Everton will face no further action from Premier League over an outstanding issue relating to a breach of its financial rules.
A Premier League RendezvousPremier League Showdown at Goodison ParkAs Tottenham gear up to face Everton this Sunday at Goodison Park, the stakes couldn’t be higher. The Spurs
Everton could land Southampton defender Kyle Walker-Peters on a cut-price deal in the January transfer window.
The Premier League’s 13th-place club, Tottenham Hotspur, visits 16th-place Everton FC at Goodison Park on Sunday at 9:00 AM ET on Telemundo.Last time out, Tottenham suffered a 2-1 defeat at
Moyes beat Fulham in his first game as Everton manager in 2002, but never looked like repeating the trick here. Villa, relative equals during his previous spell at Goodison, are now light years ahead.
Everton avoided another points deduction when a complaint brought by the Premier League regarding spending rules was discontinued on Friday.
Sean Dyche said Wednesday he had left Everton at "the right time" after managing the club during "one of its toughest periods in its history".
Senior figures at Villa see every window as an opportunity to augment the squad, but this month feels especially pressing
The league table told the story before he arrived but after his first match back in charge of Everton on Wednesday David Moyes was even more clear that the team's underlying problem is a failure to score,
The Glaswegian – who replaced Sean Dyche on Saturday – suffered defeat to Unai Emery after a goal from Ollie Watkins in the 51st minute, a result which leaves Everton 16th in the Premier League, just one point above the relegation zone with Ipswich Town still to play this week.
The Toffees are likely to extract £10-20m annually from a naming rights deal which chief commercial officer Richard Kenyon says will last at least a decade. If the final figure is at the upper end of that range, Everton will earn as much from their naming rights in a single season as they ever have done from ticket sales over the same period.