Riots, royals and legends: Goodison Park firsts and memorable moments
Goodison Park is officially opened by Lord Kinnaird, president of the Football Association and the only man to have played in nine FA Cup finals. Everton directors had purchased Mere Green Field, as it was known, after a rent dispute with John Houlding, the club's former president and landlord of their previous home of nine years – Anfield. The new stadium was built in three months by the Walton building company Kelly Brothers, and at a cost of about £3,500, with stands on three sides and a bank of cinders on the Goodison Road side. The turf came from Aintree.
It was the first major football stadium in England (the older Molineux, St James' Park and Anfield were basic in comparison) with changing rooms, offices and a referee's room underneath the East Stand on Bullens Road. No longer would players have to change in the Sandon Hotel and walk to the game, as was the case at Anfield. As the Football Echo reported: 'The players will not have to parade themselves through the public street in all their 'War paint' and, what is of more importance, visiting teams will not have to 'run the gauntlet' through a crowd of incensed partisans whom they might probably have displeased in some manner on the field.'
Goodison's official opening did not include football, bizarrely. The crowd of 12,000 were treated to an athletics meeting, music from the band of the 3rd Liverpool regiment and a fireworks display. The first game came nine days later when Everton beat Bolton Wanderers 4-2 in a friendly. The first league game was held 24 hours later, Everton drawing 2-2 with Nottingham Forest in front of 14,000 spectators. Forest's Horace Pike claimed the honour of scoring the first league goal at Goodison. Everton's first league win at their new ground was on 24 September when Newton Heath, who would change their name to Manchester United 10 years later, were beaten 6-0.
Goodison hosts the FA Cup final between Notts County and Bolton. The stadium was selected for its impressive facilities and because of problems at the previous year's final at Fallowfield in Manchester, where fans repeatedly spilled on to the pitch during Everton's 1-0 defeat by Wolves. Notts County won 4-1, becoming the first team from outside the top flight to win the FA Cup. Goodison was also the venue for the FA Cup final replay in 1910 when Newcastle United beat Barnsley.
The first league derby between Everton and Liverpool, who were founded by Houlding in the wake of the former's acrimonious departure from Anfield and won promotion from the Second Division in 1893-94. The eagerly awaited event attracted 44,000 to Goodison and Everton won 3-0.
When a match against Small Heath was abandoned after 30 minutes owing to a waterlogged pitch, a section of the crowd descended on the club office to demand their money back. The Everton director George Mahon offered free tickets for the replayed game instead and was pelted with objects including stones. The crowd forced its way into the stand, smashing it up and threatening to set it alight, before entering the pitch where it was eventually dispersed by baton-wielding police.
The first league ground visited by a ruling monarch when George V and Queen Mary meet local schoolchildren.
A match between Dick, Kerr Ladies and St Helens Ladies, staged to raise money for the Unemployed Ex Servicemen's Distress Fund, attracts a crowd of 53,000. It remained a record attendance in women's club football for 98 years. The Football Association banned its members from hosting women's football at their grounds the following December, claiming 'football is quite unsuitable for females and should not be encouraged.' The ban lasted 50 years.
Two iconic US baseball teams, the New York Giants and Chicago White Sox, stage an exhibition game at Goodison to promote the sport in England. The future Everton owner John Moores later established a National Baseball Association and a Liverpool league. William Ralph 'Dixie' Dean played for a team during the close season.
Goodison becomes the first stadium in England to install dugouts. Aberdeen already had them, and Everton copied the idea following a friendly at Pittodrie.
With the league championship won there was only one issue to resolve on the final day as far as Everton were concerned: could Dixie Dean break George Camsell's record of 59 league goals in a season? Dean needed a hat-trick against Arsenal. He sparked pandemonium when heading his third in the 82nd minute. One fan ran on and kissed the centre-forward, whose record 60 league goals in a season stands to this day.
£50,000 is spent upgrading the Gwladys Street end in time for a royal visit from George VI and Queen Elizabeth, making Goodison the first stadium in the country to have four double-decker stands.
Sustains bomb damage during the second world war. Everton receive £5,000 from the war damage commission for repairs.
A then record crowd of 74,721 descends for an FA Cup tie between Manchester United and Liverpool on 24 January 1948. A further 12,000 are reportedly locked out. United were sharing Manchester City's Maine Road after bomb damage at Old Trafford and, with City also at home in the fourth round, were forced to find an alternative venue. The post-war appetite for football was further illustrated in September that year when Liverpool's visit attracted a crowd of 78,299. It remains Goodison's record attendance.
