Irish Sunday Mirror

SAMBA KINGS Rich and Bern are Braziliant

- By CHRIS MCKENNA at Goodison Park

SAMBA drums were played on the pitch before kick-off at Goodison Park.

But it was their brilliant Brazilian duo of Bernard and Richarliso­n who brought the rhythm which has been the heartbeat of Everton’s revival under Carlo Ancelotti.

There were superb goals in a solid performanc­e sprinkled with some shaky moments.

But the Toffees are now seventh in the Premier League table ahead of Champions League-chasing Manchester United and Wolves.

That was unthinkabl­e when they were thumped 5-2 by neighbours Liverpool before Christmas as Marco Silva’s final game in charge left them in the relegation zone. But first under caretaker Duncan Ferguson and now in the hands of serial winner Ancelotti, they have turned their season around.

Ancelotti’s fifth league win came thanks to a beautiful volley from Bernard, then a rip-roaring run and finish from Richarliso­n before Dominic Calvert-lewin got the goal his performanc­e deserved. The goals from the Brazilians came either side of a Jordan Pickford howler which gifted Christian Benteke a rare goal.

And there were other moments throughout this game that showed Ancelotti’s work is still very much in progress. But there is certainly already plenty of progress.

This side was often questioned about their character after failing to win once from a losing position under Silva. But last week at Watford they came from 2-0 down to win.

And here, when Benteke scored and Palace piled on some pressure, the Blues didn’t buckle. They reorganise­d and got themselves back ahead to secure the three points.

Ancelotti joked that he may now finally be a magician after turning the Toffees’ season around. And it was a magical finish which put them in front in the 18th minute.

Patrick van Aanholt hitting the post with a deflected strike certainly shook the Everton players into life. Theo Walcott then shuffled into space to deliver a fine cross that was met by a Bernard volley and he found the net.

Not long after Walcott hobbled off with a leg injury – sparking comedy as replacemen­t Djibril Sidibe had to run back down the tunnel as he had forgotten to put one of his socks on.

Ancelotti didn’t see the funny side as he was worried his side were down to 10 men.

But Palace boss Roy Hodgson had little to smile about in the opening 45 minutes.

They are winless in seven now in the Premier League but they did have chances in this game.

Benteke started the move that led to the Palace equaliser by nodding down to Wilfried Zaha and he put

the Belgium striker through in the 51st minute. The angle was too tight and the shot too weak, but somehow Pickford allowed the half-hit effort to squirm underneath him.

Remarkably that was Benteke’s first goal of the season for Palace.

Everton were shaken and a Van Aanholt corner caused mayhem and almost found its way into the net moments later.

But then a clearance was superbly kept in play by Calvert-lewin and Richarliso­n charged on to it.

The nimble Samba star had Palace defender Gary Cahill twisting and turning before he burst past and then fired low into the bottom corner with 30 minutes left.

Moments later England No.1 Pickford made up for his earlier error by denying Benteke a second with a save from point-blank range.

And the ever-dangerous Calvert-lewin got the third when he tapped home after a Richarliso­n header from Lucas Digne’s corner came off the bar.

And he should have had a second from another Richarliso­n rebound, but in the end it didn’t matter.

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