Everton lose the plot but scrape a point against Sunderland
Sunderland 1 – 1 Everton
The Blues allowed Thierno Barry's disappointing miss to be the turning point in the game and could count themselves lucky not to have become the Black Cats' latest comeback victims
For 28 minutes at the Stadium of Light this evening, it looked very much as though Everton had decided it was high time they got their season back on track. The first few games of the campaign had hinted at what they could be this term but if some erratic performances and then back-to-back defeats to Manchester City and Tottenham had deflated the spirits, here was the moment to lift them again.
The Blues were firmly in the driving seat and were looking good value for the kind of impressive away wins they ground out at Crystal Palace and Newcastle last term when David Moyes steered the club away from trouble on the back of top-eight calibre form.
Iliman Ndiaye had put Everton ahead with another irresistible piece of individual magic, Jack Grealish had struck the post and Thierno Barry missed the kind of sitter that will haunt his dreams.
And then, inexplicably, it all nearly evaporated as the Toffees lapsed into the same, tired version of themselves that has been a feature of the team for what feels like an eternity. The faces on the pitch change but the mental fragility, sloppy ball retention and suspect game management — on the pitch and from the touchline — remain the same.
By the end, the manager and his players were happy to have escaped the northeast with a point but it was a performance, riddled as it was with mistakes, uncertainty and baffling substitutions, that will have further alarmed supporters. And it was a result that heaps huge pressure on next weekend’s game against Fulham at Bramley-Moore Dock.
Conversation has for weeks centred around the full-back and centre-forward positions but it was the latter that came painfully to the fore as Barry, handed only his fourth league start since his £27m summer move from Villarreal, passed up the best chance he has had yet to finally grab his first goal for the club.
Later earning another immature booking, he sealed his fate as a premature substitution early in the second half — annoyingly, he had not played at all badly otherwise — but his latest misfire was made worse by a wholly ineffective display by his replacement, Beto, over the remainder of the piece. Moyes has hinted at trying other options; such experimentation in many areas of the side can’t come quickly enough.
Everton showed smatterings of it against Brighton and a good deal more at Wolves in August but on the whole they have struggled for fluidity and thrust for most of the season so far. Tonight, however, there was a degree of enterprise and purpose about them for the first third of the game that should have seen them push on to grab all three points.
Barry’s knockdown almost straight from kick-off fell invitingly to James Garner who fizzed a left-foot shot inches wide of the post from 20-odd yards out and at the end of a promising counter-attack involving Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall and Grealish a few minutes later, Barry had an effort charged down inside the box.
The breakthrough came for the visitors in the 15th minute, however, when Ndiaye took centre-stage in the way only he can. Barry had stood firm with him against Noah Sidiki, whose claims for a foul were waved off by referee Thomas Bramall, and Ndiaye skipped away from touchline with the ball, jinked past three red-and-white shirts on the edge of the penalty area and then curled a beautiful shot inside the far post.
It was a stunning goal and Grealish almost doubled the advantage seven minutes later with a rare but welcome effort of his own from the edge of the box but it skidded off the base of the upright.

Six minutes after that, Barry’s moment arrived with a sumptuous delivery from the left by Grealish that the Frenchman met at the far post as it sailed over the last defender’s head but from barely a couple of yards out he despatched the ball over the crossbar.
With it went all of Everton’s composure and self-belief and the moment seemed to galvanise a Sunderland team who have been the surprise package of the season so far. They came into the weekend riding high in the top four with a quarter of the season gone but while the visitors this evening had taken some air out of their balloon with a strong start, the Black Cats quickly began to exhibit the attitude that has seen them salvage more points from losing positions than any other in the top flight to this point.
Régis Le Bris’ men dominated the final 15 or so minutes of the first half enjoying well over 80% of the ball and after Lutsharel Geertruida had volleyed narrowly over from 20 yards, it took a couple of crucial interventions from Michael Keane to send the Toffees into half-time with their lead intact.
First he came across superbly to snuff out a chance for Wilson Isidor and then he smuggled the ball away from his goal line after Dan Ballard had come crashing into the six yard box trying to force the ball home.
