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SUNDERLAND 0 - 1 EVERTON
Mar 09, 2008 | 3:57PM | report this

Sunday afternoon; again; this time at The Stadium Of Light.  The windy North East doesn’t trouble either set of fans who turn up in good numbers and good voice.  Wiley has a really poor game although unlike the last howler he doesn’t call back a spurious John son goal.  Kicking an Everton player whilst he is down, pushing an Everton player to the floor in retaliation and going in for the ankle and not the ball with studs showing on an Everton player are all deemed ‘nothing much to worry about, eh lads?”

Apparently; so Hackett tells us; Wiley is one of the better Premier League Officials. 

Sunderland weren’t any good and really, neither were Everton.  Three points away with a poor performance is always welcome. 

 

It’s a long trip to Sunderland, not long enough to daunt the Everton fans from making the trip.  Everyone received a warm Wearside welcome.  The visitors are hovering on the cusp of Europe and Sunderland are hovering on the cusp of relegation so a win is vital, a point is OK and a loss isn’t catastrophic although the season’s run in becomes just a little bit harder as a result.  Keane is even generous enough to give a nod to Everton’s progress under Moyes. 

 

Keane makes changes from the side that drew last week; the squad isn’t huge but has been doing well at home.  Gordon keeps goal with a back four of Bardsley, Nosworthy, Evans and Collins.  The five across the middle are Stokes, Whitehead, Leadbitter, Richardson and Murphy with Jones ploughing the furrow alone up front.  The 451 gives you all the information you need to know about what Sunderland will try to do. 

 

Moyes; fresh from two excellent league performances and an awful UEFA Cup game goes with a positive 442.  Howard keeps goal, Hibbert stays at right back with Yobo and Jagielka in the centre and Lescott remains at left back.  Arteta starts after injury, Neville sits in the middle with Cahill and Pienaar occupies the left flank.  Yakubu and John son partner up front.  The 442 away from home against a team in relegation trouble is duly noted. 


"Come on lads, this is football not f. uc. kin' line dancing!"  The Ugly SIster motivates the Blues (Royal that is!)

The first ten minutes is dull, lacks skill, cohesion and any sort of goal threat.  Wiley does pull back play when Lescott’s run has taken him deep on the left with time and space to perhaps create something. 

A tired Everton set up to attack are blunted by a dour Sunderland set up to defend. 

That’s the first half in a nutshell. 

Everton’s most potent threat is the odd corner or a neat bit of ball work and skill when the players find themselves in more than a yard of space without being closed down. 

Lescott has a couple of shooting chances but doesn’t fancy going for goal with his feet. 

Cahill’s close range effort is blocked by Bardsley onto the post and the rebound is headed over by John son; this is off a flurry of late first half corners. 

Nothing much in the way of attacking for the men in Royal Blue or Red, White and Black. 

Jagielka shows his pace as he tracks back to prevent Jones from getting free on the right.


Jagielka comes a rare second in this round o####ood tussle that livened up a dull game. 

The refereeing; or lack of anything resembling skilful officiating; provides the first half talking points. 

Arteta is fouled and smothers the ball with his arms and head.  This doesn’t mean anything to Stokes whose first kick catches a Spanish arm and who is allowed a second kick which thankfully doesn’t connect with a face.  Hardly worth a whistle and certainly not a card. 

 

Moyes must have given his charges a right old fashioned bollocking at the half and Keane brings on the much more talented Chopra to replace Stokes. 

 

A good early Sunderland chance is created when Neville is lazy in the middle and allows Richardson to nick the ball, and then Hibbert’s awful clearance allows Murphy the opportunity to cross.  The wide player whips in a lovely ball for Jones and Lescott has to be strong to protect his goal. 

Murphy delivers a neat near post cross which forces Howard to be alert although nothing is really testing the big American, defensive snafus are giving him more problems than anything Sunderland muster. 

 

Everton get a goal after some decent pressure was capitalized on.  The tempo increased from the away side, two fluffed clearances help to maintain it; first by Leadbitter to concede a soft throw in and secondly from Collins to concede possession deep inside his own half; why he didn’t smack it into row Z I don’t know.


"This time the bast-ard in the black can't possibly give me offside, can he?" AJ worries about Wiley. 

A poor Hibbert cross is beaten away and falls to Collins who’ remarkably’ doesn’t hoof it upfield.  His pass is intercepted by Yakubu who turns, looks up and plays a great ball to the penalty spot, Cahill’s leap is only sufficient to take the ball away from Pienaar at the back post.  The South African manages to retain the ball and keeps it simple with a layback to Arteta, the Spaniard whips in a ball to the near post which glances of John son’s elbow beyond Gordon.

Sunderland's whole season captured in just one image!

"This one is for you Mags!"

Several replays later the commentators notice it’s not actually a headed goal, more of an armed goal.  Johnson gets the benefit of being in the right place at the right time and seals the win.

Heaven is painted Royal Fu. Ck.  Ing Blue!

Everton never really look like getting a second whilst Keane’s changes sting some action into Sunderland who come closest to getting a goal. 

Lack of quality and tiredness and one world class save keeps the score at nil one. 

Murphy shows more good skill with another good cross from the left and then comes off for Reid who doesn’t deliver one telling ball into the box for the rest of the game. 

Nosworthy denies Johnson from a corner kick and Hibbert does well to stifle the resultant break which sees Everton well out numbered. 

Jagielka makes a double block in the area after a lovely reverse ball from Prica finds Chopra.  The Swede doesn’t do much else in the game. 

The best of the game; from both sides; comes right at the death.  Anichebe makes a clumsy challenge and gives Sunderland a free kick in a dangerous area.  Reid’s delivery curls neatly over the wall and looks to be going under the bar, Howard manages to adjust his flight and reaches up to tip the ball behind.  Good free kick and great save.

"Right Jack, this is called a Wall, now just stand there and pretend to be a brick!"

Phil passes on his vast experience to sixteen year old Premier League debutant, Jack Rodwell.

 

Sunderland played like a team in the bottom reaches of the Premier League, tough, gritty, flashes of neat play but on the whole a lot more endeavour than skill. 


Played to the tune of Olivia Newtron Bomb - Let's Get Physical!

Everton played tired and lacked much skill on the ball; they had the extra gear and the skill to worry Sunderland and got a good break on the goal.  Defensively they were good and just didn’t ever test Gordon when going forward.  An away win at this stage of the season is priceless.


"THE UNDERTAKER!  WINS UGLY AGAIN!"

David Moyes is fiercly jubilant after a tough old win at Sunderland!


 

Wiley.  Another poor game for the Staffordshire official. 

You can cut him some slack for awarding a spurious goal, perhaps. 

Awarding Bardsley a yellow for a reckless lunge on Pienaar is awful refereeing. 

Unlike in the Laws of the game as defined by FIFA the laws of the game as applied by Alan Wiley allow one player to push another player to the ground in retaliation of a tackle and merely get a talking to. 

If the ball is under a player’s face it’s OK to kick for the ball. 

A flying; kuyt inspired; studs up lunge which is half a yard from the ball is merely a yellow, the player walked off so it’s really just one of those things. 

Diving Spaniards are good for the game. 

 

On his way to the grass after the faintest of touches...again!


Alan Wiley displaying that infamous fairness he always displays when faced with Royal Blue shirts!

"I'm a little teapot short and stout
One arm in and one arm out
One for the handle
One for the spout
Tip me over and the tea pours out"

Alan Wiley gets musical after downing a couple of stiff ones before his last Everton game.


Nothing Much changes for Alan Wiley

Referee Alan Wiley dropped after Everton clangers

THE match officials who deprived Everton of the chance to strengthen their grip on fourth place against Blackburn Rovers have been punished for their errors.

Referee Alan Wiley, who failed to show David Dunn a second yellow card for deliberate handball and never pointed to the spot when Andrew Johnson was fouled by Zurab Khizanishvili, will not be allowed to take charge o####ame this weekend.


Sunderland:-

Gordon

Bardsley

Nosworthy

Evans

Collins

Stokes (Chopra 46)

Whitehead

Leadbitter (Prica 74)

Richardson

Murphy (Reid 67)

Jones

 

Bookings:-

Whitehead

Bardsley

 

Goals:-

 

 

Everton:-

Howard

Hibbert

Yobo

Jagielka

Lescott

Arteta

Neville

Cahill (Rodwell 87)

Pienaar (Baines 81)

Yakubu (Anichebe 87)

John son

 

Bookings:-

Cahill

 

Goals:-

John son 54

 

Attendance:-

42595

 

Referee:-

Alan Wiley

 

 

Images courtesy of Evertonfc.com

Images courtesy of bbc.co.uk

Images courtesy of daylife.com

Shiiterefereeing courtesy of alanwileyisacnut.com

3 Comments | Add a comment   categories: England, English Football, Premier League, SUnderland, Roy Keane, Stadium of Light, Everton, David Moyes, Andrew Johnson, Royal Blue
 
EVERTON 3 - 1 PORTSMOUTH
Mar 02, 2008 | 8:13PM | report this
Sunday afternoon at Goodison Park.  Hardly the proper time for football but nonetheless.  Tense game with some expansive and beautiful Everton play.  Pompey’s very own Diddy man evades his markers to grab an equalizer for the visitors and the home side is discombobulated for a while.  Normal service resumes and Tiny Tim gets Everton’s second whilst the Yak scores the third of the game and his eighteenth of the season. 

 

A convoluted trip limits the number of away fans although the home fans turn up in decent numbers for what is a European six pointer.  The weather and pitch are fine and the Panto Dame predicts a bore draw.  Hardly serious football journalism from Lawro when both sides have only managed two (home/away) draws from league play this season.  The stakes are high and at both teams are unbeaten in three so something has to give. 

 

Moyes is starting to encounter the problems of having a full and functioning squad coupled with the need to drop or change players.  Difficult but a nice problem to have. 

Howard keeps goal, Hibbert occupies the right back berth after a solid performance against Petrov, Yobo and Jagielka continue their strong partnership in the centre and Lescott stays at left back.  Carsley and Neville sit deep with Pienaar Osman and Cahill getting licenses to attack with Yakubu as the main forward.  This is very firmly an attacking 4 5 1. 


"IT'S OK LADS! MOST OF THEM ARE ONLY THIS TALL!"
DAVID JAMES ON THE MIDGET GEMS!

Redknapp has plenty to chose from and opts for a large 4 5 1.  James continues his long streak in goal the back four has the energy at the flanks in John son and Hreidarsson and solidity in the middle with Campbell and Distin.  Strung across the middle are Bouba Diop, Diarra, Muntari and Krancjar with Defoe and Kanu up front as a little and large partnership. 

 

"IS THE BIG GUY ENGLISH?"

CAPELLO, HOT OF THE HELICOPTER FROM BOLTON.

PLENTY OF ENGLISH TALENT ON SHOW!


Before Capello has even taken his seat (the Italian is hot off the helicopter after watching Bolton lose) Yakubu has duly scored the opener.  A brisk Everton attack and a clumsy challenge see Pienaar deliver a nothing ball into the area.  Distin is too slow, John son just watches and the rest of the defence barely moves as Yobo flicks the ball on for his countryman to stoop and head beyond James.  Clocked at fifty seconds.


"FEED THE YAK AND HE WILL SCORE!"
JOHN SON AND JAMES CAN DO NOTHING TO STOP NUMBER SEVENTEEN

Before it’s even begun the game has turned into a major challenge for Portsmouth.  One which in the first half they barely rise to. 

Huge swathes of the first half see some delightful Everton passing and movement which bamboozles and befuddles Pompey. 

My highlight is Pienaar and Cahill passing to each other as they advance down the left ignorant (seemingly) of the Pompey defenders they leave for dead.  Nothing comes of all the fancy footwork but a few good saves and clearances from a stout Pompey back line or a wayward strike from Phil Neville. 

Osman and Cahill have chances and James gets away with one of his trademark Calamity’s ™. 

The Everton player with the hottest boots is Irish; Carsley has a free kick and two more chances, none of which find the target.



"EVERYBODY WAS KUNG FU FIGHTING
THOSE GUYS ARE FAST AS LIGHTENING
SOMETIMES IT'S A WAS LITTLE BIT FRIGHTENING
EVERYBODY IS KUNG FU FUGHTING
LA LA LA LAAH!"
THE KUNG FU OF KUYT IS PRACTISED AGAIN AT GOODISON PARK. 

John son skinned Pienaar early on but produced a poor cross and Kranjcar briefly sputtered into life in a half that until the thirty eighth minutes the visitors looked practically dead and buried as they foundered on a calmly wonderful Everton back six. 

The ground goes into that stunned away goal silence when from out of the blue John son lays in a lovely ball which Howard should be rushing off his line to claim.  The big yank doesn’t and the little Englishman slips between two vastly bigger but static defenders to graze the ball with the faintest of touches beyond a flailing Howard for the equalizer. 

Who picked up Defoe’s run and why didn’t Howard move.  For a normally solid defence that was shocking.


"SILENCE IS GOLDEN"
UNLESS IT'S THAT GHASTLY SILENCE THAT FOLLOWS AN AWAY GOAL
POMPEY'S VERY OWN MIDGET GEM GETS AN UNEXPECTED EQUALIZER.

Everton still press in the last five but some of the conviction has slipped from their play. 

 

Moyes keeps things the same and Harry must have given some sort of fire-breathing-barnstorming-Churchillean monologue to inspire his players. 

 

The visitors emerged from the tunnel with their proverbial tails up, Defoe and Yakubu were swapping goal celebrations and everyone was happy. 

Ten minutes into the half and Everton had barely gotten into second gear.  The champagne had gone flat and it took a determined team effort to haul their sorry arses back into the game, they were just getting going and starting to move forward with some purpose when the key managerial input came. 

Moyes switched to a 4 4 2 and brought off Hibbert for John son, Neville slotted in to the right back role and John son caused immediate mayhem. 

A rapid and ball hungry outlet pulled the Pompey defence all over the park. 

The interplay between the front two was nice to see and effective, Pompey retreated back into their shell and even the addition of Utaka’s pace and skill made little difference to the Blues’ dominance. 

Things were still tense though as without a goal Pompey could sneak one or the game could end drawn. 

Tensions eased and the noise level rose after some neat play on the left produced a classic Cahill headed goal.


SOMEWHERE IN TIM CAHILL'S LINEAGE IS A WALLABY!
THE EXCELLENT OZZIE LEAPS TO GET HIS TENTH OF THE SEASON

The Australian played a ball out to the left from deep, Yakubu got on the end of it and played in Pienaar, the South African whose crosses the ball into the six yard box, Cahill has continued his run and not been picked up and rose magnificently to bury one, his tenth of the year. 

John son scored but the goal was called back for a tight offside and James had another Calamity ™ yet got way with it. 

The icing on the cake (albeit not a clean sheet) was Yakubu’s second goal.  Portsmouth lost the ball in the Everton half and John son picked up the clearance, his crossfield ball flew fourty yards and caught Campbell in an indecisive mood, the ex-Gunner let the ball go behind him and the Yak took the gift, turned Campbell inside around and hammered the ball beyond a stunned James.


FEED THE YAK AND HE WILL SCORE!
NUMBER EIGTHEEN IS ABOUT TO BEAT JAMES AFTER YAKUBU BAMBOOZLES CAMPBELL.

Everton finished professionally. 

 

Everton played well; they dug themselves a hole, blundered around in it for a while before pulling themselves out of it and playing even better. 

Happy with the goals, unhappy with equalizer and the twenty minutes of mental lethargy.

Happiest with the mental toughness that turned the game around in the second half. 

Loved the changed from 4 5 1 to 4 4 2.

EXHIBIT B - HOW BEING A FOOTBALL MANAGER WILL SERIOUSLY DAMAGE YOUR COMPLEXION!

The first half was an intimate exercise; football in microsm; play well but don’t score and you leave yourself vulnerable. 

2008 is becoming a good year for Everton in the Premier League. 

Seems the defeats in the two domestic cups were forgotten in the cold of Norway and the team was celebrated in the six-one European Night. 

Thursday will be the toughest test for the team of the season so far.   Fiorentina are good, hungry, and unfamiliar.  To repeat the efforts and enjoy the performances of the 1984/85 season the team needs to play very well against one of Italy’s best sides.  Tough but eminently dooable.  COYB

 

Pompey weren’t in the game for long periods but could have gotten three points.


"OIY LADS! QUICK! OVER 'ERE - LOOKS LIKE HARRY"S GOING FOR THE HIGH NOTE!"
MR REDKNAPP's URGING HIS TEAM ON WITH SONG!

On small things games turn, for example Defoe.  On another day Pompey score a second and kill the game.  Today they weren’t good enough to do that but good enough to frustrate and get at Everton without causing Howard too many worries. 

 

Mariner.  Pretty good game lah!

Note to Andre: check the video of the game, notice that Distin had his arms all over Lescott whilst holding him down, and notice the pushes John son applied at crucial moments to Lescott and Yakubu.  All three offences happened in the penalty area.  Penalties, maybe I’m not an expert, I’m just mentioning them in case you didn’t see them. 

 

 

Everton:-

Howard

Hibbert (John son 66)

Yobo

Jagielka

Lescott

Osman

Carsley

Neville

Pienaar (Baines 90)

Cahill

Yakubu (Anichebe 83)

 

Bookings:-

Pienaar

 

Goals:-

Yakubu 50 seconds, 81

Cahill 73

 

 

Portsmouth:-

James

John son

Campbell

Distin

Hreidarsson

BoubaDiop (Utaka 78)

Diarra

Muntari

Kranjcar

Defoe

Kanu

 

Bookings:-

Distin

 

Goals:-

Defoe 38

 

Attendance:-

33938

 

Referee:-

Andre Mariner

 

 

Images courtesy of Evertonfc.com

Images courtesy of bbc.co.uk


12 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Premier League, England, USA, Tim Howard, Jermaine Defoe, Yakubu, Tim Cahill, David Moyes, Harry Redknapp, Goodison park, Everton, Portsmouth, soccer, english football
 
ACF FIORENTINA : LA VIOLA : EVERTON'S NEXT UEFA CUP OPPONENTS
Feb 26, 2008 | 12:22PM | report this

Let’s talk La Viola, ACF Fiorentina, the Serie A side from Florence.  They play Everton in the last sixteen of the UEFA Cup and currently sit a lofty fourth in Serie A. 

 

CESAR PRANDELLI

 

Cesare Prandelli was the manager at AS Roma before personal issues forced his resignation.  He re-emerged at Fiorentina and has been quietly building a team in Florence.  He turned La Viola from relegation strugglers into a fourth place team, scandal hit and they were striped of the Champions League place and 15 points.  Despite the docked points Prandelli managed a very creditable fifth in the 06/07 season and a UEFA Cup spot.  2007/08 has seen his side well up the table and doing well in the UEFA Cup.  He is a fashionista and has had to deal with the death of his wife this season. 

 

WHAT HAS FIORENTINA DONE THIS SEASON?

 

This Viola side has a lot more in common with Everton than does a Svennaisannced Manchester City, perhaps. 

 

Fiorentina has managed the last sixteen of the UEFA Cup with wins the following.

Groningen on penalties in the first round.

In the group stages they faced Villarreal (A), Effsborg (H), AEK Athens (A) and Mlada Boleslav (H) and came away with two wins and two draws; they scored ten and let in four. 

They comfortably beat Rosenborg home and away. 

 

In Serie A

They’ve played well, sometimes poorly and sometimes spectacularly.  Similar to Everton they haven’t beaten the top sides (Milan, Inter and Juventus) this season but have managed a few good draws.  They travel well and Mutu is in the race for the capponcanoniere award. 

 

They aren’t exactly a hard or tough team (at least they don’t get many cards) and they like to attack.  Criticism of them talks about a ‘glass jaw’ and not knowing how to defend for long periods. 

 

 

WHO ARE THEY AND WHAT CAN THEY DO?

 

 

Frey (FRA) – excellent ‘keeper.  Will be the first choice for the national side in a year or two. 

Dainelli (ITA) – Mainstay of La Viola’s defence, good solid centre back. 

Ujfalusi (CZH) – right back (plays in the centre for the Czech Republic).  Better going forward than defending, particularly when pace is involved. 

Gamberini (ITA) – solid centre back and probably see action in Euro08. 

Kroldrup (DEN) – big good and works well with Gamberini – he’ll be making a return to his previous club and no love will have been lost at all. 

Potenza (ITA) – promising youngster with limited opportunities at Fiorentina, definitely one for the future. 

Pasqual (ITA) a left back, who can play further forward, gives Fiorentina a good crosser and willing runner who likes to take free kicks and corners. 

 

Da Costa (POR) – a youth prospect – unlikely to figure

Donadel (ITA) – creative midfielder for Prandelli, can spread the ball about from deep or from the flanks. 

Semioli (ITA) – mostly wide right in either the middle or in a three man attack, great crosser of the ball. 

Liverani (ITA) – can play wide left or in the middle, very creative with a good range of passing and a nice turn of speed. 

Montolivo (ITA) – creative youngster, most used from the bench. 

Gobbi (ITA) – utility player, really a midfielder and much more comfortable in that position. 

Kuzmanovic (SUI)– young midfield starlet.  Pace and plenty of energy, good box to box and doesn’t really have a pair of scoring boots. 

Jorgenson (DEN)– Utility and then some, will fit in to any position and do a decent job. 

Santana (ARG) – right sided midfielder with attacking intentions, good pace, movement and trickery with a good cross. 

 

Mutu (ROM ) – Fiorentina’s main goal threat and a potent weapon.  Scores from anywhere and comes off the flanks well.  A good lone striker or when paired with others.  Cappocanoiere potential with 14 Serie A goals on the season

Vieri (ITA) – wily veteran who may have lost some pace, he still has a bagful of tricks and is a good target man with an excellent positional sense. 

Pazzini (ITA) – a great foil for Mutu and having a wonderful season so far.  Pacy and athletic he can play wide or through the middle. 

Papa Wiago (SEN) – new signing and primarily a wide player, will fit into Fiorentina’s 4 3 3 quite well. 

Cacia (ITA) – young forward who can come of the bench and do a decent job. 

Osvaldo (ARG) – new to Fiorentina but already an impact player, pacy goal hanger. 

 

 

WHAT FORMATION AND WHAT PLAYERS?

 

Typically Prandelli will go with a 4 3 3 (although not the same sort of 4 3 3 that Grant uses at Chelsea). 

 

If he has all his players available then this is what I would suggest could be his starting eleven. 

 

GK – Frey

RB – Ujfalusi

CB – Dainelli

CB – Gamberini

LB – Pasqual

RM – Semioli

CM – Kuzmanovic

LM – Donadel

CF – Semioli

CF - Mutu

CF - Pazzini

 

Bench –

Kroldrup

Montolivo

Liverani

Jorgenson

Vieri

Santana

 

FIORENTINA’S NEXT OPPONENTS

Fiorentina play strugglers Livorno On Wednesday and then a tough trip to Turin to play the Bianconeri.  Then they welcome the Blues. 

Add a comment   categories: SERIE A, PREMIER LEAGUE, UEFA CUP, ROUND OF SIXTEEN, ENGLAND, ITALY, EVERTON, FIORENTINA
 
MANCHESTER CITY 0 -2 EVERTON
Feb 26, 2008 | 12:20PM | report this

Oop the East Lancs Road for a jaunt to the Eastlands Stadium.  Cra ppy weather in Manchester (no change there then really), and some pretty cra ppy football from Manchester City.  Everton played very well and ran out fairly comfortable two goal winners.  Howard gets tested late, Hibbo stifles Petrov, Elano is cr ap, Benjani is AWOL in the second half and we have a red for the petulant Bulgarian.  Stiles, well some quite good and some pretty awful. 

 

Short trip North East ensures a good away turnout in Manchester.  The weather didn’t douse the fans’ enthusiasm or voices.  Spark is added to the match with Everton old boys Dunne and Ball playing for City and the stadium is a regular haven for managers and ex managers.  Taking a pew are Big Sam, Peter Reid, Roy Keane, Steve Bruce and Fabio Capello.  On the pitch it’s a European six pointer. 

 

Moyes changes the side that thrashed SK Brann and opts for a familiar 4 4 1 1.  Howard keeps goal, Hibbert slots in at right back, Yobo, Jagielka and Lescott operate to his left.  Carsley and Neville sit deep with Pienaar Osman and Cahill getting licenses to attack with Yakubu as the main forward.  Some might call this 4 2 3 1 or 4 5 1 or 4 2 2 1, really just ignore them. 

 

A SCOT AND A SWEDE WATCH THE BLUE ACTION AT EASTLANDS!

Hard to change a winning team so Sven doesn’t.  The Swede selects the same eleven that beat Manchester United.  Hart keeps goal with a back four of Onuoha, Richards, Dunne and Ball, the five man midfield is Petrov, Ireland, Fernandes, Hamman, Vassel with Benjani up front on his own.  A pretty standard 4 5 1, although perhaps best suited to the away side. 

 

City starts off on the front foot and gets nowhere.  All half they had plenty of possession and did nothing with it, Howard had to come and punch or claim a few balls but didn’t have to save.  Everton defended thirty yards out and a narrow City just kept mindlessly bashing up against a blue wall. 

City’s best cross came just before the interval when Fernandes whipped a ball between Howard and the defenders, Benjani spent too much time wondering what it was and the chance went. 

The visitors threatened Hart all the first half, crisply bringing the ball out of defence or from a ball won in midfield and going straight at City with pace and bags of ideas. 

Richards probably didn’t give Everton it’s first penalty of the Premier League season as Stiles was blind or just unsighted. 

Hart saves well from Yakubu at the near post. 

Pienaar hits the bar. 

Finally the traveling fans get their goal.  Feed the Yak and he Will Score! 

A deep throw in down the right comes infield to Yakubu, Cahill’s running off Hamman finds the diminutive Ozzie in space, he beats the first man and whips a cross through the legs of the second, Yakubu had continued his run and finishes with clarity and clamness over Hart.  Great move, super finish and a well earned 0-1.


FEED THE YAK AND HE WILL SCORE - THAT'S SIXTEEN FOR THE SEASON SO FAR!

City’s response, Petrov; stifled all night by Hibbert; blast one wide from twenty five yards. 

Carsley is feeling up for the game and starts an attack from his own half, he is fouled by Hamman on the edge of the area and Stiles is just poor. 

Everton keep cutting through the City midfield and back line and win a corner, it goes way too long and the Irishman is a willing runner.  Carsley looks up and lobs a ball to wards the back post, Dunne and Hart are ball watching as Lescott adds to his excellent tally for the season with a neatly finished looping header back over Hart and into the far corner.  Sloppy defending seals the game. 

 

GOAL SCORER AND GOAL PROVIDER CELEBRATE THE FORMER WOLVES DEFENDER'S EIGHGTH OF THE SEASON!

Eriksson removes Hamman; well played by Cahill; and opts for the more fluid attacking verve of the Brazilian, Elano.  Moyes keeps his side the same, just asks them to sit a little and take the pace out of the game. 

 

Ball’s challenge prevents Cahill from giving Everton and early 0-3 lead after good work with Yakubu off a throw in. 

City mount some pressure but continue to be easy to defend, they lack width, Elano and Petrov aren’t delivering good balls into the area, Benjani is barely a threat and the substitutions don’t really change much.  It’s only in the final ten minutes when City start to try playground football that Howard actually has some saves to make. 

Mexican Castillo gets onto a loose ball and fires through a crowd, Howard gets down well and Jagielka clears. 

Petrov fires one straight at Howard, meat and drink. 

A cross sees Howard punch the ball against Benjani, Jagielka clears the loose ball. 

Other than one Dunne chance; off a dodgy free kick decision that Petrov delivered well; City were pretty dire really. 

Everton continued to threaten and defend extremely well, Jagielka being outstanding alongside Yobo. 

Pienaar is replaced by Fernandes who is in turn replaced by JJohn son, perhaps worrying Moyes in terms of upcoming games with Carsley suspended after a fifth Yellow. 

JJohn son and the Yak had half chances but Everton’s best second half chance fell to Carsley, the midfielder took advantage of Stiles’ play on call and walloped the ball goalwards before City had even organized a wall, Hart was equal to the shot and parried it over. 

Petrov’s petulance lands him in hot water at the end of the match, an odd whistle from Stiles; although play still goes on; see Yakubu run away from the Bulgarian who aims a kick at the Nigerian.  Nothing is given for that one.  Almost at the end of the game Petrov looses out to Osman and tries to play some footsie with the back of Osman’s calf. Stiles thinks, “EH! I CAN GET IN THE HEADLINES TOMORROW LETS GIVE HIM A STRAIGHT RED!” and dishes out an automatic three match ban.  Even I thought it a bit harsh and I support Everton. 

PETROV TAKES AN EARLY BATH! 


Everton outplayed and out thought City in every department tonight.  Bloody brilliant performance from a team full of beans (‘swagger’ as Tim Sherwood describes it).  Threatening goals all game and solid at the back, it could have been three or four nil instead of just two nil.  Many this season have talked about how the team is pretty ‘workmanlike’ without Arteta.  No Arteta tonight and hardly workmanlike!

 

Beating Manchester United was a bit flukey and it showed.  City tried exactly the same stuff that didn’t work at Goodison and got beat.  Substitutions didn’t work and moving from a 4 5 1 through to something resembling a 1 1 8 in the final minutes they still barely troubled the visitors.  Pretty poor in all areas of the pitch.  What can be done to stop this malaise at home?

 

Stiles, headline grabbing arse!  He can play a good advantage sometimes!  How can the man who has given more penalties than any other Premier League referee not point to the spot at least once tonight?  Burley slaughtered him and I pretty much agree with most of what the Scot said.  Still at the end of the day even cra ppy refereeing couldn’t deny a thoroughly enjoyable win. 

 

Everton:-

Howard

Hibbert

Yobo

Jagielka

Lescott

Osman

Carsley

Neville

Cahill

Pienaar (Fernandes 55, John son 66)

Yakubu

 

Bookings:-

Carsley

 

Goals:-

Yakubu 29

Lescott 37

 

 

Manchester City:-

Hart

Onuoha

Richards

Dunne

Ball

Vassel (Castillo 74)

Ireland (Caicedo 67)

Hamman (Elano 46)

Petrov

Benjani

 

Bookings:-

Petrov (R )

 

Goals:-

 

Attendance:-

41728

 

Referee:-

Rob Stiles

 

 

Images courtesy of Evertonfc.com

Add a comment   categories: PREMIER LEAGUE, BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE, ENGLAND, ENGLISH FOOTBALL, EASTLANDS, MANCHESTER CITY, EVERTON, SVEN GORAN ERIKSSON, DAVID MOYES, YAKUBU, LESCOTT, TIM HOWARD, PETROV, ROB STILES
 
EVERTON 1 READING 0
Feb 09, 2008 | 2:18PM | report this





MIKEL ARTETA'S PLACE OF WORK

Goodison Park on a sunny Saturday.  The expected three points didn’t come easy but the splendid performance of Phil Jagielka at both ends of the field gave the Blues the win.  A few times with the ball on the deck Everton looked good, mostly they looked out of sorts.  UEFA Cup is next on the agenda.  .  . 

 

Good support from both home and away supporters was in evidence but sporadic, the home fans allowed the tense feeling after two nil-nils to affect their noise.  No Sylvester Stallone; which was a real shame. 

 

Moyes opts for a 4 5 1 to start, injuries, AWOL players and lack of fitness hamper his selection.  Howard keeps goal, Neville moves to right back alongside the returning Yobo and Jagielka, Lescott moves to the left.  Carsley sits in front of the back four, Fernandes is the deepest of the five midfielders with Osman and Arteta wide and Cahill behind the lone John son. 

 

Coppell continues to plug away with his brand of football.  Hahnemann keep’s goal with Shorey, Sonko, Cisse and Murty at the back.  Oster makes a return to Goodison with Harper and Matejovsky covering in front of the defence Hunt on the left and Doyle supporting the sole attacker, Kitson. 

 

Howard gets a chance to warm his hands after an early Hunt free kick gets a wicked deflection and almost creeps in.  Reading’s next best chance come right at the end of the half with an Oster free kick having the bend to get over the wall but not to get under the bar. 

The first forty five was pretty poor from the home side, in no small part to a well managed and resolute Coppell side.  Both sides harry, hassled, hacked and herded each other with little opportunity to mount much attacking threat. 

Everton keep the ball, look before they pass and keep their heads and create the first neat pattern of play for the quiet crowd, Hahnemann is equal to the move but the opening was neatly crafted. 

Oster played well on his return, John son ran fruitlessly chasing poor passes and high balls, Hunt was integral to anything decent from Reading and Fernandes was wasteful with his passes.  The home side always seemed second to the loose ball, even when they won the tackle. 

Cahill has the best opportunities for the Blues, a late header crept over and a shanked effort well wide after some neat build up play and a good Osman turn, had his Portuguese midfield partner given the travel stained Aussie the shout the chance would have been much easier. 

Highlight of the first half though was all about Ireland.  Carsley let Hunt know he was there with a pretty nasty tackle.  Hunt stumbles and falls then bounces up with his International compatriot firmly in his crosshairs, one of his big defenders is quick enough of thinking to bearhug his fiery teammate before fists fly and cards are issued.  Storm in a teacup despite the commentary, two minutes later they shook hands. 


LADS! THE GOAL IS THAT WAY!

Moyes pulls of the ineffective Fernandes and moves to a 4 4 2 with the introduction of Vaughn.  Coppell keeps things the same.  Thoughts go to Joe Royle in the commentary box, “Second half is always better you know. Promise”. 

 

Reading manages a quick shot to start the second half.  The Blue response takes a little while to build but is much more potent than in the tepid first half. 

Six minutes in Vaughn skins Sonko on the left and puts in a lovely ball that splits Hahnemann and his defenders, neither Cahill nor John son can connect though. 

Two players up front have given Everton a different dimension, the game is more open and the home side is staring to play and pass better. 

First one corner is headed over by Vaughn then a second is put wide by a defender as Everton pressure mounts. 

Arteta’s next corner is cleared as far as Osman who intelligently plays the ball back in to the far post, Jagielka has beaten the offside and loops a header over the American ‘keeper.


JAG RISES AND NODS HOME HIS FIRST PREMIER LEAGUE GOAL FOR THE BLUES!

The goal energized Everton; who are starting to win more balls and play more in the Reading half; Reading are deflated but still gallant battle on. 

Two Coppell changes redress the balance with Malian international Kebe coming close after a terrible Lescott mistake lets him attack Howard’s goal.  Jagielka’s last ditch block probably saves the three points. 

The entire back line was peppered late on, held well with Carsley filling in the holes. 

Two chances come in the final moments of the game, Harper gets onto a loose ball and a good shot takes the paint off the upright.  In front of the Gladwys Street End John son can’t finish after rounding Hahnemann to open up Reading from a good Vaughn header on. 

 

Everton didn’t play well and they still managed to get the points.  Jagielka was man of the match by a mile; although the entire back line played well.  Reading’s stifling play didn’t allow Everton much room to pass or play and they looked most dangerous on set pieces.  The three points is a welcome boon after two goalless draws and UEFA Cup progression against SK Brann is next on the agenda. 

 

Coppell’s side played well without really threatening much.  They came for a point and looked good for it throughout the first half.  Managerially the goal was soft and the lack of much test for Howard is a worry.  Too good to go down, perhaps, seven losses on the bounce hasn’t demoralized Reading though they have to pick up points and soon. 

 

Halsey was excellent, a few good advantages highlighted his intent and he didn’t need to brandish any cards. 

A different referee may have given two penalties, although if one wasn’t given it’s unlikely the other one would be.


GOOD GAME! GOOD GAME!

Praise where praise is due.  Hopefully that will be noted in the other post match reports or interviews. 

 

Everton:-

Howard

Neville

Yobo

Jagielka

Lescott

Arteta

Carsley

Fernandes (Vaughn 46)

Cahill

Osman

John son

 

Bookings:-

 

Goals:-

Jagielka 61

 

 

Reading:-

Hahnemann

Shorey

Sonko

Cisse

Murty

Oster (Kebe 80)

Harper

Matejovsky

Doyle

Hunt

Kitson (Long 74)

 

Bookings:-

 

Goals:-

 

Attendance:-

36582

 

Referee:-

Mark Halsey

 

 

Images courtesy of Evertonfc.com

Images courtesy of BBC.co.uk



3 Comments | Add a comment   categories: England, English Football, Premier League, Everton, Reading, Goodison park, David Moyes, Steve Coppell, Phil Jagielka, Mark Halsey, Tim Howard, Marcus Hahnemann, USA
 
BLACKBURN ROVERS 0-0 EVERTON : RILEY & TURNER NEED TO RE-EDUCATE THEMSELVES WITH THE LAWS OF THE GAME
Feb 03, 2008 | 11:12AM | report this

Ewood Park bathed in the sun of a Saturday afternoon as the six or eight thousand traveling fans made the atmosphere sparkle.  Three decisons changed the game.  Despite the interference of the referee and his assistant the game had plenty of talking points but not goals. 

 

The trip to Blackburn meant plenty of Blues fans had made the trip to Ewood Park.  The weather was pleasant enough and the pitch was in pretty decent condition.  Teams with European aspirations doing battle, the sort of game against your rivals that is more important than the games against the top three, perhaps. 

 

Without some key players Hughes has to make do in defence.  Friedel keeps goal behind a makeshift back four of Emerton, Ooijer, Khizanishvili and Warnock. 

A five man midfield includes the recently called up England man Bentley alongside Reid, Derbyshire, Dunn and Pederson, Santa Cruz occupies the lone role up front in a 451 with the emphasis on width and defence. 

TURNER IS ABOUT 5'10" or 6' SO A STANDARD SIZED COFFIN WOULD BE ABOUT RIGHT...

 

Moyes battered by injuries and ACoN absentees picks a pretty standard 4 4 1 1.  Howard keeps goal, Neville drops into the defence alongside Capello favourite, Lescott, Jagielka and Baines.  Carsley sits in front of the back four alongside Fernandes, Osman plays on the left with Arteta on the right.  Cahill operates behind Johnson in attack.

 

As early of the second minute Blackburn show that they have been watching and preparing for the visit of Everton, Santa Cruz easily evades his marker and gets behind Carsley at the front post but glances his header just wide. 

Two sides with one foot in the ‘clean sheet then score’ camp provide a scrappy opening; space and time are at a premium as defence and midfield are solid and clogged respectively. 

Friedel’s first real test comes after Lescott romps upfield and plays in Neville, the cross is good but Johnson’s run isn’t and the big American stopper comes to claim the cross. 

The visitors start to dominate possession but don’t really do much with it.


SPOT THE BALL

Dunn gets a yellow for a tackle on Arteta. 

Blackburn’s strength on the wide positions is demonstrated with a cunning Pederson free kick. 

Everton pressure from the right sees Arteta play some give and go with Cahill, space opens up for the Spaniard and Friedel does well to parry the ball wide, from the corner kick an Osman drive narrowly misses the upright. 

Bentley demonstrates his intent as Everton display their closing down and the shot goes well high. 

Dunn is bamboozled by a cheeky Neville flick so deliberately uses his hand to win the ball.  Riley is only a few yards away and gives the foul but mysteriously decides that the rules for ‘deliberate handball’ don’t apply this afternoon and all Dunn gets is a brief chat. 

More Everton pressure and another corner kick and Jagielka’s stab is headed off the line from Dunn. 

 

Neither manager makes half time changes. 

 

The first half starts with a wh!z b@ng wh@llop. 

Bentley forces a good save from Howard as he breaks down the right channel and unleashes an unexpected low drive.  Howard clears his lines quickly and Everton are on the counter, good work down the left see the ball arrive at Cahill’s feet, he spots the late run of Fernandes and lays the perfect ball on a plate for the Portuguese midfielder.  The away fans behind the goal groan as Fernandes manages to whack the ball straight at Friedel. 

The play calms down but Everton retain the ball better and attack better, they aren’t able to really test Friedel. 

Arteta has his range on the dead ball deliveries and a fantastic cross from the right is too good for anybody else on the pitch and sails harmless through the six yard box at the perfect height for the merest of glances to turn it in the net. 

The game drags on and starts to get feisty, two or three dodgy calls from Greg Turner, one classic in which Arteta is bustled off the ball from behind his flag goes up for a Blackburn throw in and Riley comes rumbled over from thirty odd yards away and reverses the awful and wrong decision. 

Fernandes hits the base of a much relieved Friedel from a free kick. 

Hughes makes a second change and turns the game, Tu#### replaces Derbyshire which added to the inclusion previously of McCarthy gives Blackburn that boost up front and in the middle.  The game is more open now with Blackburn able to keep the ball, build pressure and threaten Howard. 

Late on Vaughn shows great desire and beats a Blackburn defender to the ball, Friedel comes out but Vaughn shows his mettle with a challenge against Friedel that wins the ball, the Everton substitute is first to the loose ball and hooks it into the path of the onside Johnson, the Everton striker rounds and Khizanishvili and scores.  Only when the ball is in the net does Mr. Turner raise his flag for offside.


GLEN, WORLD CUP OR NOT YOU GOT IT WRONG YESTERDAY!

Tu#### has a late chance and to end the game Santa Cruz gets free in the area and smashes the ball just over the crossbar. 

