Everton v Tottenham Hotspur, 13 August 2016

Score1-1
RefereeMartin Atkinson
CompetitionPremier League
VenueGoodison Park
Attendance39,494
Kick-off: 3.00pm Tottenham Hotspur remained unbeaten in the last eight Premier League meetings. As confirmed by Everton, the official attendance was 39,494. Many sources incorrectly quoted 34,494.

Goals:

Ross Barkley 5 G

Goals:

Érik Lamela 59 G

Starting lineup:

Defender/Midfielder Mason Holgate
Defender/Midfielder Phil Jagielka
Defender/Left back Leighton Baines
Midfielder Ross Barkley
Midfielder Gareth Barry
Midfielder Idrissa Gueye
Midfielder James McCarthy
Forward Gerard Deulofeu
Forward Kevin Mirallas

Starting lineup:

Hugo Lloris Goalkeeper
Jan Vertonghen Defender
Kyle Walker Defender
Eric Dier Defender/Midfielder
Danny Rose Defender/Midfielder
Dele Alli Midfielder
Christian Eriksen Midfielder
Érik Lamela Midfielder
Victor Wanyama Midfielder
Harry Kane Forward

Substitutions:

Arouna Koné for Gerard Deulofeu 68
Aaron Lennon for Kevin Mirallas 76
Tom Cleverley for Gareth Barry 85

Substitutions:

Michel Vorm for Hugo Lloris 35
Vincent Janssen for Eric Dier 56

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Joel Robles
Defender/Midfielder Brendan Galloway
Defender/Midfielder Bryan Oviedo
Midfielder Tom Cleverley
Midfielder Tom Davies
Midfielder Aaron Lennon
Forward Arouna Koné

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Michel Vorm
Defender/Midfielder Ben Davies
Midfielder Ryan Mason
Midfielder Josh Onomah
Midfielder Harry Winks
Forward Vincent Janssen

Comments:

This was new manager Ronald Koeman's first competitive game in charge. Everton had now drawn their last four opening day games, with Ross Barkley scoring three of their seven goals in this run. Gareth Barry had now appeared in his 20th Premier League season. Only Ryan Giggs (22) had played in more.

Comments:

This was the sixth consecutive season when Tottenham Hotspur had started their Premier League season away from White Hart Lane. Having ended the 2015-16 season with two consecutive defeats, Spurs avoided losing three Premier League games in a row for the first time since November 2012. Harry Kane extended his record of the player with the current longest run of consecutive appearances in the Premier League to 69 games.

Goals:

Ross Barkley 5 G

Starting lineup:

Defender/Midfielder Mason Holgate
Defender/Midfielder Phil Jagielka
Defender/Left back Leighton Baines
Midfielder Ross Barkley
Midfielder Gareth Barry
Midfielder Idrissa Gueye
Midfielder James McCarthy
Forward Gerard Deulofeu
Forward Kevin Mirallas

Substitutions:

Arouna Koné for Gerard Deulofeu 68
Aaron Lennon for Kevin Mirallas 76
Tom Cleverley for Gareth Barry 85

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Joel Robles
Defender/Midfielder Brendan Galloway
Defender/Midfielder Bryan Oviedo
Midfielder Tom Cleverley
Midfielder Tom Davies
Midfielder Aaron Lennon
Forward Arouna Koné

Comments:

This was new manager Ronald Koeman's first competitive game in charge. Everton had now drawn their last four opening day games, with Ross Barkley scoring three of their seven goals in this run. Gareth Barry had now appeared in his 20th Premier League season. Only Ryan Giggs (22) had played in more.

Goals:

Érik Lamela 59 G

Starting lineup:

Hugo Lloris Goalkeeper
Jan Vertonghen Defender
Kyle Walker Defender
Eric Dier Defender/Midfielder
Danny Rose Defender/Midfielder
Dele Alli Midfielder
Christian Eriksen Midfielder
Érik Lamela Midfielder
Victor Wanyama Midfielder
Harry Kane Forward

Substitutions:

Michel Vorm for Hugo Lloris 35
Vincent Janssen for Eric Dier 56

On the bench:

Goalkeeper Michel Vorm
Defender/Midfielder Ben Davies
Midfielder Ryan Mason
Midfielder Josh Onomah
Midfielder Harry Winks
Forward Vincent Janssen

Comments:

This was the sixth consecutive season when Tottenham Hotspur had started their Premier League season away from White Hart Lane. Having ended the 2015-16 season with two consecutive defeats, Spurs avoided losing three Premier League games in a row for the first time since November 2012. Harry Kane extended his record of the player with the current longest run of consecutive appearances in the Premier League to 69 games.