Everton 4-0 West Ham: Captain Wayne Rooney bags fantastic hat-trick with strike from his own half as Sam Allardyce watches on from the stands ahead of his unveiling as manager at Goodison Park
- New Everton manager Sam Allardyce was watching on from the stands at Goodison Park on Wednesday night
- It was David Unsworth's last game in charge following the sacking of former boss Ronald Koeman in October
- Everton won a penalty after Dominic Calvert-Lewin appeared to be taken down by goalkeeper Joe Hart
- Hart saved Wayne Rooney's penalty but he couldn't stop the striker heading past him on the rebound
- Rooney doubled his tally just 10 minutes later when he slotted past Hart at his far post from inside the box
- West Ham's Manuel Lanzini saw his penalty saved in the second half as the Hammers chased a comeback
- Rooney got his third from inside his own half before Ashley Williams scored Everton's fourth goal in easy win
How do you impress a new manager? Some players would favour hard work. Others, perhaps, might choose a willingness to listen and learn.
Then there is the Wayne Rooney way. Only the special ones can delve into the realms of fantasy and raise a stadium to its feet but that is what this gifted individual did. If Sam Allardyce feared he was arriving at Everton's Goodison Park to see the dying of Rooney's light, he will be thinking again.
Rooney had already scored twice when Joe Hart attempted to clear his lines and fired the ball into Everton's half. Still out of his goal, the home crowd shouted 'shoot!' and that's what he did, drilling the most glorious drive from 70 yards like an arrow into the Gwladys Street net.
Wayne Rooney scored from inside his own half to seal his hat-trick and a controlling 3-0 lead for Everton after 66 minutes
Rooney was mobbed by team-mates Mason Holgate and Ashley Williams after scoring his contender for goal of the season
Everton forward Dominic Calvert-Lewin won a penalty for his side when Joe Hart appeared to take him down in the first half
Everton captain Wayne Rooney heads past Hart after the West Ham goalkeeper kept out his initial effort from 12 yards
Rooney celebrates scoring Everton's opener in the Premier League on Wednesday night against struggling West Ham
The former England international was celebrating again when he scored his side's second goal of the evening
Caretaker manager David Unsworth was taking charge of his last match in charge of Everton since getting the job in October
New Everton boss Sam Allardyce was in the stands at Goodison Park during the home victory over West Ham
'That is as good as I have ever hit a football,' he said and for good reason. In real time, you knew it was glorious but with each replay, from every angle, it got better. It was the strike of a genius and ensured David Unsworth, the caretaker manager, could end his reign on a high.
Allardyce, when he was England manager, said Rooney could play anywhere and that's what he did against West Ham, dropping deep, splitting his two central defenders at times, even running back deeper than the left back Cuco Martina.
Most importantly, he played brilliantly. It is a national hobby to pull Rooney to pieces but this was a reminder that he can still make the magic happen. Allardyce, watching in the Directors Box alongside Farhad Moshiri, will be relishing the chance to rekindle this relationship.
Such was the fragile make-up of both teams, the impression through those sterile and tentative early exchanges was that they would have gladly shaken hands and taken a point apiece if the game could have ended there and then.
No confidence, however, is usually a recipe for mistakes and, sure enough, two errors in a flash transformed the contest. The first came from Pedro Obiang whose failed tackle allowed Dominic Calvert-Lewin to scurry clear, the second came from Joe Hart, who chopped down the young striker.
Hart tried to argue his case but it was the clearest penalty you could wish to see and, strictly speaking, the England international should have been sent off, given he was the last man. Only the fact Calvert-Lewin was running on an angle, slightly away from goal, saved him.
Referee Michael Oliver had no hesitation in pointing to the spot once Calvert-Lewin had gone down in the West Ham area
Goalkeeper Hart remonstrates with referee Oliver after he awarded Everton a crucial first-half penalty kick
Rooney struck his penalty sweetly but it was saved by the England international before the striker followed up his effort
Rooney celebrates with the rest of his team-mates after Everton scoring the opening goal of the game against West Ham
Everton doubled their tally just ten minutes later when Rooney's right-footed strike put them two goals up
'You would question the penalty,' muttered David Moyes. 'But I would also question my defence. How did we allow Everton to turn? We are making individual mistakes now. We will either have to eradicate them or get people in who will not make them.'
