David Moyes | West Ham in talks with him for managerial job

Christ, what a complete tit, as someone said on the last page, he seems to come up with new reasons to dislike him even more.

To be fair as much as I dislike him if a reporter asked you about a manager at a club doing a good job when you had done a better job at the same club you might mention it too.
 
To be fair as much as I dislike him if a reporter asked you about a manager at a club doing a good job when you had done a better job at the same club you might mention it too.
Only if you were a bit of an egotistical plonker.
 
To be fair as much as I dislike him if a reporter asked you about a manager at a club doing a good job when you had done a better job at the same club you might mention it too.
What @Hammerfell said.

I meant your current team is bottom of the table fighting relegation. Who cares what happened decade ago? "Koeman is doing a good job" that's it. No need to bragging on about his "achievement" which he couldn't replicate himself.
 
He is a completely deluded, broken man now. Wouldnt be surprised if he ends up in a mental institution few years from now and still murmuring "they promised me Ronaldo would come back" over and over again.
 
From that Sunderland forum.
No more cash left at safc to sack managers after all the other sackings.
No cash left to pay regular staff hence redundancies
No more cash left for signings

The club is skint

Pretty much sums it up. Moyes can only bring in a bunch of shite he had at Everton years ago, because there's no money. Its Moyes or bust at the minute. They've really fecked this up.
 
Football Weekly criticising Moyes and the club for sending the players on a holiday to NY watching basketball and the Red Hot Chilli Peppers and then making a load of staff redundant.
 
Football Weekly criticising Moyes and the club for sending the players on a holiday to NY watching basketball and the Red Hot Chilli Peppers and then making a load of staff redundant.
It's by no means the same thing but the reports on that ill advised trip are giving me flashbacks of that disaster Dave orchestrated on Bondi Beach:

It was an episode of farce on Bondi Beach, days into David Moyes’s reign as Manchester United manager, when it became evident that the Scot had misjudged the magnitude of the job he had walked into.

Having left behind the frenzy of Bangkok on the first-leg of United’s summer tour, Moyes had decided to take his squad on an impromptu trip to Bondi – a stroll around the beach to stretch the players’ legs after training.

On a similar summer trip to Sydney with Everton, Moyes had taken players on the same bonding session and it passed without incident.


But this was United, and while an Everton squad containing Australia international Tim Cahill went unnoticed in their club tracksuits among the surfers and sandcastles, Moyes’s new team were mobbed and besieged by supporters to the extent that the manager had to hide his players in the rooftop bar of a nightclub until security arrived to restore order.

It was akin to a supply teacher taking a group of unruly sixth formers on a day out, with the leader’s authority undermined from the outset
XwiUG3H.jpg
 
It's by no means the same thing but the reports on that ill advised trip are giving me flashbacks of that disaster Dave orchestrated on Bondi Beach:


XwiUG3H.jpg


Unreal that was, no wonder the squad hated him.
 
It was an episode of farce on Bondi Beach, days into David Moyes’s reign as Manchester United manager, when it became evident that the Scot had misjudged the magnitude of the job he had walked into.

Having left behind the frenzy of Bangkok on the first-leg of United’s summer tour, Moyes had decided to take his squad on an impromptu trip to Bondi – a stroll around the beach to stretch the players’ legs after training.

On a similar summer trip to Sydney with Everton, Moyes had taken players on the same bonding session and it passed without incident.

But this was United, and while an Everton squad containing Australia international Tim Cahill went unnoticed in their club tracksuits among the surfers and sandcastles, Moyes’s new team were mobbed and besieged by supporters to the extent that the manager had to hide his players in the rooftop bar of a nightclub until security arrived to restore order.

It was akin to a supply teacher taking a group of unruly sixth formers on a day out, with the leader’s authority undermined from the outset

XwiUG3H.jpg

Christ, what a plonker :lol:
 
:lol:
He is a completely deluded, broken man now. Wouldnt be surprised if he ends up in a mental institution few years from now and still murmuring "they promised me Ronaldo would come back" over and over again.

:lol: This is probably already happening. Only a matter of time until he is put into an institution.
 
He is a completely deluded, broken man now. Wouldnt be surprised if he ends up in a mental institution few years from now and still murmuring "they promised me Ronaldo would come back" over and over again.
:lol: This is probably already happening. Only a matter of time until he is put into an institution.
Wishful thinking lads. You're severely underestimating the kind power having "former Man Utd manager" on your CV brings. In reality he's going to spend the next decade or so fleecing faltering football clubs for every penny he can get before fecking off into the sunset, iPads in tow.
 
