
Man Utd vs Everton LIVE: Pre-season friendly latest score and confirmed lineups
August 3, 2025 8:30 pm Man Utd pre-season results and fixtures
The Red Devils only have one more friendly left after tonight's clash as they take on Italian side Fiorentina at Old Trafford on Saturday at 12.45pm. May 28 : ASEAN All-Stars 1-0 Man Utd
: ASEAN All-Stars 1-0 Man Utd May 30 : Hong Kong 1-3 Man Utd
: Hong Kong 1-3 Man Utd July 19 : Man Utd 0-0 Leeds
: Man Utd 0-0 Leeds July 27 : Man Utd 2-1 West Ham
: Man Utd 2-1 West Ham July 31 : Man Utd 4-1 AFC Bournemouth
: Man Utd 4-1 AFC Bournemouth August 9: Man Utd vs Fiorentina August 3, 2025 5:00 pm Is Man Utd vs Everton on TV?
Yes, Man Utd vs Everton will be shown on TV in the UK.
The channel you need is Sky Sports Premier League – or Sky Sports Main Event.
Sky Sports subscribers can also watch the contest live online via the Sky Go app and website. If you're not a Sky customer, you can grab a NOWTV Day Pass to watch without a subscription.
The match will be shown on MUTV too – available to live stream on the club's website. August 3, 2025 4:55 pm Man Utd vs Everton kick-off time
Man Utd vs Everton kicks off at 10pm UK time. August 3, 2025 4:42 pm Welcome!
Welcome to our live blog as Manchester United lock horns with Everton tonight.
The showdown is United's third and final game of the Premier League Summer Series – a pre-season tournament in the United States – hence the late kick-off time in the United Kingdom.
We'll be bring you updates from 8.30pm onwards ahead of kick-off. Don't go anywhere!

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Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Leny Yoro calls out Man Utd "bull****" as star issues revenge promise to fans
Manchester United endured a woeful season last term but French defender Leny Yoro has assured supporters that next season will be vastly different under Ruben Amorim Leny Yoro says Manchester United 's players are on a 'revenge' mission following their worst Premier League finish last season. United ended last term in 15th place, their lowest position of the Premier League era and worst since the 1973-74 campaign, when they were relegated. Defender Yoro knows United's rivals want to see them fail again, but said Ruben Amorim 's players are determined to prove they are way better than last season's woeful showing. 'When you play for Manchester United, you need to have the mindset of being the best version of yourself,' said Yoro. 'I think what we did last season was a mistake for us. "When you're Manchester United, you cannot be at this position. The fans know it, everyone knows it. I think we understand this. This season will be different for us. It will be like a revenge from last season. 'We're a big club. There are a lot of people who want us to fail and we know that. But there are also a lot of people that want us to do it, to do great things. 'We just focus on the fans, you know. We don't care about what they say outside - everyone said bull**** about us last year. 'But I understand, because we didn't do really well, but this season will be different, I hope, for us. We don't need to listen to this and just be focused on ourselves. All of the players in the dressing-room have a lot of quality. I think we need to mix it together and try to do our best.' United won the Premier League Summer Series in the US with wins over West Ham, Bournemouth and a 2-2 draw in their final game against Everton in Atlanta. Where will Man United finish in the Premier League this season? Share your predictions in the comments below 'We had a good tour,' said Yoro. 'We didn't lose. We know we can do better, but it's still the pre-season, there are still some things to improve. "I think we can be happy with what we did during this tour. I think mentally everyone is ready. We still have one game against Fiorentina to prepare for the new season. But the mindset of the team is to be ready for the first game, ready for the season. I think we are working and training for this, even in the game.' Yoro, 19, reckons United have the right blend of youth and experience and said players like him can benefit from the wisdom of older members like skipper Bruno Fernandes. 'I think in the dressing-room it's important to have some older players to, like, manage the team,' said Yoro. "It's important to have this in the dressing-room, to have a good mindset. You can have some players that sometimes make some mistakes or things like this. These players, they are here to help keep the group strong.' Join our new MAN UTD WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Manchester United content from Mirror Football. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Analyzing preseason friendlies is maddening, but right now it's all we have
