Everton 0-1 Leeds: Raphinha stunner settles incident-packed contest at Goodison Park

Match report and free highlights as Raphinha settles frantic Merseyside contest in Leeds' favour; Leeds end three-game winless Premier League run but Everton have now lost four of the last five

By Jack Wilkinson, @jacktwilkinson

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Leeds United claimed their first Premier League win at Goodison Park as Raphinha's late stunner saw off Everton 1-0 in a game packed full of chances but not goals on Saturday Night Football.

In a game which saw the two sides create a combined 38 attempts on goal, the Brazilian produced the decisive moment of quality as he opened his Leeds account with a brilliant drilled effort into the bottom corner 11 minutes from time.

Everton, who had two goals ruled out for offside in the first half, were indebted to the saves of goalkeeper Jordan Pickford for keeping them in the game as long as they were, but Raphinha's strike condemned the Toffees to a fourth defeat in five as they missed the chance to climb up to third in the Premier League.

For Leeds, their first victory at Goodison Park since 1990 ends a run of three games without a win and sees Marcelo Bielsa's side move up to 14 points, two adrift of Carlo Ancelotti's side.

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Player ratings

Everton: Pickford (8), Godfrey (7), Holgate (6), Keane (6), Allan (6), Davies (5), Doucoure (5), Iwobi (5), James (6), Richarlison (6), Calvert-Lewin (5).

Subs: Delph (6), Gomes (5), Bernard (n/a).

Leeds: Meslier (8), Ayling (7), Koch (6), Cooper (6), Dallas (7), Phillips (8), Alioski (6), Raphinha (8), Klich (6), Harrison (7), Bamford (7).

Subs: Poveda (n/a), Costa (n/a), Rodrigo (n/a).

Man of the Match: Kalvin Phillips

How Leeds finally got the job done at Everton

Image: Raphinha eyes the three points after putting Leeds ahead

Leeds were sharp from the outset and should have taken the lead inside the first minute when Raphinha was played in behind makeshift left-back Alex Iwobi, but his poked effort under Pickford was cleared before it reached the target.

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It was an early indication of what was to come, with both sides guilty of squandering a host of chances in a pulsating first half which had everything except a goal.

Abdoulaye Doucoure drew a fine save from Leeds goalkeeper Illan Meslier on seven minutes but suspect defending from Everton's makeshift back four saw Jack Harrison teed up at the end of a sweeping counter, but he dragged a shot wide at the near post.

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Team news

  • Mason Holgate and Tom Davies returned as Everton made two changes from the win at Fulham.
  • Marcelo Bielsa named an unchanged team following the goalless draw with Arsenal. Record-signing Rodrigo remained on the bench.

The Leeds chances kept on coming, with Pickford's outstretched leg denying Patrick Bamford another away-day goal midway through the half.

Everton responded and had the ball in the Leeds net on 24 minutes, but James Rodriguez's brilliant effort from an acute angle was ruled out for a marginal offside. Moments later Michael Keane should have found the back of the net, but he could not keep his header on target after reaching James' free-kick.

Image: Everton's James Rodriguez scores a goal ruled offside against Leeds

The game continued to ebb and flow, with the momentum swinging back in Leeds' favour, but again they found Pickford in inspired form as he clawed Raphinha's looping header off the line before Bamford fired the follow-up wide.

Mason Holgate sent a volley straight at Meslier from six yards before Everton were denied by VAR again, with Ben Godfrey penalised for interfering in play from an offside position as Richarlison's header was chalked off.

Image: Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford saves a shot from Raphinha

There was still time before the half was up for Leeds to threaten again, with Harrison sending a header crashing against the post and Mateusz Klich curling a shot inches wide.

The frantic pace continued after the break with Dominic Calvert-Lewin, Klich and Allan all registering attempts on goal, before Meslier spared his own blushes by backtracking in time to keep out James' lofted shot after the Everton forward intercepted the goalkeeper's wayward pass from the back.

Bamford thought he had given Leeds the lead on 66 minutes when he stroked the ball home from six yards, but the linesman's flag came to Everton's rescue this time around, with Ezgjan Alioski offside in the build-up.

Image: Raphinha fires home the winner

But, not to be denied much longer, Leeds finally made the breakthrough on 79 minutes as Raphinha's crisp drive flashed through the legs of Godfrey and beyond the dive of Pickford.

Alioski and Helder Costa should have put the game to bed with glorious late chances, but the damage was already done as Leeds claimed a deserved victory that very nearly escaped their clutches.

Opta stats - Chances galore at Goodison

  • Leeds have picked up their first away league victory against Everton since August 1990 (3-2), having failed to win any of their previous 13 trips to Goodison Park in league competition prior to today.
  • Everton have lost back-to-back matches against Leeds in all competitions for the first time since December 1991.
  • Leeds have won as many away Premier League games in 2020-21 (3) as they did in the entirety of 2003-04 (their previous top-flight campaign), whilst they have kept consecutive clean sheets in the competition for the first time since January 2003.
  • Everton have lost back-to-back home Premier League games for the first time since September 2019, which also involved defeats against a side from Manchester (Man City) and a side from Yorkshire (Sheffield United) on that occasion.
  • 35 of the 88 Brazilian players to play in the Premier League have scored at least once from outside the box (40%), the highest ratio for any nation to have had 50+ players appear in the competition.
  • Raphinha's goal was the fourth Everton have conceded from outside the box in the Premier League this season - no side has conceded more (level with Aston Villa), whilst only Aston Villa (4) have scored more goals from outside the box than Leeds (3).
  • In the Premier League this season, only Aston Villa vs Leeds in October (39) has seen more shots than today's meeting between Everton and Leeds (38), whilst Raphinha's winner for Leeds was the 35th attempt of the game.

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What the managers said…

Everton's Carlo Ancelotti says whoever got the first goal was going to win with Leeds taking their chance.

Everton manager Carlo Ancelotti: "I don't want to say the game was not good. The game was difficult, but with more efficiency we could have won. They got a goal at the end. We could have scored before, they could have score before. In the end they won because they got the goal first.

"We knew they played like this. In the first half we had more problems defensively. In the second half we were better and had chances. We conceded a little bit less, but at the end they scored.

"Tom Davies was in a new position, Alex Iwobi was in a new position. In the second half we were more compact, and we didn't concede a lot. There are important players out in this moment, but we need to manage this."

Marcelo Bielsa speaks to Sky Sports following Leeds' 1-0 win over Everton.

Leeds head coach Marcelo Bielsa: "It was a very entertaining game. The result was a fair one. The performance of our team was a satisfactory one. It was very difficult to defend against their forwards who are very good.

"Raphinha has adapted very quickly to the Premier League. Victor Orta [Leeds' director of football] anticipated he had the characteristics to play in the Premier League. He was correct in choosing him."

Man of the Match - Kalvin Phillips

Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher:

"Kalvin Phillips is Man of the Match. He's been outstanding. It's been a really big team performance but Everton never really got to grips with him."

​Sky Sports' Graeme Souness:

"He's got a good range of passing, he never seems to get flustered when he's receiving the ball under pressure in his defending third. He doesn't panic and he very rarely gives it away. There's lots to like about him."

What's next?

Everton travel to Burnley in the Premier League on Saturday at 12.30pm, before Leeds head to Chelsea on Saturday Night Football at 8pm - live on Sky Sports Premier League.

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