If Everton could manage two even halves of positive football, they could be a real force in this league. That would be doubly true, of course, if they could sort out their home form because away from Bramley-Moore Dock they remain a difficult proposition for opposing teams. Despite it all, they finished this game temporarily sitting in seventh place in the Premier League thanks in large part to Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall.

The former Leicester and Chelsea man was a huge miss for five winter weeks with a hamstring injury but, fit again, he came to the fore for the Blues once more, scoring the equaliser at Craven Cottage and then providing the wicked corner from which Bernd Leno became the second goalkeeper of the Premier League era to score two own goals against Everton.

This team has made a habit under David Moyes of starting games poorly but then belatedly working their way back in to either grab a point, as they did in dramatic fashion last weekend at Brighton, or all three as they did in this fixture last season and again this afternoon.

The character of the players continues to shine through in these situations; you just find yourself wishing they would stop digging a hole for themselves in the first place. Today, despite coming within inches of taking an early lead when Jake O’Brien hit the post, they found themselves overrun in the first half by a Fulham side bristling with all the quantities that Everton often lack — quick, incisive passing; movement off the ball; pacy full-backs; speedy wingers; and a reliable centre-forward.

The irony of who is their current manager wouldn’t have been lost on the travelling Toffees but in true Blues fashion, Marco Silva’s team appeared to rest a little too much on their laurels in the second half and paid the price. For all but the opening 10 minutes, however, they were irresistible at times in the first half and could have been out of sight by the break.

Jordan Pickford was required to prevent Samuel Chukwueze from scoring a quick-fire second after Vitalii Mykolenko’s unfortunate own goal, the Cottagers twice hit the woodwork and Raul Jimenez really should have scored but the second period belonged to the Toffees after what proved to be an effective half-time team talk from the manager.

The debates continue to rumble among supporters over the manager’s setup, which favours square pegs in round holes to keep his trusted lieutenants in the side, and for the first 45 minutes at least, this contest offered more ammunition for those pushing for more balance in the side and for Everton’s players to start in their natural positions.

Initially, there didn’t seem to be a problem. The Blues stated with purpose and intensity and when James Garner’s swerving free-kick was tipped over the bar by Leno, the midfielder’s corner was met by O’Brien out-jumping team-mates and opponents alike but his header back across goal came back off the post rather than nestling in the back of the net.

Fulham, however, responded by taking control of the game, carving through Everton’s midfield, over-loading them down the Blues’ right flank in particular and going very close in the 11th minute when Pickford had to be alert to stop Alex Iwobi’s deflected centre and O’Brien had to head Sander Berge’s effort off his own goal-line.

The hosts took the lead in the 18th minute, though, with a goal that had more than a touch of calamity about it from the visitors’ perspective. Idrissa Gueye’s airborne tackle merely helped the ball on to Chukwueze who, in turn, found Iwobi and when Michael Keane could only present the Nigerian’s square pass to Ryan Sessegnon, the ball ended at the feet of Jimenez.

The Mexican striker seemed odds-on to score but his shot was repelled by Pickford only to hit the torso of the sliding Mykolenko and bounce into the net.

A sweeping Fulham move less than a minute later ended with Chukwueze but Pickford turned his shot around the post superbly with a firm hand. Seven minutes later, Smith Rowe had room to whip a shot that smacked off the crossbar after Ndiaye had been dispossessed and when O’Brien was easily robbed of the ball on the half hour, it really should have been 2-0. Smith Rowe collected Chukwueze’s pass and teed up Jimenez but, thankfully, he screwed his shot wide from a central position.

Nowhere near as impotent as they has been in the first period at the Amex last Saturday, Everton had further attacking moments of their own. Thierno Barry was released by Dewsbury-Hall to drive towards goal but Joachim Andersen tracked him all the way and charged his shot down for a corner.

