Premier League chalkboards analysis

This week we use chalkboards to look at Wolves’ shackling of Joey Barton, Nemanja Vidic’s tackling, Mikel John Obi’s passing, and Leighton Baines’ positioning

Mick McCarthy’s Wolverhampton side had a clear plan to target Joey Barton on Saturday – he was subjected to a succession of extremely hard tackles. The main offender was Karl Henry, but he was not the only one, as four separate Wolves players were booked for fouls on the Newcastle platyer. The chalkboard above shows the seven fouls on him over the course of the game. Barton’s challenge in the 95th minute was just his second foul of the match, but still earned him a booking.

West Ham struggled to construct many meaningful attacks at Old Trafford on Saturday. A large part of this was Carlton Cole’s inability to hold the ball up as Nemanja Vidic kept winning it from him. The Manchester United defender had an excellent game, winning eight of the nine challenges he contested throughout the match.

The signing of Ramires from Benfica has raised doubts about whether Mikel John Obi will be a regular starter for Chelsea this season but the Nigerian has made an excellent start to 2010/11. He continued his good form against Stoke, completing 103 of the 106 passes he attempted. Critics will say the passes are all short and sideways – but Mikel’s primary job when he gets the ball is to keep possession and he did that excellently.

Leighton Baines was a constant outlet on the left hand side for Everton in their 0-1 defeat at Villa Park, constantly stretching the play and putting some dangerous crosses into the box. This heatmap of his passing shows how far up the pitch modern full-backs play when their side dominates possession.

Michael Cox is editor of zonalmarking.net. You can also follow zonalmarking on Twitter

ChalkboardsJoey BartonNewcastle UnitedWolverhampton WanderersEvertonManchester UnitedWest Ham UnitedChelseaPremier LeagueMichael Coxguardian.co.uk

Wolves’ Sylvan Ebanks-Blake ensures another false start for Everton

• Home side booed off after Wolves nearly snatch win
• ‘One point from two games not good enough’ – Mikel Arteta

Everton’s rich history is now told in a continuous seam of panels around Goodison Park, from their formation in 1878 to the present day. 2011, they hope, will record the first trophy of David Moyes’s reign and a season befitting the club’s finest squad since the 1987 panel showing Kevin Ratcliffe with the league title. So far it would simply read: ‘another false start’.

The ‘Everton Timeline’ – as it is called – is certainly effective, as collisions between fans with their eyes fixed sideways and general astonishment at the inclusion of a picture of Nick Barmby testified on Saturday. The Everton team is not. Early days, of course, yet already Moyes’s side are struggling with the weight of expectation and have only themselves to blame for trailing the leading pack once again.

Frustration is settling in on the campaign where under-achievement will be less tolerated. “Two games and only one point is not good enough for us,” Mikel Arteta admitted. “We need to start winning and getting points because there are big teams ahead of us who are winning.”

By contrast Wolves are progressing according to plan. Mick McCarthy spent big this summer in the context of Molineux’s recent history and in comparison with many Premier League peers. He was without two players acquired to push Wolves further away from trouble this season, Steven Fletcher and Stephen Hunt, but that target looked comfortably attainable without them here.

That McCarthy’s team were well-drilled, unyielding and resilient was no surprise to Everton, who dominated first-half possession but lacked the guile or finishing touch to make immediate amends for their opening day defeat at Ewood Park. But they were subdued far too easily by Wolves’ desire to take the game to their hosts after the break.

The introduction of the Algeria international midfielder Adlène Guedioura for George Elokobi, the left-back, gave Karl Henry the added bite required to wrest control of midfield. Indeed the visitors rightly sensed victory once Sylvan Ebanks-Blake converted a fine counterattack to equalise with 15 minutes remaining. Only desperate blocks on Matthew Jarvis by Everton’s central defenders, Sylvain Distin and Phil Jagielka, prevented their second successive 2-1 win.

McCarthy, who blamed himself for Wolves’ first-half retreat, said: “We could have been out of sight in the first half but we defended really well in front of Marcus Hahnemann. Marcus didn’t have much to do but the back four, the midfield and the front two were all bollocksed with all the work they had to do.”

Everton’s performance petered out towards the inevitable boos on the final whistle. Whether injury-plagued, fully fit, complete with new signings or soldiering on without, they have struggled to hit the ground settled or running under Moyes. With Aston Villa and Manchester United to come in the Premier League, they needed another of their belligerent responses to keep this season’s aspirations intact.

The sum total of their dominance in the opening period was a sliced Diniyar Bilyaletdinov shot, a save by Hahnemann from Johnny Heitinga, a close shave from Steven Pienaar and, finally, after the referee Lee Mason somehow failed to award a penalty for a foul by Stephen Ward on Arteta, a scrambled goal from Tim Cahill from the subsequent free-kick. Controversy surrounded both goals, with Wolves appealing for a foul by Cahill on Jody Craddock and Everton likewise when Guedioura caught Heitinga in a 50-50 challenge before Ebanks-Blake levelled.

