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Full Time After Extra Time This is a live match. Extra Time Half Time

Everton vs Chelsea. Premier League.

Goodison ParkAttendance39,402.

Everton 3

  • K Mirallas (45th minute)
  • S Naismith (69th minute)
  • S Eto'o (76th minute)

Chelsea 6

  • D Costa (1st minute, 90th minute)
  • B Ivanovic (3rd minute)
  • S Coleman (67th minute own goal)
  • N Matic (74th minute)
  • Ramires (77th minute)

Premier League: Chelsea hit Everton for six in nine-goal Goodison Park thriller

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - AUGUST 30: Diego Costa of Chelsea celebrates scoring his team's sixth goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Everton an
Image: Diego Costa: Chelsea striker scored twice against Everton

Chelsea hit Everton for six in a goal-filled Premier League extravaganza at Goodison Park which finally ended 6-3.

Jose Mourinho’s side were two goals to the good inside the opening three minutes as Diego Costa found the net with just 35 seconds on the clock before Branislav Ivanovic doubled their lead against the shell-shocked hosts.

Best of the match

  • Man of the match: Diego Costa. The Chelsea striker scored with just 35 seconds on the clock and then added the final goal in the last minute to make it four in three games.
  • Goal of the match: He may have ended up on the losing side, but Kevin Mirallas’ header from Seamus Coleman’s cross was outstanding.
  • Moment(s) of the match: The astonishing 10-minute spell in the second half which saw five goals as the two teams went toe-to-toe in style.
  • Blunder of the match: Muhamed Besic’s first touch only succeeded in gifting the ball to Chelsea and allowing Diego Costa to score their sixth.
  • Controversy of the match: It will probably get overlooked after the nine-goal thriller, but Tim Howard got away with a clear handball outside the box in only the eighth minute.
  • Save of the match: Thibaut Courtois' finger-tip save to deny Kevin Mirallas when Chelsea were 5-3 up with 10 minutes to go.

Kevin Mirallas’ fine header brought Everton back into the game just before the interval and they started the second half strongly before Eden Hazard’s driving run saw Seamus Coleman deflect the ball beyond Tim Howard.

The two teams then traded goals like heavyweight boxers going toe-to-toe, with Steven Naismith, Nemanja Matic, former Chelsea striker Samuel Eto’o and Ramires all finding the net in an astonishing eight-minute spell.

With Everton pushing forward in a desperate attempt to close the gap again, substitute Muhamed Besic’s dismal first touch allowed Costa to claim his second of the game and cap an all-time classic of the Premier League era.

Bizarrely it could have been even worse for Everton, as goalkeeper Howard could easily have been sent off for handling outside his area after just eight minutes.

Up until Naismith's strike, Chelsea appeared to have everything under control, with Costa showing the new attacking edge which was lacking from Mourinho's side last season.

More from Everton V Chelsea

It took just seconds to dismiss fears over a suggested hamstring injury as he scored before Everton had even touched the ball from kick-off.

There has been plenty of debate about some of the sums being spent by English clubs in the current window, but Costa is already looking value for money after scoring with his third shot on target this season.

The Brazilian-born Spain international was a constant menace, lurking with intent on the shoulder of the last defender and regularly capitalising on Everton's inability to play an offside trap which cost them two goals inside 170 seconds.

But for all the 25-year-old's threat, he still needs someone to provide the ammunition and that person is currently Cesc Fabregas, who more often than not found his compatriot with unerring accuracy.

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Jose Mourinho praised the offensive performance of his Chelsea team following their 6-3 victory over Everton at Goodison Park, but conceded he was unhappy

The first goal game from exactly that source, as the former Arsenal and Barcelona midfielder threaded through a pass, catching the defence on their heels, for Costa to stride on to and dispatch past Howard.

In doing so he became only the second Chelsea player to score in his first three Premier League appearances for the club after Adrian Mutu.

More madcap defending saw last man Leighton Baines push out a fraction too slowly to make it obvious Ivanovic was offside - which he fractionally was - and the Serbian finished with the poise of a striker.

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John Terry said that Diego Costa has everything and praised his impact on the Chelsea squad after he bagged a brace for the Blue’s in their thrilling 6-3 w

Such was the disbelief around Goodison even the electronic scoreboard took a couple of minutes to register the second goal, and Howard looked equally confused when he came clearly two yards outside his area to catch a through-ball before falling back inside the box.

A red card then would have ended Everton's afternoon, but Sylvain Distin's goal disallowed for offside after he followed in Romelu Lukaku's header against the crossbar suggested there was still fight in Roberto Martinez's side.

That materialised through Mirallas' glancing header from Coleman's cross, which was the first time Everton had got around the back six Chelsea had employed since going ahead so early.

Costa, put through again by Fabregras, was denied only by the outstretched leg of Howard before Hazard's cross from the byline was turned in by Coleman.

But the game was far from over as a brilliant run by Lukaku took three defenders away with him to allow Aiden McGeady to pick out Naismith in space and make it 3-2.

Matic's strike then deflected in off Jagielka before Eto'o, who signed a two-year deal in the week, headed in Baines' free-kick within six minutes of coming off the bench.

Ramires' one-two with Matic provided Chelsea's crucial fifth and, after Mirallas volleyed against the post, Costa added his second in the 90th minute when substitute Besic, making his debut, fluffed a backheel in the centre-circle which presented the Spain international with a run on goal after great work from John Obi Mikel.

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Jamie Redknapp and Saturday Night Football guest Eidur Gudjohnsen think that Diego Costa was key to Chelsea's 6-3 victory over Everton.

Jamie Redknapp

People talk about the Spanish league being more technical, but when you see a game like that – blood, thunder, mistakes, great goals, individual performances – it had absolutely everything as a spectacle. You have had pure value for money whether you were at Goodison Park or watching that at home. A fantastic football match.

Diego Costa is a game changer and people like that are what you pay the big money for. They lost David Luiz and brought in him and Fabregas for only £10million difference – and what piece of business that is.