Then lovely footwork by Iliman Ndiaye allowed him to clip a cross from the byline that was headed only as far as Harrison Armstrong but the youngster’s half-volleyed strike whistled past the upright. Finally, after Keane’s header at one end had dropped to Harry Wilson but the Fulham man ballooned his shot over, Barry was s split second away from converting a brilliant low cross from Dewsbury-Hall at full stretch.

It was Silva’s men who finished the half the stronger team, however, with Smith Rowe popping up in space behind James Tarkowski but Pickford denied him with his foot and Chukwueze hammered a shot that clipped the top of the crossbar.

Whatever Moyes said in the changing room appeared to have the desired effect because while there were no changes in personnel when the teams re-merged for the second half, there was a notable shift in intensity from Everton.

Dewsbury-Hall’s neat centre was scuffed rather disappointingly into Barry by Keane rather than towards the target while two deliveries from corners either side of Mykolenko’s terrific emergency clearance inside his own six-yard box to foil Jimenez found Everton heads but Barry back-headed wide and Tarkowski nodded over.

With Moyes watching from high in the Riverside stand as he served a touchline ban for accumulated yellow cards, the Blues’ breakthrough finally came with a quarter of an hour to go following the introductions of new signing Tyrique George and Beto for Armstrong and Barry respectively.

And the goal came from the unlikely source of some fine left-back play by Mykolenko, a player having an eventful afternoon on the ground where he scored a rare goal last season and who collected George's forward ball, cut smartly inside his man into the box and squared it for Dewsbury-Hall to sweep home with aplomb.

Beto signalled Everton’s intent to go for the winner he cleverly knocked the ball around a defender and raced towards goal but his final touch took it a fraction away from him and Leno was able to smother it before he could attempt to prod it past him.

The decisive goal did come a minute later, however. Dewsbury-Hall was involved again, curling a corner from the right into the six-yard box where Leno tried manfully to muscle his way around O’Brien who had planted himself in front of him but the keeper only succeeded in punching the ball it into his own net. It added to the own goal he scored for the Blues at the Emirates Stadium as an Arsenal player five years ago; it was the winner that night, too.

Rodrigo Muniz planted a header over Pickford’s bar and a late foul by O’Brien on Kevin gave Fulham a late chance from a free-kick but it was to be Everton’s day.

The win maintains Everton’s remarkable away record since Moyes returned to the club 13 months ago, one that is second only to Premier League leaders Arsenal, and returns the focus to the Toffees’ frustratingly erratic home form.

Tuesday’s visit of Bournemouth offers another chance for Moyes’s side to make the supposed advantage of Hill Dickinson Stadium pay and press their claims for a place in Europe which seventh place now almost guarantees given that the protagonists in the Carabao Cup Final will be the Gunners and Manchester City. Let’s hope they grab the chance with both hands.



Reader Responses

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

1  John Raftery
07/02/2026    20:34:00

Sometimes we leave a football stadium shaking our heads wondering how on earth we managed to lose a game. Today the reverse applied. For seventy minutes our team performed very poorly. Fulham could have wrapped up the points in the first half. Misfortune in terms of the woodwork and one piece of really poor finishing cost them dearly.

It was to our team’s credit they clung on before capitalising on one of the few pieces of attacking quality to equalise. The winner owed much to goalkeeping inefficiency but we were overdue some success from dead ball situations. Sometimes the ball runs kindly for a team. Today it most certainly did for the boys in all blue.

2  Harry Hockley
07/02/2026    21:00:21

Another result on the road, another poor first half, square pegs in round holes and a second half comeback.
A reoccurring theme as we were clinging on for dear life where Fulham should have been home and hosed by half time.

Inevitably, a second half comeback led by the instrumental Kiernan Dewsbury Hall turning things around, it wasn’t pretty or an easy watch but when is it? a win in which ever way it comes is always welcome, however, one thing you can’t question is the character of this team, we just don’t know when we’re beat.

