25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Sack the Juggler on Sun 17 Jan - 17:14

Super wrote:David Moyes demonstrated a sure grasp on football's fickle fates when he was asked if he was worried about whether Everton could hang on to Marouane Fellaini.

"You lot make me laugh," said Moyes. "A few weeks ago you were talking about when I was going to get rid of him."

Moyes had plenty to laugh about after Everton mauled Manchester City - whom he accused having "no class" and breaking transfer rules in last summer's pursuit of Joleon Lescott as he reopened old wounds via some incendiary programme notes.

If revenge is indeed a dish best served cold, then Moyes could barely disguise his pleasure at pulling something right from the bottom of the deep freeze and forcing Manchester City to choke on it.

At the pinnacle of Everton's finest performance this season was the towering figure of 22-year-old Fellaini, in every sense head and shoulders above every player on the pitch.

When Moyes claimed Fellaini was, on current form, the best midfield player in the country, even he admitted some wondered if he had misplaced his marbles. Plenty raised an eyebrow - some even raised two.

Fellaini, until recent times, had rarely looked like justifying his status as Everton's record £15m signing from Standard Liege, his main virtues being nuisance value and a knack for a goal. The drawbacks were a habit of attracting yellow cards from referees - sometimes very harshly and seemingly based on the fact that was just so hard to miss.

He sparked as much comment for his unruly mop of fuzzy hair as he did for his performances. I had serious reservations about the Belgian's ability to adapt in the Premier League, and thousands of Everton fans would be lying to themselves if they did not share those concerns.

Indeed after a particularly hopeless effort against Benfica in Lisbon I suggested through the Twittersphere that he should lose the Afro as it was drawing attention to just how badly he was playing, and what a poor return on £15m he was proving to be.

Fellaini did not look anything like a £15m player against Manchester City. He looked worth more as the young giant's transformation continued, helped by finally being played in the position Moyes bought him for.

He ruled Goodison Park from his favoured midfield anchor role on Saturday, giving a near flawless display that he capped with a Zinedine Zidane-style dragback that left Craig Bellamy chasing thin air and was afforded the accolade of a spontaneous and deafening standing ovation.

Bellamy was gracious enough to congratulate Fellaini on embarrassing him as the Belgian flourished once more away from the spot behind the striker that he occupied with mixed results last season.

Fellaini was assured in possession, instrumental at seeing and dealing with any City danger and posed a goal threat, particularly in the air as shown by one late header that was clawed on to the woodwork by Shay Given.

Gone was the player who could at times look a lost and lonely soul in games, replaced by a confident and dominating presence that helped Everton give City a going over that is not reflected in the scoreline.

A few swallows do not make a summer and Fellaini must keep producing consistently, but he is now playing to a level plenty of Everton fans never thought he would attain.

He is not the best midfield player in the country, but he is heading up the rankings - and proving plenty of observers inside and outside Goodison Park wrong in the process, myself included.

It all added up to the perfect day for Moyes. The Lescott affair still rankles badly as he complained that City treated Everton with "little respect" - although I would suggest offering £24m for the player in question is very respectful, not to mention foolhardy.

When I saw Moyes after the derby defeat against Liverpool at Goodison he looked at the end of his tether. Everton were struggling near the bottom of the table and the riches on offer at places like Eastlands suggested he had already banged his head on the Premier League's glass ceiling with a fifth-place finish and an FA Cup Final appearance last season.

Since then Moyes and his team have looked rejuvenated, and the manner in which they dominated Manchester City will have reaffirmed the Scot's faith that he can compete, even without massive reserves of cash in the bank, through the art of good management.

Landon Donovan's loan signing is the sort of market Everton operate in, and the man from LA Galaxy was one of the game's brightest performers, helping Steven Pienaar terrorise and trouble City from midfield.

And if there is a walking, talking advert for the perils of an unlimited transfer budget, it comes in the shape of Robinho, who deservedly suffered one of the biggest humiliations that can be visited upon a professional footballer: being the substitute who was so bad that he was substituted himself.

There was understandable surprise when Roberto Mancini hooked the Brazilian after 55 minutes of token effort, but the logic was perfectly clear. Why keep him on when he contributed nothing? Why keep faith with a player who barely broke sweat and went out of his way to ensure he was always second to a succession of challenges?

Mancini was not posturing or grandstanding by taking off the £32.5m striker. He was doing the right thing - strong management in action.

Robinho's removal was an even bigger headline-grabber than Fellaini's brilliance, but he does not deserve the stage. I made my feelings clear about Robinho in a previous blog after his poor performance against Stoke in Mancini's first game.

