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Everton vs Tottenham Hotspur; Premier League

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Everton vs Tottenham Hotspur. Premier League.

Hill Dickinson StadiumAttendance52,501.

Everton 0

    Tottenham Hotspur 3

    • M van de Ven (19th minute, 51st minute)
    • P Sarr (89th minute)

    Everton 0-3 Tottenham: Micky van de Ven's first-half double ends Toffees' unbeaten run at Hill Dickinson Stadium

    Report and free match highlights as Everton are beaten for first time at Hill Dickinson Stadium through pair of first-half Micky van de Ven goals and Pape Matar Sarr's late third; Jake O'Brien sees equaliser chalked off by VAR review for contentious offside call

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    FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from Everton’s match against Tottenham Hotspur in the Premier League

    Tottenham inflicted Everton's first defeat at their new Hill Dickinson Stadium with a 3-0 win thanks to defender Micky van de Ven's first-half double to move into the top four.

    Everton had not lost any of their first five matches at their new home but were undone before half-time by a pair of goals from corners - the first they have conceded from set pieces all season - before Pape Mate Sarr's late third sealed the win.

    Van de Ven continued his superb scoring form with his fourth and fifth goals of the campaign but could not have wished for an easier pair of finishes. He first glanced Rodrigo Bentancur's header back across goal beyond Jordan Pickford, before being left totally unmarked to do likewise from Pedro Porro's excellent delivery.

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    Jake O'Brien's goal was overturned following a VAR check, which ruled Iliman Ndiaye is adjusted to have been interfering with Spurs stopper Guglielmo Vicario and was in an offside position

    Everton had a Jake O'Brien goal disallowed when Spurs were 1-0 up after a VAR review led to his powerful near-post header being ruled out due to Iliman Ndiaye impeding goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario from an offside position.

    There was debate around the decision but Everton boss David Moyes felt it was the right call. "It wasn't a goal," he told Sky Sports. It's hard to take but in the end it's the right decision.

    "The position he (Ndiaye) took up with the goalkeeper, if it had happened to me I'd be complaining it was an offside goal."

    A second-half rally was not enough to keep the Toffees' invincible start to life at Bramley-Moor Dock intact, with Beto's acrobatic bicycle kick brilliantly saved by Vicario, and Ndiaye's deflected effort pulling another strong stop from the Italian.

    Also See:

    Team news:

    • Jack Grealish was the only Everton change from last week's defeat at Man City, returning after being ineligible to face his parent club.
    • Randal Kolo Muani was given his first Tottenham start, as Richarlison dropped to the bench.

    Instead, Everton's fans were left streaming out of their new home before full-time for the first time once Sarr had nodded another header beyond Pickford from Richarlison's nod across goal.

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    Ismaïla Sarr headed in Tottenham Hotspur's third goal to seal victory

    Amid a weekend of surprise results, three points on Merseyside was enough to send Tottenham into third after a previously shaky week, five points off leaders and north London rivals Arsenal.

    Player ratings:

    Everton: Pickford (6), O’Brien (7), Keane (5), Tarkowski (6), Mykolenko (6), Gueye (7), Garner (6), Ndiaye (7), Dewsbury-Hall (6), Grealish (6), Beto (6).

    Subs: Barry (6), Rohl (6), Alcaraz (n/a).

    Tottenham: Vicario (8), Porro (7), Danso (7), Van de Ven (9), Spence (7), Bentancur (7), Palhinha (7), Johnson (7), Simons (6), Kudus (6), Kolo Muani (5).

    Subs: Bergvall (6), Richarlison (7), Sarr (7), Tel (n/a).

    Player of the Match: Micky Van de Ven.

    Moyes: No need to overreact

    Everton head coach David Moyes to Sky Sports:

    "We don't need to react in any big fashion. We played a good Tottenham team. They're in the Champions League.

    "We've moved from the stadium, the position we were in needed to improve. First defeat at the stadium since we moved here."

    Frank wanted to improve set-pieces

    Tottenham head coach Thomas Frank to Sky Sports:

    "I said from the beginning when we came in that I wanted to improve a lot and one of them was being defensively strong and also set-pieces needed to be better. Two very good goals but also the desire and mentality to defend the box.

    "We tried to build something and add layers to the team all the time. The whole team was good but Joao Palhinha and Bentancur were fantastic. All the subs made a difference. This is a long season and we are going to need everyone."

    Analysis: Spurs show nouse to end Everton run

    Sky Sports' Ron Walker at the Hill Dickinson Stadium:

    In driving rain and wind on the banks of the Mersey, Tottenham's performance was little more aesthetic than the day around them, but that was the intent all along from Thomas Frank's side.

    They took the lead without playing particularly well but showed the threat they will always carry from set-pieces under this head coach, before slowing the game down as much as possible at every restart to disrupt Everton's rhythm - and it worked.

    Despite starting brightly this was Jack Grealish's least effective game in a Toffees shirt, and as he faded only Iliman Ndiaye's flashes of brilliance and Beto's second-half acrobatics really threatened any sort of comeback.

    Even if David Moyes pointed to Jake O'Brien's disallowed goal but the decision to penalise Ndiaye was 50-50, and without that slice of luck his side did not to enough across 90 minutes to earn anything.

    Spurs continue to outperform their expected goals tally but they make their own luck - this isn't a pretty way of winning, and Frank is a manager who will want to bring a more expansive style in time, but for now it is effective enough to have last-season's fourth-bottom finishers up to third in the Premier League table.

    Pickford could have a problem, says Carra

    Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher:

    "When I talk about certain teams and players not being suited to this style shift in the Premier League, Everton have got Jordan Pickford - England's No 1 and rightly so. But I think his size and presence of him isn't setup to deal with situations like the Van de Ven goal.

    "It wasn't a good look for the England goalkeeper. He's a fantastic goalkeeper but if people keep putting balls on his head, he might have a problem."

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