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More Than Just a Game via GrandOldTeam

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When Everton take to the pitch at our former ground this weekend it will be 18 years since the club has won at Anfield. By any definition, this is a woeful statistic.

Everton have now long surpassed the previous record, which stood at 14 years, spanning the period 1970-1984. Although dreadful, there were mitigating circumstances for this dismal performance. That period covered Liverpool in their pomp, when the notion of ‘Fortress Anfield’ was grounded in unshakable reality.

In the past 18 years, there is no mitigation. Liverpool are long past their best and if Anfield is any kind of fortress today, it is one whose edifice is crumbling and whose defences can be breached with ease.

But where the likes of West Ham, Crystal Palace and Aston Villa have succeeded in recent seasons (regarding a trip to Anfield as no different to any other away game) Everton have stumbled, burdened by a self-imposed mental block that has made the prospect of winning appear near impossible.

In recent seasons this has blossomed into an inability to rarely put out a competitive performance. Not only do Everton seem to enter these contests defeated before a ball has even been kicked but they have also on occasions been porous to the point of saturation.

The 4-0 defeat in 2016 might stand as a low-point in this era of misery, a game where the scoreline could have reached double figures, but although the worst example, it remains only one of a litany of recent abject performances.

The sad reality through these years of pain is that much of it has been avoidable. Few of the Liverpool sides that Everton have encountered since the club’s last victory in 1999 have been unbeatable. The club’s dismal record has spanned one of Liverpool’s more lamentable periods in their history. Compare the sides of the past two decades to those that played their football at Anfield in the 1970s and 1980s and its evident just how much Everton have fallen short.

The [Poor language removed] have been there for the taking time and time again. But Everton do not seem able to grasp the opportunities presented. Perhaps most criminal was back in 2012 when an on form Everton took on an out of sorts Liverpool and with a front line of Anichebe and Stracqualursi let them off the hook, enabling our hosts to build up a bit of confidence and run out 3-0 victors.

The Blues now effectively start each season at a numeric points disadvantage because the three points available at Anfield are effectively off the table. And by extension, Liverpool start at an advantage, so certain is it that the Anfield derby will end at worst, as a draw, at best, a victory.

But as depressing as this is, perhaps worse is what Everton’s dismal record at Anfield says about the club. Since Moyes arrived and began to restore some footballing pride at Goodison, Everton have possessed aspirations of moving back into the higher reaches of the game.

Like most clubs outside the top six, when visiting the stadiums of the ‘big guns’ there is an inevitable sense of wariness. Playing City, Chelsea or United away will always be a test. But none of these fixtures enjoy the same sense of fatalism as the Anfield Derby does for Everton. A sliver of optimism remains stubbornly persistent and occasionally it is rewarded. But against Liverpool, pessimism reigns and such an outlook generally proves to be appropriate.

The Anfield derby is Everton’s first and arguably greatest mental block. If the club has any desire or opportunity to both return to the upper echelons of the game and claim silverware then victory against the auld enemy would be hugely beneficial.

The mental fortitude to grasp silverware, to push for the Champions League, to consistently take on the best, does not currently reside at Goodison. But turning over the [Poor language removed] in their own backyard would be an enormous first step in building up the club’s self belief, arming for the ‘project’ to come.

When I interviewed players from Everton’s mid-1980s Golden Age for my recent book, Everton’s Greatest Games, the likes of Sharp, Sheedy and Ratcliffe all pointed out just how important Everton’s win at Anfield in 1984 was for what came next. For them, it didn’t just represent an end to the 14 year hoodoo that Anfield had held over the club; it also provided tangible proof that anything was possible.

Although there are no parallels to be drawn between this current Everton squad and that of the mid-1980s, and few amongst us expect another Golden Age to arrive any point soon, the hurdle of beating Liverpool at Anfield can awaken possibilities within a group of players.

No other club in the top flight has such a mental block (or sense of inferiority) when it comes to playing their neighbours. Today, Liverpool are a good side. On their day, they can beat most teams. And at Anfield, with 60,000 Norwegians behind them, they are generally better. But they are not that good. And nor have they been for some time. They are not a side that should be beating Everton 4-0, they are not a side that should be outplaying the Blues all the time and they are not a side that should be going into this fixture always expecting to win.

When Kevin Campbell slotted home his early winner back in September 1999, I doubt anyone watching thought that nearly two decades would pass without Everton bringing home all three points from Anfield again.

The club’s shambolic record at our old ground is a shameful one. If we ever hope to be something more than we are now, that has to chang

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[LISTEN] Blues Draw The Reds, Huddersfield Humbled via GrandOldTeam

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Adam and Groucho offer (a slightly optimistic) reaction to the news of Everton’s FA Cup 3rd round tie with Liverpool. The pair also look back on the win against Huddersfield and Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s role in both goals, but have they come to terms with Sammy Lee in an Everton jacket?

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Apollon Limassol v Everton via GrandOldTeam

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Everton’s calamity of a Europa League campaign finally comes to an end on Thursday evening when the Blues make the trip to Cyprus to face Apollon Limassol at the GSP Stadium.

With both sides unable to progress into the next stage of the competition it is an irrelevant game in the Blues’ calendar, but if pride means anything it’s a given no one wants to finish rock bottom of Group E, an away win will elevate the Toffees above their Cypriot opponents into third.

Sam Allardyce won’t be travelling to Cyprus due to a ‘long standing medical appointment’, assistant manager Sammy Lee is staying behind at USM Finch Farm so it is down to Craig Shakespeare and Duncan Ferguson to bring an inexperienced squad to Limassol, it’ll be a fantastic opportunity for young and hungry players to show their worth.

Apollon Limassol have won their last three league games, in stylish fashion too, netting 13 goals and only conceding one in the process which has seen them rise to fifth in the Cypriot First Division.

Everton’s one and only point in the group stage came against the same opponents in the reverse fixture, when the ten men of the visitors snatched a point late on in L4.

Team news

Senior players will be rested on mass in anticipation of Sunday’s Merseyside derby, with Kevin Mirallas, Morgan Schneiderlin, Nikola Vlasic, Davy Klaassen, Muhamed Besic, Ademola Lookman and Joel Robles the only players with experience in the first team traveling.

Momentum is key going into such a big game, the old saying ‘the form book goes out the window in derbies’ is all well and good, but of course going to Anfield on the back of three consecutive wins would be a massive bonus for a side who haven’t won a game across Stanley Park since 1999.

Up the Toffees.

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Football quiz: how well do you know the Manchester and Merseyside derbies? via The Guardian

Do you remember these all-time records, far-flung fixtures and short-lived leads?

Which one of these four has played for Manchester City and Manchester United, as well as Liverpool and Everton?

Nicolas Anelka

John Gidman

Peter Beardsley

David Johnson

Ian Rush is Liverpool’s top scorer in Merseyside derbies. Who is Everton’s?

Tim Cahill

Andy Gray

Dixie Dean

Graeme Sharp

Who is the only player to have played for both Everton and Liverpool in Merseyside derbies in the same season?

Nick Barmby

Kevin Sheedy

Abel Xavier

Dave Hickson

What was the score in Roy Hodgson’s only Merseyside derby as Liverpool manager?

Everton 1-1 Liverpool

Everton 2-0 Liverpool

Everton 4-1 Liverpool

Everton 0-3 Liverpool

Who scored the first Merseyside derby goal in the Premier League, in December 1992, when Liverpool led for one minute before losing 2-1 at Goodison Park?

Mark Wright

Jamie Redknapp

John Barnes

Ronny Rosenthal

Ramiro Funes Mori was sent off for Everton in April 2016. Who was the last Liverpool player to be shown a red card in the derby?

Steven Gerrard

Mauricio Pellegrino

Lucas Leiva

Sotirios Kyrgiakos

How many Merseyside derbies have been played since Everton last won one?

Three

Six

Nine

Fourteen

Liverpool beat Everton in the 1984 League Cup final after a replay. Where was the match staged?

Wembley

Stamford Bridge

Old Trafford

Maine Road

The first Manchester derby took place on 12 November 1881. What were the teams called?

Salford and Burnage

Newton Heath and St. Marks (West Gorton)

St Ann’s Gorton and Drayton Grove

Trafford and Citizens

The Manchester derby has been contested outside of the UK once. Where?

Shanghai

Dublin

Texas

Milan

Which player has appeared in the most Manchester derbies?

Ryan Giggs

Paul Scholes

Bobby Charlton

Colin Bell

How far apart are the Etihad and Old Trafford?

0.9 miles

2.5 miles

4.3 miles

7.8 miles

Wayne Rooney scored an overhead kick to secure a 2-1 victory for United over City at Old Trafford in February 2011. Who scored the other two goals in that game?

Micah Richards and Dimitar Berbatov

David Silva and Nani

Yaya Touré and Darren Fletcher

Sergio Agüero and Patrice Evra

Manchester City won at Old Trafford for the first time in 34 years when they beat United 2-1 in February 2008. What else was unusual about that game?

It was United's only league defeat of the season

Alex Ferguson was not in attendance as he was at his son's wedding

City beat United home and away that season but were still relegated

There were no sponsors' logos on the players' shirts

All of these players represented both Manchester clubs. Which one played for City before he played for United?

Owen Hargreaves

Andy Cole

Sammy McIlroy

Denis Law

Brian Kidd

Peter Schmeichel

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