Everton Youth Teams Thread

Re the debate about City poaching players, offering youngsters and their families better schooling/accessories etc , there is an excellent article on the U23s /Academy on the OS . I've copied this bit about our scouting in Manchester and other areas , while we can't match City moneywise it looks like we are doing pretty good in attracting good young players from the Manchester area.
Still on the City theme, I saw that Lee Carsley tweeted his support before the derby match, now there is one ex player who I wish we could pinch from City , currently u18 Manager, maybe as our permanent Academy manager.


Martin Waldron, Everton’s Head of Academy Recruitment (pictured below with Tom Davies, Gethin Jones, Kieran Dowell and Callum Connolly), is charged with overseeing a team of scouts that has grown from “about a dozen” covering the north-west of England when he joined the Toffees 23 years ago to a network of 230. Within that, there are 64 ‘league co-ordinators’, one for each league in the Club’s catchment area and each with a team of scouts working under them. In the past two-and-a-half years, the national and international scouting network has expanded from nine scouts to 109 working across the UK and at all major international youth tournaments.


c97341eca661454e9ebd1d59425515c2.jpg


The goal, now achievable, is to scout every team of each of the 92 Football League clubs from Under-9 to Under-16 every season; effectively to know every single professional youth player in the country.

“We’re always looking at procedures and making sure everything is best in practice,” says Waldron. His team are currently creating a live ‘recruitment dashboard’ to track their work. “I want to sit there and be able to see the percentage of players we know going up every week at the touch of a button."

Paul Johnson has come in from Chelsea as Professional Recruitment manager, while Mark Curran recently joined from Manchester City to be the Greater Manchester Recruitment Officer.

“Manchester has become a hot bed for footballers and I think nearly every one of our age group has got six Manchester boys in it now,” says Waldron. “It used to be hard getting kids from Manchester but now if Everton come calling, you come because the reputation is very good. I’m convinced we’ve got the best Manchester boys here at Everton.”

It’s music to Sheedy’s ears. “If you don’t recruit good players at seven, eight and nine years old then it’s difficult for the coaches to turn them into the likes of Tom Davies. We’ve proved over the years that we can get players in and then proved that we can turn them into first-team players.”

And that is where Koeman comes in.

“You can have the best facility in the world and the most coaches but, at the end of the tunnel, if you don’t get the opportunity to play in our first team then you have no Academy,” says Unsworth. “We’ve got a manager here who wants to play the young kids and throw them in. That is priceless.

“We’ve seen other clubs who have quality, quality players but they never get an opportunity to play in the first team. Here they do and, if it doesn’t work out, then the next player is there banging on the door.”
 

Mathew Virtue-Thick... good mother dumb father.. (was a Chelsea player... well you know the rest).

Liverpool website:
Matthew was a Chelsea player from the age of nine before he and his family moved to the local area and he signed for Liverpool as an U11.

what a name lol

Sounds like he's a bit Tim, Nice but Dim...

...he was the stand-out player for Yeovil, I doubt a further loan is needed in the Championship. I understand a Championship club wanted to take him on a permanent last year. It'll be interesting if the player himself is keen for permanent and regular first team football.

He also had the pressure of joining a team in the relegation zone. And helped them get out of it comfortably. He will be a premiership footballer in the future.

Re this part. I'm hoping McCarthy will be sold. Then potentially the likes of Walsh and/or Williams could be competing with Besic and Barry for the other CM slots. Barry will be a year older and won't be able to play much, and we'll have the Europa League to contend with too, so they have a chance I think.

agree with this, mccarthy will be sold, barry will barely start a game next season (in the league anyway) and besic cant be relied upon.

Think/would like McCarthy will stay. But Barry surely only has one year left in him. I would like to think that guys like Walsh will see how close they are to the 1st team and be willing to stay for a couple of seasons (be it here or on loan), and wait for an opportunity in the first team. Whilst competitive football is important for their development, they are still young and imo don't need to be playing week in-week out, quite apart from the benefits of training with the likes of Rom, Gana and Schneiderlin etc under Koeman, instead of whoever they might train with at a lower level team.

