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Sam Allardyce

So, what next?

  • IN. Give him a chance and see what he can do?

    Votes: 79 8.3%
  • OUT. Thanks but no thanks. See Ya?

    Votes: 758 79.3%
  • As ever. Cheese on Toast

    Votes: 25 2.6%
  • Er, I am a bit scared of us Evertoning this right up.

    Votes: 94 9.8%

  • Total voters
    956
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Honestly mate if Kone signed for yous and started playing the way he did for us when Sam bought him he's a beast of a player..he plays for Sam..I know that sounds a bit unprofessional on his part but Sam gets the best out of him..he was immense for us under Allardyce.

He was but he’s been utter cack for 18 months since..
 
Allardyce added: "I have chosen to take this job and it wasn't a difficult decision. I knew how good this club was before I took it. Now I just want to try and get them back to where they were when they had such a good season to finish seventh last season.

"It's a dream job for me and I'm going to give it 100%."

And with that he was up and gone, looking like a man who can barely believe his luck as he said: "Let's hope it's onwards and upwards, boys."

Exactly what we wanted to hear from our new gaffer!
 

Also serious questions:
This big fat phone earpiece - does he just want Craig Shakespeare having an overview from the stands, and he notices shapes and patterns that he can't see?
Out of Sammy Lee and Shakespeare who is the coach and who is assistant?
What role does that leave for big dunc?
Big Dunc has now learned from RK and RM, and now SA - great learning opps eh? Wonder when Mikel Arteta will be ready, for a dream team of Arteta - Big Dunc and Davey Weir
 
Also serious questions:
This big fat phone earpiece - does he just want Craig Shakespeare having an overview from the stands, and he notices shapes and patterns that he can't see?
Out of Sammy Lee and Shakespeare who is the coach and who is assistant?
What role does that leave for big dunc?
Big Dunc has now learned from RK and RM, and now SA - great learning opps eh? Wonder when Mikel Arteta will be ready, for a dream team of Arteta - Big Dunc and Davey Weir

Big Dunc's basically a mascot, mate.
 
Also serious questions:
This big fat phone earpiece - does he just want Craig Shakespeare having an overview from the stands, and he notices shapes and patterns that he can't see?
Out of Sammy Lee and Shakespeare who is the coach and who is assistant?
What role does that leave for big dunc?
Big Dunc has now learned from RK and RM, and now SA - great learning opps eh? Wonder when Mikel Arteta will be ready, for a dream team of Arteta - Big Dunc and Davey Weir

That's right re: why one of them is up in the stands. Allardyce sometimes sits up there and communicates with his team. The argument is that you can see problems and opportunities much more easily from a higher vantage point.
 
was just watching southhampton and Bournemouth... makes me sick that we gave up 4... but hey, back to basics and inject grit back into the play.. I all for sam and the little ginger next to him.. here in the states coaches switch all the time from rivals, if this works... let it ride and rebuild..

Thought his presser on Friday was genuine and honest..
 
Also serious questions:
This big fat phone earpiece - does he just want Craig Shakespeare having an overview from the stands, and he notices shapes and patterns that he can't see?
Out of Sammy Lee and Shakespeare who is the coach and who is assistant?
What role does that leave for big dunc?

Big Dunc has now learned from RK and RM, and now SA - great learning opps eh? Wonder when Mikel Arteta will be ready, for a dream team of Arteta - Big Dunc and Davey Weir

Sammy Lee is the assistant manager, Shakespeare is first team coach and big dunc is also a coach working in the first team coaching staff.
 
Last edited:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/42208960

Sam Allardyce's day started with a cold shower then an unexpected show of warmth from Everton's fans after a week of scepticism surrounding his appointment as manager.

Allardyce was hardly hiding behind the door as he eased himself into his chair at Everton with a typical show of defiance and confidence - insisting his credentials are far more suited to the task of succeeding Ronald Koeman than Watford's Marco Silva, so long a target for major shareholder Farhad Moshiri.

Big Sam's big day, his first game in charge against Huddersfield Town, got off to an inauspicious start when he received an unwelcome icy blast from Goodison Park's sprinklers as he walked around the perimeter of the pitch before kick-off.

From then on it was exactly as the 63-year-old would have wanted as his new team went on to win 2-0.

There has been scepticism among Everton's fans after a chaotic managerial hunt which went via Diego Simeone and Silva before alighting at Allardyce and a lot was riding on this meeting with Huddersfield Town.

Goodison Park was consumed by an eerie and somewhat surreal atmosphere in the hours before kick-off, many fans wondering quite how Everton have ended up at this point, led by a divisive personality who barely rated a mention when the runners and riders lined up to take over from Koeman following his sacking on 23 October.

In the fanzone area behind the Sir Philip Carter Park Stand, hundreds fell silent as Allardyce's face flashed up on the big screens and their new manager spoke. There was disapproval, no dissent, apart from one Huddersfield fan who gave colourful vent to his dislike for the former England manager.

If many Everton fans had questioned Allardyce's appointment, it was nothing compared to what greeted the arrival of former Liverpool midfielder Sammy Lee as his assistant.

Logic dictates that any new manager brings his trusted team with him and Lee was alongside Allardyce at Bolton Wanderers, West Ham United and England. Everton, however, was regarded as a a bridge too far by many traditionalists of a royal blue persuasion.

To say it had not been warmly received was an understatement but there was no rancour among the few supporters inside Goodison Park when Lee put Everton's players through their pre-match warm-up.

Lee found a friendly face in Everton chairman Bill Kenwright, who made a point of walking on to the pitch at the Howard Kendall Gwladys Street End to warmly embrace the man who piled up the honours across Stanley Park at Anfield before becoming a long-serving member of the club's backroom staff.

And if Allardyce, perhaps unlikely given his bullet-proof self-belief, had any worries about the reception he was to receive from a sold-out Goodison Park, they were banished as he strode to his place in the technical area seconds before kick-off.

When Allardyce's name was announced as Everton's new manager, there was genuine warmth in the ovation that swept around the stadium.

He did not exactly look over his shoulder to see if a club legend had appeared behind him but Allardyce seemed slightly taken aback by the greeting he received, an arms aloft gesture changing to a fist-pump as all four sides of Goodison Park broke into loud applause.

The first half was trademark Big Sam. Long overcoat. Fierce gum chewing. Earpiece crammed in. And a war of attrition unfolding in front of him that he needed to solve.

Allardyce was communicating with former Leicester City manager Craig Shakespeare, another Everton newcomer and another Allardyce loyalist from their brief partnership with England, sitting in the directors' box observing from above.

Lee, who will take a little getting used to clad in his Everton attire, was certainly not keeping a low profile as he expended more energy than some of the players in a sterile first 45 minutes, contesting every decision, cajoling, confronting Huddersfield manager David Wagner and fourth official Mike Dean, offering bursts of support to his new charges.

Allardyce exerted his influence during the interval, pushing Gylfi Sigurdsson and Aaron Lennon into more advanced positions in a move that brought dividends when the £45m Icelander slid home the first goal of the new era courtesy of the tireless Dominic Calvert-Lewin.

It was the perfect day for an Allardyce watch and he provided plenty of material as he stalked his technical area.

A furious bout of arm-waving and pointing brought murmurs of approval. A bout of flashy flicks that played Everton into trouble produced a volcanic reaction from a visibly red-faced manager before an unceremonious clearance into the crowd in the closing seconds brought applause and a thumbs-up.

It would be unfair to paint this as some sort of muck and nettles Allardyce performance. He clearly made a point of pushing Everton's more creative players into dangerous areas in the second half to make the difference, with Wayne Rooney once more oozing class and meriting his second standing ovation this week when he was substituted late on.

Rooney's magnificent through ball ensured Calvert-Lewin got the goal he fully deserved to round off Allardyce's perfect day with Everton's second.

There was no way back for Huddersfield and the final whistle brought handshakes all round and another fist-pump of approval from Allardyce as Everton made it two crucial wins and two clean sheets in four days against West Ham United and now Huddersfield.

Allaryce was, understandably, in buoyant post-match mood, describing his reception as: "Fantastic. Brilliant."

He added: "I have chosen to take this job and it wasn't a difficult decision. I knew how good this club was before I took it. Now I just want to try and get them back to where they were when they had such a good season to finish seventh last season.

"It's a dream job for me and I'm going to give it 100%."

And with that he was up and gone, looking like a man who can barely believe his luck as he said: "Let's hope it's onwards and upwards, boys."

Onwards and upwards indeed - and a far cry from the desolation that surrounded Everton after that harrowing 4-1 loss at Southampton last Sunday.

Everton are into the Premier League's top 10 and now stand just seven points behind Burnley and Tottenham.

Little wonder, then, that Allardyce made his exit with a beaming smile. This could not have gone much better.

Allardyce and Everton still looks a curious fit - but the veteran manager seems determined to make it comfortable.
 
Was there one? Dunno there seems at times so many ambiguous posts one does not know where to turn.

Me, I am a fully tested blue, I do not care who the owner is, or the chairman, or the manger etc. What I care about is the club winning first and foremost, whether it is a scrappy win or out of the world football win as long as we are winning. No matter what the situation I would never turn my back on the club unlike one or two folk have posted.

Either support the club or do one.

I think you`re getting the wrong end of the stick mate. ( again )

I haven`t read one single post, where anyone is saying they don`t support the team/ club.

I`ve read many posts by people voicing their displeasure at the choice of manager.

The two are not the same x
 
Also serious questions:
This big fat phone earpiece - does he just want Craig Shakespeare having an overview from the stands, and he notices shapes and patterns that he can't see?
Out of Sammy Lee and Shakespeare who is the coach and who is assistant?
What role does that leave for big dunc?
Big Dunc has now learned from RK and RM, and now SA - great learning opps eh? Wonder when Mikel Arteta will be ready, for a dream team of Arteta - Big Dunc and Davey Weir

....Lee and Shakespeare will basically organise the team tactically, they’re the ones who’ll be constantly advising Allardyce on team shape and in-match adjustments. Allardyce will be the decision maker but he will be very dependent on the other two.

You will notice if Ferguson has much input by the amount of interaction with him on the bench. I doubt there will be much. It was interesting that Allardyce said some existing coaches might not want to work with him and could leave in the near future.
 
Hope he plays all the fringe players + the bad atittude players at limassol to get a idea who to bomb out. mirallas schnidelin, klassen , vlasic, sandro, jags, besic your cards are all getting marked , are you up for the fight?
 

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