I thought Garner improved as the game went on and managed to stamp his authority in the middle as Chukwueze was having a field day waltzing through a porous midfield. This is a theme we’ve been seeing lately where our midfield is very disjointed, having two slow centre backs who are struggling and very deep obviously exacerbating the issue leaving gaps for Fulham to exploit.

Armstrong did well but is being wasted on the wings, after playing well in the middle against Villa Moyes stuck him out wide and he struggled and then he keeps him there, he obviously has no trust in Dibling, Tyrique George looks very promising, he was bright and confident when he came on.

Well done the players for showing grit and determination when things look bleak and well done Moyes for getting results, even if it’s at the expense of being more forward thinking and innovative.

3  Antony Abrahams
07/02/2026    21:08:46

I didn’t think we needed to make the first two subs when we did John, because I thought we were well on top at that stage of the game but I thought George, gave us a little bit more of an outlet, as we continued to push Fulham, further and further back.

Despite the many, what might have been games, my glass is half full tonight, so let’s hope this continues on Tuesday night, before the players get the first of a few breaks, which means they hopefully should be very fresh for the run-in.

4  Jonston Stanley
07/02/2026    22:29:08

How many times has losing a game like that happened to us before? Nice to be the ones dishing it out, and the points keep mounting up.
You’ve got to hand it to Davey, this is one dogged group that don’t know when they’re beaten. Thoroughly enjoyed that second half, up the toffees.

5  Jeff Armstrong
08/02/2026    00:39:28

Dibling slips further down the pecking order after George’s cameo, sorry but it’s going to be an underwhelming season from our slow £40 million one footed winger who doesn’t want to be here.

6  Weston Schmidt
08/02/2026    04:34:52

Thrilled with a rare comeback win.

But this is getting crazy. Armstrong is not a right winger. O'Brien is not a right back. For all the praise Moyes has gotten for recent results, there is no question those results would have been better with Patterson at RB. And the midfield three that played Villa off the park? Fair dues putting KDH back in, but Gana's automatic place in the 11 ought to be a thing of the past. Why is he always popping up for shots from outside the box and generally in more offensive positions than Garner? Yes, he did recently get the one assist, but otherwise his offfensive presence is a liability.

Keane is a head scratcher. He has been pretty good this season, but we are almost always better without him in the side, the odd goal notwithstanding.

I'm starting to see what people mean when they call Moyes a dinosaur and that Evertonians are so used to crap that they'll settle for anything slightly better than crap.

I understand there's a match tuesday, and so there might be some squad rotation. But here is the undoubted best 11.

Pickford
Patterson Tark Brant Myko
Garner Armstrong/Röhl
Dib/George KDH Ndiaye
Barry

Gana in the rotation. O'Brien in the rotation.

Moyes is costing us points to prove to Patterson he's a hardass. Or Moyes actually thinks O'Brien is better. Either way...

7  Christine Foster
08/02/2026    05:00:21

No wonder Silva looked so dejected, Fulham should have been well ahead by half time, our defense throughout the game, especially the first half, was poor with the exception of Pickford and the unlucky Myko. Jake is no full back, continuing with him when Patterson is clearly better suited and provides better balance is just mystifying. Both Tark and Keane were poor today, surely better pairing is Branthwaite and Tarkowski, but honestly the current pairing just cannot turn!
Midfield harried and chased down well, Garner and KDH brilliant, Harrison looked a little lost whilst Gana cannot last a game anymore, Tim is not his replacement.
Ndiaye always a threat with some great deliveries flagged a little and Barry just wasn't at the races.
Overall we should have been buried by half time but it shows if you compete and chase teams down you can win. Moyes will be rightly thrilled, so many times we needed to play front foot football in games, this showed a blueprint for how we can win games tactically with endeavour. Well in guys.. well done Moyes!

8  Phil Sammon
08/02/2026    05:58:48

I went to bed at half-time, 2:45am here in Melbourne, not knowing whether we’d just played our good half or our bad half.