England suffer their first home defeat outside of the Home Internationals at Goodison. The Republic of Ireland cause uproar by winning 2-0, having struggled to put a team together against an XI including Tom Finney, Billy Wright and Wilf Mannion, with Everton captain Peter Farrell scoring the second.
Four 185ft floodlight pylons are installed. The local electricity board has to build a new substation to provide the 6000-volt load.
The first stadium in England to have undersoil heating. Everton spent £16,000 to install under the pitch 20 miles of electric wire which were good at melting frost and snow but left the drains unable to cope with the extra water. The pitch had to be dug up and a new drainage system laid two years later.
Pelé scores the first World Cup goal at Goodison in Brazil's 2-0 defeat of Bulgaria, becoming the first player to score in three successive tournaments. Garrincha gets the second. Goodison staged five World Cup games – all three of Brazil's group matches (Pelé missed the second through injury and was hurt again in the third as the reigning champions went out), a classic quarter-final when Portugal recovered from 3-0 down to beat North Korea 5-3 and West Germany's semi-final victory over the Soviet Union courtesy of a Franz Beckenbauer winner. Eusébio, who scored four against North Korea and was the tournament's top goalscorer with nine, later said: 'This stadium for me is the best stadium in my playing life.'
Goodison's World Cup story ended on a sour note, however. It was scheduled to stage England's semi-final against Portugal but, with 48 hours' notice, Fifa's organising committee switched venues and Alf Ramsey's team remained at Wembley. Fifa, and its English president Sir Stanley Rous, were accused of favouritism towards the host nation and prioritising extra gate receipts from Wembley over the interest of fans in the north. 'The greatest betrayal in sporting history,' said the Liverpool Daily Post. Fans who bought tickets in reasonable expectation of watching their country protested at the Goodison semi-final between West Germany and the Soviet Union with banners that read: 'England fix insults Liverpool' and 'England snubs Liverpool'. Many boycotted the game. The crowd of 38,273 was more than 20,000 down on the Brazil v Portugal group game and Goodison's lowest attendance of the World Cup.
The first triple-decker stand in England opens at a cost of £1m. Everton's new Main Stand is the largest in Britain until Chelsea build the East Stand at Stamford Bridge three years later.
Dean dies of a heart attack at Goodison at a Merseyside derby. He had lunch with his good friend Bill Shankly before the game and had not been to Goodison for several years after having a leg amputated. 'We say he stage-managed the whole thing,' said Dean's daughter, Barbara. His ashes were scattered on the halfway line. Almost exactly five years later, on 9 March 1985, and in almost the same spot, Everton's title-winning and FA Cup-winning manager Harry Catterick also dies of a heart attack after a cup tie against Ipswich.
An emotionally charged Goodison hosts Liverpool's first competitive game after the Hillsborough disaster 18 days earlier. 'The Kop thanks you all. We never walked alone,' read a banner in the Liverpool end.
After years of debate, Everton ask fans attending the final game of the season to vote on whether the club should leave Goodison for a new 60,000-capacity, £100m stadium at an unidentified location. More than 80% vote in favour but opposition grows when sites outside the city of Liverpool – including the former Cronton Colliery near Widnes – are suggested. 'I can see the European Super League coming,' says the then owner Peter Johnson, somewhat prophetically. 'That is why it is so important to address the stadium issue.' The saga will finally come to an end 28 years later when Everton relocate to their magnificent £750m stadium at Bramley-Moore dock.
James Tarkowski's 98th-minute equaliser against Liverpool proved a fitting final act under the Goodison floodlights in February and ensured Everton's rivals would not have the upper hand in overall victories at the stadium. The pitch invasion and pandemonium that followed have already become part of Goodison folklore. There has been no better example of Evertonians hauling their team over the line, or of what the club means to them, than the remarkable comeback against Crystal Palace that preserved their top-flight status in 2022, however. Goodison has witnessed far too many relegation fights and not enough triumphs in its final decades but that night, when Frank Lampard's side recovered from 2-0 down to win 3-2 courtesy of Dominic Calvert-Lewin's diving header in the 85th minute, showed the stadium at its intimidating, pulsating best. From the raucous reception for the team coach as it edged along Goodison Road before kick-off to the wild scenes afterwards, it was an atmosphere that few grounds can match. Lampard ended up dancing on the roof of the executive lounges in celebration and called it, 'one of the greatest moments in my footballing life'. Goodison can do that to people.

