Everton find fight under Moyes as Grealish sparks freedom at Goodison
Moyes has pulled a dull Everton back to life and the crowd feels it.
He let creative types like Jack Grealish roam, and the freedom showed on the pitch.
Grealish arrived on loan from Manchester City and looks rebooted in our badge loving setup.
Everton used to grind out goalless draws at Goodison.
We wore the label boring like a stubborn badge.
The move to a new £800m stadium changed the mood, plain and simple.
The 2-0 win over Brighton showed a different Everton, brimming with intent.
Iliman Ndiaye linked with Grealish for the first goal and the stadium finally spoke.
The team played with freedom and a shape that screamed old school values.
The 3-2 win at Molineux added momentum and sent us into the top five.
We do not chase possession stats, we chase bothered looks and a bite in the tackle.
Goodison doesn’t sing anymore, it hums like a broken fridge.
We will not be patronised by pundits who treat Everton as a subplot in Liverpool’s documentary.
But we are here to defend the badge, not pretend Everton is a subplot in someone else’s story.
TLDR
- Grealish frees Everton and brightens Goodison with a freer, bolder vibe.
- Iliman Ndiaye adds another spark and the team shows old school shape and fight.
- Everton must keep up the bite and resist the lure of modern projects.
Jack Grealish
Everton


