For a manager not known for making either early or dramatic changes to his team, David Moyes has had to do it an awful lot this season. Tonight, as he sought to change the pattern of a match that had largely passed his Everton side by in the first half, he was compelled to pitch Jarrad Branthwaite and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall back into action following long injury layoffs at an earlier stage than he probably would have liked.

And it wasn’t just personnel; Moyes tinkered with his system to try and nullify a Leeds United side that had played his own off their own park for 45 minutes and who would prevent the Blues from registering a shot on target for more than hour at what was an often exasperated Hill Dickinson Stadium.

The close to 50,000 Evertonians who had had to wait all weekend for their team to see action had arrived in anticipation at the prospect of a home win that would have vaulted Everton into seventh place in the Premier League, a point behind the faltering neighbours… anticipation that was, no doubt, tempered significantly by the fact that the new ground has witnessed just four league victories so far.

That trepidation was well justified as Moyes’s charges toiled their way through 45 unproductive minutes before the manager was given the opportunity to shuffle his pack with a double substitution. Some familiar faces had made welcome returns to the starting XI in the form of the triumphant Senegalese duo, Iliman Ndiaye Idrissa Gueye, but too often Everton resembled 11 strangers thrown together at the last minute.

The early effort was there but there was no cohesion, no invention and, save for Ndiaye’s dazzling feet, precious little creativity. By contrast, Leeds looked purposeful and well-drilled, attacking the spaces going forward and cutting off their hosts’ passing lanes when out of possession.

Daniel Farke’s men haven’t won away from Elland Road since September but they have been on a solid run of form lately that has pulled them away from immediate danger at the bottom and the confidence was obvious in their play. Like Brentford and Sunderland before them, they came to Bramley-Moore Dock intent to disrupt any rhythm Everton tried to establish from kick-off and then prey on the uncertainty that would follow.

Pascal Struijk had an early but ambitious “sighter” from the angle that comfortably cleared the bar and Dominic Calvert-Lewin tried to assert himself quickly by muscling his way through to goal but Jordan Pickford closed him down and Ilia Gruev also put an effort into the South Stand following a Leeds corner.

What felt, on the basis of so many matches at the new stadium to date, like the inevitable duly arrived just before half an hour had elapsed. Ndiaye went down after being sandwiched between two opposition players but received no favours from referee Simon Hooper. That allowed Anton Stach to drill a low cross that eluded Calvert-Lewin but fell to James Justin, completely untracked at the back post, and the former Leicester man made no mistake with the finish.

And 1-0 so nearly became “curtains” five minutes later. Everton were cut through again with embarrassing ease but, thankfully, Calvert-Lewin could only prod Jayden Bogle’s centre onto the post. The anger cascaded from the stands and the expected chorus of boos did the same at the half-time whistle following another shocking 45 minutes from the Blues at Bramley-Moore Dock.

Moyes’s response was to replace two players, sacrificing the willing but creatively limited Harrison Armstrong and hooking the quite awful Dwight McNeil who had, for reasons best known to his manager, been deployed wide in his weakest position wide on the right.

Branthwaite and Dewsbury-Hall came on, with the former slotting into a reworked back three but it would be a further quarter of an hour before Everton started to show some life in an attacking sense.

Gueye made a smart interception in midfield and burst forward into the Leeds half but though Ndiaye’s first touch was excellent to bring the ball onto his left foot, Sebastiaan Bornauw came across well to block his shot.

Four minutes later, after Pickford had saved from Stach in front of the North Stand, a slick Everton move ended with Barry bending a superb shot with the outside of his boot arrowing towards the far corner but Karl Darlow dived to his right to palm it away.

With 20 minutes left, Moyes withdrew Nathan Patterson and introduced Tyler Dibling but it was not the young winger but the veteran Gueye marauding down the wing a few minutes later to lay on the equaliser. Barry did brilliantly to nip in ahead of Bornauw and sweep the ball high into Darlow’s net before wheeling away to enact his now-familiar archer celebration.

