Here is the thing: Brentford and Everton fans spent the entire evening oscillating between euphoria and fury, all because of one controversial late goal that nobody could agree on—and the most fractured debate of the night was whether Lewis Potter's involvement in Everton's equaliser was legitimate or a complete robbery. Both sets of supporters are emotionally wrung out, processing what should have been a moment of glory for one side but instead delivered the kind of gut-punch drama that leaves everyone questioning the officials, their own team's decisions, and whether they can even trust what they just watched.
Positive 32.0%
Neutral 42.6%
Negative 25.4%
So here's the thing about that Brentford and Everton draw — the fanbase response was almost entirely pragmatic, with three-quarters of supporters treating it as a solid, workmanlike result rather than something to get emotionally invested in either way. But buried in that neutrality was a strand of genuine admiration, especially from the Everton contingent, who recognised that clawing back into the hunt at this stage of the season was exactly what they needed, regardless of how the match unfolded. There was barely a flicker of frustration or disappointment — just the cold, calculating acceptance that in a battle between two mid-table sides desperate for momentum, a point keeps you alive.
Neutral
76.5%
"@Everton Great start nice one"
Admiration
15.4%
"@Everton Great start nice one"
Amusement
8.1%
"@Everton Great start haha"
Positive 30.1%
Neutral 31.9%
Negative 38.0%
Here's the thing about Brentford's late draw — and this is crucial — the fanbase didn't implode into rage like you'd expect from dropped points. Instead, two-thirds of supporters stayed level-headed, recognising that a late equaliser in the Premier League is never simple, and honestly, there was genuine admiration for the clinical finishing on display. But that 11 percent of angry voices? They're the ones who felt the sting of what could have been, especially given how well their attacking players—particularly the new man stepping up in Toney's absence—had been performing back-to-back. The narrative emerging wasn't heartbreak followed by fury; it was measured frustration wrapped around quiet respect for what the team delivered, even if the final result stung.
Neutral
68.5%
"@BrentfordFC That is special. Good finishing 🎯"
Admiration
20.4%
"@BrentfordFC That is special. Good finishing 🎯"
Anger
11.1%
"@BrentfordFC Good God you suck. To everyone no less"
Positive 28.7%
Neutral 45.5%
Negative 25.9%
Everton fans left their neutral corner after a draw that was anything but forgettable — George absolutely electrified the right flank with his pace and directness, and the Goodison Park faithful couldn't help themselves, shifting from cautious observation into genuine admiration. What you're seeing here isn't love or hysteria; it's something more measured but still powerful — experienced supporters recognising genuine quality when they see it, comparing him to elite attackers like Grealish and demanding he becomes a permanent fixture. The conversation cuts through the typical post-draw disappointment because one player dragged his teammates forward with such intensity that it made the result feel almost irrelevant.
Neutral
82.4%
"George looks phenomenal going forward, my god "
Admiration
11.8%
"George looks phenomenal going forward, my god "
Love
5.9%
"George playing like fast Graelish. I love him today. "
Positive 7.8%
Neutral 22.5%
Negative 69.6%
Here's the thing — Brentford fans weren't just disappointed, they were *frustrated* at a pattern they'd seen before, especially away from home where the Bees seemingly invite pressure in the closing stages. The annoyance cut deeper than a single dropped point because it wasn't about bad luck or a wonder strike — it was about tactical choices, subs made too late, and a coaching staff that fans felt was repeating the same mistakes matchday after matchday. Three points surrendered because of what looked like preventable control issues in the final third, and on a Saturday afternoon fixture too, made it feel less like heartbreak and more like self-inflicted damage.
Neutral
60.4%
"We’re so good away from home we’ve spotted them a goal as a head start."
Annoyance
22.6%
"Why do we never ever put fresh legs on in the final third of the game. I don't fucking get this coaching staff"
Anger
17.0%
"Why do we never ever put fresh legs on in the final third of the game. I don't fucking get this coaching staff"
Positive 23.5%
Neutral 48.1%
Negative 28.4%
Right, here's the thing — Everton fans are caught between frustration and cautious optimism after dropping another lead, but they're not blaming Moyes for it. Three-quarters of the conversation is dead neutral, almost clinical, because supporters are too busy dissecting his winger recruitment to get properly wound up about the result itself. And that's fascinating, because it suggests the fanbase has already decided the problem isn't the manager's eye for talent — it's whether he can assemble enough quality pieces around that talented attack to actually convert these dominant performances into wins.
Neutral
75.9%
"Moyes' choices of wingers in the market has been incredibly good tbf. George, Grealish and Dibling combined to Ndiaye is a nice set of wingers that ca"
Admiration
14.8%
"If Everton can keep Grealish, add a quality striker they could be a formidable force next season. Outstanding what David Moye's has achieved with thi"
Approval
9.3%
"If Everton can keep Grealish, add a quality striker they could be a formidable force next season. Outstanding what David Moye's has achieved with thi"
Positive 23.4%
Neutral 36.4%
Negative 40.3%
Right, so here's the thing — Brentford fans were predominantly calm about KDH's late equaliser, but beneath that surface sat genuine tension because half the fanbase thought it was redemptive brilliance whilst the other half reckoned Roy Keane had made a catastrophic error trying some ridiculous turn moments before. The anger wasn't really at the goal itself, it was at the individual mistakes that nearly cost them the point, and you can hear that frustration screaming through the posts where fans are torn between celebrating the fact they nicked a draw and absolutely seething that sloppy defending nearly handed Everton victory.
Neutral
72.5%
"Beautiful!
Way to keep at it, KDH!"
Anger
17.6%
"Yeah, in retrospect, that was just dogshit acting by Keano. Fuck my life. Beyond idiotic."
Admiration
9.8%
"Beautiful!
Way to keep at it, KDH!"
Positive 33.8%
Neutral 41.9%
Negative 24.3%
Here's the thing — Brentford fans walked away from that goalless draw fundamentally split on Beto, and it wasn't just the usual fractured fanbase nonsense. Most supporters stayed cautiously optimistic, buzzing about what he was trying to do in the final third, praising his link-up play and the creativity he brought to the pitch, but there was a vocal contingent absolutely fuming about his finishing and decision-making when it mattered. The draw itself papered over the cracks, because without clear goals or disasters to point at, fans had to make their own judgement call on whether he's the answer or just another flashy signing who won't get you over the line.
Neutral
85.0%
"Buzzing for Beto!"
Curiosity
8.3%
"Tarkowski for that first goal ??? ! ball watching 2 jogging not sprinting ..... appalling imo ! - otherwise great game , pleased that Beto is hittin"
Admiration
6.7%
"Love that from Beto"
Positive 15.9%
Neutral 36.5%
Negative 47.6%
Everton fans couldn't quite agree on what they'd watched in that midweek draw, but they were remarkably calm about it — and that tells you everything about where expectations sit at Goodison right now. Most of the chatter was clinical rather than furious: Gueye was getting stick for his passing range and touch, sure, but there was almost a resigned recognition that this is just who he is at this point in the season, while other players like Ndiaye were getting genuine praise for at least bringing some life to a stalemate. The real story? Fans have stopped expecting fireworks and started treating matches like a technical exercise to dissect, which means either they're turning a corner mentally, or they've simply accepted that this squad's ceiling isn't particularly high.
Neutral
84.8%
"Gana loves an assist this season"
Amusement
8.7%
"Ndiaye is such a fun player to watch "
Annoyance
6.5%
"Idrissa w these trash ass passes and touches "
Positive 24.6%
Neutral 34.4%
Negative 41.0%
Right, so here's the thing — Brentford and Everton fans got absolutely torn apart by a late heartbreak in Matchweek 32, and the reactions split the fanbase down the middle between raw fury and stunned disbelief. You've got 41 percent seething with anger, another 41 percent in that numb, neutral zone where you're too shocked to even process what just happened, and then 18 percent actually finding dark humour in the chaos because sometimes when football does that to you, all you can do is laugh or lose your mind. The emotional whiplash is real — one moment there's hope, the next it's "well fuck me," and that's what happens when a late goal decides everything at the death.
Anger
40.7%
"COME ON BABY"
Neutral
40.7%
"Omg thank GOD "
Amusement
18.5%
"haha true "
Positive 43.9%
Neutral 31.6%
Negative 24.6%
Here's the thing — Everton fans were absolutely torn in half after that 2-2 draw, and it tells you everything about where this club stands right now. Nearly half the fanbase remained neutral, some even sarcastically calling it a "win" because frankly, a point felt like a minor miracle, whilst a third genuinely admired the performance and the character shown in a comeback, particularly praising the impact of late substitutions. But underneath all that celebration was a gnawing disappointment — because everyone knew that in Everton's current points fight, a draw, no matter how well-earned or dramatic, might not be enough when the points deductions are breathing down their neck.
Neutral
47.4%
"Well done, Everton for winning this draw... Your prize is one on one with the POINT DEDUCTOR! "
Admiration
34.2%
"Great win for Everton! 2-2!!"
Disappointment
18.4%
"We didn’t deserve to drop points there. Everton only decent when behind. We easily turn to parking the bus when ahead which is a massive issue. Everyo"
Positive 7.4%
Neutral 37.0%
Negative 55.6%
Here's the thing: Everton fans were frustrated but not furious after that draw, and it all comes down to one man's substitution choices. Most supporters stayed relatively calm — nearly eight in ten posts were measured — but the ones who did let rip absolutely zeroed in on Moyes leaving changes too late, convinced the right attacking tweaks would've turned a 2-1 into a comfortable 3-1 victory. The real anger bubbled up from the sheer bewilderment of it all: having fresh legs on the bench but refusing to use them, watching opportunities slip away in real time, and knowing the manager had the tools to win it but chose not to pull the trigger.
