28/01/2026 5comments  |  Jump to last

For a good hour of Monday’s clash with Leeds United, Dominic Calvert-Lewin showed Everton what they are missing.

Yes, he missed a gilt-edged chance to make it 2-0 to Leeds midway through the first half, as Everton — who were shocking in that opening period — very nearly wilted under a constant barrage of pressure.

A deflected cross came to Calvert-Lewin at pace, and he could only turn his effort against the woodwork from six yards out.

Everton got away with one, and they took advantage. In the second half, Thierno Barry — from a not altogether too dissimilar chance, though hardly a carbon copy — beat his marker to Idrissa Gueye’s cross at the same end, at the same point on the edge of the six-yard box, and stabbed home, high into the net.

On the face of it, Everton’s current striker scored, and their old one didn’t, and missed a big chance in the process.

Yet I fear this misses the wider point and context.

Calvert-Lewin, especially in the first half, was fantastic. He ran Everton’s defence ragged, stretching it, running the channels and getting into a real tussle with Jake O’Brien and James Tarkowski.

The 28-year-old was also dropping expertly into midfield, creating the space for Leeds’ marauding wing-backs to charge forward down the flanks, while Brenden Aaronson was causing havoc down the Whites’ left flank.

Calvert-Lewin had 17 touches in the first half, though Leeds’ issue was only two of those came in Everton’s area.

And there could be an argument to say it was the “classic” Calvert-Lewin display, the type that Evertonians — or a certain section of the fanbase — had grown tired of.

The issue is, as Leeds dominated every facet of the game in the first half, it was evident just how much Everton, playing the way they do under David Moyes, miss a centre-forward with Calvert-Lewin’s skillset and attributes.

Bringing others into the game, getting their team up the pitch.

And this is not a criticism of Barry. He has shown he is much better at doing that than Beto, for example. He needs time, and patience. The confidence he now has in front of goal is brilliant to see, and shows a tantalising glimpse at a bright future.

However, he still has some way to go in his all-round play. The first half showed the difference.

Barry toiled up front against a back three, and that was on Moyes. His striker was isolated and his team selection was exposed. Harrison Armstrong has been fantastic since he returned on loan from Preston North End, but he lacked the physicality to get up and offer any support to the front man. Dwight McNeil playing out on the right wing was a pointless exercise.

Everton, unsurprisingly — albeit, it could hardly get much worse — improved in the second half after Moyes introduced the fit-again Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall and Jarrad Branthwaite. The change in shape helped, not only to get the Toffees up the pitch, but also give Calvert-Lewin a taste of the medicine that Barry had to swallow during the opening 45 minutes.

Barry took his chance brilliantly when it came, having previously drawn a fine save out of Karl Darlow with a cute, outside-of-the-boot effort. It is now four goals in the space of five league games for the 23-year-old.

But with a week left in the transfer window, Everton need to be smart, and they must be opportunistic. Leeds had 10 shots in the first half, and a better team than them would have put them away.

Calvert-Lewin might have missed that great chance to put the game to bed, but he had also played a huge role in Leeds’ dominance up to that point.

While Everton can look to the future in Barry, they must also look to their past in Calvert-Lewin, and realise they still need their centre-forward to offer those traits, too.

 

Reader Comments (5)

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Dale Self
1 Posted 28/01/2026 at 13:48:49
If it isn't a criticism of Barry, it is a criticism of Moyes. The manager sets it up for the spacing and channels to be targeted. Barry is a kid who is trying his best to figure it out. While he hasnt, and still may not, stitch together a full portfolio of football functions, he is scoring on very few opportunities created.

Go on, place a bet on DCL. I will support Barry catching him, without drama.

DCL put the club in a bad position for an offer that never materialized. Talking about it rather than just getting on with it cost us all. He is gone and we don't miss him.

I was hoping to avoid that discussion.

Jim Bennings
2 Posted 28/01/2026 at 13:59:28
Made a change the actually see the Barry goal came from a cross that was along the ground instead of the usual over hit above head height nonsense that we offer, mostly culpable our left back with the shovel foot.

Not every cross has to be in the air, loads of goals will be tapped in from close range along the ground.

Les Callan
3 Posted 28/01/2026 at 14:43:53
If he had stuck that easy chance away in the first half……game over. But he didn’t.
Sean Kearns
4 Posted 28/01/2026 at 15:00:31
“Showed Everton what they miss”… what are you on about?… Leeds are currently 16th the league, same place we where when he was up front for us. It’s not a coincidence. Give me Beto, Barry and top half of the league all day!… is this site ran by RD trolls now? Genuine question. Some of the article titles seem disingenuous and spiteful to me sometimes. Barry scored a blinder, Dom missed a sitter by using the wrong foot coz he doesn’t have a left at all. But apparently we are missing him 😝 🤣 😂
Sean Kearns
5 Posted 28/01/2026 at 15:02:57
RS trolls*** can we get a edit button please. Or is the site ran by an unmonitored AI system now just to show us (vulnerable working class) betting ads?

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