A run of just one win in eight in all competitions in a season that looked early on as though it might over-deliver in terms of what was expected at the end of the last one had put Everton’s fanbase in the doldrums.

On the face of it, the 1-1 draw at Sunderland last Monday represented a decent enough point on the road against a side that had started their campaign in surprisingly impressive fashion, but the context of that game — the Blues playing as well for the first half hour as they had since August before falling away in galling fashion and registering just one more shot on goal — was what made it so disappointing.

Coming on the back of frustrating home draws against Aston Villa and West Ham and then defeats to Liverpool, Manchester City and Tottenham, it dumped Everton back into 14th place and seemingly set the tone for more mid-table grind tinged with the fear that things could get dicey if this edition of the Premier League continues to be so competitive from first to 19th place. (Sorry, Wolves!)

Given that we’re a little over a quarter of the way done, the visit of Fulham this weekend wasn’t quite “must win” in that sense but it was massively important in terms of psychology. Sitting two points above the relegation zone heading into the final international break of the calendar year would have felt an awful lot worse than being just three shy of the European places.

How uplifting it was then to see David Moyes’s men not only serve up a commendable all-round performance, their most complete of 2025/26 so far, but put the ball in the net five times and register a welcomely comfortable victory over the Cottagers, the kind that you'd hope will become routine. Perhaps only a more thorough inquest from VAR Stuart Attwell into the Toffees’ third disallowed goal of the day and a first legitimate strike for Thierno Barry would have made a good day almost perfect. But we’ll take the victory.

Barry was rightly handed another chance to break his Everton duck after being hooked for Beto after 55 minutes at the Stadium of Light five days ago and though he did bulge the net, his celebrations were cut short by the first of three offside calls from linesmen whose arms seemed to be spring-loaded at times.

His wait to get off the mark goes on and though he was visibly gutted to be substituted in the 78th minute, he left the Hill Dickinson Stadium pitch to warm applause from the faithful following his best outing yet since arriving from Villarreal over the summer.

By that stage, Everton were a goal to the good thanks to Idrissa Gueye’s close-range strike and three minutes later Michael Keane scored the killer second as the hosts markedly improved the mood on the Blue side of Merseyside for the time being.

Until 2020, Everton at home to Fulham was as lopsided as it gets, with the Blues winning 22 straight before the Covid season signalled a shift in the West London club’s favour that saw them win two and draw one of the next three… although it took a stoppage-time equaliser from Beto last term to deny them the hat-trick.

If Marco Silva’s team travelled north hoping to spark their own campaign after an underwhelming start, they found an opposition determined to get back to winning ways at Bramley-Moore Dock and make amends for letting two points slip in the northeast last time out.

The key was starting very much on the front foot with the kind of tempo that was often lacking against Villa and the Hammers and then maintaining it for most of the 90 minutes. Very much helping in that regard were Moyes’s decision to switch the superbly versatile James Garner to right-back on the one hand and hugely improved performances from Gueye and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in midfield on the other.

The latter drew particular criticism for the manner in which his personal display fell off a cliff against the Black Cats but this afternoon he was excellent on both sides of the ball, all probing passes, slick interchanges and tenacious ball retrieval. He should have been rewarded with his second goal for the club early in the second half but, like James Tarkowski, he would be frustrated by an offside flag.

If his last couple of starts by the Mersey suggested Barry was several levels below Premier League readiness, he seemed to be determined today to prove otherwise. He was in the thick of things early on, just failing to get in ahead of Calvin Bassey to reach a Dewsbury-Hall cross in the second minute and powering a header over shortly afterwards from Iliman Ndiaye’s whipped cross.

And it was the Frenchman’s delightful chest off to KDH that led to the latter being bundled over by Saša Lukić and Bernd Leno having to dive to his right and parry away Garner’s accurate 30-yard drive from the resulting free-kick.

10 minutes before half-time, however, after Fulham’s only genuine forays around the Everton box had yielded an Alex Iwobi header from distance and a similarly tame effort by Raul Jimenez, the Blues thought they had broken the deadlock.

