Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

PLAQUE TO THE FUTURE Ancelotti: I was fired by Chelsea in the corridors of Goodison.. they should put up a little sign saying: Here was sacked...

- BY GIDEON BROOKS

AN hour after being unveiled as the new Everton manager, Carlo Ancelotti was recalling his last visit to the rabbit warren of corridors in the main stand at Goodison.

It was May 2011, just a year after delivering the Premier League title and FA Cup to then paymasters Chelsea. He bumped into David Moyes, who was on his way to the postmatch press conference.

The Scot asked if everything was OK to which Ancelotti replied: “I’ve just been sacked.”

Time may have soothed the edges of that day when Chelsea failed to cover themselves with glory, on or off the pitch, to the point where he can laugh now.

“I was sacked in the corridor there,” he said, gesturing vaguely behind him. “I think you have to put up a little plaque, ‘Here was sacked...’

“But I never beat Everton here or also at Stamford Bridge. David Moyes was my nightmare! Even in the FA Cup, Leighton Baines scored at the last minute.

“I am going to the training ground to remind him now!” Baines, who along with Seamus Coleman, were singled out by the Italian as having a special “belonging” to the club should have few worries.

And for all that Ancelotti’s memories here are tainted by failure, few doubt his arrival on a fourand-a-half year deal offers the chance to erase that pain.

“Life changes so quickly,” he said. “I was planning a holiday in Vancouver, but everything changed so quickly after I met Farhad Moshiri and Bill Kenwright last week, but it is good to be here. It is an important period for me and I am excited.

“It was easy to make the decision to come back to the

Premier League and the opportunit­y

Everton gave to me is a club with a lot of tradition and history who want to improve. And they have a good, clear idea of how to do that.” It is a measure of the size of the coup in bringing Ancelotti to Goodison just 11 days after he was sacked by the chaotic regime running Napoli, that eyebrows raised when it was announced have yet to come down.

Ancelotti (left) may hold one of his nearly permanentl­y aloft, but he had no hesitation accepting the challenge.

Turning things around will

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