Re the debate about City poaching players, offering youngsters and their families better schooling/accessories etc , there is an excellent article on the U23s /Academy on the OS . I've copied this bit about our scouting in Manchester and other areas , while we can't match City moneywise it looks like we are doing pretty good in attracting good young players from the Manchester area.
Still on the City theme, I saw that Lee Carsley tweeted his support before the derby match, now there is one ex player who I wish we could pinch from City , currently u18 Manager, maybe as our permanent Academy manager.

Martin Waldron, Everton’s Head of Academy Recruitment (pictured below with Tom Davies, Gethin Jones, Kieran Dowell and Callum Connolly), is charged with overseeing a team of scouts that has grown from “about a dozen” covering the north-west of England when he joined the Toffees 23 years ago to a network of 230. Within that, there are 64 ‘league co-ordinators’, one for each league in the Club’s catchment area and each with a team of scouts working under them. In the past two-and-a-half years, the national and international scouting network has expanded from nine scouts to 109 working across the UK and at all major international youth tournaments.


c97341eca661454e9ebd1d59425515c2.jpg


The goal, now achievable, is to scout every team of each of the 92 Football League clubs from Under-9 to Under-16 every season; effectively to know every single professional youth player in the country.

“We’re always looking at procedures and making sure everything is best in practice,” says Waldron. His team are currently creating a live ‘recruitment dashboard’ to track their work. “I want to sit there and be able to see the percentage of players we know going up every week at the touch of a button."

Paul Johnson has come in from Chelsea as Professional Recruitment manager, while Mark Curran recently joined from Manchester City to be the Greater Manchester Recruitment Officer.

“Manchester has become a hot bed for footballers and I think nearly every one of our age group has got six Manchester boys in it now,” says Waldron. “It used to be hard getting kids from Manchester but now if Everton come calling, you come because the reputation is very good. I’m convinced we’ve got the best Manchester boys here at Everton.”

It’s music to Sheedy’s ears. “If you don’t recruit good players at seven, eight and nine years old then it’s difficult for the coaches to turn them into the likes of Tom Davies. We’ve proved over the years that we can get players in and then proved that we can turn them into first-team players.”

And that is where Koeman comes in.

“You can have the best facility in the world and the most coaches but, at the end of the tunnel, if you don’t get the opportunity to play in our first team then you have no Academy,” says Unsworth. “We’ve got a manager here who wants to play the young kids and throw them in. That is priceless.

“We’ve seen other clubs who have quality, quality players but they never get an opportunity to play in the first team. Here they do and, if it doesn’t work out, then the next player is there banging on the door.”

Good to see we have a wide network, but whilst Chelsea/City etc are hoovering up talent from around the globe, would really like to see us bring thru more local talent, and just supplement this with 'foreign' talent when needed (mainly to go straight into the first team).
 
I’ve been really full on with work and life over the last few days so unfortunately not been able to give my thoughts. Lots of fantastic insights and posts from many who regularly watch our young lads so will try to add my feelings.

The overarching sense I get is it’s been a culmination of a fantastic journey for the younger lads themselves and David Unsworth. He began 3 years ago, relying heavily on lads like Kenny (also Dowell played a fair bit) and one or 2 others. We were a very young team. I haven’t evidence but I never remember seeing an opposition with a younger team than us back then. I remember Chelsea being very shocked and praiseworthy that we could include 2 schoolboys and be competitive (Kenny & Ledson).

When he first came in there was a big emphasis on performance. Generally they played well for him every week, but struggled to get over the line. I remember winning away at Liverpool 2-1 and conceding 2 late goals to an older team to lose. It was a real gutwrencher. We spiraled a bit after that in results, and had to win on the final day to stay up.

