Match Preview
Everton will need Mad Dog Gravesen to play and produce the
form he was showing before his recent rib injury, if they are
to make an impression on Aston Villa this weekend. The
expected return of Paul Gascoigne will also be a welcome
addition in midfield.
But Everton need to reverse the bogey that has prevented
victory against the Villans for the past six seasons, as
described by Lyndon
Lloyd in his Viewpoint column wouldn't it be nice to
continue the good work laid down against West Ham and really
give John Gregory something to moan about?
Unfortunately, that also involves bucking another annoying
trend the difficulty Everton have had in recent seasons capitalizing
on big wins and using them as a springboard for mounting a
sustained challenge on the Premiership. All to often, a
big win has preceded a depressing slump in form, as Lyndon
has also documented in an earlier column. But this
time it will be different, won't it!
In the dizzying whirl of team selection, will Walter Smith
drop the "talismanic" (arrrgh!) Duncan Ferguson to
the bench, where he so obviously belongs? After all, he
surely cannot play three up-front again... And Duncan
has been well out of sorts in recent games, failing all season
to score a single goal from open play.
Meanwhile, Joe-Max Moore continues to be overlooked, and
not even considered as a striker any more, despite producing some
good goalscoring form for his country.
With all the chances Everton created against Ipswich,
expectations will no doubt be high that a win can finally be
secured against Villa, even though they are riding pretty high
in the Premiership right now... Let's hope their
elevated position does not precipitate the usual sense of
defeatist resignation we have seen far too often this season
from Walter Smith and his irritating tendency to give superior
opposition (Liverpool, Man Utd) far too much respect.
Unleash the Dogs of War!
Vote New Walter
by Rob Burns
A game of intrigue, skill and tireless work by both teams resulted in what
can only be described as 'breathtaking' stuff at Goodison Park as Walter Smith
finally did what he has been paid to do for nearly four years he successfully
channeled the wealth of skill and ability that exists within the
Everton squad to become the first team to beat Aston Villa this season.
The game had pace, vision, movement and passing worthy of two teams that belong
in the top 8 of the Premiership and the result was as thrilling as it was
intriguing. Everton prior to kick off were surely the team who hoped to 'hold
on' despite being the home side but given a poor record against the midlanders
and their early season form it was not unexpected.
The game's start was
testament to this as Villa worked neat passes and harassed in midfield to shut
out the blues for the first 10 minutes. For their part, Everton's passing was
slack with Alexandersson in particular struggling with the notion of marking in
the opposition half and playing a number of wayward passes. The form suggested a
frustrating day for Radzinski who saw little of the ball despite his sprightly movement up front. The other half of Everton's
much-debated-but-never-in-doubt forward line was a rejuvenated Kevin
Campbell. For the second home match on the trot, behind them was a midfield four
of Alexandersson, Pembridge, Tommy Gravesen and Gary Naysmith. The defensive
show came from Pistone, Weir, Xavier and Watson - and the improving Paul Gerrard in
goal. The workrate was certainly there from Everton and it was much needed
just to live with Villa, playing in a silver kit and black shorts very similar
to our own away uniforms. Pembridge and Gravesen were second to the tackle as
Boateng and Taylor forced the issue. Darius Vassell was a mirror image of our
recent hero Radzinski as he switched from side to side making countless
openings, supported mainly from the left by Hendrie and Wright who were running
that side of the field. But The Blues began to see their luck change as passes
found men and Gravesen, still enthusing from his excellent performance against
West Ham, ducked and swerved past three men and hit a superb drive from 30 yards
that only Peter Schmeichel could take the sting out of. Radzinski began to get
the rub of the green and after screaming down the left flank he selflessly
played in Naysmith who hit a poor shot with his weak right foot. The
signs were certainly there and you could really feel that Villa
were rocking - like a boxer who has seen a cut as they poured on the
pressure - a quick free-kick by Tommy G was flicked off the feet of the waiting
Campbell who was by the penalty spot - the ball found Alexandersson whose cross
from wide right found Naysmith on the far post - Watson stooped low to convert
the pass. 1-0 and a real sense of relief throughout the crowd. Pembridge
left the field early with a hamstring injury just before
half time but there was still an opportunity for Campbell to blaze a shot over
the bar of an open goal - in fairness the cross from Radzinski was hit like a
rocket and was easily misdirected as KC made an enforced effort with his first
touch. The second half saw another distinct period in the game -
Everton were out of the blocks like a greyhound (the animal, not the bus as in
previous weeks!) whilst Villa were still in the changing room. Villa simply
melted as Gravesen took charge in the middle supported well by Gemmill - on for
Pembridge. Alexandersson had certainly found his feet in the first half and was
back into the swing of taking men on and getting beyond the defenders to cross.
