Everton players' full-time reactions compared to Man Utd clowns speaks volumes
Jake Paul talks Conor McGregor, Tommy Fury and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr
Guardiola opens up on relationship with Klopp
Conor McGregor talks UFC return as he leaves adjourned court case
Conor McGregor and Ian Garry's mutual appreciation
Jurgen Klopp discusses Mo Salah's contract ahead of Benfica clash
Mikel Arteta reviews Brighton defeat
There are brief moments in football which offer more searing insight than any amount of hot-aired punditry rhetoric.
At Goodison, there were two such fleeting portraits, which spoke volumes about both teams, and their respective positions at the moment. As the final whistle went, there was a distinctive pause as the Everton support, so wracked with nerves they were subdued for long periods, computed what had just happened, and then let out a primal roar.
As they did, Vitallii Mykolenko sunk to his knees and then lay on his back on the turf, arms spread wide in an almost religious pose, an exhausted, yet still exuberant celebration expressing a relief and joy which was telling enough, even before you consider the defender’s circumstance. Mykolenko is from Cherasy in central Ukraine, where Russian troops are reported to have attacked with vacuum bombs, a particularly brutal weapon whose use is regarded as a ‘war crime’.
He has greater things on his mind than mere football, yet the emotion he showed, the relief, was indicative of what it meant to him. No doubt what it means to his family back in Ukraine too. Because this win was huge for Everton, and huge for the career he hopes to have, after this disgusting invasion is over.
And it is huge for Everton, a result which may well be the pivotal point in their season. Lose against Manchester United, and you not only feared, but actually assumed,