I never wanted him, never liked him and didn't think he would be a success but once he was appointed i got behind him and convinced myself that Ferguson must have knew something i didn't. Those two results in december were when i knew i was right, but it wasn't until the 2-2 at home to Fulham (a game i was at) that i realized he just had to go asap it couldn't wait until the end of the season. Never seen anything like that match, as Einstein once said it was the definition of insanity that day. Cross, after cross, after cross.
I was willing to give him the benefit of the doubt but obviously he's disappointed all of us.
 
Wishful thinking lads. You're severely underestimating the kind power having "former Man Utd manager" on your CV brings. In reality he's going to spend the next decade or so fleecing faltering football clubs for every penny he can get before fecking off into the sunset, iPads in tow.

Definitely - he's done in the Premier League but he can milk it in some cash rich emerging leagues on the back of being "former Manchester United manager" (even if he was the worst in living memory).

Sunderland may even stay up despite Moyes. While the gap to safety remains small (currently 3 points), they'll have a puncher's chance so long as Defoe stays fit.
 
From that Sunderland forum.

No more cash left at safc to sack managers after all the other sackings.
No cash left to pay regular staff hence redundancies
No more cash left for signings

The club is skint
Pretty much sums it up. Moyes can only bring in a bunch of shite he had at Everton years ago, because there's no money. Its Moyes or bust at the minute. They've really fecked this up.

Sunderland were idiotic enough to give a manager who would never walk no matter how badly he's failing a fecking 4 year contract. So they deserve to be stuck with the turnip that is Moyes.
 
Only just realised that Stormzy's referenced him in his lyrics.

We all know you're a good child
So pull up your jeans
Get off the street and go do your mum proud
Go get a job and don't come out your house, mug
Look I don't rate them boys
Bare wasteman, bare pagan boys
I come to your team and I feck shit up
I'm David Moyes
 
Part of the story from Craig Hope at his Friday press conference.

David Moyes is reminded that it is now March. The inference is clear. This is the month when Sunderland sack managers. A new boss arrives. The team survives.

The Scot, for the large part, has remained calm and considered during a season in which he has been lied to by his owner and let down by his players.

But this angers him. He doesn't raise his voice, but there is agitation in his tone. 'That would say more about the players, wouldn't it?

'If they only get a boost off a new manager,' he snaps back. 'If that's the way it is (they only start playing in March) then they should be doing it now, shouldn't they? That's nothing to do with the manager.

'If that's the case (they need a new manager) then that's wrong. I'd have thought the players here had seen too many managers to want to be linked with any more.

'I'd have thought they'd say, 'Look, we've had enough changes here, we need to start looking a little bit inwardly rather than at the manager'.'

Moyes made a mistake when he said 'yes' to Sunderland owner Ellis Short last summer. You suspect he knows as much himself.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ists-don-t-want-Sunderland.html#ixzz4aSVyTVQz
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ists-don-t-want-Sunderland.html#ixzz4aSVqnfGS
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 
Part of the story from Craig Hope at his Friday press conference.

David Moyes is reminded that it is now March. The inference is clear. This is the month when Sunderland sack managers. A new boss arrives. The team survives.

The Scot, for the large part, has remained calm and considered during a season in which he has been lied to by his owner and let down by his players.

But this angers him. He doesn't raise his voice, but there is agitation in his tone. 'That would say more about the players, wouldn't it?

'If they only get a boost off a new manager,' he snaps back. 'If that's the way it is (they only start playing in March) then they should be doing it now, shouldn't they? That's nothing to do with the manager.

'If that's the case (they need a new manager) then that's wrong. I'd have thought the players here had seen too many managers to want to be linked with any more.

'I'd have thought they'd say, 'Look, we've had enough changes here, we need to start looking a little bit inwardly rather than at the manager'.'

Moyes made a mistake when he said 'yes' to Sunderland owner Ellis Short last summer. You suspect he knows as much himself.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ists-don-t-want-Sunderland.html#ixzz4aSVyTVQz
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ists-don-t-want-Sunderland.html#ixzz4aSVqnfGS
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Just his press buddies blaming anyone but him.

It's amazing that at every club he fails it's because he was dealt a bad hand.

