There were many ways this landmark day in Everton’s history could have gone and the team’s performance at Leeds last Monday hinted at a few of the unpalatable outcomes that could have afflicted what should have been — and, thankfully, very much was — a momentous and uplifting day for the club and its embattled supporters.

Add in the fact that the Blues hadn’t won a match in August since beating today’s opponents, Brighton & Hove Albion, on the south coast four years ago, plus a measure of pressure to get the new era at Hill Dickinson Stadium off to a positive start and it was hard not to feel a touch of apprehension amid the undoubted excitement on the walk-up to the ground.

By 4pm all those doubts had been swept into the Mersey as David Moyes cajoled a stirring response from his charges and, with Jack Grealish playing a starring role in his own first step towards renewal and redemption, Jordan Pickford making two crucial interventions and Iliman Ndiaye supplying another entry into the Everton history books, the Toffees emerged victorious on their big day.

It wasn’t perfect by any means — it didn’t have to be; the result was paramount — and, in truth the match could have gone either way but there were flourishes to this display that augur well for this season and beyond, while any fears that it would take a while for Bramley-Moore Dock to feel like home so soon after the Blues’ departure from Goodison Park were quickly dispelled.

From the moment There She Goes, the song that we’ll look back on as the bridge between the old and the new, blasted through the ear-splitting speakers and was followed by Grand Old Team, the siren and Z-Cars, it all felt very “Everton”. As if the heart and soul of this famous old institution had been neatly lifted from Walton and transported intact to the north docks for the club to begin life in the third stadium it has built in this city.

Where blue pyro had filled the streets and sky around Goodison in May from the hands of supporters, today it was jettisoned spectacularly from the roof of Everton’s iconic new arena amid a thunderous roar from close to 50,000 Evertonians inside.

90-plus minutes of hugely encouraging football later, the second rendition of GOT that led into Spirit of the Blues accompanied celebration in the stands and a lap of of applause from Moyes and his players following a 2–0 victory that gets both 2025/26 and that potentially bright new era underway.

Much has been made of Everton’s protracted transfer dealings this summer and the lack, in particular, of more full-back cover to add depth in the right side of defence and emergency options on days like Monday and today when there are no natural players in the position on whom to call.

Vitalii Mykolenko was again ruled out with the groin injury he sustained against Roma and Adam Aznou, an absentee himself at Elland Road after rolling his ankle in training, had to be scrubbed from the list of substitutes after aggravating the problem in the warm-up.

That meant James Garner filling in at left-back again, with Tim Iroegbunam reprising his role as his deputy in central midfield while Thierno Barry was handed his full debut in place of Beto. Likewise Grealish who came in for Charly Alcaraz and Ndiaye switched flanks to the right.

The sight of the Senegalese skipping his way past three opponents, riding an illegal challenge from Carlos Baleba and putting a first shot on target early on was reassuring evidence that his impact wouldn’t be diminished at all by the change.

James Tarkowski, on the other hand and in stark contrast to his defensive partner Michael Keane, was less impressive as Brighton threatened to take hold of the game in the first half and ruin the occasion. The team skipper mis-judged a punt forward from Bart Verbruggen that allowed Kaoru Mitoma to steal in behind him, knock the ball back to wrong-foot the Toffees’ two retreating centre-halves and then rattle volley off the top of the crossbar from 12 yards out.

A minute later, the Seagulls’ impressive link-up play saw them build down their right where the ever-lively Yankuba Minteh shrugged Idrissa Gueye aside and centred for Danny Welbeck who seemed certain to score before he contrived to scoop his shot over the bar from right in front of Pickford’s goal.

Then, midway through the first period, the hosts made the visitors pay for their profligacy with a sweeping move of their own after Barry had been bundled over near the halfway line by Lewis Dunk and Ndiaye seized on the loose ball. A quick pass inside to Gueye then to Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall who helped it on to Grealish and the on-loan star did what he does so well — drove past his man to the byline, fired the ball across and there was Ndiaye to steer it over the line.

History made by the player to score the last goal at Goodison and the first at Hill Dickinson Stadium and following in the footsteps of Fred Geary who did the same either aside of Stanley Park in 1892. Cue another deafening Bramley-Moore roar.

It set the stage for a poignant and beautifully observed minute’s applause for Michael Jones, the Everton fan who died so tragically during the construction of the Stadium before Iroegbunam, looking night and day from the player that performed so poorly at Leeds, jinked his way into space for a left-footed shot from the edge of the box but fired a yard wide.

While not quite at their free-flowing best and without the injured Georginio Rutter, Brighton nevertheless remained a threat and Jan Paul van Hecke came within inches of wiping out the Blues’ lead when his long-range effort took a deflected off Grealish and thumped off the post seven minutes before the interval.

And when they couldn’t make inroads themselves, Tarkowski almost handed the Seagulls an equaliser on the stroke of half-time. Everton’s back line had recovered from Garner’s unfortunate slip when Yasin Ayari could only poke it to the defender but instead of belting it clear, Tarkowski turned back towards goal and handed the ball straight to Matt O’Riley with an awful back-pass. Thankfully, Pickford read the midfielder’s intentions as he tried to round the keeper and made a vital double save to preserve the lead.

Barry’s inclusion from the start had been a welcome but not automatic decision from Moyes based on Beto’s hugely disappointing showing at Leeds and while the young Frenchman will feel he should have done better with a couple of headers off set-piece opportunities, he exhibited some promising play and it was his lovely cushioned lay-off to Ndiaye of Tarkowski’s ball forward that paved the way for the second goal.

The Toffees’ No 10 prodded the 1-2 back to Barry who set off down the right touchline before cutting it back to Gueye. His ball out to the left for Grealish was held up long enough for Garner to arrive and unleash a smart first-time shot that arrowed inside Verbguggen’s near post and nestled in the goal to make it 2-0.

Pickford beat away a powerful drive from Ayari on the hour mark as Brighton searched for a way back into the contest but the potential turning point came in the 75th minute when Mitoma curled a cross in with the outside of his boot that fell to Minteh on the other side of the box. His attempted cross was blocked by Dewsbury-Hall at point-blank range but unfairly with his arm according to referee Stuart Attwell and, in turn, the Video Assistant Referee.

The official line was that the Everton man had used his hands to make his body bigger when, in actual fact, he had raised it to protect his face but, the handball rule being what it now is, a reversal of the decision was never likely. Instead, Welbeck stepped up to try and halve the visitors’ deficit but, after taking an age to take the penalty, he ended up rolling a weak kick to Pickford’s left and the England man made a comfortable stop.

From then on, it Everton who should have added to the scoreline. Dewsbury-Hall opted for selflessness when a yawning gap in Brighton’s defence opened up and he opted for a pass to Dwight McNeil and the substitute could only shoot into the side-netting.

Beto, on for Barry, went close himself but could only hook a shot on the turn high and wide while McNeil mis-hit another great chance in front of goal.

Instead of folding and giving up another of those 2-0 leads that proved so vulnerable last season, Everton held on and there was time for the electric Grealish to milk the applause when he eventually acquiesced to being taken off in injury time with the three points safely in the bag.

133 years to the day after Goodison Park was officially opened, Everton marked another seismic day in their history with a well-earned victory. They rode their luck at times and were fortunate to be ahead at the halfway stage but, by the end, had run out worthy winners.

In Grealish, the club have secured, for a season at least, a genuinely elite footballer who seems thrilled to be here and who has become an instant hero. With the mesmeric Ndiaye already established in a similar position of adulation, Dewsbury-Hall providing thrust and purpose in attacking midfield and, hopefully, some more depth to be added before the transfer deadline, this first season on the banks of the river could be a memorable one for all the right reasons.



Reader Responses

Selected thoughts from readers
Certain off-topic comments may be removed to keep the discussion on track

1  Kieran Fitzgerald
25/08/2025    07:42:39

The word of the day for me was relief. Relief for the win, despite the chances we gave them, relief that Grealish did so well, given the profile of his signing, relief that Ndiaye scored as it means we have a second quality player contributing, relief that the new stadium was what we hoped it would be.

The stadium itself was the biggest thing for me. From reading forums and match reports, it rocked. There was also no reported issues with crowds leaving the narrow bridge.

