Niall Quinn
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No, they put pressure on straight away and a great whip ball.
And once again, the keeper doesn't cover himself in glory.
He's running backwards towards his own goal line, which is the most dangerous part of the goal that he should be covering.
He kind of fumbles to keep it out and it drops invitingly for Kone, who, I mean, he enjoyed himself tonight.
You can see he's working his way back to try and clear a danger there that if he was in a better position starting off, he'd have come and either punched it a moment or two earlier.
It was just a bad night all round for the Everton keeper, but credit to Kone, he was alive waiting for the sniff, you know.
Yeah, it's been a gradual decline, you know, that bright, breezy manager that came in that had the whole place sparking a couple of years ago.
That's disintegrated a little bit and you can see him carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders.
And it's not just that interview.
It's been coming a long, long time.
And he's at a club where patience is normally, you know, the thing that the board are renowned for.
They don't go rushing around and doing things in a hurry.
I'm not so sure it will happen between now and the weekend, but there's more than a hint of inevitability that he will go.
Yeah, it was calamitous, wasn't it?
But...
To be fair, Watford had a go themselves in the second half.
Yes, they did.
They got back into it.
They did pretty well.
And I'm sure it was... Igalo's first in 13.