Late Everton winner stuns Charlton

Everton 2 Charlton 1:  Everton moved into fifth place in the Premiership and within touching distance of Europe thanks to James…

Everton 2 Charlton 1: Everton moved into fifth place in the Premiership and within touching distance of Europe thanks to James McFadden's first goal for the club since December, that left relegation fodder Charlton in despair.

The Londoners thought they had claimed a priceless point with a fine Darren Bent goal in the final minute of normal time after Joleon Lescott had given Everton lead with nine minutes remaining.

The strike had left manager Alan Pardew leaping around on the touchline, but he came crashing down to earth when McFadden lashed home two minutes into injury time.

McFadden has been out with a broken metatarsal, and this was his first game back, coming on in the second half for the ineffective James Beattie.

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His goal has now put Everton in with a great chance of reaching the Uefa Cup.

For Charlton there is only more pain, having squandered a succession of chances before Lescott's strike.

Wigan's home draw with Tottenham earlier in the day at least gave Charlton some incentive ahead of a game crucial to both clubs at Goodison Park.

But apart from a powerful run from Zheng Zhi, Bent was left to lead the line largely on his own as Everton dominated the opening period.

Andrew Johnson was sharp and a constant threat to the back line, and early on he was clear after a mistake by Souleymane Diawara. But as he got to the box a poor touch took him wide, and Talal El Karkouri got back to smother the danger.

Everton's pressure was mounting, and Beattie — back in the side with teenagers Victor Anichebe and James Vaughan both injured — was unfortunate not to score in a period of sustained pressure.

He headed narrowly wide following fine crosses by Lescott and Mikel Arteta, and then failed by inches to reach a Leon Osman chip following a clever free-kick routine.

Everton kept up the attack and twice Osman made poor choices when in good positions, first miskicking a low cross and then shooting wide when Beattie was unmarked alongside him.

Charlton were content to continue with their deep defence in the hope of using Bent's strength and pace to catch Everton on the break.

And it almost worked on 57 minutes when Zheng Zhi slipped a pass into the striker's path, and only the quick attention of Lescott forced a hurried shot. The ball, though, rolled agonisingly wide of the far post.

Arteta had seen a shot blocked, but the slowness of Beattie  was annoying the Goodison faithful, and eventually David Moyes hauled off the former England striker, sending on McFadden on 58 minutes.

Everton's progress had been painful to watch, there was no snap or guile about their play and Arteta was having little impact.

But after 81 minutes, following Thatcher giving away a needless corner, Everton stole in front. Arteta's cross was nodded out to McFadden, who hit a rising shot that Johnson diverted goalwards. Scott Carson made a fine point-blank save, but Lescott was there to crash home the rebound.

Charlton threw on Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and Madjid Bougherra, the latter instantly booked for a foul on Arteta, in a desperate attempt to salvage something. Arteta was helped off, clearly dazed.

Charlton kept going forward and were finally rewarded in the 90th minute when Everton failed to clear and when the ball came back into the box for Bent, who took it wide of two defenders before lashing it past Tim Howard.

That should have been it. But in the second minute of four added on, McFadden claimed a loose ball on the edge of the box and unleashed a fierce drive that flew past Carson.