A nice move that saw Pickford pick Jack Grealish out with a pin-point ball, the on-loan winger feed Dewsbury-Hall inside who found Gueye in turn on the overlap down the opposite flank ended with Barry converting from close range. Unfortunately, Ndiaye had crept beyond Bassey as the ball came across and the goal was immediately chalked off.

Then, after Lukić had benefited from referee Andy Madley’s lenience when he tripped Dewsbury-Hall but escaped a second yellow, Everton had the ball in the net again. This time it was Tarkowski volleying home in similar fashion to his previous goal, against Liverpool in that famous last Goodison derby, after Leno had stopped Keane’s header but the former centre-half had been in an offside position when he won the original ball from Grealish’s curling cross.

The opening goal would come before the interval, though, and Tarkowski was involved again. Tim Iroegbunam, making the most of his opportunity in midfield with a solid outing, did well to keep the ball in the Fulham box and lay it off to Vitalii Mykolenko. His clipped delivery was met by Tarkowski but when his header came back off the crossbar, Iroegbunam’s scuffed effort on the turn was blocked by Joachim Andersen before Gueye arrived to poke it home from close range.

Fulham’s best spell of the game came straight after the restart for the second period after Josh King had been introduced for Lukić. It was the young forward who was played in behind and Pickford had to beat away his dangerous cross from the left and King again who drove into space and played in Harry Wilson a minute later. Thankfully, after the former red cut inside and pulled the trigger, his heavily deflected looped onto the roof of the net.

With 52 minutes gone, Everton had the ball in the net for the fourth time on the day, and this time it was Dewsbury-Hall wheeling away initially in delight after driving a shot through a crowded box and into the far side of the goal. This time, the rationale for the decision was far more contentious and worthy of more than the cursory glance the VAR appeared to give the incident where Barry, standing in an offside position, was deemed to be interfering with play by waving a leg in the direction of the ball but without making any contact.

It was very nearly a costly decision for Everton as Rodrigo Muniz, on for Jimenez for what ended up being just 17 minutes before he himself was forced off, was the recipient of more positive play by King but Pickford was equal to his shot from the angle, sticking out a foot to divert the ball to safety.

Ndiaye was in the right place to block from Kevin at the back post before the Toffeeman re-established control and eventually got their second goal with nine minutes left of the regulation 90 after Gueye had missed with a left-footer and Dewsbury-Hall had ended another lovely move with a rising shot that was always clearing the crossbar.

Merlin Röhl, Moyes’s choice to replace Iroegbunam after the former Aston Villa man had picked up a silly yellow card earlier in the half, won a corner on the right which was swung in by Dewsbury-Hall. The delivery was perfect for Keane who rose and ended up steering it over Leno and just under the bar with his shoulder.

Adama Traoré threatened to make a game of it quickly afterwards but Pickford got both gloves to his deflected drive and pushed it away while Andersen almost slid the ball into his own net at the other end late on as Grealish curled a dangerous ball in behind the visitors’ defence.

There is no question that this was Everton’s day. Afterwards, Silva bemoaned the fact that his side had really only performed for 20 minutes after half-time whereas Moyes could be well pleased with both the consistency his men showed over the 90-odd minutes and a first clean sheet since the goalless draw with Villa in mid-September.

The win sends the Blues into the two-week hiatus just outside the top half and, hopefully, in a more confident frame of mind ahead of a tricky run of games that include trips to Old Trafford and Bournemouth and home games against Newcastle and former boss Sean Dyche’s Nottingham Forest.



Reader Responses

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

1  Benjamin Dyke
09/11/2025    10:03:25

Thanks for the match report and that its up so quickly.

I noticed about 4 or 5 missing words to be a pedant!

Keane's goal was also shouldered not headed in, but well done Keane for his timely return to form. He's outshining Tarks so far this season!