Some Manchester City supporters felt the words were harsh. Were they really? Did you watch him at Goodison Park? He has no future at Eastlands. The problem will be finding someone to take him off Mancini's hands.

This was rightly touted as City's first serious test under the Italian. It was an examination they failed against an Everton side who appeared to share their manager's determination to make City pay publicly for the disaffection caused by the Lescott saga.

City's defeat should still be placed in its proper context. They are in a very healthy league position and Mancini's substitution of Robinho at least demonstrates they have a manager who will confront big decisions and big personalities.

Mancini was gracious in defeat as he praised Everton's excellence, while Moyes was obviously relishing the moment.

Back to those confrontational programme notes. "For many reasons I think this is a game we have all been looking forward to at Goodison Park."

And, judging by the unbridled elation written in every line on Moyes' face, it had been well worth the wait.


he'll never make it! afro

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  anticipate_the_pass on Sun 17 Jan - 17:24

Sack the Juggler wrote:
Super wrote:David Moyes demonstrated a sure grasp on football's fickle fates when he was asked if he was worried about whether Everton could hang on to Marouane Fellaini.

"You lot make me laugh," said Moyes. "A few weeks ago you were talking about when I was going to get rid of him."

Moyes had plenty to laugh about after Everton mauled Manchester City - whom he accused having "no class" and breaking transfer rules in last summer's pursuit of Joleon Lescott as he reopened old wounds via some incendiary programme notes.

If revenge is indeed a dish best served cold, then Moyes could barely disguise his pleasure at pulling something right from the bottom of the deep freeze and forcing Manchester City to choke on it.

At the pinnacle of Everton's finest performance this season was the towering figure of 22-year-old Fellaini, in every sense head and shoulders above every player on the pitch.

When Moyes claimed Fellaini was, on current form, the best midfield player in the country, even he admitted some wondered if he had misplaced his marbles. Plenty raised an eyebrow - some even raised two.

Fellaini, until recent times, had rarely looked like justifying his status as Everton's record £15m signing from Standard Liege, his main virtues being nuisance value and a knack for a goal. The drawbacks were a habit of attracting yellow cards from referees - sometimes very harshly and seemingly based on the fact that was just so hard to miss.

He sparked as much comment for his unruly mop of fuzzy hair as he did for his performances. I had serious reservations about the Belgian's ability to adapt in the Premier League, and thousands of Everton fans would be lying to themselves if they did not share those concerns.

Indeed after a particularly hopeless effort against Benfica in Lisbon I suggested through the Twittersphere that he should lose the Afro as it was drawing attention to just how badly he was playing, and what a poor return on £15m he was proving to be.

Fellaini did not look anything like a £15m player against Manchester City. He looked worth more as the young giant's transformation continued, helped by finally being played in the position Moyes bought him for.

He ruled Goodison Park from his favoured midfield anchor role on Saturday, giving a near flawless display that he capped with a Zinedine Zidane-style dragback that left Craig Bellamy chasing thin air and was afforded the accolade of a spontaneous and deafening standing ovation.

Bellamy was gracious enough to congratulate Fellaini on embarrassing him as the Belgian flourished once more away from the spot behind the striker that he occupied with mixed results last season.

Fellaini was assured in possession, instrumental at seeing and dealing with any City danger and posed a goal threat, particularly in the air as shown by one late header that was clawed on to the woodwork by Shay Given.

Gone was the player who could at times look a lost and lonely soul in games, replaced by a confident and dominating presence that helped Everton give City a going over that is not reflected in the scoreline.

A few swallows do not make a summer and Fellaini must keep producing consistently, but he is now playing to a level plenty of Everton fans never thought he would attain.

He is not the best midfield player in the country, but he is heading up the rankings - and proving plenty of observers inside and outside Goodison Park wrong in the process, myself included.

It all added up to the perfect day for Moyes. The Lescott affair still rankles badly as he complained that City treated Everton with "little respect" - although I would suggest offering £24m for the player in question is very respectful, not to mention foolhardy.

When I saw Moyes after the derby defeat against Liverpool at Goodison he looked at the end of his tether. Everton were struggling near the bottom of the table and the riches on offer at places like Eastlands suggested he had already banged his head on the Premier League's glass ceiling with a fifth-place finish and an FA Cup Final appearance last season.

Since then Moyes and his team have looked rejuvenated, and the manner in which they dominated Manchester City will have reaffirmed the Scot's faith that he can compete, even without massive reserves of cash in the bank, through the art of good management.

