Eastern overhaul: Manu Torres defends squad clearout after Dani Almazan exit
Manu Torres says the Eastern overhaul is part of a long-term plan, as defender Dani Almazan and several senior players are set to leave amid a summer squad rebuild.
Eastern coach Manu Torres has played down the acrimonious departure of centre-back Dani Almazan and defended a wider Eastern overhaul that will see multiple players released this summer. Torres described the turnover as an inevitable phase in his plan to reshape the squad and prepare for the coming season. The coach said changes are painful but necessary as the club looks to rebuild a more competitive side.
Torres frames departures as necessary for Eastern overhaul
Torres told reporters he accepts the club’s decision to move on several first-team members and stressed that squad renewal is part of long-term team development. He said regeneration requires difficult decisions and that refreshing personnel can be healthier for the squad’s future competitiveness. The coach emphasised that he is aligned with the club’s strategy to plan proactively for the next campaign.
Speaking after a 4-2 league defeat, Torres argued that football frequently involves turnover and that managers must manage transitions without allowing short-term tensions to derail broader objectives. He insisted the overhaul is not about finger-pointing but about creating a structure that can sustain success. According to Torres, the process can be uncomfortable but is intended to strengthen Eastern for seasons ahead.
Dani Almazan’s exit and social media remarks stoke questions
Dani Almazan’s contract was not renewed after three years with the club, and the popular centre-back posted on social media suggesting discord behind the scenes. In his message, Almazan said some people had tried to break apart what he described as a family in the dressing room, and his post notably omitted head coach Torres from a list of six coaches he thanked. Those lines prompted observers to question whether the split was purely contractual or tinted by internal friction.
Torres said he had not seen Almazan’s public comments and did not know if he was the intended target of criticism. He declined to escalate the matter publicly and stressed his focus remained on preparing the squad for the future. The coach’s reluctance to engage directly with the post suggests the club may prefer to manage personnel matters behind closed doors.
Named departures underline the scale of the clearout
Alongside Almazan, Eastern will release right-back Calum Hall, striker Manuel Bleda, goalkeeper Liu Fu-yuen and long-serving left-back Wong Tsz-ho as part of the summer clearout. The group includes both foreign imports and local veterans, signalling a comprehensive reshaping rather than one-off changes. Club sources state the decisions were taken at organisational level, with the coaching staff in agreement about the direction.
The exits represent a mix of positions and profiles, which will force a re-evaluation of squad roles and recruitment priorities. For a club that has relied on a blend of experience and imported firepower, replacing a varied set of contributors presents both a logistical and tactical challenge. The club will need to balance short-term competitiveness with the longer-term aim of building a coherent core.
Loss of local leadership raises questions about continuity
Wong Tsz-ho’s release after 16 years at the club removes a pillar of institutional memory and dressing-room leadership. The veteran left-back’s departure will be felt off the pitch as much as on it, given his long association with the club and familiarity with younger players. Replacing such figures requires more than signing talent; it demands attention to culture and continuity.
Torres acknowledged the difficulty of losing senior domestic players and said the coaching team would work to ensure that young prospects and incoming players assimilate club values quickly. The coach highlighted the need to maintain balance between experienced heads and developmental opportunities for academy graduates. That balancing act will be central to Eastern’s recruitment and retention strategy over the summer.
Torres invokes high-profile examples to normalise turnover
To illustrate his point about inevitable change, Torres referenced high-profile global moves when arguing that even the most decorated careers involve transfers and departures. He noted that elite players have moved on from long-standing clubs in the past and framed such shifts as standard in modern football. The comparison was intended to normalise squad modification as part of a competitive sport’s lifecycle.
The analogy underscores a management belief that periodic rebuilding can reinvigorate a club rather than merely deplete continuity. Torres positioned personnel change as a strategic decision, not a dismissive sweep of players who have served the club well. He reinforced that the aim is to assemble a unit better suited to the team’s tactical vision and ambitions.
Recruitment, tactics and the immediate season outlook
The coming weeks will be critical as Eastern enter the transfer window with multiple gaps to fill, particularly in defence and attack. Recruitment will need to address positional needs while maintaining the quota of local players required by regulations and preserving squad chemistry. Club officials and the coaching staff are expected to prioritise players who can adapt quickly to Torres’s methodology.
Tactically, the coach faces the task of replacing leaders and integrating new signings without sacrificing competitiveness in pre-season and early fixtures. Younger members of the squad will likely be given expanded roles, while targets in the market will be evaluated for both technical fit and cultural compatibility. The success of the overhaul will be judged over months rather than days, with early indications offering only a partial measure.
The club has signalled a clear willingness to undertake a significant reset and Torres has publicly backed that course. Fans and stakeholders will be watching recruitment choices closely, looking for signs that the overhaul can translate into improved results. How quickly the new-look squad gels will determine whether the summer changes are seen as necessary evolution or disruptive upheaval.
Eastern’s management and coaching staff face a delicate period of transition in which patient planning must be balanced against results-based pressures. The scale of the departures creates immediate work in scouting, contracts and pre-season preparation. Torres has cast the clearout as a strategic step toward building a more competitive team, and the coming transfer window will tell whether that strategy pays off.
Expectations are high that the club will move methodically to replace experience with a blend of promising talent and targeted signings. The coach remains committed to guiding the squad through what he called the painful but essential steps of regeneration. Supporters await confirmation of incoming players and the first concrete signals that the Eastern overhaul will deliver a stronger, more cohesive team.










