2018: A Year Of Two Halves

2018 has been a mixed year for Everton. Fans became frustrated with Sam Allardyce’s football and wanted change. He got sacked and in the summer, Marco Silva joined, who, since his appointment, has been praised by the majority of fans. But how do the two compare in 2018? Sam Allardyce joined Everton near the end of 2017 with the task to ease the club’s relegation fears and he did it before the year was out. The great start had deteriorated so this is an insight on Allardyce’s time at the club once the threat of relegation was over and how Silva fared compared to him.

All decimalised stats indicate “per game” (Allardyce = 17 games, Silva = 20 games).

I hope a lot these stats will intrigue you.

 

Overview

Allardyce Silva
Points 1.29 1.35
Wins 6 7
Draws 4 6
Losses 7 7
Goals Scored 1.12 1.55
Goals Conceded 1.53 1.50
Scored Opening Goal 8 11
Conceded Opening Goal 8 8
Points Won From Losing Positions 2/27 3/30
Points Lost From Winning Positions 5/24 11/36

Attacking

Allardyce Silva
Shots 9.8 13.0
Shots On Target 3.2 4.4
10+ Shots In A Game 8 16
5+ Shots On Target In A Game 4 9
Outshot Opponents 2 11
Big Chances 1.88 2.00
Goals Scored From Big Chances 0.59 0.85
Goals Scored From Big Chances % 31.3% 42.5%
Chances Created 6.9 9.5
Attempted Dribbles 16.2 14.9
Successful Dribbles 8.9 8.9
Successful Dribbles % 54.7% 59.7%
Offsides 2.4 2.2
Fouls Suffered 10.4 12.2

Opposition

Allardyce Silva
Shots Faced 13.9 11.2
Shots On Target Faced 4.8 4.1
10+ Shots Faced In A Game 13 11
5+ Shots On Target Faced In A Game 8 7
Opponents Outshot EFC 13 8
Big Chances Faced 1.71 2.35
Goals Conceded From Big Chances 1.00 1.10
Big Chances Pickford Saved 0.29 0.55
Goals Conceded From Big Chances % 58.6% 46.8%
Chances Created By Opposition 10.4 8.1
Opponents Caught Offside 1.5 2.4

Possession

Allardyce Silva
Touches 585.7 634.8
Unsuccessful Touches 17.4 17.8
Dispossessed 10.5 12.6
Unsuccessful Touches Every X Touches 33.6 35.7
Dispossessed Every X Touches 55.9 50.4
Loss of Possession Every X Touches 21.0 20.9
Recoveries 55.6 54.6

Passing

Allardyce Silva
Total Passes 385.1 427.4
Successful Passes 283.9 333.6
Forward Passes 214.0 238.7
Successful Forward Passes 133.8 165.9
Attacking Third Passes 129.7 127.1
Successful Attacking Third Passes 77.8 82.0
Pass Accuracy % 73.7% 78.0%
Forward Pass Accuracy % 62.5% 69.5%
Attacking Third Pass Accuracy % 60.0% 64.5%
Forward Pass To Total Pass % 55.6% 55.8%
Attacking Third Pass To Total Pass % 33.7% 29.7%

Defending

Allardyce Silva
Interceptions 11.9 11.4
Attempted Tackles 26.1 23.4
Successful Tackles 16.1 17.2
Successful Tackles % 61.7% 73.3%
Clearances 29.3 21.6
Fouls Committed 11.4 11.3

Actions In Opponents’ Half

Allardyce Silva
Recoveries In Opponents’ Half 13.1 15.6
Recoveries In Opponents’ Half % 23.6% 28.6%
Interceptions In Opponents’ Half 2.9 2.8
Interceptions In Opponents’ Half % 24.1% 24.2%
Tackles In Opponents’ Half 7.9 6.5
Tackles In Opponents’ Half % 30.2% 27.8%
Successful Tackles In Opponents’ Half 4.3 4.5
Successful Tackles In Opponents’ Half % 54.5% 68.5%

 

Judging by the bold count, Marco Silva has improved the team by quite a margin, especially regarding the attacking, opposition and passing stats and considering Silva’s Everton had played against 5 of the Top 6 away from home. However, it is implied that the club should have done better under Silva as Sam Allardyce and Silva’s points per game and goals conceded per game rates are very close. Conceding from set pieces has been a major issue for Everton under Silva, as well as not being clinical enough in front of goal and defensive capitulation. Seamus Coleman and Theo Walcott’s performances have also been criticised this season.