2  Paul Tran
09/11/2025    11:41:55

Yes, a welcome routine win. Good to see us take the initiative straightaway against a team more average than us. Good to see us score five on a day when Grealish & Ndaiye weren't at the heart of things. Also good to see Moyes pick a more balanced team. I would have liked to hsve seen Dibling on for the visibly tiring Ndaiye once we were 2-0 up.

All in all, a good performance.

3  Peter Hodgson
09/11/2025    12:27:28

Comparing the Sunderland game with yesterday is really the only thing to do. In the Sunderland game we dominates for half an hout or so an were rewarded with the lead. After that they stepped up a gear and we relaxed. That was where is we went wrong. Yesterday was different and we kept going at a relativley high intentensity. It was good to see and we were rewarded with the points.

Moyes probably realised that he had to do something to get a better performance out of the team or his neck could have been on the line. He managed it and we all should be happy with the performance and look to see that intensity maintained going forward because that will provide reasonable results for the remainder of the season.

Yes there willl be hiccups. It happens to every team. But the standard has been set now and it is now up to everyone to find a way of maintaining it.

One last word. It was good to see Barry have a decent match. I think, although he didn't score apart from the one that was chalked off for offside, he will take encouragement from his performance and he will continue to improve. He should continue to be the starter in matches as he is much more proficient than Beto with the ball.

4  Harry Hockley
09/11/2025    12:33:05

You might want to proof read your articles before publishing!
I noticed more than a few grammar mistakes which spoiled it!

Decent showing, KDH was very good, Mr reliable James Garner a class act at RB,
I think Rohl will be getting more minutes very soon, he looks a real prospect.

Thierno Barry, I thought it was his best game in an Everton shirt by a mile, although that doesn’t take much doing, he’s clearly bereft of confidence, he looks very clumsy most of the time, very much on the joke shelf at the moment, I’ve squeezed him in between Oumar Niasse and Dennis Stracqualursi, however he’s not top shelf just yet as that belongs to Sandro Ramirez.

5  Howard Poole
09/11/2025    13:52:05

Lyndon writes so elegantly & with such perception that it seems churlish to offer criticism.
In many respects his report maintains his own impeccable standards.
Nevertheless I feel I must challenge a key word in the heading to his report.
The word 'Routine' is wholly inappropriate & indeed the main thrust ( quite rightly) of the report makes the point that almost 98 minutes of total control is a most welcome improvement on this seasons frustratingly half -cocked, uneven performances.
We have bemoaned these collectively and individually thus Saturday was a most welcome improvement.
If you were a lesser literary figure Lyndon I might well have not felt a post necessary.

6  John Fitzgerald
09/11/2025    14:50:55

Not many sets of supporters have the long-term mental muscle memory that we have with Moyes, but the all round increase in performance levels plus a few wizened personnel changes following a string of below par games felt very familiar with Moyes. Which is no bad thing, he gets his finger out and rings the changes when it’s pretty obvious he needs to, and credit where it’s due, but he should’ve pulled O’Brien and replaced with Garner about 4 games ago. Yesterday was evidence how having a mobile, attacking full back on both wings would completely transform the whole team. I’d say those two positions rather than a centre forward should be the priority in January. It took around about this part of the season that Barry started kicking in for VillaReal last year - he’ll break his duck soon.

7  John Raftery
09/11/2025    16:59:30

Thanks for the report Lyndon. This was a really important win against one of the teams roughly at our level in the league. It was a huge bonus to see the team deliver as close to a 90+13 minutes performance as they have achieved this season.

There were some excellent individual contributions. With the team dominant KDH had his best game in several weeks, finding space between defensive lines and using the ball profitably. Gana and Iroegbunam partnered impressively in midfield while Garner brought creativity as well as defensive reliability at right back. His through pass to Beto from the right touchline was remarkable. Once again Keane proved solid as a rock at the back while sealing the points with his second goal at the Hill Dickinson.

It was a very pleasing performance from Thierno Barry. Under a harsh spotlight from all corners of the fan base and local media he showed energy, determination and skill in attacking areas. In short, he made a difference by lending the attack more variety and helping the team as a whole to establish control higher up the pitch. It would have been great for him to score a goal yesterday but hopefully this game will mark a turning point in his season as he acclimatises to his new environment.

