Everton’s injuries could lead to an unexpected return for Phil Jagielka

• David Moyes ready to call on defender after 10-month absence
• Four defenders likely to be absent for Sporting Lisbon game

Phil Jagielka could make his long-awaited Everton comeback this week as David Moyes wrestles with a defensive shortage against Sporting Lisbon in the Europa League.

The England international has not played since rupturing a cruciate ligament against Manchester City last April and, similarly to his team-mate Mikel Arteta, he suffered several setbacks during his rehabilitation that have delayed his return.

Jagielka, who only resumed full ­training last week, is due to play for the reserves tonight against Bolton ­Wanderers. With John Heitinga ineligible for the Europa League, Sylvain Distin suspended, Tony Hibbert out with a hernia and Philippe Senderos ­struggling with a back problem, Moyes said that he may have no option but to recall Jagielka alongside Joseph Yobo in Portugal.

“He is back training now and we will try and push him on quickly as we might need him on Thursday,” said Moyes, whose side carry a precarious 2-1 lead into the second leg. “He is physically not ready and he needed an injection in a cyst on his knee that kept him from training for a week. We hope that has cleared up. He is back training and with the people we’ve got out for this game I could do with him.”

While Jagielka would be a risk against Sporting, his availability represents a ­further lift to an Everton squad full of ­confidence following recent home wins over Manchester United and Chelsea.

Jack Rodwell, who sealed the 3-1 win over United on Saturday with a fine injury‑time goal, said: “Mikel Arteta was amazing against United and he’s been out for a year. Who knows where we’d have been with him? Jagielka hasn’t played and he was our best player last season. The future really is bright for Everton at the moment.”

Everton will also be without Tim Cahill and Marouane Fellaini in Portugal but Rodwell, who offers another option to Moyes in central defence, says the team has nothing to fear on current form. The England Under‑21 international said: “We’ve beaten Man City, Chelsea and now Man United. We’ve had some great results at home and the confidence is brilliant. I really think we can go and do good things this season.

“Just to get on against United was great but to score and beat them was the icing on the cake. Mikel played a lovely ball in to me and I looked up and thought, ‘There’s a lot of space here.’ Louis Saha was pulling off and I thought, ‘I’m one on one with the defender, all I have to do is take it past him’, which I did and luckily got the goal.”

EvertonSporting LisbonUefa Europa LeagueDavid MoyesAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk

David Moyes fumes at Everton’s teatime Europa League kick-off

• Match against Sporting moved to avoid Liverpool clash
• ‘I don’t know what sort of atmosphere we are going to get’

Unlike some other Premier League clubs, Everton have embraced the concept of the Europa League but they drew the line at being ordered to kick off at teatime. Everton’s manager, David Moyes, today condemned Uefa for insisting that their tie with Sporting Lisbon start at 5.45pm tomorrow to avoid a clash with Champions League games kicking off two hours later.

Everton and Liverpool had been drawn at home in the round of 32 but Everton were told to move their game from Thursday to Tuesday because of Liverpool’s superior European record.

“I don’t know what sort of atmosphere we are going to get,” Moyes said. “We will be kicking off at teatime when people are still coming home from work. It is ­something that Uefa have not done very well. They have been really poor in evaluating a competition we want to do well in. I don’t know why they could not have ruled that one of these sides would play the first leg at home and the other would play away. That would have solved everything but Uefa have not done this properly. They have not got it right.”

Everton, who expect a crowd of around 30,000, are, nevertheless, confident that the early kick-off will not see swaths of empty seats at Goodison Park and say there have been no problems recruiting sufficient stewards.

However, while clubs such as Aston Villa and Bolton have found the Uefa Cup an inconvenience and the Fulham manager, Roy Hodgson, wondered if its replacement, the Europa League, was worth the hassle, Moyes said he has been enthused by it. Since Everton have no other silverware to compete for and are now mining a rich seam of form, the Europa League is seen from Goodison as a competition well within their compass.

With virtually a full squad available, their two games against Sporting Lisbon should not produce the chaos and embarrassment of their encounters with Benfica in the group stages. The 5-0 defeat in the Estádio da Luz was their heaviest in European competition while the Portuguese leaders strolled through the return on Merseyside, where Moyes’s bench consisted almost entirely of youth team players.

“They are similar to Benfica in that they have a big history as far as European football is concerned,” Moyes said of Sporting Lisbon who have met English opposition six times in European knockout competitions and won through each time. “However, when we played Benfica, they were in a really good moment and I am not sure that Sporting are.” Sporting trail Benfica by 21 points in the Portuguese league and have failed to win any of their last four games.

And with his leading players back, Moyes is relieved that, finally, the knockout phase of this unwieldy competition has begun. “Knockout football is what everyone has enjoyed about the European game over the years and we have developed our approach to it,” he said. “When we lost to Villarreal a few years ago [in a Champions League qualifier] I thought it was important that we just went out and won, rather than stop the opposition scoring an away goal and judging it over two legs.

“We missed the likes of Mikel Arteta and Steven Pienaar earlier in the competition when we had a very thin squad and struggled to retain possession. Having them back makes you not quite so fearful.”

Everton (probable 4-4-1-1) Howard; Neville, Senderos, Distin, Baines; Donovan, Osman, Arteta, Pienaar; Cahill; Saha.

Sporting Lisbon (probable 4-1-3-2) Rui Patricio; Abel, Carrico, Tonel, Grimi; Mendes; Izmailov, Moutinho, Veloso; Carlos Saleiro, Liedson.

Referee Darko Ceferin (Slovenia)

TV: ESPN kick-off, 5.45pm

EvertonDavid MoyesUefa Europa LeagueTim Richguardian.co.uk