I do think he learnt a bit from that in the second season, as did the players. There was more of an emphasis on not being sucked into it at the bottom. In pre-season Evans (then a 16 year old) came in and was brilliant. We won 6 or 7 on the bounce in pre-season. I remember there was a huge buzz around Evans at that point, including Arsenal looking at him. One game at the end of pre-season we lost narrowly and Unsworth tore a strip off them. This was quite a marked change and showed a different side to Unsworth. As a group they responded well and ended up towards the top of the league with a strong defensive record and the star player at that level Dowell scoring lots of goals.

Going into his 3rd season and the question was really about whether we could add goals. Everyone who watched the 23’s cold only be impressed by the defensive set up Unsworth had put into place. All the players worked hard, defended properly, pressed, cleared balls away etc. The final piece of the Unsworth jigsaw was adding the goals at the other end. His acquisitions of Sambou and Calvert Lewin really helped in that regard and he got the best out of Niasse.

What is clear from Unsworth is each season he has improved on the season before and overcome hurdles. He is doing this alongside making players better footballers. This season lads like Charsley have noticeably kicked on. For us to win the youth league is a fillip for him. Sides around him spend massive sums of money on young players and he has done in, in the main with a group of local lads who cost nothing.

I have said on numerous occasions (even before this seasons triumph) he should be in strong consideration for the next Everton managers job. I look at Stubbs and the excellent work he did up at Hibs and while Stubbs did a good job with us Unsworth is on another level for me.
He seems a fantastic people person- most noticeable in the clips when he met Koeman. He was very at ease with him, calm but assertive and helped bed Koeman in. Likewise he worked very well with Martinez, and showed he could get a song out of a group of players last season who’d downed tools. Whenever you hear him post match he’s honest but also clear in the expectations he has of the team.

Generally promoting from within has a mixed success rate. That being said I do think for a club like Everton it has all the reason to work. We have a clear culture and a proud history. I think whoever managed us needs to know what the club means to it’s local fan base. There is a strong DNA and that’s carried through with the number of young local players who get game time for us. You look at Guardiola and what he did at Barca, and I see a lot of similarities with Unsworth. Guardiola focused centrally on humility and hard work, which seem central to Unsworth’s DNA. I do think at some point, we will either give him a chance, or he will go elsewhere.

I’ve gone on for too long, but it also worth mentioning the convergence was also that of a very talented group of players. I had always said it was at least our best since 1998, if not that we’d ever produced. It was interesting to see Ray Hall say something similar (that this year group was our strongest).

You had the older age group who were strong. Lads like Ledson, Kenny, Williams and Charsley were all impressive (I also liked Dyson & Graham). They were the best in the country at that age.

Yet it was the year below where there was even ore talent. Dowell, Davies, Brewster, Donuhue, Walsh and Connolly all looked very strong talents. As often happens not everyone of them kick on but at 15/16 they all looked like they had a chance of making it. Normally if you have 1-2 players of that level you’d be delighted. As a youth team they didn’t lose for about 3 years and would just annihilate opposition (often by margins of 5 or 6, sometimes even by 10 or 11).


They won the youth league, finished second the next two seasons (though had it not been for the Dallas cup would have won at least 1 if not both of them). They have now gone on, 3 years later to win the reserves league.


Unsworth said he wanted to keep the group together. I think this will prove very challenging. As I’ve said in another thread, talented young players don’t remain talented young players forever. They either break through, don’t fulfill potential, or leave to fulfill potential elsewhere. When I look at this team, you see this summer as central to keeping some of them. Walsh, Dowell & Kenny you imagine will need to have first team involvement or will look to pursue avenues elsewhere. We have shown, with Ledson, even highly thought of players will be allowed to leave if they don’t wish to wait much longer.
 

For those like me who don't live nearby..

