A wild second half at Hill Dickinson Stadium ended all square as Everton and Manchester City shared a 3-3 draw in Premier League Round 35. The Toffees mounted a stunning comeback from a halftime deficit, scoring three times between the 68th and 81st minutes through Tyrese Barry (twice) and Jake O’Brien, only for Erling Haaland to pull one back in the 83rd minute and Doku to snatch a share of the spoils in the 90th. It was a result that will satisfy nobody and frustrate both sides for very different reasons.


Key Moments
- 43′, Doku opens the scoring for Manchester City just before the break, giving Guardiola’s side a 1-0 lead heading into halftime.
- 68′, Tyrese Barry levels for Everton, sparking a dramatic Toffees fightback after a yellow-card-heavy start to the second period.
- 73′, Jake O’Brien heads Everton in front for the first time, turning the game completely on its head five minutes after the equalizer.
- 81′, Barry completes his brace to make it 3-1, seemingly putting the result beyond City and sending the home crowd into a frenzy.
- 83′, Haaland pulls one back for City to make it 3-2, immediately reigniting tension inside the stadium just two minutes after Everton’s third.
- 90′, Doku completes his own brace with a stoppage-time equalizer, denying Everton what would have been a famous three points and leveling the match at 3-3.
Tactical Breakdown
Manchester City dominated possession from the first whistle, controlling 75 percent of the ball and completing 551 of 610 passes (90 percent accuracy). Guardiola’s side registered 20 total shots to Everton’s 14, with 9 corner kicks compared to just 5 for the hosts. Yet despite all that territorial dominance, City’s xG came in at just 1.37, well below what their numbers suggested. The volume was there; the quality in the final third was not, until Doku took matters into his own hands twice.
The match turned in a remarkable 13-minute window between the 68th and 81st minutes. Everton, set up in a compact 4-2-3-1 under assistant coach Leighton Baines (listed as coach in the lineup data), absorbed City’s pressure and struck with clinical efficiency on the counter. The substitution of Beto at the 64th minute preceded the fightback, and it was the players coming into positions of influence, particularly Barry, who changed the game. City responded by bringing on Semenyo (74th) and Nico (75th), but it was only Doku, already on the pitch, who ultimately saved them.
Everton’s downfall was not the goals they conceded but the defensive ill-discipline they displayed. Four yellow cards in the second half (Keane at 45, Beto at 48 before his substitution, Tarkowski at 53, O’Brien at 86) spoke to a side under pressure and making poor decisions. Despite recording an xG of 2.77 and converting three goals, the defensive lapses that allowed Haaland and Doku to respond in the final seven minutes cost them two precious points. With only 25 percent possession and just 138 accurate passes all game, Everton’s threat always depended on making every chance count, and letting City back in twice erased what could have been a historic result.
Player Ratings
Verdict
A point apiece does little for either side’s ambitions at this stage of the season. Everton will be bitterly disappointed to have let a 3-1 lead slip with less than 10 minutes remaining, while City’s inability to win a game they dominated for large stretches reflects the inconsistency that has defined their campaign in Premier League Round 35. Both clubs will need to regroup quickly with the top-four and relegation battles still very much unresolved.