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Busy Moyes adds 4 on deadline day
1 Sep, Season 03-04
David Moyes: After a frustrating summer, the Blues' boss was finally able to improve his squad
Following a week to forget, during which David Moyes lost out on his biggest transfer targets and suffered humiliation in the Merseyside derby with a 3-0 defeat, the Everton manager was finally able to provide some good news for the Goodison faithful with four new signings acquired just before the closure of the transfer window.
Francis Jeffers is an Everton player once again, arriving from Arsenal, initially on a one-year loan in a deal that will allow Moyes to assess his long-term fitness and offers the mouth-watering prospect of a Rooney-Jeffers partnership. The two young strikers are arguably the two best products of the Everton youth system in recent years and both are firmly in the England international setup.
In an exciting development, Moyes also swooped in ahead of cash-strapped Celtic to sign Motherwell's star goalscorer, James McFadden, for an as-yet undisclosed fee. Everton had a reported £1.2m bid for the fiery Scottish international rejected late last night but it looks as though an improved offer has prompted Motherwell to sell after they had turned down Celtic's approach to take him on loan for the season.
A surprising late swoop was also made for Sunderland's Republic of Ireland international Kevin Kilbane. The midfielder, a natural replacement for Mark Pembridge, was acquired on a two-year contract for £1m from the First Division club.
Finally, Nigel Martyn is an Everton player, six years after he famously snubbed the Blues in favour of Leeds United after having been disappointed at the lack of hospitality shown by the Peter Johnson regime during transfer talks in the summer of 1997.
The 36 year-old former England international, once regarded as one of the finest goalkeepers in the country, arrives on a three-year contract for a nominal fee, believed to be in the region of £500,000. The move had been in the air for a while after Martyn turned down the chance to join free-spending Chelsea because he didn't want to uproot his family from the north of England.
Moyes also sold his second player of the summer in the form of Mark Pembridge who signed for Fulham for £500,000, rising to £750,000. The Welsh international joined Everton four years ago under Walter Smith who paid Benfica £800,000 for his services so today's transfer represents a good piece of business for the Blues seeing as the 33 year-old Pembridge's contract was up next summer.
So, with the collapse of the Sean Davis transfer and defeat in the bidding war for Barry Ferguson, David Moyes has failed to land the conventional creative midfielder he has been searching for. However, in McFadden he has a dynamic and versatile player he has covered the departures of Kevin McLeod and Pembridge with the acquisition of Kilbane, despite the fans' reservations.
Jeffers, Radzinski and Rooney offer tremendous firepower as the obvious first-choice strikers, with Kevin Campbell, Nick Chadwick and Duncan Ferguson in reserve. McFadden, who played up front for Motherwell but is employed wide on the left for Scotland, will probably be given an attacking midield role but his goalscoring ability makes him equally useful as cover up front.
There is also the option of employing Rooney or McFadden behind a front two of Jeffers and Radzinski with Thomas Gravesen as the anchor between Watson and Linderoth in a 4-3-1-2 formation. Obviously, Moyes finally has options beyond a rigid 4-4-2 system.
With the transfer window opening again in January and Moyes's transfer kitty still largely intact, it wouldn't be surprising if Sean Davis eventually completes his dream move to Goodison in the New Year. At that point you would feel that the manager has a pretty decent squad with which to work given his financial constraints.
by Lyndon Lloyd