alongside their own substantial resource.

The partnerships Everton are now involved in leave all of the 3 options available. To me it’s clear in spite of Moshiri substantial and openly acknowledged ‘conservatively estimated” wealth (Forbes have said they are unsure of his wealth and estimated it around 2 billion based on a cautious estimate of part of his holdings due to poor intelligence on Russian business interests) he seems himself as a facilitator for even wealthier individuals. These expertise are being used to help Everton move forward. The opportunities for further investment over time are substantial and as the process goes to the next phase, notably the ground move it would seem inevitable some serious movement will occur. Rather than a club with the begging bowl asking for charity, Everton are slowly starting to move towards being a serious branch ready to compete in the biggest sports franchise in the world.

The post The Rise of Moshiri’s Everton appeared first on GrandOldTeam.

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Ashes to Ashes, Tern to Tern via Everton Arent We

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There’s a developing symmetry to Ross Barkley’s Everton career that completes a rotund circle almost as perfect as a silhouette of the ruddy faced manager who has stood beside- not in front of- the door; unmoved, unnerved, seemingly unconcerned at the Barkley impasse. The decision was Barkley’s to me made, and a pragmatic shrug would’ve probably greeted any result. Now? The boyhood Evertonian discovered by an Everton scout playing football on ‘The Mystery’- playing fields close to his Wavertree home, has told his boyhood club- our boyhood club- he wants a new challenge. As his Everton journey began at The Mystery, it ends in exactly that, too. Who better than us does he think he’s going to start for on a regular basis? What happened behind the scenes with the manager? How much influence has the crowd had on him? What’s his best position? Would he have got a start next year under this manager should we end up bringing in Gylfi Sigurðsson? Why as a twenty year old did he only sign a four year deal, bringing us to this point just three years later? Why doesn’t he want to stay at his boyhood club, especially after a summer that Blues ten years his senior have been waiting for all their lives?

We’ll never have any knowledge of the kinds of conversations Barkley’s camp have had with Koeman, but there’s been nothing to make you think this is not a decision that both of them have long been at peace with. There’s an element of truth in Barkley being badly advised – does he think he’s going to walk into any side above us in the league? In a World Cup year? Risky. But he’s a 23 year old man – he knows his own mind. He can only be cut so much slack, in that sense. Leaving your boyhood club and in turn leaving Everton without any manoeuvrability in this situation, is pretty unpalatable.

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This whole situation has slowly unfurled into a mess. A mess that all parties must take their share of the blame in. By the manager’s own admission, he was too public in his criticism of Barkley at times last year, and Barkley, apparently as fragile a footballer can be at the top of the game, unable to shoulder the burden and demands of a manager who evidently saw more in him than he was giving at times. Stripped of the comfort blanket an utterly dependent Roberto Martinez swaddled him in, Barkley ironically ended up shining in the second half of last season. But constantly gnawing at the fans, or half of us, was this situation looming on the horizon at season’s end. Creeping towards this bemusing, mysterious end – as slowly as a 5 year old at the wheel of a Nissan Sunny with its handbrake off, trickling towards the caravan next to us. Sorry dad. Like that five year old bathed in Welsh summer holiday sunshine, who knows what’s going through Barkley’s mind at this point?

He’s not the first to want out, and he won’t be the last. A young man who infuriated many with his apparent lack of decision making at times, has saved his biggest decision for last, and perhaps now we know why he was reluctant to make his mind up all those times. There’s no mystery in this: Barkley’s is a poor decision, but one that will leave Barkley worse off than Everton. And that’s all that matters.

Up the Toffees.

As always, for more nonsense, you can find me here on Twitter: https://twitter.com/EvertonMusings

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Manchester United and Spurs on alert as Everton say Ross Barkley will be sold via The Guardian

• Spurs would want drop in £50m asking price for midfielder
• Ronald Koeman does not need to sell Barkley to fund further deals
Ronald Koeman has said Ross Barkley is not part of Everton’s future and will be sold this summer after the midfielder rejected the club’s contract offer to seek “a new challenge”.

Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United are interested in the England international and will have been put on alert by the Everton manager’s unequivocal statement on Wednesday. Koeman claimed he was informed by Barkley at the end of last season that the player would not sign a new contract worth more than £100,000 a week with his boyhood club. Asked if he expected the 23-year-old to leave, the Dutchman replied: “Yes, 100%.”

Related: Everton should think twice before signing Gylfi Sigurdsson for £50m

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