At the final whistle, the 50-year-old Scot, who will become Manchester United manager on 1 July, was serenaded by all corners of the stadium after a final flourish that went very much to the script.There was exemplary work-rate and ambition throughout the team with their manager barking instructions and celebrating goals with as much passion as ever. Visitors West Ham offered little, save for two efforts by Kevin Nolan and one from former Liverpool midfielder Joe Cole.Anything but a home win would have felt inadequate on a day the blue half of Merseyside came to say goodbye to their manager of 11 years.Everton could have been ahead as early as the fourth minute, only for Sylvain Distin to head Marouane Fellaini's cushioned header narrowly wide. Focused and fluent, the hosts immediately clicked into top gear, carving out clever openings and bombarding the West Ham goal. The rousing and emotional pre-match send-off was acknowledged by Moyes with a simple wave to all four stands at Goodison Park.Goodison could sense a goal and it arrived just two minutes later. Leighton Baines raced into space down the left and flicked the ball to a charging Fellaini. The Belgian midfielder found Pienaar with a clever flick, who in turn found Mirallas and his piercing low shot fizzed beyond Jussi Jaaskelainen and into the net.But the only tribute the Everton manager really cared about was the performance, and his team knew it.With Moyes standing guard on the edge of his technical area, living through every moment just as he had done for the past decade and more, Everton snapped into every challenge and zipped every pass around the slick Goodison turf.Everton, driven on by the midfield leadership of Leon Osman, the tireless running of Steven Pienaar and the ruthless finishing of Mirallas thoroughly deserved their victory.
Sunday, 12 May 2013
Everton gave their departing manager
At the final whistle, the 50-year-old Scot, who will become Manchester United manager on 1 July, was serenaded by all corners of the stadium after a final flourish that went very much to the script.There was exemplary work-rate and ambition throughout the team with their manager barking instructions and celebrating goals with as much passion as ever. Visitors West Ham offered little, save for two efforts by Kevin Nolan and one from former Liverpool midfielder Joe Cole.Anything but a home win would have felt inadequate on a day the blue half of Merseyside came to say goodbye to their manager of 11 years.Everton could have been ahead as early as the fourth minute, only for Sylvain Distin to head Marouane Fellaini's cushioned header narrowly wide. Focused and fluent, the hosts immediately clicked into top gear, carving out clever openings and bombarding the West Ham goal. The rousing and emotional pre-match send-off was acknowledged by Moyes with a simple wave to all four stands at Goodison Park.Goodison could sense a goal and it arrived just two minutes later. Leighton Baines raced into space down the left and flicked the ball to a charging Fellaini. The Belgian midfielder found Pienaar with a clever flick, who in turn found Mirallas and his piercing low shot fizzed beyond Jussi Jaaskelainen and into the net.But the only tribute the Everton manager really cared about was the performance, and his team knew it.With Moyes standing guard on the edge of his technical area, living through every moment just as he had done for the past decade and more, Everton snapped into every challenge and zipped every pass around the slick Goodison turf.Everton, driven on by the midfield leadership of Leon Osman, the tireless running of Steven Pienaar and the ruthless finishing of Mirallas thoroughly deserved their victory.
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