Here was a huge moment. Everton had conceded first in 17 of their last 19 fixtures but the opportunity to inflict damage to one of the teams in close proximity was something they could not afford to pass up and the tension as Rooney steadied himself was palpable.
Anxiety, clearly, gripped him as he allowed Hart the chance to plunge to his right and keep the kick from 12 yards out but, for once, the bounce of the ball favoured Everton and Rooney kept his focus to head the rebound into the empty net.
Now there was noise. A loud, ear-piercing exhortation of relief. There was a joyous smile from Rooney, the kind not seen since the warm days of August. Moyes, by contrast, looked out at his team, their heads bowed and belief draining, and looked haunted.
For all that Everton have been insipid, West Ham have been spineless for much of the campaign. Once again, nobody looked prepared to roll their sleeves and take responsibility. Lambast Moyes all you want but what is he supposed to do if his squad won't fight?
Rooney celebrated his second goal of the night by running towards the home supporters with his arms outstretched
Experienced full back Pablo Zabaleta looks dejected after being unable to prevent Everton from doubling their lead
West Ham manager David Moyes could only watch on as his side went 2-0 down on Merseyside on Wednesday night
Full back Aaron Cresswell went close to pulling a goal back for West Ham when his left-footed shot hit the post
West Ham were given a chance from the penalty spot, but Manuel Lanzini's effort was saved by Everton's Jordan Pickford
Pickford punches his chest after guessing correctly and saving Lanzini's penalty which was headed for the bottom corner
Rooney throws his arms aloft in celebration after scoring with a magnificent strike from inside Everton's half
Central defender Ashley Williams made it 4-0 when his header beat Hart in the West Ham goal with 12 minutes to play
Everton didn't have to be brilliant but they were organised and committed and wanted it more. Those traits enabled them to get the decisive second in the 29th minute when Tom Davies charged down the right and crossed to Rooney, via deflection from Jonjoe Kenny, did the rest.
West Ham, belatedly, started to find some rhythm, emerging for the second half with a Moyes scolding ringing in their ears – 'we told them we wouldn't accept that,' he said – and going out with a whimper at venue with so many memories was not going to be tolerated.
So they began to push. Everton, nerves starting to take hold, allowed themselves to be forced back and in the 52nd minute, they came within a whisker of being punished when Aaron Cresswell cracked the crossbar with a piercing drive before Marko Arnautovic fluffed a chance.
The warning wasn't heeded and just before the hour, they won a penalty, Ashley Williams chopping down substitute Diafra Sakho. The onus fell on Manuel Lanzini to keep his nerve but he aimed for the same corner as Rooney and suffered the same consequence.
Jordan Pickford hurtled to his right to beat the kick away and did so with such ferocity that the ball went out for a throw-in. It was a match-changing save and not long after it was followed by a match-defining goal.
Williams provided the footnote with a glancing header but the night was all about one man – and, for all the chatter about Allardyce, it did not belong to him. After all the negativity and dissent, Everton's No 10 cleared the gloom. Sam, most definitely, will play him again.
West Ham left back Aaron Cresswell is beaten by the quick feet of experienced Everton winger Aaron Lennon
West Ham needed two players - Pedro Obiang (left) and Winston Reid - to try and stop attacking midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson
Everton youngster Jonjoe Kenny puts in a strong challenge as it looked as though Arthur Masuaku had sprinted past him
Everton midfielder Tom Davies does well to hold off West Ham's Angelo Ogbonna during a first-half tussle
New Everton manager Allardyce arrives at Goodison Park with majority shareholder Farhad Moshiri (left) on Wednesday night
Allardyce said ahead of the Premier League match that the confidence had been drained from the Everton players
Sportsmail understands the former England manager's contract at Goodison Park is worth £6million-a-year
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