The Irish Mail on Sunday

Koeman’s strongman act turns sour

Players are being treated like kids and made to line up behind him for food as ....

- By Joe Bernstein

AFTER Southampto­n finished sixth under Ronald Koeman in 2016, other mid-sized Premier League clubs were surprised to receive overtures from several Saints players, particular­ly as they could not afford to pay bigger wages.

When those overtures stopped the day Koeman left St Mary’s for Everton, it became clear dressingro­om discontent was down to the manager rather than money.

Everton would have known about Koeman’s demanding methods — aloof and uncommunic­ative were two common complaints on the south coast — when they appointed him 16 months ago.

Indeed, it was a major reason why he got the job ahead of Manuel Pellegrini. The board and senior players at Goodison wanted a boss to ruffle feathers after the softer regime of Roberto Martinez.

It is fair to say the strongman approach has not worked out so far. Everton face Arsenal at Goodison today hovering above the bottom three having spent £150million in the summer to break into the top four.

Six of their last eight Premier League games have ended in defeat and Koeman’s popularity within the dressing room is slipping to Southampto­n levels.

Whereas Martinez would let players and coaches queue up together in the canteen, Everton’s first-teamers now have to wait until Koeman and his staff are served before they get their food.

What may seem like a minor issue takes on significan­ce when morale is at rock-bottom and players feel aggrieved at being treated like schoolkids. Koeman has always given his brother Erwin the responsibi­lity of taking training sessions while he stands apart until a correction has to be barked out.

He has variously accused the team of lacking passion, aggression and self-belief this season.

Young midfielder Tom Davies described his manager in these pages as ‘tough and demanding’. He didn’t mean it as a criticism, but others aren’t as charitable. Trevor Steven, part of the club’s glory team of the Eighties, said: ‘The team look a mess. There doesn’t seem to be any continuity of style or selection. The players brought in haven’t settled into a team.’

Koeman usually keeps his office door shut. While he can be charming and a good listener, it doesn’t encourage players to go to him with problems. Pre-season hopes were high with 10 players, including Wayne Rooney, signed to compensate for the loss of Romelu Lukaku. But the team have lacked pace and balance with too many No10s and no regular goalscorer.

Age-wise, Everton haven’t got enough players at their peak. Too many of the squad are either still learning — Jordan Pickford, Michael Keane, Dominic CalvertLew­in, Davies, Davy Klaassen, Nikola Vlasic — or on the downward slope like Ashley Williams, Phil Jagielka, Leighton Baines and Rooney. Those few in the ideal 25-28 age bracket have issues. Idrissa Gueye’s proposed contract remains unsigned amid interest from Arsenal, while £45million record signing Gylfi Sigurdsson hasn’t scored in nine games since a freakish goal against Hajduk Split.

Seamus Coleman, Yannick Bolasie, James McCarthy and Ross Barkley haven’t played this season because of injury. One wonders if Barkley, running down the final year of his contract, might stay if Koeman leaves.

That is a distinct possibilit­y should Everton lose their third home game in a row this afternoon. Last Thursday’s latest defeat in the Europa League was marred by an on-pitch brawl that has seen one fan banned for life.

Koeman appears fatalistic about his predicamen­t. ‘If the board thinks I’m not the right man, then they will tell me,’ he says.

It is almost sad to see one of the great players of his generation fail to live up to his reputation as a manager.

Koeman is trying to be more empathetic. Mason Holgate, who turns 21 today, wasn’t blasted for conceding a rash penalty in the loss to Lyon last Thursday.

‘Nobody roasted me for it and that helped me a lot because I can get it out of my mind,’ he said.

Koeman needs a repeat of last season’s performanc­e against Arsenal when a late winner from Williams completed a 2-1 comeback at Goodison in December.

Otherwise the experiment of replacing a sympatheti­c Spaniard with a demanding Dutchman will have failed.

 ??  ?? NO SAINT: Koeman has alienated players with his strict approach
NO SAINT: Koeman has alienated players with his strict approach
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland