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The best of times, the worst of times Everton’s Greatest Games- Jim Keoghan via GrandOldTeam

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At this time of year we are all looking for stocking fillers. Undoubtedly that will be sufficient motivation for many people to go and buy this text, available in Everton 2, Waterstones and online for Christmas. However of the reasons I can give to purchase this as either a gift for others or yourself it is towards the bottom of the pile. The project of chronicling Everton’s greatest 50 games is an ambitious task few would try to take on. Fewer still could do the history of the club justice by referencing games within their own lifetime. Jim has not only given a fantastic account of some of the crucial games not just within our own living memory, but more impressively still of games in the prewar era where he has had to use historical data to paint a romantic and thorough picture of the history of the club.

There are many ways to approach such a task of cataloguing and explaining the best 50 games for Everton. The first inclination is you look to the successes the club has had, be it league wins, international success or FA Cup victories and you identify the winning game for each. The difficulty with this is two fold’ primarily it gets you only 20-25 games but more importantly you are relying upon an archive that is extensively written about. How can a modern author add to the testimony that has already been written, either by players themselves as secondary sources, or by newspapers as primary sources? What the author has done very well within the text is not just make it a recollection and debate about our most famous moments, but create a compelling narrative about Everton Football Club encompassing all of the ups and downs alongside it.

As a result of this decision, for me the most enjoyable passages are not necessarily the chapters on winning leagues or cups, but the more authentic and incredible stories that are thrown up in the prewar era. Without wishing to give the entirety of the book away, we are told that silk hats are given as a reward for the Everton players in the first league derby against Liverpool (which we won!) and it is unusual details such as this that bring the book to life and give some indication of the breadth and richness of history the club has and the level of detail and research that the author has gone into to present a compelling story of Everton.

When reading the book you get filled with an enormous pride at being an Evertonian, which should be the standard by which any Everton related book is measured. What the book captures very effectively is that supporting a football club, and the moments you enjoy most are not always the game when you win the league or cup, but can be matches leading up to it or matches not connecting with the success. There is a story of how one of the few games where Lawton and Dean played together up front and the fans that day got to see arguably England’s greatest 2 centre forward’s line up together. When you consider the records each had it’s without doubt that on that occasion we saw English footballs most potent strike partnership and while it didn’t lead to league victory the magic for the supporters will not have been lost.

The final game chronicled, the away victory at Manchester United where Bryan Oviedo scored the winner again looks innocuous when refracted through the glass of Everton’s history. Everton winning at Manchester United, nor Everton finishing 5th is a particularly groundbreaking moment and Bryan Oviedo is far from one of the great Everton players, yet for all of us watching Everton at that moment it captured the spirit of something far greater than what the end result became. I am tempted to write this is the ultimate story of football, yet I am not sure if it’s more the story of watching Everton? That shall ultimately remain unanswered, but for better or worse we remain proud of our clubs history which is done a great service in this review and is a welcome gift for any Evertonian who wants to recall some of the great matches they have seen, understand about some of the great matches that went before any of us were born, or be greatly enlightened with a rich narrative of how the club we know today has come to where it is.

You will not be disappointed or short changed if you buy this text. Move quickly to order online, or as indicated above most Waterstones should stock as should the Everton 2 store.

Excerpt: Everton 1 Liverpool 0 (Goodison Park 1978)

Years without a win, the sense that Liverpool always have the measure of Everton, the fear that a battering is on the cards. If this all sounds depressingly familiar it’s because it is. Everton’s modern malaise in Merseyside Derbies is nothing new. In the 1970s the picture was every bit as bleak.

When Liverpool visited Goodison in the autumn of 1978, it had been 362 weeks since Everton had bested them in a head-to-head.

‘People moan, justifiably, about us rarely beating Liverpool nowadays but back then you also have to take into account that not only could we not defeat them, we also had to watch as they won everything. It was awful’ recalls Dave Kelly of the Blue Union.

Despite Everton’s often erratic form during the 1970s, prior to that Derby, matters on the pitch had been looking up. Since Gordon Lee had arrived, Everton’s outlook had improved markedly. Although in its relative infancy, the 1978/79 season was looking good for the Blues.

‘There was extra spice to that game because both teams were at the top of the table. Liverpool might have been in their pomp but because our form was so good, we fancied our chances. Gordon [Lee] had got us playing well and we had nothing to fear’ says the former Everton midfielder, Martin Dobson.

But irrespective of the Blues improved form, amongst the supporters there was a sense of unease that would be familiar to those who follow the club today.

‘Liverpool were so good back then and their record in Derbies so impressive that you went to those games fearing that we could get turned over, even if things were going well on the pitch. It was a bit like it is nowadays. They had a psychological hold over us’ recalls Phil Redmond, co editor of When Skies are Grey

On an unseasonably hot October afternoon, 53,000 crammed into Goodison to watch what Match of the Day, in a rare example of pre-Sky hyperbole, billed ‘THE MATCH OF THE SEASON!’

Liverpool were unchanged from their previous game, boasting the side that had taken the league by its throat. Everton, by contrast, had one key absence, with Mick Lyons out injured, Roger Kenyon was deputising at centre-half.

‘You look at those two sides and in one, Liverpool’s, there are no weak links. In Everton’s, the likes of Roger Kenyon, Mickey Walsh and Geoff Nulty suggested a side that couldn’t match Liverpool player-for-player, so would have to work a lot harder for any chance of a win’ remembers Brian Viner, author of Looking for the Toffees: In Search of the Heroes of Everton.

A raw and raucous atmosphere in Goodison seemed, as it often does on Derby day, to be reflected in what unfolded on the pitch. From kick-off, the play was frenetic; tackles flew in, movement a blur, the rhythm of the game played at the highest of tempos.

Watching those two sides, you would never think that Liverpool were the kings of Europe and Everton their overshadowed neighbours. Recent history seemed to mean nothing as the Blues took the game to Liverpool with an attacking display that would shame some modern Everton sides. In a first half that rang with blood and thunder, it was the home team that always seemed to carry the greater threat.

‘Even though this was Liverpool, the kind of side you could imagine getting outplayed and still nicking a jammy win, at half-time it felt good that we had been so much better than them. Despite yourself, you had that weird feeling, something that very rarely occurs for us, that maybe this could be our day’ says Phil Redmond.

Under a floodlit pitch, this time switched on to compete with the sunlight, Everton (attacking the Park End) started the second half strongly. Almost immediately, a sublime cross by Walsh nearly put Nulty in. But although he flung himself at the ball, the Everton midfielder couldn’t quite get his head to the cross.

It felt like the game’s momentum was with Everton and that a goal was on its way. But it would take a moment of magic for one to be conjured up. And on this occasion, the magician in question was Andy King.

King was just 19 when he had moved to Goodison from Luton Town in April 1976 for £35,000. Almost on arrival he was taken to the hearts of Evertonians.

‘There was just something about him that we loved’ remembers Dave Prentice, Head of Sport at the Liverpool Echo. ‘His chirpy, effervescent personality helped. But it was also clear very quickly that he became an Evertonian once he had arrived. And I think the fans always have a soft spot for those who choose to become a Blue.’

Always capable of a moment of magic, this busy midfielder was about to score his most memorable goal for the club.

‘I remember Mike Pejic looping a ball into the box which was headed down. I could just about make this out through the glaring sun’ says Brian Viner.

The ball bounced right outside the box where it was met by the onrushing King. The midfielder adjusted his body to account for an awkward bounce and then let fly. To the delight of every Blue inside the ground, he caught it sweetly. The ball flew over the fingertips of a beaten Clemence and exploded into the top corner.

‘Cue complete euphoria and insanity. The Old Lady was at her best and was shaking, we were all just being carried around in waves of people, arms around each other, fists clenched. It was complete bedlam’ remembers Mike Constantinou, who was stood in the lower Gwladys Street.

In response to being one down, Liverpool (inevitably) upped-their game and not long after nearly silenced Goodison when Johnson put the ball in the back of the net. Most Evertonians probably think otherwise but sometimes the officials can come to the rescue in Derbies. The flag went up before Johnson had struck and the goal was ruled offside. With that, Liverpool’s brief resurgence started to run out of steam.

