Nearly there. So what have Everton (almost) bought in Hayden Hackney?

Gary GowersGary Gowers
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Nearly there. So what have Everton (almost) bought in Hayden Hackney?

It’s taken a while. Bids knocked back, a different fee depending on which end of the M62 you were standing, Tottenham and Crystal Palace circling — but Everton have finally (we think) got their man.

Offers of £12m and £15m were rejected before the club finally offered a deal Middlesbrough were prepared to accept, with the deal now structured at an initial £16.5m, climbing toward £25m depending on add-ons.

So what will Everton’s midfield actually look like with Hackney in it?

Career to date

SeasonClubCompetitionAppsGoalsAssists
2021-22Scunthorpe (loan)League Two2802
2022-23MiddlesbroughChampionship3634
2023-24MiddlesbroughChampionship2110
2024-25MiddlesbroughChampionship4359
2025-26MiddlesbroughChampionship3856-7

A few things jump out. The loan spell at Scunthorpe gave him senior minutes in League Two before he returned to Boro for the 2022-23 campaign and was handed his Championship debut in a 1-0 win over Birmingham City.

A dip in 2023-24 — fewer starts and some injuries — was followed by two outstanding seasons either side of his 23rd and 24th birthdays, in which he went from promising academy graduate to the best player outside the Premier League.

He went on to win the 2025-26 Championship Player of the Year award having started every one of Boro’s league games and racked up more minutes than any other outfield player in Kim Hellberg’s side.

Profile

Hayden HackneyStats
Age24 (born 26 June 2002, Redcar)
Height/weight5’10” / 68-70kg
PositionCentral midfield (6 or 8)
FootRight
Contract status pre-moveOne year remaining
HonoursUEFA U21 Championship winner, England (2025)

A homegrown product, club captain, boyhood Boro fan — this was never going to be a straightforward sale. That Middlesbrough held out for a number well above Everton’s opening offer was always going to be the case. Especially with other clubs sniffing

Strengths

This is the good bit. Hackney ranks in the top 10 per cent of Championship midfielders for ball retention, progressive distribution, final-third ‘access’ and press resistance.

He’s comfortable taking the ball under pressure, drops deep to dictate tempo, and is built for a team that wants to circulate possession and break lines through the middle of the pitch — a system that wouldn’t suit a more direct, transition-heavy approach.

Add genuine end product on top of all that — five goals and seven assists again this season — and it’s easy to see why three other Premier League clubs were hovering.

Weaknesses

The same scouting work that praises his range also raises a discreet flag. There are, it seems, defensive and transitional limitations, and the report argues he needs a disciplined, high-volume ball-winner alongside him to cover for that.

Put simply: he isn’t going to do Idrissa Gana Gueye’s old job on his own. His anticipation of opposition passing lanes and his proactivity without the ball are both flagged as areas still needing work before he’s the finished Premier League article.

Verdict

This has the look of good business. A 24-year-old England U21 international, the standout performer in the second tier, bought on a fee that’s structured to protect Everton if the step up doesn’t click.

The question now is fit — Hackney needs the ball and needs protection in front of the back four to do his best work, and how Moyes builds his midfield around him will decide whether this becomes a successful buy or a player who needs time to find his level in the Premier League.

Finally arrived. Almost. Hopefully. Fingers crossed.

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).

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