Man Utd Transfers: 5 Reasons David Moyes Must Be Careful If He Wants To Rebuild His Squad

2. He Has Limited Experience With Buying And Working With Top Quality Players

The problem with appointing a manager that was managing Everton is he knows little of the job of taking charge of a global sporting giant. Most people would agree that Everton performed at a level above what most people expected, and he built his success of being hard to beat against the big clubs €“ and with the ability to beat the majority of the smaller teams. Man Utd aren€™t going be considered underdogs in any game that they play, and Moyes is expected to deliver results all of the time; fans expect the Red Devils to win every game. The same is true of players, fans expect them to have the world€™s best players, and signing them and managing them is a world that Moyes knows so little about. The same could be said of his European adventures and how he needs to learn quickly in that regard. This is why, in my opinion, he should be leaning towards minor tweaking of his squad. Keeping experienced players and adding quality in the areas that are most in need. Two or three top quality players would make a big difference, and as things stand at present there is quality in certain areas. Getting rid of a whole host of players and brings a dozen or more new ones in is a very dangerous strategy. This will mean that the squad will need time to settle and Moyes will need time to work with them in order to decide what his best team is. Of course, this is all likely to lead to a slow start to the Premier League season next year, something that most people would agree that Moyes cannot afford. We have seen so many stories with managers over the years that have performed well when they have left things as if, but fallen on their face when they have changed too much, too quickly.
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James Kent is a freelance writer published on Yahoo! Sports, Bleacher Report, FTBpro, Bloomberg Sports and many others. He has also been featured in the Daily Telegraph, Zoo Magazine, MSN Sport and the Manchester Evening News. His role on What Culture is currently to produce compelling football articles that nearly always use of combination of stats and strong opinion. Feel free to connect with James via Facebook, Twitter and Google Plus.