‘When the 90 minutes was up, Goodison went mad’ remembers Brian Viner. ‘I think that we gave more voice that day than we had six months earlier when Latchford scored his 30th. Goodison was hysterical. We’d actually been singing ‘Bobby Latchford walks on water’ during the game. But for the remaining half-hour or so, the ground shook to a chorus of “Andy is our King, oh Andy is our king, oh Aaaandy is our King!”.’

After the game, as jubilant Blues danced around their hero, BBC North West Tonight’s Richard Duckenfield stuck a microphone under the nose of King. “Andy King …” he began before a local bizzie hovered into view and started to barge the pair down the nearby player’s tunnel. ‘Can you get off the pitch!’ barked the bizzie, making his allegiances plain for all to see.

The supporters never got to hear Andy King’s immediate thoughts. But that might be just as well as his goal probably said more than any words could.

‘In a time when Evertonians had so little to cheer, that was an unquestioned highlight’ argues lifelong Blue, George McKane. ‘The 1970s, specifically when it came to Liverpool, had been really hard for us. It’s probably difficult to explain to modern fans what it felt like to live so comprehensively under their shadow. So, to beat them, finally, was magical.’

This is an edited extract from Everton’s Greatest Games

The post The best of times, the worst of times Everton’s Greatest Games- Jim Keoghan appeared first on GrandOldTeam.


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A Progressive Pricing Strategy via GrandOldTeam

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As a general rule I try to avoid speaking about Liverpool Football Club as much as possible. I am not sure it is massively productive for any business, fan, football team to become too concerned with what other, rival teams do. I meet a lot of Liverpool supporters who are part of the “scouse diaspora” who I greatly enjoy discussing football with, only the other day at the gym one stopped me and said he liked my shirt (it was the 1985 Cup Winners Cup shirt) and enthused about what a wonderful team it was and what a terrible shame it was that they didn’t get the chance to compete for the European Cup. He said he fancied them to win it. I reciprocated that the 88 Liverpool team was also a fantastic side and as a city neither of the two football clubs came out of the post Heysel landscape as profitably as they ought. Most people you meet who are from Liverpool to be grounded in a clear and insightful understanding of the game and I think for many Reds who move away they secretly appreciate Evertonians representation of the city more than they let on. Within the pressure cooker of the city itself I sense much of this is lost, as it is upon Liverpool fans who have little connection to the city and therein a limited understanding of the role Everton has within it. However for the most part my interactions with Liverpool fans is mainly cordial. As a result, as indicated above, I let them do their thing and try to focus on our own club.

However the latest round of what seems as increasingly bitter divide between aspects of the fanbase and the ownership over a pricing strategy to me throws up a number of interesting dilemma’s and comparisons to our club as we look to grow our brand. We also have to bare in mind (whether we like it or not) their approach will have both an indirect and direct affect on ourselves as a club. Sharing a city with a competitor means this is an unfortunate reality, not a representation of some mythical bitterness that some of the more backward and reactionary elements of Liverpool’s fanbase claim.

The origins of Liverpool’s current debate cane be traced back 18 months or so to the original pricing plan outlined by FSG upon the completion of the new Main Stand. There was some suggestion most prices would be increased, while tickets could be as high as £77.00 per match. This led to a protest from Liverpool fans, thousands of fans leaving on the 77th minute and FSG almost immediately reversing the decision almost immediately. I always felt this was a sensible move and had obviously feared as a rival they would put it behind them and move forward in the spirit of fairness and decency around pricing on the back of the u-turn. However what became apparent as time went by was that FSG hadn’t so much as learned from a mistake, but seen the problems as an issue that may have around timing as opposed to substance.

The crux of the problem for LFC appears to be the contradictory nature of their club. On the one hand, it is located in a working class city, which is very proud of it’s roots and traditions and keen to maintain it’s connection to the local community. Yet on the other it is a global business and a European super club, with an international fanbase built up in part during an almost unrivalled level of success between 1971-1990. These tensions seem further heightened by the fact they have international owners who see it very much as a business, but who came to own the club in no small part off the back of a campaign driven and rooted in the local fan base. When you read comments and accounts of what people want there are numerous differing and often contradictory perspectives, yet many can be broadly grouped into the above two camps.

