Everton are planning to appoint Nick Cox as their new technical director by luring him away from Manchester United, reports Mark Douglas and Pete Hall of I News. The development has also been confirmed by Partrick Boyland of The Athletic.
Cox currently serves as the director of the academy and has been at Old Trafford for a decade. The Toffees continue to make a series of changes to their backroom and administrative staff following The Friedkin Group takeover last December.
“The i Paper understands that Cox will have a wide-ranging remit in his new role and that Everton still plan to appoint an academy director to replace Gareth Prosser, who left to join Al-Jazira in the United Arab Emirates last month,” the report mentioned.
“While he is not taking a job specifically focused on youth development, Cox’s expertise in academy matters will come in useful with Everton planning to restructure their academy operations after Prosser left the club to join Al-Jazira in the United Arab Emirates last month. James Vaughan, the former head of academy recruitment and player pathways, left in April.”
The Blues have also brought Manchester City’s director of scouting and recruitment James Smith back to the club and he will take over a senior scouting role.
Following Kevin Thelwell’s departure as director of football, the club, led by new chief executive Angus Kinnear, has opted for a “broader, flatter” structure with individual experts in recruitment, data analysis and player negotiations.
“Cox’s impending appointment is arguably the final piece of the jigsaw as Kinnear assembles his new-look team. Through executive search firm Nolan Partners, the club had been searching for a new figure to take over some of former director of football Kevin Thelwell’s responsibilities,” said a report in The Athletic.
“Cox will be expected to oversee the running of most of Everton’s football departments, including medical and the academy (recruitment will be handled by different figures).”
Cox, who had previously turned down various technical director and sporting director roles with clubs across Europe over the years, is excited by the prospect of joining Everton. He joined Man Utd in 2016 and became the head of academy in 2020, in charge of overseeing the club’s development programme from under-9s through to the U-21 team. He also has the experience of working for Watford’s academy as well as at Sheffield United.
The 47-year-old’s departure is “understood to be amicable” according to the report. He will not join the Toffees immediately and will instead remain at Man Utd in the coming months to assist with a smooth transition. Cox recently earned his Uefa Pro Licence and his work with the Man Utd academy has been highly rated. 38 academy players have made their first-team debuts under Cox’s regime, including the likes of Kobbie Mainoo and Alejandro Garnacho.
Reader Comments (43)
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Brian Williams
1 Posted
18/06/2025 at
08:40:36
With all these new staff hires will there be any money for players? 😱
Mike Doyle
2 Posted
18/06/2025 at
08:47:44
Quite a few backroom personnel seem to have left recently Brian.
Danny O’Neill
3 Posted
18/06/2025 at
09:02:41
The owners are firmly putting their own stamp on the club.
The paragraph that caught my eye, was referring to Kinnear, wanting a broader, flatter structure, with experts in recruitment and player negotiations, which takes it away from Moyes’ sole responsibility.
That’s not a dig at the Manager. He can tell them what he wants and focus on the first team.
Clive Rogers
4 Posted
18/06/2025 at
10:33:47
That seems to be the modern system where the manager concentrates on the first team squad.
Colin Glassar
5 Posted
18/06/2025 at
10:40:39
Scratching my head here thinking which Man U academy product has made a major impact over the last decade. Mainoo, perhaps? Not sure
Dave Abrahams
6 Posted
18/06/2025 at
11:20:57
I think the crucial appointments for the Academy will be the new coaches, they are certainly needed and have done for a good few years.
Ryan Holroyd
7 Posted
18/06/2025 at
11:39:02
How about James Garner, Anthony Elanga, Dean Henderson, Angel Gomes too
Robert Tressell
8 Posted
18/06/2025 at
11:41:51
– to provide first team players
– to provide additional revenue through player sales to buy first-team players
Even when the academy players are excellent they are being traded because there is a big accounting win.
There is a lot of trading going on age 14 to 18 – and then bigger money deals age 18 to 22. Man Utd haven’t done this as successfully in recent years as City and the RS possibly – but still generated money from the likes of Kambwala, Hannibal, Pellestri, Carreras, Pereira etc and those mentioned by others.
Sam Hoare
9 Posted
18/06/2025 at
11:49:47
Think they’ve been in the top 2 or 3 in the U18 Premier League for the last 4 years or so which suggests their academy is churning out or finding decent players consistently though obviously they have far more resources than most. Not sure of budgets but maybe they might feel they should have been matching Chelsea or Man City, which I’m not sure they’ve achieved.
Danny O’Neill
10 Posted
18/06/2025 at
11:53:55
Villa has already paid a lot for him. If reports are to be believed, paying 75% of his significant wages. The deal also had an option to buy for £40M. I’m not sure if they took that up. I haven’t seen anything.
Ryan, I’m not sure what you’re getting at there. Other decent players or being sarcastic? Maybe explain, so I can understand.
James Garner, once fit, had a very good half a season alongside Gana.
Henderson is England’s number 2 and won the FA Cup with Crystal Palace, although it’s debatable that he should have still been on the pitch.
Tommy Carter
11 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:05:16
Anybody involved with developing young players and recruitment will do well to secure the signing of Said El Mala who has a great future ahead of him in the game. Plays in the 3rd tier of German Football and has lots of experience already as well as representing Germany at youth level. Signing players such as these with a view to fast tracking them once acclimatised is the way to go.
Dave Abrahams
12 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:05:39
Yes, he has had a tough 2 years with Man Utd and England but I think he has had a good few years with Man Utd, mostly as a striker.
Maybe his form has dipped with him being used more as a winger and I think he will have a few options to move this summer although the huge wages he is on could be a handicap to that move.
Andrew Ellams
13 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:11:17
Ryan Holroyd
14 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:16:50
I’m adding the player brought through the Man Utd academy because Colin was struggling to remember other players coming through their academy.
Danny O’Neill
15 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:18:10
I just wasn’t sure what you meant. My bad.
Ryan Holroyd
16 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:20:06
Danny O’Neill
17 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:27:22
Maybe not as good now as Sir Alex’s early days, but still produce. Arsne Wenger wasn’t too shabby at spotting young talent and West Ham back in the day were pretty good too.
Let’s hope this restructuring can help us tap in to local and foreign talent. I’m not a believer of taking kids into academies too early, but we can at least identify them.
You will rarely, if ever get a Rooney, who by all accounts (urban myth), was ready for the man’s game at 10 years old!!
Ryan Holroyd
18 Posted
18/06/2025 at
12:33:03
For me, there’s never been a greater England player than Wayne Rooney. You don’t get players like him often.
I love the interview Kevin Campbell gave about first meeting a young 14-year-old Wayne Rooney
Frank McGregor
19 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:07:26
In fact… we could be in for a name change to the club:
Manchester Old Boys.
Jimmy Hogan
20 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:22:57
That’s a very negative viewpoint. What we need around the club is some enthusiasm and optimism.
Ryan Holroyd
21 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:33:40
Based on what, Frank?
Kevin Molloy
22 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:39:07
I hope our ‘maximisation of matchday revenue’ guru, Kinnear isn’t cutting across Moyes’s acknowledged expertise in recruitment.
Robert Tressell
23 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:47:38
He has some strengths certainly: largely in buying good but not great players in what would now be the £20M to £40M range.
But how does his expertise compare with the professionalised set-up at Brighton, for example, where they have already spent about £60M this summer on 4 under-21 players from Korea, Greece, the Championship and Italy?
Kevin Molloy
24 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:53:43
And how many players did Moyes increase in value between 5 and t10 times? I’d say it’s around a dozen players. I think his track record in recruitment is utterly beyond question.
Ryan Holroyd
25 Posted
18/06/2025 at
13:57:30
It’s been reported by Paddy Borland that Moyes will get the final say on any transfers.
Robert Tressell
26 Posted
18/06/2025 at
14:07:18
And Moyes does still have his limits.
I’d be very surprised if he’s managed to stay on top of what is now a global market (and the highly professionalised nature of operating in that market). And when he has a big budget, he just seems to spend it on the same quality of player he can typically find with a smaller budget.
I think these are things which mean he is not beyond question. And will definitely benefit from experienced professional support (in the same way Klopp did at the RS, when we was persuaded to go with advice from the then newly hired data analysts).
I think that is what Ryan is suggesting – that we’re building a better team around recruitment (or at least trying to) to make the most of the budget we do have going forward – which will also extend to areas of recruitment Moyes probably shouldn’t have any say in (i.e. 14 to 16 year olds who are unlikely to debut while he is manager – and any development players initially earmaked for loans).
Bill Gall
27 Posted
18/06/2025 at
14:17:03
I met Rooney when he was about 10 or 11 years old.
He was at my niece’s birthday party who was a good friend and still is with Wayne’s future wife. I suppose the word for him then was ‘brash’ and he didn’t mind telling you how good he was.
Glad to see the fixtures are out and I can start planning my next visit back… looks like September when they have 2 home games.
Tommy Carter
28 Posted
18/06/2025 at
14:42:38
He achieved nothing during that time.
He actually got Sunderland relegated in that period after buying Darron Gibson, Steven Pienaar and Bryan Oviedo from us as well as Victor Anichebe.
On that basis if he thought they were all good enough for Sunderland. He’d have kept them at Everton.
Then to West Ham where he inherited Declan Rice. He wouldn’t have had him at Everton.
Beyond that you have to assume that about 75% of the players he signed for West Ham – he’d have brought to Everton.
Out of those, he signed Soucek and Bowen would have improved the Everton team of that period. But not many others.
Kevin Molloy
29 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:06:53
Yes, I take the point on the kids, he will need help. I’m suspicious of Kinnear though, and his system. On what basis are we thinking this system will succeed? Does he have any track record of showing how his new flatter system will succeed?