So 2019 could be a promising year for Everton providing that they continue becoming an attacking threat, they sign a striker who is clinical in front of goal in January (plus one or two signings) and be a more composed defence when they are on the brink of conceding a goal and after they concede a goal as well.

The John Marshall Story

Today (7th December 2018), John Marshall would have celebrated his 40th birthday. 23 years ago, he was a promising young footballer who featured prominently for England’s under-15 team. He honed his skills at the famous Lilleshall National Sports Centre for two years. Clubs were vying for his signature – such as Blackburn, Aston Villa, West Ham and Liverpool. But he decided to join Everton. The Blues were tracking his progress for 18 months and were pleased that he decided to join them. In June 1995, John returned home from holiday in Spain with his friends from Lilleshall. He was at home with his family, playing with his sister, and suddenly, he became very seriously ill. He was in intensive care for a few days but the doctors sadly couldn’t save him. He passed away on 3rd July 1995 – the day he was about to sign for Everton as an apprentice. He was just 16 years old.

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Springboks at Goodison

In 1958, a team comprising of South Africans went on a tour of Britain and Ireland. It started in the summer with a 2-2 draw against Headington United. Victories against Bedford Town, a Norfolk County FA XI and a British Universities XI followed and then came their biggest test – reigning champions Wolves. The Springboks narrowly lost 1-0 to Wolves. They then beat a Wales Amateur XI before preparing themselves to face Everton at Goodison Park.

 

In September 1958, it was announced that Everton would play against the South African tourists under the floodlights at Goodison Park. The match took place on October 8th – and this wasn’t the first occasion South African tourists played at Goodison Park. In December 1924, Everton played against a South Africa XI at Goodison, losing 3-2. Jimmy Broad and Alec Wall scored for the Blues. The player who scored two of the South African tourists’ goals was David Murray, who subsequently joined Everton the following summer and became the first overseas player to play (and score) for the club when he made his debut against Cardiff in September 1925.

Teams

Everton South Africa XI
Jimmy O’Neill Trevor Gething
Alan Sanders George Martin
John Bramwell Ken Denysschen
Johnny King Henry Hauser
TE Jones Gilbert Petersen
Brian Harris Malcolm Rufus
Andy Penman Charlie Hurly
Jimmy Harris Wally Warren
Dave Hickson Les Salton
Bobby Collins Marty Deetlifs
Eddie O’Hara George Barratt

There are three names worthy of note. Gilbert Petersen, the tour captain, was nearly signed by Everton in 1955 when he was 18 but he decided to stay in South Africa. Everton then tried to sign compatriot and tour-mate Charlie Hurly the following year but he declined, saying he didn’t want to move to England. The remaining name is Andy Penman – said to be Everton’s youngest ever player. The Scotsman made his debut for the Blues exactly a week earlier in Everton’s Floodlight Challenge Cup meeting against Liverpool, aged 15 years and 223 days. He also nearly scored in that game, with the Liverpool Daily Post saying he “delivered a magnificent shot that was speeding away from [Tommy] Younger to a place in the net, when the international goalkeeper flung himself sideways for a save which did full justice to the shot.”

Bobby Collins broke the deadlock after just 3 minutes and then Dave Hickson doubled the lead after Trevor Gething saved Collins’ shot only for the ball to neatly fall to Hickson. Eddie O’Hara made it 3-0, heading the ball past Gething after meeting a Jimmy Harris pass. TE Jones then made it 4-0, converting a penalty after O’Hara was fouled by George Martin. During the first half, Everton were briefly down to 10 men after goalkeeper Jimmy O’Neill had a recurrence of a knee injury he suffered in a preseason tour of Ireland. For a few minutes, Brian Harris took his place between the sticks and had little to do, so he “played up to the crowd by wandering yards out of his goal with the spectators waving him back,” and whenever he did get the ball, his clearances fell to the feet of the South Africans. Albert Dunlop was then brought on shortly before half-time and the match was 11-a-side again. It looked like it was going to be a cruising victory for Everton as they were 4-0 at half-time. But that wasn’t the case.

