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You can have it all, but how much do you want it?

Everton have won just two games in eight in the Premier League.

They have taken just two points from home matches against Brentford, Wolves and Leeds United.

They have been without some key players for well over a month, and face the very real prospect of going the rest of the season without Jack Grealish.

And yet somehow, despite all the frustration and disappointment, they have picked up enough points to still be in the top half, just three points off the top six, and only five behind fourth-place Manchester United.

Had Everton won on Monday, they would have moved into seventh place. As it is, they are 10th, but as the end of January approaches, they are right in the mix in one of the most congested races for European qualification in recent memory.

Just 10 points separate fourth place from 13th. Bournemouth are within two wins of sixth-place Liverpool.

There is a real opportunity here, because none of these teams really look capable of stringing together any kind of consistency.

Liverpool, Chelsea and Manchester United have the strongest squads of the bunch, and you would expect, when all things iron themselves out, that those three teams make up between fourth and sixth. But it is very likely European qualification will drop down to seventh, and there is a healthy chance that the eighth spot will be worth a place in next season’s UEFA Conference League.

So Everton are right in the mix. Whether you feel they are “ready” for Europe or not, or whether or not they are really good enough, is not the argument. They might not, on paper, be strong enough — but neither are Sunderland, or Brighton, or Bournemouth, or Fulham. And all of those teams are probably in the picture at the moment, too.

Opta’s supercomputer, which runs 10,000 predictions ahead of every matchday, ranks Everton’s top-six chances at 7.86%; their probability of a top-seven finish stands at 14.83%, and the likelihood they are in the top eight come the end of May is 17.15%.

But this is with Everton’s current squad, and as mentioned, this is an Everton team that is only just getting some of its best players back, even if Grealish is going to be a big miss.

And this is an Everton team that has not been given any help, so far, in the January transfer window.

David Moyes continues to say that Everton are looking for opportunities in the market. They are drastically short at full-back, and now on the wings, and they are shorn of a back-up centre-forward that is capable of offering reliable support to Thierno Barry.

Could they get all of those positions of need filled in one, winter window? Of course not, and that shouldn’t be expected.

But the seeming lack of urgency — or perhaps, even, just a tad too much caution — is frustrating, because there is a real opportunity here for Everton to get back where Moyes, and their fans, feel they belong.

Europe does not have to be the primary objective. But Everton are well clear of danger, and seasons like this do not come around every year. There is nothing wrong with having a rough aim, and a stretch target, and seeing where it ends up.

However, to achieve that stretch target, Everton’s squad needs a boost. It needs those one or two fresh faces, either on loan or cheaper deals, who are ready to come in and make an impact. Carlos Alcaraz, is the perfect example — even if he had to work harder than perhaps he really should have had to, to earn Moyes’ trust, the Argentine came in last January and made his impact felt straight away, providing a versatile squad option and bringing energy and drive in midfield.

I wrote earlier this month that Everton could not allow their season to drift, and even after the ups and downs of this dreary January, the campaign is still alive, just waiting for a spark.

Please, Everton, act. Do not be reckless, do not spend big money on a player now if you wouldn’t in the summer, but still, act. There are deals there to be done; players who would improve certain areas of this team (or squad), because the bar in those positions is so low.

Moyes has his critics, and some of that criticism is fair, but we should not lose perspective of how far Everton have come in a year. And the club should not let a fantastic opportunity pass them by, just because they were too caught up in ensuring the mistakes of yesteryear aren’t repeated.

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Posted 30/01/2026 at 12:54:59

We ARE letting the season drift, and it comes down to a complete lack of ambition. The increased money from higher league placing would pay for incomings, and instead, TFG and the "transfer committee" are treading on their own dicks rather than helping the manager and the team.

This season is a real opportunity, and we are fucking crying out for full-backs and some pace on the wings. It's been a weakness for years, and we've done nothing whatsoever to address it.

Having started the season with many of us content to see a season of mid-table mediocrity after years of squalor, there's instead a real opportunity to take advantage of the league's mediocrity this season, and we're throwing it away.

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