Thursday, January 31

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 31st January 2008

Noble makes Liverpool pay penalty - WHUFC
A last-gasp penalty from Mark Noble gave West Ham United three precious
points on Wednesday night
30.01.2008

West Ham United 1-0 Liverpool

Mark Noble held his nerve to fire in a last-gasp penalty that gave West Ham
United the richly-deserved victory that saw them end a seven-match losing
streak against Liverpool.

Jamie Carragher's stoppage-time foul on Freddie Ljungberg gave the England
U-21 midfielder the chance to seal a dramatic late victory and he made no
mistake. Although they went agonisingly close in 2006's epic, 125th FA Cup
final at the Millennium Stadium, West Ham United came into this latest
encounter without a victory over Liverpool in their previous eleven
meetings.

Having gone nine games unbeaten since mid-December, Rafa Benitez's,
sixth-placed, side had also made it into the last 16 of this season's FA Cup
competition, too, after finally dispatching plucky part-timers Havant and
Waterlooville at Anfield, on Saturday. But after seeing his red-faced Reds
rescued by a hat-trick from former Boleyn Ground midfielder Yossi Benayoun,
the Liverpool boss made eight changes following that faltering 5-2 win.

Indeed, only the Israeli playmaker, Sami Hyypia and Steve Finnan survived,
as Xabi Alonso came in for suspended old boy Javier Mascherano, while
skipper Steven Gerrard Jose Reina, Jamie Carragher, Fabio Aurelio, Harry
Kewell, Fernando Torres and Dirk Kuyt each returned to the fold.

West Ham United's last win over the Merseysiders came courtesy of Trevor
Sinclair's lone strike back in November 1999, but sitting in tenth spot,
Alan Curbishley had every right to feel confident that his unchanged team -
with the fit again trio of Dean Ashton, Matthew Etherington and Nolberto
Solano also on the bench - could turn the tide following their 1-1 draw at
Manchester City ten days ago.

However, it was the reshuffled Reds, who looked more dangerous in the early
stages as Torres tried his luck with a hopeful, long-range grass-cutter in
the opening seconds before Benayoun sent a rising effort into the middle
reaches of the Bobby Moore Stand. Then, on 18 minutes, with the linesman's
flag staying down, Torres raced clear from halfway only to be thwarted by
Robert Green's perfectly timed charge from his area that saw him clear from
the sprinting Spaniard.

With Anton Ferdinand gradually getting the measure of Liverpool's £27m
marksman, West Ham United visibly grew in belief as Luis Boa Morte fired
over after the ball was frantically scrambled off Lee Bowyer's toes, and
then the relieved Reina could only stand and stare as the impressive Noble's
inswinging, left-wing free-kick was nodded on to his own crossbar by Finnan.

Five minutes before the interval, Aurelio hauled down the fleeing Ljungberg
at the expense of a yellow card and, as West Ham United began to shade an
absorbing first half on points, Reina's timely punch cleared the ball off
the head of toiling lone-striker Carlton Cole to keep it goalless at the
break.

Just after the restart, Ljungberg just could not connect with ever-present
George McCartney's cross into the six-yard box and then Boa Morte scuffed
wide from six yards to the frustration of the claret and blue fans amongst
the sold-out crowd of 34,977. That was the cue for both Etherington and
Ashton to enter the fray at the expense of Bowyer and Boa Morte for a final
half-hour that saw the home side revert to a more attacking 4-4-2 formation.

Benitez immediately responded by bringing on Lucas for the subdued Kewell,
who had also got little joy out of the other Lucas - fellow Aussie Lucas
Neill. The Brazilian substitute soon fired just past the base of Green's
right-hand post and, midway through the half, he also strolled on to the
galloping Gerrard's square pass, before shooting over the home 'keeper's
left-hand angle, too.

After Gerrard uncharacteristically sent an 18-yarder high and wide, Torres
found himself booked for dissent before Benayoun trudged away to be replaced
by Ryan Babel. With the game ebbing and flowing more and more as it moved
into the final quarter-hour, both Cole and Ljungberg went close before
Neill, at the far past, sent his shot crashing into the boards, while Torres
was also thwarted by the outstretched leg of Green.

Jonathan Spector came on for the final ten minutes as Cole departed to
deserved applause but with West Ham United reverting back to a 4-5-1
formation a goalless draw, by now, looked the only realistic outcome.

But with just seconds of the three added minutes remaining, the breaking
Etherington had other ideas and when he picked out the supporting Ljungberg
inside the box, referee Alan Wiley had no hesitation in pointing to spot
when he fell under Carragher's challenge. Ice-cool, Noble did the rest with
a low, spot-kick kick beyond the outstretched left arm of the diving Reina.

West Ham United: Green, Neill, Ferdinand, Upson, McCartney, Bowyer (Ashton
58), Mullins, Noble, Ljungberg, Boa Morte (Etherington 58), Cole (81)
Subs not used: Wright, Solano

Liverpool: Reina, Finnan, Hyypia, Carragher, Aurelio, Benayoun (Babel 73),
Gerrard, Alonso, Kewell (Lucas 61), Torres, Kuyt
Subs not used: Itandje, Skrtel, Crouch

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Curbs thrilled by 'fantastic result' - WHUFC
An understandably upbeat Alan Curbishley has once again paid tribute to the
effort made by his players
31.01.2008

Alan Curbishley could not hide his elation after West Ham United once again
showed their tremendous form with a superb 1-0 triumph against Liverpool.

It was the first time in 12 meetings that the club had got the better of the
Reds, and the manager had plenty of words of praise for the way his team -
from Robert Green at the back to Carlton Cole in attack - stuck to the task
before deservedly taking the points with a late Mark Noble penalty. Although
Pepe Reina dived the right way in the Liverpool goal, the shot arrowed into
the corner of the net to send the Boleyn Ground wild.

"It was a fantastic result for us," he said. "We have had to keep it tight,
work ever so hard. Everybody played their part, Greeny made the saves when
he needed to and the back four once again have stood really firm. We've got
a terrific defensive record and we needed it. I am delighted for the
players.

"It was mentioned yesterday that West Ham have had a turbulent record
against Liverpool. I wasn't fully aware of it. As they have shown all
season, they gave everything. We are chopping and changing a lot of the time
but they have given everything. It is nice when you get the result in the
last minute and we will take it."

