Premier League

March 20, 2010

Full-time

Everton

2 - 0

Bolton Wanderers

Premier League

15:00 GMT, March 20, 2010

Goodison Park, England

Referee: Alan Wiley

Toffees seal success

Scoring Summary

Everton Bolton Wanderers
Mikel Arteta (72') 
Steven Pienaar (89') 

Mikel Arteta and Steven Pienaar fired Everton to their seventh successive Premier League home win after a strong second-half showing against 10-man Bolton.

• Moyes: We were better

Arteta broke the Goodison Park deadlock after 72 minutes with a stunning free-kick after last man Gretar Steinsson was sent off for bundling Yakubu over.

Pienaar then wrapped up victory in the dying moments by side-footing into an empty net after good work from Leon Osman, who had hit the bar seconds earlier.

Victory maintained Everton's late push for Europe while Bolton, after a run of three wins in four games prior to their trip to Merseyside, still have work to do to avoid relegation.

Both sides, having come into the game in good form, opted for unchanged teams but Everton were forced into an alteration after just 13 minutes.

Victor Anichebe, who only returned to action in January after almost a year out with a knee injury, crumpled up in pain after a challenge by Paul Robinson and could not continue.

By then the forward, who was playing out on the right wing, had already spurned one of the best opportunities of a scrappy first half.

Anichebe was played in on goal by a superb through-ball from Tim Cahill but took too long to shoot as he charged into the area and Robinson slid across to tackle.

A goal would have been a double blow for Bolton having been denied a penalty moments earlier.

Johan Elmander had a shot blocked after Steinsson lobbed a free-kick into the area and Kevin Davies' follow-up appeared to catch the arm of John Heitinga, but referee Alan Wiley gave nothing.

Bolton caused more problems from another free-kick but Zat Knight was unable to make firm contact with Lee Chung-yong's cross and Tim Howard saved comfortably.

Cahill was then booked for a bad challenge on Jack Wilshere and Everton struggled to clear the resulting set-piece as Phil Jagielka headed unconvincingly over his own bar.

Elmander won another free-kick after being tripped by Phil Neville, making his 200th Everton appearance, 30 yards out.

Davies was unable to make the most of the opportunity, shooting tamely at Howard.

Everton's supporters called for a penalty after Leighton Baines went down under a Lee challenge but the player himself was quickly on his feet and Wiley was unmoved.

Bolton replied with a couple of good attacking moves.

The first ended with Tamir Cohen firing narrowly over after Davies' cross was headed in his direction by Baines.

A slick break involving Elmander and Lee then saw Wilshere play Davies through with a neat backheel but the Bolton skipper again shot at Howard.

The tone of the game changed in the second half as Everton stepped up the pressure.

Pienaar had a volley blocked by Steinsson and Yakubu's effort on the rebound was grabbed by Jussi Jaaskelainen after a deflection.

Heitinga also tested Jaaskelainen from long range before Cahill appeared to nudge the ball past the goalkeeper to create another opening, but the Australian had handled.

Cahill was withdrawn soon after the hour as Everton opted to switch to 4-4-2 and introduce fit-again top scorer Louis Saha.

The Merseysiders maintained the momentum and felt Knight had handled in attempting to chest back a Baines cross to Jaaskelainen but again Wiley saw nothing untoward.

Jagielka went close after 68 minutes as he rose to meet an Arteta free-kick with a firm header but Jaaskelainen saved well.

Bolton were struggling to cope with Everton's increased vitality and Steinsson was given his marching orders a minute later.

The visitors could have few complaints either as last man Steinsson - the third Bolton player sent off in four games - hauled Yakubu down as he raced clear from a Pienaar pass.

Arteta stepped up to double the punishment by curling a sweet strike over the wall.

At that moment there seemed little way back for Bolton, but remarkably they could have equalised almost immediately as Knight put a free header over from a Davies flick-on.

Diniyar Bilyaletdinov then headed over from an Arteta cross at the other end and Saha shot straight at Jaaskelainen as Everton looked to kill off the game.

Substitute Osman then rattled the woodwork after Jaaskelainen parried a Heitinga shot but the Toffees were not to be denied a second.

Osman weaved his way into the area with two minutes remaining and pulled the ball back to present Pienaar with a simple finish.

  • Moyes: We were better

    Everton manager David Moyes felt his side thoroughly deserved their three points after a hard-fought Premier League win over 10-man Bolton this afternoon.

    Moyes said: ''It was turning but it was up to us to make it so. We were the only team I felt was going to go on to win the game. I thought we were the better team, we were the team who passed it.

    ''Bolton came in and made it very hard but they didn't offer any attacking threats, with the exception of a couple of free-kicks, so overall I thought we deserved it.''

    The sending off was the main talking point of the game but Moyes backed referee Alan Wiley's decision.

    ''I have seen it again and the referee calls it right,'' Moyes said. ''He was onside and it was a really good ball from Steven Pienaar through to Yak. He certainly brings him down.''

    Victory was Everton's seventh in succession in the league at home, their best run since 1990. But Moyes added: ''The job is to win the next game. If I can get records, then great, but it's not important for me.''

    Bolton boss Owen Coyle felt the red-card incident changed the course of the match, but had more of a gripe with where Arteta's free-kick was taken from than the actual decision.

    Coyle said: ''We more than matched Everton and had some great chances in the first half to take the lead, but we never took them. The sending off will be the talking point and the free-kick for the goal. My initial impression was it was offside to begin with, but I'll need to look back at that.

    ''I think if there was any contact it was minimal but Mr Wiley, in his wisdom, has decided it is a red card. Sometimes they go for you and against you but my issue then was that Mikel Arteta was allowed to move the ball another four yards nearer our goal.

    ''I would suggest with the quality he's got he's far more dangerous there than where the offence was committed. I can accept sometimes that decisions go against you but not that he's allowed to move the ball into the arc. That gave them an unbelievable advantage. It leaves a bad taste in the mouth and the frustration is we've left here with no points.''