Everton on course after win over Hajduk
Everton secured a 2-0 advantage in its UEFA Europa League first-leg play-off tie against Hajduk Split, with Michael Keane scoring and Wayne Rooney assisting its second.
UEFA Europa League play-off: Everton 2-0 Hajduk Split
Michael Keane and Idrissa Gueye were unlikely goal scorers as Everton was rewarded with a 2-0 UEFA Europa League win against Hajduk Split in their play-off round first leg.
The Toffees secured a reasonably comfortable advantage at Goodison Park with Keane, who scored his first Everton goal in front of watching England manager Gareth Southgate, and Gueye making the difference.
Everton paraded club-record signing Gylfi Sigurdsson prior to kick-off and there was further reason to celebrate when Keane headed home the opener in the 30th minute.
The match was disrupted by clashes between Hajduk supporters and stewards, with referee Ivan Kruzliak temporarily calling the players off the pitch and away from the unrest.
However, Ronald Koeman's side remained in its groove upon the restart and, while it had recorded 1-0 wins in each of its three prior competitive matches this term, there appeared little chance of the visitors holding it to just the one goal.
Gueye doubled Everton's lead before the interval and the hosts then delivered a professional second-half performance to see out a fourth successive clean sheet and take a two-goal advantage to Croatia, although there were a few scares as Jordan Pickford was forced into some work late in the half.
Sigurdsson was presented to the home fans before kick-off and his new team-mates soon put Hajduk under pressure, with Wayne Rooney leading the line and nodding the first chance high and wide from Kevin Mirallas's corner.
Rooney teed up Ademola Lookman to tease a low centre across the face of goal, just beyond the stretching left boot of Davy Klaassen, and a series of dangerous deliveries from Cuco Martina caused the visitors further problems before Everton deservedly led.
Leighton Baines stood up a cross from a half-cleared set-piece for Keane to power a header past the stranded Dante Stipic.
Unsavoury scenes involving a section of the Hajduk supporters led to a pause in play of roughly four minutes, but Everton had a second goal before half-time.
A tight offside call had denied Rooney moments earlier, but Gueye timed his run to meet the forward's measured pass, after good work from Klaassen, and squeeze a finish inside the bottom-right corner.
Rooney, still waiting on his maiden European goal in Everton colours, was again given opportunities to get on the scoresheet either side of the break but shot too close to Stipica and then directed a header wide.
At the other end, Pickford had only previously been worked by optimistic efforts from distance, but the former Sunderland man extended himself well to save from Franck Ohandza after Hamza Barry stripped Gueye of the ball.
Pickford saved twice more in the final 10 minutes, keeping out Ante Erceg and Hysen Memolla, to deny Hajduk an away goal and maintain Everton's control of the tie.