Any system is only ever as good as the people inputting the data, and I would suggest with Brighton — whilst they may have efficiencies we can only dream of — they also have very capable people overseeing it.
I’m not sure Kinnear and his mates fit into that category. they may do; it’s all to play for. But the key figure at the club is Moyes.
Bill Gall
30 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:07:28
Sorry Danny I meant #17 hope at 84yrs old a small mistake will be forgiven
Robert Tressell
31 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:09:59
I think this is one of those strange occasions where people who broadly agree with each other manage to have an argument on social media because we’re all chipping into a meandering conversation.
I’m not trying to say Moyes was a good fit as manager 2016 to 2021. Sadly I think he had a nervous breakdown or something like it after the Man Utd job and it took a long time for him to rebuild. It was more a comment on our crap transfer record at that point – and where we are now, responding to Kevin.
Michael Kenrick
32 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:14:38
You gave me a right belly larf with this one:
with a view to fast-tracking them once acclimatised
Sorry, you can’t be talking about Everton and Moyes. More like hold ’em back until they kick and scream. Or just send ’em out on loan so they are not pestering you for a game.
Jay Harris
33 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:23:21
When you’re in with the big boys you need top people not the two Muppets that were previously in charge.
The whole club corporate strategy, marketing, football etc needs a major rethink which I am glad to say looks underway.
Danny O’Neill
34 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:23:40
Hopefully we have learned. from the Moshiri era.
As I keep repeating myself, and I get the economics. It’s like the difference between shopping in Waitrose or Lidl.
I’m not denying what you say about expenditure Robert, but even now, It’s not always what you spend, it’s how you spend it. There is value for money out there.
Ryan, from what I’ve read, and heard, Moyes will influence. The recruitment team will do what is says on the tin. Then Moyes can agree or disagree. He may well get the final say, but it may not happen with every player.
Kevin, maybe a fair point. Moyes has uncovered a fair few hidden gems. But there were also a few expesive failures.
But then name me any manager or DoF who doesn’t have either?
Danny O’Neill
35 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:27:18
Forget 84, you’ll be as young as what will then be my 54 when you enter that stadium!!
Eric Myles
36 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:27:48
This ‘flat’ recruitment system is just acknowlegement that there’s specialists in different fields and all contribute to the process.
I doubt very much that any manager ever discussed the fine print of a contract with any player or his agent.
So recruitment look at players and suggest them to the manager, he OKs them, finance set the budget and contract guys go do the negotiation and signing.
Raymond Fox
37 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:32:40
Is it ‘too many chiefs and not enough indians’ its to be hoped they turn out to be better than most of our appointments over the years.
Martin Berry
38 Posted
18/06/2025 at
15:42:36
I have been impressed with the way the FKG are putting together their backroom staff.
All strong in their expertise and background.
Angus Kinnear, James Smith and now the impending Nick Cox.
If you would have been told these three people were to join Everton 12 months ago you would have said impossible, when you bear in mind their current roles and clubs at the time.
It also shows that the FKG and Everton have pulling power, they have been sold a vision and have been suitably impressed to join the club, that itself is a major step forward..
Ryan Holroyd
39 Posted
18/06/2025 at
16:24:36
Mike Gaynes
40 Posted
18/06/2025 at
16:55:48
“Cox has had interest from clubs in the Premier League and Europe, as well as governing bodies, but is believed to feel the prospect of working with Moyes, under new ownership as Everton enter a new stadium next season, is an opportunity too good to turn down.”
Must admit I had no idea Moyes carried this much of a reputation. Players coming to play for him? Certainly. Executives coming to work with him? Quite unexpected.
It’ll be interesting to see how the club handles this critical window without Smith or Cox fully aboard and the new scouting structure not yet pulled together.
Tommy Carter
41 Posted
18/06/2025 at
22:22:03
Maybe he learned quite a bit as a young manager in his handling of Rooney. Because I remember being frustrated that he rarely completed 90 minutes at Everton yet was ever present as soon as he was available at Man Utd.
Since then, he gave fair opportunity to James Vaughan (when not injured), Rodwell, Gosling and various others such as Magaye Gueye and Vellios.
He never gave much opportunity to Ross Barkley, which was disappointing. And we didn’t see anybody feature towards the end of the season just gone despite us being comfortably safe for a number of weeks.
I think he tends to dither more with new signings. I find it very rare that, unless forced to do so, he will bring someone in and play them from the off in their best position.
Jagielka and Lescott were played out of position when they first arrived. Baines couldn’t get a game. He dithered over signing Arteta and played him on the right-hand side of midfield for a long time. He didn’t trust Seamus at right-back until 3 years after he started playing for us.
Michael Kenrick
42 Posted
18/06/2025 at
22:41:57
I thought it was just me who held those grudges!
But what about Jake O’Brien? Trying to recall if that was forced by injuries?
Eric Myles
43 Posted
19/06/2025 at
02:35:44
Michael #42, they happen to be untrue.
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