Daily Dispatch

Everton’s radar on Dyche after Koeman shown exit

Burnley manager also linked to the Leicester hot seat

- By JASON BURT

SEAN Dyche has emerged as one of Everton’s top targets following the sacking of Ronald Koeman as manager.

David Unsworth, a former Everton defender, will take charge for the short-term after stepping up from his role with the club’s U23s. He will be assisted by John Ebbrell, another former player, for tomorrow’s Carabao Cup fourth-round tie at Chelsea.

The pair could also take charge of Sunday’s Premier League match away to Leicester City – who are also searching for a new manager – while the club fully assess how to proceed.

One option is to keep Unsworth in place, possibly even until the end of the season should things work out, while Everton consider possible candidates, but Dyche is believed to figure prominentl­y in their thoughts at present.

The Burnley manager has also strongly been linked to the Leicester job and there is a sense that, should he leave Turf Moor, he would prefer to move further south to be closer to his family home, which would count against Everton.

If a deal is agreed, it is thought Everton would have to pay Burnley £2.5-million (R45.2-million) in compensati­on, as well as meeting Dyche’s financial demands.

That would not appear to be a problem, given the money paid to lure Koeman from Southampto­n 16 months ago, but the optimism of that hiring, with a seventh-place finish in the Premier League last season and after spending unpreceden­ted sums in the summer transfer window, has quickly evaporated during this disastrous campaign.

Dyche is not the only candidate being mooted as a possible replacemen­t. Bournemout­h manager Eddie Howe – an Everton supporter – has long had his admirers at the club but it would also be difficult to lure him away mid-season. The same would apply to Watford manager Marco Silva.

Everton also admire Mikel Arteta, their former player who is working as Pep Guardiola’s assistant at Manchester City but, again, it would be difficult to prise him away and would also appear to be a significan­t gamble, given his inexperien­ce.

Everton may aim for either Carlo Ancelotti or Thomas Tuchel – both currently out of work – but although they would both be interested in coming to the Premier League, both would prefer a Champions League club or Arsenal, should a vacancy arise. Both appear long shots. Former Manchester United star Ryan Giggs has also expressed an interest in the role.

Everton decided to terminate Koeman’s contract following Sunday’s shock 5-2 home defeat by Arsenal, which left the club in the bottom three with just eight points from nine games and already eight points outside the Champions League qualificat­ion places.

Koeman arrived at Everton’s Finch Farm training ground at 7am yesterday and oversaw first-team training, before then being called to a meeting with Everton chairman Bill Kenwright and chief executive Robert Elstone, during which he was told he was being fired.

By lunchtime Everton had issued a statement confirming Koeman’s departure, which read: “Everton Football Club can confirm that Ronald Koeman has left the club. Chairman Bill Kenwright, the board of directors and Major Shareholde­r Farhad Moshiri would all like to express their gratitude to Ronald for the service he has given to the club over the past 16 months and for guiding the club to seventh place in last season’s Premier League campaign.”

The Arsenal defeat was clearly the final straw for Everton’s majority shareholde­r Moshiri, who bought shares in the club in February 2016 and has now overseen the departure of two managers, having also sacked Roberto Martinez.

Unsworth took charge of the senior side for a match after that decision, at the end of the 2015-16 season, and is expected to fulfil the same role again, possibly for longer this time.

Moshiri had given Koeman his backing just a fortnight ago after their 1-0 home defeat by Dyche’s Burnley, but since then Everton have drawn at Brighton, lost to Lyon in what has been a desperatel­y poor Europa League campaign, and then been humiliated by Arsenal. It would not have helped Koeman’s prospects that Arsenal were the club Moshiri attempted to buy, along with Alisher Usmanov, before he invested in Everton.

Koeman becomes the third Premier League managerial casualty of the season, after fellow Dutchman Frank de Boer left Crystal Palace and Craig Shakespear­e was sacked by Leicester.

“Write what you want to write,” Koeman said as he departed his postArsena­l press conference, and they were his final public words as Everton manager, having arrived at the club with Moshiri proclaimin­g him the kind of big name needed to compete against the other “Hollywood” managers in the North-West such as Guardiola, Jose Mourinho and Jurgen Klopp.

Koeman – along with his brother, Erwin – arrived speaking of “an exciting project”, of “financial possibilit­ies” and of “fighting for trophies” and Everton appeared ready to challenge after last season and the promise of spending heavily.

However, their recruitmen­t has been poor and badly planned. Gylfi Sigurdsson has failed to justify the £45-million (R813-million) spent on him, while the negligence of not replacing striker Romelu Lukaku after he was sold to Manchester United for a fee of up to £90-million (R1.6-billion) appears worse by the day. — The Daily Telegraph

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