âNot a magicianâ but Moyes casts spell again at Everton
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Published
Just a couple of weeks ago, David Moyes said he âcanât magicianâ Everton to scoring some goals.
Some quipped that they would have needed a Potter to conjure some wizardry after Englishman Graham took over at West Ham.
But Moyes is waving his wand again in his second spell at Goodison Park.
Ten was the magic number on Merseyside on Saturday. Abdoulaye Doucoureâs goal after that many seconds came quicker than Moyes can say âExpelliarmusâ and the thrashing of Leicester was sealed by fansâ favourite Iliman Ndiaye, who wears that particular shirt.
Moyes said: âThe players have just given themselves a bit of confidence and positivity. We are only trying to give them as much confidence as we can.
âWe have got a good strong base defensively and trying to find ways to score a few more.
âI am certainly not getting carried away. After eight seconds, I was thinking âmy goodness this is fabulousâ. The second goal backed it up.â
Moyes âpleasedâ for Beto
Saturdayâs impressive performance in the 4-0 triumph against the woeful Foxes means Everton have now scored eight goals in their past three matches, all wins.
It marks an incredible contrast to when Sean Dyche was in charge â only three of his 19 league games this season were won, with Everton failing to score in 11 of them.
But the win lifted the Toffees up to 15th in the table, nine points clear of the relegation zone with a game in hand over the sides occupying the last four places.
âA brilliant result,â said Moyes. âA great performance in many aspects; sometimes we didnât play quite so well. If you had given me three wins out of four games in the position we are in, I would say âthanks very muchâ but to score the goals and we could have got a couple more⊠We are doing a lot of really good things.â
Supporters may have wanted games to end early while watching the often turgid and one-dimensional style of play deployed by Dyche, but one fan was left asking for â20 more minutesâ when the fourth officialâs board was held aloft in stoppage time.
At full-time, goalscorer Beto acted as the cheerleader, rousing those in the Gwladys Street End, Moyes waved towards those in the main stand with a beaming smile on his face, while the home faithful were left singing the clubâs âSpirit of the Bluesâ anthem long after the final whistle.
Injuries to Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Armando Broja and Youssef Chermiti left Beto as Evertonâs only fit senior striker and the Portuguese stepped up when needed.
âIâm really pleased for Beto,â Moyes said. âThe people who have been here much longer than me will know more about Beto. Iâm just getting to know him.
âHe is a great kid, works hard in training, tries to improve himself. Sometimes in life, you need an opportunity. Today, he got an opportunity and the receptions he got coming off the pitch was as good as weâve heard here for a long time.
âGood credit to him he stuck at it and took his two goals well.â
Leicester start left a âmountain to climbâ
Everton host Merseyside rivals Liverpool in their next league game on 12 February in a match postponed in December because of the weather.
Arne Slotâs side are in imperious form, sitting nine points clear at the top of the table after beating Bournemouth 2-0 on Saturday.
Former Reds defender Stephen Warnock said on BBC Radio 5 Live: âLiverpool will now look back and wish they had played that game against Everton previously. Now, they have to face David Moyes.
âHe knows how to set his team up for a derby and they are in good form now.â
Leicester boss Ruud van Nistelrooy added: âAfter 10 seconds and five minutes you are 2-0 down at Goodison against a team with most clean sheets. You give yourselves a mountain to climb and didnât come back from that.
âIf you have a start like that, then it is difficult.â