We were lucky to only be one down but we did have our chances. Knowing we can only show up for one half of football, I didn’t know which Everton were going to show up after the break.

Woke up this morning and was delighted to watch one of the best 45 minute performances of the year. I thought we came out with real hunger and didn’t stop even when we got the equaliser.

KDH will take the plaudits and rightfully so. He was excellent and looked dangerous every time he got the ball.

Armstrong has been great but I would have subbed him earlier. I don’t think he played well today and he’s not a wide player. He does guarantee you 100% effort which I’m sure Moyes appreciates.

With George, Dibling and McNeil we do have plenty of options. George likely to start midweek I reckon.

Anyway, great win and we are sitting very pretty. Happy days.

9  Jerome Shields
08/02/2026    08:14:17

When is Moyes going to rethink his first half tactics and instructions ? Again the inevitable happened.It took being on the front foot progressing the ball forward in the second half to get the result. Silva made the same mistake in the second half protecting the lead and not putting Everton's unit cohesiveness under pressure.Tarks and Keane cannot defend on the turn , staying that critical yard too deep and wrecking the unit going forward leaving gaps.

But the next game Moyes will set up exactly as before.

10  Peter Hoban
08/02/2026    08:42:24

Every week is turning out the same but as long as we pick up wins like yesterday or last second equalisers at Brighton then Moyes will consider his formation the right one and won’t change.

We can expect to see O’Brien at right back for the rest of the season except for a last home game start for Seamus but hopefully Branthwaite will start Tuesday and then remain in the team next to Tarkowski.

Hoping to see George start Tuesday and if he does and shows some direct, pacy running then the crowd will take to him.

After every away win this season I hope for a home win to move us up the table so here’s to a win Tuesday.

Unless we go on a four or five game winning streak then I think 7th place is the best we can achieve which is likely to qualify for Europe although a number of far flung places will be the reward. That will test the away support!

11  Antony Abrahams
08/02/2026    09:42:59

I like Silva. Christine, but I saw a little face he pulled just before half time and it told me he was worried because he knew his team should have been out of sight.

Maybe this is his flaw? I’ve seen that face a few times before, when he stares blankly at the floor and it is usually a resignation sign, just before things go and get worse, which is thankfully what happened yesterday.

12  Paul Tran
08/02/2026    10:14:59

Silva lacks the nous Moyes has, Tony, and I think he knows it. Saw it often enough when he managed us. That's why I thought we could get something out of the game at half time. Easy to forget that they're a midtable team too. I'd like to see George start on Tuesday.

13  Peter Fearon
08/02/2026    10:24:42

Given the critical comments on this thread if I did not know the result I would have assumed we had lost.
Weston@6, you cannot argue that with a different team selection “there is no question our results would have been better.” They may have been, or they could have been worse. You are engaging in speculation not certainty. Moyes and his expirienced staff do have more information about players’ fitness and attitude than all of us spectators. They see them in training and they talk to them individually. Their selection choices might not satisfy all fans but they are based on a professional assessment of which is the best team to win the game.

14  John Raftery
08/02/2026    11:30:00

Tony (11) Yes, I spotted Silva shaking his head not long before half-time. I think he probably realised his team would not be able to sustain the level of effort they put into that first half. So it proved. The Fulham players were out on their feet after the hour mark.

Peter (13) Fully agree. I would add that Branthwaite was clearly struggling in the last few minutes of his appearance at Brighton. Plainly he is being eased back into regular action. After such a lengthy absence it will take him some time to reach full match fitness. The worst scenario would be for him to break down again.

Harrison is not a right winger. He is not a left winger, the position in which he started yesterday’s game. Yet one of the impressive features of his play is that he appears able to make a decent fist of any position. Yesterday he relieved the pressure on his team by running at the opposition and winning five fouls out of the total of eleven committed by Fulham. In this development phase of his career, it will do him no harm to get a taste of the requirements of different positions.

