Barry is near the start of his career, Moyes approaching the end of his. The 62-year-old displayed his own prowess in a radical reshuffle at the break. Off came Dwight McNeil, who left James Justin unmarked for Leeds' goal, and Harrison Armstrong. On came Jarrad Branthwaite for a belated first appearance of the season, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall for a first of 2026. "My plan was not to use Jarrad as early or Kiernan," said Moyes. But his squad had been stretched. As he now has more options, even minus Jack Grealish, he used his bench well.

Yet Everton started badly. "We were really poor in the first half," said Moyes. "I can't put my finger on why." Then it seemed Everton had little answer to Farke's gameplan. The German has prospered with an emphasis on solidity but the teamsheet might have been deceptive. Farke fielded five defenders and two defensive midfielders; yet that permitted the wing-backs to roam ahead of them, to great effect.
His left wing-back scored a goal. His right wing-back almost got an assist. Justin finished after Anton Stach delivered a low cross that went through Calvert-Lewin's legs and fell obligingly for the former Leicester defender. Then Calvert-Lewin struck the post from Jayden Bogle's enticing cross. "Dominic probably should have scored," sighed Farke.
The scorer of one of the most important goals in Everton's history - the 2022 winner against Crystal Palace that kept them up, averted relegation, and perhaps administration, and enabled them to finance the construction of Hill Dickinson Stadium - had also been denied by his former teammate Jordan Pickford.