Landon Donovan's loan signing is the sort of market Everton operate in, and the man from LA Galaxy was one of the game's brightest performers, helping Steven Pienaar terrorise and trouble City from midfield.

And if there is a walking, talking advert for the perils of an unlimited transfer budget, it comes in the shape of Robinho, who deservedly suffered one of the biggest humiliations that can be visited upon a professional footballer: being the substitute who was so bad that he was substituted himself.

There was understandable surprise when Roberto Mancini hooked the Brazilian after 55 minutes of token effort, but the logic was perfectly clear. Why keep him on when he contributed nothing? Why keep faith with a player who barely broke sweat and went out of his way to ensure he was always second to a succession of challenges?

Mancini was not posturing or grandstanding by taking off the £32.5m striker. He was doing the right thing - strong management in action.

Robinho's removal was an even bigger headline-grabber than Fellaini's brilliance, but he does not deserve the stage. I made my feelings clear about Robinho in a previous blog after his poor performance against Stoke in Mancini's first game.

Some Manchester City supporters felt the words were harsh. Were they really? Did you watch him at Goodison Park? He has no future at Eastlands. The problem will be finding someone to take him off Mancini's hands.

This was rightly touted as City's first serious test under the Italian. It was an examination they failed against an Everton side who appeared to share their manager's determination to make City pay publicly for the disaffection caused by the Lescott saga.

City's defeat should still be placed in its proper context. They are in a very healthy league position and Mancini's substitution of Robinho at least demonstrates they have a manager who will confront big decisions and big personalities.

Mancini was gracious in defeat as he praised Everton's excellence, while Moyes was obviously relishing the moment.

Back to those confrontational programme notes. "For many reasons I think this is a game we have all been looking forward to at Goodison Park."

And, judging by the unbridled elation written in every line on Moyes' face, it had been well worth the wait.


he'll never make it! afro



afro box to box afro yesterday


cheers

anticipate_the_pass
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Fellaini Interview (possibly done before?)

Post  Tonteau on Mon 18 Jan - 16:18

http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jan/16/marouane-fellaini-everton-interview

cheers

And especially:

The midfielder was linked with a ­lucrative move to Chelsea last week by, of all people, his father, who told a Belgian newspaper his son belonged on the grandest stage possible and was interesting Carlo Ancelotti. The mention of his father's proud boast brings an embarrassed shake of Fellaini's head.

"I am perfectly happy where I am," he says. "Of course big clubs are always ­looking at players, but I think talk of ­Chelsea's interest was blown up a bit. Everything was taken out of context really because I am happy at Everton. Last season we were in the FA Cup final, and this time we're still in that competition as well as the Europa League.

"We've got players coming back all the time and I think we can only get ­better. It's hard to say where we will finish in the league, but things are definitely improving."


cheers

Tonteau
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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Dixie Land on Mon 18 Jan - 16:25

cheers cheers cheers

Nice one big man. Tell your dad to fuck off. cheers

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Top Balcony Blue on Mon 18 Jan - 16:26

I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Dixie Land on Mon 18 Jan - 16:34

Top Balcony Blue wrote:I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.


Im not much for humble pie. Not enough calories. Not even worth eating, a bit like that green shite with leaves.

Dixie Land
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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Top Balcony Blue on Mon 18 Jan - 16:38

Dixie Landon Donovan wrote:
Top Balcony Blue wrote:I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.


Im not much for humble pie. Not enough calories. Not even worth eating, a bit like that green shite with leaves.



Don't fuckin rub it in. You pinched my humble pie and then you say you didn't like it FFS! Very Happy

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Tonteau on Mon 18 Jan - 16:40

Top Balcony Blue wrote:I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.




"I wouldn't sell Marouane Fellaini to Chelsea, Man City, Man United, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Inter Milan or AC Milan. Not even for £40million (wink, nudge, taps nose, wink, nowhatimean). I'm simply not interested in selling the excellent midfielder, Marouane Fellaini, to any of the aforementioned clubs or anyone else for that matter.....not even for £35 million"


Last edited by Tonteau on Mon 18 Jan - 16:44; edited 1 time in total

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Dixie Land on Mon 18 Jan - 16:41

Top Balcony Blue wrote:
Dixie Landon Donovan wrote:
Top Balcony Blue wrote:I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.


Im not much for humble pie. Not enough calories. Not even worth eating, a bit like that green shite with leaves.



Don't fuckin rub it in. You pinched my humble pie and then you say you didn't like it FFS! Very Happy


Thats coz Im a greedy fucker. Ive just nicked your green leafy stuff while you werent looking as well. Will look OK on a block of lard.