15  Tom Smith
08/02/2026    13:04:24

There’s no pleasing some people, away points won since he came back is second only to Arsenal, home form needs sorting obviously but why can’t you just enjoy the win today, 7th in the league at the moment, go back to where we were before he came, we were probably 17th, chill out we’re on the up 😄

16  Weston Schmidt
08/02/2026    16:51:08

Peter 13- But we've all seen the matches, so we all know the team plays better with Patterson at RB. It's not speculation. I love three points on the road as much as anyone, but that first half (anyone else noticing a trend?) was not good and we could have been well behind at half time. Well done to the players on the pitch for fighting back, but their manager set them up for failure.

Everyone knows Moyes plays favorites (many managers do, of course), but unless O'Brien is looking like Maicon in training and then suddenly looking like... O'Brien... during matches, the line "we don't see training" does't make sense.

"This lad trains so well, or I assume he does because the manager chooses him"
"How does he look on match day then?"
"Barely serviceable. Really limits the side."
"Haven't you got any other options?"
"There is another player, he's actually a natural at the position as well."
"Why does't the manager chhose him? How does he look on match day?"
"Pretty good. Better than the other one."
"Why doesn't he play then?"
"Couldn't tell you. He nust not train well."

Madness.

If you have two strikers who are both performing well below standard in matches but you have to choose one, then by all means, choose the one looks better in training. But match performance is the best predictor of future match performances.

And again, we have seen the matches. Not only is Patterson better at RB than O'Brien, but the whole team improves with Patterson's presence. Are you and others not seeing this when you watch? If you're not seeing it, I suggest you watch more closely. If you are seeing it, what is the point of defending the manager's error? "Three points so who cares la la la"? Very shortsighted.

Moyes is a dinosaur. He lives in the past. He will never take a team to the top. It's not in him, I'm afraid. People say he gets the club. So he came in thirty years after the club was last successful- what is it that he gets then? He was an acceptable choice (though perhaps not the right choice) after Dyche, but that's it.

Who thinks Ndiaye will want to stick around when he could go to nearly any club he wanted and they will... if you can believe... actually play a proper fullback behind him.

Why do you imagine Grealish sings Moyes' praises so much? Because Pep froze him out and Moyes has done nothing but tell him what a good, important boy he is. It's not complicated. Moyes couldn't handle Man U and laughably his first move there was to try to poach Everton players (playing favorites again... as bad as Martinez bringing along Kone and Alcaraz). He couldn't help Sunderland. What happened in Spain? We know what happened at West Ham. Ok for a while till the wheels fell off.

Again, happy to have him after Dyche, but will be shocked if we haven't got a new manager by the start of the 2027 season. Old Bill played favorites with Moyes like Moyes does with the squad, but Bill's not around any more.

I suppose that was a lot of words to say: who do you think is the better RB, Patterson or O'Brien? If you say O'Brien, you're joking. If you say Patterson, then you are admitting that the manager is making decisions that cost us points.

17  Rupert Sullivan
08/02/2026    17:50:41

Weston (16) I find myself agreeing withg much of what you say... I too think that Moyes is a manager whoi plays his 'favourites' irrespective of the tactics that a situation may demand. I am neither a football manager, nor a player, but I am dismayed that the club can have players for certain positions, and then not play them. Having watched a fair bit of Everton under David Moyes, I lament his tendency to (what seems to me from the outside) freeze out certain players - notably the youngsters. Dibling, Aznou both must be wondering what they have to do to mark their mark... Patterson too no doubt. Yes, George got a run-out, and yes, Armstrong too apparently, but the 40 million pound winger just sits there on the bench.

He isn't a risk-taker, and he plays the percentage game. Perhaps that is what is needed right now, although honestly, I think he will ruin players like Dibling if he continues down this path.

