Alan Stubbs calls for big changes at Everton after the club barely survived relegation
Alan Stubbs is adamant the fact the Everton retained their place in the Premier League does not mean the season was a success.
Former Everton captain Alan Stubbs says he was left feeling both relief and anger after the club secured Premier League survival on Sunday and has called for "major changes from boardroom level down."
The final day of the season saw the Toffees claim the victory they needed for safety as Abdoulaye Doucoure's stunning 57th-minute strike sealed a 1-0 win over Bournemouth and Leicester and Leeds were relegated.
Stubbs told BBC Radio 5 Live: "There are two (feelings) - one is relief and the other is anger.
"It was a horrible 90 minutes as an Everton fan, watching that and the emotions you were going through. The players did really well - to play under that pressure, it's not easy and the manager (Sean Dyche) deserves a lot of credit as well.
"But now…Everton need to make some major, major changes from boardroom level down. It's got to happen."
Regarding Everton owner Farhad Moshiri, Stubbs added: "I have to applaud him in terms of he's invested in the club, but he's been really poorly advised by people on the board and probably people he's trusted in as well, and he has to take a step aside because he's not a football person so he shouldn't be getting involved in any football decisions.
"That's got to be left to people and trust them to do the job, and if he doesn't trust them they shouldn't be there in the first place.
"(Chairman) Bill Kenwright, (chief executive) Denise Barrett-Baxendale, thanks very much but it's time to go because you've failed this football club, on and off the pitch, and the owner has to make those decisions, because if he doesn't, the animosity among the fanbase… they've had enough.
"This is where everyone's waiting with bated breath, to see what the next steps are. I'd be surprised if there's nothing coming from Everton today in terms of resignations. Everton is broken, and it can be fixed but there has to be major changes for that to happen."
Leicester went down despite concluding their campaign with a 2-1 home win over West Ham.
Former Foxes skipper Steve Walsh told Sky Sports it had been a "sad day", adding: "It really hurts, it does.
"The alarm bells were ringing after 10 games, we were in a bit of trouble, so you sensed something could happen, but you never believed it would because of the quality that was in the squad.
"These owners have won so much. Hopefully we can bounce straight back, but there's a lot of hard work behind the scenes that has to be done and the club know that."