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May 18, 2025. Everton Women manager Brian Sorensen exists in two universes. There is Sorensen Redacted, the version disseminated on Everton's socials. The Danish manager standing in the epicentre of the Goodbye Goodison Park celebrations, accepting the pressure and privilege of making the storied stadium his side's new home. Advertisement Then there is Sorensen Unfiltered or, as Sorensen sees it and those close to the head coach attest, 'just me, Brian'. The man who declared in front of 40,000 or so weepy-eyed Evertonians that 'it's big shoes to fill, but we already made Anfield our training pitch. So we're looking forward to it'. Everton Women have won their four matches at Anfield since 2019 by an aggregate score of 7-1, after all. Amid the bittersweet blue pyro of Goodison's farewell, Sorensen wore a mischievous grin. He winked. The crowd cheered. Three weeks later, in a small office at the top of the Liver Building in which Everton have their headquarters, vestiges of that mischief dance across Sorensen's face when this moment is recalled. 'I don't think about whether I can say something, if I'm successful enough to say it. I just enjoy the ride,' says Sorensen. So, he's enjoying it? A flash of a grin. Advertisement 'The first question I used to get in an interview with an agent and a potential player is: 'Are the men('s team) still going to be supporting you?'. Now, I don't get those questions. Because action speaks louder than words.' Sorensen reclines in an office chair, fresh off the final day of his League Managers Association management diploma. Sporting a retro cream Everton hoodie and bright blue and yellow Nikes, he oozes dangerous levels of zen. 'My last assignment was due on Thursday, I was doing it Wednesday night,' he says. This is not so much procrastination as an example of Sorensen's innate calm, born out of his upbringing in Arden, Denmark. The small railway town was home to his very large family. From the time he was born until Sorensen was 15, days were spent on his grandmother's farm, alongside a rotating compilation of his father's seven siblings and Sorensen's 36 cousins. 'We didn't buy anything from the store,' says Sorensen, who is an adept carpenter like his father and builds climbing frames for his six-year-old daughter, Rose, in their back yard in the south of Liverpool. 'We did everything, built everything, grew everything, we had all types of animals. So you couldn't take things too seriously or dwell too much because we need to put food on the table. Advertisement 'My wife (Camilla) sometimes kills me because things that don't affect me or I can't affect, I'm like, 'Why stress about them? It'll all work out, you know?'. 'I really, hate micromanagement,' he adds. Autonomy, instead, is his currency, a lesson gleaned from his grandmother. 'She's my role model. How she could control 20 kids at one time, on a farm, I have no idea. You give people the tools but trust them to use them right.' Since April 2022, when Sorensen joined Everton from Denmark's Fortuna Hjorring, the past three seasons have turned on savvy survival. Annual squad budgets ranged between £3million and £4m ($4m and $5.4m) due to the club's wider financial plight. Injury crises across Sorensen's first two seasons exacerbated an already gossamer-thin squad. Everton's budget for the start of 2024-25 ranked the lowest in the Women's Super League (WSL), with all seven summer recruits arriving on free transfers. That Everton kept well away from any potential relegation wreckage in all three seasons under Sorensen (they've finished sixth, eighth and eighth) is a testament to the Dane's capacity to build from very little. Advertisement 'All the players we've recruited have done super well for us, they're good people,' he says, 'but I had to play people out of position because I had to take the good players who were available, waiting for clubs to announce their released lists. That's where we've struggled all these years. I had no budget.' This summer, things are different. The WSL summer transfer window does not officially open until June 18 but six new signings have already committed to Everton, with a possible two more to follow. As we speak, an international player, whom Sorensen says he had been attempting to recruit since last October, waits in a room across the hall, ready to put pen to paper. This has been the speed of operation since the Friedkin Group's (TFG) takeover in January. That same month, Everton completed the permanent signings of midfielder Hayley Ladd and striker Kelly Gago from Manchester United and Nantes, along with three loan moves. For the first time in nearly 12 months, Sorensen had a full bench. In April, Sorensen and his assistant manager, Stephen Neligan, signed new contracts, followed by new deals for defenders Kenzie Weir and Clare Wheeler. The following month, Everton confirmed the women's team's historic move to Goodison Park, leaving behind Walton Hall Park, along with the appointment of Hannah Forshaw as chief executive of Everton Women. 'Active' is how Sorensen describes the period. Which feels something of an understatement. Advertisement 'For the first time since I've been here, I got all of my targets,' he adds. 'That's never happened before because we're not in the top of the ranking order.' Sorensen assembles his hands to form a food chain. 'There's Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester City and Manchester United, then the powerhouses in Spain, France and Germany, then some Italian teams because they pay more.' He drops his hand lower. 