It was his fourth goal in his last five games and the metamorphosis from frustrated and petulant new arrival earlier this season to increasingly prolifiic marksman comtinues.

The home crowd had come to life by this point and a wall of noise willed Everton on to try and find a winner and it almost arrived from the boot of Gueye. Dibling laid it off to the Senegal international outside the box but his placed effort smacked agonisingly off the angle of crossbar and post.

While another home defeat would have been particularly damaging in terms of morale, a draw wasn’t much better but Moyes will take encouragement from his team’s response and the return of key players.

Although Gueye's display was patchy, Branthwaite and Dewsbury-Hall looked like they hadn’t been away while the outlet that Ndiaye provides was hugely welcome in the absence of Jack Grealish. Whether having those stars back will be enough to turn around this miserable run of just one home victory in two months is debatable — you get the sense that without a couple of pre-deadline signings who can make an instant impact on the first team, particularly in the fullback positions, Everton are going to continue to struggle to dominate or break visiting teams down.

Europe, therefore, remains a distant dream despite the Blues’ proximity, for now, to fifth and sixth spots.



Reader Responses

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

1  Frank Sheppard
27/01/2026    07:38:51

Difficult to fathom why first half was so very poor.
Second half obviously a significant improvement.
Didn’t deserve to win, and away teams have sussed out how to dominate us at home.
Great to see Branthwaite back. Dibling looked so very short of confidence & urgency and awareness.

2  Benjamin Dyke
27/01/2026    07:53:59

Ndiaye has quick feet but recently it's not meant goals or clear cut chances. We were unbelievably poor in that first half! Maybe throwing Gana and Ndiaye straight back in was a mistake? When KDH and Branthwaite came on and we changed shape it was a much better level of performance. It's strange that the players can't handle the expectation/atmosphere at home right now but reserve their best levels for away matches. Hohum...1 point nearer to safety and avoiding a relegation scrap.

3  Jerome Shields
27/01/2026    08:05:02

Just set up negatively and allowed Leeds to play.A team in the Premier League cannot do that.In Everton's case this is the second time against Leeds this season.Moyes will see this as success compared to the last time even at 1-0, but he got lucky with Barry's well taken goal.

4  Paul Hughes
27/01/2026    08:50:32

The game passed Armstrong by in the first half. He couldn’t seem to adapt to the formation he was placed in. That’s OK, he’s 19. I agree with everyone else. McNeill on the right is unfathomable. Gana Gueye looked knackered after 10 minutes, but fair enough, he created the goal and nearly won it for us.
Mykolenko was dreadful, Aznou must be a useless defender not to be selected before him.
Barry, what to say? He barely won a challenge all game, looked like Bambi on ice, and yet scored another cracker.
Overall, a disappointing performance, but I’ll take 33 points at the end of January.

5  Neil Cremin
27/01/2026    08:54:38

Set up positively although I would have preferred Rohl to Gana otherwise the general consensus was that we had the same team that did so well against Villa which most posters here and elsewhere were looking for. The difference was that they didnt perform with the same level of intensity after the first 10 minutes and let Leeds dominate the game. Gana, Garner, Armstrong, McNeill all were much to pedestrian.
Changed at half time to a back 5, bringing back our injured players and we dominated midfield. Even with the numbers in midfield, we are still to pedestrian, out goal came from a quick passing movement which is all to rare at Everton.
Overall a disappointing night but trying to put the blame on the manager is a cop out for those who just don't want Moyes and will find every excuse to find fault. Picked the wrong team, made the wrong changes all with 20:20 vision. Damned when he does and damned when he doesnt. For the moments and the rest of the season unless we bring someone in this week, the manager and players are who we have and the Kobe is to get the best out of them. We all have opinions as to who played well and who didnt and that includes the manager and are free to express it but it gets boring when we get the same posts week after week. Moyes may not be the long term but he has done a reasonable job in the past 12 months where I no longer am fearful at this time of year wondering once again if we will survive. Our club was left rudderless for a long time under Bill and Moshri but now I think we have strategic people at the tiller and the ship has steadied, now lets us start beginning to build a team for the future where we make carefully planned purchases not impulse ones like in the past both players and managers. After all we could have had Thomas Frank.

