So the show goes on at the London Stadium, only
with a new ring master in charge. Moyes though has bridges to build from the
start, with fans already gathering petitions protesting against the appointment
of the former Sunderland, Real Sociedad, Manchester United and Everton manager.
The protesting fans are most concerned about Moyes recent CV that has been
something less than impressive. He took Sunderland down last season, failed in
Spain and at Manchester United - though in the latter case, he was not given a
lot of time or the resources that his successors received to do the job.
At West Ham, if he can start well and get
the fans behind him, Moyes maybe able to get back more to the halcyon days of
his career at Everton – the fans will certainly be hoping that is the case.
The demise of Bilic has been a sad thing to
witness. The former West Ham player came in on a high for the final season at
the Boleyn ground. His tenure began well with victories at Arsenal and
Liverpool. Dimitri Payet thrilled the fans, with his breath taking skills. The
great football continued almost to the end of the season. A better last week
could have seen West Ham finish fourth. In the event, they came 7th.
Already though some of the cracks were
beginning to appear, with some silly points given away with naïve mistakes,
particularly in defence. The second season started badly at the club’s new London
Stadium home.
Recruitment was bad over the summer, with the
players brought in on the whole not being up to the mark. This was emphasised
further in the January transfer window when the club paid over the odds for
Robert Snodgrass (£10m) from Hull and Jose Fonte (£8m) from Southampton.
It took time to iron out the problems at
the new stadium, though this was done in time but whatever anyone says the
London Stadium will never be the Boleyn ground. Bilic managed to pull things
around on the pitch with the team finishing a credible 11th.
There was though all the time the rumours
of boardroom unhappiness with the manager. Other managers were being touted to
replace Bilic, who was not offered an extension on his three years contract.
The West Ham high command have a very
strange way of working with their managers, which seems to involve a lack of
direct contact but communication by social media. Whether intended or not it
creates a feeling of undermining all of the time, rather than everyone pulling
together against the perceived outside enemy – namely, the other football clubs
in the Premier League.
The signings made last summer looked good -
Javier Hernandez (£16m), Marko Arnautovic (£24m), Pablo Zabaleta and Joe Hart. However,
the new signings have not gelled. Hernandez has been played all over the place,
often visibly showing his displeasure with team mates and the management.
Arnautovic upset Bilic early on when he was sent off in the Southampton game
putting the team in a difficult position. He never really got the manager’s
confidence back after that and has been a substitute in recent games. Zabaleta has probably been the pick of the signings,
though even he has given away a number of needless penalties. Hart just looks
permanently frustrated at what is going on in front of him. West Ham is
certainly not a happy ship.
Moyes will need to sort things out from the
start. If he does the players are certainly there to get a top eight finish but
there are clearly some dressing room issues that need resolution.
Most will be sad to see Bilic go, he’s an
honest man, who never hid when things were going wrong. He has been let down
big time by the players. Hopefully, he will go on to better things elsewhere.
The owners of West Ham have given the
manager longer than many would in the crazy world of football these days but no
doubt saw the need to act as the team seemed to be drifting toward the
relegation trap door. The boardroom though need to take a look at itself, cut
out the social media activity in favour of the old fashioned idea of direct one
to one communication. They also need to put their money where their mouths are.
West Ham’s ambitions have always been high but at the moment they maybe getting
57,000 crowds but the net transfer outlay (£20 million in the summer) is more
in line with an aspiring Championship side.
Nor are the club bringing through the young
players in the way they used to or other clubs like Spurs continue to do today.
This is another source of constant irritation for the fans, who want to see
local lads playing for the club.
David Moyes has a golden opportunity to
revive his own career and reputation. The players also have the chance to make
amends for the way they let down Bilic. Some of the players who were in with Bilic
will no doubt not be Moyes favourites, whilst
others on the Croatian’s periphery could come into the fold with the new
manager. Opportunities abound.
published 8/11/2017 Morning Star - "Moyes and West Ham could be the perfect fit"
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