Give Moyes time and he'll succeed

By Chris Doroudgar / Roar Pro

As we head into one of the season’s annual blockbuster fixtures between Chelsea and Manchester United the anticipation has been lower than seasons past.

Usually each fixture comes with a story line mostly littered with the consequences it would have to the top of the table. This time it’s different.

This time it’s about David Moyes.

So halfway through the season it is clear that Moyes has yet to set his stamp on this team.

Their position on the table is a result of Ferguson’s departure and not the management of Moyes.

Ferguson had more authority almost than the club’s owners and had unprecedented control for a manager, his role was imperative both on and off the pitch and someone of that type of influence is not easily replaced and more important not easily replicated.

Imagine something happening to your mother and then immediately replaced by a different woman. It is normal to have teething problems.

Through time Moyes should step into these massive shoes and create his own impact on the club.

It is important that the fans respect that he will not and should not be expected to attempt to emulate Ferguson.

His job is not to be the next Alex Ferguson his job is to be David Moyes at Manchester United. The sooner he and fans accept this; the sooner it will be until they make the climb up the ladder.

It starts this weekend, for United the timing of this game could not get any worse.

Their injury crisis with Wayne Rooney and Robin Van Persie out, along with their recent poor performances does not put them in a healthy mindset to travel to West London.

Though these were indeed the occasions that United seem to always thrive on over the past two decades, often getting results through adversity because of their never say die attitude instilled in them by their manager.

Moyes was handpicked and dubbed as ‘the chosen one’ for his merits at Everton.

His passion for the game, attractive style of football and the way he got the best out of his players were the reasons why he was picked over every other manager in the world and so far he has not shown the confidence he displayed while he was in the blue half of Merseyside.

Just like the first few weeks of any new job, confidence is always low, but seasons past proves that David Moyes always seems to achieve 25% more points in the second half of the season as his team buys into his style of football.

This in this case will be 77 points by season’s end.

The fans at United enjoyed unprecedented stability so as a consequence they need to be a lot more patient. They need to realise that the future of this club depends on the way they support and react to David Moyes.

They need to trust and respect their beloved Alex Ferguson and realise that booing Moyes is a subtle way of booing him.

Just like Sir Alex, Moyes needs time to build his team. If you sit back and analyse the team he has at his disposal you would realise that his squad especially with the injuries they have suffered is only good enough for the position they are on the table.

Their two so called world-class players have been either injured or out of form, along with their lack of experience in midfield and ageing back four it is clear why United are in the situation they are.

It seems that every week Moyes is faced with a different formation, different starting eleven and a different game plan.

Team identity goes a long way in football and at the moment United are a lost team with no character.

First and foremost the expectations of both management and fans alike need to be lowered as they usher in the much dreaded ‘transition’ period.

Over twenty years of stability has come to an end and United need to simply weather the storm and have faith and respect for him as he faces the toughest task in world football.

What he is facing is a mammoth mission and he will need to learn and grow much quicker than the pace he was used to.

In the end he has a team that boast s one world class star in Van Persie and arguably another with Rooney, whereas other teams on the top of the table consists of four or five.

He needs to, with respect, phase out the ageing stars with their legendary statuses such as Rio Ferdinand, Patrice Evra and Ryan Giggs and blood their young players, something that most managers would find difficult.

He needs to simply back his actions and his decisions and the only way he will allow himself to do that is with the utmost support of the club and fans.

This will enable him to have his own team and allow him to identify and build over the next two seasons which consequentially would earn him respect.

Add Roberto Martinez’s recent success and it makes it look even worst for him but Moyes needs to step out of Ferguson’s shadow and be his own man and it starts this week.

Win, draw or loss as long as his team shows a display consistent with past United teams and instil in them their famous ‘never give up’ attitude then that should suffice.

It is hard to show pity for Moyes, for in the end he has arguably the most coveted job in football, now along with that is the immense pressure that is attached to it.

The fans and club simply need to be a lot more patient and as time goes by; you might see another great Scot on the summit of the most accomplished club in England.

Not to worry United fans, I still believe that Ferguson’s greatest gift to your club is his parting one.

The Crowd Says:

2014-01-19T03:23:12+00:00

nickoldschool

Roar Guru


"Yet they do sometimes qualify for the Champions League ( if the club was from anywhere but England, Everton would qualify every single season) ". Maybe you meant 'they do sometimes qualify to the UEFA cup", not the UCL. Also not sure they would finish in the top 4 of the Liga, seria A and bundesliga but we will never know. Everton are a good club but anything higher than 5 in the EPL is a near miracle. 6-10 club and its already pretty respectable.

2014-01-19T02:31:44+00:00

Wanderer

Guest


I personally hope he takes them to another level of mediocrity. Alas, to the championship!

2014-01-19T01:20:38+00:00

fowry

Guest


-- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2014-01-19T01:20:33+00:00

fowry

Guest


I am a Manchester United fan, but I've always respected Everton FC. They don't have the money to buy world-class players and if they do have an up and coming young star (Wayne Rooney) the player is always sold. Yet they do sometimes qualify for the Champions League ( if the club was from anywhere but England, Everton would qualify every single season) and , in recent times, have frequently finished higher in the table than the red half of Merseyside. David Moyes might not have been able to win any silverware while at Everton but he did make them a club to be respected and opponents would always play their first XI against Everton. Take the 2003-04 season, Everton finished 17th on the table, only one place shy of relegation. The next season, they finished fourth and qualified for the Champions League. This extraordinary jump can be attributed, at least in part to David Moyes. And people forget that it was David Moyes who discovered the talent that was Wayne Rooney. His tenure at Manchester United has not been entirely successful, I'll give you that. Fellaini is a good player, but worth much less than £27m. Also Kagawa and Zaha have been much under-utilised. But Manchester United is not Chelsea nor Tottenham, Manchester United is not a hire-and-fire club. I believe Moyes will take the club to new highs in the coming future. -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2014-01-19T00:20:48+00:00

Me Too

Guest


Not sure exactly what Moyses credits at Everton were? A B grade coach who never did anything other than achieve B grade success. What success he did achieve came at a C grade club. He is in well over his head and when the coach is worse at his job than his players respect is a hard thing to earn.

2014-01-18T23:48:30+00:00

Gavin

Guest


Agree with a lot of what has been said. He needs to stamp his authority on the squad. The players clearly don't want to play for him which is a shame. They should all be professional enough to give him their all. All this talk about a clear out is not the answer and will not work unless the fans, the board and shareholders are willing to stick by him for 3-4 years. I think the board will but it might be hard to ignore the noise. There's key areas that need to be addressed but it shouldn't all be done at once. Centre mid and centre back are priority and hopefully two players come in January but the rest can wait.

2014-01-18T22:34:18+00:00

fadida

Guest


Moyes has never had "success" in his coaching career yet. Preston winning promotion is it. A decade at Everton and not a single trophy to show. Wigan, Portsmouth etc won something in this time. There is no evidence that he has what it takes to be a winner at one of the worlds biggest clubs. None. Moyes approaches games like he is still at Everton, and plays as the underdog. The football is ugly and he has created a situation where teams travel to OT expecting to win. Unheard of. He has no idea what to do with creative players. Tactically he is reactive, conservative, inflexible and quite frankly out of date. Ferguson's parting gift was an unbalanced squad with a sub-par midfied that he had failed to fix for the last 4 seasons, and a manager who simply isn't good enough. Last years run away champions are a shambles. Moyes is lucky to still have a job. Is the author a Liverpool fan? :)

2014-01-18T20:37:16+00:00

Alex Kiefer

Roar Rookie


I wouldn't put it like that. In quite a few games this season Moyes has made tactical errors, most notably the horrible lineup he put up against Sunderland in the first leg of the league cup semi. It is taking Moyes a bit of time to adjust to selecting the best squad of the players who have not been affected by injury and decisions, such as that to move Kagawa to centre midfield in place of Januzaj who moved to the wing, show that he is learning. Give him time.

2014-01-18T17:02:50+00:00

ian

Guest


Players are showing signs of not playing for him if that's the case his time is limited.

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