Talking about the penalty that won it, he said he left it up to the players
to decide who was going to take the responsibility. "Reina's good on
penalties and I saw Dean Ashton walking towards it as well. Mark took the
one at the Birmingham, while Deano was the penalty taker last year but Mark
took it and put it on the spot. He was confident I think but you have to ask
him how confident."

The manager added his only concern after the goal went in was that Noble did
not pick up his fifth yellow card of the season for an over-zealous
celebration - which would have meant a one-match ban. He was also concerned
that the referee did not add extra time. As it was, the final whistle blew
seconds after the restart and Curbishley was able to keep on looking
upwards.

"We have got to keep the run going," he said, already thinking about
Saturday's trip to Wigan Athletic." We have had to use everything we have
got. We have had players playing out of position, we have had to change
things during the game and perhaps put people in unfamiliar places. They
have shown great character. I think West Ham fans should be looking at them
and saying what they are producing is fantastic - a great attitude."

As well as Nolberto Solano's return as an unused substitute, the manager
confirmed that Julien Faubert, Craig Bellamy and Bobby Zamora are all close.
"Bellamy and Zamora are in full training, Faubert is back in training - so
we have got one two of them perhaps who are looking as if they are going to
be back in the next couple of weeks. We will have to see."

The manager had a word for Luis Boa Morte who gave his all as he continues
his return from hamstring trouble while he explained why he had to take
Carlton Cole off late in the game. "It wasn't popular because people think
that it is a forward coming off but Steven Gerrard was running riot and I
had to do something about it. I put Jon [Spector] on there to try and stop
that and he did. Sometimes you have to do things in games that perhaps
people don't see but we have to do it."

The ends justify the means and with Everton, Aston Villa, Manchester City,
Blackburn Rovers, Portsmouth and, of course, Liverpool, all dropping points
this week - the club are within striking distance of the European places.
"We are delighted. It means that we are looking straight at the two teams
above us now. Let's see if we can improve on it next week. I am only
concerned about us. We should be proud of what they have achieved so far."

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Nobes: 'I was so confident' - WHUFC
Mark Noble revealed he had no hesitation about stepping up to the spot in
the dying seconds
30.01.2008

Mark Noble revealed he was determined to take the last-gasp spot-kick that
gave West Ham United a valuable 1-0 victory against Liverpool.

When Jamie Carragher fouled Freddie Ljungberg in the penalty area, there was
only one thought in the 20-year-old's mind - especially as he had scored
from the spot in the only other penalty awarded to the club this season
against Birmingham City back on 18 August. With a smile, he said: "We have
only had two this year. I scored the first one, so my record was 100 per
cent.

"No one was going to go against me," he added, well aware that Dean Ashton
was moving towards the ball and also fancied his chances against penalty
expert Pepe Reina in the Liverpool goal. "I was taking it no matter what. As
soon as I picked up the ball I thought Reina's got a reputation...but I was
so confident that I was going to score, I didn't feel that nervous."

Alan Curbishley could not hide his praise for Noble's all-round
contribution. "For a young boy he has shown great maturity," the manager
said. "He really looked as if he was enjoying himself tonight. I left him
out a couple of times just before Christmas and he was playing with an
injury. He had this hernia problem, and he never told anyone. In the end he
had to have it done. The rest he had has done him good."

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West Ham 1-0 Liverpool - BBC
By Saj Chowdhury

Mark Noble's injury-time penalty gave West Ham a deserved victory over
Liverpool at Upton Park. Noble slotted the ball low past Pepe Reina with
virtually the last kick of the match after Jamie Carragher had brought down
Freddie Ljungberg. Earlier, West Ham's Luis Boa Morte twice missed from six
yards out while Xabi Alonso headed on to his own bar. Lucas Leiva missed
from eight yards for the Reds while Fernando Torres' shot was saved by
Robert Green.
The result must have buoyed West Ham boss Alan Curbishley whose best-laid
plans to frustrate Liverpool did not go awry. Although the Reds had not won
in the league for over a month they had beaten the Hammers in their last
seven meetings. But from the first whistle, the home side were intent to
bring an end to their appalling record against the Merseysiders and even
steal a win themselves. They had the best two chances of the first 45 with
Boa Morte blazing over from six yards and Alonso coming close to heading the
ball into his own goal - the crossbar denying Curbishley's troops. The
closest Rafa Benitez's men came to grabbing the lead was inside the first 10
minutes when former West Ham player Yossi Benayoun burst into the area but
fired his shot over the bar from eight yards. Liverpool's multi-million
pound strikeforce of Dirk Kuyt and Torres were often crowded out as soon as
the ball arrived at their feet by the dynamic duo of Anton Ferdinand and
Matthew Upson.
The defensive pair along with the rest of the backline and midfield worked
tirelessly over the 90 minutes to deny playmakers Steven Gerrard and Alonso
much time to weave their magic. After the break, the visitors from Anfield
should have been made to pay again for their lack of bite when Boa Morte
received the ball on the edge of the six-yard area but completely mis-hit
his effort embarrassingly wide. That was enough for a bemused Benitez who
brought on Leiva and Ryan Babel to insert some life into his side. The
Brazilian made a brief impression on the match, shooting narrowly wide from
Torres' low right-wing cross, while Babel found Torres with a short pass
only to see the Spaniard's effort saved low by Green - although it appeared
to be heading wide. The match was veering towards a draw until one of the
stars of the show, Ljungberg, motored into the area only to have his ankle
clipped by Carragher. Referee Alan Wiley was left with a no-brainer and
pointed to the spot. England Under-21 star Noble, who had an exceptional
match, was left with the pressure kick but showed no nerves to fire sweetly
into Reina's left corner.

West Ham boss Alan Curbishley: "It's tremendous - if you're going to get a
penalty and score then it's a great time to do it. "Week in and week out
we've put in a lot of effort - the squad have a fantastic attitude and full
credit goes to them. "We've lost three games in the last 16 and that's gone
unnoticed."

Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez: We had chances but couldn¿t take them. We
started really well and in the second half we had a lot of possession and to
lose following a counter attack in the final minute is disappointing. "For
them to score from a penalty so late on was terrible. We now need to think
about the next game."

