[ad_1]
It was not a good game for Yerry Mina this Sunday, in Everton’s 2-0 defeat at home to Newcastle. He knows.
The only Colombian on the court (James was out due to injury) looked slow in Newcastle’s few approaches and failed at a key moment in the game to allow a second goal from the local.
The local press saw it all and was not indulgent: Liverpool Echo gave him 5 qualification points, the same note that Sigurdsson and André Gomes got, both of them inconsequential in the attack.
“He didn’t have much to do in a defensive sense during most of the attacks, but at least he was ordered in possession to help Everton build,” he said, although on the heads-up with Fraser he concluded: “He defeated him with too much ease in preparing for the second goal ”.
Precisely about that play, The Guardian newspaper noted: “Ryan Fraser took advantage of Mina, who had to leave an opponent to watch faster than him. But he went to the ball, Fraser disappeared, and when he crossed, the ball passed the stride desperate from the defender and it came out really well for Wilson to hit the far post. “
Mina wanted to win as a ‘babbler’ in Wilson’s penalty and made him get a yellow card (the referee caught the provocation) but did not prevent the attacker from scoring and then, according to the Newcastle man himself in statements to Sky Sports, he dedicated him his celebration commanding him to shut up: “I used my brain a bit, I tried to get him to kick me,” he said.
The game, somewhat slow for the intensity of the Premier League, meant that the Colombian did not miss much in his area, but in individual duels he could not take advantage. That’s what they charge him now that Everton has lost the lead and concede their second loss in a row.