Everton Greatest All-Time Team
Everton's most successful season: 1984-1985 |
This is my selection of a 25 member all-time team for the club. The number 25 was chosen because it is the official squad size for the Champions' League.
Formed in 1878, Everton were founding members of The Football League in 1888 and won their first League Championship two seasons later. Following four League Championship and two FA Cup wins, Everton experienced a lull in the immediate post World War Two period until a revival in the 1960s, which saw the club win two League Championships and an FA Cup. The mid-1980s represented their most recent period of sustained success with two League Championship successes, an FA Cup, and the 1985 European Cup Winners' Cup.
Team
GK: Neville Southall (Wales)
Southall was FWA Football of the Year in 1985 and one of the few keepers to win the award. He was regarded as one of the best British keeper of his generation in a generation filled with great keepers. He started with Bury, but played most of his career with Everton, where the club was enjoying its most successful period. He won two First Divison title and two FA Cup with them. He had 92 caps for Wales.
Neville Southall |
He joined Everton as an apprentice in 1929 after playing for Thorne Colliery in Yorkshire and made in debut in 1930. He played in the championship winning sides of 1931–32 and 1938–39 and the FA Cup winning side of 1933. He made 499 appearances for Everton; this goalkeeping record for the club was only beaten by Neville Southall in 1994.
GK: Gordon West (England)
After 33 League games for Blackpool, he signed for Everton in 1962 for £27,000, then a British record for a goalkeeper. He won the Football League First Division: (1962–63), (1969–70,) and the FA Cup(1965–66). West won three caps for England. He turned down a place in the 1970 FIFA World Cup squad because he wanted to stay at home with his family.
RB: Gary Stevens (England)
Graduated from Everton's academy, he played in the great Everton side of the 1980's. He took home two league titles. Stevens was went to the 1986 World Cup Finals (along with the Tottenham Hotspur player Gary A. Capped 46 times, Stevens, causing a spot of confusion) and played in all of the games as England reached the quarter finals. He also played at Euro 1988 and Italia 1990.
RB: Tommy Wright (England)
Wright spent his entire career with Everton. He played in the winning team in the 1966 FA Cup Final. He also won the 1969/70 Football League Championship. Capped 12 times. He made his debut in the 1968 European Championship. He also participated at the 1970 World Cup Finals in Mexico. He was named as an inaugural member of Gwladys Street's Hall of Fame in 1996, and as an "Everton Giant" in 2016.
CB Kevin Ratcliffe (Wales)
He was the captain of Everton during its golden era in the 1980's. He won two English League titles, one FA Cup and another Cup Winners' Cup. In 1991, he went to Dundee and then played for a short spells with Cardiff City, Nottingham Forest, Derby County and Chester City. Ratcliffe was capped 59 times by Wales, often as captain. Wales never qualified for a major tournament while he was active.
Kevin Ratcliffe |
He born in Manchester of Polish descent. He played for Sheffield Wednesday before joining Everton in 2007. The transfer was the highst ever for a Sheffield United player. At the time of writing, he has over 40 caps for England. He went to European Championship in 2012 and World Cup Finals in 2014.
CB: Dave Watson (England)
Watson moved to Everton for £900,000 in 1986 after six years at Norwich. He remained at Goodison Park for 15 years. atson was an integral part of the Everton side throughout the 1990s, and following the departure of goalkeeper Neville Southall in 1998 he became the club's oldest and longest serving player. Capped 12 times.
CB: Brian Labone (England)
Labone played his entire career with Everton in England. He was an one-club man. His professional career lasted from 1958 to 1971, during which he won the Football League championship twice and the FA Cup once. Labone played 26 times for England between 1962 and 1970. He withdrew from England's 1966 World Cup squad because of his imminent marriage but played in three of the four games in the World Cup in 1970 in Mexico.
Brain Labone |
From 1952 to 1964, Wilson played for Huddersfield. In 1964 Wilson joined Everton, by which time he had played 30 times for England, and remains to this day Huddersfield's most-capped England international. For England, he would win 53 caps in total and was a starter at the WC Finals in 1966 in which England won. He played in the 1968 European Championship where England reached the semifinal.
LB: Leighton Baines (England)
Baines started his career with Wigan Athletic, and was part of the team that won the Second Division in the 2002–03 season and was a runner-up in the 2004–05 Championship and the 2006 League Cup Final. He joined Everton in 2007, helping them reach the 2009 FA Cup Final. He has played for England at under-21 and senior levels. Baines was included in the England squads at UEFA Euro 2012 and the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
Leighton Baines |
He built his reputation at Bolton Wanderers, before signing for Everton in 1982. He helped the club win two league titles, a FA Cup and the 1985 Cup Winners' Cup. He was voted as the PFA Players' Player of the Year in 1985. He represented England at the 1986 FIFA World Cup and 1988 UEFA European Championship. He won 13 caps in total. Reid joined Queens Park Rangers in 1989, but moved on to Manchester City a year later to begin his managerial career.
Peter Reid |
CM/DM: Howard Kendall (England)
Kendall started with Preston North Endl. He was a runner-up in the 1964 FA Cup with Preston, and at 17 years 245 days was the youngest player to play in a Wembley final. In 1967 Kendall joined Everton, where he played in midfield with Alan Ball and Colin Harvey, the trio gaining the nickname "The Holy Trinity". With Everton he won the First Division title, the Charity Shield, and was again an FA Cup runner-up.
CM: Alan Ball (England)
Ball was the youngest member of the WC winning team in 1966. He started his career with Blackpool. He also played with Everton, Arsenal, Southampton and various clubs in North America and Hong Kong. He played 72 times for England and was a key player at the WC finals in 1966 and 1970. He missed the ill-fated match vs Poland in 1973 due a suspension.
Alan Ball |
Started with Burnley, he joined Everton in 1983. He helped the club win two league titles, a FA Cup and the 1985 Cup Winners' Cup. He joined Graeme Souness' Rangers in 1989. In 1991, Steven moved for £5.5 million - the joint-highest fee involving a British player at the time, shared with David Platt of Aston Villa to Olympique Marseille where he stayed for one season, winning the French league title. Capped 36 times.
LW: Tommy Eglington (Northern Ireland/Ireland)
He played as an outside-left for, among others, Shamrock Rovers, Everton and Tranmere Rovers. Eglington was also a dual internationalist and played for both Ireland teams – the FAI XI and the IFA XI. Eglington's playing career followed a similar path to that of Peter Farrell. As well as teaming up at international level, they also played together at three different clubs
LW: Kevin Sheedy (Ireland)
He spent the largest portion of his playing career with Everton – with whom he won the FA Cup, European Cup Winners' Cup and two Football League titles – and also played for Hereford United, Liverpool, Newcastle United and Blackpool. Born in Wales, he played 46 times for the Republic of Ireland and scored the country's first ever goal in a FIFA World Cup finals.
AM/CM: Colin Harvey (England)
Harvey was often described as an elegant and skilful player and was nicknamed the "White Pele" by Everton fans. Harvey became a part of the famous midfield trio known as the "Holy Trinity" with Alan Ball and Howard Kendall. Widely regarded as the best midfield of their generation, they were the key components of Everton's Football League First Division winning team in the 1969/70 season.
AM: Tim Cahill (Australia)
Cahill is the all-time leading scorer for Socceroos and was considered one of greatest Australian players ever. He played for Millwall, Everton, the New York Red Bulls, Shanghai Shenhua, and Hangzhou Greentown. At Everton, he was one of their star players for 8 seasons. He represented Samoa at youth level. Later, he switched to Australia in 2004. He went to three WC Finals. He led Australia in winning the Asian Cup in 2015.
Tim Cahill |
Started with Liverpool in 1957, he "crossed the park" to join Everton in 1962, sold without manager Bill Shankly's knowledge. He scored on his Everton debut, in the first league Merseyside derby in 11 seasons, which finished as a 2–2 draw, and went on to help the club to the First Division title in his first season.
FW: Alex Young (England)
He is the all-time fourth highest scorer for English club Everton and scored the only goal to win the 1906 FA Cup Final. Some attribute to him a total of 113 league goals for Everton, which would put him in second spot behind Dixie Dean. He was also the Football League's top scorer in 1906–07. He also played for Tottenham Hotspur, Manchester City and South Liverpool.
ST: Dixie Dean (England)
He was a star player in the pre-War era, Dean played the majority of his career at Everton before injuries caught up with him and he moved on to new challenges at Notts County. He is best known for his exploits during the 1927–28 season, which saw him score a record 60 league goals. He scored 379 goals in 438 games, 28 goals in FA Cup matches. He also scored 18 goals in only 16 caps for the national team.
Dixie Dean |
Ferguson began his football career at Carse Thistle before being signed by Dundee United in 1990. He moved to Rangers in 1993 for a then British transfer record of £4 million. He spent the remainder of his career in England with two spells at Everton and Newcastle United. Capped 7 times.
ST: Graeme Sharp (Scotland)
Sharp started his playing career at Dumbarton before signing for Everton for £120,000 in 1980, with whom he won the FA Cup, European Cup Winners' Cup and two Football League titles. He later played for Oldham. Capped 12 times and played a single match at Mexico 1986.
He made more than 500 appearances in the Football League, playing for Birmingham City, Everton, Swansea City and Coventry City in the First Division. During his time at Everton, he was the club's leading post Second World War goalscorer with 138 goals, a record he held until 1989 when Graeme Sharp broke it. He won 12 full caps for England.
Bob Latchford |
Honorable Mention
Wayne Rooney, Roy Vernon, Dave Hickson, Tony Cottee, Andy Gray, Joe Royle, Gary Lineker, Andrei Kanchelskis, Mikel Arteta, Tommy Lawton, Mick Lyons, Phil Neville, Peter Farrell, David Unsworth, Tim Howard.
Squad Explanation
-- The 1980's was Everton's Golden era. Howard Kendall took over as manager and guided Everton to their most successful era. Everton won the FA Cup in 1984 and two League Championships in 1984–85 and 1986–87. In Europe, the club won its first, and so far only, European trophy by securing the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1985. Neville Southall, Graeme Sharp, Kevin Sheedy, Trevor Steven, Gary Stevens, Peter Reid and Kevin Ratcliffe played in that generation. I could not find space for Andy Gray.
-- Gary Lineker only spent one season at Everton. He only made my honourable mention.
-- Tommy Lawton also played his prime elsewhere. He too only made my honourable mention.
-- I chose other fullbacks ahead of Keith Newton.
-- Leighton Baines now has been to the club for 11 seasons. He belonged to this team.
-- Wayne Rooney is Everton's greatest homegrown talent, but he left too early. In 2017, he returned to the club. He might make tis team, depending on his performance during his seocnd stint.
Formation
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