Neutral
77.1%
"With the right subs, we win this 3-1. They're there for the taking.
The way Moyes is managing this looking like a 2-1 loss"
Annoyance
14.3%
"What dreadful take. Get outta here with this please."
Anger
8.6%
"What dreadful take. Get outta here with this please."
Positive 40.4%
Neutral 34.6%
Negative 25.0%
Here's the thing — when Igor Thiago started piling up the goals at Brentford, fans couldn't quite make up their minds whether to lose their minds or pump the brakes. Three-quarters of the conversation stayed measured and analytical, folks were genuinely curious about whether he could sustain this form and challenge for the Golden Boot, but there was this undercurrent of admiration mixed with something darker — some supporters were asking harder questions, pointing out that not every performance was pretty, that sometimes the finishes felt a bit fortunate. What you're seeing here is classic Premier League fan behaviour: the neutrality of people watching a legitimate threat emerge, the curiosity of wondering if it's real or a flash in the pan, and just enough admiration to acknowledge the numbers are genuinely impressive, even if the style doesn't always convince everyone in the room.
Neutral
74.3%
"@BrentfordFC @premierleague @CBF_Futebol 20 goals in a Premier League season for Brentford. The Premier League never runs out of stories and Igor Thia"
Curiosity
14.3%
"Every fuckin game we see him killing a poor bird standing on the top of the stadium. When will It stop ? "
Admiration
11.4%
"@BrentfordFC @premierleague @CBF_Futebol 20 goals in a Premier League season for Brentford. The Premier League never runs out of stories and Igor Thia"
Positive 15.7%
Neutral 27.5%
Negative 56.9%
Here's the thing — when Brentford took on Everton in Matchweek 32, the refereeing absolutely split the room, and the data tells you why: three-quarters of fans stayed measured about it, but a solid chunk simply couldn't wrap their heads around the consistency. You've got people praising the official for actually getting a decision right for once, whilst others are watching the exact same contact and asking how it's even a yellow card, let alone a foul. The real tension wasn't about emotion — it was about logic, about whether the referee was applying the rules the same way twice in the same match, and frankly, that's when football discourse gets properly interesting.
Neutral
75.0%
"That's incredible reffing to be fair"
Disapproval
13.9%
"I literally do not understand how that's even a foul let alone a yellow"
Curiosity
11.1%
"1:16 Why is holding an arm round someone's chest not a foul before the first Everton goal?"
Positive 32.0%
Neutral 44.0%
Negative 24.0%
Right, here is the thing — Brentford and Everton fans were caught in this bizarre fog of numbness after the whistle went, because that late drama left everything hanging in the balance, and nobody quite knew whether to celebrate or kick the cat. You had pockets of genuine elation from the winning side's supporters, sure, but the overwhelming response was this stunned, almost confused silence — like watching a magician pull off a trick so late in the show that you're still processing whether it actually happened or not. The curiosity was there, the joy flickered for some, but mostly what you're seeing is fans in a state of disbelief, caught between relief and bewilderment, because football at its most dramatic doesn't always feel real in the moment.
Neutral
86.0%
"COYB WHAT A WINNER AT THE END UTFT"
Curiosity
7.0%
"What the absolute bollocks?"
Joy
7.0%
"Ahhh, it’s good to be back"
Positive 33.3%
Neutral 46.7%
Negative 20.0%
Right, here's what actually happened: Brentford and Everton fans were locked in this bizarre emotional limbo after their 2-2 draw in gameweek 32, and you can hear it in every post they made. Most supporters held neutral ground—couldn't quite work out if they'd stolen a point or dropped two—but there's this weird undercurrent where both sets of fans are sarcastically celebrating a draw like it's a proper win, which tells you everything about where their seasons had gone. The curiosity was real too, because nobody could quite believe how it had unfolded, and that late drama left everyone scrambling to process what they'd just watched rather than reaching for genuine celebration.
Neutral
43.3%
"Massive 2-2 win!"
Approval
30.0%
"Ah yes, a brilliant 2-2 win!"
Curiosity
26.7%
"Incredible winner. how they won 2-2 we will never know"
Positive 47.6%
Neutral 26.2%
Negative 26.2%
Right, here's the thing — when Brentford and Everton cancelled each other out, nobody was upset about the result because both goalkeepers absolutely turned this into a masterclass in shot-stopping, and the fanbase couldn't help but show respect. Jordan Pickford and Mark Kelle were basically having a save-off, with Kelleher pulling off a double-save that had people across social media breaking down the technical brilliance of it, and even Liverpool supporters were forced to acknowledge the quality on display. The mood was overwhelmingly accepting of the stalemate because everyone recognised they'd just witnessed two world-class keeping performances — the kind where you can't blame either side for not winning because the goalies simply refused to be beaten.
Neutral
63.6%
"@Everton Gotta say both goalies made some great saves...I'm lose count now how many for @JPickford1 this season!! https://t.co/thVrL1fl1R"
Admiration
21.2%
"@Everton Gotta say both goalies made some great saves...I'm lose count now how many for @JPickford1 this season!! https://t.co/thVrL1fl1R"
Anger
15.2%
"Another fucking Kelleher save"
Positive 22.5%
Neutral 55.0%
Negative 22.5%
Right, so here's what happened: Brentford and Everton fans absolutely called out the clickbait when that video title screamed "WINNER" without delivering the goods, and what's fascinating is they weren't even angry about it — they were just bemused, more curious than anything, genuinely wondering why the creator needed to oversell what should've been a solid enough match recap on its own merits. The tiny sliver of admiration in there? That's for the fans who actually engaged properly with the content and wanted a genuine tactical breakdown, not some manufactured drama designed to farm clicks. The real tension here isn't about the result itself — it's about the erosion of trust between creators and audiences who just want to watch football talked about properly.
Neutral
45.2%
"what a winner that was"
Curiosity
35.5%
"What's your thoughts on the game?! Let us know! ⚡"
Admiration
19.4%
"what a winner that was"
Positive 28.2%
Neutral 64.1%
Negative 7.7%
Here is the thing: when Brentford and Everton finished level in matchday 32, fan reaction was almost entirely switched off—we're talking 86 percent neutral sentiment, which tells you this draw satisfied absolutely nobody. But in that slim sliver of approval, you've got the real story: Brentford supporters celebrating Kayode's brilliant work down the right and their side's comeback, whilst Everton fans were lifted by Thiago's clinical penalty conversion, yet neither set of supporters could muster genuine passion about the final scoreline because both clubs left points on the table they desperately needed.
Neutral
86.1%
"WE ARE DESERVEDLY BACK AHEAD!
It's superb from Kayode in the build-up to cut inside three from the right wing!
He goes for goal with the outside of "
Approval
11.1%
"ALWAYS BELIEVE IN! 🇧🇷
Pickford guesses the right way but Thiago's penalty is too good and finds the bottom corner!
WHAT A START! 🙌🙌 https://t.co/Q2"
Positive 24.3%
Neutral 51.4%
Negative 24.3%
Right, so here's what happened — Sky Sports got absolutely roasted by fans for calling a goal a "winning goal" in a match that finished two-two, and the response was brilliantly restrained British sarcasm rather than genuine outrage. Most fans stayed neutral about it, finding the blooper more funny than infuriating, with some even admiring Sky's commitment to the gaffe, whilst others used it as ammunition to praise the BBC's coverage as superior. The whole thing became this lovely reminder that even the biggest broadcasters slip up, and when they do, football fans are there with their quick wit to remind them why that matters.
Neutral
68.0%
"2:39 Brilliant Braziliant"
Admiration
20.0%
"Good one sky sports ahhahaha"
Curiosity
12.0%
"how drunk are the people writing the titles for your videos? 2-2 is a draw. you can't have a winning goal in a draw.
there was another the other day"
Positive 44.1%
Neutral 26.5%
Negative 29.4%
Here's the thing — halfway through this match, something genuinely unusual happened: the fanbase almost entirely agreed on something. Nearly half the supporters couldn't be bothered to pick a side either way, but the other half? They were actively impressed, with admiration and outright love splitting the passionate contingent right down the middle. The reason's simple: this referee came in and performed at a level that made fans sit up and notice, and in a sport where officials are usually invisible until they ruin your day, being *good* — being so clearly, competently good — was enough to earn genuine affection from a significant chunk of the crowd.
Neutral
47.8%
"This referee is great"
Admiration
26.1%
"This referee is great"
Love
26.1%
"Love this new ref blood"
Positive 72.7%
Neutral 12.1%
Negative 15.2%
Right, here's the thing — Brentford and Everton fans walked away genuinely buzzing after this one, and it wasn't just because their teams played well, it was because they got to witness proper football being played at proper intensity. More than half the conversation was pure admiration for what unfolded on the pitch, with fans across both camps recognising that a 2-2 draw was the only fair result, the sort of scoreline where both teams earned their stripes. What really sealed the deal, though, was the officiating — this referee actually let the game flow, made smart calls, and didn't insert himself into the narrative, which meant fans could sit back and enjoy two teams genuinely having a go at each other without the usual frustration boiling over.
Admiration
54.2%
"Really great game that could've gone either way imo. Also thought the referee was fantastic today."
Joy
25.0%
"Fun game. 2-2 is deserved. Some proper football at times, great intensity. Keleher is so good "
Approval
20.8%
"Really great game that could've gone either way imo. Also thought the referee was fantastic today."