Shortly after the U-turn from FSG comments where made that it was a temporary reprieve. CEO Ian Eyre had also tried to sell the benefits of the deal on the basis of a (relatively) small number of cheap tickets available for those with a L postcode. FSG then seemed to up the ante further by calling into question the viability of the redevelopment of the Anfield Road End without the ability to hike up ticket prices. There are some rumours that planning permission may have expired on this development and even if these are untrue you can only imagine that the point at which it expires will be approaching. The latest siren in the war of words appeared to be yesterday, where the club detailed a consultation and when asked on lower ticket prices included the statement that “at some point the revenue generated from ticket sales will have to go up”.

What underpins FSG’s approach is a logical desire to monetize an asset. While almost every Premier League club now sell out almost every game, it is easy to see where a ticket shortage, particularly for big games would be more acute for Liverpool. With demand outstripping supply the logical answer is to drive up revenue by raising costs. The reality is also that the cost involved in adding 5/6k extra seats in the Anfield Road End will unlikely be met in an agreeable time frame unless costs are increased. Likewise, the desire to get a commercial naming partner for the new stand has proven difficult, as understandably the best opportunities for this lie in new stadiums who as yet have no name attached to them, not for stands in grounds that have a well established brand. I suspect FSG want to drive costs up across the board, with a handful of premium seats, a larger collection at semi-premium and try to sugar coat the message with a handful of cheaper tickets for local fans. Rightly many Liverpool fans have seen through this as tokenistic and is indicative of a wider attitude towards the local fan base.

While in many ways it makes financial sense to drive the costs up, what cannot be understated is the longer term damage this does. With the multitude of revenue streams that have opened up for football clubs, particularly those at the top end of the league has meant the revenue generated on match days takes a more peripheral role than even 20 years ago. An increase of say £20 per fan per game would be well below 10% of Liverpool turnover, yet the negative impact of pricing supporters our of being able to afford to go and watch the team could be seen as a far greater risk. Such an increase will impact upon a supporters in a more traditional working class city like Liverpool than from those outside of the area and in many ways further compound the difficulties faced.

This is very much the context with which Everton now operate in. While it is fair to say if you remove a 20 year period between 1970-1990 the two clubs achievements are broadly comparable, the fact those decades still remain in many people’s lifetimes means Everton are very much the underdog in terms of attracting new supporters. This is in part compounded by a trophyless run since 1995, allied to Liverpools achievements in the early part of this century and the more competent approach to growing the business they have had in the lean years. What remains impressive with Everton through that period though, is even in the face of stiff competition the ability to maintain a fanbase in the mid to late 30 thousands. Over the last few years, where most (if not all) games are sold out it is clear our fanbase is not bigger than 40,000 and while it is very difficult to predict I suspect our average attendance would be near to 50,000 if size was no issue.

The story that gets told around this, is that it is down centrally to a super loyalty of Evertonians. While there is little doubt that there is a loyalty, attachment and resilience to the club that Evertonians have that few can match, much of can also be put down to some (rare) sensible strategic planning at board level. The commitment to affordable ticketing, particularly for young supporters (with the 100 pound season tickets) has been an enormous success in continually capturing a new generation of supporters. The fact the benefits are now rolled out to those under 21 and students is another sensible strategy as it eases supporters from being children into full paying adults in a tiered way rather than one big jump and will likely lead to less fans dropping off. Whereas FSG see affordable ticketing as a tokenistic gesture few can doubt the continued commitment to getting local supporters into the ground and how that is embedded across our club, and can be seen by the pride with which Elstone speaks of the number of young fans who are season ticket holders. In no small part has this underpinned our ability not just to maintain but grow our fanbase in the face of stiff competition.

As our new stadium progresses forward it is important that we learn not just on our successes, some of Liverpool’s mistakes but also see the opportunities that arise from this. I firmly believe, with the new ground bounce we would fill a 60k seater most weeks, but I also think it provides a unique opportunity to build the profile and presence of the club in the city and the surrounding areas as well attract commercial partners. As I have suggested above, I don’t believe it’s easy to put a price on having a fanbase particularly in the area you are based. The supporters are your best ambassadors, sales people and business assets. Liverpool remind me of a club who have taken for granted the local population at board level and if they push ahead with the higher ticketing costs will drive even more young supporters towards the football club in the city they can afford to support, which should be Everton.

Football remains a unique industry in just how few supporters (customers as it were) change brand. In a globalized world, underpinned by the neo-liberal illusion of choice there has been an erosion of brand loyalty in most areas, yet this has not really filtered through to football supporters. Children around the age of 6/7 make a choice of football team that will likely remain with them for the rest of their lives. When I was supporter, most chose teams around 1994/5 and I would say as many as 30-35% of my friends changed teams to support the 1993/4 champions Manchester United. Even after 2 league titles the volatile nature of children had seen them dominate as the most popular team. It is an anathema to me that Manchester City for example could dominate Manchester for supporters of young fans as they now do, yet the 5 years in the relative wilderness Manchester United have hit them hard. As a teacher you would see first hand how quickly trends would change, but also know once someone committed to a team it was a match made forever. In such a unique and challenging marketplace, complacency is a major weakness and if it’s shown in one of your nearest rivals it presents a fantastic opportunity.

The approach that The Esk (amongst others) has put forward and one that seems to chime easily for Moshiri appears to be that we look to hold costs down for the majority of supporters while having a minority of seats sold at a premium price. While my preference would be that we have no luxury or semi-luxury seats, given the way football has gone it may be a small price to pay to allow for us to further expand the numbers of local and young fans who can watch Everton play on a regular basis. It appears an approach that seems the opposite of what Liverpool are going for, where for them the majority pay more for a few local fans to have access, what we are looking to do is have a minority pay more so a majority of local fans can see the match. While this may lead to less value in crass monetary terms, the value of having significantly higher local and young season ticket holders cannot be understated.

This approach ought to be allied to a far broader and likely more aggressive approach to how we use the stadium. While it is probably a debate for another platform I think we need to view the stadium as a space that can come to signify Everton Football Club in what it does not just on the pitch but also off the pitch. For me there ought to be a lounge for former players, managers, the academy and also EITC. Given the increasing pressures around Brexit, but also tightening of tax loopholes it may prove more challenging to attract corporate clients for boxes (even in a groundbreaking stadium situated in arguably the most beatific waterway in the UK) and therefore using some boxes not just for corporate hospitality but as a hub space that can be used the whole year around would seem a forward thinking measure. Likewise there needs to a Museum, partly dedicated to Everton, partly to football and how the two intertwine that can be educational in focus with the aim of looking to have it filled every none match day with local schools in the area. This can not just match up easily with the progressive pricing structure, but may also be able to be linked in with former players/managers having a role in making the displays interactive. We should aim not just to have a world class stadium for Match days, but a unique and warm space that can be utilised by the local community all year around.

Undoubtedly Everton FC are coming from well behind their neighbours when it comes to building a brand. Yet clubs grow and decline at differing speeds, and when your rival can be seen to be making a mistake it presents an opportunity. For Everton the time is now to begin to seize that opportunity and once again overtake LFC to restore the balance of power that exists before the 1970’s. The opposite approach doesn’t just exist in terms of pricing structure but also approach. LFC have endless consultations and essentially present bad news in a transparent and open way. Evertons board currently seem to want to hide communicating good news. If there is one thing I would borrow from LFC’s board it is the openness they are conducting these meetings and the willingness to put their viewpoint out there. That will be increasingly important as the stadium move progresses forward.

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More Yuletide Points For EFC + Behind Enemy Lines: Chelsea (H) via GrandOldTeam

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Adam and Groucho look back at the 3-1 win against Swansea (sorry for the delay), debate the atmosphere inside Goodison (is safe standing the answer?) and are joined by Scott Nicholls (a lifelong Chelsea supporter who has appeared on the BBC, Ball Street and NBC)to get the Chelsea perspective ahead of Saturday…

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Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend via The Guardian

How will Arsenal cope with Liverpool’s fearsome foursome, the Mark Hughes ultimatum and whether Sam Allardyce will ever win over Everton fans

