Dominic Calvert-Lewin denied dream homecoming as Everton and Leeds share spoils — Independent 26/1/26
Everton 1-1 Leeds: Thierno Barry cancelled out James Justin’s opener in a game of two halves
Richard Jolly at Hill Dickinson Stadium
For Everton, it was at least a night when they need not rue
letting the most prolific Englishman in the Premier League this season leave on
a free transfer. Dominic Calvert-Lewin hit the post in his first reunion with
his old club. But Thierno Barry, the striker Everton signed to replace him,
scored, a second terrific goal in as many weeks sparing them defeat.
While there were a few boos for Calvert-Lewin, Barry’s name
rang around Hill Dickinson Stadium. He and his fellow forward Beto have been
the butt of many a joke, a seemingly goal-shy pair forever being swapped for
each other. But Barry now has four goals in his last five league outings. After
failing to score with any of his first 15 shots in the Premier League, he has
found the net with five of the last 10. And if, like Everton, he was utterly
ineffectual before the break, he was much better after it.
A game of two halves was shaped by two managers. The first
45 minutes amounted to a tactical triumph for Daniel Farke. Yet David Moyes
changed the match with his response. He copied Farke’s back three, took a team
with a meagre first-half xG of 0.14 and no shots on target for the first hour
and gave them a threat.
Some of it came in the unlikely form of Idrissa Gana Gueye.
A defensive midfielder by trade, an Afcon winner last week became an attacking
weapon. The Senegalese set up Barry’s equaliser. Then he rattled the bar from
20 yards. If Gueye owed Everton, given that he had only played once for them
since his ridiculous red card for slapping teammate Michael Keane at Old
Trafford in November, he repaid a debt.
Barry is starting to show signs of repaying his £27m fee,
too. There was delicacy in a shot with the outside of his right foot that Karl
Darlow saved, precision and confidence in his finish, lifted over the
goalkeeper, from Gueye’s low cross to the near post. “There's a little bit of
textbook centre-forward [play],” said Moyes. “He got across the defender and
put it away well. It was a really good run.”
After Barry’s dink over Emi Martinez clinched Everton’s best
win of the season, victory at Aston Villa, it was another sign he is settling.
“I am really pleased for Thierno,” added Moyes. “If you're a centre forward,
you need to score goals and he hadn't at the start. There are a lot of strikers
in the Premier League that cost a lot of money and it has not been easy for
them either.”
Barry is near the start of his career, Moyes approaching the
end of his. The 62-year-old displayed his own prowess in a radical reshuffle at
the break. Off came Dwight McNeil, who left James Justin unmarked for Leeds’
goal, and Harrison Armstrong. On came Jarrad Branthwaite for a belated first
appearance of the season, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall for a first of 2026. "My
plan was not to use Jarrad as early or Kiernan," said Moyes. But his squad
had been stretched. As he now has more options, even minus Jack Grealish, he
used his bench well.
Yet Everton started badly. “We were really poor in the first
half,” said Moyes. “I can’t put my finger on why.” Then it seemed Everton had
little answer to Farke’s gameplan. The German has prospered with an emphasis on
solidity but the teamsheet might have been deceptive. Farke fielded five
defenders and two defensive midfielders; yet that permitted the wing-backs to
roam ahead of them, to great effect.
His left wing-back scored a goal. His right wing-back almost
got an assist. Justin finished after Anton Stach delivered a low cross that
went through Calvert-Lewin’s legs and fell obligingly for the former Leicester
defender. Then Calvert-Lewin struck the post from Jayden Bogle’s enticing
cross. “Dominic probably should have scored,” sighed Farke.
The scorer of one of the most important goals in Everton’s
history – the 2022 winner against Crystal Palace that kept them up, averted
relegation, and perhaps administration, and enabled them to finance the
construction of Hill Dickinson Stadium – had also been denied by his former
teammate Jordan Pickford.
But injuries were a reason why Everton did not match his
salary demands. There are times when Everton have missed him this season. Their
goals have been too infrequent – only Sunderland in the top 14 have fewer – and
home wins too elusive; the Hill Dickinson is a deluxe destination but no
fortress as the last five visitors have exited undefeated.
Yet Leeds could go back across the Pennines with regrets.
“Slightly disappointed we didn’t win all three points,” said Farke. It would
have capped a stunning turnaround. After 11 points in their first 13 league
games, Leeds have 15 in 10.
Yet they have only climbed two places in the process and,
over the weekend, saw West Ham and Nottingham Forest close the gap to them. “We
can’t influence what happened elsewhere,” added Farke. “It is a long road of 38
games but you don’t always have gamedays that go in your favour.”
And this did not. Leeds are up to 26 points: enough to keep
a team up last season, but nowhere near enough this year. They still have much
to do but Farke insisted: “This group has again proven we have enough to win
enough points to stay in the league.”