Evertonians can watch David Unsworth’s title-winning Under-23s end a memorable campaign against Liverpool at Goodison Park on Monday 8 May - and support the young Blues’ inspiring ‘Home is Where the Heart is’ campaign in the process. It will be a chance for fans to see the young Blues lift the Premier League 2 trophy, watch a mini-derby, while learning more about the squad’s fundraising campaign and support their efforts to raise £230,000 to help the city’s homeless.
The game kicks off at 7pm with admission free for all supporters. Tickets are now available to collect from the Park End box office, Everton One or Everton Two.

As the game is a dedicated fixture to raise awareness and funds for the ‘Home Is Where The Heart Is’ campaign, which has as its goal the development of a supported living initiative for young people between the ages of 16-23, there will be donation buckets on entry at the turnstiles for fans to show their support.

If you are unable to attend the game, you can watch it live on evertontv. A £3.99 donation to the ‘Home Is Where The Heart Is’ fund will give you exclusive live access to the full 90 minutes of the game – with commentary provided by Darren Griffiths and a Club Ambassador. Visit evertonfc.com/U23Live to make your donation and book your live stream. The funds raised will be used to purchase, and operate, a house close to Goodison, which will offer 16 to 23-year-olds who have fallen on hard times, or have perhaps fallen out of the care system, a roof over their heads.
 
I’ve been really full on with work and life over the last few days so unfortunately not been able to give my thoughts. Lots of fantastic insights and posts from many who regularly watch our young lads so will try to add my feelings.

The overarching sense I get is it’s been a culmination of a fantastic journey for the younger lads themselves and David Unsworth. He began 3 years ago, relying heavily on lads like Kenny (also Dowell played a fair bit) and one or 2 others. We were a very young team. I haven’t evidence but I never remember seeing an opposition with a younger team than us back then. I remember Chelsea being very shocked and praiseworthy that we could include 2 schoolboys and be competitive (Kenny & Ledson).

When he first came in there was a big emphasis on performance. Generally they played well for him every week, but struggled to get over the line. I remember winning away at Liverpool 2-1 and conceding 2 late goals to an older team to lose. It was a real gutwrencher. We spiraled a bit after that in results, and had to win on the final day to stay up.

I do think he learnt a bit from that in the second season, as did the players. There was more of an emphasis on not being sucked into it at the bottom. In pre-season Evans (then a 16 year old) came in and was brilliant. We won 6 or 7 on the bounce in pre-season. I remember there was a huge buzz around Evans at that point, including Arsenal looking at him. One game at the end of pre-season we lost narrowly and Unsworth tore a strip off them. This was quite a marked change and showed a different side to Unsworth. As a group they responded well and ended up towards the top of the league with a strong defensive record and the star player at that level Dowell scoring lots of goals.

Going into his 3rd season and the question was really about whether we could add goals. Everyone who watched the 23’s cold only be impressed by the defensive set up Unsworth had put into place. All the players worked hard, defended properly, pressed, cleared balls away etc. The final piece of the Unsworth jigsaw was adding the goals at the other end. His acquisitions of Sambou and Calvert Lewin really helped in that regard and he got the best out of Niasse.

What is clear from Unsworth is each season he has improved on the season before and overcome hurdles. He is doing this alongside making players better footballers. This season lads like Charsley have noticeably kicked on. For us to win the youth league is a fillip for him. Sides around him spend massive sums of money on young players and he has done in, in the main with a group of local lads who cost nothing.

I have said on numerous occasions (even before this seasons triumph) he should be in strong consideration for the next Everton managers job. I look at Stubbs and the excellent work he did up at Hibs and while Stubbs did a good job with us Unsworth is on another level for me.
He seems a fantastic people person- most noticeable in the clips when he met Koeman. He was very at ease with him, calm but assertive and helped bed Koeman in. Likewise he worked very well with Martinez, and showed he could get a song out of a group of players last season who’d downed tools. Whenever you hear him post match he’s honest but also clear in the expectations he has of the team.