Glory for Manchester United, who lifted the Premier League summer series on Sunday despite twice being pegged back by Everton to draw 2-2 in Atlanta. A degree of relief for West Ham, who beat Bournemouth to finish second in the competition despite all the gloomy prognostications about their campaign to come. In Seoul, meanwhile, there was a very Tottenham moment as they followed the glee of last week's 1-0 win over Arsenal with a 1-1 draw against Newcastle in which James Maddison was stretchered off with a knee injury described by his manager Thomas Frank as 'bad'. It all looks real, it sounds real and yet everybody knows it isn't real. That even now, in this age of data and minute analysis, there remains an element of randomness, is one of soccer's great joys as a sport. But that tendency is magnified in pre-season. The Premier League has been away for 10 weeks now. For those hooked on its soap opera, the wait is intolerable. The Club World Cup, the England men's team being dreadful in June as they so often are, the Under-21s continuing their unfamiliar excellence, even the women's Euros … none of it quite offers the same hit. Obsessing over transfers suffices only for so long; eventually there is a need to see them play. And so there are pre-season games, and there is is analysis. The best of it is skeptical, acknowledging the absurdity of making judgements on 45 minutes. The worst of it is breathlessly insistent – of Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha, the two senior players United have managed to sign, appearing together against Everton. What does it mean that Rasmus Højlund was only on the bench? Does that mean Benjamin Šeško is more likely to sign? The front three, with Mbeumo dropping deep and Cunha and Bruno Fernandes at times running beyond him, looked fluent. Fernandes and Mbuemo set up Amad Diallo, overlapping from wing-back to score the opener. This is the way Ruben Amorim's 3-4-3 is supposed to work. In that, at least, there is a sense of something tangible, a United that is, at last, able to execute their manager's attacking plan. But Ayden Heaven's own goal was a reminder that United remain as self-destructive as ever. Perhaps more significant was the equaliser conceded after Manuel Ugarte lost possession, the lack of urgency to get back. Did this happen because it was only a friendly and United are nowhere near peak fitness yet? Or because this is an irredeemably feckless bunch of players? This is smoke on a foggy day. Will any of it be relevant when the season begins for real? United fans will remember ruefully just how good they looked in pre-season under Louis van Gaal in 2014, only for the season itself to prove anticlimactic. The problem with assessing pre-season games is that different sides are at different stages of readiness. Some expect to hit the ground running from week one; others are building to peak in March or April, the differences magnified two weeks before the opening day. Some managers are working on specific plans and are less bothered by the whole, some are just hoping to get semi-competitive minutes into their players' legs. Sign up to Soccer with Jonathan Wilson Jonathan Wilson brings expert analysis on the biggest stories from European soccer after newsletter promotion In the old days, before Premier League teams went on foreign tours and everybody was desperately promoting themselves to a global audience, pre-season was about team bonding as much as anything else: the team that drinks together wins together, as the adage had it. The stories are legion: the Everton winger Peter Beagrie driving a motorbike through a plateglass window in San Sebastián; Sunderland's diminutive but extremely tough full-back John Kay terrifying a much larger local who had threatened him by casually eating the antiseptic cubes from a urinal in Bristol; Arsenal's French midfielder Gilles Grimandi joining five of his English teammates on a night out in Switzerland where the first round comprised 35 pints of lager and a dry white wine. Many managers, you suspect, would quite relish a return to the days, if not of booze, then at least of pre-season being a largely private affair rather than a projection of the club to the world. Very occasionally something consequential happens, such as Chelsea conceding four in the second half to an experimental New York Red Bulls led by Jesse Marsch in the summer of 2015, the first sign that something had gone badly wrong for José Mourinho's side since winning the Premier League two months earlier; within five months, Mourinho had been sacked. (It was also the debut first-team appearance for Bournemouth and US national team midfielder Tyler Adams, then 16 years old.) Pre-season is very much the phoney war, the jockeying, the probing. It matters to the clubs, but to outsiders it is essentially like watching an artist mix his paints. There's anticipation and a vague technical interest, but it means nothing until it starts being applied to the canvas. This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond. Subscribe for free here. Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwithjw@ and he'll answer the best in a future edition.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Yoro wants 'revenge' for last season
Manchester United defender Leny Yoro says his team-mates are determined to prove the doubters are unbeaten during their pre-season programme so far, with Sunday's 2-2 draw with Everton in Atlanta proving enough to secure silverware in the form of the Premier League Summer Series after their unprecedented 15th-placed finish last season, Yoro knows it will take more than that to convince anyone life at Old Trafford will be better this time many are willing the situation to get even worse."There are a lot of people that want us to fail, we know that," said Yoro. "But there are also a lot of people that want us to do great things."We don't care about what they say outside - the media, everyone."I understand that because we didn't do well."I think what they did last season was a mistake for us. When you're Manchester United, you cannot be at this position. The fans know it - everyone knows it. We understand season will be different. It will be like a revenge from last season."