Positive 42.9%
Neutral 32.1%
Negative 25.0%
Here's the thing: Pickford absolutely split the Everton fanbase down the middle in that Gameweek 32 performance, but the numbers tell a story that might surprise you. Nearly four out of five supporters stayed neutral, refusing to get drawn into the drama, while just over a quarter actively praised his first-half brilliance—but that final four percent? They were genuinely disappointed, and that's where the real tension lives. The goalkeeper's display was reckless enough to divide opinion, yet commanding enough that most fans couldn't argue he wasn't doing his job, which left everyone in that uncomfortable middle ground where nobody's quite sure whether to celebrate or criticise.
Neutral
78.3%
"@Everton Pickford have been brilliant for you. He’s the man of the match at first half."
Admiration
17.4%
"@Everton Pickford have been brilliant for you. He’s the man of the match at first half."
Disappointment
4.3%
"1:43 “it is very crowded in and around Jordan Pickford” don’t even get free kicks for multiple penetration these days smh"
Positive 21.4%
Neutral 10.7%
Negative 67.9%
Right, so here's what happened at the Gtech Community Stadium in Matchweek 32: Brentford and Everton served up an absolute emotional rollercoaster that left both sets of supporters absolutely drained, with anger and annoyance completely dominating the discourse at over a third each. The late drama — whether it was a controversial decision, a missed opportunity, or a sickening turn of events — had fans of both clubs tearing into each other and the officials, their frustration boiling over in real time as the match slipped away or took an unexpected turn. What really wound them up wasn't just the result itself, but the manner of it: the sense that something unfair had happened, that their team had been denied or mugged off right at the death, leaving a genuine sadness underneath all that fury that only comes when you've invested emotionally in something and watched it fall apart in the cruelest way possible.
Anger
35.7%
"fucking hell is this match getting annoying now"
Annoyance
35.7%
"fucking hell is this match getting annoying now"
Sadness
28.6%
"I feel bad for my phone; it did not deserve to be yeeted into the wall like that. "
Positive 12.0%
Neutral 28.0%
Negative 60.0%
Here's the thing — when that Brentford-Everton shot went in, the fanbase basically split down the middle on whether it was brilliance or dumb luck, and most supporters couldn't even be bothered getting heated about it. Nearly four in five fans stayed cool and measured, acknowledging it was a legitimate goal without losing their minds, but that one in six who got annoyed? They were convinced it was genuinely poor finishing that just happened to work out — arguing the shot was so badly executed that any respectable finish would've buried it easier. The overwhelming consensus wasn't outrage, though; it was almost resigned acceptance, like fans had seen enough weird moments this season to simply shrug and move on.
Neutral
78.9%
"Nah that goal is legit. "
Annoyance
15.8%
"Boy some ball that was"
Approval
5.3%
"Nah that goal is legit. "
Positive 41.7%
Neutral 54.2%
Negative 4.2%
Here's the thing — when Brentford and Everton shared the spoils in Matchweek 32, the fanbase response was almost eerily measured. While nearly four in five supporters took a neutral stance on the result, there was a genuine undercurrent of respect bubbling underneath, with Everton fans in particular fired up by their side's performance and showing real approval for how the Toffees had battled back. The draw wasn't a cause for celebration, but it wasn't disappointment either — it was recognition that both teams had produced something worth watching, and sometimes in football, that mutual respect matters just as much as the three points.
Neutral
81.8%
"1' We are under way in Brentford. UTT!!!!!! ✊
#BREEVE https://t.co/05wpLNx4Tp"
Admiration
9.1%
"Great response, up the fucking Toffees!!"
Approval
9.1%
"1' We are under way in Brentford. UTT!!!!!! ✊
#BREEVE https://t.co/05wpLNx4Tp"
Positive 30.4%
Neutral 39.1%
Negative 30.4%
Right, so here's the thing — Brentford fans watched their side get absolutely done by a Jake O'Brien masterclass in the box, and instead of losing their minds about a potential foul on Lewis Potter, nearly half the fanbase just... accepted it. The neutrality tells you everything: they saw a physical battle, not a crime, and actually admired how Everton's big centre-back simply used his frame better in that crucial moment. You've even got fans genuinely laughing it off, calling it "Big Jake versus Little Lewis" like it's a cartoon, which means the broader emotion wasn't anger or betrayal — it was respect for a well-executed move, mixed with that gallows humour you get when your team gets outmuscled fair and square.
Neutral
47.4%
"Big Jake vs Little Lewis is not a foul, thats a size advantage. Great team goal from back to front. "
Admiration
31.6%
"I thought that would come back for sure, great stuff from O'Brien"
Amusement
21.1%
"Lewis-Potter is such a bitch lol "
Positive 8.7%
Neutral 39.1%
Negative 52.2%
Right, so here's what went down with Tarkowski at Everton: fans absolutely lost it, and it wasn't just a bit of frustration—there was genuine anger mixed with bafflement at what he was doing out there. About three in ten supporters were fuming, calling him an idiot after a particularly shocking moment of defending, whilst the majority sat somewhere between disappointment and resigned acceptance that their centre-back had, once again, made a decision that made absolutely no sense. The thing that really got to them wasn't just a bad pass or a misplaced tackle—it felt careless, the kind of error that suggested he wasn't switched on when the stakes were highest.
Neutral
58.8%
"Cause Tarkowski is great in the air, Brathwaite is just as big and Mykolenko is taking the throw"
Anger
29.4%
"What is Tarky up to? He's an idiot at times. "
Surprise
11.8%
"omfg tarky!"
Positive 9.5%
Neutral 52.4%
Negative 38.1%
So here's the thing — when that ball hit the back of the net in the 90th minute, you had two completely different fan bases experiencing two completely different realities. Brentford fans were losing their minds because they'd snatched a point from nowhere, but Everton supporters? Absolutely gutted. They'd done the work, they'd earned it, and then watched it slip away in heartbreak — which is exactly why you're seeing that split between the neutral majority just accepting the chaos of football, and the angry minority absolutely livid at how the evening unfolded.
Neutral
82.4%
"INSANITY!!!!"
Anger
11.8%
"INSANITY!!!!"
Curiosity
5.9%
"You cheated"
Positive 40.0%
Neutral 45.0%
Negative 15.0%
Right, here's the thing about Brentford fans when that late Everton equaliser went in — they weren't actually devastated, they were taking the piss. Nearly two-thirds of the reaction was dead neutral, which tells you everything: they'd made peace with the result almost immediately, but then you've got thirty-one percent winding each other up with gallows humour, laughing at the sheer absurdity of how it happened. The real kicker is how fans were mocking the officiating and the narrative around it, more concerned with the comedy of the moment than the actual pain of dropping points, which is either the sign of a fanbase that's seen it all before or one that genuinely couldn't believe what they were watching.
Amusement
31.2%
"NEVER a foul🤣🤣 what on earth is he doing"
Positive 60.0%
Neutral 25.0%
Negative 15.0%
Here's the thing: when Brentford and Everton played out that thrilling draw in matchweek 32, the fanbase was absolutely flooded with admiration for what they'd just witnessed. Sixty percent of the conversation centred on genuine respect for the quality of football on display, with fans repeatedly praising the spectacle they'd been given, whilst the remaining third stayed measured and neutral about the result itself. What's crucial here is that approval was almost non-existent — this wasn't fans celebrating their team getting what they wanted, it was pure appreciation for a match that delivered entertainment and tactical intrigue from start to finish.
Admiration
60.0%
"What a great start!"
Neutral
33.3%
"What a great start!"
Approval
6.7%
"What a great start!"
Positive 35.0%
Neutral 30.0%
Negative 35.0%
Here's the thing: heading into Matchweek 32, both sets of supporters are cautiously daring to believe they can actually take three points here, and that optimism — sitting at 56 percent of the conversation — is absolutely crackling through the fan forums. The language is almost defiant in its simplicity: "We can defo win this one," repeated like a mantra, because both clubs smell vulnerability, and after weeks of struggle, that flicker of hope is intoxicating. But underneath that optimism sits a very real anxiety — nearly a third of the conversation is pure neutral fence-sitting, with 12 percent still haunted by previous disappointments — because these aren't teams brimming with confidence; these are clubs desperately grasping at the possibility of a result that could genuinely shift their trajectory.
Optimism
56.2%
"We can win this game, and furthermore, we might win this game"
Neutral
31.2%
"We can defo win this one "
Sadness
12.5%
"I have a bad feeling, but always hoping for the best! Come on, show some buzz guys! "
Positive 20.0%
Neutral 65.0%
Negative 15.0%
Right, so here's the thing — Everton fans absolutely lost it when that late equaliser went in, but here's what's interesting: the overwhelming majority of the reaction was pure, unadulterated relief rather than genuine joy, which tells you everything about where this club is right now. Yes, there were the obligatory "we never quit" rallying cries and desperate pleas to push for a winner, but beneath all that noise, you're detecting a fanbase clinging to any morsel of hope because draws like this feel like victories when you're fighting relegation. The admission of that 20 per cent anger seeping through the celebrations? That's the real story — fans furious it took a last-gasp goal just to scrape a point they arguably shouldn't have needed.
Neutral
75.0%
"GET IN!!!!!! WE NEVER QUIT!"
Anger
20.0%
"GET IN!!!!!! WE NEVER QUIT!"
Admiration
5.0%
"Mustache and splashy get in "
Positive 78.9%
Neutral 15.8%
Negative 5.3%
Right, so here's what happened: a late goal — and it looks like O'Brien was the man — absolutely sent one set of supporters into absolute euphoria, with nearly six in ten fans expressing pure admiration for the quality of the strike itself. The thing is, this wasn't just celebration, it was gratitude mixed in there too, because when you're getting that kind of dramatic, match-deciding moment, you don't just appreciate the goal, you're relieved and thankful it came through for your side. The language in those posts tells you everything — that raw, unfiltered excitement, the swearing, the capitals — this was the kind of late drama that flips an entire match on its head and leaves one group of supporters absolutely buzzing whilst the other's left wondering what just happened.
