Jamie Vardy Strike Gives Leicester Victory Over Everton
1st January 2019
Clear openings, however, were at a premium during 45 minutes in which neither side was especially fluent in possession
- Everton went down to a single-goal defeat in their opening game of 2019, with Jamie Vardy’s 58th-minute goal banking all three points for Leicester City
- Vardy latched onto Ricardo Pereira’s pass to shoot low into the net and hand his side an unlikely advantage after Everton had fashioned the game’s better openings
- nd there were chances after Vardy’s goal for Richarlison and Cenk Tosun as the Blues enjoyed large passages of possession without being able to force the equaliser
LIVERPOOL, United
Kingdom- Everton went down to a single-goal defeat in their opening game of
2019, with Jamie Vardy’s 58th-minute goal banking all three points for
Leicester City.
Vardy latched onto Ricardo Pereira’s pass to shoot low into
the net and hand his side an unlikely advantage after Everton had fashioned the
game’s better openings.
Jonjoe Kenny rattled
the woodwork in the first half. And there were chances after Vardy’s goal
for Richarlison and Cenk Tosun as
the Blues enjoyed large passages of possession without being able to force the
equaliser.
Everton came closest to forging a first-half lead through the unlikely source
of Kenny.
The right-back – playing his first Premier League football for three months –
advanced upfield as play developed down the left, Richarlisonfeeding
the overlapping Lucas
Digne.
Digne’s delivery evaded any number of bodies in Leicester’s penalty area,
progressing to the far post where Kenny met it with a rising shot which slammed
against the frame of goal where post joins crossbar.
Kenny’s cross from the right soon after was headed past the near post by
Dominic Calvert-Lewin.
Clear openings, however, were at a premium during 45 minutes in which neither
side was especially fluent in possession. Indeed, the first time Everton had
stitched together a sequence of passes it ended with the game’s opening effort
on goal.
Andre Gomes robbed
Rachid Ghezzal on 11 minutes and fed Richarlison, who
quickly shifted play on to Gylfi Sigurdsson.
He fed Digne, scuttling forwards but saw his attempt thunder into defender
Harry Maguire.
Richarlison’s
strike 60 seconds later met with a similar fate. Maguire’s slack pass from
defence went directly to Sigurdsson. The midfielder, back in the starting XI
after being rested at Brighton three days ago, swept the ball to Richarlison on
the left of the penalty area. His right-footed strike was planted into the
frame of Maguire’s fellow Foxes centre-half Jonny Evans.
For Leicester, Vardy hit wildly over from distance, while the forward was only
denied a clear run at goal when last man Idrissa Gana
Gueyewas perfectly positioned to intercept a through ball from Ghezzal.
Kurt Zouma tried
his luck from 30 yards on 34 minutes but the defender’s effort was too high to
bother Kasper Schmeichel.
Pereira, playing on Leicester’s left flank, represented arguably his side’s
most reliable outlet during the opening half.
The Portuguese got no change from Michael Keane,
however, when the Everton man blocked Pereira’s route into the penalty box
following a run from deep in his own half.
Centre-back Keane had proved a similarly impenetrable barrier for the onrushing
Vardy early in the piece.
When Vardy did manage to escape 13 minutes after the interval, his finish was
unerring.
Keane’s lapse allowed Pereira to pounce and turn forward a first-time pass for
the England striker.
He used his first touch to nudge the ball out of Zouma’s reach. With his
second, he swiped it across Jordan Pickford and
inside the goalkeeper’s left post.
Everton’s first attempt at a reply saw Sigurdsson strike over after Theo Walcott had
knocked down Gomes’ lofted ball into the box.
Leicester’s defensive wall repelled a Digne free-kick after Richarlison was
impeded by Hamza Choudhury.
Bernard, by now,
was on for Gomes. He was joined by Turkish centre-forward Tosun with 20 minutes
remaining, Walcott the player replaced.
A neat move down the right ended with the sliding Richarlison’s shot
being deflected behind following Bernard’s cut back.
And Richarlison was
frustrated again seconds later. Sigurdsson’s right-wing corner dropped in the
box, with the Brazilian first to react but unable to force his low drive
through a crowd of bodies.
Everton were starting to generate some momentum. Tosun was first to Evans’
loose header and stung the palms of Leicester goalkeeper Schmeichel from 18
yards, Evans then compounding his error by upending Richarlison, who
had fastened onto the rebound. Sigurdsson’s free-kick, though, crashed against
a head in the Leicester wall.
Everton were progressively committing more bodies to attack, with the
inevitable consequence of being vulnerable on the counter.
Zouma stretched out a leg to prevent Vardy streaking onto Ben Chilwell’s pass
from deep. And Chilwell progressed 40 yards to hit a low effort comfortably
gathered by Pickford.
Back came Everton. Bernard jinked
past Chilwell and sent in a teasing low cross which was hacked away by Maguire.
And with the match entering stoppage time, Schmeichel spread himself to repel a
close-range header from Tosun.
Gutsy Kenny On The Pulse
There was a return to Everton’s team for Jonjoe Kenny following
a three-month absence.
Kenny’s previous outing was in the game at Leicester City back in October – his
fourth successive appearance – when he was typically tenacious in a 2-1 win.
“A typical Scouse full-back”, is Jamie Carragher’s take on Kenny. Carragher’s
verdict is intended as a compliment in every respect, alluding to the
21-year-old’s bite in the tackle and indefatigable commitment to the team’s
cause.
There is an implied reference to Kenny’s character in there, too, and the
manner in which the player got straight back about his business without missing
a beat here was testament to how he applied himself during his time out of the
team.
Kenny generated the first Goodson Park roar of the afternoon when he thundered
into a challenge on Ricardo Pereira, the sound of impact of man on ball echoing
pleasingly around the stadium.
He had already forcefully and fairly relieved Rachid Ghezzal of possession by
this stage.
There is much more to Kenny than fizz and aggression, though. A graduate of
Everton’s Academy, the defender meets the criteria required to feature in a
Marco Silva team.
Kenny is polished on the ball and adventurous down his right flank. He was high
up the pitch to connect with a delivery from fellow full-back Lucas Digne and
slam a strike against the angle of post and bar on 19 minutes.
Not much more than five minutes later, Kenny swung a precise cross onto the
head of fellow England Under-21 international Dominic Calvert-Lewin, the
striker’s effort flashing past the near post.
Between times, Kenny hared back 40 yards or so to recover possession for his
team, leaving the exasperated Ben Chilwell flinging up his hands in despair.
Indeed, it is a measure of Kenny’s quality that he did not suffer in any way by
comparison with Chilwell, the Leicester City player who is currently first pick
at left-back for England.
The raw appreciation for Kenny’s meaty challenge on Pereira was replaced by
gasps of admiration when he cushioned a dropping ball in the shadow of the Main
Stand shortly before the break. Kenny’s subsequent one-two with Theo Walcott to
extricate himself from a tight spot was just as impressive.
Kenny unquestionably has the confidence of his teammates, too. It was possible
to gauge just how much his colleagues trust him when Andre Gomes spun
in the centre circle early in the second half and drilled a ball to the right
without so much as a glance. He knew Kenny would be stationed in the right
place to receive the forward pass.
Kenny’s gutsy display merits mention on a tough afternoon for his team.