Date:
Venue:
Competition: English Premier League.
Score: Everton 4
Scorers: Everton:
Attendance: 37,355.
Teams:
Everton: Gerrard; Weir, Gough, Watson, Ball (Johnson); Collins, Unsworth, Gemmell (Pembridge), Barmby; Campbell, Hutchison. Unused Subs: Cadamarteri, Ward, Simonsen.
Referee: Mr D. Gallagher (
The
plaudits had poured into Elland Road in recognition
of Leeds United’s ten–match record-breaking League
and Cup run of victories as David O’Leary’s talented young upstarts made people
sit up in admiration and take notice of them. Having demolished Locomotiv Moscow 4-1 in the home leg of their UEFA Cup
Second Round tie to smash their win sequence record, United were on the crest
of a wave and had goals on their mind when they made the journey over the
United’s
quest for goals continued and they hit four past the Everton defence to share the points in an eight goal thriller, that
had the 37,000 crowd on the edge of their seats. Entertainment was the name of
the game, though goalkeepers Paul Gerrard and Nigel Martyn didn’t quite see it that way. Picking the ball out
of the back of the net is not a keeper’s favourite
pastime. For Gerrard it was the second game in
succession that four goals had gone past him, but he had emerged with credit
from the encounter with the Gunners making some great saves under relentless
pressure. In this game where the emphasis was on attack it was a disappointment
that United’s winning streak came to a halt in such
fashion as they had been defending well up to that point and that had been the
foundation of that winning run.
Everton had
started strongly with John Collins shooting inches wide after good work by
Kevin Campbell and David Unsworth. They surged into
the lead in the fifth minute with a goal from Kevin Campbell, who gave Nigel Martyn no chance to end a John Collins inspired move by
taking the Scot’s through ball into his stride and lobbing it into the far top
corner from the edge of the area. It was not the kind of start United were used
to but United showed their powers of recovery when in the next minute Michael
Bridges turned Harry Kewell’s nicely weighted pass
into the net only to be ruled offside. Then Lee Bowyer just failed to get
enough power into his header from a Harry Kewell
cross and Paul Gerrard saved without too much
difficulty but Jonathan Woodgate was desperately
unlucky to see his header from an Ian Harte cross
scrambled off the line by John Collins with the keeper beaten. After those near misses United hit back to
level matters in the fourteenth minute. A scintillating burst by Harry Kewell took him to the by-line and his cross was hammered
home at the far post by Michael Bridges for his eighth goal of the season.
The goal
inspired
If that
goal was something to set the pulses racing then what happened seven minutes
later was in the realms of the unbelievable. Lucas Radebe
won a challenge in midfield and tapped the ball to Harry Kewell,
wide on the left. His only option seemed to be to run deep into Everton
territory but the extremely talented Australian had other ideas. From the far
left touchline, his lob took Paul Gerrard completely
by surprise and it nestled neatly in the net for a sublime goal.
The
ding-dong battle took another twist just eight minutes before half time as Don
Hutchison took advantage of hesitancy in the United defence
to toe-poked into the net from close range and United’s
resolve and resilience were being tested to the limit. Then twice in a minute
after the break Everton almost stole further ahead, Don Hutchison forcing Nigel
Martyn to a fingertip save to concede a corner and
then he failed by inches to turn David Unsworth’s
cross into the net. At the other end Lee Bowyer snatched at an
half-chance from Stephen McPhail’s cross but the ball
flew over the bar. Then it seemed that Kevin Campbell must get his hat-trick,
but he stubbed his shot and Nigel Martyn gathered
without difficulty.
There were
shouts from the Everton camp for a penalty as Lucas Radebe
tackled Don Hutchison on the edge of the box, but the referee was unmoved. It
seemed like United’s goal was leading a charmed life,
but next it was Paul Gerrard’s turn to be grateful
when a mazy run from Harry Kewell ended with a strong
left-foot shot which skidded narrowly wide.
Darren Huckerby was sent on to replace Alan Smith in the
sixty-eighth minute and it paid immediate dividends when he teed up the ball
for Michael Bridges on the edge of the area for the striker to lob
spectacularly into the far corner for a fine equalizer. Incredibly, four
minutes later United were ahead when Jonathan Woodgate
got highest to Ian Harte’s corner and his header
cannoned in off the underside of the cross-bar.
Now that
they had clawed their way back so frequently it might have been so easy to let
it get away from them and United tried desperately to play out time, but a
free-kick awarded on the left for a foul by Jonathan Woodgate
in the first few seconds of injury time saw it delivered by David Unsworth and David Weir bravely dived in to score with the
final act of a memorable afternoon.
Match Action:
Jonathan Woodgate
heads United’s fourth goal
David Weir heads Everton’s fourth and final
goal
Players:
Michael Bridges (2), Harry Kewell
and Jonathan Woodgate scored for
Kevin Campbell (2) Don Hutchison and David Weir
were the Everton goalscorers Ian Harte’s
crosses caused Everton trouble
Darren Huckerby
replaced Alan Smith and quickly set up a goal Stephen McPhail
gave Lee Bowyer a half-chance
Paul Gerrard was in
goal Michael Ball partnered David Weir at
full-back Richard Gough and Dave Watson were the
centre-backs
John Collins, David Unsworth,
Scott Gemmill and Nicky Barmby
were the Everton midfield with Kevin Campbell and Don Hutchinson up front
Mark Pembridge and
Celtic loanee Tommy Johnson were the substitutes