Everton face Arsenal at Goodison Park with the contrast clear: a home side grappling with inconsistency against league leaders who have been efficient rather than flamboyant. Arsenal sit 1st with 36 points from 16 games, Everton are 9th on 24 after the same number of fixtures, and the data suggests a contest that could be decided by fine margins rather than chaos.
Form lines and where this game tilts
Across the last ten matches, Arsenal’s rhythm has been more convincing and more controlled. Everton’s trend is jagged — a heavy defeat to Newcastle was followed by a clean-sheet win over Nottingham Forest and an eye‑catching 2-0 at Chelsea — while Arsenal’s recent run features a 3-0 away win at Club Brugge KV and a gutsy 2-1 at Aston Villa. Notably, Arsenal have not failed to score in their last ten-game sample; Everton have in three of those ten.
| Metric (last 10) | Everton | Arsenal |
|---|---|---|
| Form | LWWLWWDLLW | WLWDWDWWWW |
| Goals scored (avg) | 1.1 | 1.8 |
| Goals conceded (avg) | 1.3 | 0.7 |
| Failed to score | 30% | 0% |
| Clean sheets | 4 | 5 |
Season-long numbers reinforce the picture. Arsenal average a goal every 48 minutes and concede roughly every 144 minutes; Everton’s season rate is a goal every 80 minutes with concessions arriving at around 75.8 minutes. In set-piece and territory cues, Arsenal have averaged 6.06 corners for per league game to Everton’s 4.44 this season, a small but telling nudge toward sustained pressure.
Head-to-head: tight margins more often than not
The recent history has rarely been a procession. There are cagey draws in the mix and the odd decisive scoreline, but most meetings have been decided by a single goal or not at all.
| Date | Fixture | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 05 Apr 2025 | Everton vs Arsenal (Premier League) | 1–1 |
| 14 Dec 2024 | Arsenal vs Everton (Premier League) | 0–0 |
| 19 May 2024 | Arsenal vs Everton (Premier League) | 2–1 |
| 17 Sep 2023 | Everton vs Arsenal (Premier League) | 0–1 |
| 01 Mar 2023 | Arsenal vs Everton (Premier League) | 4–0 |
That pattern matters, because the model view for this game splits the difference: a strong lean to an Arsenal win, yet a suggestion the scoreline may stay around the margins rather than explode.
Tactical notes through the numbers
Everton’s most productive scoring window this season is late — 76–90 minutes (29% of their goals), and that rises across their last five fixtures. It fits a team that can rally but sometimes chases games. Arsenal’s season trend peaks before the interval (31–45, 29%), while their last five show a surge right after half-time (46–60, 44%), a cue that they can change tempo quickly.
| Offensive metric (season) | Everton | Arsenal |
|---|---|---|
| Goals For | 18 | 30 |
| Shots on target | 47 | 82 |
| Shot conversion | 38% | 37% |
| Offsides (against) | 19 | 24 |
| Top minute window | 76–90 (29%) | 31–45 (29%) |
There is a selection wrinkle as well: Ben White is feared to be out for over a month with a hamstring issue sustained in the win over Wolves, according to recent reports. Given Arsenal’s defensive sample over the last ten matches (0.7 conceded on average and five clean sheets), the question is whether their defensive structure absorbs that absence without visible drop-off.
Recent results snapshot
Everton’s last five show sharp swings — two clean sheets, three defeats — while Arsenal’s run reads steady and pragmatic, with a Champions League win folded in.
| Everton – last 5 | Opponent | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 13 Dec 2025 | Chelsea | 2–0 (A) |
| 06 Dec 2025 | Nottingham Forest | 3–0 (H) |
| 02 Dec 2025 | Bournemouth | 1–0 (A) |
| 29 Nov 2025 | Newcastle | 1–4 (H) |
| 24 Nov 2025 | Manchester United | 1–0 (A) |
| Arsenal – last 5 | Opponent | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 13 Dec 2025 | Wolves | 2–1 (H) |
| 10 Dec 2025 | Club Brugge KV | 0–3 (A) |
| 06 Dec 2025 | Aston Villa | 1–2 (A) |
| 03 Dec 2025 | Brentford | 2–0 (H) |
| 30 Nov 2025 | Chelsea | 1–1 (A) |
Model view and match scenarios
The model leans heavily towards Arsenal: a 71% pick on the match winner. Intriguingly it also points to Under 2.5 at 54% and BTTS: Yes at 70%, which implies a narrow game in which both teams find a way to score — the profile of a contest decided by single moments.
| Market | Pick | Probability |
|---|---|---|
| Match Winner (1X2) | Arsenal | 71% |
| Over/Under 2.5 | UNDER 2.5 | 54% |
| BTTS | BTTS: YES | 70% |
If Arsenal win, it underlines the sense that their baseline — solid chance creation, low concession rates — travels well and survives absences. If Everton impose the game’s rhythm late, as their scoring window suggests, and turn this into a Goodison scrap, it could again be decided by one goal. Either way, the data points to precision over drama: not many chances, and the value of set plays and transitions magnified.
For readers tracking broader European angles, it’s often useful to cross-reference analytical voices across leagues — including curated pages of premier league betting tips — to sense how models price similar patterns of control versus variance.