Admiration
58.3%
"LFG! Great goal!!!"
Approval
25.0%
"LFG! Great goal!!!"
Gratitude
16.7%
"Damn that was a good goal"
Brentford supporters are divided on whether Lewis Potter was impeded by Everton defender O'Brien in the build-up to Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's dramatic 90+1' equaliser, with some arguing the midfielder was physically outmatched and fouled, whilst others contend Potter theatrically went looking for a penalty that wasn't there. The broader debate reflects frustration over Premier League refereeing inconsistency rather than any unified anger at the outcome itself.
Just The Facts, Mate
This camp is dissecting exactly what happened on the pitch — the mechanics of the contact, Potter's positioning, O'Brien's arm — without committing to whether it was a foul or a masterclass.
neutral
potter
"O'Brien does wrap an arm around him and hold him back enough that KLP decides falling over for the call is his only option, but he doesn't get the call. It's bullshit, but it's the"
"We should buy potter this summer. What a player "
The Ref Got Robbed
These fans are genuinely divided on whether the official missed a clear handball or got played by a striker who went down too easily, and they cannot let it go.
"How did O'brien get away with that 😭"
"Lewis Potter master class just clear the fucking ball "
Brilliant Dark Arts Football
Brentford supporters celebrating that O'Brien got away with exactly what they wanted him to do — tight defending on the edge of legality that secured a massive goal.
admiration
amusement
potter
"I thought that would come back for sure, great stuff from O'Brien"
"Big Jake vs Little Lewis is not a foul, thats a size advantage. Great team goal from back to front. "
Potter's A Cheat And We Know It
Everton-leaning or neutral viewers convinced that Potter threw himself into contact deliberately to con the referee, and they're furious the deception worked.
potter
"Lewis-Potter is such a bitch lol "
"Weak little bitch pushing himself into O’Brien"
The Win Is All That Matters Now
Fans cycling between anger at the decision and resignation that whatever happened in that moment, Brentford got the three points and that's the only stat that counts.
"How did O'brien get away with that 😭"
"Lewis Potter master class just clear the fucking ball "
Supporters from both sides are cautiously optimistic about snatching a win despite the match's tight nature, with fans oscillating between hope and dread as they anticipate a dramatic finish. The discussion captures that classic football tension where belief clashes with the paranoia that VAR or a late heartbreak could destroy their dreams.
We're Actually Going To Do This
These fans believe their side can genuinely win this match and aren't afraid to say it out loud, throwing caution to the wind with defiant optimism.
optimism
win
game
"We can win this game, and furthermore, we might win this game"
"We can defo win this one "
Hope Is A Cruel Betrayer
These supporters are battle-hardened cynics who've seen this film before—they know the pain is coming, and they're bracing themselves for heartbreak wrapped in false promise.
sadness
win
game
"These are gonna be an absolute pain in the ass to break down at home"
"Its the hope that kills ya lads..."
The Madness Might Just Happen
These fans are caught in purgatory between belief and disbelief, intellectually dismissing their chances whilst simultaneously allowing themselves the dangerous luxury of dreaming if—just if—something miraculous unfolds.
neutral
win
game
"It’s so implausible and unlikely. But if it happens omg. "
"I really should have learned by now not to allow myself to hope "
Both sets of supporters are left in bits after a frantic 2-2 draw that saw Everton claw back from 2-1 down with a dramatic 90+1' equaliser, with fans acknowledging the match delivered theatrical football even if the result leaves neither side satisfied. The emotional intensity is raw across the discussion — hearts racing, phones being thrown — as supporters process what amounts to a rollercoaster of a fixture that neither team particularly controlled.
Absolutely Fuming at the Chaos
These fans have hit their emotional limit—they're furious at the late drama, exhausted by the rollercoaster, and genuinely questioning whether their nerves can take another match like this.
anger
annoyance
sadness
"fucking hell is this match getting annoying now"
"I feel bad for my phone; it did not deserve to be yeeted into the wall like that. "
This is Our Moment Now
These believers see the late twist as destiny rewarding them, convinced their team deserves exactly what just happened and that timing and fortune are finally breaking their way.
"Perfect timing for us as always "
"What we deserve! What a GAME!"
Relief Has Set In
These pragmatists have moved past the drama and are simply processing what happened as fair, justified, and cathartic—they're able to step back and acknowledge the result makes sense.
"Fully deserved"
"Feels much better now"
Brentford supporters are processing a devastating 2-2 draw against Everton, with a last-minute leveller in the 91st minute leaving them furious about dropped points in their pursuit of European qualification. The fanbase is split between frustration at the result itself and broader debate about realistic ambitions—with some acknowledging that a top-seven finish and Europa League football represents the club's genuine ceiling rather than a Champions League push.
The Collapse Condemners
Furious that Brentford threw away a dominant second-half performance by sitting deep and gifting Everton an undeserved equaliser through shambolic defensive organisation.
anger
"@BrentfordFC Good God you suck. To everyone no less"
"@BrentfordFC You stupid cunts spent 40+ minutes attacking in the 2nd half only to sit back and concede an equalizer..I hope this loss keeps you away from European football next yea"
The Captain's Fall Guys
Convinced that Brentford's leadership vacuum — specifically their captain's catastrophic decision-making — cost them the three points when victory was theirs to lose.
neutral
"@BrentfordFC Get rid of this pathetic excuse for a ‘captain’. Incredibly brain dead."
"@BrentfordFC Everton didn’t deserve shit from that, but of course our shitty disgrace of a captain has no idea how to command our team."
The Silver Linings Believers
Celebrating the positives in Brentford's attacking display and backing their new striker's quality, refusing to let one dropped point overshadow genuine progress.
admiration
"@BrentfordFC That is special. Good finishing 🎯"
"@BrentfordFC @premierleague @CBF_Futebol a great replacement for ivan toney, he has been scoring back to back for the team, that’s incredible"
The System's Victims
Caught between disappointment at the draw and suspicion that external forces — dodgy refereeing, the luck of the draw — conspired against Brentford when they deserved better.
"Referee knew Brentford wouldn't win so he gave them the Arsenal treatment."
"Was at the game as a Brentford fan. So disappointed to see them lose 2-2"
Brentford and Everton supporters were split on the officiating during their goalless first half, with some praising the referee's early decision-making whilst others grew frustrated with his management of the match after the break. The discussion touched on inconsistency in his control, with one fan suggesting institutional bias against Everton, though others noted appreciation for his willingness to use common sense rather than blindly following VAR protocol.
The Fresh Blood Believers
This group reckons the referee showed quality decision-making and are genuinely impressed by a new official bringing proper standards to the Premier League.
admiration
love
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"This referee is great"
"Love this new ref blood"
The Conspiracy Theorists
Convinced the league has orchestrated a half-time intervention to silence one team's challenge, turning a dodgy call into proof of institutional bias against their club.
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"Fucking Sepp. Ruined a good game."
"Wow ref actually falling apart. "
The Sceptical Observers
These fans aren't buying the official explanation — they reckon the Premier League's hand is all over this performance, and the ref's second-half collapse is no accident.
neutral
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"The PL have had a word with the ref at half time. Can't have him making the rest look bad"
"Officiating making it clear league don’t want us near so this hurts more because it just gets silenced and brushed aside haha "
Fans across both sides and neutrals are locked in debate over a controversial double save that kept the match alive in the dying moments, with particular praise directed at the shot-stopper's crucial intervention. The neutral sentiment reflects the divisive nature of the moment—some hailing it as world-class, others questioning whether it should have been a different outcome entirely.
Goalkeeping Masterclass Merchants
This lot genuinely celebrated the quality on display, recognising that both Pickford and Kelleher produced genuinely elite shot-stopping that made for brilliant football entertainment regardless of the result.
admiration
Jordan Pickford
Mark Travers
"@Everton Gotta say both goalies made some great saves...I'm lose count now how many for @JPickford1 this season!! https://t.co/thVrL1fl1R"
"As an ex keeper, I have to give huge huge credit to Kell that double save was absolutely awesome and as a Liverpool fan, I wish we still had him he is an absolutely amazing keeper "
Sick of Keeper Heroics
These fans are absolutely seething because they're convinced their team gets cursed by opposition goalkeepers having the performances of their lives, and they're not wrong to notice the pattern.
anger
Jordan Pickford
Mark Travers
"I am so tired of opposing keepers having career games against us."
"Another fucking Kelleher save"
Unlucky But Realistic
This middle ground acknowledges that Kelleher played brilliantly but frames it as pure misfortune rather than their own side's failures, accepting sometimes the keeper just has that day and there's nothing more to do about it.
neutral
Jordan Pickford
Mark Travers
"Kelleher turning into prime casillas against us, I mean what more can we do there
Just unlucky"
"That redshite goalie with leccy legs there"
Fans are celebrating an entertaining, back-and-forth encounter that saw Igor Thiago's double cancelled out by Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's dramatic 90+1' leveller, with supporters praising the quality of play despite the stalemate result. The discussion focuses on individual moments of skill—headers, crosses, and finishing—rather than dwelling on dropped points, suggesting both sets of supporters found redemption in the spectacle itself.
The Bright Start Brigade
These fans are riding high on early optimism, convinced their side has come out swinging and set the tone they needed for the match.
admiration
approval
"What a great start!"
"Awesome name "
The Cautious Pragmatists
They're keeping emotions in check, clocking that things haven't gone to plan but staying level-headed rather than losing their minds over opening moments.
neutral
"Less than ideal start"
"Well thats not the start I wanted "
The Gutted and Furious
These supporters are absolutely seething at what just happened, venting raw anger because the start has already contradicted everything they were hoping for from this fixture.
"What a fucking start...."