After watching the TV highlights I doubt VAR would have intervened if the assistant had kept his flag down for the Dewsbury-Hall ‘goal’. The interference was more imagined than real.

8  Lyndon Lloyd
09/11/2025    17:18:04

Thanks, all. Justifiable criticism of the lack of proof-reading accepted — although I will defend myself regarding the description of Keane’s header which was as you describe it Benjamin in the original, unedited report 😉

In terms of the headline, I suppose I was trying to convey that the win was the kind of comfortable one that should be routine for us. It hasn’t been, of course, so it was a bit of an ironic misnomer.

9  Ben King
09/11/2025    20:57:18

Terrific win. Thanks for the report Lyndon

10  Sean Byrne
09/11/2025    21:15:45

I would like more routine wins- at least we didn’t moan as much as the red noses today about their offside goals !!

11  Paul Ferry
10/11/2025    03:44:59

Great report, as ever, Lyndon. Nicely written. No opportune swipes at players, although I never expect that from you.

I was pleased to see Garner at right-back and, quite frankly, he was a candidate for man of the match.

I can't join in with the KDH euphoria. I read that he gave the ball away ten times to one of them. But he was better and long may that upward curve continue but, that said, I wouldn't have him in my starting XI at the moment.

However, I continue to be disappointed in the handling of Tyler Dibling. I know that he has hardly set the place on fire in his few cameos, but he needs thirty minutes not three. And I find the Dave Moyes 'not Premiership ready' view for a few of our players down through the years a tad disingenuous.

I know that I am not there during the week at Finch Farm but I would like to see a little more creativity in selection and a little more of an attacking threat.

Moyes builds from the back. We know that. He likes a pair of defensively-minded midfielders. I do find myself sometimes wondering what is the relative weight Moyes puts on not conceding a goal or scoring a goal.

Fifteen days is a long time to think things through. It's a gift but not to us supporters. I do hope that this is an opportunity that is not missed.

Meanwhile, I spend idle minutes tweaking what I think is my preferred starting XI. Right now it's:

Pickford, Garner, Keane, O'Brien, Mylolenko, Gana, Iroegbunam, Grealish, Dibling, Alcaraz, Ndiaye.

Can I say that a refreshing thing about this site is that we hardly ever, if ever, see all the stupid little short names we get on the other place: Picks, Garns, Jake (completely acceptable), Mylo, Gans, Buno, Greals, Dibs, Charley (acceptable), and Ily.

I might be harsh on Barry who needs more game time, unlike Charlie Chaplain Beto. I much appreciated the reception for Barry who put in a shift as he left the pitch. But, pace Dyche's keen sense of smell, I smelt sympathy in some of that. We need to win matches and score goals and have forwards who can score goals, We can always take off one of Dibs and Charley for Bazza and Ily can swap for either Dibs or Chaz.

12  Frank Sheppard
10/11/2025    08:00:08

Lots of positives from this result, Moyes showing flexibility starting Garner at RB; KDH having a great performance; M.K. again more than dependable; more minutes for Merlin R; lots of chances being created; clean sheet.
Happy days, more of the same please.

13  John Gall
10/11/2025    12:22:39

Paul #11, aka Fezza, very funny post. I was tempted to blame the kids for all these nicknames but then recall that I was always Gally growing up in Liverpool in the 1970s. Picks is the one that real grates, for some reason. All sounds a bit public school perhaps?

14  Darren Hind
10/11/2025    15:17:26

Mr Ferry

Good to hear from you and good to see your time over there has not dimmed your ability to see the funny side of things.You cant take the boy out of Crosby....

I have to agree with you about Barry too. I think claims that he played well are born more out of wishing it was so than his actual performance. That said he is clearly trying to improve and the ovation he received when he left the pitch reflected that. He cut such a forlorn, isolated figure after that miss at Sunderland I was worried for his future.