West Ham: Green, Neill, Ferdinand, Upson, McCartney, Ljungberg, Noble,
Mullins, Bowyer (Ashton 58), Boa Morte (Etherington 59), Cole (Spector 81).
Subs Not Used: Wright, Solano.
Goals: Noble 90 pen.

Liverpool: Reina, Finnan, Carragher, Hyypia, Aurelio, Benayoun (Babel 72),
Gerrard, Alonso, Kewell (Lucas 61), Torres, Kuyt.
Subs Not Used: Itandje, Crouch, Skrtel.
Booked: Aurelio, Torres, Alonso.

Att: 34,977
Ref: Alan Wiley (Staffordshire).

BBC Sport Player Rater man of the match: West Ham's Mark Noble 7.16 (on 90
minutes).

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West Ham United 1 Liverpool 0 - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Mark Noble is the toast of the East End tonight after his 94th minute spot
kick gave the Hammers their first win over Liverpool since 1999.

Noble stepped up to convert the injury time penalty after Freddie Ljungberg
was brought down inside the area in the 93rd minute. Despite the best
efforts of Liverpool keeper Pepe Reina the England under 21 midfielder held
his nerve to slot home the goal that gives the Hammers a vital three points,
leaving them just four points adrift of Liverpool and right back in the hunt
for a European spot.

Although the Hammers had controlled the first half Liverpool had seemingly
done enough to earn a share of the spoils with a solid second half
performance. But Ljungberg, the scourge of Liverpool over the years had
other ideas when he raced towards the visitor's goal three minutes into time
added on.

That it was a penalty was never in doubt, although 'Pool will pehaps feel
aggrieved that they weren't awarded one of their own earlier in the second
half when Lucas Neill saw the ball roll down his arm from a Reds corner.

Yet that aside Rafa Benitez's team - who have now earned just four points
from their last five matches and remain without a win in 2008 - have nobody
but themselves to blame for missing a series of second half chances to break
the deadlock and perhaps put the game beyond West Ham's reach.

But for as profligate as Liverpool were in the second period the Hammers
were every bit as wasteful in the first 45. For the first time in a number
of years the Merseysiders were clearly there for the taking and the Hammers
took full advantage of the Reds' recent misfortunes with an encouraging
first half performance that had everything but a goal.

The best chances of the half fell to Luis Boa Morte - who could only drill
his shot from six yards high into the stands on 22 minutes - and Carlton
Cole, who saw his shot on the turn from a similar distance well blocked on
the stroke of half time. However the best chance for the home side arrived
on 27 minutes via the head of Steve Finnan who inadvertently turned Mark
Noble's inswinging free-kick on to his own crossbar with Reina well beaten.

At the other end Liverpool managed just one meaningful effort on goal when
former Hammer Yossi Benayoun - who received a chorus of boos every time he
touched the ball and when he was substituted late on - saw his delicate lob
float over the bar.

It looked as if the Hammers had blown their chance after the break as
Liverpool came out a different side to that which had seemed so ordinary
before it. As few as four minutes had passed before Harry Kewell spurned a
golden opportunity from close range after good work on the flank by Dirk
Kuyt.

Yet the Hammers were to spurn two further opportunites before Liverpool's
dominance took hold. Freddie Ljungberg misread a George McCartney cross
(although a slight deflection by Aurelio may have been more responsible for
the Swede's mishit) and Boa Morte once again fluffed a sitter from close
range at the far post.

That was enough for Curbishley who replaced the out of form Portu-geezer
with Matthew Etherington to a chorus of approval from the home fans.
Etherington was joined on the pitch by Dean Ashton, who took over from Lee
Bowyer as the Hammers adopted a more attacking 442 formation.

Yet if anything this new system served to hinder the home side's progress as
the visitors began to profit from the new space afforded in the centre of
the park. Lucas - twice - and Babel has good chances to open the scoring
before the other Lucas - West Ham's Mr Neill - was perhaps a touch fortunate
to escape censure for the aforementioned penalty appeal (although there was
clearly little intent by the Australian ful-back).

As Liverpool pressed for the winner in the closing minutes the Hammers took
advantage with the kind of counter attack more often seen away from the
Boleyn this season and Ljungberg used all of his professional knowledge to
draw Jamie Carragher into a clumsy challenge which left the referee with
little choice but to award a spot kick - which Noble drilled into the bottom
right hand corner to win the game for the Hammers.

The win gives the Hammers renewed optimism in their push for Europe -
especially as Portsmouth lost at Man Utd and Man City could only muster a
draw against bottom club Derby. Whilst the Hammers remain in tenth spot with
36 points they are now just a single point behind Portsmouth and two behind
Blackburn with a game in hand.

As a footnote, last season it took the Hammers 36 games to accrue a point
less than they have already achieved this season - from just 23 games. That,
combined with a goal difference of +8 are quite astonishing statistics given
the short space of time involved and the fact that Alan Curbishley has been
so limited for choice this season due to a series of injuries.

With strugglers Wigan, Birmingham and Fulham to come in the next three
games, it seems as if the Hammers can only go from strength to strength.

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Curbs delight at late drama - SSN
Hammers boss jubilant after injury-time winner
By Joe Drabble Last updated: 31st January 2008

Alan Curbishley was left thanking the footballing gods after Mark Noble
struck a 94th minute winner from the penalty spot to defeat Liverpool 1-0.
West Ham themselves have endured their fair share of penalty heartache and
Curbishley admitted he was elated that the luck finally changed for his
side. "We've been on the end of penalties in the last minute and Robert
Green has pulled us out of it," said Curbishley. "Portsmouth was one,
Tottenham another one, and it's nice to spin it around. "It was a tough game
tonight, I think Liverpool are a top side and they put us under a lot of
pressure without really creating the chances."
The late substitution of Jonathan Spector replacing Carlton Cole signalled
Curbishley's intent to hang onto a point, and the ex-Charlton boss admits to
gain all three was a huge bonus. "I must admit with a couple of minutes to
go I would have took the point," he said. "But it's great that we have
picked up the three and that puts us within striking distance of the clubs
just above us now - let's see if we can attack that."

