Everton pay the penalty for O’Brien’s hare-brained lapse
Everton 0 – 1 Arsenal
The defender's gift-wrapped present for Arsenal made an already difficult assignment practically impossible given the lack of creativity and cutting edge up front yet the Blues were denied a clear penalty in the second half.
Everton weren’t quite down to the bare bones for this meeting with the Premier League leaders but they were close and the chronic lack of depth that will hamper David Moyes during the busy Festive period and beyond was painfully evident at Bramley-Moore Dock tonight.
The build-up, featuring a team welcome, fireworks and a massive tifo in a South Stand filled with card-bearing fans depicting the “blue wave” envisioned by Hill Dickinson Stadium architect Dan Meis, was pulsating. By contrast, the performance that followed from the workman-like Toffees was energetic but blunt to say the least.
For long periods it looked and felt as though the first-half goal gift-wrapped for Arsenal was all Mikel Areta’s men would need, such was Everton’s inability to cause David Raya or their back line any real problems — though if there were any justice or consistency in the application of the rules by Video Assistant Referee, Michael Salisbury, the hosts would have been given the chance to level from the spot for William Saliba’s foul on Thierno Barry.
Had Jack Grealish been fully fit — he is clearly blighted by a hamstring issue and is playing well within himself at the moment as a result — and both Iliman Ndiaye and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall been available, this would undoubtedly have been a more interesting and more even contest.
Without their key creative outlets, however, and with Dwight McNeil and Charly Alcaraz toiling unsuccessfully as visibly inferior alternatives, chances for Moyes’s side were almost non-existent against an Arsenal team that heads both the English and Champions League heading into Christmas and who struck the post twice in the second half.
It’s unfortunate that even though they lacked the quality needed to break the Gunners down, Everton’s industry was ultimately let down by a moment of madness from Jake O’Brien midway through the first half that ended up being the difference on the night.
Prior to that, a 20-odd minute phoney war had played out by the docks as the two sides sized each other up. Barry almost had a chance open up when O’Brien’s long throw fell to him close to goal but his attempt to turn it in was blocked by Jurien Timber.
A few minutes later, Alcaraz did well to roll Martin Zubemendi but then over-ran the ball in a moment that would encapsulate the Argentine’s frustrating evening and which preceded the first real stirrings from the visitors in an attacking sense.
Michael Keane stabbed Bukayo Saka’s cut-back from the byline out to the edge of the box and Zubemendi lashed over the bar. Viktor Gjökores then headed a Martin Ødegaard cross wide before Timber’s centre was deflected towards the back post where Gjökores went sprawling under the attentions of James Tarkowski but Arsenal appeals for a penalty were waved away.
They would be awarded their spot-kick following the ensuing corner which was whipped into the six-yard box in trademark fashion by Declan Rice but, jumping to challenge Riccardo Calafiori, O’Brien threw both arms in the air and practically caught the ball above his head, contact with the hands that was missed by referee Sam Barrott but was unmistakable on the replays studied by VAR Salisbury. Gjökores hammered his penalty past Jordan Pickford and depleted Everton’s hill became a mountain from that point.
They managed to get to half-time without further damage as Rice blazed over from 20 yards, Gjökores sliced wide at the back post under a tackle from Tarkowski and Saka failed to punish Alcaraz for his latest wayward pass when he dropped a header wide from the Swedish striker’s cross.
The half-time interval brought no change in personnel or approach from Moyes and the pattern established late in the first half continued into the second. Leandro Trossard almost fashioned an opening when he drove in towards goal but was foiled by Pickford while Timber got to the byline and cut it back for Saka but the England winger’s shot was cleared away from his goal line by Tarkowski before the Blues had their first significant shout for a penalty of their own.
Barry was sent tumbling by Zubemendi right on the edge of the box in the 52nd minute but the referee gave nothing and Salisbury deemed it to be “a coming together”. Five minutes later, the French striker was left prone clutching his ankle following clear contact by Saliba who kicked through him trying to clear a loose ball but, once again, the officials refused to intervene.
Arsenal threatened to put the game to bed as first Trossard bent a shot around Pickford but saw it smack off the post and then Zubamendi rattled the same upright with a low drive.
That left the game delicately poised for the final 20-odd minutes but Everton, with Beto on for Barry and then Tyler Dibling and Merlin Röhl on in place of McNeil and Alcaraz, were unable to trouble the Londoners’ goal despite all their huff and puff.
Instead, the closest the match saw to another addition to the scoresheet was in the 90th minute when Tarkowski poked the ball inches past his own goal as he intercepted Calafiori’s through-ball.
