Premier League: Everton David Moyes’s boss is proving age is not an obstacle to the success of Premier League
It is right to say that David Moyes was not a popular universal choice among Everton’s supporters as the man who replaced Sean Dyche at the beginning of this season.
Toffees were trying to unite any kind of winning victory under the former Burnley Morned, however, Moyer‘The last season of the season in West Ham had clearly left much to be desired.
Fan Power in the East of London, as much as everything else, seemed to be the catalyst for the curtain to collapse at the time of Scotland at the London Stadium, and he ended the 2023/24 campaign with a record 53, won 22, Drew 12 and lost 19.
Moyes deserves credit to take over a fought side Everton
The 82 goals of West Ham scored were the second since his teams had managed in the past 10 seasons, though the 90 goals accepted were the worst of that time and undoubtedly contributed to the club by facilitating him from his tasks.
At the time he took over for his second season in Goodison Park, Moyes was watching a team playing 19 Premier League matches under Dyche in 2024/25, had won only three, drawn eight (five of which were volatile 0-0 cramps) and lost eight.
At that time there were 15 brave goals, with 25 accepted, giving Dyche a 15.8%victory percentage. It is hardly the best record, and for all its honesty, gravel and determination, it was clear about everything required for a change.

The judgment of Everton’s extended fans is likely to have been covered by the last season of Moyes with Hammers, but easily bypassed the fact that he would win the first IRS trophy for any description (UEFA Conference League) in over 40 years, and took Eastern Londonians in Europe for the first time.
Moyes’s first home match in Goodison Park saw the hosts get all three points in a five-goal thriller against Tottenham, and he quickly followed him with a win against Leicester, Brighton and Crystal Palace, as well as two 2-2 drawings against Liverpool and Man United.
In fact, he remained invincible in nine games before he was lost by the strange goal for Everton’s Merseyside rivals. However, until then, he would take them all in the arm and, far from the concern over renunciation, the tide had turned to such an extent that the conversation was as high as Toffees could end.
Moyes’s record in Everton this season is chalk and cheese compared to Dyche’s
Indeed, so far, Moyes’s registration this season compared to Dyche is both crayons and cheese.
Under Moyes, Toffees played 14, won five, withdrawn six and lost only three. They scored 19, accepted 15 and had a percentage of 35.7%victory.
Consistency and performance levels, both individually and collectively, are perhaps more an incentive than the results and points on the board.

After all, Moyes has practically had the same players to work at the same time his predecessor and yet has appeared to be 10 percent of each of them. The new manager dances and everything.
Not even before, has he turned the narrative that surrounded his abilities as a manager, because let’s not forget that Sir Alex Ferguson and Man United considered Moyes good enough to take over at Old Trafford.
A harmful period in the Dream Theater and the unstable tracks in Real Sociedad, Sunderland and the first time around in West Ham had largely contributed to the idea that Moyes was yesterday’s man and a ‘dinosaur’, while in fact he did not accept bravery in taking those positions in the first place.
Moyes was hiding for nothing on Old Trafford
Especially when you consider that anyone who had followed Sir Alex was always in concealment for nothing.
Yes, one side of David Moyes is not the offensive fraud of Swashbuckling that are a city inspired by Pep Guardiola, but they will be organized, adaptable and ready to run on brick walls for each other – and this must account for something.

What is also interesting is that the 61-year-old’s external perception is often contrary to reality.
For example, any suggestions that Moyes plays boring football can roll in his head given that in 360 games in all competitions over the past 10 seasons, he has been at the top of only 18 goalless draws – and never more than three in each season.
It is also worth noting that Everton’s net spending of £ 27.22m over the last five years makes them roll at the end of English flight in terms of financial expenses during that time – meaning that Moyes did not have much terrible to work with when he returned to the blue half of Merseyside in any case.
Not the right time to judge Moys’s time in Merseyside
Therefore, long-term disappointments by the locals are also likely to have played a role in their belief that the appointment of Moyes was another cost reduction exercise than a pre–but this is not in the manager.
Fortunately for Scotland, he has not taken time to prove that, despite being the elderly man of the Premier League, he has yet taken what he needs to mix with the most famous managers in the division.
With five games left to play in the current campaign, Everton find themselves in the 13th position, which is not the best, but not the worst, given how things were looking when Moyes took over.

This time next year, after almost a season at Everton’s new home in the Brampia-Moore Dock, it will be the right time to judge the manager, and would be a brave betting man against Toffees once again becoming so difficult to defeat that they were during the previous manager with the club.
They say you should never go back, but David Moyes has already debated that theory.
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