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Noble spot-on for Hammers - SSN
Last-gasp penalty sees Rafa's men stumble
By Joe Drabble Last updated: 30th January 2008

Liverpool's stuttering season continued as Mark Noble's last minute
spot-kick earned West Ham a 1-0 win at Upton Park. Jamie Carragher brought
down Freddie Ljungberg in the 94th minute, and Noble kept his cool as
Liverpool slipped three points behind Merseyside rivals Everton in the race
for fourth place. West Ham had the better of the first half with Noble
coming within inches of scoring when his direct free-kick rattled the
crossbar after a deflection off Steve Finnan. Liverpool dominated the second
period with Robert Green fantastically denying Fernando Torres with a smart
low save, and Lucas Leiva twice coming close from long-range. The West Ham
backline defended heroically, and after a superb late counter attack
Ljungberg was brought down by Carragher - and the Hammers stole the points.
Former Hammer, Yossi Benayoun had the first chance when he almost took
advantage of a mishap from Green. The goalkeeper's slice was worked to Dirk
Kuyt and then Benayoun, but his chip drifted over the crossbar. From a
relatively promising start for the visitors, it was the hosts who then
gathered momentum as the first half unravelled. Carlton Cole helped create
West Ham's first genuine opening, midway through the opening half. The
striker flicked on George McCartney's long throw, Liverpool were seized by
panic as Lee Bowyer tussled but Luis Boa Morte rushed his shot and blazed
over when the ball fell to him. The hosts got even closer in the 26th minute
when a free-kick was awarded on the left flank for Carragher's foul on Cole.
Noble took the set-piece, which was glanced by Finnan and cannoned off the
crossbar. Cole had a sight of goal in stoppage-time in the opening period
but Benayoun slid in to block and Liverpool went into the break level.
Kuyt created the first chance of the second half, three minutes in, when he
found room on the right flank and drove a cross into the danger area, but
Harry Kewell could not wrap his foot around the ball to finish. Matthew
Upson then flashed a backpass right across Green's goal, which the
goalkeeper had to watch drift wide. At the other end, Boa Morte fluffed his
finish when Noble's free-kick was headed into his path. Then came the ironic
cheers for Boa Morte's departure, with Bowyer also coming off for Matthew
Etherington and Dean Ashton, both back from injury. Liverpool midfielder
Lucas came on for Kewell and he was just wide with his finish after
releasing Torres down the right and getting on the end of the cross. Lucas
also went wide when he got on the end of a driving run from Gerrard. With
injury-time just about over, Carragher brought down Ljungberg in the penalty
area and Noble converted the spot-kick.

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West Ham 1-0 Liverpool: Reds' title dream over - Soccernet

Liverpool's hopes of getting back in the Barclays Premier League title race
took another blow after Mark Noble scored the only goal of the game in
stoppage-time for West Ham at Upton Park. Lucas Neill comes across to
prevent a Harry Kewell cross at Upton Park. With better finishing from Luis
Boa Morte, the Hammers would have had their first win over Liverpool since
1999 sealed before Noble struck from the spot in added time. But Boa Morte
wasted two sitters either side of half-time before home fans cruelly cheered
him off when he was substituted. Even a draw would have left Rafael
Benitez's men still well off the pace for the title and they remain without
a win in the league since Boxing Day. It was billed as a match between two
teams with contrasting styles of ownership - Alan Curbishley is left to get
on with by his Icelandic bosses, while the Americans at Anfield have created
a stir since taking over. On the pitch, only Noble's penalty was to choose
between them. West Ham knew victory or defeat would not have moved them from
10th, yet their display would have suggested they were trying to prove they
could rub shoulders with those chasing Europe. Their fans had a point to
prove as well, jeering Yossi Benayoun following his departure in the summer.
'We were hoping he would sign a long-term contract with us, but that didn't
happen,' wrote Hammers boss Curbishley in his programme notes. Benayoun,
Steve Finnan and Sami Hyypia were the only survivors from the nervous
victory over Havant and Waterlooville at the weekend - and it was Benayoun
who had the first chance when he almost took advantage of a mishap from
Robert Green.
The goalkeeper's slice was worked to Dirk Kuyt and then Benayoun, but his
chip drifted over the crossbar. From a relatively promising start, with Kuyt
seeing the ball playing just off Fernando Torres, it was the hosts who then
gathered momentum as the first half unravelled. Curbishley used Carlton Cole
as the focal point of his attack, and the striker almost embarrassed Jose
Reina early on when the goalkeeper dwelt on the ball. Cole helped create
West Ham's first genuine opening, midway through the opening half. The
striker flicked on George McCartney's long throw, Liverpool were seized by
panic as Lee Bowyer tussled but Boa Morte rushed his shot and blazed over
when the ball fell to him. The hosts got even closer in the 26th minute when
a free-kick was awarded on the left flank for Jamie Carragher's foul on
Cole. Noble took the set-piece, which was glanced by Finnan and cannoned off
the crossbar.
Noble and Steven Gerrard battled in the middle of the park - England central
midfielder against his under-21 counterpart - and the senior man was
fortunate to escape a booking for one of his challenges. Fabio Aurelio,
though, picked up a caution for his foul on Freddie Ljungberg. Cole had a
sight of goal in stoppage-time in the opening period but Benayoun slid in to
block and Liverpool went into the break level. They were marginally brighter
in the second half.
Kuyt created the first chance, three minutes in, when he found room on the
right flank and drove a cross into the danger area, but Harry Kewell could
not wrap his foot around the ball to finish. Matthew Upson then flashed a
backpass right across Green's goal, which the goalkeeper had to watch drift
wide.
Torres also ran at pace into the penalty box but was outnumbered when he
looked to find a team-mate. At the other end, Boa Morte fluffed his finish
when Noble's free-kick was headed into his path. Then came the ironic cheers
for Boa Morte's departure, with Bowyer also coming off for Matthew
Etherington and Dean Ashton, both back from injury. Liverpool midfielder
Lucas came on for Kewell and he was just wide with his finish after
releasing Torres down the right and getting on the end of the cross. Lucas
also went wide when he got on the end of a driving run from Gerrard. Torres,
who was booked for dissent, was denied by Green at the near post from Ryan
Babel's cross, while Lucas Neill flashed wide for West Ham before the end.
With injury-time just about over, Carragher brought down Ljungberg in the
penalty area. Noble converted the spot-kick.
Rafael Benitez is confident he will be given time to turn around Liverpool's
season after the stoppage-time defeat to West Ham virtually ended their
hopes of getting back in the title race. The Spaniard said: 'Yes. We will
improve. Because we can improve.' 'Did we deserve to lose? I think we
deserved to win.
'If you analyse the game, you can talk about the game. If you analyse the
result you can talk about the result. 'I am a manager, so I have some
experience. We must think about how to improve, how to take our chances and
how to win games.' Benitez insisted he was not thinking about where
Liverpool stand in the title race, adding: 'I'm thinking just about the next
game and I will try to win the next three points against Sunderland. Our
next game is more realistic to think about.'
When asked if the American owners of Liverpool will be analysing the game,
he said: 'I don't know if they have a TV. 'Everything is behind (us) and we
will start thinking about winning games.' The main worry for Hammers boss
Alan Curbishley was Noble's celebrations, as the midfielder is flirting with
suspension on four bookings. He also was concerned with fans jeering Boa
Morte for his missed opportunities. 'It's happened a couple of times,' he
said. 'They need to get behind the players. Luis has been out a month and
came back at Manchester City and put everything in.' With players returning
from injury, Curbishley's men are also handily placed for a push for
European places. 'We've got to win our home games and keep the run going,'
he added. 'We've lost three games in 16, and those were to Arsenal, Chelsea
and Everton. 'We've had to use everything we've got. We've had players
playing out of position, and we've had to change players during games, but
we've shown great character. The fans should be pleased with the attitude.'


