David Moyes succeed Slaven Bilic As West Ham Manager
The former Everton and Manchester United boss
replaces Slaven Bilic, who was sacked on Monday with the Hammers in the
relegation zone.
Moyes has been out of work since May, when he
resigned as Sunderland manager after the club's relegation to the Championship.
West Ham joint chairman David Sullivan said the
54-year-old Scot is "the right man to turn things around".
He added: "We need somebody with experience,
knowledge of the Premier League and the players in it, and we believe David can
get the best out of the players.
"He is highly regarded and respected within the
game and will bring fresh ideas, organisation and enthusiasm.
"He proved with Everton that he has great
qualities and we feel that West Ham United is a club that will give David the platform
to display those qualities again."
Moyes' first game in charge will be at Watford in
the Premier League on 19 November.
He added: "I've managed five clubs since
starting out nearly 20 years ago at Preston and then going to Everton. My
period at Manchester United is well documented and I then did something I have
always wanted to do by experiencing management abroad, with Real Sociedad.
"It's only been the last job where I feel it
wasn't a good move and I didn't enjoy the experience. So I'm hungry to make
sure I get things right now.
The Hammers are 18th, having won just two Premier
League matches in 2017-18 - and lost their first three league games of the
campaign.
Former manager Bilic spent a reported £42m on
players in the summer - including forward Marko Arnautovic from Stoke City for
a club record £20m and former Manchester United striker Javier Hernandez from
Bayer Leverkusen for £16m.
But West Ham have taken just nine points from 11
league matches, conceding 23 goals.
Following the Watford match, West Ham host Leicester
City and go to Everton, before a difficult run in December which brings league
games against leaders Manchester City, last season's champions Chelsea and
Arsenal.
Later in the month, the Hammers travel to face the
Gunners in the Carabao Cup quarter-finals.
Moyes, who started his managerial career at Preston
North End, was voted LMA Manager of the Year three times during an 11-year
spell at Everton from 2002 to 2013. In 11 full seasons, the Toffees finished in
the top eight nine times.
He succeeded Sir Alex Ferguson as Manchester United
boss on his fellow Scot's recommendation when he retired after a trophy-laden
26 years in charge at Old Trafford.
But despite signing a six-year deal with the then
Premier League champions in 2013, he was sacked 10 months later with united
seventh in the table.
Moyes went on to manage Real Sociedad in Spain but
was sacked by the La Liga club after a year in charge in November 2015.
He took over at Sunderland in July 2016 before
quitting in May 2017 after the Blacks Cats were relegated, having finished
bottom of the Premier League.
Former West Ham striker Dean Ashton told BBC Radio 5
live that Moyes was "the safe option if you're thinking about grinding out
until the end of the season and safety".
But he added: "As a player, David Moyes coming
in wouldn't inspire me."
During his time at Sunderland, Moyes attracted
controversy for telling BBC reporter Vicki Sparks she might "get a
slap" in March, leading to a Football Association charge for improper
conduct and a £30,000 fine.
He said he "deeply regrets" making the
comment and later apologised to Sparks, who did not make a complaint.
Writing in her Sun column in April, West
Ham's vice-chairman Karren Brady said Moyes' words were "just another
brilliant example of the pressure women are under to laugh off these everyday
moments of sexism as a joke".
She added: "The threat to give someone a slap,
no matter how you look at it, is aggressive. It is not banter. And it is not
OK.
"I would like to think that any man who worked
for me - no matter how wound up they feel by a reporter who is simply doing her
job well - would not threaten to slap a woman.
"One of things I find most objectionable in
this whole story is his reference to Sparks as being a 'girl', when he said he
had apologised to her.
"She's not a girl. She is a woman and a
professional. To call someone a girl is belittling, disrespectful and a real
indication that you don't see her as an equal.
"Hopefully the penny has dropped for him that
it's not OK to patronise, intimidate and threaten women and treat them as if
they are imposters in a man's world."
FROM BBC.com
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