Everton’s transfer strategy under Moyes 2.0 looks different – and that’s no bad thing

Gary GowersGary Gowers
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Everton’s transfer strategy under Moyes 2.0 looks different – and that’s no bad thing

There was a time when an Everton transfer windows seemed to unfold without any obvious pattern.

One target would disappear, another would emerge, and by the end of the summer, the squad often looked like a collection of individuals rather than the product of a clear plan. And sometimes played like one.

It is still far too early to judge this window on whether it succeeds or fails. There are deals to complete, negotiations to navigate and, as Evertonians know better than most, plenty can change before the deadline.

Yet even at this stage, there is, I believe, a noticeable thread running through the club’s recruitment.

Rather than pursuing players because of their reputation, or because he fills a short-term gap, Everton appear to be focusing on what this squad actually needs.

That may sound obvious, and should be, but hasn’t always been.

Reliance on individual quality

When Moyes arrived in early 2025, he turned a team that had a habit of losing into one that became increasingly difficult to break down, but one that still lacked enough attacking variety. Everton relied heavily on moments of individual quality, with Iliman Ndiaye and Jack Grealish (when fit) often carrying the creative burden and Beto left feeding on limited service despite ending the campaign in encouraging form.

If the reported targets are any indication, Moyes has identified where improvements are needed. It is not rocket science, but then it never was, and all too often those targeted were not a good fit.

The links have largely centred on wide players capable of providing greater creativity, full-backs who can contribute in the final third and attacking reinforcements who would ease the pressure on those already in the squad. They are different positions, but they all point towards the same objective: giving Everton more ways to create and score goals.

Again, not rocket science, but it feels like recruitment driven by need rather than opportunities that present themselves.

Compare it with some of Everton’s previous summers, when the club often appeared to react to whichever players became available.

Under Moshiri, there were transfer windows that produced some talented players but little squad balance. Managers inherited squads with overlapping strengths, obvious weaknesses and players who never looked like natural fits for the system they were being asked to play.

The result was a cycle that became all too familiar. New manager, new ideas, another overhaul.

Moyes, in his defence, has never built teams that way.

There are good players, and the right players…

His most successful Everton side in era 1.0 was not assembled through marquee signings or eye-catching transfer fees. It was built patiently, with players chosen because they understood their role and complemented those around them. The collective mattered more than individuals.

There are signs that the same thinking is shaping this rebuild.

That does not mean Everton are without ambition. Supporters will always want players capable of lifting the team’s quality, and rightly so. But there is a difference between signing good players and signing the right players.

The two are not always the same.

Whether every reported target arrives is almost beside the point. Transfer windows evolve quickly and circumstances change. What matters more is that Everton seem to be working from a blueprint rather than chasing the market.

After years in which recruitment often felt reactive, that alone represents progress. I think.

The success of this window will ultimately be judged by results once the season begins. But if Everton emerge with a squad that is more balanced, more cohesive and better equipped to play the football Moyes wants, Evertonians may conclude that the biggest improvement was not the calibre of the individual signings.

It was finally having a proper plan.

Gary is editor for ReadEverton. He has many years experience of sports writing behind him after deciding (belatedly) that the world of accountancy wasn't for him. His work has been featured on (among many others) BBC Sport and The Metro. He has written on many sports, but considers himself an expert in football and F1. When not writing and editing he likes to go to the cinema and sip a lovely cold pint of Guinness (not always at the same time).

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