Everton: The EPL's sleeping giant from Merseyside

By Mike Pearsall / Roar Rookie

It’s a cold, soggy morning in the North-West of England, as the Manchester City bus rolls on down the M62, en route to Goodison Park.

It’s a relatively short away-trip for the Sky Blues and Pep Guardiola, with a rather comfortable three points to keep pace with the Premier League’s peloton expected.

Plucky old Everton has put up some stiff opposition to City in recent years, even securing a lucky point in the home fixture at the Etihad, courtesy of two penalty saves from their keeper Maarten Stekelenburg.

You’d think though, that the quality of City’s line-up would ensure that the Toffees aren’t so lucky this time around.

Sergio Aguero, Kevin de Bruyne, Yaya Toure, David Silva and Raheem Sterling provide firepower that should simply be too much for the spirited side that Everton will put out this afternoon.

Perhaps the only question in Guardiola’s mind is how young John Stones will handle his return to Goodison Park.

Stones didn’t really force his highly publicised transfer, though he didn’t exactly dig his heels in to stay either. If there’s a way to get 40,000 scousers offside, it’s to leave for seemingly greener pastures. Just ask David Moyes.

When referee Mark Clattenburg blew his whistle at the end of the 90 minutes, Guardiola wasn’t the only one in shock.

The entire footballing world would collectively jaw-drop at the final scoreline, Everton having torn City to shreds. Guardiola looked like a man devoid of ideas on the touchline, head in hands as he came to terms with an away trip in the Premier League not being quite so straightforward as one to Getafe or Ingolstadt.

But you could forgive him for not seeing this onslaught coming.

Everton has been solid without being impressive this season. They sit well outside the top six, but don’t look to be troubled by any of the sides below them at the minute. They’re in their own league of slightly-above-par.

If you discount the past two seasons, this position isn’t unfamiliar.

Roberto Martinez had them finish fifth in his first season in charge, and David Moyes had them in the top seven in each of his last two seasons. They were sound achievements when you consider the budget afforded each season.

Across Stanley Park, Liverpool was bringing in Andy Carroll for £35m while bargain buys like Kevin Mirallas at £6m took an entire season’s transfer budget.

But things are different now.

Ronald Koeman hasn’t won over the hearts of fans yet, as he hasn’t adopted the whole ‘my blood runs blue’ charade.

What he does buy into, is Everton’s mantra that only the best is good enough. Too often it’s said but not believed, as a place in the top-half has been seen as a success at Goodison.

He’s made it clear to players and fans alike that the previous standards are no more, with Tom Cleverly loaned out to Watford and inconsistent fan-favourite Gerard Deulofeu seemingly frozen out of the squad.

New major shareholder Farhad Moshiri, who bought in early last year, has also given him the financial muscle to break the glass ceiling.

That budget-breaking fee for Kevin Mirallas four years ago was nearly doubled to bring in an 18-year-old from Charlton in League One.

Making an instant impact, Ademola Lookman put the final nail in City’s coffin with a debut goal after a failed John Stones clearance. Throw in the big signings of Morgan Schneiderlin, and Yannick Bolassie back in the summer window, and suddenly it’s not the ‘plucky old Everton’ of the Moyes era.

That’s not to say Koeman is transforming the club by throwing cash.

The team that dismantled City on Sunday featured two boyhood Evertonians in Ross Barkley and 18-year-old Tom Davies, the latter introducing himself after rather-comically dismissing Gael Clichy and Toure no less, en route to scoring a brilliant goal. 20-year-old Mason Holgate was also among the back three that kept a clean sheet.

The drubbing of Manchester City may just be the highlight for Everton this season. It would take a monumental collapse from one of the sides above for Everton to move any higher in the table, cup hopes having been dashed already.

Perhaps the excitement surrounding this sleeping giant may come in the form of periods of brilliance in the second half of the season, or in transfer business to come.

However what is clear is the new era dawning for Everton Football Club.