It would be a dereliction of duty if Arsène Wenger has not spent the past few days coming up with a way to stop Liverpool’s fearsome attack from running riot at the Emirates Stadium on Friday night. Arsenal’s manager cannot say that he has not been warned. He knows how much his team has suffered against these opponents since Jürgen Klopp’s arrival on Merseyside in October 2015 and nobody could say it was a surprise when Liverpool hammered Arsenal 4-0 at Anfield in August, with Roberto Firmino, Sadio Mané and Mohamed Salah inspired and Philippe Coutinho not even involved. It was, to be brutally honest, an entirely predictable result given that, under Klopp, Liverpool have won three times and drawn once with Wenger’s side, scoring 14 in the process. There is proof that their attacking formula is capable of ripping Arsenal to shreds, so it is up to Wenger to change. Arsenal, who were caught on the counterattack by United three weeks ago, have to find the right balance. Playing with carefree abandon against this Liverpool side could have dire consequences. JS

Related: Bristol City in dreamland and Swansea in a spin – Football Weekly Extra

Related: David Squires on … Manchester City's football utopia

Related: Football stadiums then and now – interactive quiz, part five

Related: The Fiver Christmas Awards 2017

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Everton v Chelsea Preview via Everton Arent We

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Heavy going this winning thing.

Some relief then that current champions come to Goodison this Christmas Saturday to relieve us of this burden we have been carrying, all the way to the top half of the table.

Or will they? Read on to not find out.

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Of course Chelsea will [Poor language removed] win because there’s no way Everton are winning 5 out of 6 in the league with this bunch of mismatched chancers, and thus sending you into Christmas Day with positive thoughts about the future. Everton quite simply doesn’t work in this way.

No it’s not the type of damaging mindset which holds this club hostage at all – before all them young Spanish obsessed ultras launch edgy social media abuse – it’s just stating what you know. And if it isn’t then sound, then I’ll start to get a wee bit excited about what is to come. Because there’s a shitter of a month ahead, a double Sam honeymoon graveyard if you will.

Maybe it’s a defence mechanism to spare one from the regular pain Everton inflicts. [Poor language removed] knows.

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The Swansea game was one I reckon we’d have lost a few weeks earlier. Going a goal behind has been somewhat of an achilles heel for an Everton team devoid of backbone. There’s no doubting the fixture list has been rather kind to large Samuel since his Everton introduction but 5 wins out of 6, and crucially 13 points out of 15 in the league have been most welcome and better than anyone really expected.

There’s shouts to cut some slack to our leader – with his face like an imminent mudslide – and a burgeoning large group of acceptors, even finding joy in Sammy Lee on our touchline and professing how it’s for the better. As often with Everton, division and polarisation are what we do so well. I’m game by game myself but If you can’t enjoy a load of Everton consecutive wins then [Poor language removed], Everton really have killed you inside and it’s time to take up bowls.

That goal by Sigurdsson though. That tackle by Kenny.

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So what can we expect from Chelsea? An ace team signed at great expense who will provide a stern test of our defence and resolve. You watch them on the telly, you read about them often, they’re a cracking team. I can tell [Poor language removed] about them that you don’t know.

Manager Conte done great in his first season to galvanise the squad together in that 5 at the back system and muller most teams before them, including Everton twice. All sorts of mutterings about starting a dynasty and that but then Guardiola moved through the gears and has put pay to anyone thinking of that [Poor language removed] for a while.

Chelsea fans suffered from a certain stereotype – which is usually celebrated in full in these [Poor language removed] previews – but it’s a disservice to the tonnes of sound working class Chelsea fans out there. Fans who were staunch during Chelsea being abstract [Poor language removed] – barring the Kerry Dixon season – for absolute beards. Then the Abramovich thing happened which is like some mad cheat code on an arl Amiga 500 game, and Chelsea have been a different proposition since that.

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There’ll be a lot of envy towards that but it’s delivered sustainable success in a new age of English top flight football. We’d be all over it. Interestingly those most triggered by this period of Chelsea is our nearest and dearest over the park, they have a real distaste for Chelsea and engage them in some tacky banter about plastic flags. I’d have absolutely no qualms over HOWARD KENDALL’S BLUE AND WHITE UNDIES on the finest young Orca or Panda skin if it meant we won a truck load of titles myself like.

Anyway if big red are hating on another club then it means that someone is doing some form of good deed, so it’s on that basis Chelsea get a pass in this preview. Maybe big red are just jealous Chelsea are winning leagues and they’re not, who really knows?

