 Welcome to ToffeeTV, it is the Everton News Daily. Yeah, following on from the Merseyside Derby on Saturday, obviously, a lot of deflated Evertonians about, not just by the De Fieper, obviously, the manner of the decisions in the Derby as well. Another controversial one with Liverpool, who should have gone down to 10 men as Everton did. And it's a case of what could have been, again, for the Toffees. Sean Dice, obviously, reflected after the game on the performance. Let's hear them talk about it. Well, from a group of players giving maximum to the cause and the situation, given the decisions that were made, then I was very pleased with that side of things. First half, before we go on to the big talking points, the first half, I thought we quelled the game defensively and did a good job with that. We didn't create as much as we have done recently. We definitely weren't as clean and fluid with the ball as we have been recently, but they're a good side, we know that. But we defended very well. Sending off happens. I think the first one's touching go, the first yell is, the second yell is the yellow, that's the way it goes. And then second half, we changed the shape. And I thought that worked well because we wanted to take the sting out of the game, the heat, then kicking into the cop end and all them things. And I thought it worked really well. They were really distant efforts and long distance efforts. And then, of course, the penalty changes it. And then it's difficult after that to try and then change the format and the mental format to come out and play more aggressively on the attacking side of the game. The penalty is, I don't like the modern rule of it, but I'm aware of it. It hits your arm, that's it, it's a penalty. I preferred it when it used to be you had to make a deliberate act. I don't think it's a deliberate act, but I'm not crying it in. They're the rules now. It's going to get given. I must say, and as I said, I think in a few interviews, I don't know about you, but I'm getting bored of all this run over to the TV because we all know what's going to happen, don't we? I don't know what the strike rate is, but it's probably like 99% chance that the referee is going to give whatever he's been told in his ear. So I'm like, I can't really see that. They're talking about speed in the game. I want to just get on with it. You've got someone in an office with 47 views. It's a penalty, it's a penalty. You know what I mean? I don't really get that bit, but anyway, that's an aside. That's for the greater good, I think, rather than today's game. Yeah, so Sean Dyke's obviously quite level on the whole thing, isn't he? He keeps his part of the day, he keeps calm on these things. And for him, it was a good performance. And we, you know, we did quite, we did do quite well. Okay, there wasn't a lot of attacking intent as such, but there was a game plan. And obviously, the sending off to actually the young men, he had to make changes. And then maybe that would have been even doubted if it had a place sent off, which obviously they didn't, but here's Sean Dyke's thoughts on Canati's foul and the fact that he didn't get a second yellow card from Craig Paulson. I have, I have no clue. I have no clue. I've asked the referee, he said he didn't feel that it was a bookable offence and he found that straight away. I don't know what he's done, because I'd like to think there's a lot of fair-minded people in football, and I think people who are here today would be stunned. Oh, that's not a second yellow. Oh, they're managing it. Fair play to him. He took him off as quick as he could. You know, he's realised he's sort of got away with that. I imagine he thought that, I don't know. But he couldn't wait to get him off, because he thought, no, he knows. And we know. Yeah, it's a fact that he's taken post-match in the news as well, that he felt that he was fortunate to get away with it. You know, that's fine. No, fair play, you know, because, you know, we all, I mean, there's times it's difficult to be honest as a manager, but I think there's an honest view. It's easy to say when you win, of course, but I don't want to bleep too much about the fact that we lost, because we did lose. But I don't want to talk about referees, especially in games like this. And it's rare. I can't remember the last time I spoke so openly about referees and decisions, but that one's incredible to me. I mean, I don't even know how I got a yellow card. It was like a near impossibility. I don't know what for, for just literally gesticulating like everyone in the stadium was probably thinking, well, I've probably got away one half months ago and crazy going, what's going on here? I mean, you got a yellow card for that. I mean, that's just, that's just... Well, I've seen the footage actually back and it literally within a second is going, no chance, no chance. And I'm thinking, I'm going to give yourself thinking time. Whereas, actually, young, he's stepped away, giving himself thinking time decides it's a yellow. So I didn't do that with that. Because if he gives himself 10 seconds, I bet he any money goes, oh, it's got a bit yellow. It's got to go off. So again, Sean Daish, quite calm on it. I'll be honest, I'd like to have seen him get a little bit angrier. I know that's not really his style, but I'd like to have seen him maybe push a little bit harder on it. And don't get me wrong, I'm not having a go at him. That is very much his style, but we've seen what happened when clubs are a little bit more vocal about these decisions. To be honest, I would have liked to have seen the players on the pitch when it happened, be a little bit more aggressive towards the officials, because I think we just let them get away with it. I know some of the players did make the point, but it would have been nice to have. I don't know, you just sometimes want to see the players or the manager feel as angry as you do. I'm sure they do. And I know after the game that James Tarkowski came out and said that the reasons why he was given the yellow card were basically the same reasons why, you know, can I say they should have been given a yellow card, but they weren't. And Simacast should have been given a yellow card in the first half, exactly the same thing as what Ashley Young did. And it's just infuriating, isn't it? It's just absolutely infuriating. But you feel like maybe more was made of it, that it would be kept in the public, the public spotlight for a little bit longer, but it probably wouldn't make a difference anyway, knowing that it's us and it's them and all that, which we know about. So Ashley Young will save his suspension against West Ham on Sunday in the one o'clock kickoff. They play on Sunday on Thursday, sorry, in the Europa League over in Greece. So they've got a game this week and hopefully Everton can be fit and fresh for that game, obviously, without Ashley Young. It's an opportunity for Nathan Patterson, if he plays, obviously, to take that, to take that position with a good game. We'll have to wait and say, but we move on. We move on. That's all we can do really, isn't it? Move on. As we spoke about last week, the first seat I've gone in to Everton's new stadium at Bramley Moore. Everton have actually revealed that they hope to have all the seats in place in the stadium by Easter. 3,600 seats arrive every single week with with 500, hopefully every day being put into the stadium. The roof has gone on now all around the stadium. There's the lifts. There's a few there's a few joining parts to do and then the cranes can leave the centre of the stadium off the pitch and that will mean that the west and the east end, the Patterson can go all the way to pitch level as well, which will obviously mean we'll have a complete bowl and all the seats can go in and that's when it gets very exciting, isn't it? You can imagine by Easter if all the seats are in and all the way round and then you can start looking at doing the pitch if that's when they're looking at doing it and you just think this time next year we might have a stadium ready to go. Whether Everton decide to move into it is another question. I don't understand why he wouldn't if there's a stadium ready to go. The financial differences would be huge but we'll have to wait and see. So great to see the first seats and there's a lot in already by the way in the north. I think it's in the northeast corner of the stadium. There's quite a few in already so that's going to continue now. I pace every single day up till as I said, Easter. They hope to have it fully completed so it's exciting. It's exciting to see it getting built and obviously that'll slow down once a lot of the outside is done and then it'll move to getting the inside finished. I mean they've already started on the inside obviously but just getting the inside finished. Once the outside wall is tight with all the glass going on and everything it's something really to look forward to. So, Evan, I've got a video over there, YouTube channel. So, if you want to see more on that, make sure you check that out. If you want more of our content, head over to Toffee TV. Premier the link is in the description. QR codes on the screen now. Thanks for watching. See you later.