Just as Manchester City announced themselves with the record-signing of Robinho in 2008, Everton too has made a statement on the world stage.

The Crowd Says:

2017-01-19T00:32:16+00:00

Eden

Guest


That's the story...I found that amazing when I read it.. Honestly I have much more confidence in Koeman's team than last year simply because defence is a priority. But the bad habits have taken a while to go, and the attacking fluidity seems to only exist if the opposition is pushing forward - i.e. counter attacking City, or any team that chases goals late. When a team sits back we can't penetrate very well.

2017-01-18T21:44:16+00:00

Ken

Guest


Not sure they had 'stadium operators' in 1892. Everton played at Anfield and the landlord, John Houlding tried to put the rent up. Everton said "We're not paying that!" and went and built their own stadium at Goodison. Houlding, with a ground but no football team, formed Liverpool. Be confident man, we'll get a draw at Palace!

2017-01-17T09:03:35+00:00

tully101

Roar Guru


that bloody tom davies played one of the best games ive seen from a midfielder in the prem this year. his passing was exactly what you wont from a number 8, but his defensive duties were something any number 6 would be proud of. Constant harassment of the city players when the had the ball. even without taking the goal into consideration, a great great game from an exciting prospect.

2017-01-17T06:38:36+00:00

Eden

Guest


As an Everton fan I am biased but there is a case for 'sleeping giant' based on their history. A very old club (I believe Liverpool were born out of a disagreement between Everton owners or stadium operators many years ago), some very successful periods and more first division titles than most clubs, strong fan base. However having been pretty much unsuccessful since the premier league era it isnt a surprise that people would write them off. The difference now is that they have a backer who can do more than just maintain and survive. competitive transfer periods, some strong youth at the club - also leading the EPL 2 competition - a new stadium and some luck could really see them leap frog Tottenham and be that team that threatens the big 4 and hopefully cracks it open. Of course being an everton fan means I fully expect them to follow up a 4-0 drubbing of city with a listless loss to Palace next week.

2017-01-17T05:43:10+00:00

clipper

Guest


Don't know if I'd put Everton in the sleeping giant category - they actually hold the record for most years in the top division - quite a feat considering all the rivals.

2017-01-17T00:55:57+00:00

Liam Sheedy

Roar Guru


For the first time in a long time there is proper direction at Everton. Koeman is slowly but surely turning over the squad and putting his stamp on things. Steve Walsh will hopefully work his magic like he did with Leicester in the transfer window.Not a bad start with Lookman. Moshiri though is the best thing to happen to this club in a long time.The debt free loan he provided was massive, new sponsorship deals already in place and Everton can actually start spending significantly. The pipe dream of a new stadium is very much a real possibility. The notion of Everton being a powerhouse will be scoffed at by many as evidenced by the early comments on this article. As a Toffee fan I am feeling very confident for the future. Having an Iranian Billionaire as a stakeholder will do that.

2017-01-16T23:24:07+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


Sleeping giant...you've got to be kidding right?

2017-01-16T22:16:02+00:00

Square Nostrils

Guest


Spot on AZ_RBB, if Everton are a sleeping giant so are Newcastle, Nottingham Forest Wolves,Sheffield Wednesday/United, Sunderland and so on. In Fact Manchester CIty were until they were taken over by CFG no bigger/better or any more or less sleeping giants than Everton or similar clubs as mentioned.

2017-01-16T20:47:06+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Headline is embarrassing. I feel bad for the writer who I'm assuming had no say in the headline. Everton has been around for well over 100yrs and will remain where they are unless they find someone willing pump in £200M each season. They're no sleeping giant. The headline should refer to the writer's claim that this is a new dawn for Everton. I don't quite agree. Everton has seen itself in this sort of position a number of times over the past decade and always reverted back to mid table mediocrity. Alternative is to cash in on players like Tottenham have in recent years. Even then it's very difficult to reach that next level without some serious spending. Yes I know Atletico have done it but they're the rare exception.

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