Dixie Land
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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Top Balcony Blue on Mon 18 Jan - 16:41

Dixie Landon Donovan wrote:
Top Balcony Blue wrote:
Dixie Landon Donovan wrote:
Top Balcony Blue wrote:I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.


Im not much for humble pie. Not enough calories. Not even worth eating, a bit like that green shite with leaves.



Don't fuckin rub it in. You pinched my humble pie and then you say you didn't like it FFS! Very Happy


Thats coz Im a greedy fucker. Ive just nicked your green leafy stuff while you werent looking as well. Will look OK on a block of lard.



Yeah, you enjoy that Nettle. See whose fuckin laughing in a minute!

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Dixie Land on Mon 18 Jan - 16:43

Top Balcony Blue wrote:
Dixie Landon Donovan wrote:
Top Balcony Blue wrote:
Dixie Landon Donovan wrote:
Top Balcony Blue wrote:I fuckin love him now. If that's fickle, well, I don't give a fuck. I've eaten my humble pie* and now think he's worth £40m plus. Just don't tell Bill.




*i haven't actually, I was going to, but Dixie ate it while I was typing this post. You snooze , you lose.


Im not much for humble pie. Not enough calories. Not even worth eating, a bit like that green shite with leaves.



Don't fuckin rub it in. You pinched my humble pie and then you say you didn't like it FFS! Very Happy


Thats coz Im a greedy fucker. Ive just nicked your green leafy stuff while you werent looking as well. Will look OK on a block of lard.



Yeah, you enjoy that Nettle. See whose fuckin laughing in a minute!


Mmmmmmmmmmmmmm.... nettles and lard.

Dixie Land
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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Knight of Thorgothshire on Mon 18 Jan - 18:24

He does appear to be rather level headed. Doesn't get too high when things are going well, and not too low when they are not going well.

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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  yankthetoffee on Mon 18 Jan - 18:38

Tonteau wrote:http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2010/jan/16/marouane-fellaini-everton-interview

cheers

And especially:

The midfielder was linked with a ­lucrative move to Chelsea last week by, of all people, his father, who told a Belgian newspaper his son belonged on the grandest stage possible and was interesting Carlo Ancelotti. The mention of his father's proud boast brings an embarrassed shake of Fellaini's head.

"I am perfectly happy where I am," he says. "Of course big clubs are always ­looking at players, but I think talk of ­Chelsea's interest was blown up a bit. Everything was taken out of context really because I am happy at Everton. Last season we were in the FA Cup final, and this time we're still in that competition as well as the Europa League.

"We've got players coming back all the time and I think we can only get ­better. It's hard to say where we will finish in the league, but things are definitely improving."


cheers


the truth is probably somwhere in the middle (with his mum maybe?)
Big Fell isn't going to say what his dad said.
He's got a gig to maintain. If there is a bigger gig available at the end of the season, well.........

(Having written that, the Biggun has really impressed me the last 3-4 games. One we need to hold on to, Are you listening Bill?)

yankthetoffee
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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Bluey on Mon 18 Jan - 18:51

I think people forget and don't give this kid enough credit at how young he is. We played him out of position because we had a striker shortage in the fastest paced league in the world, he put many a striker to shame. He's then very ill over the summer but plays every game with the media, Evertonians and Ref's all over him.

We know he has to show consistency now, but he is only 22. He's now showing his strength, awareness and snap. he'll never be that quick. I thought he would never look pretty but that Pirouette was something special.

Seamus is nearly the same age and hardly getting a game.

It's f'kin great being an Evertonian and doing it against the masses of riches against you. I think as many of you have read today Moyes has not only bought players to play but who will run through brick walls for Everton.

That is the main difference accross the park imo.

Bluey
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Re: 25: Marouane Fellaini - Short, Back, in Side

Post  Statman on Mon 18 Jan - 19:51

Blueyaletdinov wrote:I think people forget and don't give this kid enough credit at how young he is. We played him out of position because we had a striker shortage in the fastest paced league in the world, he put many a striker to shame. He's then very ill over the summer but plays every game with the media, Evertonians and Ref's all over him.

We know he has to show consistency now, but he is only 22. He's now showing his strength, awareness and snap. he'll never be that quick. I thought he would never look pretty but that Pirouette was something special.

Seamus is nearly the same age and hardly getting a game.

It's f'kin great being an Evertonian and doing it against the masses of riches against you. I think as many of you have read today Moyes has not only bought players to play but who will run through brick walls for Everton.

That is the main difference accross the park imo.


Fantastic post Bluey. cheers cheers cheers

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