Cape Times

Allardyce not part of Everton’s long-term plan

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LONDON: Everton’s structural shake-up left no room for Sam Allardyce who was sacked as manager yesterday after a six-month reign in which he steered the Merseyside­rs to eighth place in the Premier League.

Former England manager Allardyce replaced sacked Dutchman Ronald Koeman in November with the club 13th and five points above the relegation zone. He had a year to run on his contract.

Denise Barrett-Baxendale, who will officially replace Robert Elstone as the club’s chief executive on 1 June as part of a raft of changes at the top, said the task of replacing Allardyce would begin immediatel­y.

“On behalf of the Chairman, Board of Directors and (owner) Mr (Farhad) Moshiri, I’d like to thank Sam for the job he has done at Everton over the last seven months,” she said.

“Sam was brought in at a challengin­g time last season to provide us with some stability and we are grateful to him for doing that. However, we have made the decision that, as part of our longer-term plan, we will be appointing a new manager this summer. We wish Sam well for the future.”

Allardyce was not a popular choice with the fans and the writing looked to be on the wall for the 63-year-old when he criticised the recent changes in the club’s hierarchy.

“I’m shocked, disappoint­ed and disgusted that the football club didn’t have the decency to tell me, my Director of Football and my staff about the changes,” he told the Liverpool Post.

“They must have been in the pipeline for a considerab­le time, but no-one thought to tell me and my staff.”

Since Moshiri took over the club in February 2016, Everton have spent around £300million in the transfer market but rather than mount a challenge to the top four they are treading water in the league.

Everton have had four managers since Moshiri came in and former Watford manager Marco Silva is favourite to become the fifth. – Reuters

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