It was instructive that Moyes refused to give the benefit of the doubt to his players, preferring instead to question Heitinga’s commitment to the tackle and the lazy loss of possession by Louis Saha that demonstrated why he was demoted to the bench in the first place. The Everton manager said: “We were on the attack but we got involved in overdoing it with one-touch passes. We shouldn’t have had to make the tackle but I still would have hoped we’d have come out with the ball.”

The afternoon was uninformative for Fabio Capello, with Phil Jagielka and Leighton Baines subdued and Jack Rodwell strangely left on the bench throughout. In the absence of outstanding homegrown talent it was left to Arteta to admit that, now he is eligible for British citizenship, England is a possibility. “If one day the opportunity comes obviously I would have to consider it very seriously,” said the Spaniard. Not on current form.

Premier LeagueEvertonWolverhampton WanderersAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk

Everton 1-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers | Premier League match report

The only common ground Everton and Wolverhampton Wanderers share at present is an ability to dismantle pre-season predictions. The idea of a return to Europe for David Moyes and a retreat to the Championship for Mick McCarthy, both championed only a week ago in some quarters, needs revising already.

A hard-fought, controversial but deserved point courtesy of Sylvan Ebanks-Blake’s late equaliser, maintained Wolves’ fine start to the season. For Everton, however, there was a second successive Saturday of self-inflicted frustration as their inability to punish opponents undermined their lofty aspirations again. Next up in the league for Moyes’s side are Aston Villa and Manchester United.

Moyes has the components in place to challenge for Champions League qualification except the ingredient that allows the cream to rise; a top-class goalscorer and one who can complement the quality of the Mikel Arteta, Tim Cahill and Steven Pienaar supply line. As it is also the most expensive, that deficiency may undermine Everton’s efforts to consistently compete with the elite for some time yet.

Not that the Everton manager is short of striking options. Louis Saha started in the opening day defeat at Blackburn Rovers last weekend but, after a sharp dip in form since his match-winning brace against Chelsea in February, the last goals from a striker who had scored 12 in the first half of the season, patience evaporated here and the Frenchman was relegated to the substitutes bench.

With Yakubu Ayegbeni declared “not physically in shape” by the Everton manager before the game, it fell to Jermaine Beckford to lead the attack and find the penetration that was sorely lacking at Ewood Park. No mean feat for any striker against a resilient, well-drilled Wolves team, and particularly one making his first Premier League start having leapt from League One into the top flight from Leeds United in the summer.

McCarthy’s side arrived in confident mood following an impressive 2-1 win against Stoke City on day one, although optimism was checked by the loss of Steven Fletcher, a goalscorer on his debut at Molineux last weekend, and Belgian international defender Jelle Van Damme to injury. The platform for their survival last season, however, disciplined defending and a prodigious work ethic, survived intact as they frustrated Everton throughout a dominant first half by the home side.

Everton began as they finished at Blackburn, controlling possession, winning free-kicks in dangerous areas and attempting to work their way through a rigid defence. But they struggled to create any chances of note until a highly contentious breakthrough just before the interval.

The greatest problem for the Wolves goalkeeper Marcus Hahnemann was his own kicking until Cahill scored. Four times Hahnemann put the ball straight into touch, and McCarthy’s ire on the touchline visibly and understandably increased with each one. Moyes struck an animated figure alongside him too, although his frustrations stemmed from the prolonged failure to turn dominance into chances.

John Heitinga drew the first save of note from Hahnemann with a rising drive from 25 yards after dogged work on the edge of the area by Cahill. Otherwise it was keep-ball minus an end product for Everton until the referee Lee Mason provoked uproar on both sides in the build-up and execution of the opening goal.

Four minutes before the interval Arteta tricked his way into the visiting penalty area and was tripped a yard inside by Stephen Ward. Mason, standing over the incident, took an age to penalise the foul but awarded it on the 18-yard line when he did so. That was Everton in a rage.

Arteta’s free-kick struck the wall and squirmed through, but as Jody Craddock went to clear his leg was caught by Cahill, who then converted the loose ball high over Hahnemann. That sent Wolves apoplectic, but their protests went ignored and Mason left the pitch at half-time with both sets of supporters offering impolite thoughts on his performance.

Wolves, unseen as an attacking force in the first half, took the game to Everton thereafter. Constant pressing by the visitors left them vulnerable to the counter-attack but, despite Beckford squandering one glorious break when he ran into Craddock’s challenge with two blue shirts unmarked to his right, they were undeterred and levelled with a superb counter of their own with 15 minutes remaining.

As with Cahill’s goal, the Wolves equaliser was laced with controversy. Adlène Guedioura dispossessed Beckford’s replacement, Saha, deep in his own half and then left Heitinga in a heap as they challenged for a 50-50. Mason allowed play to continue and Henry released Kevin Doyle down the right, raced into the Everton area and, when a low cross arrived from the Republic of Ireland striker, stepped over the ball to allow Ebanks-Blake to convert a simple tap-in at the far post.

Premier LeagueEvertonWolverhampton WanderersAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk