Match Report

 

Saturday, 29th November 1997
Goodison Park

Everton 0 VS 2 Tottenham Hotspur

Southall, Ward, Short (Cadamarteri 74), Bilic, Tiler, Phelan (Hinchcliffe 72), Farrelly (Oster 65), Speed, Williamson, Barmby, Ferguson Attendance
36,670

Referee
P Jones
Walker, Carr, Wilson, Campbell (Scales 44), Vega, Fox, Calderwood, Sinton, Nielsen (Anderton 58), Ferdinand (Iversen 78), Ginola
Subs not used: Myhre, Ball. Subs not used: Dominguez, Baardsen.
Booked: Bilic Booked: Scales, Vega.
  Goal Scorer: Vega 72, Ginola 76


    Christian Gross started his Tottenham career with a crucial win and one which came at the expense of rock-bottom Everton.
    A section of the Merseyside club's fans stayed behind at the end to chant for chairman Peter Johnson's exit, banging their seats and howling in rage as stewards and police moved in.
    A win would have eased the pressure on Johnson, but the game had been drifting towards a goalless draw until Spurs grabbed two inside five minutes through Ramon Vega and David Ginola to give their new manager a perfect start.
    For Everton it had started so well. Neville Southall passed a late fitness test on a back problem to win selection for his 750th senior game for the Toffeemen, Norwegian new boy Thomas Myhre being left on the bench.
    They also fielded new signings Mitch Ward and Carl Tiler, with Howard Kendall leaving out England international Andy Hinchcliffe.
    Gross dropped five players from the Monday defeat by Crystal Palace, a game he watched but didn't interfere with, leaving Chris Hughton in charge.
    Out went John Scales, Darren Anderton, Justin Edinburgh, Steve Clemence and Steffen Iversen, with Gross playing the rigid 4-4-2 formation he had promised.
    Kendall's men started with promise. Duncan Ferguson almost scored inside the first minute with a header that was deflected inside the six-yard box and was rolling into the net until 36 year-old Clive Wilson hacked the ball off the line.
    Gary Speed then had a low drive held by Ian Walker as Everton attacked with passion and no little intent.
    But slowly the fire died away, and Spurs without being commanding were able to contain the Premiership's bottom club.
    Andy Sinton and Allan Nielsen both had shots that fizzed over, but the nearest anyone came in the first period was when Gary Speed hooked the ball into Nicky Barmby's path, for the ex-Spurs striker to cut inside Sol Campbell and lift his shot over Walker and onto the bar.
   Campbell was dumped on the track by Ferguson, and eventually the England man had to be replaced by John Scales before the break.
    Everton started the second half meaning business, Speed just missing the far post with a low shot under intense pressure from Nielsen, but the home side were too predictable.
    Ruud Gullit had criticised their long ball tactics after the midweek defeat at Chelsea, and Everton showed they have learned few other options.
    With three towering centre-backs, wing-backs and the giant Ferguson, the ball is continually launched 30 or 40 yards, and it become all too obvious.
    With so much at stake both managers started to change things with the introduction of more attacking players: John Oster and Danny Cadamarteri for Everton and Anderton for Spurs. Hinchcliffe replaced Terry Phelan on the left.
    Almost immediately, the game changed. David Ginola, a flickering fringe player in the first half, got annoyed when he was brought down and got nothing for it.
    It roused the Frenchman from his slumbers and he had three chances inside five minutes it's amazing what a flash of temperament can produce.
    That seemed to wake Spurs up too, and after 71 minutes they went ahead when Ramon Vega, who had missed a glorious chance earlier, this time dived forward to head home a Wilson flick-on after Sinton's cross had floated into the box.
    Everton were stunned, their fans silenced, and four minutes later Ginola made it two when he ran down the right, held off Ward and lashed the ball into the roof of the net.
    No lack of commitment now from Spurs, and the game was over as a contest. Walker made fine saves from a Ferguson header and a Speed 20-yarder, but Everton had been deflated in a big way.
    Gross had got the win and the response he wanted.
    The vast majority of the crowd slipped away into the night, numbed by the the club's terrible form. But, 15 minutes after the end, some fans were still there, chanting their anger.
    It was billed as the showdown between two chairman, Johnson and Alan Sugar, both the target of claims that they have failed their team. In the end it was Sugar who left with the sweet taste of victory in his mouth, while Johnson had to endure yet more abuse.

 

See the goal...   Vega 72'
  Ginola 76'
   
Hear the goal...