Winning against the league leaders was always going to be a tall order but, having done the hard work in largely containing Arsenal and making them look fairly ordinary at times, Everton shot themselves in the foot with O’Brien’s mistake. The desperate lack of quality at the other end meant that retrieving the situation was always going to be difficult and so it proved.
The next set of fixtures until Moyes takes his side to Villa Park in mid-January is more forgiving but without their key creative components, the points will need to be ground out with much more needed from those second-stringers hoping to impress enough to stake a claim.
Reader Responses
Selected thoughts from readers20/12/2025 00:05:01
We have only three players who would even make the bench for Arsenal, and two of them weren't there. The quality simply isn't there in the squad. At one point we had three promising counterattacks in a three-minute stretch, and in every case the man on the ball made an error or a wrong decision.
I liked the level of effort and the attacking confidence we displayed, and the defensive organization against one of the most dangerous attacking sides in the world was excellent -- with the exception of the blunder by O'Brien, who had gotten away with a possible pen just a minute earlier and was never going to evade the law a second time.
The second challenge on Barry was a clear penalty, but from the replay the young ref Barrott had a likely obscured angle. That the VAR official Salisbury didn't at least send Barrott to the monitor for a second look was disgraceful.
21/12/2025 00:07:44
0-1 flattered us, Tarkowski off the line with Pickford well beaten and they hit the post twice, we never laid a glove on them, some poor displays tonight from Alcaraz, Grealish, No‘Brain, and a few others, Pickfords distribution was dire, Rohl looked rusty when he came on and Dibling looks low on confidence.
20/12/2025 00:15:53
Did Arsenal think they could just turn up and get 3 points? Without having to fight and perform to the best of their abilities? Well, yes actually and they were proven right by a total lacklustre performance and failure to take the initiative, Arsenal started sluggishly and never got out of second gear and to be honest they didnt have to as we wasnt bothered, strolling around the pitch and looking totally pedestrian we got what we deserved, nothing.
Moyes doing what he does best, being prudent and starting McNeil instead of Dibling, Moyes was always a safety first man always thinking of the logical outcome rather than being innovative, we have enough points at this stage to be able to take a risk, you cant keep getting away with it, not in todays game its too ruthless and cut throat, I thought Moyes may of adapted, maybe he will..I hope.
Not much more to it, come January and everything will be a lot clearer, well see what the board are thinking about, are they serious about moving us forward? If they dont make moves come Jan Im afraid we may have a bunch of impostors at the helm.
Oh well. Dust ourselves off and win the next game and everything will be fine.
21/12/2025 01:58:08
I……. Once again applaud Peter Mills who provides another slice of realism with his overall review of things today!!!
21/12/2025 05:52:55
Moyes's systems placed immense pressure on defenders to be perfect for 90 minutes, and any error is catastrophically punished.
It was entirely predictable how Moyes would set up his team against Arsenal,even with no shows, as he has done for 85 matches resulting in 2 wins against the Traditional Top 4.The stats show the same inevitability of 5 shots against 13 from Arsenal, with only one on target.
Obviously Moyes has to be more daring and less predictable in his preparation.This is what Evertonians expectation should be of him, not the inevitable dire acceptance. To be a Evertonian is to suffer.
I don't have to give the blow by blow account of my analysis of Moyes,something I have prepared , you all already know where I stand.
21/12/2025 08:09:14
I thought we might get something when Arsenal started so sluggishly, but we needed to score first. Only Jake O'Brien knows what was going through his head when he went up like a volleyball player, but it effectively ended any plan we may have had.
Arsenal are going through a wobbly patch and I still feel we may have gotten something if we had tested their resolve. Watching our performance it was clear the plan was to stay in the game...A better result would have required a little more ambition
21/12/2025 10:06:35
I thought our players gave a creditable showing. Even if our two best attacking players had been available we would have found it difficult to make inroads against a very strong defence.
The gap in quality between the two teams was evident in the starting elevens and the names on the respective lists of substitutes. Apart from Barry, who was no match for Saliba and Grealish, who currently looks well off the pace, the starting line-up was comprised of players who were with us in the second half of last season. Their obvious limitations were what made the summer transfer business a matter of such considerable urgency.
There was nothing wrong with the tactics or formation. Quite simply, and unsurprisingly, McNeil was unable to match Ndiayes trickery. More of a disappointment was his poor delivery from set pieces. Charly Alcaraz, with his runs into blind alleys and stray passes, offered firm evidence as to why he was offered only a two year contract. He is nowhere near the level of Dewsbury-Hall. Again, that was hardly a surprise.
In the absence of quality in attack it was left to Garner and Iroegbunam to fight the good fight in midfield. They were our best players with Tim earning a man of the match rating for some excellent tackling and tidy use of the ball.
21/12/2025 10:47:32
Well, nobody likes being negative, but, the only thing positive for me was Tims Performance.
Normally, its no great shame to be beaten by a Team like Arsenal, but the errors were palpable.
A like for like substitute on 76 minutes.
Alcaraz who gave (gives) the Ball away, replaced by Rohl, who was equally as generous, with giving the ball away in the few minutes, that he was on the pitch.
No excuses for not being Match fit!
OBrien cost us a point.
Any excuses for Barry being a PL CF can be squashed in my opinion.. the Lad is a complete Bollard!
In the third minute, he was 25 yards out and instead of looking up, passes it to their defenders.
He immediately receives the ball and then splays a Hospital pass back to our defender, which was intercepted, but recovered well.
That small sequence shows me that he hasnt got a football Brain, let alone the physicality to compete with defenders, as Beto showed against Saliba.
Dibling is very discreet for a player who cost 40ml.
The fact that McNiel (an equally discreet player!), gets chosen before him, is alarming.
And to compound our misery.. we get treated with images of DCL knocking them in for Leeds!
I say good luck to the Lad!
21/12/2025 11:00:14
Paul (9)
Are you talking about a different Tim? Iroegbunam was absolutely anonymous throughout the game.
He gets shut of the ball as soon as he receives it, never looks up, and looks frightened to death.
He's built like a middleweight boxer, but performs like Wayne Sleep.
21/12/2025 11:04:50
Wayne # 10
He stood out for me, albeit among some diabolical stuff.
I guess that really compounds it 😀
21/12/2025 11:54:07
Harry (4)
To put things into perspective, the 'american imposters', as you called them, undoubtedly saved the club from going into administration, such was the mess our finances were in.
In reality, a new stadium, 75% built, and Moshiri either unwilling or unable, to supply the club with anymore finance. In the meantime, the backstreet gangsters 777, were circulating, smelling the dying carcass of a Premier league club.
Only time will tell, whether they are the 'right' owners, but I for one am grateful they have at last, brought financial security to my football club, after the last 10 season's of surviving on pay day loans, provided by our great friend of the club (Bill's words) Phillip Green, and other dubious lenders based in the Isle of Man, and the Cayman Islands.
21/12/2025 12:27:29
People see the same game and performances differently, I thought Irogbunam had a decent game especially first half, he didnt waste possession much unlike Alcaraz and was strong on the ball. Tarkowski and Mykolenko were decent, Keane played safely and enough said about OBriens brain fart.
Garner was efficient, agreed about the comment on McCneils floated free kicks and as mentioned Pickfords distribution was wayward.
21/12/2025 15:38:14
I watched the game on TV rather than from my normal seat and that may have given me a different perspective. I didn't think for instance that we were denied a penalty having seen the onscreen evidence. Over all I thought we looked like the scratch team we currently are who did well keeping the score to 1 nil.
The next few weeks are going to be difficult, but we knew that. Hopefully the fringe players will step up, as I think Iroegbunam did yesterday, and McNeil will not be selected to play as a right winger again. Also with reference to young Barry. He looks a nice lad, and he works hard but he achieves so little, and for me I would go back to Beto as he can deal with the hustle, and gives the opposing centre backs more to think about. Any further injuries or suspensions would be disastrous so fingers crossed and New Year wishes made.
21/12/2025 15:58:08
Without wanting to hijack the thread and as we are approaching the end of the year, It would be interesting If Lyndon could create a thread on where we are one year on from the takeover.
Whereby, we can give ( hear from fans ), an assessment of players present and whos needed for what and where.
21/12/2025 17:28:42
I know that yesterdays performance by all and sundry is best forgotten asap. O'Brian hand ball. What do you say. If you are a Gunner. Thank you for a lovely Christmas present is quite sufficient.
My main gripe yesterday, apart from the general malais which seemed to affect almost everyone, was with Pickford. Is it just me or did others notice that he seems incapable of playing it out from the back. He seems to delight in hoofing it foward at every opportunity, usually with the ball going straight to the opposition or out of play and then it coming back straight at us.
Somebody must teach him that keeping the ball, and moving it forward progressively, is what creates chances and currently we are very short of those. It may not of course be down to Jordan. It might be tactics decided by others. If so they need to grow a pair and admit they are wrong.
Whatever, whoever, just do it. Please.
21/12/2025 18:26:53
Ive just googled the second half of last season and it told me that when David Moyes, took over last January, Everton had played 19 games and had 17 points.
When the season finished, Everton had gained another 31 points in their remaining 19 fixtures and ended up with 48 points.
This season we have played 17 games and accumulated 24 points, which means that the players we had for the second part of last season, have actually done slightly better than the team has done so far this season.