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Vinny's Liverpool Report - West Ham Online
Vinny - Thu Jan 31 2008

West Ham United 1 Liverpool 0

A last minute penalty from Mark Noble gave West Ham a precious victory over
Liverpool and closes the gap on the European positions which West Ham are
now only five points away from with a game in hand. Yes, I know it may be a
bit too soon to be talking about Europe but with out recent displays, our
upcoming fixtures and the knowledge that we have plenty of quality players
to return very soon, it is not crazy to suggest that our season may have
quite a bit of life left in it. Our first half performance was excellent and
we dominated the game and really should have gone in front. Luis Boa Morte
missed a sitter and he missed an even better chance just after the interval.
Liverpool would have surprised many with there flat performance and although
they do possess a few world class players, as a cohesive unit they do not
click and our hard work made sure they had no success in their attacking
play. Alan Curbishley made no changes to the side which started at
Manchester City keeping faith with Carlton Cole as the lone striker with Boa
Morte and Ljungberg either side of him. On the bench there were returns for
Dean Ashton, Matthew Etherington and Nolberto Solano. Liverpool started with
a fast pace and it did take us a little while to settle. What was evident
was our inability to clear the ball in this messy beginning to game, but we
did manage to start passing the ball about as we took control of the first
half. Torres was showing some terrific pace and running into space but our
defenders (Anton especially) were matching him every time in the tackle. Our
first chance of the first half fell to the much maligned Luis Boa Morte when
a corner was cleared, Bowyer was disposed but the ball fell to Boa Morte on
his right foot but the winger fired way over the bar. Another set piece
followed shortly after when a free kick was won the left hand side. Mark
Noble stepped up to swing it in and the cross was flicked on by Steve Finnan
and it flew past Reina but only crashed off the crossbar with Liverpool
frantically clearing their lines.
We were starting to see a lot more of the ball and our midfield was winning
every second ball and we were playing some good stuff. Freddie Ljungberg was
looking in the mood and looked to run at the Liverpool right back Aurelio at
every attempt which led to the Liverpool man hacking the Swede down and
being shown the yellow card. Carlton Cole had two half chances (if you could
even call them that) before the half time whistle. One from a long pass
where he nearly beat Reina to the ball but the goal keeper did well to punch
the ball away. The other chance was the final action of the first half as a
corner caused problems in the Liverpool area and the ball fell to Cole whose
goal bound shot was superbly charged down. The players received a deserved
applause as they left the field for the interval (although I doubt many
counted Boa Morte their applause), and there seemed to be a air of
confidence around Upton Park (or was it just me?) that felt that we would go
on to win a game which we had been largely dominant in even though we hadn't
created a plethora of goal scoring opportunities. The second half saw
Liverpool compete in a way which most would have expected them to do
throughout the entire game with their big names showing glimpses of their
true quality. We had started the second period in the way we had finished
the first with multiple free kicks being won and pressure being applied to
the Liverpool backline. A deep cross from George McCartney evaded everyone
but found Ljungberg at the back post unmarked but the winger seemed to take
his eye off the ball and it was put out for a corner. Noble (who had been
pulling the strings in our midfield) was cynically fouled by Aurelio and the
Liverpool man should have seen his second yellow card for yet another clumsy
foul. The resulting free kick was played in by Noble and after a poor
defensive header the ball fell to Boa Morte who was just a few yards out but
he completely scuffed his left foot shot wide to the anger of the Upton Park
crowd.
Coincidently Matthew Etherington had just been about to come on, and with
that anger still in the air Boa Morte received a less that savoury reception
as he left the pitch. Don't get me wrong now, he was shocking, he missed two
great chances and had to be taken off, but the heckling he received as if he
was a enemy was a little over the top. I suppose I should have learnt by now
that West Ham fans are generally irrational. This wasn't the only change
which was made at this moment, and it was one of the turning points of the
game which nearly had Curbishley looking tactically inept. He decided to
bring on Dean Ashton and take off Lee Bowyer which saw us go to a
conventional 4-4-2. Whilst many supporters will think this was a bold move
which showed the ambition to win the game, I saw it as a bit of a naïve move
which was applied far too early into the second half. We had been the
better side, and were creating the odd chance, and if we kept going the way
we were we may well have got that goal we had been searching for, but with
Ashton on the pitch all we did was resort to the long ball with little
movement, and we became easy to defend against. In turn this saw Liverpool
gradually get a foot hold on the game, and as an attacking force we had
disappeared from the game. The visitors first decent chance fell to Harry
Kewell who had lost his marker to win the ball from a cross to the back post
but his shot was less than convincing and went well wide. A brilliant move
involving Gerrard saw the England Midfielder race into the space over on the
left hand side and cut the ball back for substitute Lucas to fire a shot
well wide of Robert Green's goal. The frustration was telling on the
Liverpool players faces with Torres slamming the ball down on the floor
after Lucas Neill won a throw in off him. The Spanish striker was booked for
his dissent. Lucas Neill saw the ball fall to him from a poorly cleared
corner but his shot went wide when he really should have been hitting the
target. Liverpool's best chance of the game fell to Torres whose shot was
brilliantly saved by Robert Green from point blank range with his feet.
The game was becoming more stretched and Liverpool were finding lots of
space to run into. Alan Curbishley had to backtrack on his earlier intent to
attack Liverpool (which had failed) by taking off Carlton Cole and replacing
him with Jonathan Spector who came into the centre of midfield to keep
Gerrard at bay.
Three minutes of injury time were to be played and there only looked one
side who could possibly get a winner and it wasn't us. Lucas Neill was
frustrated to concede a corner in the final minute of the three. I was
holding my breath at this point as I was very satisfied with gaining a point
and a clean sheet in this game. But what was to happen took myself and
everyone in the ground by surprise. From the Liverpool corner we managed to
clear the ball and it came out to Etherington who raced forward and played
the ball to Ljungberg. The Swede kept possession and played it back to
Etherington who looked around, took his time and swung a ball out to the
left where Ljungberg had run and the winger got into the area, knocked the
ball past Jamie Carragher only to be chopped down and the referee had no
choice but to point to the spot. It was a stonewall penalty as you are
likely to see and the Liverpool players didn't even bother protesting thus
was the obvious nature of the foul. Mark Noble stepped up to take the
penalty with the Boleyn falling deafly silent as he took the shot which went
past Reina to the delight and joy of every West Ham fan. The Liverpool
players only had time to kick off as the ref blew for full time. A fantastic
result and one of the best this season.

