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Ronald Koeman.
Ronald Koeman shows his displeasure during Everton’s defeat by Arsenal, a result which led to the Dutchman’s sacking as manager at Goodison Park. Photograph: BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
Ronald Koeman shows his displeasure during Everton’s defeat by Arsenal, a result which led to the Dutchman’s sacking as manager at Goodison Park. Photograph: BPI/Rex/Shutterstock

David Unsworth in temporary charge after Ronald Koeman sacked by Everton

This article is more than 7 years old
Koeman leaves with club in bottom three of Premier League
Everton spent heavily in the transfer window this summer

David Unsworth has taken temporary charge of Everton and wants to manage the club long term after Ronald Koeman was dismissed 16 months into a three‑year, £6m-per-annum contract.

Koeman, 54, was sacked on Monday after a dismal run of form that has left Everton third from bottom of the Premier League and with two wins in 13 games. The decision was taken by Farhad Moshiri, the major shareholder, and it fell to the chairman, Bill Kenwright, and the chief executive, Robert Elstone, to tell Koeman after he had taken training at Finch Farm. The Dutchman told friends on Sunday evening, hours after a 5-2 defeat by Arsenal, that he retained Moshiri’s support.

The Everton hierarchy are considering several candidates to replace the manager lured on a lucrative deal from Southampton in June 2016. The Burnley manager, Sean Dyche, Watford’s Marco Silva, the former Borussia Dortmund coach Thomas Tuchel and Carlo Ancelotti have been linked with the vacancy, although there had been no formal approach from Everton to their counterparts at Turf Moor by Monday evening.

Tuchel, Jürgen Klopp’s successor at Dortmund, is available but is believed to want a club in the Champions League or, ideally, the opportunity to become Ancelotti’s long-term replacement at Bayern Munich next summer. Hoffenheim’s Julian Nagelsmann is likely to provide strong competition for that role.

Unsworth is another candidate to replace Koeman on a permanent basis. The former Everton defender, who has flourished as manager of the club’s under‑23s, took charge of one Premier League game after Roberto Martínez’s sacking in 2016 and will reprise his caretaker role for Wednesday’s Carabao Cup tie at Chelsea. The under-23s coach John Ebbrell will also be in the Everton dugout at Stamford Bridge.

Unsworth, 44, is highly regarded within Goodison and, although he lacks managerial experience in the Premier League, would welcome an extended run of games to press his claims for the job. He may be given the next four matches until the international break – Chelsea, Leicester City, Lyon away and Watford – to impress.

Moshiri moved to sack Koeman after watching the Arsenal defeat on Sunday, Everton’s seventh loss in 11 matches in all competitions. The former PSV Eindhoven, Valencia and Benfica coach led the club to a seventh-placed finish in his only full season in charge but, despite an investment of almost £140m in players this summer, Everton’s form has nosedived.

A club statement read: “Everton football club can confirm that Ronald Koeman has left the club. Chairman Bill Kenwright, the board of directors and major shareholder Farhad Moshiri would all like to express their gratitude to Ronald for the service he has given to the club over the past 16 months and for guiding the club to seventh place in last season’s Premier League campaign.”

Three weeks ago, following a home defeat against Burnley, Moshiri insisted Koeman retained his total support. Since then, Everton have needed a 90th‑minute penalty to draw at Brighton & Hove Albion, lost at home against Lyon in the Europa League, thereby extending the worst start made by an English team in the competition, and been routed at home by Arsenal.

The summer’s spending increased expectations on Koeman but most of the acquisitions have struggled. Gylfi Sigurdsson and Davy Klaassen cost almost £70m but have had minimal impact and senior players such as Ashley Williams and Morgan Schneiderlin have been badly out of form.

Romelu Lukaku’s £90m departure for Manchester United and the failure to adequately replace the Belgium international have had a major impact. There will be questions asked of Steve Walsh’s performance this summer as director of football but ultimately it was Koeman, who has struggled to find a settled or effective side this season, who shouldered the blame.

Koeman will receive a handsome pay‑off from Everton, who had to pay £11m to Martínez and his backroom team after their departure. Koeman’s assistant at Goodison, his brother Erwin, the fitness coach Jan Kluitenberg and the goalkeeping coach Patrick Lodewijks are also expected to leave. The first-team coach Duncan Ferguson may be retained.

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