Generally promoting from within has a mixed success rate. That being said I do think for a club like Everton it has all the reason to work. We have a clear culture and a proud history. I think whoever managed us needs to know what the club means to it’s local fan base. There is a strong DNA and that’s carried through with the number of young local players who get game time for us. You look at Guardiola and what he did at Barca, and I see a lot of similarities with Unsworth. Guardiola focused centrally on humility and hard work, which seem central to Unsworth’s DNA. I do think at some point, we will either give him a chance, or he will go elsewhere.

I’ve gone on for too long, but it also worth mentioning the convergence was also that of a very talented group of players. I had always said it was at least our best since 1998, if not that we’d ever produced. It was interesting to see Ray Hall say something similar (that this year group was our strongest).

You had the older age group who were strong. Lads like Ledson, Kenny, Williams and Charsley were all impressive (I also liked Dyson & Graham). They were the best in the country at that age.

Yet it was the year below where there was even ore talent. Dowell, Davies, Brewster, Donuhue, Walsh and Connolly all looked very strong talents. As often happens not everyone of them kick on but at 15/16 they all looked like they had a chance of making it. Normally if you have 1-2 players of that level you’d be delighted. As a youth team they didn’t lose for about 3 years and would just annihilate opposition (often by margins of 5 or 6, sometimes even by 10 or 11).


They won the youth league, finished second the next two seasons (though had it not been for the Dallas cup would have won at least 1 if not both of them). They have now gone on, 3 years later to win the reserves league.


Unsworth said he wanted to keep the group together. I think this will prove very challenging. As I’ve said in another thread, talented young players don’t remain talented young players forever. They either break through, don’t fulfill potential, or leave to fulfill potential elsewhere. When I look at this team, you see this summer as central to keeping some of them. Walsh, Dowell & Kenny you imagine will need to have first team involvement or will look to pursue avenues elsewhere. We have shown, with Ledson, even highly thought of players will be allowed to leave if they don’t wish to wait much longer.

There's several of you that do a fantastic job, but I wanted to let you know, as someone who is far away and cant' watch the lads live, how much I appreciate the effort you put in keeping us informed. We're the odd ones in this thread...the ones who spend as much time thinking about the lads as much as we do the senior squad.

Winning this title feels really good.
 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...bing-group-young-stars-Golden-Generation.html
There was a point during Everton's recent 4-2 beating of Leicester when David Unsworth swelled with pride.

The 43-year-old, a club stalwart who now manages Everton's Under 23s, looked out from his seat in the Main Stand and saw Matthew Pennington snapping into tackles, Tom Davies driving forward from midfield and Ross Barkley sprinkling stardust.

This was his utopia: academy products, schooled the 'Everton way', playing lead roles with Goodison packed to the rafters. But before Unsworth became too satisfied with what he saw, impatience took hold.

3FAA05E700000578-0-image-a-31_1493318451553.jpg

Everton Under 23s manager David Unsworth can reflect with immense pride on his season

3F7DC68800000578-0-image-a-40_1493318556730.jpg

Tom Davies began by playing in Premier League 2 games and is now a first team regular


Everton's draw with Chelsea coupled with Liverpool beating Manchester City sealed the title

'They are lovely moments,' he says. 'But, in all honesty, I'm thinking, 'Who's next? How are we going to get Liam Walsh or Joe Williams or Beni Baningime in?'. They are the next three. They are the ones fighting for Tom's shirt in the first team.

'They are top players. We want them there as quickly as possible. I'm in a rush to get them into the first team. The lads are in a rush to be Everton players. That is the way it should be. They don't want to play for me, they want to play for the first team.'

History shows those three teenagers are in the right place if they want to fulfil their dreams. Few clubs are as willing to give youth a chance as Everton and around the corner from their Finch Farm headquarters is proof.

