West Ham would need a very good W reason not to reward David Moyes's fine work with a new contract. If they waver they only need to think back to how the Scot's first spell at the London Stadium ended. Instead of embracing the stability offered by Moyes, West Ham went for the glamorous option. They appointed Manuel Pellegrini, gave the Chilean a huge budget and ended up sacking him after 18 months of inconsistency left the side in relegation trouble. The grass isn't always greener.
Moyes returned in Pellegrini's place, preserved West Ham's Premier League status and built a team with a hard-running identity. He finished sixth and seventh, bringing European football for the first time since 2006.
It has not always been plain sailing. West Ham's league form dipped in 2022, though allowances can be made for their run to the last four of the Europa League, and Moyes's position came under serious threat. He would have been fired if West Ham had lost to Fulham last April. Many fans had seen enough. Some have never taken to Moyes's pragmatic approach and jump at any chance to criticise him. Outsiders detect more than a whiff of ingratitude.
Moyes is the man who led West Ham to their first trophy in 43 years. He charged down the touchline in Prague when Jarrod Bowen scored the winner against Fiorentina in the Europa Conference League final last June. Time to build the statue? Not quite. For much of last summer the talk was of tension between Moyes and West Ham's new head of recruitment, Tim Steidten.
This story is from the January 02, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the January 02, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
FTX files $1.8bn lawsuit against Binance and its former CEO
The collapsed cryptocurrency company FTX is suing Binance and its former CEO Changpeng Zhao, alleging that $1.8bn was \"fraudulently transferred\" by FTX management to Binance and its executives.
Ref's video nasty Coote suspended for foul-mouthed Klopp tirade
The Premier League referee David Coote has been suspended after video footage emerged of him calling Jürgen Klopp a \"German cunt\" and Liverpool \"shit\".
Van Nistelrooy leaves United as Amorim checks in
Ruud van Nistelrooy has left his role as assistant coach after the arrival of Ruben Amorim at Manchester United.
Merino backs Arsenal to stay in title race after 'difficult few weeks'
Mikel Merino insists Arsenal will thrive on the pressure of their bid to win the Premier League and has cited the late push in Sunday's 1-1 draw at Chelsea as evidence of their character.
Robertson not worried after being 'written off' by some
Andy Robertson has said he had a point to prove in Liverpool's win over Aston Villa having been \"written off\" for the first time in his storied Anfield career.
Unfamiliar City woes make this Guardiola's trickiest challenge
The champions struggling in the autumn is nothing new but the root of this season's problems appear different
Coote's mindless rant undermines trust in referees - he can have no complaints over the consequences
There is lots I do not want to know about the video featuring the Premier League referee David Coote.
'Proud father' Gil Gomes reveals a unique family tale
Angel Gomes's dad recalls his own remarkable football journey which took him from Angola to Salford via Hendon
Foden and Palmer among eight England dropouts
Lee Carsley has been rocked by an extraordinary eight withdrawals from his England squad to face Greece and Republic of Ireland in the Nations League, Phil Foden an unexpected name on the absentees list where he joins his Manchester City teammate Jack Grealish.
Ruthless Ruud catches Alcaraz cold in Turin
Carlos Alcaraz made a stuttering start to the ATP Finals in Turin as he suffered a shock first career defeat to the world No 7 Casper Ruud.