"Well thats not the start I wanted "
Everton supporters are split on Jordan Pickford's performance in the 2-2 draw against Brentford, with some criticising his overly aggressive approach that led to an early penalty, whilst others argue he made crucial saves to keep his side in the match. The broader frustration centres on wasted chances and defensive errors that cost Everton what should have been a comfortable win.
Pickford's Having A Masterclass
These fans are convinced the keeper was absolutely brilliant in the first half and deserves genuine praise for commanding his box.
admiration
Pickford
Séamus Coleman
"@Everton Pickford have been brilliant for you. He’s the man of the match at first half."
"Yeah nice one Pickford "
Just Reporting The Chaos
This camp is simply documenting what happened on the pitch—the crowded moments, the reckless challenges—without taking a stance on whether it was right or wrong.
neutral
Pickford
Séamus Coleman
"1:43 “it is very crowded in and around Jordan Pickford” don’t even get free kicks for multiple penetration these days smh"
"Jordan Pickford loves lunging out and injuring players eh? "
Enough Is Enough, Pickford
Fed up supporters are demanding he change his aggressive approach because his constant lunging and risky behaviour is either injuring opponents or costing Everton matches.
disappointment
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
James Tarkowski
"Pickford, please stop"
"Eh not much in that, Pickford had it covered.
What a fuckin joke tho. Horrible pass by Gana gueye, horrible call on the foul to give the free kick.
Just a shite series of eve"
He Did His Job, Move On
Pragmatic fans arguing Pickford made the saves he needed to make and held the line well enough to deserve credit for a solid performance despite the drama.
"1:43 “it is very crowded in and around Jordan Pickford” don’t even get free kicks for multiple penetration these days smh"
"Created plenty of chances, Kelleher made plenty of saves and Pickford did the same to be fair. Take that point"
Everton supporters are sarcastically joking that their side secured a "victory" after the dramatic 2-2 draw at Brentford, with the humour clearly aimed at their club's ongoing points deduction saga and the absurdity of celebrating a draw in such terms. The neutral sentiment reflects genuine confusion and dark comedy about the result itself, mixed with broader frustration about Everton's disciplinary situation off the pitch.
The Delusional Celebration Brigade
These fans are genuinely calling a 2-2 draw a "win" because they're so starved of success that holding their own against a top side feels like a trophy lift.
admiration
mins
toffees
"Great win for Everton! 2-2!!"
"what a win. Well done everton"
The Pragmatic Point-Takers
This lot see the draw as damage limitation — could've been worse, could've been better, and they're rationally weighing what Everton actually deserved against the reality of dropping points in a crucial match.
neutral
mins
toffees
"Annoying that we walked over Chelsea 3-0 and then had a 3 week break. Draw was probably a fair result end of the day, shame as 3 points would have been massive. Guess we'll just ha"
"@Everton Feels like 2 points dropped in such a massive game for us. BUT could have been so much worse. Disappointing but hopefully a wake up call for improvements needed to solidif"
The Rightfully Aggrieved
They're fuming because Everton bottled it from a winning position, reverting to defensive cowardice the moment they went ahead, and they're furious at the wasted opportunity against a beatable opponent.
disappointment
mins
toffees
"@Everton Frustrating to be honest. Just glad we got something. Now into these horrible cunts next week."
"We didn’t deserve to drop points there. Everton only decent when behind. We easily turn to parking the bus when ahead which is a massive issue. Everyone was good but lack of calm c"
The Cynical Observers
These fans are taking the piss, cracking jokes about the chaotic entertainment value of the match and sarcastically questioning whether a draw really counts as Everton doing anything right at all.
"Football was the real winner here, unless you count Everton"
"Everton well deserved the win"
Everton supporters are celebrating Kiernan Dewsbury Hall's dramatic 90+1' goal that rescued a 2-2 draw against Brentford, though many are frustrated that he and fellow forward Ndiaye wasted earlier one-on-one chances that could've won the match. The conversation reveals classic football fan contradiction — genuine appreciation for KDH's crucial intervention mixed with lingering annoyance at his decision-making in open play.
Defensive Collapse Merchants
These fans are absolutely furious because they've clocked what actually cost Brentford the points — not the drama of KDH's moment, but the catastrophic defending and individual mistakes that invited it in the first place.
anger
kdh
"Yeah, in retrospect, that was just dogshit acting by Keano. Fuck my life. Beyond idiotic."
"Ndiaye and KDH have been awful today. Can't have both of them being shit in such an important match, goodbye Europe"
The Play-By-Play Exasperated
They're caught in the moment, dissecting the madness in real time and genuinely baffled at the tactical naivety and poor decision-making that handed their rivals a lifeline.
neutral
kdh
"Just knew when KDH decided to have a brain fade that we were going to be punished. Been so defensively poor."
"Why the fuck would you try some absurd turn there??"
The Redemption Believers
These fans are living for the script — they don't care about the errors or the chaos because KDH delivered when it mattered most, and that moment of salvation is everything.
admiration
kdh
"Beautiful!
Way to keep at it, KDH!"
"KDH REDEEMED AAAAAAHHHHHOHHHHHHHHHH LORD"
Fans are locked in debate over Igor Thiago's elite finishing and his challenge for the Premier League Golden Boot, whilst simultaneously criticising teammate Schade's creative inconsistency and lack of end product. The discussion reveals tension between recognising Thiago's clinical excellence as a striker and frustration at the supply line failing to maximise his goal-scoring potential.
Golden Boy Status Confirmed
These fans are revelling in a genuinely elite season, celebrating Igor Thiago's record-breaking output at Brentford as proof he belongs in the conversation with the Premier League's finest strikers.
admiration
igor
points
"@BrentfordFC @premierleague @CBF_Futebol 20 goals in a Premier League season for Brentford. The Premier League never runs out of stories and Igor Thiago is writing a brilliant one"
"This guy is having a stormer of a season! 21 for the campaign!"
Just Here For The Goals
This camp is simply documenting the moment as it happens—no agenda, no analysis, just pure reactive posting every time another one hits the back of the net.
neutral
igor
points
"Fucking hell he just nicked that off Thiago"
"For the 20th time this season 🇧🇷❤️🔥 https://t.co/MxcdaO025a"
System's Broken, Players Are Culprits
These fans are convinced that individual players are sabotaging the team's chances, turning each missed opportunity into evidence of incompetence rather than acknowledging the wider tactical picture.
igor
points
"@BrentfordFC Why the fuck is schade still playing hes the worst player ive ever seen not even exaggerating"
"Every fuckin game we see him killing a poor bird standing on the top of the stadium. When will It stop ? "
Fans across 169 posts reacted to a thrilling 2-2 finish, with Igor Thiago scoring twice for Brentford before Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall snatched a last-gasp equaliser for Everton in injury time. The conversation stayed largely neutral, touching on striker form, pressing tactics, and the sheer drama of a match that swung between the sides right until the final whistle.
Absolute Meltdown Mode
These fans are venting raw, unfiltered frustration at what they've just witnessed — pure emotional release with zero filter or analysis.
neutral
game
"@Everton Get fucked you clowns"
"@Everton WTF 🤬"
We'll Take The Point
This lot are choosing optimism, backing their team's fighting spirit and seeing a dramatic draw as a positive step forward in the race.
admiration
amusement
game
"@Everton Great start nice one"
"@Everton Brilliant . We keep in the hunt ."
The Detached Observers
These are the pragmatists and content-miners who are either cracking dry jokes about the scoreline or simply promoting highlights without emotional investment.
"@beyondthebeatenpath8727 I'm more a fan of an 8 goal thriller 0-0."
"You can watch highlights from EVERY Premier League game this season right here
bit.ly/PLHighlights2526"
This Team Isn't Good Enough
Proper furious fans who reckon the performance proves Everton aren't European-standard material and deserve better — or deserve to be called out for mediocrity.
game
"@Everton Don’t deserve Europe we are pathetic"
"@Everton Didn't even have a moment to sit my arse down fucking hell guys"
Fifty posts capture the raw aftermath of a chaotic 2-2 draw, with fans still processing Dewsbury-Hall's stoppage-time equaliser and unable to settle on whether to celebrate or despair. The neutral sentiment reflects genuine confusion—some are joking about parade cancellations and April Fools' wind-ups, others are left repeating "April 1st??" as if questioning whether the whole thing actually happened.
The Resignation Brigade
These fans have seen it all before — they're already mentally preparing for the worst because late drama at this stage of the season always ends badly for their side.
neutral
"Oh well. One of those days incoming"
"Disasterclass"
The Belief Vindicated Crew
They're absolutely buzzing because their team just delivered exactly when it mattered most, and this is the moment they point to all season when asked why they never gave up.
joy
"Ahhh, it’s good to be back"
"COYB WHAT A WINNER AT THE END UTFT"
The Robbed and Raging Squad
They're convinced a catastrophic injustice has just unfolded — whether it's a decision, a collapse, or plain bad luck — and they're furious because their team got absolutely shafted when it counted.
"You shitting me.....FFS blues "
"What the absolute bollocks?"
Supporters from both sides celebrated a thrilling 2-2 encounter as a fair and entertaining match between evenly matched teams, with fans appreciating the directness and intensity of football on display despite the late drama. The positivity stems from the quality of the spectacle itself rather than the result, with fans relieved to see engaging, competitive football after what some alluded to as a leaner period.
Both Teams Left Everything Out There
These fans are just buzzing off the football itself — two sides going for it, chances flying in, and a fair result that nobody can complain about because the football was absolutely worth the price of admission.
admiration
joy
approval
"Really great game that could've gone either way imo. Also thought the referee was fantastic today."
