
Everton insiders know nothing about Bill Kenwright exit as matters play out in London
Some Everton insiders simply don’t know what is going on in regard to the chairman position at the club following Bill Kenwright’s expected exit, according to Liverpool Echo.
On 12 June, Denise Barrett-Baxendale, Grant Ingles and Graeme Sharp all left their roles at the club, with Kenwright’s future also to be decided in the following 48 hours.
However, nine days have passed and Kenwright is still in his position behind-the-scenes at Goodison Park which has brought some scathing criticism from journalists and those within Everton.

“Some inside the club don’t know what the current status is in terms of an update on the chairman’s positions, while others claim the matters are ‘playing themselves out down in London,’ far away in terms of both geography plus hearts and minds of most of those who are the lifeblood of the club, those aforementioned supporters,” Liverpool Echo [21 June] goes on to report.
Uncertainty continues
Everton really are a club in turmoil at present. And just when the club will be released from these dark times is unknown to many across the footballing world, and even those within the Toffees.
The fact that Moshiri has missed his own deadline when deciding Kenwright’s future tells you everything you need to know about his incompetence and the problems the club are steeped in.

The Everton chairman should have been out of the Goodison Park doors a long time ago, along with Moshiri, he is a huge part of the dark cloud that is encompassing all over the blue half of Merseyside.
There’s simply no plan, no follow through, no ruthlessness and decisiveness amongst those at the top and the 25% takeover from MSP Sports Capital simply cannot come soon enough.
The Toffees have been associated with mediocrity for so long and such change among the hierarchy has long been a significant desire for a number of years now and brought further to a head when Rafael Benitez was controversially given the Everton job and then woefully replaced by Frank Lampard who also proved out of his depth.
With the club planning ahead of another incredibly fortunate Premier League campaign, the rebuild job that Sean Dyche wants to undertake now looks terribly uncertain.