Last updated: Friday 17 April 2026. Two days out from the Merseyside derby and the picture is sharpening. Everton host Liverpool at Hill Dickinson Stadium on Sunday 19 April, kick-off at a time that will make the whole city stop. We have been building toward this one all week on the panel, and now that squad news is settling and the odds are hardening, let's give you the full picture before the weekend arrives.
Context first, because it matters more than people appreciate with a derby. This is not a match being played in a vacuum. Liverpool sit fifth in the Premier League table, having scored 52 goals and conceded 42 across the season. That goal difference tells a thread worth following: they have been capable of real attacking quality, but they have also been opened up with a regularity that a top-four side cannot fully afford. Fifth place, at this point in the campaign, means every point is consequential.
Everton, meanwhile, sit eighth. Thirty-nine goals scored, thirty-seven conceded. The real question is what that relative balance says about their season. They are not a side that has been taken apart defensively, and they are not a side that has been toothless in front of goal either. Eighth place with those numbers suggests a team that has been solid without ever quite finding the consistency to push higher. A derby win at home, though, changes conversations very quickly.
This is where the two-day-out refresh becomes important. Both clubs have had time to recover from last weekend's fixtures and preparations are now near-final. I would encourage you to check the official club channels for any late fitness decisions, because the final training sessions on Friday and Saturday will determine whether any doubtful players are risked in a match of this intensity. What I can tell you is that the squads are largely settled, and neither manager will want to be making forced changes for a fixture of this magnitude.
And that brings us to the tactical thread. Everton at Hill Dickinson Stadium will be looking to use home advantage the way they have done effectively this season, keeping the defensive numbers tight and making Liverpool work hard through the middle. Liverpool, carrying the sharper attacking record of the two sides, will arrive with genuine belief that their firepower can cause problems. Fifty-two goals in a season is a significant return, and that attacking output does not simply switch off for a derby.
Let's be direct here. Near-final odds have Liverpool as marginal favourites to take the three points, which reflects their league position and their superior goal return across the season. Everton to win or the draw both carry value given the context of the fixture, the home crowd, and the fact that derbies routinely ignore league tables entirely.
But here is what nobody is asking. Look at the goals columns for both sides. Everton have scored 39 and conceded 37. Liverpool have scored 52 and conceded 42. Both teams have been scoring and both teams have been conceding throughout this campaign. BTTS, both teams to score, lands as the most logical reflection of what the season's data is telling us. Neither defence has been watertight. Both attacks have been productive. A cagey nil-nil would be an outlier for both of these clubs based on everything the numbers say.
My position is this: BTTS at odds around the evens to 10-11 range represents a considered selection here. I am not chasing a big price, but the underlying data supports it cleanly. On the match result, Liverpool's away form and attacking numbers make them a reasonable selection, but given the derby context and Everton's home record, I would keep any stake modest. If you want the result without the risk, the draw offers something too. I would leave an Everton win single alone unless you are getting a price north of 3-1, at which point it becomes worth a small interest.
I want to add one layer of context that the raw numbers do not capture, because it is genuinely worth watching as Sunday approaches. Liverpool at fifth need to keep winning to protect and potentially improve that position before the season ends. For them, three points in a derby is not just about bragging rights. There is a functional necessity to it.
For Everton, the calculation is different but no less real. Eighth place with positive momentum from a derby result is a far more comfortable way to see out a season than eighth place with a home defeat weighing on everyone. The emotional stakes and the practical stakes are pulling in the same direction for both clubs, and that is exactly the kind of alignment that produces matches people remember.
Hill Dickinson Stadium on a Sunday with this much on the line for both sides. I have covered enough Merseyside derbies to know that you cannot fully model what happens when those two sets of supporters are in the same city, in the same ground, watching their clubs go at it. The data gives you a framework. The match will do whatever it wants with it.
We will be back on Sunday with live coverage and in-play updates across the SportSignals panel. Enjoy the build-up.
The match is being played at Hill Dickinson Stadium, Everton's home ground, on Sunday 19 April 2026.
Going into the match, Everton sit eighth in the Premier League with 39 goals scored and 37 conceded. Liverpool are fifth, having scored 52 goals and conceded 42 across the season.
Based on the season-long data for both sides, both teams to score (BTTS) is the clearest selection. Everton have scored 39 and conceded 37 this season, while Liverpool have scored 52 and conceded 42. Neither defence has been consistently tight, and both attacks have been productive, which supports BTTS as a well-reasoned bet at near-evens odds.