Shocked Keane takes blame for Everton mauling
The 36-year-old could scarcely believe his eyes as the Black Cats were taken apart at Goodison Park on Saturday and slipped into the Barclays Premier League’s bottom three as a result.
However, far from ranting and raving at his players, the former Manchester United skipper took the blame squarely on the chin.
He said: “It was a difficult weekend for me. I am disappointed because performances over the last few weeks have not been too bad.
“To defend as poorly as we did was a major blow and we have got to react in a positive way.
“In defence of the players, I picked the wrong team. Even at 4-1 and 5-1 down, we were attacking and we left ourselves wide open, and I have to take full responsibility. That’s what being a manager is about.”
Keane pitched skipper Dean Whitehead straight into battle after a three-month lay-off with a knee injury, while Dwight Yorke started his first game in seven weeks following a calf problem. In addition, Dickson Etuhu was included after playing twice for Nigeria during the international break.
Keane said: “I probably called it wrong. I played Dwight in the middle of the park with Dickson.
“Dickson was on the back of two tough international matches and Dwight had been out for a month or more, so there’s no doubt that I got the team selection wrong.
“We changed it at half-time, but even then we still encouraged the players to get forward.
“That’s the way I like to play, but you cannot do it all the time. It’s a learning curve for me like it is for everyone at the club, but you cannot keep losing football matches, and so far this season we have lost too many.”
The trouncing at Everton came out of the blue for Keane, who had seen his side turn in a good display at home to Newcastle in their previous game, only to come out with just a single point to show for their efforts.
He knows his side must react when fellow strugglers Derby head for the Stadium of Light this weekend, but admits they may have to be more conservative.
Keane said: “I don’t know whether it’s worse as a player or a manager — it’s very different.
“Any bad result is hard to take and everyone reacts in different ways. As a player, you look at your own form.





