Daily Mail

Everton have spent more than Real and Bayern… and gone backwards

- Follow me on Twitter... @MicahRicha­rds

THE more I look at the numbers, the less I understand. Everton have invested £500million in five years on 44 players. It should have taken them forwards but they are going backwards.

Their net spend in that period of £213m dwarfs superpower­s such as Bayern Munich and Real Madrid. In the Premier League, only the Manchester clubs have a bigger transfer deficit.

I simply cannot fathom how so much can be invested and for a team to be no better than they were before.

As someone who loves football, it is so frustratin­g to watch the continual wasting of money.

Whoever has sanctioned these deals — such as £27m on Davy Klaassen, £35m on Alex Iwobi and £45m on Gylfi Sigurdsson — has serious questions to answer.

Iwobi couldn’t get in Arsenal’s team at the time of his move in 2019, so how does that allow you to spend £35m?

Klaassen was well-regarded in Holland but he joined in the summer that Everton also signed Sigurdsson and Wayne Rooney and left having barely kicked a ball. He never scored a goal.

Farhad Moshiri, Everton’s major shareholde­r, has been at Goodison Park since February 2016. His first big decision was to sack Roberto Martinez three months later and try to improve a squad that had been built over a number of years.

It’s worth pointing out that Martinez reached the semi-finals of both the League Cup and FA Cup in his final season.

His team for that 2-1 FA Cup defeat by Manchester United included John Stones, Romelu Lukaku, Ross Barkley, Leighton Baines and Phil Jagielka. Do Everton have five players of comparable quality in their squad now?

The irony of the situation now, though, is the current manager has not had the right level of backing.

I see that Rafa Benitez is under pressure following a run of eight games without a win and many fans have no affinity to him.

Rafa isn’t the main problem here. I worked with him earlier this year on CBS Sports for the Europa League final and found him fascinatin­g.

He knows everything there is to know about tactics and he talks about the game relentless­ly.

He cares deeply about his job and improving players. Benitez took the job, determined to transform their fortunes, but he has arrived at a club that looks nothing like how I remember it.

Everton reminded me of the old Manchester City, with a sense of community and family, but what I see now doesn’t seem to reflect those values.

Going to Goodison Park was always hard. It wasn’t as intimidati­ng as Anfield but it was on a par with Stoke — in that I mean the crowd was angry in a good way and, if you were not at the right level, you could easily get swept away and beaten 3-0.

I could have seen myself enjoying playing for them as it seems that if you give your all for their crowd they will get right behind you. There was talk of me being potentiall­y used as part of swap deal when Everton sold Joleon Lescott to City in 2009 but it never materialis­ed.

What you see with Everton now, however, is a reminder that money is not the route to all happiness or a guarantee of success.

We saw it initially at City when Thaksin Shinawatra was our owner; there was a giddiness and we didn’t buy the right players.

Sometimes money makes you think you are something that you are not — you want to buy glamorous players.

Look at what Everton did with James Rodriguez last year. He’s a lovely footballer, with all the tricks, but come the end of the season, he didn’t want to be there. They paid him a fortune for very little return.

Everton should be a club putting pressure on the European places. Martinez, who took the team to fifth in 2014, has regularly told me about it being an amazing place with incredible potential and how he loved his time there, following on from David Moyes.

Now all the talk is about building a new stadium on Liverpool’s waterfront but part of me wonders whether they have become too sidetracke­d by that project — there’s no point having a brand new house if there is nothing to put inside it.

Standards have fallen in the one area of the club that matters more than anything — the actual football, as shown on Wednesday when they were thrashed in the Merseyside derby.

When I think of Everton, I remember their academy thriving and producing a raft of great young players such as Rooney, Barkley and Leon Osman. James Vaughan would have been brilliant but for injuries.

They used to make smart signings like Joleon, who cost £5m from Wolves, or Seamus Coleman, who at £60,000 is one of the best value for money transfers you will ever see. Unfortunat­ely, they have got themselves into a horrible mess, one that has led fans to talk about the prospect of relegation.

Everton won’t go down — but it’s going to be a long road back.

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GETTY IMAGES Expensive mistake: James only lasted one season
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