EVERTON FC

Everton logo

Everton FC

FOUNDED: 1878.

LOCATION: Liverpool.

STADIUM NAME: Goodison Park.

STADIUM CAPACITY: 39,571.

LEAGUE POSITION: 16th.

GOAL DIFFERENCE: -10

MANAGER: Sean Dyche (52 years old)

ASSISTANT MANAGER: Ian Woan. (56 years)

CAPTAIN: Seamus Coleman.

LEAGUES PARTICIPATED: Premier League, EFL Cup, FA Cup.

RIVALS: Liverpool.

COLORS: Royal Blue, White.

NICKNAMES: The Blues, The Toffees, The Peoples club, The School of Science

TOP SCORER: Abdoulaye Doucoure (6)

TOP ASSIST: Dwight McNeil (5)

SQUAD LIST: 27.

GOALKEEPERS

Jordan Pickford (1)

Joao Virginia (12)

Andy Lonergan (31)

DEFENDERS

Vitali Mykolenko (19)

James Tarkowski (6)

Jarrad Branthwaite (32)

Ashley Young (18)

Nathan Patterson (2)

Seamus Coleman (23)

Ben Godfrey (22)

Micheal Keane (5)

Mackenzie James Hunt (58)

MIDFIELDERS

James Garner (37)

Abdoulaye Doucoure (16)

Idrissa Gueye (27)

Amadou Onana (8)

Andres Gomes (21)

Dele Alli (20)

STRIKERS

Jack Harrison (11).

Dwight Mcneil (7).

Dominic Calvert-Lewin (9).

Norberto Bercique Gomes Betuncal (14).

Arnaut Danjuma Groeneveld (10).

Lewis Norman Dobbin (61).

Youssef Ramalho Chermiti (28)

SPONSORS: Stake.com, Hummel, KICK, Fanatics, Socios.com, Ticketmaster, Christopher Ward, Davanti Tyres, The Turmeric Co, Carling, Lucozade, Sportsbreaks.com, Marc Darcy, FIGS.

⁠ACADEMY: Everton F.C. Reserves and Academy

MOST INFORMED PLAYER: Abdoulaye Doucouré

MAJOR TROPHIES: 23
9 Premier League (1986, 1984, 1969, 1962, 1938, 1931, 1927, 1914, 1890)
5 FA cup (1994, 1983, 1965, 1932, 1905)
7 Community Shield (1995, 1987, 1985, 1984, 1970, 1932, 1928)
1 Championship (1930)
1 Cup Winners Cup (1984)

⁠ALL-TIME HIGHEST SCORER: Dixie Dean (383).

ALL-TIME HIGHEST ASSIST: Leighton Banes (54)

BRIEF HISTORY: The Everton Football Club was originally brought about by St. Domingo Church Sunday School. The named was changed to Everton, after a district in Liverpool.
Everton FC quickly emerged as one of the top football clubs of their era. They were among the twelve founding members of the Football League, the first professional football competition in the world. Their first taste of silverware came in 1891, with the club winning its first League title (the third edition of the Football League).
Everton’s final claim to fame came in the mid-80. After winning the 1984 FA Cup, the club one-upped it with their first Double the following year; after claiming a League title, they won a Cup Winners’ Cup. Under Kendall, the club would win their ninth (and as of yet, final) League title in 1987, with the Heysel tragedy preventing them from competing for European trophies.
The club is far less fortunate in the Premier League era, with the 1995 FA Cup being their only trophy in the two decades that followed. After being regulars in the lower half of the league table for a while, they had a mini-resurgence under David Moyes, who led the club to a fourth-place league finish in 2005 and the FA Cup final in 2009.