Allnin all a good day.

2  Paul Tran
25/08/2025    07:50:44

Great to see a player in an Everton shirt who keeps and uses the ball, while providing time and space for other players. Even better to see some stickability when it got tough. A good, promising start.

3  Mike Owen
25/08/2025    09:00:40

It's a lovely, sunny morning on Merseyside. I'm not sure whether that's due to the meteorological conditions or the fact that Everton won, playing some nice football in the process.

Though perhaps we missed a chant yesterday: Can we play you every August?

4  Michael Fox
25/08/2025    09:41:52

I keep hearing that Welbeck's penalty was a bad one, but praise has to be given to Picks because he made it be that bad. On the run up Picks started to move to the left before the ball was kocked therefore giving Welbeck the "OH SHIT" moment that made him second guess and fluff his lines. So a bit more credit should go to Picks.

5  Darren Hind
25/08/2025    10:18:33

You capture the day perfectly Lyndon. Worth the wait. Its so refreshing to read an article from an Evertonian who understands what he is watching.

Before we celebrate the positives. I feel there are a couple of negatives which we need to address. Tarkowski being the primary one. He didnt get away with these errors early last season when we were repeatedly punished and found ourselves floundering near the bottom and he wont continue to get away with them this season. He didnt just make a couple of errors. He handed Brighton two gilt edged chances which could, and lets face it, should, have seen Brighton go in at HT in front. Then we see Seamus warming up when O'Brien went down. My heart sank. Great servants they may have been, but I cant escape the feeling that by keeping them around, Moyes risks damaging the affection in which both men are held by the fan base. Not until they are sitting in the stands with the rest of us can we relax in the knowledge that we are heading in the right direction IMO.

So. The positives. What a great day. The weather permitted me to invite a "few" blue brothers around for a pre-match bevy. before I knew it, we had a garden full of Fanatical Blues. The usually gobby RS neighbours were bemused. They got a first hand look at what your actual match goer looks like.

A short stroll down boundary and we were sampling the carnival atmosphere. The stadium is magnificent. There were periods when the noise levels dropped, but I give Brighton credit for that. They do keep the ball well, but when we were able to wrest control from them, the noise was deafening. Charlie Danced. Tim slalomed and Jack simply strutted. Arrogance in a blue shirt...Bliss.

Keane was hitting some beautiful balls. Pickford was Brilliant. The tackling machine tackled....Then he tackled some more. Which is what you need to do against this very impressive Brighton team.

Some lovely flashes of individual skill rather than a dominant team display, but I don't think either Barry or Beto are footballers and I thought DH was trying a little too hard. That said; I would like to think that when the individual skills we have acquired will start to manifest themselves into dominant team displays allowing us to see the best of Dewsbury-Hall whilst ensuring The strikers will get enough chances to prove you don't have to be a great footballer to score goals.

Finally; I'm really warming to Garner. He was given a torrid time by a fast, powerful winger for long periods during the game, but despite being played hopelessly out of place. He stuck to his task manfully and eventually got on top of his man. What a strike too. My MOTM

6  Paul Conway
25/08/2025    10:28:15

Michael Fox 4

Yeah!
And I keep hearing of Mitoma’s unlucky Volley!
but, Did anyone else see, that he controlled ( check replay!) the ball in the air with his hand?

I suppose,with the dire refereeing, had it gone in, the ref ( without VAR),would have accorded it, just for the effort and more so to punish us!
Our new Stadium definitely shone some good Luck on us, apart from the outstanding goals we scored.
More of the same please.

7  Paul Conway
25/08/2025    12:25:54

Darren Hind 5

nail on the Head, with your perspective on all the Players, that you mentioned.

I was disappointed to see that Barry was outran to the Ball.
I thought when I saw him first, with his build, that he would be a lot more speedy.

The three substitutes, Beto, Alcarez, and McNeil that came on were uninspiring.
Taking McNeils injury into account, I Feel that all three have somewhat Stagnated, since last Season.

8  Dave White
25/08/2025    12:27:56

Thank you Paul! I immediately noticed Mitoma’s use of his hand in the replay, but no one else made any mention of it so I was wondering if I was seeing things!

