WITH his pallid complexion and
haggard appearance, David Moyes bore the look of a man clinging on for
dear life long before his exit as Manchester United manager today.
Despite being hand-picked as Alex Ferguson’s successor by the man
himself, Moyes struggled to convince from the start and quickly found
himself facing questions about his suitability for the role.
The
honeymoon period was desperately brief - victory over Wigan Athletic in
the Community Shield, a 4-1 success at Swansea City on the Premier
League season’s opening day, and then the wheels came off.
By the
end of September, United had lost at Liverpool, been humbled 4-1 at
Manchester City, and gone down at home to West Bromwich Albion for the
first time since 1978.
By New Year’s Day, they were 11 points off
the pace in the league. By late January they were out of both domestic
cup competitions.
Elimination from the Champions League by Bayern Munich on April 9 effectively brought their season to an end.
All
the while Moyes looked on, apparently powerless, and United’s fans
quickly came to lament his passivity in front of the media.
Where
they had grown accustomed to the bullish rallying cries of Ferguson,
Moyes was a manager who seemed to lace every sentence with qualifying
words like “hopefully” and “maybe”.
As early as October, reports
had emerged that he was being told by officials from within the club to
stop letting photographers catch him with his head in his hands.
Like
Ferguson, he seemed determined never to publicly criticise his players,
but faced with the scarcely believable disintegration of the Premier
League era’s outstanding team, his words rang hollow.
“We were the
better team at 2-0 down in the first half,” was one such verdict,
uttered after Sunday’s one-sided 2-0 loss at his former club, Everton.
Having
been urged to “stand by our new manager” by Ferguson, in his final
address to the Old Trafford crowd, United’s fans were initially
supportive.
A banner branding him ‘The Chosen One’ was unveiled on
the Stretford End and he was even granted his own song, but the
supporters’ backing soon wavered.
Last month, a small plane was
flown over Old Trafford calling for Moyes to be sacked and while many
fans found the stunt distasteful, it demonstrated the extent to which
the 50-year-old had become a figure of fun.
His departure will
prove particularly chastening for Ferguson, who thought that in his
fellow Glaswegian he had found a manager hewn from the same material as
himself.
Moyes built his reputation on a fierce will to win and a
knack for rooting out transfer bargains, and the relative success that
he delivered at Everton earned him the grateful appreciation of Goodison
Park.
“Evertonians owe everything to David Moyes,” said Everton
chairman Bill Kenwright in 2009. “He took on our club when it was on its
knees.”
After failing to make the grade as a player at Celtic,
Moyes settled at Preston North End and having started studying for his
coaching badges at just 22, he worked his way up the club’s coaching
structure before being appointed manager in 1998.
He led Preston
to promotion to the English second tier in his third year and then took
the club to the brink of the Premier League, only for them to lose to
local rivals Bolton Wanderers in the 2001 play-off final.
It was
the first major disappointment of his managerial career, but within a
year he was at Everton, where he quickly endeared himself to fans by
describing their team as “the people’s club”.
His willingness to
work to tight financial constraints made him a perfect fit at Goodison
Park, but his 11 years without a trophy there were to prove an
unfortunate harbinger of what was to come at United.
Speaking
before Moyes’s appointment had been confirmed, former United manager
Tommy Docherty said: “If it is David Moyes, then I congratulate him and
feel sorry for him.
“How can you follow the impossible?”
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