Player Reviews

Robert Green
Made some good punches from a few good crosses. His kicking was a little
wayward at times but his excellent save from Torres in the second half more
than made up for that.

Lucas Neill
Up against his fellow countryman Harry Kewell, our captain came out firmly
on top putting in a really excellent display. His defending was at a high
and he was a good shout for man of the match.

Matthew Upson
There were a few shaky moments from Upson, and some strange passing which
put us under pressure at times. Was excellent in the air and won the battle
with Kyut.

Anton Ferdinand
His great form continues and tonight was a real test up against the quality
of Torres. Ferdinand matched him for the majority and I am pleased to see he
is doing the simple thing instead of trying to be flash.

George McCartney
Defensively yet again he was excellent, but going forward he really needs to
work on. He takes far too long to put in his cross and had a real lack of
movement when pushing forward. But I can't take anything away from his
performance because was very good once again.

Freddie Ljungberg
This is the player we hoped we had signed in the summer. Looked like a
proper winger where he really wanted the ball and wanted to take players on.
He gave Aurileo a torrid time and was constantly fouled throughout. Mugged
Carragher at the end and won the penalty which gave us the victory. His form
of late has been very good.

Lee Bowyer
Didn't see too much of him during his time on the pitch and although his
effort was evident, he didn't have any impact on the game.

Mark Noble
He was superb in the first half and pulled all the strings in our midfield.
Like our last game against Manchester City, he was our key man and you felt
if something was going to happen, Noble would be there or thereabouts.

Hayden Mullins
Quietly went about his job and did if very well. Up against some top
players, Mullins held his own and was strong throughout.

Luis Boa Morte
Whilst I thought the reaction to his substitution was a little over the top,
there can be no denying that he was awful and had to be taken off. His last
three games have provided us with nothing but shit, and he has a long long
way to go before he proves he is anything more than a very poor player.

Carlton Cole
Brilliant once again and all that was lacking was the goal. He gave the
Liverpool centre halves nothing but trouble and he won headers and brought
the ball down countless times whilst holding the ball up well. He must not
be dropped.

Subs Used

Matthew Etherington (on for Boa Morte 59 mins)
Didn't actually see much of the ball until the end but had a massive part to
play in our goal.

Dean Ashton (on for Bowyer 59 mins)
Looked leggy once again, and never got going.

Jonathan Spector (on for Cole 81 mins)
People groaned at his introduction but the part he had to play was vital.

Overall

Before the game I really thought this was one we could win as I had been
encouraged by the football we were playing. As the final minutes kicked in I
would have been pleased with the draw but to pick up all three points was
just utterly superb.

Nights like these are what it is all about, and to beat Liverpool at Upton
Park with a last minute penalty (how fitting was that) was just the script I
would have wanted for this one.

Up next are Wigan in what hopefully will be a great day, and after last
season I cannot wait for this one. We should be beating this lot and I am
sure we will.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool hit by Mark Noble effort at West Ham - Telegraph
By John Ley
Last Updated: 1:49am GMT 31/01/2008

West Ham United (0) 1 Liverpool (0) 0

Liverpool's problems continued at Upton Park where a penalty in the fourth
minute of added time condemned them to another costly defeat. Any slender
hopes Rafael Benitez had of gathering pace on the leaders disappeared into
the east London night when local boy Mark Noble dispatched the spot-kick
with remarkable coolness.

It seemed that Liverpool were heading for their 11th Premier League draw
when Freddie Ljungberg, in attempting to turn Jamie Carragher, had his feet
taken away by the defender. Referee Alan Wiley gave the kick immediately
and, after stalling tactics from goalkeeper Pepe Reina, Noble buried the
ball into the bottom right-hand corner.

Liverpool made eight changes to the team who initially struggled against
Havant & Waterlooville on Saturday, though they showed only two alterations
from their previous Premier League outing, the 2-2 draw with Aston Villa.
Javier Mascherano, once of West Ham and the possible subject of a full-time
move to Anfield today, was left out altogether.

Liverpool included former West Ham winger Yossi Benayoun and Alan
Curbishley, the home manager, admitted in his programme notes that he was
disappointed the Israeli had preferred a move to Anfield rather than accept
a new contract. Benayoun scored a hat-trick on Saturday but he soon received
a negative reaction from his former fans.

West Ham, after their 1-1 draw at Manchester City in the Premier League,
were unchanged, with Matthew Etherington, Nolberto Solano and Dean Ashton on
the bench.

