On this day 22 years ago, Everton survived a late Derby County fightback at Pride Park to herald a new era at the club.
The Blues raced into a 3-0 lead early in the second half on March 23, 2002, but by the time referee Neale Barry blew the full-time whistle, they were relieved to run out victors in a seven-goal thriller. Although they’d not won in any of their previous seven Premier League matches and had recorded just one success among their previous 13 fixtures in the competition, Everton had defeated Fulham 2-1 at Goodison Park the previous weekend in David Moyes’ first game in charge after replacing fellow Scot Walter Smith as manager.
However, that was (before coronavirus-induced action behind closed doors and the return of former Blues boss Marco Silva who triumphed three times at Goodison over Sean Dyche’s men in 2023), the date on the calendar always destined for a home banker. Until Josh Maja’s brace inflicted a Valentine’s Day massacre when Everton slumped to a 2-0 defeat to Fulham at an empty Goodison in 2021, the Blues had won 22 consecutive league games at home to the Cottagers on a run that stretched back to 1959.
The three points collected in the East Midlands though were Everton’s first ever at Pride Park and their first away win in the Premier League since a 2-1 triumph at Charlton Athletic on the opening day of the season back on August 18. Just as he done against the west London outfit seven days earlier, David Unsworth put Everton on their way with a cool left-foot finish on 38 minutes.
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The visitors doubled their lead seven minutes into
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