David Moyes has returned to football with Spanish strugglers
Real Sociedad following his disastrous 10-month spell as Manchester United
manager, the Basque club announced late on Monday.
“Real Sociedad have reached an agreement with David Moyes to
be the coach of the first team until June 30, 2016,” Sociedad said in a
statement published on their website.
“Tomorrow (Tuesday) the details for his official
presentation and the backroom staff led by the Scottish coach will be
finalised.”
Moyes, 51, was sacked in April after less than a season in
charge of United as they failed to qualify for the Champions League for the
first time since 1995.
The Scot enjoyed a broadly successful 11-year spell at
Everton prior to taking the job at Old Trafford, although he has yet to win a
major trophy as a coach.
Sociedad have been looking for a new coach since Jagoba
Arrasate was sacked last weekend after just one win in their opening 10 league
games.
However, they responded in style to beat La Liga champions
Atletico Madrid 2-1 on Sunday, which saw them move out of the relegation zone.
Sociedad have a history of appointing British managers,
starting with Henry Lowe, who took charge for five years from 1930.
John Toshack enjoyed three spells as boss in the Basque town
of San Sebastian, while current Wales manager Chris Coleman had an ill-fated
six months in charge during the 2007-08 season.
Moyes recently told the BBC that he was interested in
coaching overseas.
“It is something that we don’t report enough — British
managers outside the (British) shores,” he said.
“It will actually help the development of coaches, where you
can come back and give a bit back to them — tell them the experience you have
had working in Spain, Italy, Germany or wherever it may be.”
Moyes had a long but undistinguished playing career as a
central defender before going into management with Preston North End, then in
the English third tier, in 1998.
He joined Everton in 2002 and led the club to consecutive top-eight
finishes between 2006 and 2013, despite having to operate on a shoe-string
budget.
He earned the admiration of legendary United manager Alex
Ferguson during his time at Goodison Park and when Ferguson stepped down at the
end of the 2012-13 season, he invited his fellow Glaswegian to succeed him.
But Moyes’s tenure proved a disaster and he was sacked in
April as the defending champions slid towards a seventh-place finish in the
Premier League — their lowest position since 1990.
Australia midfielder Tim Cahill, one of Moyes’s most
successful signings at Everton, welcomed the news, writing on Twitter: “Great
to see David Moyes back in the game @RealSociedad. Was only a matter of time.”
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