Near the hour mark, the South Africans reduced the deficit to three goals after Les Salton eased past TE Jones to pick up on Charlie Hurly’s through ball and slotted the ball past Albert Dunlop. But the hopes of a comeback for them faded after Dave Hickson set up Jimmy Harris to regain the 4-goal lead and then go one better around 10 minutes before full-time with Harris returning the favour for Hickson to score his second of the game. But a few minutes after it was 6-1, the South Africans incredibly made it 6-4. Gilbert Petersen converted a penalty after John Bramwell handled in the area, Malcolm Rufus picked up on a pass by Wally Warren with a move, according to the Liverpool Echo, that was akin to Stanley Matthews and hit the back of the net, and Les Salton scored his second of the game from a corner. There was a possibility for the Springboks to make it 6-5 and make the last couple of minutes of the game extremely interesting but it wasn’t to be after Dave Hickson completed his hat-trick. Full-time score: Everton 7-4 South Africa XI.

It was a very creditable performance from the Springboks, with George Barratt, Charlie Hurly and Les Salton receiving some praise from Liverpool Echo journalist Leslie Edwards. But the one player who got the biggest praise was Malcolm Rufus, whom Edwards said was “the best non-stop left-back [he’s] seen since Joe Mercer.”

An admirable performance also from Everton. The only criticism would be the defence’s brief collapse in the latter stages of the game. One would think the defence would have learned from their mistakes ahead of their next game three days later. But it appears that they didn’t as Everton got thrashed 10-4 by Tottenham.

The Latchford-Thomas Partnership

In the 1977/78 season, Bob Latchford pocketed £10,000 after scoring 30 goals in the First Division. No Everton player since World War II has bettered that tally in the top flight (only equalled by Gary Lineker in 1985/86). It was a magnificent achievement and Everton fans who watched him that season could argue that it might not have been possible if it wasn’t for one man – Dave Thomas.

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The Chedgzoy Corner

On November 15th, 1924, Sam Chedgzoy dumbfounded the Goodison crowd by displaying a technique that should really have been illegal – dribbling the ball from a corner. However, it was legal thanks to a vague rule change. Before the 1924/25 season, goals could not be scored directly from a corner. In June 1924, the rule was amended to allow players to score directly from a corner. But the amendment ended up causing loads of controversy and debate.

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How Non-League Football Shaped Jordan Pickford

Jordan Pickford’s World Cup heroics made people realise what a great goalkeeper he is. Before the World Cup, and even during, they were wondering whether he was the right choice to be England’s number 1. He brushed those criticisms aside with brilliant performances in the knockout stages which helped England fans believe in the team again. Where did it all start? The Conference.

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Marco Silva – Career In Stats

League Summary

Season Team League Pld W D L GS GC Pts W% L% PPG Pos
2011/12 Estoril Segunda Liga 25 15 6 4 37 17 51 60% 16% 2.04 1st
2012/13 Estoril Primeira Liga 30 13 6 11 47 37 45 43% 37% 1.50 5th
2013/14 Estoril Primeira Liga 30 15 9 6 42 26 54 50% 20% 1.80 4th
2014/15 Sporting Lisbon Primeira Liga 30 22 10 2 67 29 76 73% 7% 2.53 3rd
2015/16 Olympiacos Superleague Greece 30 28 1 1 81 16 85 93% 3% 2.83 1st
2016/17 Hull* Premier League 18 6 3 9 20 36 21 33% 50% 1.17 18th
2017/18 Watford** Premier League 24 7 5 12 33 44 26 29% 50% 1.08 10th

Game-By-Game Breakdown in the League

2011/12 L W D W W W W W D W W W W W W D L W D L W D L W D
Pos 15 10 12 8 5 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
2012/13 L D D W D L L W W L W L L W L D L W L W W L W D W L W D W W
Pos 15 11 11 5 5 11 14 8 6 6 6 6 7 6 7 7 8 6 8 7 7 8 5 6 5 6 5 6 5 5
2013/14 W W D L D W L W L W L W W D D D D W W W W L W D L W W D D W
Pos 3 4 3 4 5 4 6 4 5 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
2014/15 D W D D W D W W L D W W D W W W W W W D D W L W W W D W W W W D W W
Pos 11 7 8 8 6 7 4 4 6 8 6 4 5 5 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
2015/16 W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W W D W W W L W W W W W W W W
Pos 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
2016/17 W L D W L D L W L W W L L W D L L L
Pos 18 19 19 18 18 19 19 18 18 18 17 17 17 17 17 18 18 18
2017/18 D W D W L W D W L L L W W L D L L L L W L L D L
Pos 10 3 7 4 11 6 5 4 5 7 9 8 8 8 8 9 9 9 10 10 10 10 10 10

Other Competitions

Season League Cup National Cup Champs League Europa League
2011/12 2nd Group Stage 5th Round
2012/13 2nd Group Stage 5th Round
2013/14 2nd Group Stage Quarter-finals Group Stage
2014/15 2nd Group Stage Winners Group Stage Round of 32
2015/16 Runners-up Group Stage Round of 32
2016/17 Semi-finals* 4th Round
2017/18 2nd Round 4th Round**

League Cup = Taça da Liga and EFL Cup

National Cup = Taça de Portugal, Greek Cup and FA Cup

Notable Games

Games against reputable teams and European games.

Season Team Opposition Res V Competition
2011/12 Estoril Porto L 0-1 A Taça da Liga
2012/13 Sporting Lisbon D 2-2 A Primeira Liga
2012/13 Porto L 1-2 H Primeira Liga
2012/13 Porto D 2-2 H Taça da Liga
2012/13 Benfica L 1-3 H Primeira Liga
2012/13 Sporting Lisbon W 3-1 H Primeira Liga
2012/13 Porto L 0-2 A Primeira Liga
2012/13 Benfica D 1-1 A Primeira Liga
2013/14 Hapoel Ramat Gan D 0-0 H Europa League
2013/14 Hapoel Ramat Gan W 1-0 A Europa League
2013/14 Pasching W 2-0 H Europa League
2013/14 Pasching L 1-2 H Europa League
2013/14 Sevilla W 2-1 A Europa League
2013/14 Porto D 2-2 H Primeira Liga
2013/14 Slovan Liberec L 1-2 A Europa League
2013/14 Benfica L 1-2 H Primeira Liga
2013/14 Freiburg D 1-1 A Europa League
2013/14 Freiburg D 0-0 H Europa League
2013/14 Sevilla D 1-1 A Europa League
2013/14 Slovan Liberec L 1-2 H Europa League
2013/14 Sporting Lisbon D 0-0 H Primeira Liga
2013/14 Porto L 1-2 A Taça de Portugal
2013/14 Porto W 1-0 A Primeira Liga
2013/14 Benfica L 0-2 A Primeira Liga
2013/14 Sporting Lisbon W 1-0 A Primeira Liga
2014/15 Sporting Lisbon Benfica D 1-1 A Primeira Liga
2014/15 Maribor D 1-1 A Champions League
2014/15 Porto D 1-1 H Primeira Liga
2014/15 Chelsea L 0-1 H Champions League
2014/15 Porto W 3-1 A Taça de Portugal
2014/15 Schalke L 3-4 A Champions League
2014/15 Schalke W 4-2 H Champions League
2014/15 Maribor W 3-1 H Champions League
2014/15 Chelsea L 1-3 A Champions League
2014/15 Benfica D 1-1 H Primeira Liga
2014/15 Wolfsburg L 0-2 A Europa League
2014/15 Wolfsburg D 0-0 H Europa League
2014/15 Porto L 0-3 A Primeira Liga
2015/16 Olympiacos Bayern Munich L 0-3 H Champions League
2015/16 Arsenal W 3-2 A Champions League
2015/16 AEK Athens W 4-0 H Superleague Greece
2015/16 Dinamo Zagreb W 1-0 A Champions League
2015/16 Dinamo Zagreb W 2-1 H Champions League
2015/16 Panathinaikos F 3-0 A Superleague Greece
2015/16 Bayern Munich L 0-4 A Champions League
2015/16 Arsenal L 0-3 H Champions League
2015/16 AEK Athens L 0-1 A Superleague Greece
2015/16 Anderlecht L 0-1 A Europa League
2015/16 Anderlecht L 1-2 H Europa League (AET)
2015/16 Panathinaikos W 3-1 H Superleague Greece
2015/16 AEK Athens L 1-2 N Greek Cup
2016/17 Hull Manchester United L 0-2 A League Cup
2016/17 Chelsea L 0-2 A Premier League
2016/17 Manchester United W 2-1 H League Cup
2016/17 Manchester United D 0-0 A Premier League
2016/17 Liverpool W 2-0 H Premier League
2016/17 Arsenal L 0-2 A Premier League
2016/17 Manchester City L 1-3 A Premier League
2016/17 Tottenham L 1-7 H Premier League
2017/18 Watford Liverpool D 3-3 H Premier League
2017/18 Manchester City L 0-6 H Premier League
2017/18 Arsenal W 2-1 H Premier League
2017/18 Chelsea L 2-4 A Premier League
2017/18 Manchester United L 2-4 H Premier League
2017/18 Tottenham D 1-1 H Premier League
2017/18 Manchester City L 1-3 A Premier League