The support he received from both crowd and team mates on Saturday was heart warming. Hopefully he can repay all those well wishes with a few goals. One against the Mancs would be very welcome indeed.

15  Howard Poole
10/11/2025    19:58:07

Magnanimous & classy at 8 above Lyndon. Respect.
I struggled for ages before finding an apt headline which is a luxury you did not have.
' Vibrant Blues finally provide a quality show' was my final form of words.
You have a free shot of criticism on that.
I would not miss your reports and also the sensible, (largely) erudite exchanges they provoke.
It surprised me to discover that his dramatic fall to earth after a pleasing second half run was not diva'ish but because his shoulder strapping to protect an injury had loosened.

16  Paul Tran
10/11/2025    20:29:22

Good to see you on here Paul Ferry. Barry worked his socks off, which to me was an improvement in application, and that's as far as I'll go.
I'd prefer him to Beto, but I'd really prefer someone in January who knows where the goal is.

17  Paul Ferry
10/11/2025    21:35:10

Darren, Paul, John, so nice to see you here and hope you are all well, though - Paul - I thought of you when I saw the new unveiling on the other site, that seems to be pimping for gambling.

I also prefer Barry to Beto, a little like preferring treacle to marmite. Like you, Paul, I am pinning my hopes on a January striker, but I think we might agree that it is highly unlikely to be a head-turning buy.

I hope that we are looking at the Championship and any rumours that link Como or Sunderland to someone. Haji Wright at Coventry and Tommy Conway at 'boro seem very capable of the next step up for me.

There are some decent right- and left-backs down there too. I like Ben Johnson at Ipswich on the right-hand side and also Elias Jelert is worth keeping an eye on (although he is on loan at Southampton), along with Bright Osayi-Samuel at Birmingham (although he only joined them this summer on a three-year deal).

18  Jeff Armstrong
10/11/2025    21:35:45

Thoughts on Saturday, big improvement on the second half at Sunderland, most players played well, Barry was better and worked hard, he deserves more minutes, I am not KDH biggest fan but I thought he played well, pressed and tried to be positive and forward thinking in most of his play.
Garner at right back just opens up other options in midfield whilst also gaining mobility and nous at RB, it can allow Rohl or Irogbunam to offer something different in midfield,possibly giving chances to Alcaraz or Dibling to come, especially with Afcon coming.
I’ve got to say though,I thought Fulham were gash.

19  Paul Ferry
10/11/2025    21:53:25

Top class second paragraph Jeff.

Fulham fans seem to agree with your last line, though they did enjoy our new home.

20  David Currie
11/11/2025    01:24:58

Good win and a better performance from Barry, hopefully he can start scoring soon.

21  Dave Williams
11/11/2025    10:57:45

Whilst Garner was excellent my mom was KDH. All action, got stuck in and played with pacey movement and creativity. Barry has some way to go but this was a huge improvement and it looks like he will respond to the encouragement of the crowd.

22  Mark Stanley
11/11/2025    11:11:09

Going a little off script here guys, but I just wanted to ask opinions on the Brobbey goal for Sunderland vs Arsenal at the weekend. I have to say that I could guarantee 100% that if that was Barry or Beto it would have been disallowed, if not by the referee than it would have been picked up by VAR as dangerous play against either the heading defender or the goalkeeper. Probably both if it was us.

23  Paul Tran
11/11/2025    14:07:22

Better writing, better discussions, and an absence of rehashing Google rumours, conspiracy theories and veiled racism will keep me here. A live forum on here would be the icing on the iced bun (remember them?).

24  Neil Cremin
11/11/2025    14:13:19

Don’t agree with replacing KDH with Alcaraz because we would lose the high press which is why we performed so much better on Saturday. Alcaraz may be a bit more creative going forward but defensively he is poor which would mean we would be under more pressure in midfield and the back. Also Alcaraz seems to get a free pass with his butchering of a 2v1 situation v Sunderland which would have won us the game and put is very close ot a CL spot. KDH works his socks off literally and on Saturday so did Barry hence giving us 5 goals. It is a team game so all the efforts in the high press creates opportunities for somebody.
Paul, I would also possibly give Rohl a start before Tim and use Dibling earlier to replace Ndiaye who also works his socks off and tires towards end of game.