On the opposite flank, Naysmith grew in confidence and played like a winger.
His
workrate was enormous as he flew back time after time to assist Pistone.
Radzinski ran every inch of the turf and Campbell has certainly found a new
extra-sensory partner in the Polish-Canadian as he turned provider on many occasions.
If Campbell can continue this form, he will more than pay for the oft-criticised
contract signed in the summer. Naysmith and Radzinski combined for the
second goal. After excellent work on the left, the Scot took it right to the goal
line and slid a cross through that Radzinski converted. The third was more of a
soap opera. Gemmill ran into the area with the ball dropping in front of him.
As
he attempted to control with his head a foot came up and caught him in the face.
An indirect free kick was awarded which Gravesen pushed sideways for Steve
Watson to shoot. But the early movement of the wall led to a retake. Pistone
pushed Gravesen; Gravesen pushed Pistone while Gemmill (I think) stood by.
Like three school-kids they 'discussed' who would be the taker as their one move had been
given away. Gravesen looked to the bench as if to say "Dad tell him its my
turn" - Dad Knox, looking for a quiet life, said OK. "Play nicely
Alessandro!" So he did - one touch and Tommy rocketed the ball under the
wall and away from the outstretched Schmeichel. Gravesen ran the length of the
pitch, past the bench towards Gwladys St - I reckon he wanted to see himself on
the big screen! He was a man possessed and his current form is giving a new
dimension to the side - skill, creativity and agility - a powerful, accurate
shot and an ability to turn - these are rare qualities in a defensive
midfielder! He is the man to turn our season and he is totally hooked on his
rapport with the crowd. Villa showed how a top side should behave at 3-0
however, and rallied; the game took a further turn as they regained the
toughness of the first 20 minutes. Xavier was a rock - some great recoveries of
seemingly lost balls and a calmness in the face of the repeatedly backing in
Vassell and later Dublin. It's hard to tell whether the big man is settled with
us now, but he shows the class of a world footballer more and more these days
and he is certainly a major asset to our squad. Alongside Abel's leadership, Weir
was assured and confident, strong in the tackle. Pistone was also cool and
collected, and seems to jog everywhere but keep pace with his man. His
distribution is accurate and intelligent - he is a player transformed as far as
I - one of his biggest critics last season - am concerned. The 4-4-2 system
complimented both defence and midfield and there was an understanding
of roles and responsibilities that has been a rarity when the back five have
played.
By no means dead, John Gregory's side replied first with Moustapha Hadji from
the right with a header - no fear - we swallowed as I began to play closer
attention to the floor than to the drama unfolding... Action on the bench as
Ferguson and Gazza stripped. The main danger man Radzinski was the sacrifice to
the boos of the crowd. In a testament to his loyalty for the manager,
Tommy duly felt his hamstring and left to a huge ovation - as did Gravesen
minutes later for Gazza, our favourite geordie comic. Everton had understandably begun
to cruise - after all every side who comes to Goodison and concedes tends to
roll over. Not Villa, who played to the last. Three minutes of extra time and
two corners - a goal from their 'keeper and sporting applause from the Everton
faithful for his persistence and the perfect execution of the shot. If he'd have
repeated the feat of course he'd have been booed! Gazza's efforts to play a
holding role looked strained as if what he really wanted to do was entertain.
