An aerial shot of Goodison Park and its surrounding streets
Sir Alex Ferguson described Goodison Park as "a nightmare" to visit(Image credit: Getty Images)

As you first arrive through the narrow, brick-terraced streets off County Road, Goodison Park looms above.

A majestic yet anachronistic throwback to the great grounds of the pre-Premier League age, it is football nostalgia, a Grand Old Lady whose very structure still shakes when the crowd gives it reason to.

This is a venue rooted in its community, the pubs, cafes and chippies that form an indelible piece of the experience - a bevvie in the Winslow, a bacon butty in the Goodison Cafe, salt 'n' pepper chicken from the Blue Dragon.

But it's about to be no more.

Beckenbauer, Pele and Eusebio all played at Goodison Park

The ground that has hosted an FA Cup final, that saw such luminaries as Franz Beckenbauer, Pele and Eusebio grace its turf at the 1966 World Cup, and whose brickwork continues to resonate with the countless memories of the club that made it its home, hosts its final game - Everton vs Southampton on the penultimate weekend of the Premier League season.

Gone forever will be a ground that Sir Alex Ferguson described "a nightmare" to visit with Manchester United, and the aforementioned Eusebio regarded as the "best stadium in my playing life".

His World Cup display for Portugal against North Korea at Goodison in 1966 is ranked at no.91 in FourFourTwo's list of the greatest individual performances of all time.

The case for a move is overwhelming, but itll be a sad day when Goodison Park is gone, says Paul Wilkinson, who played for the Toffees during the mid- 1980s.

"The closeness of the supporters to the pitch, the noise of the place, the fact that something as simple as a full-blooded tackle can rock Goodison to its foundations.

So often it has been the team's 12th man over the years. It's really hard to imagine the landscape of Everton and English football without it."

Modern football's financial reality is to blame for Goodison Park's impending demise. For all of its emotional appeal, the stadium has acted as a handbrake on the Blues' ambitions.

Boxed in and hard to develop, it's been a contributory factor in their generational mediocrity.

As Anfield and Old Trafford expanded to capitalise on the Premier League boom, Goodison remained fixed in the Football League epoch, with the myriad financial implications that implies.

Former owner Peter Johnson initially identified the need to relocate back in the late '90s.

Nearly three decades and several false starts later, that need is about to be realised, as Everton move into their swanky waterfront stadium this summer.

It's a move that brings to an end a footballing story that began almost 133 years ago.


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Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by TakeSporty.
Publisher: FourFourTwo

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