25  Mike Hayes
11/11/2025    15:06:42

Good to get all three points at home good to see Moyes make a change. Would love to see Rhol get a full game and Dibling to see what they bring to the start of a game. Barry will come good with the right deliveries and although his first goal was chalked off I’d like to think it’s given him a confidence boost even having to wait until after the crappy internationals. Good luck to him and the rest. Fingers crossed we can push on higher against UTD 💙

26  Peter Mills
11/11/2025    15:07:15

I was fortunate enough to get a bit of a look behind the scenes on Saturday, together with receiving first class hospitality.

I came away smiling. Despite some persistent challenges with getting to and from the ground, somehow, out of the mire of the last 30 years, we have an opportunity to re-build on the foundation of a world class stadium.

Will the ambition be there to do so? In the company of Wayne Rooney, Peter Reid, Nigel Martyn and Angus Kinnear was a gentleman who I was told was Ryan Friedkin, so let’s hope so.

27  Darryl Ritchie
11/11/2025    16:17:18

I thought Garner had an excellent match. He’s become a set piece master. Maybe he could be first choice penalty taker, a la Leighton.

28  Lyndon Lloyd
11/11/2025    16:49:38

Folks, I've put together something more definitive around the intent of Evertonia, moderation policies and the like here given that we can expect some more TW refugees coming this way but the tl;dr version is that this isn't ToffeeWeb and was never intended to be.

With the exception of inherently non-football posts like the one linked immediately above, the comments sections at Evertonia are for discussing the team, the club, and the football only. In accordance with that I'll be removing some of the off-topic posts above that reference the updates to ToffeeWeb, etc.

29  Jay Harris
11/11/2025    17:12:44

Great report as ever Lyndon.

I thought we raised our game against poor opposition. The next few games will be challenging. Lets hope we come through them with reasonable success.

I should also mention I guess a number of former Toffeewebbers will now use Evertonia as their go to site in the light of recent developments on that site so you may become a little busier😊.

30  Harry Hockley
11/11/2025    18:41:50

I hear Dibling is already knocking on Moyes’ door asking for a January exit, surely this can’t happen, or be true as we have Afcon approaching and he’ll get his opportunity to fill in for Ndiaye who’s been exceptional so far.

31  Jeff Armstrong
11/11/2025    19:21:41

Harry#30, where did you hear about Dibling wanting out in January? I read something similar about Aznou last week but put it down to those ridiculous click-bait sites, is your source reliable?

32  Paul Tran
11/11/2025    19:47:32

Well said Lyndon #28.

33  Paul Conway
11/11/2025    20:33:53

Lyndon @ 28

hear hear!

And may each poster refrain from the dénégation of fellow Posters, simply because their opinions do not jive with that of their own., whereby a simple counter argument should suffice.

Respect to fellow Blues, by fellow Blues !.. after all, we are all going to end up in one Blue Heaven!

COYB!

34  David Lynch
11/11/2025    21:35:58

As much as Moyes is a steady hand he is also a liability imo.

He simply does not trust talent or young players, he would rather go with what he considers to be reliability even if that comes with risk.

35  John Raftery
11/11/2025    22:27:38

David (34) Many supporters would agree with you but Moyes has given several starts to Iroegbunam who is not yet the finished article. He has also eased Barry into the team in a period when the player has been finding it difficult to adjust to his new environment.

In his first stint at Everton Moyes gave debuts to 16 year olds Rooney, Vaughan, Rodwell and Baxter and a 17 year old Barkley. At Sunderland he trusted a young Pickford in a relegation battle.

I would like to see more of Dibling but believe his time will come once the manager is as sure as he can be that the player has the best chance of succeeding. Dibling, in his brief appearances, has yet to make a compelling case for inclusion ahead of Ndiaye and Grealish.