'Then there's us.' Under TFG, the ambition is to reposition Everton into the top echelon, as well as be a landing spot for England internationals. No English club was represented in Sarina Wiegman's England Euro 2025 squad outside the top four (although Arsenal forward Michelle Agyemang was included after a season on loan at Brighton & Hove Albion). Only six Everton players from last season regularly started for their international teams. Sorensen has faith the shift will occur sooner rather than later. He tells the story of TFG's first meeting at Finch Farm in January in front of the club's entire staff and playing teams. 'The first thing they said was they want to support the women's team,' Sorensen says. 'Then they began speaking about the men's team, the academy, so on. That was the first sign of, 'OK, they actually want to support us, they're taking it seriously'.' Advertisement The move to Goodison has been a catalyst — for recruitment but also commercial opportunities. 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In late May, he travelled back to Denmark with Camilla, their six-week-old son, Milas, and Rose, the latter spending her days on the tractor with her grandad, navigating the fields Sorensen grew up on. Now back in Liverpool, there's a new garden to build, a workout gym for himself and his wife. 'I need to get fit,' he quips. He's already constructed an outdoor gymnastics setup for his daughter, fit with climbing walls, monkey bars, a rubber floor and a television so she can stream practice videos. 'She walks more on her hands than her legs nowadays.' Advertisement This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Everton, UK Women's Football 2025 The Athletic Media Company


New York Times
3 hours ago
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A new home for Everton Women, all summer targets signed: ‘We have something here'
May 18, 2025. Everton Women manager Brian Sorensen exists in two universes. There is Sorensen Redacted, the version disseminated on Everton's socials. The Danish manager standing in the epicentre of the Goodbye Goodison Park celebrations, accepting the pressure and privilege of making the storied stadium his side's new home. Advertisement Then there is Sorensen Unfiltered or, as Sorensen sees it and those close to the head coach attest, 'just me, Brian'. The man who declared in front of 40,000 or so weepy-eyed Evertonians that 'it's big shoes to fill, but we already made Anfield our training pitch. So we're looking forward to it'. Everton Women have won their four matches at Anfield since 2019 by an aggregate score of 7-1, after all. Amid the bittersweet blue pyro of Goodison's farewell, Sorensen wore a mischievous grin. He winked. The crowd cheered. Three weeks later, in a small office at the top of the Liver Building in which Everton have their headquarters, vestiges of that mischief dance across Sorensen's face when this moment is recalled. 'I don't think about whether I can say something, if I'm successful enough to say it. I just enjoy the ride,' says Sorensen. So, he's enjoying it? A flash of a grin. 'The first question I used to get in an interview with an agent and a potential player is: 'Are the men('s team) still going to be supporting you?'. Now, I don't get those questions. Because action speaks louder than words.' Sorensen reclines in an office chair, fresh off the final day of his League Managers Association management diploma. Sporting a retro cream Everton hoodie and bright blue and yellow Nikes, he oozes dangerous levels of zen. 'My last assignment was due on Thursday, I was doing it Wednesday night,' he says. This is not so much procrastination as an example of Sorensen's innate calm, born out of his upbringing in Arden, Denmark. The small railway town was home to his very large family. From the time he was born until Sorensen was 15, days were spent on his grandmother's farm, alongside a rotating compilation of his father's seven siblings and Sorensen's 36 cousins. 'We didn't buy anything from the store,' says Sorensen, who is an adept carpenter like his father and builds climbing frames for his six-year-old daughter, Rose, in their back yard in the south of Liverpool. 'We did everything, built everything, grew everything, we had all types of animals. So you couldn't take things too seriously or dwell too much because we need to put food on the table. Advertisement 'My wife (Camilla) sometimes kills me because things that don't affect me or I can't affect, I'm like, 'Why stress about them? It'll all work out, you know?'. 'I really, really hate micromanagement,' he adds. Autonomy, instead, is his currency, a lesson gleaned from his grandmother. 'She's my role model. How she could control 20 kids at one time, on a farm, I have no idea. You give people the tools but trust them to use them right.' Since April 2022, when Sorensen joined Everton from Denmark's Fortuna Hjorring, the past three seasons have turned on savvy survival. Annual squad budgets ranged between £3million and £4m ($4m and $5.4m) due to the club's wider financial plight. Injury crises across Sorensen's first two seasons exacerbated an already gossamer-thin squad. Everton's budget for the start of 2024-25 ranked the lowest in the Women's Super League (WSL), with all seven summer recruits arriving on free transfers. That Everton kept well away from any potential relegation wreckage in all three seasons under Sorensen (they've finished sixth, eighth and eighth) is a testament to the Dane's capacity to build from very little. 