By
contrast Ferguson took it slow and steady and showed restraint as he help to pin
the advancing Villains back, but less effective against those corners.
Everton once again put on a convincing display and showed that they are serious
contenders for a top-six finish. It is still very early in Walter Smith's
re-birth and bearing in mind Ipswich last week he is not fully committed to the
4-4-2 system yet. He can't ignore players like Alexandersson, Xavier and Pistone
however, who are looking increasingly comfortable in their rightful positions
and showing the form that he must have expected when he bought them.
The only
real drawback from today is that you notice the vulnerability of our squad - the
real disadvantage for Walter - in that we are unable to replace a Gravesen with a
Gravesen, or a Radzinski with a Radzinski - until there is money or movement in
the market we should fear injuries.
It's Just Like Watching
Brazil
by Julian Cashen
Well, not to get
too carried away... I said after the West Ham game that one god result doesn't
make Wally a good manager, any more than the defeat at Blackburn made him a bad
manager. But let's put this result into context. Not only are Villa a major
bogey team for us undefeated at Goodison since 1996 but they are this season's
surprise package, undefeated in the premiership until yesterday and having
conceded a miserly 3 goals in 7 games. And not only did we beat them but, other
than an uncertain opening 15 minutes and a jittery last 10, we played them off
the park with the type of passing game that all Evertonians love but which has
been virtually absent over the past 5 or 6 seasons. This result was an excellent
one for us though it is typical that the headlines will be stolen by the goal
scored by a certain red-nosed Dane. The Line Up For once, no
surprises. Gerrard in goal; the increasingly secure looking back four of Watson,
Weir, Xavier and Pistone. Midfield; Niclas, Pembo, Mad Dog and Naysmith; Super
and the Rad up front. Good for Wally in having the guts to relegate Dunc to the
bench where, with Gazza also present, we have some subs actually capable of
changing a game when we're behind, as opposed to the usual desperate ploy of
throwing Unsie into the fray... First Half During the long drive
up from Ipswich,
listening to the radio and Villa being talked up and Everton getting barely a
mention, I was feeling increasingly glum and hoping for a point, probably from a
nil - nil. And in the opening 10 minutes, I'd have gladly settled for such an
outcome. Villa came out of the blocks at a charge, with the confidence bred from
their good start to the season, while we were hesitant, second to the ball,
misplacing passes all over the park. During this spell the Villans nearly opened
the scoring through a great strike by Lee Hendrie that just cleared the angle.
Vassel looked lively in this opening phase too, though as has been remarked, his
pace well outstrips his ability. Mind you, Angel - 9M?? Makes Bakayoko
look a snip. Gradually we came in to the game and this was largely due to
Tommy Gravesen. I am virtually lost for words at the transformation in this
player this year. We saw in all too brief patches last season, particularly
early on, the type of player he could be, but his energy, determination, and
most of all his range of passing have been a revelation this season. He grabbed
this game by the scruff of the neck and virtually controlled proceedings for the
next hour. After 20 minutes or so, he made a brilliant pass to Naysmith that
should have resulted in a goal, but the youngster, in unfamiliar territory,
hesitated and then snatched a weak shot straight at Schmeichel. No matter.
On 30
minutes we took the lead. A quickly taken free kick on the angle of the box
seemed to have come to nothing but we fought to retrieve the situation, a great
cross went in from the right, Naysmith nodded it back across, and there was
Watto, plunging to power a header in from the edge of the 6-yard box. Get
in!!! Pick the bones out of that one, Red Nose!!!!!!!!