It was all undone, though, within 43 seconds of the restart when Sunderland equalised. No one in a black shirt reacted quickly enough to a loose ball in their box and when it was laid back to Granit Xhaka, the Swiss drilled a low shot that James Tarkowski diverted past his own goalkeeper with an out-stretched boot.
And three minutes later, the contest was almost flipped on its head by another deflected shot. This time it was Enzo Le Fée whose speculative drive hit a team-mate and looked to be bouncing beyond Jordan Pickford before the Washington-born keeper stuck out a glove and pawed it away.
At that point, it felt as though there was only going to be one winner if Everton couldn’t find their feet and re-establish the control they had enjoyed for the first half hour. Moyes’s first response was to hook Barry, a harsh move no doubt rationalised by the yellow card he’d picked up in the first period and throw on Beto.
But when the Portuguese wasn’t watching aimless punts from his goalkeeper drift over his head to the grateful arms of Robin Roefs in the opposition goal, he failed to make any mark on the game.
More impacting was the loss of Ndiaye to injury just past the hour mark but instead of the pace and directness of Tyler Dibling or the driving power of Merlin Röhl, Moyes made the bizarre decision to introduce Dwight McNeil. The former Burnley man’s only other minutes thus far had come against Brighton, Wolves in the cup and Manchester City and he looked well off the pace in all of them. Tonight was no different.
Meanwhile, the home side huffed and puffed in search of the goal that would take them back to second in the table. Wilson Isidor might have delivered it with 13 minutes left but badly miscued Nordi Mukiele’s cross while Mukiele himself could have done better with Xhaka’s cross but he planted his header well over the crossbar.
For all the frustration around their performance for the preceding hour, though, it was Everton who had the chance to pinch the points right at the end after Vitalii Mykolenko had stung Roefs’ palms with a rasping effort from outside the area. (Damningly, that was the first shot the Blues had had in goal since Barry’s miss.)
Everton cleared a corner at one end and counter-attacked with Grealish who pinged a perfect ball for recent substitute Charly Alcaraz to race into a two-on-one situation with Idrissa Gueye but the Argentine was too slow in deed and thought and allowed himself to be crowded out before he could either shoot or lay it off to his team-mate.
If the disappointing but explainable results against and City and Spurs had dropped Everton back into the bottom half of the table, this was the chance to pull themselves to within three points of the European places.
In view of Sunderland’s form, a draw might have been deemed respectable before kick-off but you can’t escape the notion that Everton surrendered a position of dominance that would otherwise have delivered the win.
Now next weekend’s game is fraught with the danger that the anxiety of the last few years of relegation battles will come flooding back if things don’t go the Toffees’s way.
Reader Responses
Selected thoughts from readers04/11/2025 07:18:57
We could have easily been 3 up after 30 minutes And well worth worth it.
The Decision to replace Ndiaye with McNeil and not give our forty million kitty -busting Summer signing a Run-out, is becoming curiouser and curiouser!
Not hooking the phantom KDH earlier was also strange… if not bizarre !
I think along with Ndiaye and Jack, he has become a confirmed favourite to Start … even after consecutive ineffective performances.
I mean, how unready does Dibling have to be?
Tarkowsky has now cemented his liability status, that Keane once was and seems to be doing a better Job at it!
Its not a good feeling for myself and Im sure for my fellow Blues, to be posting negative remarks, but there is no Sugarcoating it.. is there?
Im sure Moyes told them to slow it down After the half hour mark.
To be Frank about it… or even Earnest!… His in game management has become dreadful and frustrating.
I bet he was glad to get back to his Cardie and slippers, along with his undeserved Cup of Coco!
Probably the best decision he made tonight, was to ask the Wee Hen for an extra Blanky!
04/11/2025 08:34:09
After the BIG MISS, we seemed to morph into rubbish, miracle we only conceded one 2nd half.
Keane was MOTM again, thats probably been the case most of the last 4 or 5 games.
Such a disappointment as we were fantastic for 25 minutes.
