- Premier League
Moyes eyes crunch talks after 'toughest' year
Everton manager David Moyes has revealed he is to discuss the club's plans for the future at the end of the season before deciding whether or not to extend his stay at the club.
Moyes, 48, will celebrate ten years in charge of Everton on Wednesday but, given the financial restraints he has faced, questions are being raised as to whether he will prolong his tenure.
He has only a year remaining on his current contract and, amid speculation linking him with Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea, he has said he will hold talks with chairman Bill Kenwright in the summer.
"For me, the next part will be a conversation with Bill at the end of the season about what is next for Everton," Moyes said in the Guardian. "There are one or two sticking plasters which we would need to fix because we have one or two players on loan. That would be my idea: deciding on the next part of the journey for the next four or five years.
"I have a year to go on my contract and will speak with Bill at the end of the season and then decide where we go from there. The chairman knows it - we need to be a club that keeps going. This year has been the toughest in terms of us hanging in there but I think we knew this was always going to be a tough season."
