The National - News

Relief for Silva as Everton beat West Ham to end losing run

- RICHARD JOLLY

Marco Silva needed this. It was victory and vindicatio­n. “Pressure has to be a pleasure and a privilege for us,” said the Everton manager, but he is now under less of it.

His side ended a four-game losing run, extricated themselves from the relegation zone and, at times, eviscerate­d West Ham in a manner to make their recent wretched results appear a figment of the imaginatio­n.

This was a 2-0 thrashing, a performanc­e so emphatic as to prove Silva’s charges are still playing for him and featuring the kind of entertaini­ng, expansive football he likes.

“We embraced the game and the challenge,” Silva said. “It is important to talk about the way we played. It was a very good performanc­e with quality football.” West Ham were dismal, but that should not detract from Everton’s excellence or the success of Silva’s blueprint. The Portuguese made five changes and while three were enforced, he dropped Everton’s record signing. Gylfi Sigurdsson came off the bench to add a stylish second goal in injury time but Everton were more vibrant and dynamic without him. At a time when his decision-making was under particular scrutiny, Silva was rewarded for his boldness.

“I know what I’m doing,” he said. Silva picked a front four who are all wingers by trade. Two combined for the breakthrou­gh. Theo Walcott found Bernard who, in a twisting, turning run, seemed to have taken the wrong option for evading Arthur Masuaku and slipping a shot under Bernard.

It was the first time since September 1 that anyone other than Dominic Calvert-Lewin had scored for Everton. The luckless striker was benched but Everton were more fluid without him. “The movement in our offensive organisati­on was very good,” Silva said. “They understood where the space was.”

Richarliso­n led the line in Calvert-Lewin’s stead and ran West Ham ragged. He was a catalyst as struck the woodwork three times and had two goals chalked off.

The elusive Brazilian clipped the outside of the post and volleyed in Lucas Digne’s cross, only to be ruled offside. The impressive Walcott rattled the bar from 20 yards and had a shot deflected on to the upright. Yerry Mina also had a goal ruled out. Alex Iwobi, sent scurrying clear on goal by Djibril Sidibe, was thwarted by Roberto.

The goalkeeper was alone in excelling for the visitors. He denied Tom Davies an early opener with a point-blank block, though the lifelong Evertonian added urgency on a belated first league start of the season. Alongside him, the fit-again Andre Gomes brought incisive distributi­on from the base of the midfield. “Andre is a key player for us,” Silva added. “It was a very good game from him and Tom as well. The game was always under control. We created so many chances.”

But profligacy could have been costly. West Ham threatened to depart Goodison Park with an undeserved point, with Jordan Pickford making a fine late save from Angelo Ogbonna.

Otherwise, however, they looked shabby and flimsy, making a string of mistakes in defence, being overpowere­d in midfield and proving ineffectiv­e in attack.

The only outfield player to emerge in credit was Andriy Yarmolenko, strangely benched and a half-time introducti­on. “In that moment, if I can make 11 changes, maybe I do,” admitted manager Manuel Pellegrini. “In the first half we didn’t shoot once at goal. Everton dominated the game.”

Their last four matches have brought a 4-0 humiliatio­n at Oxford’s hands, a solitary draw and successive league defeats. “I don’t think it was just one problem,” Pellegrini added. “As a team they played better, they run better and they deserve to win the game.”

West Ham were dismal, but that should not detract from Everton’s excellence or the success of Silva’s blueprint

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