Everton
Moyes: United Have Drifted From Ferguson’s Values, Leaving Managers Little Time
David Moyes: United moved away from Sir Alex Ferguson’s values, leaving managers little time. widely
David Moyes has renewed criticism of Manchester United’s post‑Ferguson era, saying the club’s culture has changed and managers now receive far less patience. The former United manager, now preparing to face the Red Devils with former club Everton, argued that the values established under Sir Alex Ferguson have eroded and that the environment that once favoured long-term planning is gone.
“The history of Manchester United was not [one of change],” Moyes reflected, more than a decade after his appointment. “Manchester United had a great culture. They stuck with their managers, they brought through their own academy boys. They actually had some of the best characteristics of what you would want your club to have; good values.
“Sir Alex had great values at Manchester United and, over the years, those values he established needed some time to come through as well. It was always a club with brilliant values with an understanding about bringing their young players through and developing them in the right way.”
Moyes said the lack of time given to managers has been decisive. He recalled inheriting an ageing United squad after Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement, with senior figures such as Rio Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidić, Patrice Evra and Michael Carrick all over 30, Robin van Persie approaching 30 and Ryan Giggs near 40. The club also lost long-term stability at the executive level when David Gill planned to move on.
Recruitment difficulties compounded the challenge. Marouane Fellaini was the only new signing recorded in that window, arriving amid a missed release clause deadline, and moves that had been in motion before Ferguson left — including efforts involving Cristiano Ronaldo and interest in Gareth Bale, Cesc Fàbregas and Toni Kroos — did not come to fruition.
“I always thought when I took the job that it wouldn’t be able to be fixed quickly. I saw not long after I went in that it was going to take a bit of time,” Moyes said. He also noted the rising strength of rivals: “I think also you have to remember that it was not just to do with the strength of United. It was to do with the strength of other teams; Manchester City , Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal were all incredibly strong. They were all rebuilding and bringing in more all the time. I think those clubs played as big a part in it as anyone else, that their quality had risen or was rising all the time.”
Moyes has repeatedly argued that he was not afforded the time needed to rebuild. “I believe I had nothing but support from Sir Alex during my short period as manager,” he explained. “It was unfortunate I wasn’t given more time to succeed. It could well be that gone are the days of long-term planning at United.” He later added: “Do I feel I should have been given more time? Of course I do. To go to a club like Manchester United and follow someone like Sir Alex after the time he had been there, to stay for 10 months … ]
Arsenal
Shortlists for November Premier League Player and Manager of the Month
Nominees for November’s Premier League Player and Manager awards, highlighting key performances. Stars
The Premier League shortlists for November have been published, highlighting individual runs that shaped the month.
Newcastle United winger Harvey Barnes closed November with three goals, two of which arrived in the win over Manchester City. Everton midfielder Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall delivered a memorable strike against Manchester United, also scoring against Newcastle and providing an assist against Fulham. Manchester City winger Jérémy Doku produced one of the season’s most eye-catching individual displays as he demolished Liverpool and helped Pep Guardiola’s side remain competitive in the title race.
Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes finished November with four assists, creating goals against Nottingham Forest, Tottenham Hotspur and Crystal Palace. Morgan Gibbs-White enjoyed a three-game scoring streak for Nottingham Forest, firing home against Man Utd, Leeds United and in the away victory at Liverpool.
Chelsea defender Reece James featured in all four of the Blues’ Premier League matches in November. His assist in the 1–1 draw with Arsenal capped off a truly stunning individual showing in a month which yielded a total of three clean sheets. Arsenal’s Declan Rice added attacking impetus with a goal against Burnley and an assist in the north London derby win over Tottenham Hotspur.
Brentford striker Igor Thiago continued his hot form, adding five goals across November with strikes against Newcastle, Brighton & Hove Albion and Burnley among them.
Managers with strong cases included Mikel Arteta after Arsenal’s unbeaten month, which produced wins over Burnley and Tottenham as well as draws with Sunderland and Chelsea. Unai Emery’s Aston Villa won three of four and emerged as outside contenders in the title race. Pep Guardiola’s Man City scored a league-high 10 goals in November, including the victory over Liverpool. Fabian Hürzeler’s Brighton & Hove Albion conceded once in four games, producing wins over Leeds, Brentford and Nottingham Forest. Chelsea went unbeaten under Enzo Maresca with three wins and a draw. Marco Silva’s Fulham recorded three wins over Wolves, Sunderland and Tottenham.
