Smart subs from David Moyes change the game for Everton

Smart subs from David Moyes change the game for Everton

2 minutes, 54 seconds Read

This season Crystal Palace may present the most difficult test for Everton in the new Hill Dickinson Stadium. Second are in the competition and on a remarkable 19-game undefeated series.

The home team was comfortably surpassed by the Oliver Glasner team in the first five -five minutes.

At the same time, Palace checked more of the ball and Everton threatened on different occasions from set pieces, while it also opened the Toffees on fast counters when Everton made trips in their area.

Suspected with Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, David Moyes chose to play Iliman Ndiaye in the number ten position, while Tyler Dibbling moved to the right wing.

While Everton fans were enthusiastic to see the signing of 45 million pounds his first Premier League start, the decision Everton hurt tactically.

Crystal Palace gets their width from wingbacks, instead of wing players. In the meantime, their two most advanced midfielders, in this case Yeremy Pino and Ismaila Sarr, remain central.

At the same time, their two deeper midfielders, Daichi Kamada and Adam Wharton, are in a double pivot for the back three.

This means that Crystal Palace often has four midfielders who can print as a unit in the middle of the field, supported by the full-backs wide, and the striker for them.

While Iliman Ndiaye likes to wand around the right from the right and Kiernan supports Dewsbury-Hall, both Dirabling and Grealish stayed outside.

Everton lost the fight in midfield, when Ndiaye, James Garner and Idrissa Gueye were in the middle of the field in the minority.

A glance at the statistics shows that Crystal Palace won eight tackles in the first half, in addition to enjoying most of the possession than Everton, and won slightly less than 60% of midfield duels.

When a goal during the break, Moyes Charly Alcaraz applied to replace Tyler Dibbling, and when he was still lagging behind in the 65th minute, he replaced an injured Michael Keane by Tim Ioontbunam.

This went against the overload of Crystal Palace. In the first half, Everton only let Iliman Ndiaye attack the space just before the palace, for the last third part of the competition, Everton had all three Alcaraz, Iriegbunam and Ndiaye who roamed in that area.

This brought the fight in midfield equal, and in the second half it was Everton who checked more possession, and won more than 50% of the duels, with 38 to Palace’s 37.

It was the Run of Iukebunam of the midfield in the box that resulted in the tackle and the penalty, which ndiaye steered comfortably.

It was again Iebbunam who started the move for the winner and combined with Mykolenko on the left while Grealish pushed into the box. The next pass from Alcaraz has set up Ndiaye to cross the box, where Everton now had four players waiting.

Without a victory since the end of August, and after much criticism of certain tactical decisions in recent weeks, the on-the-fly changes of David Moyes ultimately made the difference, and Bump Everton was the eighth in the Premier League in the second international break of the season.


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