Sunday Mirror

Blues No.1 a cool winner

- By IAN MURTAGH at St James’ Park

NO fatal distractio­ns for Jordan Pickford on this occasion.

Back in March, the Everton and England No.1 and former Sunderland keeper was booed and baited for 90 minutes by the Toon Army.

Being a national hero means nothing in these parts when you’re born and bred in enemy territory.

And for a man who had kept his cool in the pressure-cooker atmosphere of a World Cup campaign nine months earlier, it all proved too much.

On a forgettabl­e afternoon for the dyedin-the-wool Mackem, Pickford conceded a penalty and was fortunate not to be sent off early on for a blatant foul on Salomon Rondon.

And then in the second half, he was culpable as Everton threw away a two-goal cushion to lose 3-2.

Contrast his antics back then to the focused figure in all-yellow yesterday, a man who shut out the taunts and provocatio­n to produce a performanc­e worthy of his current status.

Last season, he stuck out his tongue to the baying masses and even appeared to offer to meet one of his verbal assailants “outside” as he headed for the tunnel on the final whistle.

What a difference here. Pickford showed no reaction when Dominic Calvert-Lewin fired Everton into an early lead, standing motionless for a few moments before heading to the side of his goal and taking a sip of water without making eye contact with those screaming at him. And it was the same sober response when CalvertLew­in (below) restored their lead after Fabian Schar had equalised.

Of course, when it comes to poise, panache and an exterior which betrays few emotions, new Everton boss Carlo Ancelotti has few peers.

While Steve Bruce kicked every ball and cursed every decision which went against his team, five yards away the Italian chewed gum and largely kept his counsel.

He becomes only the third Everton manager in the modern era to kick off with back-to-back wins, following in the footsteps of Joe Royle in 1994 and David Moyes eight years later.

Perhaps it’s asking too much for him to emulate his Chelsea achievemen­t in winning his opening six games in charge.

But his 50th Premier League win will have given him as much satisfacti­on as any of his previous 49.

Ancelotti’s keeper certainly enjoyed himself a lot more than in the correspond­ing fixture last term. On 38 minutes during a spell of sustained Mapgies’ pressure, Pickford demonstrat­ed just why he’s so rated as a shotstoppe­r, brilliantl­y keeping out Schar.

With Andy Carroll a constant menace, the 25-year-old dealt confidentl­y with the high ball, proving as immune to aerial as aural intimidati­on.

Only when he celebrated afterwards in front of the Everton fans did Pickford allow himself to smile. You half expected him to pull out a pair of earplugs as he headed off.

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 ??  ?? LEAPS & BOUNDS Pickford defies another Toon attack
LEAPS & BOUNDS Pickford defies another Toon attack

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