Having been appointed Everton’s head of academy recruitment & player pathways last month, James Vaughan is now responsible for bringing through the next generation of Blues youngsters. But his own record-breaking strike has now stood for longer than he’d been around back then.
Some 19 years ago today, on April 10, 2005, Vaughan, aged 16 years and 270 days at the time, became the youngest goalscorer in Premier League history when he came off the bench and netted on his Everton debut to seal a 4-0 thrashing against Crystal Palace. On-loan Mikel Arteta set the ball rolling just seven minutes in with a superb free-kick curled around the wall for his first goal for the club before a Tim Cahill brace early in the second half (smashing into the net on 47 minutes and then a back-post header on 54 minutes) put the Blues in command.
With 16 minutes remaining, manager David Moyes replaced left-back Gary Naysmith with the teenage striker and on 87 minutes the young Brummie pounced as he attacked the ball to meet a low left wing cross from Kevin Kilbane. Scott McLeod wrote in the ECHO: “There has been talk of his talent in footballing circles all season but the Blues have tried hard to keep them under wraps.
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“Now, though, the secret is out. He is a huge prospect, although comparisons with you know who (Wayne Rooney) would be unfair.”
Everton’s ‘Wizard of Oz’ Cahill was quick to sing his rookie team-mate’s praises. He said: “It was fantastic. It was great to get two goals but for Vaughany to score as well was special.
“The kid is young and
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