Dear Guest
Thank you for visiting! est189 will soon be closing its doors (do forums have doors?) please visit the following thread - (to wail & cry perhaps?)
https://www.est1892.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?p=4002484#post4002484
Thanjk you.
Paul.S
Yup, hopefully we'll trounce them but besides that, they'll hopefully pick up more points and squeeze Europe. I want to see them in the Europa
There's no way on earth they are better than either Spurs or Everton. Results only go to prove that theory too. I hope you can cope with the disappointment of not seeing them in any European competition next season
I think their real problem is that the owners really don't give a **** where they are in the league all they're arsed about is that the club generate an income big enough to service debt and pay dividends etc. And they'll always be able to do that. We had similar issues with the other two.
I have one word to offer - honesty. I couldn't be devious if I tried. Joe Fagan.
Well David, here are some home truths. Even accounting for all of your reasons, you're doing a rotten job of managing Manchester United, the Premier League champions. You have been in the job for only eight months and yet have already equalled Manchester United's record number of losses in a Premier League season. Your team, which was good enough to win the title last year, is now nine points off a Champions League place, and nearer to Crystal Palace than Chelsea.
On almost every level, Moyes is failing to do his job to the required level. In the broadest terms, the remit of a football manager is to get as many players as possible playing to the height of their potential. The greatest (and that evidently includes Ferguson) take this further, actually making the team greater than the sum of its parts.
Moyes is a long way from the former, simpler goal. It could be argued that Rooney is the only one performing at a higher level than last season, and even he is far from his peak form. Almost every other player without exception is performing at a lower level than they did even ten months previously. Rafael may have last month issued the stock quote expected of a player in such a situation ("I don't know why everyone is looking at the manager. It is the players who have to do the job on the pitch"), but this falls on deaf ears. The regression of individual players may be seen as an anomaly, but when 12 or 14 professional footballers suddenly begin to struggle almost en masse, the buck stops with the manager.
Wasn't just moyes tho the players went mental as well...Rooney dropped to his knees, pumping both fists in the air like it was the winner in the last minute of the World Cup final
i own everton fans on the internet....that's what i do
When I was a teenager me and my mates had a saying "It's all gone horribly Ray Harford" taking the piss out of our mate who was a Blackburn Rovers fan, (referring to Ray Harford taking over from Kenny Dalglish and taking Blackburn from Champions one season to 7th place in a season). I think that saying may need to be updated...
The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.
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