Sociedad are fighting for UCL places since his departure.
 
The Daily Mail said:
The Scot, for the large part, has remained calm and considered during a season in which he has been lied to by his owner and let down by his players.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ists-don-t-want-Sunderland.html#ixzz4aSVqnfGS
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

:lol: Always the way, isn't it?

Sunderland should definitely keep him in the job though - I've come round to the idea that he's looking for his next sacking pay-off, and I'm not at all sure he'll fancy the Championship with them for the remainder of his contract, so Sunderland should make him honour what he signed, at least until some Premier League club next season hits the panic button and makes an offer to Sunderland for the great man to come and save them :)
 
Part of the story from Craig Hope at his Friday press conference.

David Moyes is reminded that it is now March. The inference is clear. This is the month when Sunderland sack managers. A new boss arrives. The team survives.

The Scot, for the large part, has remained calm and considered during a season in which he has been lied to by his owner and let down by his players.

But this angers him. He doesn't raise his voice, but there is agitation in his tone. 'That would say more about the players, wouldn't it?

'If they only get a boost off a new manager,' he snaps back. 'If that's the way it is (they only start playing in March) then they should be doing it now, shouldn't they? That's nothing to do with the manager.

'If that's the case (they need a new manager) then that's wrong. I'd have thought the players here had seen too many managers to want to be linked with any more.

'I'd have thought they'd say, 'Look, we've had enough changes here, we need to start looking a little bit inwardly rather than at the manager'.'

Moyes made a mistake when he said 'yes' to Sunderland owner Ellis Short last summer. You suspect he knows as much himself.

Jesus christ, Moyes must have real trouble pushing turds past these Journalists tongues seeing as they are so far up his arse all the time.
 
It would be quite a sight to see him wither in the Championship, Defoe-less and desperate for the sack but getting just enough points to keep him in the job.
 
It would be quite a sight to see him wither in the Championship, Defoe-less and desperate for the sack but getting just enough points to keep him in the job.
The problem with that narrative is, if he manages to get them back up, we'd never hear the end of it.
 
"Well, I thought we tried our best but it didn't come off. Credit to City. We need to start making it harder for our opponents..."

suicidehdx7d.gif
 
Whenever I feel the slightest for Sunderland I remember the Poznan the day Aguero won the league for City

Youre welcome for Moyes, Im a spiteful cnut and karma is a bitch
 
"Perhaps people will be looking at David Moyes a wee bit differently today, and saying 'That David Moyes knows how to get a result.'"
"You lost, Dave."
"Shit..."
 
You just know they'll mount the most miraculous comeback in the next 2 months. though I would certainly be happy to be proven wrong and luck does finally run out for them this season and they can finally feck off to championship.
 
He should be considered for the Manager of the Year award. The fact that he has single handedly won 19 points for them with his amazing performances is unprecedented. It's the first time manager, without help of his players, wins points consistently for his team. He has been absolutely bloody brilliant.
 
He should be considered for the Manager of the Year award. The fact that he has single handedly won 19 points for them with his amazing performances is unprecedented. It's the first time manager, without help of his players, wins points consistently for his team. He has been absolutely bloody brilliant.
He probably genuinely believes he has been doing a good job with Sunderland. And it's just the players and board who have let him down.
 
Did he say he was let down at United? Because from what I remember he was definitely backed financially.
Of course he lost the players fairly quickly, delivered shithole football and yet thought he would stay for up to 6 years the crazy man.
 
He probably genuinely believes he has been doing a good job with Sunderland. And it's just the players and board who have let him down.

Even the press keeps that narrative though so we should not be surprised. The article above saying that he has been badly let down by players says it all. It's never Dave, it's always the fecking players.
 
Did he say he was let down at United? Because from what I remember he was definitely backed financially.
Of course he lost the players fairly quickly, delivered shithole football and yet thought he would stay for up to 6 years the crazy man.

A lot of people on here were also hating the players and saying they are letting the amazing Dave down. It's been the common opinion about him that he's been doing magnificent job everywhere he went but the players were letting him down. Also happened at Sociedad where he was apparently 'forced out by the dressing room'. It's NEVER his fault.
 
Next time a Sunderland player has an interview, they should comment on how hard Moyes is trying, but ultimately he lacks quality and the club needs to invest in a better manager. I wonder how well that would go down, seeing as Moyes basically says that about his players every week.