Unusually, the teams had yet to meet this season, but Liverpool had won on
their previous three visits including last season's 2-1 victory a year ago
to the day. Indeed, West Ham went into the game without a win over Liverpool
in 14 League and cup games home and away.

That history may have offered Liverpool solace as they looked to claw back a
deficit of 17 points behind the Premier League leaders, a cause not helped
by four successive draws.

Yet in the opening minutes the 3,000 travelling fans were singing the name
of their manager and, in a lively opening in which the visitors moved the
ball around sharply, they were unfortunate not to take the lead.

West Ham's pedestrian defence laboured to clear an early Steven Gerrard
free-kick and, after Robert Green had cleared sloppily, Benayoun attempted
an audacious lob from a difficult angle, but the hosts survived.

Green, hoping to feature in Fabio Capello's first England squad today, had
to react quickly when Dirk Kuyt threaded the ball to Fernando Torres, with
the goalkeeper racing out to clear from the Spaniard's feet. And when,
minutes later, Torres attempted to beat the defence on his own, Anton
Ferdinand made a timely tackle.

West Ham finally responded in the 22nd minute when Liverpool's
indecisiveness allowed Luis Boa Morte an opportunity close in but the
Portuguese squandered the chance, sending it high over the target. And, five
minutes later, West Ham's revival from an insipid start continued when
Noble's free-kick took a headed deflection off Benayoun and bounced on to
the Liverpool crossbar.

Now it was Liverpool who appeared anxious and before half-time Boa Morte
offered Ljungberg a chance from a side position on the right, but the Swede
lost control of the ball.

Boa Morte was guilty again of squandering a wonderful chance in the 57th
minute. Noble's free-kick was headed out but only to Boa Morte and, to the
annoyance of the home fans, the midfielder, from five yards, slashed at the
ball and missed.

Curbishley made a double substitution with Etherington and Ashton
introduced. That Boa Morte was one of the players to make way brought a
collective cheer from an impatient Upton Park.

Liverpool then brought on Lucas, and within a minute he hit a shot just
wide. Then he combined with Gerrard before sending an effort just over.

Torres had a close-range attempt blocked and Lucas Neill drove another
effort just off target.

Ljungberg, though, won the crucial penalty and the manner in which Noble
calmly slotted the kick beyond Reina was admirable.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Rafa Benitez shows strain of Liverpool defeat - Telegraph
By John Ley
Last Updated: 7:25am GMT 31/01/2008

West Ham United (0) 1 Liverpool (0) 0

Rafael Benitez offered a defiant response to Liverpool's latest
disappointment last night, insisting that the club, in seventh place after
this defeat, could still qualify for the Champions League, while not
completely ruling out winning the title. Yet, after watching Mark Noble
convert a penalty in the fourth minute of added time, the Liverpool manager
carried the air of man under pressure.

Liverpool, once a big draw, have become specialists in stalemates. Just as
they were heading for their 11th draw of the season on a night when both
teams missed chances, a Liverpool local boy's error allowed a home-grown
West Ham product to deliver victory.

The fourth official had confirmed three minutes of added time, and there had
been 3min 58sec of extra play when West Ham went upfield and Freddie
Ljungberg had his legs taken away as he attempted to turn Bootle-born Jamie
Carragher.

Referee Alan Wiley, who had earlier rejected pleas for a Liverpool penalty,
pointed to the spot and West Ham's Canning Town-born Noble dispatched the
kick with remarkable coolness into the bottom right hand corner to add to
the strain on Benitez.

The Liverpool manager looked shell-shocked. He refused to blame his players
for another disappointment, but looked as though he could see his position
at Anfield weakening with each poor result. If falling behind twice in the
Cup to the taxi drivers and labourers of Havant and Waterlooville was hard
enough to take, the fact that Liverpool have not won in the League in 2008
does little to improve his relationship with the club's American owners.

Asked if Liverpool could still win the title, Benitez said: "I think just
about the next game. We try to win the next three points and that's it."
Then the Spaniard responded with a succession of curt one and two-word
answers.

Was he confident of qualifying for Europe? "Yes." Champions League

or Uefa Cup? "Champions League." And when asked what was going wrong he
responded with a question of his own. "Do you think we deserved to lose? I
think we deserved to win. I am confident we can qualify for the Champions
League because we will improve, we can improve."

Benitez received the backing of joint owner Tom Hicks at the weekend and
added: "Everything is behind us; now we can concentrate to win games." Asked
if he was confident of improving the club's position the response was
another one-word answer. "Yes."

The harsh realities are that Liverpool have drawn as many games as they have
won, they are 17 points behind leaders Manchester United, three points
behind fourth-placed Everton and a point outside the Uefa Cup qualifying
positions.

Had West Ham's Luis Boa Morte taken at least one of his chances, the outcome
could have been determined earlier than the final minute.

West Ham's pedestrian defence laboured to clear an early Steven Gerrard
free-kick and former West Ham winger Yossi Benayoun attempted an audacious
lob from a difficult angle, but the home side survived.

Then Robert Green had to react quickly when Dirk Kuyt threaded the ball
through to Fernando Torres, with the West Ham goalkeeper racing out to clear
from the Spaniard's feet.

West Ham responded in the 22nd minute when Liverpool's indecision allowed
Boa Morte his first opportunity, but the Portuguese squandered the chance,
sending it high over the target.
Five minutes later, West Ham's revival from an insipid start continued when
Noble's free-kick took a deflection off Benayoun and bounced onto the
Liverpool bar.

Now it was Liverpool who appeared anxious. Boa Morte wasted two more chances
in the second half, one a wonderful opportunity in the 57th minute, and his
subsequent substitution was greeted with applause.

In the 78th minute the ball struck West Ham defender Lucas Neill on the arm,
but the referee gave him the benefit of the doubt. Ljungberg then won the
crucial penalty when his turn fooled Carragher, and Noble converted the
penalty in style.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 1 Liverpool 0: Noble on the spot to punish Liverpool - The
Independent
By Mike Rowbottom
Thursday, 31 January 2008

Liverpool's season began to unravel last night as a penalty in the third
minute of injury time from Mark Noble inflicted a defeat which distanced
them yet further from the sharp end of the Premier League and a position
which is not so much desirable as essential in the wake of their recent
£350m refinancing by the club's American owners, Tom Hicks and George
Gillett.

