Everton manager Sean Dyche admits his players may have been affected by the team’s point deduction (Adam Davy/PA)
Everton manager Sean Dyche has admitted the club’s 10-point deduction may have had a psychological effect on his players.
The Toffees are still awaiting the outcome of their appeal against the punishment they received for breaching the Premier League’s financial regulations last November.
The sanction has effectively plunged the Merseyside club into a relegation battle and Dyche feels the uncertainty over whether or not they will get any points back could be having an impact.
Everton are still awaiting the outcome of their appeal against a 10-point deduction (Richard Sellers/PA)
Dyche told a number of national newspapers: “It affects everyone – everyone is sitting around waiting and wondering.
“They take those 10 points off immediately, so you keep looking at that table and you keep getting asked about being in the bottom three, four, five. They don’t leave you up there, so how do we know how that affects the psychology?
“It changes the perception, it changes the feel, it changes the fan base, it changes the feel of performances. That’s just a fact. We all measure it differently when the team are there, top, middle or bottom.
“Does that affect the team whilst the process is going? At first everyone says obviously not because you win four, but you could argue there is a delayed effect.”
Everton’s appeal hearing was held at the end of last month and a verdict is now thought to be imminent but no exact date has been set for when it will be delivered.
“We haven’t got a clue, or I certainly haven’t at the moment,” said Dyche at a press conference.
“The guidelines that you (the media) suggest and we suggest have
Read on belfasttelegraph.co.uk