Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

GOODISON

Ancelotti has managed at some of the world’s great

- BY DAVID MADDOCK

EVEN a half-time marriage proposal could barely add romance to a damp Merseyside afternoon where the football matched the grey sky.

With Burnley the ferocious, cussed opposition, Carlo Ancelotti (above right) clearly had no illusions.

This was hardly the San Siro or the Bernabeu. This was not taking over a team of galacticos and guiding them back towards the glory that is inherent in the clubs he has managed. Yet the rousing reception he received, as he walked along the touchline at the start of his first game in charge of Everton, showed that he is at a special club, if one whose best days are something of a distant memory.

And when Dominic Calvertlew­in (right) produced a stunning winning goal 10 minutes from time to lift the roof off this famous old stadium,

Ancelotti certainly knew one thing. If he has a big job on his hands, then he will at least get plenty of help from the supporters who already revere him.

It is a long time since Ancelotti has managed at this level, more than 20 years in fact, when he left Reggiana for

Parma. Since then, it has been a host of illustriou­s names and venues, and inevitable success.

Yet he knows how to build teams, as his spells at those first two Italian clubs showed, by steering Reggiana to promotion before driving Parma to second place in Serie A and into the Champions League.

Everton are some distance from that. Yet as skipper Seamus Coleman said, the team has already taken on board some of his ideas and some of his demands.

That much was clear on an otherwise gloomy afternoon, when the home side were transforme­d from a desperate first half, where they were too methodical and even robotic. Ancelotti got to work at the break, changing the formation, getting Bernard on the ball, and crucially, providing quicker ball into Calvert-lewin. The young centre-forward is still a work in progress, a work that is happening out on the pitch in the full glare of the unforgivin­g Premier League spotlight.

He missed three presentabl­e chances to the groans of an expectant Blues support, heading an early Gylfi Sigurdsson freekick wide early on when he should have done better, and mistiming his jump from Lucas Digne’s cross to head horribly over before the break.

A third chance

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