If Everton thought Stones was a formality, Inter just complicated it

Gary GowersGary Gowers
Share
If Everton thought Stones was a formality, Inter just complicated it

A couple of weeks ago, this sounded well on the way to being done. John Stones, closing in on a free transfer back to Everton under the manager who gave him his Premier League start as a teenager.

David Moyes wanted him. Stones, by most accounts, wanted to come home. Talk had turned to contract length and salary, reportedly around £5.2m a year, rather than whether the move would happen at all.

Then Inter Milan entered the equation.

Why Inter’s interest changes the landscape

Tuttomercato’s report on Inter’s interest shouldn’t be dismissed. This is a club that has made a habit of getting more out of players in their thirties than almost anyone else in Europe — Francesco Acerbi and Stefan de Vrij have both been playing some of their best football at the San Siro well past 32, at less intensity than the Premier League demands week on week.

That’s the calculation Stones has to weigh up. He turns 32 this summer, and the last two seasons at City have been a fight against fitness as much as anything else. Serie A offers a slightly less intense route through a season for a defender trying to squeeze a few more good years out of his legs. England offers a return to where it all started.

Everton aren’t panicking. People close to the deal still call Stones their priority, and the player himself is said to lean toward Merseyside – an area he knows, the manager he trusts, no relocation required.

Coventry, Bournemouth and Newcastle have all been mentioned in passing, but nobody seriously expects them to be the ones who decide Stones’ fate.

Inter is a different proposition. The reporting out of Italy still has Everton ahead. But for the first time in this saga, ahead doesn’t feel like the same thing as a shoo-in.

Gary is editor for ReadEverton. He has many years experience of sports writing behind him after deciding (belatedly) that the world of accountancy wasn't for him. His work has been featured on (among many others) BBC Sport and The Metro. He has written on many sports, but considers himself an expert in football and F1. When not writing and editing he likes to go to the cinema and sip a lovely cold pint of Guinness (not always at the same time).

View all articles →
dave.sport

dave.sport is in beta

We are building a new home for independent sports coverage. dave.sport is currently in beta, with new features and publisher tools rolling out as we test what fans need most.

Explore the beta
Discover more from Read Everton

Add Read Everton as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting.

Follow
Keep Reading

Former winger Kevin Kilbane urges David Moyes to sign AZ Alkmaar striker Troy Parrott

related.