'I am delighted to have been trusted with this position again'
Everton v Aston Villa (19:30 GMT)
Shamoon Hafez
BBC Sport football news reporter at Goodison Park
The scarf sellers outside Goodison Park are seemingly doing a roaring trade with their 'Return of David Moyes' merchandise as the Scot takes charge of Everton for his second spell tonight against Aston Villa.
The 61-year-old told me on Monday that the Toffees were the only club job that could have enticed him back into management for, 12 years after leaving for that ill-fated 10 months at Manchester United.
Moyes comes back to the Blues in a very different situation, just one point above the relegation zone and having scored only 15 league goals this season.
"Needless to say, Everton Football Club means so much to me and my family and I am delighted to have been trusted with this position again," Moyes writes in his programme note.
"The hope now is that we are seeing clearer blue skies in the distance - but there is plenty of hard work from us as players and staff to do to ensure we get there.
"We all need to be onboard to build a more positive future and my belief we can have that is genuine."
Team news - Calvert-Lewin starts for Everton, Onana faces old club
Everton v Aston Villa (19:30 GMT)
Shamoon Hafez
BBC Sport football news reporter at Goodison Park
Returning manager David Moyes names his first Everton starting XI in 12 years and makes six changes from last Thursday's FA Cup third round win over Peterborough.
Jordan Pickford returns in goal, with Ashley Young, James Tarkowski, Abdoulaye Doucoure and Jack Harrison coming into the side.
There is also a start for Dominic Calvert-Lewin up front, with the Englishman without a goal in his last 15 games.
Everton XI: Pickford, Young, Tarkowski, Branthwaite, Mykolenko, Mangala, Gueye, Doucoure, Harrison, Ndiaye, Calvert-Lewin.
Aston Villa boss Unai Emery makes four changes from the side that beat West Ham last time out.
Emiliano Martinez returns in goal, with Lucas Digne and Jacob Ramsey getting starts, as does midfielder Amadou Onana against his old club. We wait to see what reception he gets here after his move from Everton last summer.
Aston Villa XI: Martinez, Cash, Konsa, Mings, Digne, Onana, Kamara, Ramsey, Tielemans, Rogers, Watkins.
'A steady pair of hands'
Everton v Aston Villa (19:30 GMT)
Mike Richards, Fan writer
Since leaving the club, David Moyes has been on his own managerial rollercoaster. The lows of Manchester United, Real Sociedad and Sunderland and the highs of West Ham and winning their first trophy since 1980. It's certainly been an eventful career, post-Everton.
Some may say it is a typical romantic appointment and nothing has changed, even under new ownership.
It is a valid observation, but the appointment smacks of common sense.
The general feeling within the fanbase appears to be one of satisfaction. There is a palpable sense of relief, despite some dissenting voices.
The managerial appointment was never going to please everyone, but we all deal in the currency of wins.
Every Evertonian can get on board with that.
Read the full column here.
'Arsenal really need boost... and must take chance to narrow gap at top'
Arsenal v Tottenham (20:00 GMT)
Nedum Onuoha
BBC Sport pundit
Who is the north London derby bigger for? I would have to say Arsenal this time around.
It has been a disappointing week for the Gunners, losing the first leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final to Newcastle and then being knocked out of the FA Cup by Manchester United on Sunday - both at home.
The manner of those defeats, especially against a 10-man United, have not sat well with the fans.
There has been chat around Mikel Arteta's management and whether he can win the Gunners silverware, and that is because, although their home record was strong, their performances have not been overly convincing in recent weeks.
A derby win would not completely squash that conversation, but it could perhaps move it to the periphery.
Gabriel Jesus is also the latest name added to the long-term injury list and given Bukayo Saka's absence it feels the club really need a boost, and a victory over Tottenham always provides that.
Arsenal must take the chance to narrow the gap to Liverpool, who dropped points at Nottingham Forest on Tuesday.
The title race is not over in January.