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Everton vs Tottenham Hotspur. Premier League.

Goodison ParkAttendance34,992.

Everton 1

  • N Jelavic (22nd minute)

Tottenham Hotspur 0

    Debut delight for Jelavic

    Nikica Jelavic marked his first outing at Goodison Park with the winning goal in Everton's 1-0 victory over Harry Redknapp's slumping Spurs.

    Redknapp's season crumbling; Moyes provides perfect celebration

    Nikica Jelavic marked his home debut for Everton with the winning goal in a 1-0 victory over Tottenham which ensured Harry Redknapp's Premier League season continued to crumble. The Croatian, a £5.5million January deadline day signing from Rangers who had previously played two away games for Everton, opened his Premier League account in the first half with a wonderfully precise finish. Tottenham had struggled with their shape and in the second half, regardless of a gentleman's agreement between Harry Redknapp and David Moyes which was redundant under league rules, introduced Louis Saha. The former Everton striker hit a post in a frantic finale but Spurs still suffered three consecutive Premier League defeats for the first time under Redknapp and critics will continue to suggest their campaign is imploding amid the reports linking their manager to the England job. In contrast, Moyes provided the perfect Goodison Park celebration ahead of next week's 10-year anniversary as Everton manager and maintained momentum ahead of Tuesday's Merseyside derby at Liverpool. It extended Everton's unbeaten run to 10 in all competitions and they head to Anfield just two points behind Kenny Dalglish's side. Spurs, conversely, have North London rivals Arsenal breathing down their necks and could see the gap to the fourth-placed Gunners cut to just a point on Monday night. For all the talent the visitors had on display it was Jelavic who stole the headlines as he opened his account just 77 minutes into his Everton career, having made just two previous substitute appearances. When the 26-year-old arrived at Goodison Park, he was asked what he would bring to the club. "Goals, goals, goals" was the response and he started to deliver on that promise with a sumptuous strike midway through the first half.

    Goals, goals, goals

    Jelavic had looked a threat from the start, generally offering a willing outlet up front, and moments before his goal he provided the knockdown from which Marouane Fellaini forced Brad Friedel to save an angled shot with his legs. In the 22nd minute, he played a pivotal part with the sort of finish Everton have been missing since the sale of Saha in January. The Frenchman was watching from the bench, although Moyes' claims he had a gentlemen's agreement with Redknapp was disproved in the second half when the striker was sent on. Leon Osman broke past Younes Kaboul into the box and brilliantly took both Sandro and Ledley King out of the game with his cutback which Jelavic clinically fired first-time past Friedel. Jelavic did not appear to be lacking in confidence and with established free-kick takers Leighton Baines and Royston Drenthe standing over the ball he whipped in a right-footed shot which was turned away by the diving Spurs goalkeeper Friedel. Most of the threat before the match had been expected to come from Drenthe and Tottenham winger Gareth Bale. Redknapp's decision to post the Wales international on the right meant Drenthe had to be switched to the opposite flank in order for Seamus Coleman to track Bale. It also meant Moyes could keep a closer eye on the Dutchman who excites and infuriates in equal measure with his unpredictability. Throughout most of the first half the Everton manager instructed, cajoled and ordered the on-loan Real Madrid midfielder into where he wanted him. It seemed to work and only when Bale briefly appeared on his usual left side shortly before the interval did Drenthe display his less disciplined persona when well out of ear-shot of Moyes.
    Wastefulness
    Spurs were disappointing in the first half, Bale particularly so with his main contribution being two wide shots. Jermain Defoe was also guilty of wastefulness as he seemed destined to score until some late pressure from John Heitinga forced him to shoot well wide. The striker looked sharper immediately after the restart as Tim Howard twice had to save from him, the second after Sylvain Distin had backed off and given him far too much room inside the penalty area. Luka Modric was also starting to look more threatening and he too was denied by a Distin block before also firing over. Saha arrived in the 54th minute for the ineffectual Emmanuel Adebayor but Defoe looked Tottenham's greatest threat and his deflected shot briefly caused Howard a moment of concern before he twisted his body mid-save. While Tottenham's pressure was growing the home side were still a threat and, when Coleman burst from the halfway line to tee up Osman, Friedel had to save again. Redknapp's decision to persist with Bale on the right was not welcomed by the visiting fans, who sang "Gareth Bale, he plays on the left" as the game entered its final quarter. From his right-sided position the Welshman thought he had set up the equalising goal when he turned Benoit Assou-Ekotto's cross into the path of Defoe but the striker was well offside as he fired in from close range. Saha should have scored it in the third minute of added time but hit a post. It would have been the cruellest of finishes.
    Everton Team Statistics Tottenham Hotspur
    1 Goals 0
    1 1st Half Goals 0
    5 Shots on Target 5
    1 Shots off Target 12
    3 Blocked Shots 7
    0 Corners 8
    14 Fouls 11
    3 Offsides 2
    2 Yellow Cards 2
    0 Red Cards 0
    74.1 Passing Success 83.8
    20 Tackles 27
    65 Tackles Success 70.4
    37.9 Possession 62.1
    52.4 Territorial Advantage 47.6
    321 Total Passes 532
    9 Total Crosses 28
    162 Lost Balls 162
    53 Recoveries 73
    48.1 1st Half Poss. 51.9
    24.9 2nd Half Poss. 75.1

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