Recent monthly winners: Jack Grealish (Everton, August), Erling Haaland (Man City, September), Bryan Mbeumo (Man Utd, October). Recent manager winners: Arne Slot (Liverpool, August), Oliver Glasner (Crystal Palace, September), Ruben Amorim (Man Utd, October).
Everton
Teammate Red Card and Missed Opportunities Leave Manchester United Short After Everton Loss
A rare red card for a teammate clash and wasted superiority left Man Utd exposed and criticised. once.
Ruben Amorim marked his first anniversary as Manchester United manager with a painful defeat as Everton left Old Trafford with a historic win.
The match threatened to swing United’s way early on when Idrissa Gueye was sent off 13 minutes in after a clash with teammate Michael Keane. Gueye became the first player dismissed for clashing with his own teammate in a Premier League match since Ricardo Fuller in December 2008. An errant Gueye pass allowed Bruno Fernandes to pounce and shoot wide, after which Gueye confronted Keane and slapped him. It was no more than a tap, but referee Tony Harrington dismissed Gueye, who apologised to Keane and the Everton supporters via Instagram post-match.
United had hoped a lopsided victory would push them into the top four, extending an unbeaten run to six games, but instead they remain tenth with 18 points from 12 games.
Everton took the lead through a fine Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall finish just before the half-hour mark. Playing against ten men, Amorim’s side failed to convert their numerical advantage into a breakthrough. United kept three centre backs on the pitch throughout and increasingly targeted crosses, delivering 38 into the box, yet Everton’s defence held firm.
Jordan Pickford made six saves, a couple of which were outstanding, and those interventions helped the Toffees secure just their third Premier League victory at Old Trafford.
The result returns scrutiny to Amorim. He enjoyed a brief respite before the November break, but Everton’s triumph ensures questions will resume. Amorim has now lost more Premier League games as Manchester United boss than José Mourinho in 54 fewer attempts. His win rate of 30.8% remains the worst among Manchester United managers in the competition’s history.
Everton
United Frustrated by Ten-Man Everton as Dewsbury-Hall’s Curler Settles Game
United dominated possession but missed chances and lost 1-0 to 10-man Everton; Dewsbury-Hall scored.
Manchester United were left to rue missed opportunities after a 1-0 defeat to 10-man Everton in Monday’s Premier League fixture at the Theatre of Dreams. Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall produced the decisive moment, beating Senne Lammens with a curled effort in the 29th minute shortly after Everton were reduced to 10 men.
Tempers boiled over just under 15 minutes when Idrissa Gana Gueye struck teammate Michael Keane. Jordan Pickford tried to break it up but referee Tony Harrington dismissed the Senegalese midfielder, leaving United with a numerical advantage. Everton adjusted and remained dangerous on the break, and they were rewarded when Dewsbury-Hall found the net.
United dominated large parts of the second half and probed frequently without finding the finish. Of the 25 shots the Red Devils mustered, just six were on target. Bruno Fernandes completed the most passes and saw several clear openings go begging. Amad Diallo created the most chances on the night but a switch to right wingback after Mason Mount’s introduction changed his influence.
Managerial changes in the second half included Mason Mount coming on for Noussair Mazraoui at half time and Diogo Dalot and Kobbie Mainoo entering in the 58th minute. Joshua Zirkzee had two big late opportunities, one requiring a spectacular save from Pickford and another that missed the target. Matthijs de Ligt produced an underpowered effort late that nearly troubled the goalkeeper.
Key defensive interventions were notable, including a 57th-minute challenge by Michael Keane to deny a goalbound Bryan Mbeumo. Video assistant referee checks upheld on-field decisions and denied United penalty appeals.
Statistically United carried the game: 70% possession, an expected goals total of 1.66 and nine corners, but they could not convert dominance into points. The loss ends a five-match unbeaten run and hands United a frustrating return to league action. Next up is a trip to face Oliver Glasner’s Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park.
-
Analytics & Stats2 months agoOpta Numbers Confirm Arsenal’s Set-Piece Method Shapes Their Play
-
Arsenal1 month agoOctober 2025: Premier League Player and Manager of the Month Shortlists
-
Liverpool2 months agoLiverpool’s injury list grows as Gravenberch leaves international early ahead of United derby