 

*On the day of Silva’s appointment, Hull were 20th with only 13 points and 3 wins to their name. Based on results from Silva’s appointment to the end of the season, Hull were 14th. Hull had already reached the semi-finals before Silva was appointed.

**Watford were 10th when Silva was sacked, subsequently finishing 14th. Watford were also still in the FA Cup at the time of Silva’s sacking, subsequently getting knocked out in the 4th round by Southampton.

Harry Cooke – Dixie Dean’s Saviour

On 5th May 1928, Dixie Dean scored a hat-trick against Arsenal on the final day of the 1927/28 season. The last of those goals was Dixie’s 60th league goal of the season – a record in English football, beating George Camsell’s record of 59 in a season. No player has come close since and it is extremely likely that this tally will never be beaten. However, Dixie came really close to not playing in the game at all. In the previous game against Burnley, he picked up a thigh injury. The record was in sight but the injury made Dixie’s hopes of breaking it fade away. But then along came Harry Cooke.

In an interview with Liverpool Echo journalist Michael Charters in May 1971, Dixie thanked long-time trainer at the club Harry Cooke for making the 60-goal season possible. Cooke was determined to make him fit for the Arsenal game and beat it.

You see, if it hadn’t been for old Harry Cooke, I wouldn’t have played against Arsenal at all. Harry was the trainer at Everton in all my years there, and he was a great character. His birthday was the same day as mine, on January 22nd, and he was like a father to me.

The position was this: George Camsell, the Middlesbrough centre-forward, had set the League scoring record at 59 the season before, but that was in the Second Division. With two games to go, I had scored 53 goals in 37 League games, so I wanted seven goals from the last two matches to beat George’s record.

The first of these two games was at Burnley on the Wednesday of the last week of the season. I got four that day, all before half-time, and I was particularly pleased because I was playing against big Jack Hill, the England centre-half in those days, and a particular pal of mine. He was reckoned the best in the business then, but any rate, I got four against big Jack and he rubbed his faced on the ground when the fourth one went in. I didn’t do anything in the second half because I pulled a thigh muscle badly, and I was in some pain. Old Harry Cooke was shaking when he found out about it – and so was I.

Harry was really worried that I wouldn’t be able to play against Arsenal. So when we got back from Burnley that night, he came with me to my home in Alderley Avenue, Birkenhead. He wanted to put hot plasters on my leg to get the muscle right. You’re supposed to put these plasters on pretty hot and leave them for about ten to twelve hours, but Harry wasn’t content with that. He wanted to change them every two hours so that the heat from the plasters would really work. So I went to bed and he sat in a chair in my bedroom and woke me up every two hours so that he could put a fresh plaster on. He did this for three nights on the run – the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights before the Arsenal game.

Without him, I’d never have played that day and never broken the record.

What we used to do was that in the morning, I’d run him to his home in Wallasey before we went over to Goodison for more treatment. I don’t know how he stuck it for three nights on end without much sleep, but he told me he used to try and get a few hours sleep each afternoon before he came back to my home in Birkenhead to start putting on the plasters all over again.

He was a wonderful man – all the lads at Everton would do anything for him, and he was a wonderful man to me.

For decades, Everton fans have been adulating Dixie for breaking the record, but there has been little mention of Harry Cooke. He was Everton through and through and his key contribution to Dixie’s record should be talked about more often.