Southampton's Danny Ings celebrates his goal against Everton
Southampton's Danny Ings celebrates his goal against Everton

Everton 1-1 Southampton: Danny Ings boost Golden Boot hopes but Saints pegged back at Goodison


Southampton striker Danny Ings scored his 19th Premier League goal of the season, but Everton hit back to mean it ended all square at Goodison.

His scrappy finish midway through the first half moved him within three goals of Leicester's Jamie Vardy in the race to finish the campaign as the division's leading marksman, but it was not enough to give Saints all three points.

He also saw a header hit the crossbar while James Ward-Prowse missed a penalty with the score still goalless, and it would prove costly.

Before the break Lucas Digne's precise diagonal ball picked out Richarlison, who expertly finished over the onrushing Alex McCarthy.

Ings highlighted his ability to seize a chance when it comes his way with a real poacher’s goal, playing on the shoulder of the last defender and benefiting when a mishit shot from Stuart Armstrong fell at his feet.

The former Liverpool and Burnley striker was denied a major tournament debut with England at Euro 2020 this summer due to the coronavirus pandemic but his current form surely makes it impossible for Gareth Southgate to ignore him in future selections.

The result did nothing for either mid-tabled side’s faint European hopes, with Toffees manager Carlo Ancelotti admitting they had to win their three home matches to stand a chance.

They were not given much opportunity in the first half as Southampton, with more away victories than any other team outside the top three, set about extending that record by pressing high and hard.

Ancelotti had made a change to the criticised midfield of Monday’s defeat at Tottenham, with academy graduate Anthony Gordon replacing Gylfi Sigurdsson – the one player singled out for extra scrutiny against Spurs – and the youngster responded by being Everton’s best player in the opening 45 minutes.

The bar was set low, though – the hosts were dreadful as they were once again dominated in midfield and panicked in defence with a lively Ings running rings around them.

Armstrong hooked home from an offside position to give Everton an early scare but with Oriel Romeu and Ward-Prowse bossing the middle there was a lot more pressure to absorb.

Not only were Saints harder working and more determined, they passed the ball better, with one or two intricate and incisive moves leaving their opponents chasing shadows.

After Alex Iwobi had forced Alex McCarthy into the first save from a rare Everton chance, the game burst into life with Ward-Prowse’s free-kick tipped over and Ings’ near-post flick-on hitting the crossbar.

The bar came to Everton’s rescue again seconds later when Ward-Prowse sent Jordan Pickford the wrong way from the penalty spot after the midfielder was fouled by Andre Gomes.

Ings was not to be denied, however, and pounced when the ball somewhat fortuitously fell to him, holding off Pickford to scuff home.

Just before half-time Everton’s midfield issues got worse when Gomes went off injured, to be replaced by Sigurdsson.

But out of nowhere the hosts equalised when Lucas Digne’s long diagonal out of defence was controlled with one touch by Richarlison and hammered past McCarthy with the second, equalling his best tally of 14 in all competitions.

Ancelotti’s decision to replace right-sided midfielder Iwobi with defender Djibril Sidibe at half-time had the desired effect of giving Everton more solidity and their performance improved as a result.

Dominic Calvert-Lewin, who has not scored in nine matches and was quiet again, fluffed his one chance when he failed to connect properly with Tom Davies’ diagonal pass with only McCarthy to beat.

Richarlison, having run from halfway, felt he was denied a goalscoring opportunity by Jan Bednarek but referee Lee Mason decided the foul warranted only a yellow card and VAR agreed – much to the Everton coaching staff’s disgust – and with it went the last real chance of the game.


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