"All in all this was a good match to watch, both teams have been impressive this campaign "
The Fair Draw Debate
This camp enjoyed the spectacle but can't quite shake the nagging feeling that one team — usually theirs — probably deserved more, yet they're willing to accept a draw as reasonable given how evenly matched the battle was.
"I fucking loved that game. 2 teams who were fairly direct, having a good go, lots of chances, fair result.
Felt like having proper football back "
"Great game tbh. Stupid opener but then played well, either team could've won so a draw is probably fair? George looked very positive."
We Should've Won This
These fans are frustrated because the underlying numbers tell the story: their team created significantly better chances and dominated the expected goals battle, making a draw feel like two points dropped rather than one gained.
"This match by no means deserved to yield one point. xG 2.37 to 1.51. Strip out the penalty it's only 1.58 to 1.51, but that penalty was 100% deserved and denied a probable 0.5 xG s"
"The type of match we didn’t get the chance to enjoy for a good number of years there. "
Result Stings But The Football Delivered
This group is processing the emotional whiplash of a thrilling match that gave them everything tactically and entertainmentwise, but the early penalty or a missed opportunity means they're left anxious rather than satisfied.
"Good game for a neutral this. I'm fucking shitting myself though."
"Makes that penalty at the beginning hurt more, but still, great game "
Everton fans and neutrals engaged in surprisingly measured debate about striker Beto's performance during what the match data reveals was actually a dramatic 2-2 draw, with supporters split between backing him as the club's best forward option and questioning whether he should remain a permanent starter. The discussion centred on his finishing quality, physical presence, and potential January transfer interest from rival clubs, rather than focusing on the chaotic final scoreline or individual defensive errors.
The Honest Auditors
These fans see Beto's invisible stretches of play as an actual problem that needs solving, not excusing — they're the ones keeping score on his involvement when it matters most.
neutral
Beto
Dwight McNeil
"Get Beto off. He's not even in this game. Well done for the goal, but the man honestly doesn't exist on the pitch for 99% of most games."
"Periods like this show how poor Beto is. We need him to hold the ball up and release the pressure but it's like pin ball. Outmuscled any time it's near him and it comes straight ba"
The Moment Merchants
They're locked in on what Beto does right and riding that wave, unwilling to let the broader performance narrative spoil the celebration of individual brilliance.
admiration
Beto
Dwight McNeil
"Buzzing for Beto!"
"Love that from Beto"
The Rage Brigade
These are the fans who've seen enough of Beto getting physically bullied week after week and are at boiling point — they're not critiquing his technique, they're questioning his ability to survive in this league.
Beto
Dwight McNeil
"Beto is fucking rubbish"
"Beto gets manhandled every fucking match"
Everton supporters spent the match critiquing David Moyes's defensive setup and individual performances, particularly questioning why wingers were being asked to defend deep and why midfielder Idrissa Gueye was roaming too far forward rather than sitting deep to shield the back line. The conversation centred less on match events and more on systemic problems with how the team was structured, suggesting frustration with the tactical approach rather than the 0-0 result itself.
Gana's Technical Decline Exposed
Nearly half the fanbase is fuming at Idrissa Gueye's sloppy passing and positioning, convinced his limitations in possession are actively hurting Everton's attacking threat.
annoyance
Dwight McNeil
Beto
Iliman Ndiaye
"Gana is one of the worst strikers outside of the box I’ve ever seen."
"Idrissa w these trash ass passes and touches "
The Gueye Defensive Cult
More than a third of supporters are riding the wave of his slide tackles and work rate, celebrating what they see as pure defensive commitment regardless of the final result.
neutral
Dwight McNeil
Beto
"I'm gay for Gueye's slide tackles 🏳️🌈"
"There's the Gueye we know and love"
Injury Chaos Over Tactics
Just under a quarter are more concerned with Everton's mounting injury crisis and questionable defensive setup than any individual performance, viewing the stalemate as inevitable given the depleted squad.
"Literally no shot yarmo is injured"
"I don't even care that he got skinned. I don't want my wingers back making tackles in the defensive 3rd.
Semenyo wasn't tracking back and making loads of tackles at Bournemouth. "
Pure Entertainment Value
A smaller contingent are just enjoying the spectacle — impressed by Ndiaye's flair and Gana's fitness at 36, choosing entertainment over tactical analysis or blame.
amusement
Dwight McNeil
Beto
"Ndiaye is such a fun player to watch "
"It’s amazing to me that at 36 Gana can still get about the pitch the way he does. "
Everton supporters are divided on David Moyes's handling of George (likely a loan signing or fringe player), with many arguing he should earn regular starting opportunities after impressing in a cameo during the 2-2 draw with Brentford, whilst others defend the manager's preference for defensive work rate in his team selection.
We're Watching It Collapse
These fans are documenting Everton's passive, defensive shape in real time — frustrated observers cataloguing exactly where the tactics are failing, particularly McNeil's inability to function in transition.
neutral
Dwight McNeil
Beto
"God we are so passive. Everyone collapsing back too deep. And McNeill... they are literally walking past him. If he can't defend we might as well bring on one of the other wingers "
"Time for another Barry ass goal"
Finally, A Genuine Talent
George's attacking brilliance is undeniable to this camp, who see a player operating at a completely different level and are simply revelling in witnessing genuine quality on the pitch.
admiration
love
Dwight McNeil
Beto
"George looks phenomenal going forward, my god "
"George playing like fast Graelish. I love him today. "
Moyes Is Holding Us Back
These supporters believe the manager is criminally underutilising a transformative player and are demanding answers for why George isn't getting consistent minutes to influence matches.
"Why the hell Moyes won't give George more game time is beyond me!"
"The Moose is loose!!!
"
This Kid Is Being Wasted
Angry fans are channelling frustration at the gap between George's obvious ability and his limited opportunities, viewing it as a damning indictment of the club's decision-making and McNeil's clear inadequacy.
Dwight McNeil
Beto
"McNeil might be the worst counterattacking option in the league "
"Bro how does George not get more minutes. Kids nasty "
Fans are bewildered and frustrated after the match ended 2-2, with numerous supporters confused about whether either side actually secured a win, whilst others sarcastically claim victory despite the result being a draw. The late Dewsbury-Hall equaliser has left both sets of supporters grappling with the reality that neither team took three points despite the thrilling nature of the contest.
Pragmatists Accepting Reality
These fans recognise a point isn't ideal but understand that a 2-2 draw represents a fair outcome given how the match unfolded, even if it stings to drop two points at home.
neutral
2-2
"Heartbreaking to lose the 3 points, but a fair result at the end of the day"
"As if they don’t check what they’ve written as the headline before posting. It was 2-2. No winner here. Doofus"
Delusional Optimists Spinning Gold
This camp refuses to accept the reality of a draw, actively rebranding the 2-2 result as a "win" to maintain belief in their team's trajectory and performance.
approval
2-2
"Ah yes, a brilliant 2-2 win!"
"Massive 2-2 win!"
Gutted at Throwing It Away
These supporters are furious because they see a late equaliser as a catastrophic missed opportunity — they had the match won and the team bottled it when it mattered most.
2-2
"Man losing 2-2 at home is such a bad feeling"
"That is a really tough pill to swallow. I know it’s a point and 7th retained, but what a waste there at the end."
Both sets of supporters are venting raw frustration over a dramatic 2-2 draw that saw Everton surrender a winning position with a last-gasp equaliser in stoppage time. The discussion captures the gut-wrenching emotion of throwing away three points in the final moments of the match.
Robbed at the Death
Fans absolutely seething that a late incident cost their team the result, convinced they've been done dirty by circumstances beyond their control.
anger
"Well fuck me "
"Fucking shit"
Just Taking It In Stride
The pragmatists rolling with the punches, finding dark humour in the chaos rather than letting emotion consume them in the moment.
neutral
"Ah okay haha"
"haha true "
Dodged a Bullet Late On
The winners riding high on relief and elation, celebrating that last-gasp drama went their way when it could've gone either direction.
amusement
"Omg thank GOD "
"COME ON BABY"
Fans have torn into Sky Sports for bizarrely labelling Dewsbury-Hall's 91st-minute equaliser as a "winning goal" when the match finished 2-2, with supporters calling out sloppy editorial standards and demanding basic proofreading. The gaffe has sparked wider frustration about the broadcaster's quality control, with some sarcastically praising the clickbait strategy whilst others question why basic headline-checking appears beyond the organisation's capabilities.
The Bemused Eye-Rollers
These fans are just clocking the absolute chaos of Sky calling a 2-2 draw a winning goal and can't help but laugh at the sheer incompetence on display.
neutral
game
"91st minute winner though it finished 2-2
That makes so much sense 😂"
"Bloody hell sky"
Appreciating The Unintentional Comedy
This lot genuinely rates the blunder as peak entertainment—they're here for the funny side and treating Sky's disaster like premium content gold.
admiration
game
"Good one sky sports ahhahaha"
"2:39 Brilliant Braziliant"
Demanding Heads Roll For This
They're absolutely seething that Sky Sports can't get basic facts straight in their own headlines and descriptions, and they reckon whoever wrote this deserves the sack.
game
"What cretin is given a job writing 💩💩💩💩, 91st minute winner sack the moron."
"first of all in the title it says 91st winner, not just that but in the description it says 1-1 draw, this is absolutely disgraceful from skysports"
Fans are locked in heated debate over the referee's inconsistent application of fouls during the 2-2 draw, with particular fury directed at a disputed yellow card that some view as a clear penalty whilst others insist was never a foul at all. The discussion reveals frustration that smaller clubs feel they receive less favourable refereeing decisions compared to the traditional big six sides.
The Robbery Brigade
These fans genuinely believe the referee has got it catastrophically wrong—a non-foul has been punished, and the match has been decided by incompetence rather than football.
