Daily Mail

MOYES DONE GOOD

But Hammers can ditch him in six months

- By MATT LAWTON and SAMI MOKBEL

DAVID MOYES will be confirmed as the new manager of West Ham today to shake up a dressing room that senior figures at the club felt was not being driven hard enough by Slaven Bilic.

Bilic’s tenure ended in a meeting with David Sullivan yesterday morning and the club moved immediatel­y to secure the services of Moyes, who flew in from Qatar for talks in London.

Moyes, 54, is set to sign a two-and-a-halfyear contract that will include a break clause at the end of this season if the Scot fails to make an impact.

His arrival will certainly lift the intensity of training and for good measure he has turned to Stuart Pearce, a former West Ham player he hopes he can persuade to join his coaching staff. Alan Irvine is also expected to team

up again with the former Everton and Manchester United boss, while Chris Woods was the one member of the Bilic backroom team to survive the axe yesterday. Moyes had Woods as his goalkeepin­g coach at Everton and United.

Sportsmail understand­s Moyes’ deal is heavily weighted towards a £2million bonus for keeping the club in the Premier League after Saturday’s crushing 4-1 defeat by Liverpool saw them slip into the bottom three. In a recent interview with this newspaper he expressed his determinat­ion to repair the damage of a difficult year in the North East which saw him relegated to the Championsh­ip with Sunderland.

‘That was my first ever relegation and I hope it’ll be my last,’ he said. ‘I want that winning feeling again.’

Moyes has the internatio­nal break to acquaint himself with the club and then three games that represent a decent chance of getting some precious points on the board; a trip to Watford is followed by an encounter with Leicester at the London Stadium before they face Everton at Goodison Park on November 29.

After that, however, things get tougher, with Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal their next three games. But Moyes will walk into the east London club confident of his methods and proud of his record, despite some of the challenges he has faced, here in England and in Spain, since leaving Everton in 2013.

‘I think my last game was 499 games as a Premier League manager,’ he said in his recent interview. ‘I’ve maybe got 880 or 890 as a manager in total. I think my record will stand up as well as anybody’s.’

On the decision to dismiss Bilic after less than two and a half years in charge, West Ham said there was an urgent need ‘ to move forward positively and in line with their ambition’. A statement from joint-chairmen Sullivan and David Gold said Bilic, the 49-year- old former Croatia coach, had conducted himself with ‘honesty and integrity’, while the decision to terminate his employment had been made ‘with disappoint­ment and heavy hearts’.

They added: ‘We see this as an exciting opportunit­y to appoint a quality manager to the position to inject fresh ideas, organisati­on and enthusiasm into a very talented squad.

‘We will now focus our entire efforts on bringing in the manager we believe can get the best out of the current squad of players and steer the club towards the top half of the table as quickly as possible.’

Speaking to reporters as he left West Ham’s training ground, Bilic said: ‘There are no hard feelings. I can be very proud of my work here.

‘We didn’t start this crucial season well. As in many clubs across Europe, the manager is the one who pays the price. It’s a very logical move.’

West Ham also announced that Bilic’s coaching assistants Nikola Jurcevic, Edin Terzic, Julian Dicks and Miljenko Rak had also left with immediate effect. If Sam Allardyce takes the Everton manager’s job it throws up the intriguing possibilit­y at Goodison later this month of Moyes v Allardyce, both facing their old clubs.

 ?? PA ?? Organiser: Moyes aims to rebuild his bruised reputation
PA Organiser: Moyes aims to rebuild his bruised reputation
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