36  David Lynch
11/11/2025    23:40:04

John...Dibbling is a right back is he not? We bought him for that position and he was proven in the Prem with a reported great season at Southampton.

Instead Moyes plays others who are not natural right backs, he frustrates the life out of me and tbh can't wait to see the back of him.

PS... I well remember Rooney breaking through and I well remember Moyes straight after the Arsenal game playing down his potential.

37  chris Keher
12/11/2025    01:03:42

David Lynch - no Dibling is a right winger. Don't know where you've got that from.

Also, many would argue his handling of Rooney did Wayne no harm at all in terms of him reaching his potential. He was 16 and needed the hype reducing not being ramped up.

38  Jeff Armstrong
12/11/2025    05:43:28

Dibbling, Rohl, Alcaraz maybe Aznou will all get chances in the coming weeks, Afcon starts in December I believe, and the FA Cup early January, all the fringe players will be required to contribute.
I think Moyes is being his usual pragmatic self in getting points on the board with his preferred players,before being forced into changes.

39  Jerome Shields
12/11/2025    07:31:48

A Toffeeweb refugee.

40  Duncan McDine
12/11/2025    08:40:11

It was a bit choppy but I've survived the crossing. Lyndon, can you please grant me asylum?... its not safe back there.

41  John Fitzgerald
12/11/2025    11:07:47

I haven’t yet seen Röhl play in the flesh - what are the thoughts of any who have? Does he look like he could be as box-to-box like he says he is? If he’s quick and 6’ 3” that could be an extra 10 goals a season.

42  Jeff Armstrong
12/11/2025    11:15:24

John 41,when Rohl has come on he has looked decent, mobile, and he does look good with the ball at his feet moving at pace, sometimes his passing has been a bit astray but I would put that down to being overeager to show what he can do in the limited minutes that he’s been on the pitch, if he can stay fit I think he could be a good solid midfielder especially if Garner continues at RB (a la Ian Snodin)

43  Si Shaw
12/11/2025    13:10:18

Another great match report Lyndon. We need two ‘proper’ full backs and, I still think, a centre forward and we’ll be a force. Welcome to all new readers/posters!

44  Si Shaw
12/11/2025    13:17:18

Jeff Armstrong…..yeah I was thinking similarly regarding Garner going a bit Snodin/Gary Stephens. That could be a problem solved for us.

45  Andrew Ellams
12/11/2025    13:50:43

Rohl look like exactly what we need.

His first thought everytime he has the ball is to carry it forwards and look for an attacking pass.

46  John Fitzgerald
12/11/2025    15:52:34

Yeah - that’s the impression I got from him, good feet and speed for a big guy. Handy for late runs into the box for second balls. When him and Dibling are up to speed we’ll be a force for sure.

47  Jay Harris
12/11/2025    16:19:24

I think Rohl looks a good prospect but needs to get up to pace. He got caught on the ball a few times when he came on against Fulham,

He will need more game time before Gana goes to Afcon.

48  Jeff Armstrong
12/11/2025    18:22:57

Snodin was bought as a midfielder, but had to fill in at RB due to injuries, he basically stayed there for the rest of his Everton career, even making the England squad,injuries later took their toll.

Garner has recently expressed his desire to get into the national squad, right back might be his best option, he’s got Under 21 appearances at RB and his move to the position hopefully for him, will not have gone unnoticed at international level.

49  John Fitzgerald
13/11/2025    08:06:03

Garner makes the switch between midfield and right back effortlessly and without any the pyschodrama of Alexander Arnold who couldn’t defend to save himself. Or his team.

50  Jerome Shields
13/11/2025    12:39:56

Jeff#48

Good point and good information regarding Garner.

51  Professor Peach
13/11/2025    19:45:32

First time on the site and I’m fairly impressed. Good to see some familiar names from TW on here- Peter Mills especially who your always guaranteed to be served a hearty dollop of sense from. UTFT’s !!!


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