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"What a joke of a call. Not even a foul, gets a yellow and they almost score "
"I literally do not understand how that's even a foul let alone a yellow"
The Reasonable Debaters
This camp acknowledges the controversy but refuses to pick a side, weighing up whether the official made a defensible call based on the laws of the game.
neutral
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"Never a foul. Good job ref "
"Really good call from the official tbh, so often the defenders get that call for nothing"
The Rule-Mongers
These fans aren't arguing the decision itself, but rather interrogating whether the rulebook has been applied consistently across both teams in similar situations.
"1:16 Why is holding an arm round someone's chest not a foul before the first Everton goal?"
"Double jeapordy rule. It's only a red if the studs to the ankle would warrant a red on its own."
The Ref's Defenders
A smaller but vocal group convinced the official made a genuinely excellent decision and that critics are either biased or simply misunderstanding what constitutes a legitimate foul.
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
James Tarkowski
"That's incredible reffing to be fair"
"Let’s go!!! Fuck that’s good from the ref; defender is absolutely begging for a foul there"
Fans are furious that Everton couldn't hold a 2-1 lead in a 2-2 draw with Brentford, with particular criticism aimed at defensive decisions and substitution choices in the final stages. However, there's also optimism about David Moyes' summer recruitment strategy and the squad's potential if they can add a quality striker to challenge next season.
The Clinical Match Observers
These fans are documenting what's actually happening on the pitch — defensive lapses, individual errors, tactical breakdowns — without emotional baggage, because the facts speak loudest.
neutral
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"He’s deadly going forward and a liability defensively. That second brentford goal started with him getting beat way too easily "
"Tyrique just stole that man's soul, yeesh "
Lead-Blowing Rage Machine
Everton's chronic inability to protect advantages has wound these supporters so tight that they're venting pure frustration at the club's transfer strategy and Moyes' in-game management.
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"The summer transfers were utter dogshit. Barry showing nothing. Dibling doesn't even get minutes. Rohl the same. £90m fucking wasted"
"Useless. Can NEVER EVER hold a lead."
The Summer Rebuild Architects
These fans are zooming out from the immediate devastation to analyse whether Moyes has actually built the attacking pieces needed to win next season — and whether he can keep his best talent.
"If Everton can keep Grealish, add a quality striker they could be a formidable force next season. Outstanding what David Moye's has achieved with this team since his return. Much "
"Useless. Can NEVER EVER hold a lead."
Moyes' Market Believers
They're celebrating the manager's winger recruitment as a genuine success, convinced that if Everton can retain their creative talents and add a striker, they've got something special brewing.
admiration
approval
Séamus Coleman
Michael Keane
"If Everton can keep Grealish, add a quality striker they could be a formidable force next season. Outstanding what David Moye's has achieved with this team since his return. Much "
"Moyes' choices of wingers in the market has been incredibly good tbf. George, Grealish and Dibling combined to Ndiaye is a nice set of wingers that can keep the ball for long perio"
Everton supporters are heavily criticising James Tarkowski's performance against Brentford, with fans particularly frustrated by his inability to deal with the opposition's long throw-ins and questioning whether he's lost some of his earlier quality on the ball. The negativity centres on his individual errors and whether he's the right man to lead the Toffees' defence going forward.
Tarkowski's Lost His Way
These fans are absolutely done with him, convinced that his individual errors and brain-dead positioning have become the defining feature of his game and that he's simply not good enough anymore.
anger
"Wow that replay made Tarks look like he’d not make my over 30s team. What the fuck"
"What is Tarky up to? He's an idiot at times. "
Frustrated But Still Processing
They're venting raw emotion in real-time without deeper analysis, capturing that immediate gut reaction fans have when something goes visibly wrong on the pitch.
neutral
"omfg tarky!"
"Braindead from Tarky wtf"
It's More Complicated Than That
This camp argues that context matters—pointing to Tarkowski's actual strengths in the air and suggesting other factors like throw-in positioning or his defensive partners might be the real culprit.
"Cause Tarkowski is great in the air, Brathwaite is just as big and Mykolenko is taking the throw"
"omfg tarky!"
Let's See Where This Lands
Rather than rushing to judgment, these fans are sitting with the result and trying to understand what it means for Everton's bigger picture, weighing individual moments against the collective performance.
"Cause Tarkowski is great in the air, Brathwaite is just as big and Mykolenko is taking the throw"
"omfg tarky!"
Credit Where It's Due
A small but vocal minority refuse to pile on, recognising Tarkowski's genuine defensive qualities and resisting the urge to make one moment define an entire player's season.
"Cause Tarkowski is great in the air, Brathwaite is just as big and Mykolenko is taking the throw"
"omfg tarky!"
Fans are locked in disagreement over a pivotal shot attempt during the match, with some arguing the player should have stayed on his feet whilst others claim he executed well under pressure. The debate centres on whether the resulting action was a genuine shooting opportunity or a defensive mishap that could have been avoided.
The Execution Was Abysmal
This camp believes the player bottled a golden opportunity through poor technique and decision-making, convinced the shot should have found the net regardless of what happened next.
annoyance
"no the shot was awful, any height and goes in"
"Scared to use his right foot what the hell man "
The Situation Was Complicated
These fans are torn between what actually occurred and what could have happened differently, debating whether the player should have stayed on his feet or whether defensive heroics saved the day.
"I know they scored the penalty but I’m convinced that he coulda stayed on his feet and got a shot off"
"If that wasnt offside that'd be save of the season"
Relieved By The Randomness
This group are simply grateful the ball fell kindly to the player's stronger foot, treating the moment as pure luck rather than skill or failure.
neutral
"All I can say is, thank god that ball fell right to his left foot lol"
"Boy some ball that was"
Defending The Goal's Legitimacy
The smallest but most vocal camp are backing the goal as legitimate and well-taken, rejecting the narrative that it was anything other than a clean finish.
approval
"Nah that goal is legit. "
"Boy some ball that was"
Brentford fans are furious after throwing away a 2-1 lead in the dying moments against Everton, with widespread criticism directed at the team's inability to hold leads and the coaching staff's substitution decisions in the final stages. The negativity centres on repeated defensive lapses and a pattern of conceding goals when the opposition throws fresh bodies at them, suggesting systematic issues with squad depth and tactical management rather than one-off bad luck.
Coaching Staff Deserves Blame
These fans are absolutely seething that Brentford's tactical decisions—particularly late substitutions and set-up in the final third—cost them the match, and they want accountability from the dugout right now.
annoyance
anger
Reiss Nelson
Kevin Schade
Keane Lewis-Potter
"Why do we never ever put fresh legs on in the final third of the game. I don't fucking get this coaching staff"
"Fuck. Just let them through again."
Individual Errors Lost It
This camp reckons the result hinged on specific defensive lapses and missed attacking opportunities, arguing Brentford had enough to win but shot themselves in the foot.
"Put Ball in the box we score penalty and deflect goal should have won"
"Defending for evertons first goal was absolute poverty....what a whimp. Just deal with the ball and defend instead of looking for a free kick that was never coming"
Performance Was Actually Decent
These supporters are taking a measured view, acknowledging Brentford played well for large stretches despite the frustrating finish, and refusing to write off the whole display.
neutral
Jordan Pickford
Mark Travers
"We've actually played well apart from that opening 3 minutes"
"well we're doing better than we did at the start of the first half I guess "
We Should've Won This
This group is caught between recognising what went wrong defensively and knowing that better execution in the box—a penalty converted, a deflection avoided—would've seen them over the line.
"Put Ball in the box we score penalty and deflect goal should have won"
"Defending for evertons first goal was absolute poverty....what a whimp. Just deal with the ball and defend instead of looking for a free kick that was never coming"
Finding Silver Linings
The smallest contingent here are either cracking jokes about Brentford's away record or finding random positives in the fixture scheduling, essentially coping with disappointment through gallows humour.
Jordan Pickford
Mark Travers
"We’re so good away from home we’ve spotted them a goal as a head start."
"Good thing about daylight savings ending is that the games aren't so late for us now."
Supporters are calling out the match report's misleading headline after Brentford 2-2 Everton ended in a dramatic 90+1 equaliser, not a winner. The bulk of engagement centres on fans demanding the caption be corrected, with many highlighting that the clickbait framing generated comments whilst failing to accurately describe what was actually a contentious draw.
The "That Wasn't Actually a Win" Bloc
Over half the fanbase is calling out the straightforward truth — this result doesn't deserve the hype, and they're not buying the clickbait framing.
neutral
"It was definitely not a winner?"
"It was definitely not a winner?"
The Glass-Half-Full Believers
A smaller but vocal contingent genuinely rate the performance and the outcome, refusing to join the cynicism and celebrating what they saw as a genuine positive result.
admiration
"what a winner that was"
"Best result"
The Fed-Up Content Critics
These fans are absolutely seething with how the narrative has been packaged and sold to them, demanding accountability for misleading headlines that milk engagement at the expense of honesty.
"OK OK OK OK okand one more OK you all milked the winner point to death."
"I think you need to rename the video"
Brentford supporters are having a laugh after Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's dramatic 90+1' leveller snatched a 2-2 draw from what looked like a Bees victory, with fans sarcastically celebrating what they see as poetic justice against Everton. The overwhelmingly tongue-in-cheek tone suggests Brentford fans are finding humour in the bitter pill of dropping two points so late in the match.
The Bewildered Observers
They're still processing what just happened on the pitch, caught between disbelief and dark humour as they try to make sense of the chaos unfolding before them.
neutral
"He doesn't appreciate your advances 😅"
"😂😂😂who wrote this title"
The Everton Vindication Squad
They're revelling in the dramatic equaliser moment, celebrating their side's resilience and proving the doubters wrong with one perfectly-timed strike.
amusement
"🤌🏻"
"And after all... 😁💙 https://t.co/cexcOX0jhk"
The Robbed Referee Truthers
They're absolutely convinced the official got the call catastrophically wrong and that a foul was never there, watching their team's hard work get undone by what they see as a shocking piece of officiating.
"NEVER a foul🤣🤣 what on earth is he doing"
"😂😂😂who wrote this title"
Everton fans are frustrated that manager David Moyes made no substitutions until late in the match despite having fresh legs available on the bench, arguing that earlier changes could have prevented Brentford's dramatic 90+1 equaliser and cost them a crucial win. The debate exposes growing concern about Moyes' tactical decision-making and squad rotation, with supporters convinced that proactive substitutions at key moments would have secured three points instead of a disappointing 2-2 draw.
Moyes Lost The Plot
These fans believe the manager's refusal to make timely substitutions cost Everton the match, and they're furious about the tactical stubbornness on display.
annoyance
anger
rotate
Mathias Jensen
"What dreadful take. Get outta here with this please."
"Even when we have a bench they make no subs. I'm so fucking bewildered by their decision-making."
The Damage Report
These supporters are matter-of-factly processing what went wrong — acknowledging the substitution failure without necessarily assigning blame, just stating facts about how the game unfolded.
neutral
rotate
Mathias Jensen
"No substitutes? Well done Keith you've thrown it away. Absolute genius of a manager. "
"One of the subs was the reason they scored lol "
But Did He Though?
This group is actively fact-checking whether Moyes actually made substitutions or not, caught between those claiming negligence and those defending that changes were made.
"Even when we have a bench they make no subs. I'm so fucking bewildered by their decision-making."
"He did. He brought on KLP for either Schade or Outarra and rotate midfielders as well as rotate Henry and Hickey. "
When The Subs Backfired
These fans are pointing out that some of Moyes's substitution decisions directly contributed to Everton's problems — the very moves meant to fix things made them worse.
"Even when we have a bench they make no subs. I'm so fucking bewildered by their decision-making."
"He did. He brought on KLP for either Schade or Outarra and rotate midfielders as well as rotate Henry and Hickey. "
One Change Away From Glory
These optimists reckon Everton had the quality to win decisively if Moyes had just made sharper, earlier substitution decisions — it's frustration dressed up as hope.
rotate
Mathias Jensen
"With the right subs, we win this 3-1. They're there for the taking.
The way Moyes is managing this looking like a 2-1 loss"
"Thanks to Moyes getting the final say "
A 2-2 draw packed with controversy has left both sets of supporters furious and confused, with fans trading accusations of cheating and incompetence in the aftermath of Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's dramatic ninety-first minute leveller. The match's chaotic nature—featuring early penalties, quick-fire goals, and a last-gasp scramble—has fractured the fanbase into competing camps, each convinced they've been wronged by what unfolded on the pitch.
The Chaos Observers
These fans are simply documenting the madness as it unfolds, caught between disbelief and acceptance that football has just delivered another unpredictable gut-punch.
neutral
"I knew it, delusions paying off!"
"INSANITY!!!!"
The Robbed and Furious
Everton supporters convinced they've been done dirty, angry at their side for bottling it and the universe for conspiring against them when victory was theirs to lose.
anger
"And there it is, fuck us"
"fucking dumb man."
The Vindicated Dreamers
Brentford believers whose wild faith in a late comeback has just been rewarded, proving that even the most delusional optimism can hit in ninety minutes of madness.
"INSANITY!!!!"
"I knew it, delusions paying off!"
Fans are processing a chaotic 2-2 draw packed with swings in momentum, with multiple posts capturing the emotional whiplash of thinking the match was won before a dramatic last-minute leveller snatched it away. There's acknowledgement of both sides' attacking prowess and a grudging acceptance of a hard-fought point, though clearly some bitterness lingers about how the points were shared.
O'Brien Just Won Us The Match
Nearly four-fifths of supporters are absolutely buzzing because they've just witnessed a dramatic late goal that's swung the entire momentum, and they're here to celebrate a moment of pure footballing joy.
admiration
approval
gratitude
"LFG! Great goal!!!"
"Fucking fantastic goal - well done o'brien"
Well, That Actually Happened Then
A smaller chunk of fans are simply processing the shock of what they've just seen unfold, reacting to the raw event itself without quite committing to either euphoria or devastation.
"The big fifteen mugged the first goal 😢"
"Boy that was a decent hit "
The Ref's Bottled This Completely
A furious minority believe the decisive moment was tainted by a refereeing decision gone wrong, and they're seething because their side got mugged off when it mattered most.
"The big fifteen mugged the first goal 😢"
Everton supporters are erupting over Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's stoppage-time equaliser that rescued a 2-2 draw against Brentford, with fans praising the team's refusal to surrender despite being behind. The raw celebration across the discussion reflects relief and redemption after what looked like a defeat slipping away in the dying moments.
Raw Release Valve Fans
These supporters are simply detonating raw emotion in the moment — no narrative, no analysis, just pure unfiltered relief that the ball's hit the back of the net.
neutral
"GET THE FUCK IN"
"Get in!!!!!!!"
Never Say Die Brigade
This lot believe Everton's character and refusal to surrender is the whole story here — they're celebrating the mentality and fighting spirit as much as the actual goal.
admiration
"GET IN!!!!!! WE NEVER QUIT!"
"GET INNNN
Lets go for the win here"
Redemption Through Fury
These fans are furious at something that came before — a missed chance, a poor performance, a player's earlier mistake — and the late goal is their cathartic forgiveness wrapped in absolute rage.
anger
"FUCKING GET IN I FORGIVE YOU"
"Get fucking innnnmmm"
Fans from both sides are celebrating a dramatically entertaining 2-2 finish, with Everton supporters particularly vocal about their side's battling comeback from behind in the final moments. The discussion reveals genuine appreciation for the match's intensity despite the neutral outcome, as Dewsbury-Hall's 90+1' leveller salvaged a point neither team was willing to concede.
Chaos and Catharsis in Real Time
These fans are living in the moment, processing the raw drama of a pulsating match through immediate reaction—swearing, celebrating, and documenting the narrative as it unfolds because the football itself is too good to analyse, only to feel.
neutral
"Fucking Toffees man.
Great match"
"Back for a big 45 minutes
COYB! 🙌
🐝 1-1 🍬
#BREEVE | #BrentfordFC"
Defiance Through the Comeback
This camp watches Everton's fightback as proof of character and resilience, turning a draw into a moral victory because bouncing back from adversity is what separates the committed supporters from the fair-weather ones.
admiration
approval
"HAAHAHA came for the comments after seeing the title and they didn’t disappoint
Up the toffees 💙"
"Great response, up the fucking Toffees!!"
Fans from both sides are processing a thrilling 2-2 draw that saw Brentford come from behind to snatch a late equaliser through Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall in the 90th minute, with supporters expressing relief at salvaging a point after going down to Igor Thiago's second-half strike. The discussion centres on the drama of the finish and tactical adjustments made during the match, with neither set of supporters particularly satisfied but resigned to a share of the spoils.
The Play-By-Play Documentarians
These fans are locked in, narrating every twist and turn of the match in real-time because the drama of the moment itself is the whole story.
neutral
"How has that stayed out! 🤯
Schade's header hits the bar, Dango is denied by Pickford on the rebound and Branthwaite then blocks Thiago's follow up effort!"
"How has that stayed out! 🤯
Schade's header hits the bar, Dango is denied by Pickford on the rebound and Branthwaite then blocks Thiago's follow up effort!"
The Believers Who Got Rewarded
They're celebrating the audacity and execution of crucial moments — penalties converted, saves made, the stuff that decides matches — because their team came through when it mattered.
approval
amusement
"ALWAYS BELIEVE IN! 🇧🇷
Pickford guesses the right way but Thiago's penalty is too good and finds the bottom corner!
WHAT A START! 🙌🙌 https://t.co/Q2M2SNmggh"
"ALWAYS BELIEVE IN! 🇧🇷
Pickford guesses the right way but Thiago's penalty is too good and finds the bottom corner!
WHAT A START! 🙌🙌 https://t.co/Q2M2SNmggh"
The Ones Who Can't Believe It
Absolutely wound up by near-misses and what-ifs, these fans are venting pure frustration at how fine the margins are between heartbreak and glory.
"What a fucking strike "
"How has that stayed out! 🤯
Schade's header hits the bar, Dango is denied by Pickford on the rebound and Branthwaite then blocks Thiago's follow up effort!"
Cross-Cutting Patterns
Séamus Coleman
Appears across 4 debates: Everton Drop Lead Again as Moyes Rotation Debate Rages, Pickford's Reckless Display Divides Everton Fans, Brentford and Everton Fans Clash Over Controversial Fouls, Fans Divided on Referee's Controversial Second-Half Performance
Michael Keane
Appears across 4 debates: Everton Drop Lead Again as Moyes Rotation Debate Rages, Pickford's Reckless Display Divides Everton Fans, Brentford and Everton Fans Clash Over Controversial Fouls, Fans Divided on Referee's Controversial Second-Half Performance
Beto
Appears across 3 debates: Everton Fans Dissect Tactical Flaws in Stalemate, Everton Fans Debate George's Impact in Draw, Beto Divides Brentford Fans in Goalless Draw
Dwight McNeil
Appears across 3 debates: Everton Fans Dissect Tactical Flaws in Stalemate, Everton Fans Debate George's Impact in Draw, Beto Divides Brentford Fans in Goalless Draw
Jordan Pickford
Appears across 2 debates: Brentford and Everton Draw Amid Goalkeeper Heroics, Brentford Collapse Again as Late Equaliser Frustrates