Another issue is how subs can influence and change a game, for the better, unfortunately 3 of ours, McNeil, Beto and Alcaraz had a nightmare.
04/11/2025 08:46:18
Not Moyes' finest hour. An uninspiring, conservative team selection that made me eat my words for 30 minutes, followed by a reminder of why I was concerned before the game.
The midfield was crying out for a solid, steady presence. Rohl is 'impressive' in training but stayed on the bench. The attack was crying out for a bit of invention. Again, apparently Dibling 'impresses' in training, but again, stayed on the bench. For McNeil.
Barry missed a sitter again, but tell me, what kind of a manager spends that money on a striker and hooks him early every game he picks him? Tell him he's getting a six game run as a starter and give him a proper chance.
Regarding Dibling, I know two Saints fans. Both tell me that Dibling is a quiet lad off the pitch, looks languid when he's on the pitch, but is at his best when he gets the ball early so he has space to go at players.
Put O'Brien at centre half for Tarks so we move 10 yards up the pitch. Garner or Coleman at full back. Rohl in the middle. Barry up front. Alcaraz behind him to move the ball forwards more quickly.
It strikes me that Moyes is picking players based on what he wants them to be like rather than their actual strengths.
He has to do better.
04/11/2025 11:03:49
How long can this go on for?
Sunderland were finished, all at sea, and completely lost there nerve, there was no way back even the ref seemed to be on our side.
Then Moyes signals from the sideline slow it down! Slow it down at half hour, you coward Moyes! Youre a disgrace! Get out of this club you are not wanted!
He brings McNeil on ahead of Dibling? What does that signal to everyone? McNeil as we know is done, hasnt played in god knows how long, he obviously doesnt like Dibling.
Nothing will change why Moyes is here, hes clueless, old and out of date, for him mid table is a success. Friedkin please pull the trigger before we we fall any deeper.
04/11/2025 11:09:41
the McNeil sub was jaw dropping. Our star signing was not trusted for 20 minutes against a desperately poor Sunderland team, instead Moyes preferred a player he clearly isn't interested in, and in fact played him out of position. We've spent £40m for a right winger, and then play a left winger who's on the way out in his place. WTAF. So that's £70m (when you include Barry) of players Moyes ins't sure about. And when you think Rohl and Aznou haven't started a game, you can say we've spent a hundred million pounds, and the manager doesn't think any of them can get into that shitshow of a team.
04/11/2025 11:59:02
I have to agree with Harry and Kevin.
Its absolutely lamentable.
McNeil had a stinker in his last outing and he wasnt great playing for the u21s.
Hes an extremely limited one footed player, who in my opinion lacks Premier League quality.
Paul 4
I would prefer Garner to keep his current position, as he is creative and knows how to Shoot.
Seamus isnt the player he was. Hes lost pace and could be prone to injury, if he was to bust a gut for us. The leg Break didnt help either.
Besides, if we have Seamus, Tarkowsky and Keane on the same Park, thats nigh on one hundred collective years of very limited Talent.
that wouldnt be a sign of a « work in progress » to me.. more like regression.
We seem to have a knack over the years of unearthing players who Flatter to deceive and we become terribly reliant upon.
We had players like Mirallas and Dulofeu and now we have KDH and Alcaraz.
Not many of our players can put in consistent 7/10 performances.
Its rare that we have the whole team Marauding.. we are consistently lacking.
I feel that that transfer window and the inability to adress urgency in defence and attack, notwithstanding our outlay on unprepared personnel, has seriously stunted our « Progress » and could well have knocked us back a tad.
I know its not time to panic, but there are teams below us, who could well hit form and surprise us.
These days a mere 4 or, 5 points could seperate several teams.
04/11/2025 12:26:40
We played well for half an hour before losing control of the game. In some ways that has been the story of the season so far. The team seems unable to put a full 90+7 minutes performance together. Even the performance in the 3-2 win at Wolves was patchy with periods of dominance followed by lapses.
Why did we lose control after the opening half hour? I dont subscribe to the notion Moyes instructed his players to drop deeper. I think Xhaka and Sadiki simply got stuck into our midfield and asserted themselves having been totally outplayed previously.
Our response lacked physicality as well as belief. It is noticeable that once we lose midfield control Dewsbury-Hall might as well not be on the pitch. He is hopeless fighting for the punts out of defence and is heavily dependent on having players around him, especially Grealish, to make themselves available for a pass. Put simply, he looks a capable player in a team playing well but a liability in a team struggling for possession.
The McNeil substitution left everyone in the away section dumbfounded. The player seemed hell bent on proving his many doubters correct, giving away possession cheaply and running into hopeless dead ends. The away fans were understandably calling for Alcaraz well before Moyes brought him on. That change should have been made twenty minutes earlier. Likewise Iroegbunam, who added much needed physicality in the closing stages when we finally managed to break forward with some intent. That was too little too late but in truth we were mightily relieved to escape with a point after a very poor second half performance when, with better finishing on their part, Sunderland might well have recorded another win.
04/11/2025 12:43:48
What is it with Everton that just as we start to hope that we have turned a corner and things are looking brighter, we frustratingly revert to form? Is there any Evertonian who watched that match last night and have followed the Blues for any length of time who didn't know that we would regret the squandered chances?
The massively frustrating thing for me is that, at times, we look a decent team. Ndiaye, Grealish, Garner, Dewsbury-Hall are good players. Pickford is one of the best keepers there is. It's very early days but perhaps Roehl can fill the Gueye boots (who looks like age has caught up with him, to me). When Branthwaite is fit then we have the nucleus of a good team. Keane has done well, this season. However, supporting Everton is like a game of whack-a-rat. Just as you solve one issue, things that were working then go to pieces. We never seem to have a solid defence, a competent goalkeeper, a potent attack and some creativity in midfield all at the same time.
This season, my heart is in my mouth every time Tarkowski receives the ball or a player attacks him. I'm getting sick of him smiling to the referee or his teammates because he's either committed a stupid foul or made a ricket. The much-derided Keane has been our best defender this season by a country mile.
McNeill gave one of the worst performances from a substitute that I can remember. He seemed to lose possession every single time he got it. His set piece delivery was atrocious as well. Just what exactly does the two-arm signal mean? My interpretation of it is "I'm going to put it in the 'keepers hands now".
I'd have taken a point before the game but you just knew that when we didn't go 2-0 up then we'd concede. It doesn't matter who the manager is; we never seem to be able to string two good halves of football together. The only surprise to me was that I thought Sunderland were nailed on for a penalty at some point last night.
Dewsbury-Hall needs to start shooting as well. He gets in good positions but chooses to feed it out wide too often for me. When we shot, we looked dangerous but the only shots I remember other than the goal were from Garner, Grealish and Mykolenko (I'm discounting Barry's miss as that hardly constitutes a shot; it came off his shin). We constantly get in good positions but then try and knock it out wide, invariably resulting in a player being in less-threatening position. One of my other pet hates is that our players never seem to have an awareness of what's around them. Very often, I'm watching thinking "do NOT lose the ball there" because we have no cover whatsoever. Sometimes we can have the ball in their half and you know that if we get caught out, Pickford will be fishing it out of his net.
Moyes needs to find a way to get goals from this team or this season is going to derail in the way it did under Benitez and Dyche.
04/11/2025 14:46:14
Whoever was responsible for signing Barry, for quite a bit of money, wants shooting. He is nowhere near being ready for the Prem League (as is Beto by the way) and should be sent immediately to the U21's not to emerge from there until he shows some semblance of being able to hold his own as a centre forward in the Prem League.
I'm not sure if that will happen though but at least we maybe can find out, without damaging our first team, if he is going to be any good to us. I feel sorry for the boy as it is not his fault he came here as a centre forward, to all intents and purpose, replace Beto. He is even less a Prem League CF than Beto.
One last thought. When I saw the team and subs announcement I was please as I thought Moyes was going to do the right thing and, if things weren't going to plan he was going to use the strong looking bench to change things around. Wrong. He did his usual Moyes thing and went for the "we are not going to get beat if I can help it mode" at the first opportunity.
I am worried now about the rest of the season if we continue as we have shown in the early season with the players we have played to date.
Some things never change do they.
04/11/2025 15:10:53
John Raferty,
Lets say for arguments sake he didnt say the words “slow down” from the sidelines although I saw it as did others.
What does hes actions and approach tell us?
He has players capable of making a difference and possibly changing the flow of the game in our favour like Dibling, Rohl etc but opts for McNeil?
Not only that but on the right side? Sorry no excuses for it.
He was trying to hang on and get a point, negative tactics that invariably will cost us points.
04/11/2025 19:05:38
Ive just learned the reason why Moyes chose McNeil over Dibling,
Apparently, according to Moyes, McNiel was tearing it up in training.
So, that can only be be construed as.. we have an absolute Duff, that is better than our 40 million potential star player.
Now, please feel free to correct me if Im on the wrong piste, but, have we been had?
05/11/2025 15:48:52
Paul @12. Not answering you directly but I do feel that we made some real mistakes during our summer business and those responsible, including Moyes if applicable, should be held to account if proven.
I'm not sure about Dibling. From the little that we have seen him I would put him into the 'not ready' category and therefore we overspent in a big way. Not sure about Dewsbury-Hall either but the big mistakes in my eyes was Barry. Never in a month of Sundays was he scouted properly and we paid well over the odds for what we got.
If you look, with the benefit of hindsight of course, at our incomings how many are now in the team week in week out. The fact that the answer is very few is revealing. It was poor recruitment or Moyes is at fault. I don't know which but our results tell us that somthing is wrong. Not sure about Grealish either. Wonderfull player but doesn't he slow things down when a fast break is called for?
I may be barking up the wrong tree of course but they are my thoughts on why were are in a pickle at the moment.
05/11/2025 22:57:17
Peter @ 13
The reason I asked « have we been Had ? », in my post @ 12, ( although, I admit that you werent referring to that particular post), is for the following reason:
Way Back in 2016, we signed a certain Oumar Niasse.
It took what seemed like ages Before we saw him take to the field.
To finally see him in Royal Blue, we were more than curious, of what he would offer and thought at the same time, that HE would be chomping at the Bit!
The excuse was, he had a hand injury !.. a very strange injury, that could impede anyone from using their feet.
There were rumours at the time, that Joe Royle had said that he was « Shit » in training !
Now, I dont know how true those rumours were, but, once he took to the field, he showed all the attributes of someone who played nowhere above non-league football.
The problem was, that like all Everton supporters, we want to get behind and Support all our players, with passion, but for the hapless Oumar, he provoked Ridicule from members of the Fanbase, after some very unconvincing performances.
Oddly enough, in hindsight, his efforts were no worse than what is on display, from our current Charges !
So, has Dibling been so bad in training, that McNiel, (who has been complete gash!), gets the nod before him!
I personally find this suspicious and alarming.
06/11/2025 10:12:16
Agreed Paul. My take on it is that we should look at our recruitment with suspicion. My view is that this summers efforts have been less than helpful to our cause and that Moyes, rightly or wrongly is equally unimpressed. In other words there is something wrong with what we are doing. Do you agree?
06/11/2025 11:46:33
Peter @ 15
One hundred per cent !
Moyes knew he was taking over a Broken Train set when he was recruited.
He knew he would have to delve and dabble in the Summer Transfer Market, albeit with limited funds.
Although he did spend over 100m …unwisely, it seems.
He had several months to study
his potential targets, so he wasnt under pressure.
I keep on about his out dated number Nine strategy and his insistence on the same game plan.
He is going Down the Dyche Road.
His pressers are becoming nauseating and once the mumerings of discontent have started, there can only be one outcome.
We, as fantasy managers have already seen the limitations of the personnel at our disposal.
I only hope that us, as fans, do not have to suffer another long drawn out tooth- pulling saga!
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04/11/2025 07:18:33
Yep
Anxiety starting to creep in both on and off the pitch. It just feels so unnecessary