great Derek Temple scored his only hat-trick for the club at Goodison Park but joked he never received the match ball because the club could not afford to give it away. The 1966 match-winner will be present this weekend for the visit of as
but Sunday is the final farewell for the men. Toffees legend has picked out some of his favourite memories of the ground ahead of what is set to be an emotional day for everyone connected with the club.
"I only ever scored one hat-trick - against Ipswich when they won the championship in 1962 and Alf Ramsey was manager," the 86-year-old told the PA news agency. "That was my favourite game - not that I remember getting the ball though. They were probably short of money!"
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Temple, one of Everton's oldest surviving players, has one other memorable match - against the pre-Munich air disaster team of 1957-58.
"It was a sellout. The crowd was spilling over onto the track," he added.
"That United side was superb. At half-time we were 3-1 down - I'd scored the one - and one of the lads said to me, 'we're going to get hammered here' and I said, 'it looks like it'.
"We came back - Jimmy Harris made it 3-2 and then I scored after playing a one-two with Hicko (Dave Hickson) and putting the ball into the Gwladys Street net.
"Goodison was like a fortress for us. Once they got behind you they roared you on and you couldn't help but put that effort in."
Former midfielder Peter Reid played in arguably the greatest Everton team of all time under Howard Kendall in the 1980s and admits leaving the ground will be tough.
"It will be not like anything else. It will be emotional," he said.
"When you see some of the players who played here: Pele, Eusebio, Dixie Dean, Dave Hickson, Alan Ball - it's a unique stadium.
"The atmosphere in the stadium is great. It holds memories which will never be forgotten and no one can take them away from you.
" in the semi-final of the European Cup Winners' Cup against a very good side, the atmosphere that night was second-to-none.
"That season we beat Manchester United here on the way to winning the title 5-0 and those two really hold special memories.
"They were good team performances but the atmosphere within the stadium was absolutely brilliant."
Reid is confident the atmosphere can be recreated at Bramley-Moore Dock.
"The way the club have done it architecturally wise it is going to be incredible," he added.
"We will miss the Grand Old Lady but we are going to another absolutely marvellous stadium which will enhance atmosphere. It is brilliant."
Even current manager , in his second spell at the club, is getting emotional.
"I'm hoping it's only age but I am, actually. I am only just back but it has played a huge part in my life," he said.
The Scot arrived at Goodison as a 38-year-old after four seasons at Preston and admits he had jitters.
"I felt unbelievably nervous. The nervousness going into Goodison on the first occasion was wild," he added.
"I didn't know if they knew who I was. We had David Ginola, Paul Gascoigne, Big Duncan (Ferguson), Tommy Gravesen in the dressing room and I was thinking, 'they will be thinking - who is this coming to talk to us?'."
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