 

Everton played well enough considering they fielded two players carrying knocks and a third who is not fully match fit.  They played well in parts against a difficult opponent and created some good chances that they failed to take.  When they did take them they were penalized.  Had they played the match against the ten men following Dunn’s handball things may have been different. 

A point away isn’t too bad a result and we are still in fourth.  The team is missing Yakubu, Pienaar and Yobo. 

 

Hughes played a makeshift back four that managed to keep a clean sheet.  His substitutions made the game closer than it should have been and he got lucky with some wrong decisions.  His team is built to be hard and tough but that hampers the goal threat.  Considering a point against a top four team is quite a good result for Sparky.  His moaned about McCarthy not getting a penalty can be ignored, he was fifty yards away at the time. 

 

Riley was his usual good self.  Plenty of common sense applied and officiated with a smile and without getting flustered. 

Three decisions changed the game. 

First only he knows why he ignored the following and let Dunn continue to play. 

 

Disciplinary sanctions

There are circumstances when a caution for unsporting behaviour

is required when a player deliberately handles the ball, e.g. when a

player:

• deliberately and blatantly handles the ball to prevent an opponent

gaining possession

 

Second he ran thirty or more yards to correct a wrong call from the near touchline assistant referee, Glen Turner. 

Third he didn’t stop play when McCarthy went down quicker than a strumpet’s knickers at Mardi Gras under the challenge of Jagielka. 

Glen Turner may have gone to Germany to officiate at the World Cup but his wrong offside decision against Andy Johnson was poor form.  You can see it in his mind, “these blue boys have been shouting at me all this half, and I’ll show them”.  If an assistant doesn’t actually know how to recognize what an offside is or isn’t then he shouldn’t be on the touchline. 

 

Blackburn Rovers:-

Friedel

Emerton

Ooijer

Khizanishvili

Warnock

Derbyshire (Tu#### 73)

Bentley

Reid

Dunn (McCarthy 56)

Pedersen

Santa Cruz

 

 

Bookings:-

Dunn

Khizanishvili

Emerton

Pedersen

 

Goals:-

 

 

Everton:-

Howard

Neville

Lescott

Jagielka

Baines

Arteta

Carsley

Fernandes

Osman (Vaughn 75)

Cahill

Johnson

 

Bookings:-

Howard

Arteta

 

Goals:-

 

Attendance:-

27946

 

Referee:-

Alan Wiley

 

 

Images courtesy of Evertonfc.com

Images courtesy of BBC.co.uk

2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Premier League, Barclays Premier League, Football, Soccer, England, Tim Howard, Mike Riley, Glen Turner, David Moyes, Mark Hughes, Ewood Park, Blackburn Rovers, Everton, Andy Johnson
 
WIGAN 1 EVERTON 2 : LATICS PLAY WELL, EVERTON FINISH BETTER.
Jan 21, 2008 | 6:20AM | report this

JJB Stadium; a football game in a rugby town, a football game on a rugby pitch.  Perhaps that’s why the stadium is rarely filled for football?

Both Moyes and Bruce keep improving their sides.  Today though Everton were an example of a team not playing particularly well but taking all three points.  Wigan had more ball but couldn’t really use it, Bramble has his usual howler and the pitch more than played a part in an away win. 


...and it was only after I'd finished burying him that I realized his coffin was upside down..!

Almost a local derby; but not quite; plenty of fans made the trip to the JJB Stadium from the City Of Culture.  Expectations were high from both sides.  Moyes’ side continues to do well in the Premier League and Bruce’s squad seem too good to go down.  The pitch was heavy and was cutting up during pre match practice.  Kept on the heavy side for the rugby games; it’s not a great surface to play on, for either side. 

 

Bruce selected a bit of pace and guile wide but more grit and grind in the middle, height and crosses looked to be the order of the day.  Pretty orthodox 4 4 2 for the ex United defender, Kirkland keeps goal behind a back line of Melchiot, Scharner, Bramble and Kilbane (himself an ex Blue).  The middle had new signing Palacios on the right with Brown and Landzaat inside him and Valencia on the left.  Bent and Heskey provide brawn up front. 

 

Moyes goes with his familiar 4 4 1 1.  Howard keeps goal, Hibbert, Lescott, Jagielka and Valente provide the defence.  Carsley sits in front of the back four alongside Neville, Osman; returning after injury and Arteta.  Cahill operates behind Johnson in attack.  Johnson and Osman returning to fitness is a boost as is the form of Jagielka.  This team provides a limited type of attack but plenty of options from midfield. 

 

Palacios looks bright and show some strength on the ball but poor finishing in the early going and for the visitors Arteta shows a good first touch and a heavy second in the Wigan area. 

The opening play is patchy; neither team is helped by the heavy pitch which makes passes harder to pick out and saps the strength of the runners. 

Wigan is playing some neat football on the left with Palacios showing well and in the middle they are overpowering the visitors.  Their second half chance comes on the left with Valencia cutting inside and laying the ball into Melchiot, the ex-Chelsea player misreads the ball and Everton clear. 

Arteta picks up a stupid yellow card, he gets a second chance to deliver a better ball in from another free kick in a similar position and Bramble does well to hurry Carsley whose volley sails over the bar. 

It takes Everton a little over fifteen minutes to create their first good passing move, Johnson win the ball in the middle and plays it to Neville, the return ball finds Johnson in space and he is able to cross under pressure from Melchiot, Arteta has time to pick his spot but only fires straight at Kirkland who is agile enough to parry the ball away. 

Wigan get their first corner kick a little after twenty minutes, poor Everton marking by Neville allows Bent a free header, Howard is alert enough to palm the ball onto the bar before it is cleared. 

Everton are disjointed and struggling, which is as much down to Wigan’s harrying physical play than as Everton’s incohesiveness and the heavy pitch. 

Wigan is having plenty of the ball, their approach work is good but the final ball in or the finishing touch isn’t good enough.  Everton are sitting and defending and Heskey is losing the physical battle with Lescott. 

On thirty eight minutes Wigan come undone, Everton continue with their dogged defending and Arteta plays a speculative ball up the right flank, Johnson chases; as he has all game; Bramble is perfectly positioned to cut across Johnson and play the ball back to his keeper,