18  Paul Hughes
08/02/2026    19:34:43

We are in 8th place. We have 37 points in the first week in February. We are not in a relegation dog-fight.It’s better than anything we’ve seen for the past 6 or 7 seasons.
I just don’t get the negativity. Yes, Moyes is frustrating with his conservatism and favouritism. But, honestly, what alternative would the nay-sayers suggest,at this juncture?
If we are still 8th-ish, with underwhelming performances this time next year, then let’s re-assess.

19  Peter Fearon
08/02/2026    20:51:01

Weston@19. That is a very long ramble that adds nothing to the debate on Moyes’ capability as a manager. The “dinosaur” jibe is a ridiculous criticism. We are performing exceptionally well given the depth and quality of our squad. Look at the top six teams in the Premiership and calculate how much those players cost and compare that to Everton. Look at underperforming Man U, Newcastle, Spurs for example. Are they managed by non dinosaurs? We have been managed by Martinez, Koeman and Lampard. I prefer Moyes

I do not rate Patterson as a full back. It was a gamble to sign him, worth the risk but it has not paid off. I cannot understand why you feel he is the key to team success.

Moyes was not a success at Man U, but none of those who have followed him have done any better. By the way, ‘manager’s favourites’ are players who are chosen by the manager because he feels they are the likely to get the best results and looking at the league table, we are doing well. Perhaps, given the quality of our squad, better than many of us expected.

20  Jerome Shields
08/02/2026    21:20:10

Everton are refinanced and under new management.Evertonians after years are entitled to ask for more. Both Weston and Rupert are right.Moyes scrapping through with obviously weak tactical play and only playing younger players with potential when he has too is not good enough.Alot of money was spend on these players they should be developed to play in the first team by now, they do add to play when they do play. They are not coached for Moyes rigid structure with their previous Clubs and Moyes has not accommodated them.

Moyes will finish mid table, but just as the Cups are gone, European Football will follow suit.

Everton with Moyes and Finch Farm are not geared for European football.They will get renumerated as before without qualification.

21  Weston Schmidt
08/02/2026    22:11:47

Peter, please, tell me who- based on your watching Everton this season- has performed better at RB- Patterson or O'Brien? That is the only question.

I thinj Patterson is particularly good, but I know, from watching the matches, that he is better than O'Brien. Agree or disagree? We aren't talking about how good either player is, we are only comparing them to each other for this season. Who has performed better? With which player on the pitch has the team performed better? If you say O'Brien, then that's that. We disagree, we move on. If you say Patterson, I'd like you to explain why you think it's ok for Moyes to any play him when there is literally no other choice? Maybe I'm missing something.

Finally, it's not negativity. Let's say we lost a hotly contested cup semi-final, but most supporters agreed the manager did not play the best players. Nothing about tactics even. Just that a better player sat the bench. Is it negative to say, "manager got that wrong. We could be in the final and are a better side than either of the other two semi finalists. Very frustrating and not a good sign for things to come?" Is that negative? What is it to say "Wow we made it the semi final and nearly even won. Good enough for me and I won't here any criticism".

Yes, wonderful result at Fulham, but look at the whole season. If you're so pleased with 7th (for now) how would 6th feel?

I get it, some supporters just want to moan when we lose and celebrate when we win. And of course I could be criticized for wanting to moan no matter what, but that is missing something about what I'm saying. I'm saying we could be doing even better but for the manager's stubborness. If I can see who the better RB is, he can too. Yet he persists. Why? Dinosair mentality. Tough guy "my way or the highway" routine. Mourinho is the only top manager who could pull that off, and we see where he is these days. And he made his players- all of them- love him. He would have either converted Patterson or shipped him off by now. Not Moyes. Moyes' insistence is costing us points. The manager is meant to squeeze the most points out of the side as possible. What management philosophy is leading him to play O'Brien over Patterson is flawed. Seventh? We could be higher. Happy with a 1-2 comeback, sure. How about roasting any side that comes to HD. Never under Moyes.

I see what I see. If that makes me negative, fine. I can do no other.

