Circuit Hospitality at Everton

Hospitality at Everton.

Circuit Hospitality is an official reseller of Premier League packages at Everton Football Club, in the magnificent maritime city of Liverpool.

We provide fantastic packages in the 1878 Brasserie at Goodison Park, named after the year in which this wonderful and historic football club was founded. The experience begins with a champagne reception on arrival at the stadium, three hours prior to kick off, before guests enjoy a three-course meal and complimentary drinks at a private table. The award-winning 1878 Brasserie is recognised as being one of the Premier League’s finest hospitality offerings, a recent
refurbishment putting it at the very top of what English football clubs have to offer. The atmosphere in the suite is extremely relaxed, and popular with all fans, young and old. In addition to the first class dining experience, this package includes the best seats at Goodison Park, situated close to the Directors’ Box in the Executive Main Stand.

Club History

There are few clubs that have a history as rich and successful as Everton, who hold the record of 118 seasons of top flight football. They’ve been English champions on 9 occasions, won five FA Cups and also the European Cup Winners’ Cup in 1985, during the club’s most successful period. Their trophy haul would almost certainly have been greater had their success not come at at time when English clubs were banned from European competition following the Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985.

There is obvious rivalry in the city between the red half and the blue half, never more so than in the 1980s, when both clubs were at the peak of their powers. Liverpool have gone on to enjoy more success than their near neighbours over the last few years, but the intensity of the Merseyside Derby is never diminished by league standings, and it’s the fixture which has seen more red cards than any other since the formation of the Premier League.

Goodison Park

Everton’s home ground, Goodison Park, is possibly the finest of the remaining traditional stadia in England. Known as ‘The Grand Old Lady”, it has been the club’s home for a staggering 130 years, following a move across Stanley Park from nearby Anfield, which of course then became home to the city’s other club…

Over the years the stadium has been modernised to make it more suitable for the demands of football in the Premier League era, but expansion has always been restricted by its location in a residential area of Liverpool. Such is the need for a larger capacity, the club announced in 2021 that an agreement had been reached to redevelop the Goodison Park site with a mix of homes and offices. This has provided the necessary funds for the club to begin construction on a new
home, the Everton Stadium, at Bramley-Moore Dock on the River Mersey, just two miles from their current home. This magnificent structure is set to be the benchmark for all new football grounds, and is scheduled to open its doors at the beginning of the 2024/25 season – which makes it all the more important for you to experience Goodison Park before the turnstiles are closed for the final time.

Everton FC Legends

Some of the greatest British players have plied their trade in the blue of Everton, including Wayne Rooney and Gary Lineker from the modern era, and earlier the likes of World Cup winner Alan Ball and his teammate Howard Kendall – who also enjoyed huge success managing the club. Perhaps the name most associated with Everton is William “Dixie” Dean. Dean scored 350 goals in 400 appearances for the club during the inter-war period. Dean was described by Liverpool manager Bill Shankly as one of “the supremely great, like Beethoven, Shakespeare and Rembrandt.” He
died in 1980 after suffering a heart attack at Goodison Park during the 1980 Merseyside Derby. With only a small number of opportunities left to enjoy a match at the famous old ground, now is the time to book a trip to Goodison Park, and there’s no better way to experience it than in the superb 1878 Brasserie.

Did you know?

Goodison Park was the first English stadium to have covered dugouts, inspired by a pre-season visit to play Aberdeen at Pittodrie. In 1958, it was also the first pitch in England to benefit from the addition of undersoil heating. This proved so effective that the amount of water created by the melting snow and ice overloaded the ground’s drainage capacity!

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONTACT THE TEAM

Give Us a call on 01454 201210 or email enquiries@circuithospitality.com to see how we can help you.

Contact

Churchill Barn, The Street, Olveston, Bristol, BS35 4DR United Kingdom

01454 201210
enquiries@circuithospitality.com

 

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