There’s of course the plethora of hang ons that Chelsea attract as fans who overcompensate to show they “get it” so they can [Poor language removed] off, as can the racist ones too. Blerts.

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Some of the Chelsea players that may or may not play against Everton this weekend:

Morata – doesn’t play as the ref shithoused him for celebrating a 92nd min winner. Pure Everton that.

Hazard – [Poor language removed] ace. [Poor language removed] him and take the early yellow, and hope.

You know what? It’s a bit futile going through them one by one as they’re all dead well known and have been done to death so we’ll skip this bit and go straight to St Domingo’s Young Pissboilers, and friends.

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Don’t think too many people would be surprised to see the same team starting again. It’s been working against lesser lights with the only real scruple being that deep midfield combination of Schneiderlin and Gueye, but they seem more suited to this type of game where Everton will be sitting deep. If not then West Derby’s Thomas Davies will be on the scuttle between the lines and looking for them forward balls.

So that means more of DCL up front, and it’s dead pleasing to see his development and some well deserved acknowledgement coming with it. Evertonians are always going to have time for players that work themselves to the bone for the cause, which he does, but it’s all the other wee things he brings in the final third that become more pronounced the more he plays in a winning team. Easy for us to lavish compliments to anyone in that circumstance I suppose. We will need a good quality forward brought in as early as possible in January to share that load and take the lead, but at very worst we’ve a good quality squad player for £1.5m here, and at best who knows?

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It’s also working well having eager legs in front of Rooney who himself is another example of that polarising quality of Everton I spoke of earlier. The last 4 weeks of Rooney have been very good indeed, on the back of him moving deeper and taking over the captaincy. The impact on the play, the goals and assists have been plentiful. Up to you if you cheer him in a royal blue shirt or not. I’m increasingly pleased he’s there though.

Sigurdsson is another to exert influence in the team with another scorcher of a goal and a similar heavy workload as admired in DCL. This type of impact on games is what we all expected when we signed him, the match winning impact. Thing is that he’s playing over on the left so not in his preferred position and I’m told by level headed Swansea fans that there’s levels still to come when he does end up there. We will see, but considering he was Emperors Clothes numero uno for me a month ago it’s pleasant to be proven a tit. Might as well continue the easy plaudits for wins against [Poor language removed] teams with Lennon and his various roles in the team. With Bolasie and January’s transfer window looming who knows for how long? But he’s come into a struggling team and delivered just what we needed, and given the young Kirkdale full back with sensational teeth behind him some space to make a foothold in the first team.

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Defence may seem an uneasy alliance but it’s been working, although this game will provide a stern test of their competence. They passed it at Anfield so maybe I shouldn’t be too defeatist. Like [Poor language removed] I’m moving on from the defence without lavishing praise on the young right back feeling his way into the team. If not anything else he’s illustrated perfectly the old Jack Rodwell adage about the differences between Birkdale and Kirkdale, with his most excellent shithousing. The latest of which was a completely needless, beautiful, tackle on that poor Swansea player. A tackle of such handsomeness that it started a melee in which all Jonjoe’s hopper mates bounced in like a snarl in the Paradox. Well in lad you’ll do for us.

Pickford in goal, he may be tested somewhat more than of late in this.

So I started with expecting a twatting, and the more I’ve gone on writing this I’ve been seduced by that hope thing that maybe glues many of us to this preferred weekend pastime of ours. Everton have got a wee bit of momentum and it’s at a more assured Goodison who know the importance of signing off for Christmas with a performance.

Allardyce has beaten Chelsea in his last two games with Sunderland and Crystal Palace respectively, with his sitting-deeper-than-a-spliff-on-an-old-sofa approach suiting this type of game, maybe, right at this moment.

CFC10.jpg


Predictions and previews make awkward bedfellows so I’ll just leave that [Poor language removed] there.

It’s the season of goodwill and with this being the final game before Christmas I’d like to wish all the best to you and yours, and a heartfelt ‘nice one’ for all anyone clicking on any of this [Poor language removed] I type throughout the year. Goodwill to all. Except Chelsea, they can get to [Poor language removed]. Right into them Everton.


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