Something that really frustrates me about David Moyes, is that he likes to stick with the same team, rather than trying to integrate more of his squad onto the pitch on a regular basis. This is something that he seems to have done throughout his managerial career, is how I personally remember him from the eleven and a half years, that he managed our club, when I was younger.
Listening to some Evertonians, its not Moyess fault that he has used the least number of subs in the league, because its clear to see, that after playing against the team that is top of the league, that a few of our fringe players arent good enough, and they werent good enough against wolves in the cup, even though they helped the team accumulate more points in the second half of last season, than this much better team have accomplished in the first half of this season.
The more that you study Moyes, the more you see a pattern emerging, and this is probably a major reason why he has got such a poor record in the cup competitions, over the years.
He done okay in his last stint at West Ham, in European Football competitions, but I wasnt surprised when his West Ham team lost to Eintract Frankfurt, in the two legged Europa league semifinal, (even though you could argue they were unlucky to see players sent off in both games?) because when I watched us play them at their ground, just before they played their first leg, their players looked dead on their feet.
I mentioned this to a few different West Ham fans, and questioned why their manager hadnt changed his team, to keep his better players fresh for the Frankfurt game, and they all said the same thing, which was that the players had been looking tired for the last few weeks, and they couldnt understand it either.
Two of the biggest rules for any sportsperson, is that you wont do your best when youre tired, and you cant do your best if youre underprepared. Thats how I see it anyway!
21/12/2025 19:12:00
Reasonably happy even though we lost to just a defensive mistake.
What Moyes gets out of this ragtag bunch of no hopers in nothing short of incredible.
We have no squad numbers, few high quality players yet we're 1 mistake away from drawing with the top of the league.
Keep going you super toffees!
21/12/2025 20:50:26
David @14
Does Barry 'work hard'? I'm not convinced. I realise he has a thankless task under this system, but he gives me the impression that he can't really be bothered to close down defenders.
Mind you, he wasn't alone in that yesterday, where was the intensity to win the ball back? I'm not suggesting we revert to 'dogs of war' tactics, but the odd strong tackle every now and again wouldn't have gone amiss
21/12/2025 21:03:34
Tarkowski got booked for a strong tackle, although Im not sure how much contact he made and then in the second half Barry, turns their defender out wide by the touch line, got hauled to the floor and no card.
The lack of consistency is incredible, especially when its something we seem to be on the wrong end of quite often. The home team being treated like the away team, thats Everton!
21/12/2025 22:16:17
Whilst it was an infuriating watch, it was a game that was never out of reach. Infuriating because we were second to every ball, unable completely to shut down an Arsenal team who were allowed to walk through a midfield who were unable to shut a door never mind space..
There isn't any point in castigated individuals, because I felt as a team we got the set up and game plan completely wrong. But it was specific failures and atrocious referees that cost us in the end. Fish out of water O'Brien inexplicably thought he was a goalkeeper, leaping like a salmon to palm the cross away.. just nuts..
The two Barry decisions border on unmitigated bias, when running through he was cleaned out with the conversation by commentators as to inside or outside the box, it didn't even warrant a foul according to the referee. The second was farcical. Barry gets to the ball first and knocks it on, before the Arsenal follows through his attempted clearance unending Barry. It's deemed "insufficient contact" to award a penalty. We have seen then awarded for standing on a toe, let alone a clearout. It may have been unintentional by the defender but then most fouls are exactly that, arriving late to a tackle or clearance..
Did we deserve it? On the balance of play probably not as the gulf in quality was significant, but that's the game, on another day O'Brien wouldn't play volleyball and the ref would have awarded a penalty for Barry. We used to call it the rub of the green, luck has been replaced by VAR.
21/12/2025 00:32:41
I wasnt expecting much yesterday with our small squad depleted even more, so I wasnt that disappointed how it turned out.
Winning four games out of five makes us think we may over achieve this season and whilst losing to Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal isnt unexpected, all three teams were ‘wobbly when we played them so its annoying we didnt get more out of them.
The next four league games, albeit still with an under strength squad, are the games we should look to win and will give us a truer reflection of where we are.
Im not expecting much in the January window but after Barrys display yesterday a centre forward is crucial but we are likely to spend good money on something similar to what we already have.
If we accept this season is a building block then lets save most of our money until the summer when we will presumably have more to spend and a bigger pool to choose from.
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20/12/2025 23:48:52
Arsenal, without being great, were the superior team by some margin. It would have been a joy to watch Declan Rice had he not been playing for the opposition, what a good footballer.
We tried our best, but far too many of our players were just not good enough to beat one of the best teams in Europe.
Reinforcements, particularly at centre forward, would be very welcome.