Lacklustre Everton fail to live up to expectations

Blackburn Rovers 1, Everton 0: SO INTENSE is the battle for the top four expected to be this Premier League season that on its…

Blackburn Rovers 1, Everton 0:SO INTENSE is the battle for the top four expected to be this Premier League season that on its eve the learned campaigners Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger both put forward Everton as potential gatecrashers. Not on the evidence presented at Ewood Park, however, and David Moyes acknowledged as much.

Such was their vibrancy at the end of 2009-10 – including a sumptuous and rare away victory on this very turf – that Everton would not have wanted the season to end. Unbeaten in their final 11 matches, momentum was clearly with the blue half of the Merseyside divide.

Yet despite the return of recuperated limbs, which has them at optimum strength, Everton hit a buffer upon the top-flight’s resumption and the club’s longest sequence without defeat for 24 years was terminated when Nikola Kalinic’s predatory instinct exposed Tim Howard’s clanger for the only goal.

There were still 76 minutes remaining for Everton to muster a response and failure to do so irked Moyes most. Of suggestions they can mount a challenge akin to Tottenham’s monopoly-busting campaign of last year, Moyes said: “I think we can be but not on this performance and I have let the players know. I’m setting the bar really high. We didn’t show enough invention and our play was too sloppy.

READ MORE

“We didn’t do enough and I want my team to go out to win. What it reminds you of is that whoever you play in the Premier League you are going to have a hard task.”

Winning at venues such as Blackburn and Stoke are, as Spurs discovered last season, what Champions League qualifications are made of. But a lack of fluency, significantly contributed to by Blackburn’s robust harrying in central areas, ensured Everton began their quest with a setback.

“Expectations are good, it’s what we have wanted so we can’t complain about them being higher now,” the captain, Phil Neville, said. “We wanted a big squad, we wanted two players for every position and now we have it we can’t go into our shell. We have to show whether we have what it takes to get into that top four.”

Rovers secured three points thanks to their new-look Croat. Kalinic (22) now cuts quite a contrasting figure to the spindly €6 million striker snapped up from Hajduk Split last summer.

“Strength-wise we’ve done core weights with him ever since he’s been here,” Allardyce said. “He was like a little boy when he first came, with rolls of puppy fat. We’ve tried to turn him into a man and you can see that physical presence now.”

  • Guardian Service