Welcome to Tate Sports

Tate Sports

Four people have been introduced so far in the summer window. Moyes: I will continue to sign before closing the window. Right-wing players will be given priority

7:33pm, 4 August 2025Football

August 4th, since the start of the trip to the United States, Everton coach Moyes has been dissatisfied with the team's lack of new players. Before the last game of the Premier League summer league, he finally expressed a more optimistic attitude towards the transfer issue in an interview and looked forward to the new players joining.

This summer, Moyes insisted that the team needs to bring in nine to ten new players for the 2025/2026 season. So far in the summer window, Everton has successively introduced midfielder Alcaras (15 million euros/flamengo), forward Tirno Barry (30 million euros/Villareal), goalkeeper Travers (4.6 million euros/Bornemouth) and left-back Adam Aznu (9 million euros/Bayern Munich).

Moyes said: "We are having a lot of conversations and working hard to advance some deals. I won't name it publicly because there are a lot of players mentioned at the moment, and you don't know where to start. We are trying to improve the existing player roster and build a stronger team. I have said that, and I am confident that we will do it."

"I believe we will introduce a lot of new players. The adaptation period mentioned last week did make me a little worried because the time is getting shorter. However, I remain optimistic and believe that we can introduce a lot of new players before the transfer window is closed."

According to the Echo, Everton hopes to complete at least one major deal in the next week, but any potential transfers about Manchester City star Glalish will wait until the team handles the emergency.

Moyes admitted that right-wing players have been his top target in the transfer window, saying, "All summer, right-wing players have been our priority. I hope this is the first place to be finalized if possible. We tried to do some action, but it hasn't worked out yet."

"I think the transfer window has been difficult for years. Many clubs are changing players, but we have a bigger change, including the CEO, the new boss, and the new recruitment team. We are heading in the right direction and we will continue to do the right thing."

"We came here with a smaller team, there are only one or two players who can rotate, and we don't have too many people, which makes it difficult for us to make too many changes. We have to accept the fact that the reconstruction was, and last year we ended up ranking above Manchester United, West Ham and Tottenham. "

"We also know it's a tough summer because there are a lot of players leaving after contracts. It takes more time than I thought, and we all know that the team is about to launch a new stadium, and we're excited about it. We look forward to it, but we also want to give fans something to cheer for. "

"We want to have a competitive team when moving to a new stadium. You don't want to waste a week and a half of preseason time and do nothing, so all clubs try to do something, and we're no exception. "

"We hope that the future will be better. Whether it's a new stadium, a new owner or otherwise, there will be some running-in periods. I'm very optimistic about this opportunity, and we fill the stadium every week, just like we've always done. My job is to create a team for fans to watch."

Links: