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October GOT Player of the Month via GrandOldTeam

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October
GOT Player of the Month

October, not that we really need reminding, was something of a traumatic month for Everton Football Club.

We saw four massively underwhelming performances and results bring about the termination of Ronald Koemans’ contract and the elevation of U23s manager David Unsworth on an interim basis to try and steady the first team ship.

As with August and September, another six games were played and with Koeman in charge, we endured four, three limp losses and a listless, last-gasp penalty draw away at Brighton. At short notice under David Unsworth, games five and six for the month saw a loss and exit from the Carabao Cup against Chelsea, and a very disappointing performance in the 2-0 loss at Leicester City.

So to the votes cast by the membership of GrandOldTeam.com and somewhat understandably on the back of the results and performances, October saw a lower than normal number of votes cast. The single biggest game vote came after the home loss to Burnley with the lowest following Leicester away last weekend.

Only three players appeared in all six games, Jordan Pickford, Tom Davies and Dominic Calvert-Lewin, while twenty-three was again the total number of players who saw first team action including a return from injury for James McCarthy and an impressive debut for Beni Baningime at Chelsea.

Four players won individual matches, Oumar Niasse, Nikola Vlasic each with one, with two games apiece for both Jordan Pickford and Beni Baningime.

Again, we’d like to stress that your votes really do count and would encourage you to vote as quickly as possible due to the compressed nature of the fixture list this season, polls will/may only be open for a few days due to the next game coming very quickly afterwards.

And so to the result and as is customary… in reverse order and third place, congratulations go to Beni Baningime.
In second place and for the second month running was Nikola Vlasic.

And the GOT Player of the Month for October with 24% of the votes cast is…

Jordan Pickford.

The post October GOT Player of the Month appeared first on GrandOldTeam.


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Everton v Watford via GrandOldTeam

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Everton’s winless run stretched to an embarrassing eight games after Thursday night’s horror show in Lyon.

The last time the Blues tasted success was back in September when Oumar Niasse downed Bournemouth.

David Unsworth’s side welcome a rebuilt Watford with promising manager Marco Silva at the helm.

The Portuguese boss showed signs of what he could do at Hull, but the damage was done before his arrival, and as much as he tried he couldn’t save an already sunken ship.

But it is his start for the Hornets that has caught the eye.

Narrowly avoiding the drop last season in 17th place prompted the club to sack Walter Mazzarri after just one season and Silva currently has his troops sitting in a respectable 8th.

But after a brave loss at Stamford Bridge and then gifting Stoke all three points at Vicarage Road in the last two fixtures there is weaknesses in the outfit, weaknesses an Everton side sitting in the relegation zone need to cash in on if they have any hope of saving this disastrous season.

Who are the visitors’ dangermen?

Former Brazilian youth international Richarlison has caught the eye since his summer move from Fluminense.

A pacey creative attacker who knows how to find the net, and with Everton’s shaky backline he will fancy his chances to add to the three Watford goals he has already scored.


Richarlison has been directly involved in five goals this season.

3 goals⚽
2 assists
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All of them away from home. pic.twitter.com/pPdYjOvyp8

— Squawka Football (@Squawka) October 21, 2017

One of the Blues’ biggest problems at the back is how to deal with fast players.

And that is just what Andre Gray is, the former Burnley man will be relishing the chance, if selected, to run at some of the least mobile players in the Premier League.

Team news –

Watford will be without captain Troy Deeney after his coming together with Joe Allen last weekend earned him a three-game suspension.

Midfielder Roberto Pereyra and defenders Sebastian Prodl and Younes Kaboul will also miss out on the L4 clash due to injuries.

Michael Keane is hopeful for a return after a lay-off due to a foot problem, while players rested in midweek such as Wayne Rooney, Phil Jagielka and Leighton Baines are all due to re-join the squad.

Cuco Martina will be out for ‘a number of weeks after his nasty fall in Lyon.

So, out of two cups and in the bottom three, and it has only just turned November!

It’s looking grim for a team with so much expectation and promise at the start of the campaign.

But if there was ever a time to reignite a season then it is the present… this Sunday against Watford with the backing of the Goodison faithful.

Up the Toffees.

The post Everton v Watford appeared first on GrandOldTeam.


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Arrogance and Incompetence have Left Everton Punch Drunk via GrandOldTeam

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The post Leicester fall out has likely shifted the Everton board into directions they were previously unwilling to consider and at a speed they are uncomfortable with. The chaos and confusion that has reigned through consecutive summer windows is beginning to threaten to erupt over a manager search, where lines of division are becoming more pronounced with different managers and approaches seemingly favoured by the older members of the board and the new shareholder. I have little doubt they had hoped Unsworth would make a success of this appointment. He would get some points on the board quickly, ideally at least 4 in his two league games to get the phycological hurdle of being in the bottom 3 out of our minds and allow us to pitch the club not as one mired in a crisis and a dog fight but one which can look to climb the table with an inviting set of fixtures to come.

The Leicester result has really put the dampeners on that. It was not the worst Everton performance I’ve ever seen, nor was it the worst Everton performance I’ve seen this month but the worry was it was indicative of a caretaker manager who had little ideas how to set a team up to be competitive. Leicester didn’t hammer us, but they won comfortably and didn’t get out of second gear for most of the match.

Logic of course would have dictated that Unsworth would struggle. A manager with a handful of first team games under his belt would indicate such a turnaround in such a short space of time was unrealistic. Many people have said that and they have thus far been proven right. I suspect tonight’s game against a 3rd place Lyon (who were Europa League semi fianlists) will further re-inforce this against a depleted Everton squad. I can’t lay claim to be one who shared the view Unsworth would struggle, though I am very rapidly coming round to the viewpoint my initial optimism may have proven to be overly keen.



While the logic that an untested manager at this level would likely lead to failure, there were other factors that counted in Unsworth’s favour. The work he’d done at youth level being one, his knowledge of the club being another and perhaps most importantly the experience of his only previous game being a dramatic 3-0 gave decent grounds for optimism albeit from a tiny sample.

Of course, using 2 or 3 games to discount him from the job is also equally difficult to generalize from, but the onus was very much on Unsworth to prove he was worthy in these games, which at present he has struggled to do. 

There could well be a number of factors for why it so well last time and not this time. The quality of opposition must be taken into account, and also the fact Norwich were relegated helped Unsworth. Chelsea, Leicester and Lyon away is a fiendishly difficult start for any manager, yet you can only play the cards you are dealt and there was precious little to shout home about against Leicester.

I also feel, a heavy emphasis on working hard which comes from Unsworths sides allowed a side with far greater quality (lads such as Coleman, Mori & Lukaku) to up their game dramatically, whereas this time the lack of quality is shining through as opposed to a lack of effort. If a team is already working hard, making that a central tenant of your approach is unlikely to garner the results you are after.



As the crisis has gradually engulfed the club it should be no surprise that the names currently dominating the betting are Allardyce and Dyche. Both managers experienced managing teams struggling at the bottom. On Monday I felt we would see one appointed before Lyon, but for whatever reason it looks like they have held their nerve slightly and stuck to the original plan of waiting until after the Watford game. Quite why this has happened I don’t know. Possibly there is an unresolved disagreement between who the number 1 choice is? It could be they are waiting on a bigger name manager to give them a concrete answer. Perhaps more likely may be that the package both managers are asking for (particularly Allardyce) goes well beyond what we had in mind and they are hardballing it, and sticking rigidly to the original plan that Unsworth gets given the full 4 games. I find it hard to believe any result Unsworth gets against Watford can really save him, so I can’t say delaying the Allardyce (Or Dyche) appointment makes much sense.

While both Allardyce and Dyche seem to be getting lumped in together, and have many similarities in their approach to football and knowledge of the English top division, there are some key differences. I sense those in favour of Allardyce on the Everton board see him as a far easier short term solution, given his age and reputation of “fireman Sam” and may allow Everton to look again come the summer at a higher name of candidate. You can imagine Silva, Tuchel and Ancelotti may well have their futures mapped out and be far more open to advances knowing they have a full summer to sort the squad out and a team in the top division. In theory this plan may well look the most appealing one. We put up with 6 months of Allardyce to get us to safety, accept the season is a complete write off before investing again come the summer.

There are major flaws in this proposal though, the primary one being the ambitions of Allardyce himself. Every comment I have seen from Allardyce indicates to me he wants a crack at a top job. Perhaps legitimately he has always carried something of a chip on his shoulder that he has never been afforded an opportunity at a top job. There are certainly those in and around football who are lurching behind this supposed anti-British outlook of the Premier League and making noises that Everton would be insane not to give Allardyce the opportunity to show his worth. He himself has made at times ridiculous comments that his approach to football would be better suited to Real Madrid. He had apparently retired from Crystal Palace as he’s sick of managing at struggling to just get them to safety. 




Given all of this context I find it very hard to believe Allardyce will accept anything less than an 18 month deal. Some reports are suggesting he wants as long as 3 years and the ability to bring in 10-15 members of his own staff, included sacked Leicester manager Craig Shakespeare. Perhaps understandably he sees the pot of money at the end of the summer being the real prize and sees keeping Everton afloat as a means to an end as opposed to an end in itself. For Everton that means if the plan was to keep him until the summer, it’s likely they will have a bill of upwards of 10 million to pay off Allardyce, on top of all of his staffs contracts in addition to the costs involved in hiring them. It would not be unreasonable to suggest the cost of Allardyce with bonuses involved and this seasons wages could become close to 30 million for Everton.



The other concern with this, is that it is likely to mean the back office that Everton have built over a longer period, crammed with talented coaches as well as those who have come through the academy system, played for the first team to then return and as coaches when their career ended. I can understand the objection that we have to look for excellence over loyalty to ex players, though the record we have at youth level is excellent and it would feel deeply short sighted and morally questionable to see Evertonians such as Ferguson, Unsworth, Ebbrell and Royle being made to leave so the entourage of Sam Allardyce can be given a final pay day.


While many of these problems are very specific to Allardyce, you would imagine Dyche may be more open to working with some of the staff who are at Everton. He also feels a more Kenwright type manager (as with the broad links he’s Kenwright’s preferred option) as a younger manager, who has shown promise at a lower club in the North West can come and build a “dynasty” at Everton. He feels very similar to David Moyes when he first came. You also sense, to get him out of Burnley a long term deal would need to be on the table and reassurances about time to build a side up would need to be given. If Allardyce’s pride may stop him signing up to do a short term job, common sense would probably prevent Dyche walking out on a stable job where he has built links to go into a club who may view his role as a glorified caretaker until the end of the season.

Whether Everton want to commit to Sean Dyche over the medium term (ie the next 2-3 years) is to me hugely open to question. While there undoubtedly positives in how he’s set Burnley up, you can also see enormous limitations to the play. Much like Everton found under Moyes, a self imposed glass ceiling will likely be re-enforced through his play style as opposed to broken down. His Burnley team show a huge reliance on largely British based players who play an effective brand of football but not one you would readily associate with sides who challenge for honours.



All of the above leads to a precariously difficult job for Everton’s board. Difficult discussions and negotiations and perhaps a realisation of the mess they have led us too, not just in the short term but also as part of the longer term picture. It is difficult to truly identify what Moshiri’s approach is, given how little his board communicate to the media and how there is a feeling that this board remains a transitional arrangement. In the absence of said communication there is huge scope for speculation both on the immediate goals and which direction the club wants to travel in after the full acquisition.

With that in mind it would not be unreasonable to say Moshiri wants Everton to move down a youth orientated, low cost high sell on value approach to recruited, which has been partly performed by Steve Walsh thus far. In order to maximise the potential for this you need a manager to work easily with the DOF, be competent and happy with working with and developing young players and be willing to have a longer term view of managing the club as opposed to the expectation of immediate results.