On a huge blue plaque, which stretches from floor to ceiling, there are 43 names listed. It begins with Tony Grant back in 1995 and runs to 2016. Davies, 18 — one of the success stories of the season — and Jonjoe Kenny, 20, are the most recent additions.


Tony Grant is the first of 43 names on a plaque to recognise their ascent to the first team
The 20-year-old defender Jonjoe Kenny is the most recent addition to the blue plaque
Everton's Under-23s side celebrate Liam Walsh's goal against Chelsea in Aldershot this month


'We have always given youngsters opportunities,' Unsworth explains. 'We have always looked to our academy. Not all academies do that. We look to produce players for our first team, not anyone else. Every manager we've had has afforded young players opportunities to develop.
'The Everton way is throughout the club. The staff are all Evertonians. There is just a lovely atmosphere around the place. People talk about creating the right environment and that is what we have done.'

There has been upheaval at Everton's academy recently, with Peter Vint — the American appointed to the role of director in December 2015 — and head of coaching Dave Adams leaving abruptly.But the foundations are strong and the outstanding work that continues can be gauged by the success of the Under 23s.Kieran Dowell is another shining light who has already played for the first team at Goodison

The team will now look to end their campaign in style against Liverpool a week on Monday
Unsworth is too modest to shout from the rooftops but the fact he has steered this group to the Premier League U23 title is huge. The championship was wrapped up on Monday night and fans are already dubbing this group the Golden Generation.

'I look at Chelsea, Man City — the big spenders — and we can easily compete with them when we are at our best,' says Unsworth.'It is great that the boys have done it. They have put themselves in this position by their performances. It is a great thing for them and the club. I am so delighted.' Everton's ambition is to have a conveyor belt of the best youngsters coming through, ready to help the first team and maintain tradition. This is a club that beats with a local heart.

Everton's coaching staff is full of former players including legendary striker Duncan Ferguson
Unsworth is one of 11 coaches at Finch Farm to have played for the Everton first team. They include Duncan Ferguson, Unsworth's assistant John Ebbrell, Under 18 head coach Kevin Sheedy and Francis Jeffers.

'Without a doubt this is the best city in the country for producing footballers,' adds Unsworth. 'It's a working-class city with passion. You see that in young players. It's a vibrant, dynamic city. 'And that is the type of footballer we produce.'
 
Last edited:
There's several of you that do a fantastic job, but I wanted to let you know, as someone who is far away and cant' watch the lads live, how much I appreciate the effort you put in keeping us informed. We're the odd ones in this thread...the ones who spend as much time thinking about the lads as much as we do the senior squad.

Winning this title feels really good.
Indeed, I did worry once that I was odd in that respect :). Just love these guys ,the effort they put in and enjoy them for what they are , young Everton players, the trophies are a bonus, while also knowing that sadly even some of the very talented won't make it permanently to our first team. Wish I could see them live too, but you can form pretty reasonable opinions from the bits we get to see, international matches, etc - I've never seen that Messi fella, but think he's pretty good and at the other end of the scale I really like the look of the 17 year old Trevoh Chalobah of Chelsea having only seen him on tv about 4 or 5 times in the past year. Looking forward to Monday night now, and also happy to admit that a large part of looking forward to Sunday's game is for the involvement of our young players.
 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...bing-group-young-stars-Golden-Generation.html
There was a point during Everton's recent 4-2 beating of Leicester when David Unsworth swelled with pride.

The 43-year-old, a club stalwart who now manages Everton's Under 23s, looked out from his seat in the Main Stand and saw Matthew Pennington snapping into tackles, Tom Davies driving forward from midfield and Ross Barkley sprinkling stardust.

This was his utopia: academy products, schooled the 'Everton way', playing lead roles with Goodison packed to the rafters. But before Unsworth became too satisfied with what he saw, impatience took hold.

3FAA05E700000578-0-image-a-31_1493318451553.jpg

Everton Under 23s manager David Unsworth can reflect with immense pride on his season

3F7DC68800000578-0-image-a-40_1493318556730.jpg

Tom Davies began by playing in Premier League 2 games and is now a first team regular


Everton's draw with Chelsea coupled with Liverpool beating Manchester City sealed the title

'They are lovely moments,' he says. 'But, in all honesty, I'm thinking, 'Who's next? How are we going to get Liam Walsh or Joe Williams or Beni Baningime in?'. They are the next three. They are the ones fighting for Tom's shirt in the first team.

'They are top players. We want them there as quickly as possible. I'm in a rush to get them into the first team. The lads are in a rush to be Everton players. That is the way it should be. They don't want to play for me, they want to play for the first team.'

History shows those three teenagers are in the right place if they want to fulfil their dreams. Few clubs are as willing to give youth a chance as Everton and around the corner from their Finch Farm headquarters is proof.

On a huge blue plaque, which stretches from floor to ceiling, there are 43 names listed. It begins with Tony Grant back in 1995 and runs to 2016. Davies, 18 — one of the success stories of the season — and Jonjoe Kenny, 20, are the most recent additions.


Tony Grant is the first of 43 names on a plaque to recognise their ascent to the first team
The 20-year-old defender Jonjoe Kenny is the most recent addition to the blue plaque
Everton's Under-23s side celebrate Liam Walsh's goal against Chelsea in Aldershot this month


'We have always given youngsters opportunities,' Unsworth explains. 'We have always looked to our academy. Not all academies do that. We look to produce players for our first team, not anyone else. Every manager we've had has afforded young players opportunities to develop.
'The Everton way is throughout the club. The staff are all Evertonians. There is just a lovely atmosphere around the place. People talk about creating the right environment and that is what we have done.'

There has been upheaval at Everton's academy recently, with Peter Vint — the American appointed to the role of director in December 2015 — and head of coaching Dave Adams leaving abruptly.But the foundations are strong and the outstanding work that continues can be gauged by the success of the Under 23s.Kieran Dowell is another shining light who has already played for the first team at Goodison

The team will now look to end their campaign in style against Liverpool a week on Monday
Unsworth is too modest to shout from the rooftops but the fact he has steered this group to the Premier League U23 title is huge. The championship was wrapped up on Monday night and fans are already dubbing this group the Golden Generation.

'I look at Chelsea, Man City — the big spenders — and we can easily compete with them when we are at our best,' says Unsworth.'It is great that the boys have done it. They have put themselves in this position by their performances. It is a great thing for them and the club. I am so delighted.' Everton's ambition is to have a conveyor belt of the best youngsters coming through, ready to help the first team and maintain tradition. This is a club that beats with a local heart.

Everton's coaching staff is full of former players including legendary striker Duncan Ferguson
Unsworth is one of 11 coaches at Finch Farm to have played for the Everton first team. They include Duncan Ferguson, Unsworth's assistant John Ebbrell, Under 18 head coach Kevin Sheedy and Francis Jeffers.

'Without a doubt this is the best city in the country for producing footballers,' adds Unsworth. 'It's a working-class city with passion. You see that in young players. It's a vibrant, dynamic city. 'And that is the type of footballer we produce.'

Also, good to see him mention Walsh as fighting for a first team place. I really want to see him involved one day. If we have to sell him I do hope we include a buy back clause.
 
Koeman:

“It’s a really good achievement. You play football to win. The most important is to bring good players to the first team but you play to win.

“Sometimes though I feel there’s too much positivity abut the young players and I know they’re not ready.

“It’s very difficult to make the last step and I know that even though they win the title it doesn’t mean they’re ready.

“Look to the young players involved this season; Mason, Lookman and Dominic. Tom Davies perhaps an exception.

“It’s too easy to tell people we have a lot of players ready for the first team because it’s not the case.

“Now we have enough young players in the squad. We need more players in the age bracket 26-29 to improve.”We stay open to young players as well but little by little. Not too fast.”
 

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