Duncan Ferguson signed off for the season by scoring the goal which should
ensure Premiership football for Everton next season.
Ferguson continued his rollercoaster ride since David Moyes took over four
weeks ago by scoring Everton's equaliser four minutes from time with his 50th
league goal for the club.
It was his fourth goal during Moyes' reign, to go with his red card against Bolton, and it takes Everton to 40 points which should prove enough for
safety.
Ferguson will now sit out Everton's remaining three games because of that rush
of blood, but at least he can feel he has done his bit to help
the Blues' cause.
Moyes had made three changes and in came Paul Gerrard, Alan Stubbs and David
Unsworth and out went Steve Simonsen, Peter Clarke and Jesper Blomqvist.
The match was Micky Adams' first as boss of already-relegated after succeeding
Dave Bassett on Monday and he made just the one change with Matthew Heath
replacing groin-injury victim Matt Elliott.
Stefan Oakes should have got Adams' reign off to a memorable start after 17
minutes when Matthew Piper found him unmarked at the back post.
But rather than hit the back of the net, he hit the fans in the Gwladys Street
end.
Brian Deane showed him how it's done a minute later when Robbie Savage found
him unmarked 20 yards out from goal and he curled a right-foot shot home.
If Everton's defending had been bad for that goal it was downright abysmal
after 27 minutes when they gifted Leicester a second goal.
Stubbs and Gerrard got in each other's way going for Frank Sinclair's lofted
ball from the halfway line to present Deane with the simplest of tap-ins for his
seventh goal for the Foxes.
Everton were in disarray and Leicester might have had a third when Paul Dickov
shot right-footed across the goal from a narrow angle on the right.
The Blues tried to claw their way back into the game and Unsworth blasted over
with his weaker right foot.
Leicester might have scored again and Lee Marshall shot wide from Oakes' cross
when he really should have hit the target.
Everton finally threatened and Sinclair cleared Niclas Alexandersson's shot
off the line at the back post.
That effort was not enough to appease some of the home fans who booed Everton
off at half-time.
Everton continued to flounder until they switched to plan B on 61 minutes and
brought Nick Chadwick on for Tomasz Radzinski.
The change worked and within three minutes of coming on, the 19-year-old
pulled a goal back for Everton.
After Unsworth had seen a shot deflected just wide, Thomas Gravesen crossed
from the left for the striker to head home only his second goal for the club
from the edge of the six-yard box.
Now it was game on and referee Uriah Rennie had to cool tempers after Stubbs
and Deane shoved each other.
Everton kept up the pressure and Walker dived to keep out a Chadwick volley as
the home side sensed an equaliser.
Alexandersson played Chadwick through on the right only for Walker to smother
the ball at the second attempt.
Everton's best chances continued to fall to Chadwick and Walker brilliantly
touched his back header over the bar.
Moyes went for broke when he threw on Kevin Campbell with eight minutes
remaining and the striker had only made one substitute appearance since March 6
because of his knee injury.
Then on 86 minutes Unsworth's curling free-kick from the left flank fell to
Ferguson, who stabbed it home left-footed from close range to send the Everton
fans away happy.
Teams
Everton: Gerrard, Watson (Campbell 82), Weir, Stubbs, Pistone,
Alexandersson, Gemmill, Gravesen, Unsworth,
Radzinski (Chadwick 61), Ferguson.
Subs Not Used: Blomqvist, Simonsen, Linderoth.
Booked: Gravesen.
Goals: Chadwick 64, Ferguson 86.
Leicester: Walker, Rowett, Sinclair, Heath, Davidson,
Piper (Reeves 72), Savage, Marshall, Oakes,
Dickov (Stevenson 82), Deane (Ashton 68).
Subs Not Used: Flowers, Williamson.
Booked: Marshall.
Goals: Deane 18, 27.
Att: 35,580
Ref: U Rennie (Sheffield).