Everton only went from strength to strength to strength when the Friedkin Group ended Farhad Moshiri's dysfunctional reign toward the end of 2024, moving swiftly to replace Sean Dyche with David Moyes in the dugout.
Relegation candidates in the bleak of winter, Everton played to Moyes' tune across the second half of the campaign, finished comfortably in 13th place in the Premier League.
Everton manager David Moyes before the match
The Scotsman has overseen a slow start to the transfer window, albeit with chief executive Angus Kinnear settling in and dealing with an overload of potential departures. Albeit, Charly Alcaraz's loan spell has been made permanent for a £13m fee.
Much has been made of the need for forwards, with Dominic Calvert-Lewin going and the Toffees closing in on his replacement in Villarreal striker Thierno Barry, 22, who has a £34.5m release clause.
But Everton may yet need to package their midfield with one or two impactful additions.
The latest on Everton's midfield situation
Everton always knew this was going to be a significant summer, with so many comings and goings taking place. Midfield is indeed more settled than other areas of the field, but the likes of Abdoulaye Doucoure have departed, and with Alcaraz now a permanent feature, Everton might want to invest in a deeper-lying replacement.
There is, however, hope on Merseyside that 35-year-old star Idrissa Gana Gueye might renew his Everton vows to spend a year at the Hill Dickinson Stadium.
Gueye is still an effective player, but he's a veteran, and it might be good to seek a replacement, one who could contest for that starting spot next season. That man might prove to be Leicester City's Wilfred Ndidi, who has emerged as a top target for Everton.
That's what Football Insider believe, having detailed Everton's desire to rival Manchester United for the Nigeria international by making a formal offer for the player.
Suitors are lining up as he is entering the penultimate year of his contract at the King Power, Leicester having been relegated from the Premier League last season.
Wilfred-Ndidi-Leicester
GIVEMESPORT have also chimed in, stating that the Foxes recognise that clubs might not fancy paying the full release clause and might instead settle on a more agreeable £5m figure.
Part of this is due to Ndidi's high £75k-per-week salary.
What Wilfred Ndidi would bring to Everton
Leicester signed Ndidi from Belgian side Genk way back in January 2017, when he was only 20 years old. Arriving in a deal worth £15m, he always had a huge task in replacing N'Golo Kante, but he's done himself justice over his years on English soil.
Everton's Dwight McNeil in action with Leicester City's Wilfred Ndidi
Still only 28 years old, Ndidi has featured 303 times for his current club, notching 40 goal involvements and playing a tackle-heavy defensive role that has since bloomed into something more dynamic and modern, the anchor raised.
In this way, he could prove to be a fantastic replacement for Gueye but also an upgrade on the older man, bringing to Everton a fitting combative style but also a slick passing game that can help the evolution of Moyes' system.
Premier League 24/25 - Top Tacklers
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Stats via Premier League
Remarkably, no Premier League player won more tackles than Gueye in 2024/25, the veteran belying his age to play a priceless part in the stabilisation of a side that stared down the barrel of a smoking gun.
Everton need someone to step into his boots and emulate such qualities. Ndidi could be that man. Indeed, as per FBref, the 6 foot 2 star ranked among the top 5% of central midfielders across Europe's top five leagues last season for tackles, the top 7% for blocks, the top 3% for clearances and the top 4% for aerial battles won per 90.
Leicester City's Wilfred Ndidi in action with AFC Bournemouth's Marcus Tavernier
He also averaged assists at a rate of 0.19 per 90, which underscores a ball-playing side to Ndidi's game that could prove invaluable as Everton look to break free from the pragmaticism which has defined so much of their football in recent years, and instead become a force to be reckoned with in England's top flight.
Gueye, by contrast, averaged 0.09 assists across all competitions in 2024/25. This was hardly to the detriment of Everton's fluency and success; it wasn't within the ball-winner's jurisdiction. However, it illustrates the presence they would sign by reeling in Ndidi, for sure.
Last season, Ndidi served in a collapsing Leicester system, but he still plied his trade dutifully. As per Sofascore, across his 28 appearances in the league (all starts), the African midfielder racked up five assists, created five big chances and averaged 0.6 key passes per game.
Moreover, he won three tackles, 6.3 duels and made 4.5 ball recoveries on average each Premier League outing. Thus, his ability to slot right in and claim the torch from Gueye is highlighted.
Leicester were abject last year, but Ndidi has long been a pillar of strength in the Midlands. One FIFA expert even named him "the best defensive midfielder in the Premier League" back in 2020, while ESPN's Colin Udoh described him as an "absolute monster".
Szoboszlai-Everton-Liverpool-Gana-Gueye
Of course, there's hope that Gueye will be staying put over the coming year, but he will indeed turn 36 around the start of the campaign, and Everton will need to cover him - especially as the versatile midfielder Doucoure has left.
Moyes has succeeded in stabilising the club, and Kinnear will know, of course, that the wage bill has been slashed by the recent exodus, thus putting the high-salary Ndidi in an attainable bracket.
With Barry potentially shoring up the frontline for a hefty £34.5m fee, Everton could hit the jackpot in shrewdly signing Ndidi, for he could absorb some tricks of the trade from his older positional peer before emphatically replacing him down the line.
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