Everton caretaker manager David Unsworth said his team did him proud despite their Carabao Cup last-16 defeat by Chelsea. Willian scored the decisive second as Chelsea advanced to the quarter-finals but they were pushed to the final whistle by the rejuvenated visitors.
Chelsea had contained Everton with ease in the first half and led through Antonio Rudiger’s looping header.But the Toffees were sharper after the break as Kevin Mirallas had a shot well saved and Ademola Lookman hit the bar.Willian drilled a superb low finish home in stoppage time before Dominic Calvert-Lewin netted a consolation.
“I’m a bad loser but I have to say I’m proud of the performance, they were terrific,” Unsworth, who has replaced the sacked Ronald Koeman for now, told BBC Radio 5 live.”It was a committed performance. Hopefully we’ll show that in every game I am in charge.”Chelsea will learn their last-eight opponents when the draw is made at 16:00 BST on Thursday.Unsworth – taking charge of Everton in the wake of Koeman’s sacking on Monday – will not have a last-eight tie to look forward to but was rightly delighted with his team’s performance.
A commanding defender during his playing days, he will not relish reviewing the opener however.With Michael Keane dropped to the bench and a flat back four on the pitch, neither Phil Jagielka nor Ashley Williams commanded the penalty box as Rudiger floated free to direct a fine header back across Jordan Pickford from Charly Musonda’s cross. Unsworth has made no secret of his desire to be permanent Toffees manager and, after an insipid first half, his contagious passion for the club appeared to inspire a much-improved second-half showing.Everton’s energy and industry flustered Rudiger, Andreas Christensen and Gary Cahill in the home defence and it took a string of smart saves from Willy Caballero to preserve their lead before Willian drilled in the hosts’ second.
A more mobile attack, with Tom Davies, Mirallas and Aaron Lennon all brought into the starting line-up, provided the Toffees with more direction and urgency and that may be the key lesson from the evening.With a Champions League campaign to fight alongside their Premier League title defence, this was the type of game to test a squad that Chelsea manager Antonio Conte feels is stretched too thin.However Danny Drinkwater, a £35m signing from Leicester, is some impressive back-up to call upon and the England international delivered a typically assured performance on his debut for the club. Michy Batshuayi could not take his chance to similarly press his claims for a first-team role.
The Belgian was outmuscled by Jagielka after rounding Pickford in his only clear chance and saw Alvaro Morata, firmly Conte’s first-choice striker, come on in his place before the end.The moment of quality that killed the game as a contest came from another Conte favourite as Willian hammered a low shot in off the inside of the post to double the lead.Calvert-Lewin bundled home a minute later, but it was destined to be in vain.
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