Unbelievably, rather than retreat into our shell and try to see the game through
to the half, we continued to storm in to them. Alexandersson was proving a real
threat down the right with Rad, looking like a stronger Jeffers without the
glass ankles, providing no end of willing movement. On the stroke of half time,
surely it's two; the Rad breaks loose, drills across a great ball, SuperKev surely
only has to connect: he does, and we look for the expected billowing of the
net......... argh!!!!! He's somehow managed to balloon it over from four yards,
which doesn't bode well for his confidence in front of goal after the misses at
Ipswich. Second Half Whatever John Gregory said to his team at
half time had virtually no effect. We continued to batter them, with Tommy
letting fly shortly after the restart with a great 25-yarder that Schmeichel did
well to turn over. Just when I was worrying that the pressure wouldn't turn into
goals, along come two in the space of three minutes. First, Naysmith shows
brilliant alertness to take advantage of some horrible dithering by a couple of
Villans, heads for the bye line at great pace, cuts it back, and finds Rad who
buries it joyfully first time, though in truth he had so much time and space he
could have controlled it, had a cup of tea and still scored. What a beauty,
and Rad's instant rapport with the fans is an absolute pleasure to see.
Minutes later it gets even better. Gemmill, going in to the box, gets his head
virtually removed from his shoulders by a flying Villan boot. Mystifyingly the
ref opts to give... not a penalty for violent play, but an indirect kick for 'foot
up'!!! We line it up. The Villan wall is max 5 yards away. 99 times out of 100 we
balls these up and either hit the wall or an unlucky punter in row Z. There's a
bit of argy bargy as to who'll take it. Finally we're ready. Sharp intake of
breath. It's rolled to Tommy who lashes it through a shaky wall in to the bottom
corner!! Yes!! And last years clenched-fist headless-chicken completes his
transformation into the man of the season so far, celebrating with almost as
much abandon as the most hysterical supporter. It wouldn't be Everton
if we couldn't have a nervous ending. Whether it was tiredness or what, a couple
of substitutions for Villa, and the game swung away from us. Dublin made a
nonsense of his manager's preference for Angel. As to Ginola, he always makes me
nervous after beating us single handedly in a poor Spurs side in the 3rd HK era
- a game where Ginola just about had the beatings of his marker, Mitch Ward. Anyway, their first goal was a looping header of the kind that always makes a
keeper look flat footed. The second, as perhaps any readers of this report may
have heard, was scored by their Keeper. In fairness, Schmeichel's goal was well
applauded by the Goodison crowd. I suspect that had it come 10 minutes earlier
it may have been met by a different sound - that of 33,000 people suffering an
involuntary bowel movement. But we hung on, and thoroughly deserved the
win. Verdict I'm determined not to get carried away but, for an hour
of this game, we played some excellent football. Pleasing as the 5 - 0 scoreline
against the Hammers was, the calibre of the opposition makes this by far the
more satisfying result. To see us actually passing the ball, using the width,
moving off the ball - it's such a contrast with the dross that's been served up
over recent years that it really rekindles the enthusiasm. We're by no
means world beaters but some of our players are really coming into their own
and in particular I am pleased for Xavier, Pistone, Alexandersson and Gravesen,
all of whom have had their doubters, myself included. Xavier and Pistone are
looking real class at the back, strong when defending, comfortable on the ball,
good tacklers and excellent readers of the game. Alexandersson, lost when we
play five in midfield, has come in to his own in a 4-4-2 formation and offers an
outlet and a real threat though the final ball could still improve. As for
Gravesen, a couple of real class performances from him have made him one of our
most influential players. Next Up - the Barcodes Another real test
for us. Similar to Villa, Newcastle have moved on a lot this season under the
guidance of the apparently senile but still motivational Robson. The opportunity
to barrack Shearer is one to relish but, other than their has-been Number 9,
the Barcodes have been a strong attacking side this year and it will be a test
for us to contain them. However, assuming no injuries, recent results have to
have bred confidence... Prediction: Home Win!!
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