'All the players we've recruited have done super well for us, they're good people,' he says, 'but I had to play people out of position because I had to take the good players who were available, waiting for clubs to announce their released lists. That's where we've struggled all these years. I had no budget.' This summer, things are different. The WSL summer transfer window does not officially open until June 18 but six new signings have already committed to Everton, with a possible two more to follow. As we speak, an international player, whom Sorensen says he had been attempting to recruit since last October, waits in a room across the hall, ready to put pen to paper. Advertisement This has been the speed of operation since the Friedkin Group's (TFG) takeover in January. That same month, Everton completed the permanent signings of midfielder Hayley Ladd and striker Kelly Gago from Manchester United and Nantes, along with three loan moves. For the first time in nearly 12 months, Sorensen had a full bench. In April, Sorensen and his assistant manager, Stephen Neligan, signed new contracts, followed by new deals for defenders Kenzie Weir and Clare Wheeler. The following month, Everton confirmed the women's team's historic move to Goodison Park, leaving behind Walton Hall Park, along with the appointment of Hannah Forshaw as chief executive of Everton Women. 🏟️ More memories to be made at our new home, Goodison Park. — Everton Women (@EvertonWomen) May 31, 2025 'Active' is how Sorensen describes the period. Which feels something of an understatement. 'For the first time since I've been here, I got all of my targets,' he adds. 'That's never happened before because we're not in the top of the ranking order.' Sorensen assembles his hands to form a food chain. 'There's Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester City and Manchester United, then the powerhouses in Spain, France and Germany, then some Italian teams because they pay more.' He drops his hand lower. 'Then there's us.' Under TFG, the ambition is to reposition Everton into the top echelon, as well as be a landing spot for England internationals. No English club was represented in Sarina Wiegman's England Euro 2025 squad outside the top four (although Arsenal forward Michelle Agyemang was included after a season on loan at Brighton & Hove Albion). Only six Everton players from last season regularly started for their international teams. Sorensen has faith the shift will occur sooner rather than later. He tells the story of TFG's first meeting at Finch Farm in January in front of the club's entire staff and playing teams. 'The first thing they said was they want to support the women's team,' Sorensen says. 'Then they began speaking about the men's team, the academy, so on. That was the first sign of, 'OK, they actually want to support us, they're taking it seriously'.' Advertisement The move to Goodison has been a catalyst — for recruitment but also commercial opportunities. 'Thousands of people (at Goodison on May 18) had probably never watched Everton Women,' Sorensen says. Now? Gates of 10,000 is the ambition, roughly five times the average attendance (2,000) Everton clocked during the 2023-24 season, the second lowest in the WSL. The limitations of Walton Hall Park — 2,200 capacity (half that under a roof) and council ownership meant little could be done to enhance the matchday experience — take some blame. Another avenue for revenue generation is selling shares in Everton Women to investors, similar to Alexis Ohanian's minority stake in Chelsea Women. 'I look at Angel City or Kansas City (in NWSL), the valuation they built from scratch,' Sorensen says. 'We have the best league in the world. If people can understand and see the growth, if they have the American mindset that this is something you should invest in now rather than later, then I don't see why it's not possible to do that in this country.' Or at Everton. 'We have something here,' Sorensen says, reeling off a list: the country's 'best stadium'. A clear playing style. Last season's fifth-best defence in the WSL, despite having a rotating cast that included six different centre-back partnerships, five right-backs and three left-backs. Sorensen also knows the value of the collective. His family lived within 15 miles of each other, all skilled tradespeople: plumbers, carpenters, bricklayers. 'The whole family would go over to one sibling's house, do it up in two months, then go to the next one,' he says. Sorensen's recruitment doctrine has roots here, valuing people and teamwork skills above all else, sounding out the opinions of players over those of agents for character references. With most recruitment work finished, Sorensen's summer plans are relaxed. In late May, he travelled back to Denmark with Camilla, their six-week-old son, Milas, and Rose, the latter spending her days on the tractor with her grandad, navigating the fields Sorensen grew up on. Advertisement Now back in Liverpool, there's a new garden to build, a workout gym for himself and his wife. 'I need to get fit,' he quips. He's already constructed an outdoor gymnastics setup for his daughter, fit with climbing walls, monkey bars, a rubber floor and a television so she can stream practice videos. 'She walks more on her hands than her legs nowadays.'
Yahoo
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Why Sean Longstaff may stay at Newcastle United despite growing transfer interest
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