22  Peter Fearon
08/02/2026    22:26:24

Weston, you have an extraordinary faith in your ability to detect football excellence which I do not share.

23  Kevin Molloy
08/02/2026    22:31:26

Jerome none of that makes sense. Moyes took over a team with two goals in ten games. I will repeat that. Two goals in ten games. From that standing start he has produced top six football now for over a year. And you say 'Evertonians are entitled to expect better'. So if top six wasnt' good enough for that first year, can you tell me what was? were you thinking we should have been in the Champions League spots by now? Or is it the First halves of the last few games that is keeping you awake? The ones where we come back to equalise or win away, but still those wretched first halves mean that the manager has somehow underperformed. It's just so negative. We finally get a good run, something to cheer about and there is so much moaning. It would be different if it was constructive criticism, or justified complaints, but it isn't. Top six football for a year, from a team circling the drain. After a decade of shite.

24  Jerome Shields
08/02/2026    22:50:41

Kevin#23

Moyes was employed to stabilise and get mid table.Moyes is achieving that, which I am glad to see, but Everton now need to be showing signs of pushing on from that.It is obvious there is no stage 2 with Moyes.

25  John Fitzgerald
08/02/2026    23:14:20

Jerome, he quite literally took Everton from upper middle table to European placement yesterday. And yes, definitely despite his team selection which for most/ a lot of us drives us mad yes, and yes, his luck in first halves will run out in away performances, but we’re three points from safety in early Feb and a shout of Europe. We all want attacking front football, but guess what, it takes more than two transfer windows to turn it around. For once in your life give the guy a break, ffs.

26  Jerome Shields
09/02/2026    00:26:59

John#26

I agree with your post.

The transfer policy is to buy in young players with potential and spend a lot of money on buying them. Moyes will not be given the money to spend on the experienced professionals he would like. The development of these type of players is currently what you are seeing. The tactics and selection are not showing that.That is my point.

As for European Football Everton do not have the squad or preparation for a Cup run never mind European Competition.

27  John Fitzgerald
09/02/2026    01:38:42

Jerome, your measured response humbles me. I might disagree with you on occasion but you’re always civil.
I will, however, hope to prove you wrong with Moyes not investing in youth - he will play George regularly from now on, he’s ready.

28  Antony Abrahams
09/02/2026    07:40:21

It’s not about you proving Jerome wrong, it’s up to David Moyes, to do that John!

I think if Everton get into Europe, then Moyes, would go all out for the conference cup, Jerome. Why not he’s done it before so he already knows it’s achievable, just like he will know that he can make us the best of the rest again, but has he got that real belief in himself to believe that he can take us further?

That’s how I see our manager. He’s already proved that he his steady and decent, but has he got that inner belief to go and achieve so much more, now he’s got so much experience?

29  Tom Smith
09/02/2026    10:42:08

Jerome, you are a bundle of joy aren’t you, I would hate to sit next to you at the game lad, thank god it’s only a 52,000 to one chance

30  Howard Poole
09/02/2026    15:40:50

I think the polarisation of views in this thread reflect what is a most odd season; certainly far from the stressful times we have season over many years.
That is refreshing.
On the other hand our fickle form is concerning.
Saturday's game was possible the strangest this season.
Initially a decent opening spell which threw Fulham subsided as we failed to score followed by twenty minutes of chaos. Gana Gaye seemed to lose interest & the back four seemed literally all over the place.
A disastrous three or more deficit loomed.
Somehow enough order returned to allow us to compete again, even create as the half concluded.
Thankfully the unity of purpose which has been a real plus emerged and carried us through.

31  Andy Merrick
09/02/2026    16:53:00

If this conversation is about how we now assess the manager one year into his contract,I cant deny his improvements, steady the ship and make us harderto beat, job done.

Maybe I should be happy enough with that in view of the angst ridden seasons weve been through?

But when his chosen 11 start badly, he is not inclined to change it early enough for me.

