There is newfound optimism at Everton on and off the pitch ahead of the upcoming Merseyside Derby, and the performances of a new signing, Jack Grealish, epitomise this fresh outlook on the banks of the River Mersey.
By James Nalton
The fact that Everton have been able to make new signings at all has in itself been cause for optimism, but the arrival of such a star name, still just about within the prime years of a footballing career, has provided additional hope.
When Everton’s rumoured interest in Jack Grealish surfaced in the summer, there was some disbelief, mainly because the club had for several years operated only on the fringes of the transfer market. Once it became clear Everton were back in the mix for such players, the excitement grew.
How did Everton manage to sign Grealish?
The Grealish links meant that a couple of things, both from the business and sporting side, needed to be taken into account.
The first was an issue that football cannot escape in recent years, and that is one of finance.
Mismanagement at Everton in previous years led to problems with profitability and sustainability rules, and related financial fair play issues. At times, it felt like Everton were unfairly made an example of as other teams got off lightly, but nevertheless, the club was poorly run, and fans regularly made their feelings clear regarding this.
Everton are now starting to emerge from this with new ownership from the Friedkin Group and a new stadium on Bramley-Moore Dock. This is the first transfer window in which they have had some breathing space to attempt to put together a team that can do more than merely survive in the Premier League.

A loan deal, in which Everton are, according to the Athletic, covering three-quarters of Grealish’s wages with Manchester City making up the difference, is the perfect solution for the club at this moment in time.
Where would Grealish play?
The second question around this high-profile arrival was where he would play. Everton’s best player last season was Iliman Ndiaye, and the Senegalese operated in Grealish’s usual role as a No.10-style creator but one who plays from the left.
Adding Grealish to Ndiaye and another new signing, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, seemed like adding too many of the same type of player, when what Everton really lack is some pace out wide, but it turns out that simply adding a load of good footballers brings good results.
Manager David Moyes has found a way to fit Grealish, Dewsbury-Hall, and Ndiaye into his lineup. Many thought that Grealish might play as the central No. 10, but, instead, he has taken the position from the left with Ndiaye now performing his magic on the right.

Grealish tops the Premier League for expected assists and actual assists with four, having only managed two across his two previous full seasons for Manchester City. The creative spark has returned to his game.
Dewsbury-Hall’s energy, often unheralded tenacity, and midfield attributes have made him ideal for a central role, either as one of the deeper two or as an attacking midfielder behind the striker, completing the puzzle. He is also second in the league for expected assists behind Grealish and is regularly involved in delivering the team’s set-pieces.
Moyes now has the question of where to fit another exciting new signing, Tyler Dibling, into all of this, but it’s a nice problem to have.
The team still feels like it needs a bit more pace and more quality in the centre-forward position, but there is a hope Thierno Barry can provide some of that once he settles, and Dibling will offer some speed off the bench or in rotation.
Hope and ambition
So far, Everton’s start to life on their new pitch suggests that they are looking to do more than merely recover; they are looking to be genuine challengers for places in the upper middle of the Premier League table. European football has even been mentioned for the first time since Carlo Ancelotti was in charge.
No club has a given right to any status within any league. Everton know that better than most as they have repeatedly fought relegation and points deductions in recent seasons. But the club remains one of only six to have been ever-present in the English top flight since the start of the Premier League era in 1992, and one that for most of this time had at least one eye on European qualification, regardless of how regularly it actually qualified (seven times).

Football fandom can be a pessimistic business, not least when your team is regularly fighting against relegation, but there is always the hope that something more positive is just around the corner.
This is the kind of dynamic that football support is built on, and there are few better providers of this kind of hope than a player like Grealish. It’s no wonder the fans have taken to him straight away.
“Since I’ve come here, I don’t really know how or why the connection’s been the way it has, but it’s just something that’s just happened, and it’s so lovely,” Grealish told the Liverpool Echo.
“Everyone, all of my family says it as well, because they come to every game and they can see it.
“I just want to thank you [the fans] for all the support and all the love. Hopefully I can repay you in so many different ways, and hopefully there are many more good times to come.”
For both of the clubs involved, Merseyside derby wins can always produce such good times, regardless of the respective clubs’ wider aims for the season. Grealish will be looking to provide some for the blue half of the city this weekend when they make the trip back up to Stanley Park to face Liverpool at Anfield.
(Cover image from IMAGO)
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