6  Peter Hoban
27/01/2026    08:55:32

This season appears destined to be split into two: brilliant, backs to the wall away wins after scoring on the break followed by turgid home displays when we are forced to try and take the game to the opposition.

We simply don’t have the players to play expansive, attractive football.

Each game, whether we win, lose or draw, shows up some tactical shortcoming of our manager. Last night it was putting McNeil on the right and Ndiaye on the left when both are suited to the opposite although wherever McNeil plays doesn’t matter as he was truly shocking.

Fair enough changes were made at half time and it was great to see KDH and Branthwaite back.

Next game Brighton away and we can be sure O’Brien will return to right back.

7  David Bromwell
27/01/2026    08:59:28

Interesting game on reflection, which could well have been a disaster, but in the end we thankfully salvaged a point. What happens next will be interesting, since the shape of the team in the second half was completely different to the first.
Reflecting on the positives, it was good to see the two boys back from injury, they both played well and looked comfortable with the ball. Young Barry continues to frustrate, but he saved our bacon with a peach of a goal. Young Armstrong was unlucky to be hooked, and I think this confirms he will be sent back to Preston where he will get more game time. And finally I think we finally saw a little bit of hope in young Dibling,s play. Hopefully that will have done him good and he will get more game time as the season progresses.

8  Lee Courtliff
27/01/2026    09:27:00

Very disappointing performance and result but, let's be honest, we kinda knew it would happen.
A chance to move within a whisker of the CL positions with a home game following a tremendous away victory...Everton, that.

Positives were the return of missing players, another excellent finish from Barry, and a decent cameo from Dibling. Let's hope he can build on that.

9  Jerome Shields
27/01/2026    10:56:56

If you are playing Leeds you have to get amongst them, not sitting back off them.That is the second time Moyes has made this mistake and that is not a cop out.He was lucky it was not disastrous.

10  John Raftery
27/01/2026    11:24:40

Jerome(9) I don’t think we sat back off them. The problem in the first half was that in attempting to press high we left too many gaps behind us. We were repeatedly caught out by quick long balls up the field. Leeds created overloads in the wide areas and could easily have been two or three goals in the lead by the interval.

The half-time changes of shape and personnel gave us more control although we still lacked the pace and urgency to create better attacking options. Our centre backs saw too much of the ball and not enough movement in front of them.

11  Harry Hockley
27/01/2026    12:06:50

Frank 1,
We was so poor because David Moyes bottled it.
Dropping Röhl and reinstating Gueye, who wasn’t playing particularly well before he departed for Afcon was a big mistake, Röhl was absolutely fantastic against Villa in a pairing with Garner but he didn’t even get on the pitch.
I’m a big supporter of Moyes on the whole but I can’t keep defending him his mind numbing selections and set ups are surely wearing thin on my patience. As soon as he has a chance to prove he can go up a level he gaslights everyone including himself and bottles it.

The changes in personnel and set up in the second half showed how Moyes got it wrong as we were much better, Mykolenko is an average player, that has been established quite emphatically, he’s had a long run to prove himself but hasn’t improved and he won’t either, problem is where do we find good full backs who can defend and cross a ball? Never mind attack! They’re a rare commodity these days.

On the grand scheme of things Moyes is doing well, we have 33 points and are comfortably sitting mid table which is a vast improvement on last season but I feel we could be doing even better, you might say well these things don’t happen overnight, I’d say you’re wrong, things can change very quickly especially in todays climate, but not for us it doesn’t and that’s down to many factors past and present, which I won’t go into now.

Time to get serious! No more actors, thespians and accountants looking for a payday, we need professionals who love football and Everton and will do anything to see us win.
Over to you TFG.

12  John Fitzgerald
27/01/2026    12:10:06

Why did Dibling rush off down the tunnel just as he was about to get subbed on? Reports say it was to the pisser, it wouldn’t surprise me if he was throwing up from nerves. If so, he clearly needs more time to settle into the side, his confidence just isn’t there yet.

13  Andrew Ellams
27/01/2026    12:23:16

He went into a home game against a relegation candidate with a setup to avoid losing and not one to go out and win the game.

That's just not acceptable.

14  Alan McMillan
27/01/2026    12:49:33

i agree with Harry above, Gueye is the past, Rohl is the present and future. Why on earth break up such an effective midfield pairing with Garner to accommodate Gueye? I'm sorry, these lads need to know that if you decide to go off and play Afcon mid season then there is a chance you will lose your place when you come back. Moyes let Everton down with his selection.

As much as we are crying out for a right back, Mykolenko needs upgrading just as much! Please do not play O'Brien in place of Patterson against Brighton, if you need to drop Tarks to play Jarrad, do that instead. Why bring on Beto with 2 minutes to go??? Makes no sense, unless to give him the chance to say his goodbyes. Aznou played really well in the cup match, give him a go, you might be surprised.

15  Neil Cremin
27/01/2026    12:56:56

Peter @6 and John @ 10 good balance analysis. Even when Branthwaite came on his passing was slow. I thought this site would have more balanced opinions however it is the same as TW. The game I watched was we went at them from the first minute winning a corner but as John points out we left ourselves exposed. This has nothing to do with team which from most of what I read was positive. There were difference of opinions on Gana for Rohl which I though was a mistake but then Gana supplied the assist for the equaliser and nearly won it. Cries for omitting McNeill but also similar cries for keeping a winning team, who then would replace him out wide. The main problem last night was the midfield was flat as compared to the Villa game. The obvious analysis on hindsight but who would have predicted that Garner, Armstrong would be poor.

16  Jeff Armstrong
27/01/2026    13:29:33

Personally I thought Moyes main mistake was not going with Aznou instead of Mykolenko at the start of the second half, he made the correct calls by taking off McCneil and Armstrong, and change formation to a back three with wingbacks, for me Aznou would have been a far better option with his pace than the Ukranian who cannot beat a player nor cross a ball consistently.
I also thought Patterson was doing fine on the other flank second half and we didn’t particularly need the Dibling substitution anyway, he proved his lack of confidence late on when he elected to try to pass across the box when a shot at goal was the obvious choice.

17  Paul Birmingham
27/01/2026    14:02:20

A point is better than a defeat.

The 1st half was painful and Leeds were knocking on the door and deserved their lead.

It's very frustrating to watch especially after a very good away win, at Villa, and understandibly this game follows a dip in home form, in terms of results. How and why? But hopefully with core of the squad back, the home form will improve.

But the 2nd half was far better with the changes made, but at times the passing ws too slow.

Barry looks better with the ball played into space, infront of him, and hopefully the hope and pray punts via Tarks and Pickford will reduce.

Good atmosphere towards the end and to think now of the next game, but having Branthwaite and KDH back was a welcome bonus along with Ilie and Gana.

In the bigger picture the 3 pm. KO on Saturday is now a novelty, but the media now runs football. I think we have 3 Saturday home games left for this season.

18  Mike Owen
27/01/2026    14:21:10

Walking away from BMD again with a sense of frustration, I thought of it as a film I had seen countless times over the years, only the names differ.

But the equaliser at least prompted the best bit of atmosphere so far at the new stadium.

Paul, 17, I don't think we'll be seeing any more Saturday 3pm home games this season. Is only Lpool and Man City left down for tbat slot and I'll be shocked if they're not changed for TV. Sunderland is already a Sunday (FA Cup final weekend).

19  Jonston Stanley
27/01/2026    14:23:31

Agreed with Jeff about Aznou in the second half as wing back, he’d have offered a more positive and attacking change. I’d also be trying him as left mid after the last cameo and keep Ili on the right now jacks out. Let’s give the youth a chance Davie, slot merlin back in and give Ganas legs a rest. McNeil lost his man for the goal, does he offer anything more defensively than dibling who’s shown glimpses of being a very intelligent player needing time to find his confidence.

20  Weston Schmidt
27/01/2026    15:16:45

USA here. I didn't get to see the match, only a six minute highlight reel. Was Mcneil truly on the right and Ndiaye on the left?

I can understand putting Ndiaye straight back in because with Grealish out we are short, but Gana was a mistake. The midfield against a very good Villa side was excellent, why change it? Really, ask yourself, why did the manager change it? What was he trying to accomplish with that set up? Did it work? What of the alternatives?

How did Patterson do? If O'Brien is back at RB on saturday it will be more than I can take. Keane can be fourth choice at CB now, and Branthwaite can be eased back in by spelling O'Brien and Tarkowski. No more O'Brien at RB. Surely that nightmare is over.

Good on Barry. How about that side footed shot too?

21  Jerome Shields
27/01/2026    15:22:28

John#10

I take what you are saying. Moyes always has this problem in that his teams do not attack or defend as a unit when his inferiority complex surfaces.

Everton’s issues remain structural rather than situational. The team continues to attack and defend in separate blocks, with a deep defensive line and wingers dropping early, creating persistent gaps through the middle.

What are described as wide overloads tend to form too deep to apply real pressure, slowing attacks and reducing Everton’s ability to sustain possession in advanced areas and often getting caught in deep areas.

The second-half shift to a back five further reduced risk but also conceded initiative, leaving Everton dependent on Leeds pushing forward to create space.
The draw masks a familiar pattern: Everton managing danger rather than imposing control. Leeds did not dominate the game, yet Everton rarely asserted superiority either. It was a performance shaped more by caution than ambition.

Moyes set up to nick a goal without commitment. He then found himself a goal down, and was accepting a 1-0 defeat, better than the previous game against Leeds.
But luckily he got a out of the blue goal, not because of any commitment. He will be well pleased with a draw.

Evertonians should never be accepting this grap from Moyes.

22  John Fitzgerald
27/01/2026    15:54:35

Jerome, I think Evertonians saw with their own eyes that Moyes rang the changes at half-time that had them on the front foot for most of the second half and were a whisker from a win if Gueye’s shot was an inch lower. He may have erred on a few things but accusing him of settling for a loss at home is nonsense.

23  Chris Jones
27/01/2026    16:16:57

I'm really warming to Barry; the lad is a trier.

Several home games ago he fell heavily on his left shoulder when high up on the left side of the pitch (close to my spot in the South Stand, near the corner flag') and it was apparent he'd been having problems already because with his shirt off (while being attended to by the physios) you could see there was already a lot of tape on his shoulder/upper arm.

Last night, during shooting practice in the warm up, Barry shot at goal and immediately afterwards crouched down in some pain for quite a while, clutching the same shoulder (this very close to and in front of Alan Irving). After a while he carried on, and of course took to the pitch when the teams later came out for the kick off.

During the first half Barry was barged by one of the Leeds CBs and went down holding his left shoulder, and the physios came on. The fact that he continued, after the obligatory 30 seconds off the pitch when the game restarted, showed his grit, and suggested the club knows he's struggling, but has stayed quiet so's not to alert opposition yard-dogs to the possibilities of targeting him and his dodgy shoulder.

Anyway, and somewhat to my and my brother's surprise, Barry came out for the second half - and boy weren't we glad he did. As well as scoring a good goal, he'd already earlier drawn a fine save from the Leeds keeper.