He does have favourites, Pickford I undersrand, top keeper, we have 4 CBs, one or both of Jarrard and Jake should start, as much as we have relied on Tarks and Keane, they both lack speed and mobility now, we play deeper, safer with this pair, and it makes DM play deeper too or leave spaces, and at Fulham this was exploited.

At home on our bigger pitch, this can be even more testing, I feel this maybe a factor in our disappointing home form.

The full backs issue is long standing and well debated, we probably need to keep both Patterson and Myko as squad players for a while longer.

Our midfield us really interesting now, Gana is fading, but Garner has come on so well, KDH is a quality addition, Armstrong is develoing really well, Tim, Charly and Merlin give us some cover.

The front line is poor, apart from Illy who has such great feet, confidence and flair.

Jack has been such a useful outlet, so comfy on the ball, occupying 2 or 3 opponents at a time, winning freekicks, we have to hop Tyrique can fill a a gap for us now.

Tyler seems lost, maybe Moyes has tried and failed to lift him, but the manager and player may have lost faith in each other.

Neither Beto or Barry hit the ground running, both are short on quality and consistency.

Lets see how our manager gets on with what we have until the summer, and more importantly perhaps how he strengthens then.

So I am grateful for what Davey has done, but the manager of old is still there in my eyes, and I am wanting more than this now.

32  Andrew Ellams
09/02/2026    17:32:11

Totally agree Andy. There's no doubting that Moyes has moved us on but is he the man to take us to the next level after this? I don't think so.

I get he's been hampered by the basket case this club had been for 9 years before and even though the summer window was a plus it still left him short squad wise but for me we have the best batch of quality young players we've had for a very long time and I just don't think that's his forte.

33  Paul Birmingham
09/02/2026    18:20:56

Great recovery and win from the ashes of in some ways a typical Everton 1st half this season.
At half time, it could have been 4, 5, to Fulham and perhaps Everton could have scored a couple after a positive initial 8 mins.

Why this happens, allowing for a few positonal tweaks in the S L U, is one to reflect on.

Brainthwaite, starting on the bench made shrewd sense. I believe he will start tomorrow.

Bournemouth on their day are a good team and play with flair. The bew Brazilian winger, looks very handy as an attacking threat.

I don't believe Everton, have enjoyed total command of any half of any game this season.

The great posiive from this season todate and hopefully it lasts, to season end, is some how away from home, Everton turn up in phases, of the games and have been decisive.

If.. as always, tomorrow Everton, can break the home form jinx, and turn up and win.

This would be a big positive, in view of tough games home and away coming up soon.

NSNO!

34  Mike Iddon
10/02/2026    11:24:25

If we are as poor as some of the comments on this thread make us out to be, how shit must the RS be only 2 points ahead?
The debate about pro/anti Moyes is so tedious, no-one can say he, along with his coaching staff and new players, hasn't improved the team this year; from my perspective it's night and day over the past 3-4 years.
Everyone knows he's not the medium-term future of Everton management but its the here and now that counts. Let's just support the team to a european place and see where that takes us rather than fearing we're not equipped for it.
An article in the Athletic today quoted "the big 6 plus Everton" were the only continuous members of the PL. A post in response rightly stated that its actually the top 7 most successful teams in history plus City & Chelsea (who have had massive cash injections).
Step by step, let's get back where we belong whoever the manager is.

35  Jerome Shields
10/02/2026    14:28:09

Tom#29

Hopefully I will get sitting beside when I'm Bramley Dock.

36  Jerome Shields
10/02/2026    17:50:44

Tony#28

It did cross my mind that he would try to qualify for Europe for that competition.But I think that there are two things against it ; Will Finch Farm want the extra work of Europe and he will not get to buy in the hardened professionals like he did have at West Ham.Moyes may think that it is better the manage expectations rather than achieve them.

You are right Tony I am throwing down the gauntlet to Moyes.I am prepared to accept mid table at best.


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