 Welcome to Toffy TV, here is my three things. Manchester United won, Everton won, Arold Trafford lunchtime kickoff and Everton have got a very good point, delighted with the point. Like you said on my maths reaction, a little bit if I'm being greedy, disappointed we didn't get the three with the mean and gold fraction we ruled off shy about, that's football. We've got a good point and we move on front there. First thing I will talk about today is Anthony Gordon. Young lad obviously come through the ranks being involved in and around the first team for a couple of seasons now. But I thought today was his most mature performance for Everton. He had a job to do at Old Trafford in front of 76,000 people. We were always going to be the way we play. We play on the counter attack, so we always had to do a defensive reminder job. And I thought in front of Leucardine, he worked his socks off, chose the right time to run at Wambasaka, giving problems, more and more problems as the game went on. But I just think there was a real discipline from Gordon that I hadn't seen. Well, I said last week when he came on against Norwich, he dropped into the correct positions and all his eyes on everything else that was going on. And it was the first time I'd really noticed it last week. Today it was the same, obviously much higher quality opposition than what Norwich City are. A real tough place to be able to do it as well at Old Trafford. And I thought he had a really good game. And just that maturity coming through and seeing that will help him get more game time for Everton. If I'm being a little bit critical of him, I want to see him running the players more. Sometimes he's a little bit laxadaisical with what he does. He'll go past one and it's like, I've got a lot of time now, mate. It's got to be sharp in the Premier League. But in general, his play was excellent today. And he put in a real good 70-minute shift that really helped the team. And I think the manager's shown great faith in him, really. He could have shifted a couple of things around. Tom Davies could have started. He could have thrown Mason Hallgate in midfield. He could have, you know, there was other things that were available to him, but he's gone with Anthony Gordon from the Offerall Trafford. So if I was Anthony Gordon, as well as sleeping tonight, which I'm sure he will, I would be delighted that the manager's shown a bit of faith in me there. And obviously brought Lewis Dobbin on for the last couple of minutes as well. So it's great to see the young lads getting on the pitch as well. But Gordon, real mature performance, long may it continue. Second thing I'm going to talk about is the manager himself, Raphael Benitez. He came in, I've said it many times and on many different things that he wouldn't have been in probably my top five manager list for the Everton job this summer. The time before when he was mentioned, when we ended up getting Carlo Antiorotti, I'd considered it then and thought, well, okay, we need someone to guide us. I'd considered it then. This time I've moved away from the idea totally. But since he's come in, he's been excellent. It's all very well saying, well, you know, we've had this team and this team. We should have beat those teams. We haven't been beating those teams in the past and that is the difference. I think the coach and he was walking off the pitch there and he's telling Michael Keane different things that he should have done. The game is literally just finished. He's telling Luca Dean, you know, he's laughing and joking with Tom Davis saying, you know, I think he said something like, why didn't you shoot with the thing? So it's a manager who's very hands on. I love that. I love that about a manager. The fact that it comes across like he wants to win as much as we do. Like we'll give everything. Look for those finite details. People don't like him. I get it. I get it. But if it wasn't the ex Liverpool manager, you would, I think most people would love the way he's gone about the job so far, the things he's done. It's very early days, very early days, things changing football very quickly. Of course they do. But the early signs from the manager, I'm very impressed with that. I don't think you can, I, even the most critical Evertonian, I think would struggle to say that we haven't had a good start of the season. And the manager hasn't been impressive given 1.7 million pounds or 1.6. Why do I keep saying 1.6 million pounds this summer to spend? Look what he's done. Andrews Townshend's just got his fifth goal of the season. Nobody would have picked Andrews Townshend for Everton. Nobody. And he went and got him. Damari Gray, there was lots of people turning their nose up at him on social media when he was mentioned. Lots of people, he's crap, he's this, he's that, he's the other. And Damari Gray's been sensational the same as Townshend. So I think the manager deserves a pat on the back so far. Listen, there's more to do. I want to see him doing it year after year, not seven games. But just the start he's made, the little bit of coaching that we're seeing, we're seeing improvement from certain players, which again is what managers are supposed to do, coaches that are supposed to make players better. You know, we've got into a culture of Everton, it seems, since David Moyes has gone, of managers just go and get me, get me, get me. I'm forgetting their role in it, which is actually you're supposed to coach as well mate. You're supposed to make these players better. And I think since probably David Moyes, people have struggled to improve Everton and that's not good. So let's hope Rafa Benitez can solve that conundrum because that's a key. All the best managers do it. The make players better. So is he one of the best managers? Wait and see. But if he is, he will improve our team. And already we look at a much more competitive, combative, threatening side on the counter attack. We just look at a much better side than we were last season. And this is, this don't forget is a team that doesn't have Retialas in it. It doesn't have Dominic Calvert-Lewan in it. It doesn't have Seamus Coleman in it. You know, on the bench we had no André Gomez, whether you think he's good or not. You know, no fatten. People like that who would have bolstered the bench, you know. Well, it seems we were hoping to get a look at a Solomon Rondon would be sub, wouldn't be start, no a wo being there. So when you go through the team like that and see the amount of options that he's had at his disposal. I think he's doing really well. And the third and final thing I want to talk about is Andros Sarnsendt, who has been sensational since he came in. This is a lad who I've just mentioned to Marey Gray and people turning their nose over him. Everybody, everybody was a bit like, what? Andros Sarnsendt? When we got him. And when it became clear we were getting him. Free transfer, what's going on? We want, you know, I wanted Leon Bailey and this, that and the other. We'll tell you what, if we would have got Bailey and he'd have made the impact Andros Sarnsendt has made. Had it been that, you know, absolutely loving it. But Andros Sarnsendt is coming for nothing. Work rate sensational, attitude sensational, delivering on the pitch fantastic. Fifth goal, you know, goal contributions in every game he's played, I think so far this season. Not near enough. Just brilliant. And that infectious willingness to work hard is what rubs off on other people, makes other people do their work. Right, you see when the final whistle went today and they're all day, you can see them together. Like a bit of unity that we haven't seen much of. And it was like, well in lad, we worked our socks off today to get that result. And Godfrey and Damari, they coming back on the pitch and was like, you know, you could see them. Yeah, we've been, we've been good today. Townsend set a lot of that. And I think when we've got Dominic Alvidlouman back in the side, he's another one who likes to work hard. Rechialison's another one. All of a sudden options of this team gets better and better. But it's because of the likes of Andros Sarnsendt, why other players are now working the socks off. Sut yn rhan, like prime Peter Reid, today socks round his ankles, bossing the game, the core, right? Everywhere, absolutely fabulous everywhere. So it's brilliant to see and the team is really moving in the right direction right now. Seven games in the Premier League, that's all, can change. Hopefully it doesn't, hopefully we continue and continue. But just right now and just today, that felt like a reel to get in us. And the man at the forefront of all of that for me was Andros Sarnsendt. I give Dymarey Greymann a Dymatt on the mat reaction because I felt like overall he was key to us getting that point with his skill and his pace and his real causing United real headaches. But I think Townsend is the town setter and he's come up big for us again when we've needed it today. And you know, it was great seeing those images of Dominic Alvidlouman back on the pitch running on our hand train. And Seamus Gullman, soon it'll be Ritchie and we can go forward and get better and better. But right now Townsend has been an absolute revelation. That is it for me. Let me know if you disagree in the comments. Make sure you give the video a thumbs up. Subscribe if you haven't and if you want more videos, join us on Patreon. Otherwise, have a fantastic weekend. See you later.