The club favourite, who has spoken of his desire to permanently succeed the sacked Ronald Koeman, presided over an improved performance – but he will likely require more from his players if he is to succeed.
A vastly-changed team from that which on Sunday lost 5-2 at home to Arsenal, before Koeman’s dismissal, played with greater confidence and energy and repeatedly threatened but lost following Antonio Rudiger’s and Willian’s goals.
Unsworth, 44, recalled Tom Davies, Kevin Mirallas, James McCarthy and Aaron Lennon, each having become peripheral under Koeman despite providing the pace Everton have obviously missed.
Summer recruits Michael Keane and Gylfi Sigurdsson were also dropped to the substitutes’ bench, but Chelsea’s Antonio Conte similarly made numerous changes.
After beginning with greater composure and taking the lead, the hosts were stretched by Everton, suggesting Conte is right to be concerned.
Rudiger scored his first for the club since his summer arrival for an initial £29million in the 26th minute.
It took until early in the second half for Everton to create a clear chance – but when they did the impressive Caballero would not be beaten. From Jonjoe Kenny’s cross on the right wing, Mirallas knocked possession down to Wayne Rooney, who struck from directly in front of goal but watched Caballero’s reaction save tip the ball wide.
The goalkeeper then rushed out to clear when Lennon ran through on goal almost immediately after, before producing a similarly impressive save from Phil Jagielka’s header.
From another short corner, Willian exchanged passes with substitute Cesc Fabregas before running into the area and, at an angle, superbly curled a shot beyond Pickford and inside the far right post.







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