The Irish Mail on Sunday

Big Sam finds home comforts as Coleman limps out

- By Dominic King

THERE were bear hugs and high fives and eventually a roar of relief. Sam Allardyce had demanded a response following last weekend’s calamity and ultimately got it.

Everton deserved their victory over Crystal Palace. They made fewer mistakes, were resolute and got the breaks when they needed to atone for how they allowed Arsenal to annihilate them. It would be going overboard, though, to say this was a happy afternoon at Goodison Park – Ireland’s Seamus Coleman went off at the break and awaits news on a scan ona muscle injury

And for long periods, particular­ly in a grey and charmless first half, the tension inside the stadium was impossible to escape but the standout moment came in the 80th minute, when – to a soundtrack of booing – Morgan Schneiderl­in was introduced for the injured Idrissa Gana Gueye.

‘I was surprised, very surprised,’ said Allardyce. ‘I’ve not heard that before. Morgan is a very important part of our squad. A lot of players haven’t performed up to their potential, we know that. But I can’t ask for more from them at home. Away has been the problem.’

The reaction may have startled Everton’s manager but this latest success has propelled his team into ninth place. No matter how bad the campaign has been, they will not be relegated.

When they eventually cranked into gear — and Gylfi Sigurdsson, Oumar Niasse and Tom Davies scored the goals — Everton had more than enough to take care of Crystal Palace. It just took them a painfully long time to get there.

After a listless opening period, fans did not seem in a hurry to get back to their seats and that indifferen­ce was costly as they missed Sigurdsson’s goal.

A lay-off from Niasse sat up perfectly for Sigurdsson, whose first- time drive skimmed off James Tomkins’ leg and skidded beyond Wayne Hennessey. Everton had doubled their advantage within five minutes when Niasse was unmarked eight yards out — the Senegalese forward heading home Cuco Martina’s cross.

Palace were breached for a third time when Davies netted after Sigurdsson cut back a loose ball after Hennessey had thwarted Niasse.

‘That shows the difference between being 3-0 up and 20 up,’ said Allardyce. ‘We played the game out really well. Defensivel­y we were very solid.’

There was time for Palace to get a consolatio­n when captain Luka Milivojevi­c crashed home a penalty.

Hodgson, who shook hands with Allardyce, confirmed an incident in 2016 – when Allardyce mocked his manner of speaking – has been forgotten. ‘Sam called me on Thursday evening and apologised to me and I was happy to accept that apology and as far as I’m concerned now, that matter belongs in the distant past.’

 ??  ?? ON TARGET: Gylfi Sigurdsson opened the scoring for Everton in their victory over Crystal Palace at Goodison Park
ON TARGET: Gylfi Sigurdsson opened the scoring for Everton in their victory over Crystal Palace at Goodison Park

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