I just want to give a shout to Tim Iroegbunam who I thought had his best game in an Everton shirt. I hope his injury isn’t too bad as it would be cruel for him to have miss out after such an assured performance.

Also to Michael Keane, seeing him spray those pinpoint cross field passes suggests that his confidence is up. And I believe a confident Keane still has a lot to offer.

The score would’ve been very different without Brighton’s profligacy, but I say fuck it…we put the ball in the net and they didn’t! 💙

9  John Raftery
25/08/2025    13:54:32

Dave (8) You beat me to it regarding Tim Iroegbunam. I thought yesterday he gave his best performance as a driving force in midfield. He has many of the attributes of a Patrick Vieira; tackling ability, physically powerful, skilful with the ball and tenacious. He is still learning his trade. Obviously he needs to grow out of the impetuosity which has earned him two yellow cards for halfway line tackles in the first two games of the season. I really hope the maturity which comes with experience will enable him to develop into the intelligent, genuine box to box midfielder we need.

In regard to Tim’s injury yesterday, it appeared from my seat in the Lower North Stand that he was suffering from cramp rather than a strain. Even if it is only cramp it may make sense to rest him on Wednesday, allowing Harrison Armstrong to step into the lineup.

Lyndon mentions the ear splitting speakers. The noise was slightly less pronounced than we used to suffer in the Park End but mates who previously sat in the Bullens Road or the Street End say it is much louder than they were accustomed to.

Lyndon, I think I am correct in saying this was your first visit to the stadium. Aside from the game itself, I would be interested to know, perhaps in the next podcast, what you made of the whole experience pre and post match, what you thought of our new home and how it compares with other stadia you have been to.

10  Andy M
25/08/2025    15:01:05

Great day, nice write up, and some good comments.

From the start Jack showed his composure and ball control, he teases players to try and take the ball off him, and he makes such good use of it when he plays it out from his velcro boots, two assists, and so nice to watch.

Illy moved comfortably to the right and contributed as always, so pleased we scored the first goal, and at both ends too.

The pen save and clean sheet were icing on a cake that Brighton could have eaten first half, but the day was ours, and will live in the memory.

11  Michael Fox
25/08/2025    19:02:32

Yea Paul
I seen it, I was screaming at the telly but the stupid ref just ignored me.

12  Frank Sheppard
26/08/2025    08:13:14

In the context of the result, rather than the splendid occasion, it was a nervous watch for most of the game. Luck was with us thankfully, and it ended up as a game with LOTS of positives. A happy momentous day.

13  Si Shaw
26/08/2025    12:17:42

As Frank says we rode our luck at times but two cracking goals and some stand out individual performances….I thought Grealish and Gana had particularly fine games.

14  Lyndon Lloyd
26/08/2025    15:22:36

John (9), I will do that on the next podcast next week when I'll have had time to fully digest what was a brilliant day.

It was my first to HDS visit, yes. I think even were I based in the UK, I might have resisted the temptation to go to one of the test events because I would have wanted to experience it for the first time on a day that meant something but I didn't have a choice really.

Suffice to say, it more than met my expectations and erased any fears it was all hype.

15  Peter Mills
26/08/2025    22:07:04

I have watched the construction of the stadium with keen interest and great expectations.

My visits for two test events worried me, it just didn’t feel right. Having been going to Goodison since 1963, I felt I would not adapt to the new surroundings, the place felt soulless.

I was bowled over by it on Sunday. It’s magnificent.

16  kevin molloy
27/08/2025    13:06:33

the first goal was of a high quality. Brighton were in trouble the moment Barry reversed the ball superbly into Ndiaye's path, even though it was ten seconds before the ball hit the net. also the weight DH put on the ball to Grealish, perfect. And Grealish's ability to get the cross in, most times that ball gets blocked, but his ability to shift the ball from his right foot to the left in one instant made it very difficult for the defender. And the finish, not easy, that was a fizzing ball.


Add Your Thoughts

Only registered users of Evertonia can participate in discussions.

» Log in now

Or Join as Evertonia Member — it takes just a few minutes and will allow you to post your thoughts on artices across the site.