The biggest loser of the last 5 days surely has to have been David Unsworth, who many (myself included) felt could give a good fist of taking the job on a more medium term basis. While there was positives in the second half against Chelsea, Everton looked woefully short against a Leicester side who were only marginally above Everton at Kick Off. What’s become clear over the last two games is a focus on working harder alone is not going to be enough to get Everton out of the predicament. While in his last foray into managing the first team, an injection of energy and workrate to a team with distinctive quality worked dramatically well, this side needs more than just a re-emphasis on the importance of working hard. At present it’s difficult to see quite what David Unsworth can offer above that.

As I travelled back from Leicester I pondered quite where Unsworth can go from here. As I suggested in the previous article about him wanting to see positives, it’s very difficult to take positives from that game. Privately I think he will be confused as to how to deal with this situation. Had it been the under 23’s they’d have been given a rocket and slammed publically after the game, yet given the gravitas he holds within that set up and the trust and respect he has built from those players he would get the required reaction from them. They are also mentally strong enough to take the said criticism and respond positively. Looking at the players on Sunday, I am hugely doubtful such an approach would bear dividends. After an initial meeting outlining expectations he would have been looking for positives to build upon to keep the momentum going and he received precious few on Sunday.

What is also becoming clear, is that it is not as simple as just freezing out signings from the Koeman regime. Already publicly Nikola Vlasic has stated his displeasure at not playing and questioned his future beyond January. I suspect privately Sigursson, Klaasen & Sandro may be doing the same. Another harsh lesson for Unsworth may be that managing senior players who can move to most decent clubs in Europe is a lot harder than managing teenagers who would give their right arm for your recognition. In the most part the under 23’s players need Unsworth and Everton to forge a career, yet the senior players I have mentioned above their could all have their pick of clubs playing European football.



For Unsworth to have given himself a credible chance of taking the job on a longer term basis, I always felt he needed a strong start. When you look at how Royle and Moyes started (both brought in part way through the season to turn fortunes around) both started with wins and subsequent unbeaten runs. There is a strong case to say he has been unlucky to be given 3 challenging away fixtures to start however life and football is very much about being in the right place at the right time and on this occasion it looks like the starts didn’t align for him. Even an unlikely win in Lyon and triumph over Watford will be enough to keep him in a job, as I sense the wheels are now firmly in motion to get a full time replacement and I can’t see that being reversed.

The two prominent names currently being mentioned are Dyche and Allardyce. While I will deal with both individually there are enough similarities to make some broad statements about both. Currently the fanbase seem heavily split, around 70-30 in most polls against both managers though both (particularly Dyche) may see an increase in support if they are appointed. While the reasons for such a split may in part be down to their individual record, to me it goes to much deeper questions about how we view the club.

Football played simply, (as with most businesses and competitions) reflect the inherent bias and inequality within the game. The teams with the most money, should be able to afford the best players and will thus finish higher. For a club like Everton, who sit around 7th in terms of wages & turnover (though recently higher when it comes to gross and net spend) a long way behind those sides above them this doesn’t play out well. We are destined to be some way off challenging for honors and need to become inventive in ways to try and combat this. One answer is to grow revenues, which tentative progress has been made. The other is you need to find ways to outperform your position on turnover, ie spend your money better than those with more of it. One clear example of that is to employ a coach, who is adept at working with younger (and often cheaper) players, improve them and manage a team that can win trophies from a much lower budget than might be expected from buying them at their peak. This certainly appeared to be the dream for Moshiri on buying Everton.

As with most good ideas though, I always feel if it worked that easily everyone would do it. Some teams do try to do it (namely Spurs and Southampton who have had varying degrees of success in doing this) however it is laden with risk. You are essentially putting short-term gain to one side for the potential rewards of long term success. In calculations this makes sound footballing sense, but within the Premier League the spectre of relegation, whereby you lose hundreds of millions of pounds of TV revenue alone (before you even mention gate money, sponsorship etc) means for many owners and clubs they are either not brave enough to go down this path, or they lack the stability and initial quality to be able to make such a risk.

The two example I gave above were Southampton and Spurs who are examples where such an approach has worked. Spurs were a side who finished 6th when they went for Pochetino and Southampton were towards the middle of the table. Both had a stability to be able to employ a more long term, youth orientated manager. Both had the stability to know relegation wasn’t a concern, and could risk falling down the league a little in the short term (as Spurs would finish outside of the top 4 in Pochetino’s first season) for a longer term gain.

The absolute travesty of the situation Everton have put themselves in is this is no longer a straightforward option. For years we lingered around the top half of the table without ever really threatening to break into the top 4 or 5 teams. Through a heady mixture of arrogance and incompetence we are now very much in the midst of a relegation dogfight. If we go for the short termism of a manager to get us out of trouble in the interim, we risk heavily undermining (I’d argue destroying) the longer term plan of breaking into the upper echelons of the league. Alternatively, making an appointment such as Tuchel or another foreign coach (often more adept at working with younger players) increases the risk in the short term things could go wrong and if it were to go wrong the stakes for losing are the calamity of relegation.

This is the essence of the debate around Allardyce and Dyche. While I object to the “Allardyce has always kept sides up” argument- as there is always a first time for everything, and in truth he has skirted mightily close over a number of seasons, there can be little doubt he would give us the safest route to survival, followed closely by Dyche who has experience of the English league. The question for supporters really ought to be just how much trouble do you think we are in?

This again is a very difficult question to answer. I have found myself in the odd position of having supporters from other clubs (Even Liverpool) suggesting we are far too talented to go down. Yet anyone who has witnessed the performances of the squad in the last few weeks would struggle to find a worse side in this league. You could make a case for Palace, West Ham, Swansea and West Brom playing worse than us (I think Bournemouth have just been unlucky) and of the list above I think Palace look to have more spirit than we have and pose more of a threat on the break.

That being said I have to keep reminding myself we have not bought poor players. Sandro was wanted by Barcalona, Spurs and Athletico Madrid, Klaasen captained Ajax to a Europa League Final, Sigurdsson was chased by Leicester at 40 million pounds, Keane is capped by England, Pickford is in the England squad etc etc. I don’t think it’s blue tinted glasses to compare our current crop to when we signed the likes of Farrelly, Ward, Oster or Spencer, players who were not only not good enough on the pitch for Everton but also widely accepted within football as poor players. We have also seen lads such as Baningime, Davies, Kenny, Holgate, Vlasic, Calvert Lewin and Lookman all show enormous promise if only for short periods of time. When I look at the squad if feels a long way from the teams of the 90’s and 00’s which were genuinely poor, yet the performances as a team are every bit as bad as some of the turgid stuff we were served up back then.

There is no easy answer to this question. I tried to make sense of it all for over 3 hours on the way back from Leicester and I could garner no conclusions. Part of me wants to be very frustrated with Evertonians wanting either Dyche or Allardyce, but I can understand it is not about low expectations but rather a very real fear we are in an irreversible mess. While there’s little doubt either appointment would see a likely mass exodus of the talented younger squad we have built and should have been developing akin to what Spurs have done I cannot hand on heart say taking the safe option for Allardyce or Dyche is wrong, even if it is disagreeable to me.

As a final though though, none of this reflects well on any element of Everton’s board. While there is a cruel inevitability that Kenwright, Woods and Elstone would let us down (I think most have grown de-sensitised to this) it has been a painful period for those who have put their hopes into Moshiri. He has now left that board in charge for over 18 months, even promoting Elstone to the board and allowing him to preside over consecutive summer debacles over the recruitment in the striking positions. Why has it taken until November and being sat in the relegation places to inject any urgency and why in that injection of urgency is there little to be said about the board currently running the club?

Farhad Moshiri has made a number of intriguing statements since coming in charge of Everton, one was indicating nothing would ever be the same again, the other was that we had a small window of opportunity to catch the teams above. An appointment of Dyche or Allardyce will do nothing to match the ambition shown in those two statements, in truth it would be indicative of a club that has gone back a decade or more. It might also suggest, the window of opportunity had sailed by. Fans craving the security of Allardyce or Dyche are understandable but for those supposedly leading the club into brave new exciting waters their potential appointments are the walking representation of failure and incompetence.

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Everton v Watford Preview via Everton Arent We

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The lunatic is on the grass.

It’s ok though, international break is nearly here to save your weekends once more from the peril of Everton. The utter [Poor language removed] shitehawks.

It’s also apparently the final game of Unsworth’s 4 game trial, the preceding 3 bringing defeats and two cup exits. Which was harsh timing on our generously-built-top-wool- as any pair of hands would have struggled.

But that’s your top flight football, baby. It’s a results business. Tough at the top. And all over [Poor language removed] cliches you can think of, of which a few more will follow in a genuine dog’s turd of a preview to reflect accurately on this modern Everton team.

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The Lyon and Leicester games accurately portrayed an Everton team devoid of backbone. As soon as a goal is conceded there would be a gigantic fork ran onto the pitch to poke out players one by one until death. There’s just nothing about them. They can’t keep clean sheets, they can’t score goals, and they can barely fight as a unit. It’s absolutely [Poor language removed] terrifying that nearly £200m can be spent in one calendar year on a team to make them so pathetic.

To get to this particular crisis point has been a result of multiple failures, with Koeman paying the price but there have naturally been others. If they identify themselves as contributing to this shitstorm then they have some making up to do or a similar fate will follow them.

Because hankering for people in your sport’s team to lose their livelihood is so 2017. Our entitlement inflamed, we rate our perception so highly that we can critique a billion dollar business based on what we assume and gossip which may or may not be true.

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The truth is that there is no club that has a right to evade relegation. That we’ve managed that successfully more than anyone else doesn’t mean it won’t come around to our door, as we witnessed in 1994 and 1997. With lots of blame flying around everyone and everything is easy game including at the fans ourselves. [Poor language removed] knows. I’d wager that the scrutinising nature of Evertonians and our almost fatalistic appreciation of the Greek tragedy that regularly consumes us works in both ways. But it is better noting that we are in deep [Poor language removed] [Poor language removed] in October and doing something about it before it gets to an irreparable state. And if the dam breaks open many years too soon, you know where I’ll see you.

Watford come to town enjoying a buoyant season under new manager Marco Silva, who naturally Everton are throwing the eyes at. There’s no way he will end up at Everton right now as he’s merely a matter of months into a new job and there’s too much tangible risk in taking this Everton job for a swanky foreign who has designs on an elevatory career path. We’re not the lily pad you want to step on right now if you’re striving to make the fresh meadows on the other side.

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I’d usually try and find some sort of unfair angle with a stereotype on the opposition right now but Everton are sucking all of my powers of despisement towards themselves rather than who were playing. There’s plenty to like about Watford as a club too, not least them running out to Z cars and being a club that proudly represents a parochial working class support.

Yes it is indeed true that the likes of Watford, Luton, Northampton and all those [Poor language removed] towns in wool-London are a breeding ground for Tommy Robinson types. It is also true that there is fervent England support and the type of poolside behaviour in your Canary Island hotel that affirms your shameful opinion on nondescript [Poor language removed] southern town inhabitants. People from Watford go to Tenerife rather than Lanzarote. You know that type. They’re sat in Linekers bar with hideous tattoos and red shoulders at 11.24am trying to create banter with the barman, who smiles pleasantly while zeroing in on his plans to seduce their 18 year old daugher.

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There’s Watford there with three lions swim shorts and Reebok Classics beating a path down the sea front trying to build rapport with the lucky lucky men by altering his accent to a cringey Jamaican patois – despite the lucky lucky men being from west coast Africa. “Grassy arse” to the the Moroccans serving him that most traditional Spanish cuisine of club sandwich and fries. The soft bell can’t wait to tell anyone sat next to him that he’s self employed, as he fits a few carpets every month.

There’s [Poor language removed] Watford on a jetski thinking he’s in a Miami Vice cutscene. Kicking a cockroach on the half volley in front of the kids and screaming LUTHER BLISSETT GOOOOOOOL as he runs down Los Cristianos high street with his shirt over his head, not giving a [Poor language removed] that he is disturbing other people’s senses visually, audibly and their sense of smell on account of being drenched in jarg Calvin Klein Eternity that he haggled for 4 euros earlier that day. The same scent that comes from a group of Spanish students pissing into the vat knowing some poor sunseeker is gonna splash it all over his neck and think he’s sound.

