Newcastle Run Riot in Stunning 4–1 Win Over Everton
So, let me walk you through what turned into a wild Premier League night at the Hill Dickinson Stadium, where Newcastle absolutely dismantled Everton with a ruthless 4–1 victory. It was one of those games where everything suddenly clicked for Eddie Howe’s side, especially away from home—a place that had brought them nothing but frustration all season.
Before anyone even settled into their seats, Newcastle had already struck. And I mean inside the first minute . From Lewis Miley’s corner, Malick Thiaw rose between two Everton defenders and glanced in a header that became the fastest goal of the Premier League season. You could almost hear the shock ripple around the stadium. This early punch didn’t just silence the home crowd—it set the tone for everything that followed.
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Everton actually reacted fairly well at first, pushing forward through Jack Grealish, Iliman Ndiaye, and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall. But for all their possession, they couldn’t carve out a clean breakthrough. Meanwhile, Newcastle looked sharp, direct, and dangerous every time they burst forward. And their second goal arrived thanks to a moment Jordan Pickford will want to forget. A shot that should have been a routine stop somehow slipped straight through the England goalkeeper’s legs. Miley got credit for the strike, but it was Pickford’s mishap that stunned the home fans.
Newcastle weren’t done. Just before halftime, another rapid counterattack carved Everton open again. Anthony Elanga, who terrorised Mykolenko all night, squared the ball for Nick Woltemade. With almost casual ease, the forward lifted a delicate lob over Pickford to make it 3–0. At that point, the result already felt sealed.
The second half didn’t bring any real revival from Everton, even after a lively spell when substitute Carlos Alcaraz hit the post. Instead, Newcastle pushed on and added a fourth—once again through Thiaw, who powered in another header from a superb Lewis Hall cross. A centre-back scoring twice away from home? It summed up perfectly how unstoppable Newcastle were.
Everton had the ball in the net once through Thierno Barry, but a VAR check ruled it out for handball. Eventually, Dewsbury-Hall scored a beautiful consolation after a brilliant first touch, but it hardly changed the story of the night.
By full-time, Newcastle had snapped their long run of away struggles with a dominant, confident performance from front to back. For Howe, it was a night filled with relief as much as satisfaction. For Everton, it was an evening of errors, missed chances, and a blunt reminder of how quickly a match can spiral out of control in the Premier League.
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