Keep going lad; UTFT!

24  Jerome Shields
27/01/2026    16:33:22

John#22

I agree to differ. I don't think my assessment was nonsense, but I will give you he did bring on some younger players, which was a good thing. Barry did score a great goal.

25  chris Keher
27/01/2026    16:56:38

I do back Moyes overall but I thought he got the line-up wrong last night.

Why was McNeil on the right? The drop off from him compared to playing him on the left is massive whilst Ndiaye is a similar standard on either the right or the left.

I'd like to see Patterson (who I thought was good in the first half) link up with Ndiaye as that could be a good combination.

Why was Gana playing so far forward with Garner further back? I thought their roles should have been reversed.

There's also an argument to say Rohl should have kept his place alongside Garner.

That said there were several positives.

Barry is starting to look the part with another well taken finish off very little service.

Branthwaite looked like prime Beckenbauer when he came on (okay maybe I'm overstating that - but he offered us son much more on the ball).

After about 20 minutes KDH started to look like he was getting back to the levels he was at before his injury.

26  Paul Birmingham
27/01/2026    18:31:01

Thanks Mike, that is a sobering prospect.
Yep, the what if's, have been several this season at home, last night, no diffrent to all the home games this season. Getting the good performance for 90 mins is tough, but lets see, with a full strength squad.

All considered, God knows, how many games will be 3 p.m. K O. next season.

Raises many questions, and healthy debates, about football and Everton, - STs, Digital Wallets,etc and value for money.

But good signs for the rest of this season, -hopefully no more injuries.

NSNO!

27  Steve Hogan
27/01/2026    20:16:21

My 10ps worth guys. Question, are we a team in transition, or did last night's performance have all the old traits we are used to seeing with Moyes over the years, even in his second spell?

I would guess, a mixture of both. There are probably four/five current player's who will be no where near that team next season. The two full back position's will most certainly see two new faces,as McNeil and a number of other members of the squad will certainly depart.

We desperately need real pace up front, and someone who can assist Barry as he looks like making the centre forward position his own.

In nearly all of Everton's games this season, home or away, we have never exerted any real control of games, and as such, we almost hand the onus to the opposition to dictate play.

Leeds will almost certainly stay up this season, they controlled the first half, just by keeping possession,and their home form will see them safe. If I had one real criticism of Moyes, it's that his teams, even allowing for the lack of real quality at times, very rarely look like a team who practice passing moves in training for any length of time.

We have said it time and time again, but the recruitment team have a massive job in the summer months, there is a real opportunity to turn a mid-table team, into a side pushing for the top six, and a genuine push for Europe and a strong run in both cup competitions.

Unless Moyes, manages to convince the Friedkin Group that real steady progress is being made in the next few months, they will seek a younger more expansive manager who encourages bold attacking football, certainly at home.

They have made massive strides off the pitch, and our turnover will increase by 30/40% in the next 12 months,which will aid our trading position immensely, our new owners will want to see similar progress on the field.

28  Peter Hoban
27/01/2026    23:39:53

Steve @27 I too think it is a mixture of both. This summer will tell us how good the recruitment team is at not just buying but selling.

I was generally happy at moyes’s return but he hasn’t eradicated his faults from first time round. He’s a safety first manager but there is no denying we have accumulated a good number of points with a threadbare squad and in some cases substandard players.

Chris @23 Barry is a trier and certainly knows how to put the ball in the net but he still has a lot of shortcomings. He’s doesn’t close down players quickly enough and gets pushed off the ball far too easily. Having said that, it is his first year in the premiership so we have to hope he will get better with better players around him and with better service.

29  Andy McNabb
28/01/2026    01:28:04

Really enjoy your articles, Lyndon and I wonder if you unintentionally answered the question here from your other article about our failure to dominate at home?

You started the article by stating that almost 50,000 Evertonians ‘gathered at the prospect of a home win’. We will hopefully be back in the UK later this year and a trip to BMD is definitely in the plan (I struggle with Hill Dickinson) but I certainly don’t expect us to win at home.

When we have a dismal first half at home, I’m not surprised. When I saw that we are next up AWAY to a footballing team like Brighton, I am much more optimistic. Whether it is down to Moyes or the players at his disposal, we are a counterattack minded side and we do not look comfortable in possession. Teams like us will never set the place alight when playing at home.

I sent a screenshot to my son of the table which showed how many games we have won at home since the 17-18 season. Evertonians are a tough breed. I wouldn’t like to work out how much those victories had cost per £ if you had held a season ticket for those years!

Maybe I’ve been beaten down over the years but I was simply pleased that DCL didn’t put the nail in our coffin.

30  Darren Hind
28/01/2026    08:24:10

I see screaming reasons why are results away from home are so much better than the ones at home.The first being we still have more players who are better without the ball than they are with it.
We have a squad that can stand in front of any team and ask "What have you got ?". We are excellent at it. It's when the boot is on the other foot we struggle. When teams demand to know what we have, The answer is usually, not a lot.
It's ridiculous to suggest that we are struggling to come to terms at the new stadium. Especially when you consider we are regularly winning in stadiums we will only play in once.
The tight-nit unit we see away from home completely unravels when the onus is on us. Our midfield players push up, but not far enough to support Barry, He continues to cut an isolated figure. Meanwhile, last ditch Tarks still thinks he is playing away. Unless we are chasing a game, nothing short of a gun to his head will get him away from our area. Last night was no different. We end up strung out like a washing line and the visiting team is able to play through us by exploiting the gaping holes.

We don't have that much to play for this season (give or take 2-3 places either way) so there is no pressing need to rush back our classy valuable center half.

I don't want to keep bashing Tarkowski. It's never just one mans fault and he has been a wonderful servant, but I genuinely thought we had seen the back of him when results went so fantastically well when he was injured last season. Unfortunately my fondness for him evaporates a little more every time I see him. I cant help but wonder. How the fuck he is still getting a game ?

31  Kevin Molloy
28/01/2026    12:53:22

There are clear reasons why we find playing at home more difficult
1 everyone does cos of the change in style across the game with playing it out from the back, it's significantly more difficult to get the ball back from the opposition than was historically the case. See Sunday's results for the latest example of this.
2 we're been bedding in our striker, and so he's not as good at holding up the ball as he will be in a year's time.
3 the key attacking players in the modern game are now the fullbacks, and ours are both sadly lacking in this regard.
4. we are getting used to the new stadium. that old familiarity which we had at Goodison has vanished. it will take decades to build that up.
5, for the last eight weeks we've had six to nine players unavailable from an already pretty small squad.

32  Paul Tran
28/01/2026    13:36:45

We need more players comfortable with the ball so we can actually control games.

We need players with pace so we can break more quickly and simply get the crowd on their feet.

We need Moyes to stop kidding himself about the players. O'Brien is not a full back. Dibling is not a winger. Neither Beto nor Barry are big, strong, hold the ball strikers. McHeil is not a 'solud' option. Play them for what they are, not what you wish they were.

A busy summer for the recruitment team, with possibly some longer-term thoughts on the manager role?

33  John Fitzgerald
28/01/2026    16:09:16

Kevin @ 31 and we’re not the only ones struggling at home. Collectively there seems to be less of a fear factor amongst teams playing away this season. All the clubs around us are hitting and missing. And yet, incredibly, somehow, we’re 6th in the form league, that’s without KDH, Ndiaye, Gana, Alcaraz, Branthwaite and a bit of Grealish.
I’d love to see attacking, flying fullbacks brought in now and Tarkowski eased out to pasture, but I doubt we’ll get anyone in til summer. Moyes used to be good at strong finishes to the season, he’d better remember how that works.


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