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There’s Watford, the acute minority who creates the stereotype for all the really sound normal British folk who fancy a quick week in the sun and to appreciate different sights, sounds and foreign culture. But we’re not doing stereotypes as Everton are [Poor language removed].

Here’s some of their players:

Deeney – not playing because he strangled Joe Allen and perhaps because he looks like a big ET headed biff who is still cutting his milk teeth.

Richarlison – I never know about this lad until 3 mins ago reading some media previews so I can pretend I know anything about other teams. He’ll score a brace and no mistake.

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Cleverley – tell yer fat dar who abused him mercilessly as some sort of paranoid devious Martinez plot that I hope Tom absolutely [Poor language removed] us. His taunting celebration in front of the Lower Bullens prompting yer dar to [Poor language removed] us right off and go and support whoever Lukaku is playing, the bitter arl [Poor language removed].

You know what, I’ve just searched unsuccessfully for Watford players in the past few minutes and apart from two above I don’t know any of them. They’ve loads of names of players that sound like Pro Evo before an option file update. And despite that they’ll still beat us with ease.

So who will they be beating? Rooney was rested so will start. Where and how deep he plays will be for you to lament and moan at. Calvert-Lewin may get another chance to [Poor language removed] his confidence or maybe Niasse rested too midweek may get a go. I’d like to see Vlasic in the mix somewhere as at least he affects the game.

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I once loved Schneiderlin and although a brief love it was intense and now I feel dirty and used. Because of that expect more from Gueye, Davies and co in the middle. On current viewing the first name should be Baningime but only David Unsworth has the answers.

I don’t care who’s at the back I just wanted them to stop conceding goals. Pickford is sound so imagine how fuming we are gonna be losing him next season as we’re relegated like Sunderland were.

The preview is absent of manager chat as I genuinely don’t have a [Poor language removed] clue who I’d want. Just some form of leader who makes an impact and isn’t scared of ruffling feathers of the established staff to sort what seems like a permanent malaise out. Francis Underwood isn’t available right now so I’ll leave that in the hands of those who run the club and have their money invested in it.

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So this out the way and then two beautiful weeks without an Everton performance troubling your mood. You lock the door and throw away the key. There’s someone in my head but it’s not me.

See you there.


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Arsenal and Everton stakeholders’ close ties laid bare in leaked files via The Guardian

Links between Alisher Usmanov and Farhad Moshiri prompt calls for broadening of Premier League ‘dual ownership’ rules

It is a tale of two major Premier League football clubs. And two billionaires. And how their close relationship and the opaqueness and secrecy of the companies they own in offshore tax havens has led to questions over who owns what. As a result, campaigners are calling for changes to the rules intended to safeguard the independent ownership of Premier League teams.

The story begins with Arsenal and a very rich supporter, the Uzbek-Russian oligarch Alisher Usmanov. Ten years ago, Usmanov decided to buy a stake in the London Premier League giant whose home is the 60,000-seat Emirates Stadium, and he turned to the Isle of Man law firm Appleby to get it done.

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Leighton Baines steps up to crown epic Everton comeback against Watford via The Guardian

David Unsworth may not get the Everton manager’s job he craves but he will never receive a better endorsement of his ability to generate spirit and fight in a team than what transpired on a remarkable evening at Goodison Park. Everton delivered the first win of his temporary reign in chaotic, calamitous and truly unforgettable style.

Watford led 2-0 just after the hour and Goodison was on the brink of revolt. Then came the fightback led by Oumar Niasse, levelled by Dominic Calvert-Lewin and sealed by Leighton Baines’ 91st-minute spot-kick, the left-back replacing Unsworth as Everton’s all-time leading penalty scorer in the process. It did not end there. In the 10 minute of 12 added on for injuries to Heurelho Gomes and Christian Kabasele, Jordan Pickford fouled Richarlison to concede another penalty. Tom Cleverley, a former Everton midfielder, stepped up. Goodison had a collective seizure. Cleverley missed.

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