Having seen his team slip to seventh, 17 points behind the leaders
Manchester United, Liverpool's manager, Rafa Benitez, fielded questions with
the brooding air of a man who was about to explode.

He remained cool enough to insist that the owners would give him time to
turn the side's form around, and that a Champions League place at least was
still within range. But he tacitly admitted that the title was now out of
reach, as he responded: "I think I will need to think about our next match,
against Sunderland. That's more realistic."

Given that Liverpool have now not won since Boxing Day, Sunderland might
even be starting to fancy their chances a bit. Certainly, if they can pursue
Benitez's men with the indefatigability the West Ham demonstrated here, they
will give themselves a chance.

Asked to confirm that he had recovered his equilibrium following the
breakdown in communication with the club's owners earlier in the season –
and the subsequent revelation that they had sounded out Jürgen Klinsmann for
the manager's position at Liverpool – Benitez replied dutifully, but
unconvincingly. "Everything is behind us," he said. "We will start thinking
now about how to win games."

Benitez insisted that his team had not deserved to lose, referring with a
touch of grim humour to the claim for handball in the area by Lucas Neill
after Sammy Hyypia had headed on Steven Gerrard's corner that the referee
Alan Wiley waved away in the 78th minute. Asked what he thought about the
penalty, Benitez replied with the ghost of a smile: "Both were penalties."

His confidence about regaining a place in the top four, he maintained, was
based on a simple reason. "Because we will improve," he said. "Because we
can improve." After four successive draws and a defeat, Liverpool
desperately need to improve.

The decisive moment occurred as West Ham engineered a final breakaway that
was masterminded by their substitute Matt Etherington. His ball in to
Ljungberg prompted Jamie Carragher into a rash challenge that saw the
referee point to the spot, and the 20-year-old Noble personified his team's
approach on the night by electing himself as penalty taker, grabbing hold of
the ball and then driving it low past Jose Reina's left hand to confirm a
victory that may yet transform his side's season.

Benitez had spoken beforehand of the "silly mistakes" that had undermined
his side's progress this season. Here, from their captain, was another.

West Ham's manager, Alan Curbishley, admitted afterwards that his immediate
concern after the goal was that Noble, who is on four bookings, might earn a
fifth and a suspension for over-celebrating. "But then, if you beat
Liverpool in the last minute, you're entitled to celebrate," Curbishley
added with a grin.

His team's task might have been more straightforward had they converted two
early chances against a visiting side to which Benitez had made eight
changes following the weekend FA Cup win over Havant & Waterlooville.

After 21 minutes, George McCartney's long throw-in from the left created
confusion in the Liverpool defence which allowed Luis Boa Morte to shoot
from 10 yards, but the midfielder hooked his effort over the bar.

As their supporters found their voice, the home side began to pick up
momentum, and five minutes later they came even closer to forcing an opening
goal when a free-kick driven in from the left by Noble deflected off the
head of Steve Finnan and cannoned away off the woodwork.

But Noble's flourish eventually earned the points which lifted West Ham to
within shouting distance of a Uefa Cup qualifying position. "The run-in
starts now," said Curbishley, who has long-term injured Craig Bellamy, Bobby
Zamora and Julien Faubert back in training. "Let's see what we can do."

For West Ham, optimism. For Liverpool, a growing sense of dire necessity.

Goal: Noble (90) 1-0.

West Ham United (4-5-1): Green; Neill, Ferdinand, Upson, McCartney;
Ljungberg, Noble, Mullins, Bowyer (Ashton, 58), Boa Morte (Etherington, 59);
Cole (Spector, 81). Substitutes not used: Wright (gk), Solano.

Liverpool (4-4-2): Reina; Finnan, Carragher, Hyypia, Aurelio; Benayoun
(Babel, 72), Gerrard, Alonso, Kewell (Lucas, 61); Torres, Kuyt. Substitutes
not used: Itandje (gk), Crouch, Skrtel.

Referee: A Wiley (Staffordshire).

Booked: Liverpool Aurelio, Torres, Alonso.

Man of the match: Upson.

Attendance: 34, 977.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Benítez defiant on top-four finish after losing to West Ham
Dominic Fifield at Upton Park
Thursday January 31, 2008
The Guardian

Rafael Benítez claimed last night that Liverpool would still finish in the
Premier League's top four despite a 1-0 defeat at West Ham leaving them in
seventh place and trailing Manchester United and Arsenal at the top by a
distant 17 points.
The Spaniard, who said he expected to be given time by the club's American
owners to turn round a stuttering season, cut a dejected figure here as his
side missed a series of chances and then, in the third minute of
injury-time, conceded a penalty when Jamie Carragher tripped Fredrik
Ljungberg after West Ham had raced upfield from a Liverpool corner. Mark
Noble converted confidently to hoist West Ham within reach of the race for a
Uefa Cup place and condemn Benítez's side to a fifth league game without a
win.

Asked whether he was confident Liverpool would still qualify for Europe next
term, the manager said: "Yes. The Champions League." His short, sharp
answers to questions thereafter betrayed a man weighed down by his side's
shortcomings. He was asked what was going wrong, only to cling to what
meagre positives he could glean from another chastening evening. "Did you
think we deserved to lose today? I think we deserved to win. We will
improve. We can improve."
Had the uncertainty surrounding the club's ownership, now firmly in the
control of Tom Hicks and George Gillett, affected his team? "Everything is
behind us," he said. "We will start thinking about winning games. That's our
idea. It depends whether you analyse the game or if you just analyse the
result. I don't know whether [the American owners] have a television so I
don't know what they think." But was he confident he would be given time to
turn this around? "Yes. We are only thinking about a win.

"We did everything we could to win it today but in the end we made a
mistake. We created chances. We had some good opportunities but we didn't
take them. Sometimes it's not just because their goalkeeper makes a save.
Other times we need to shoot on target when we get in good positions. But
all we can do is think about improving, taking our chances and winning some
games."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbishley still upset over Benayoun's West Ham exit
tribalfootball.com - January 30, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley admits he was "stunned" by Yossi
Benayoun's move to Liverpool last summer. The Israeli, who scored eight
goals in 63 appearances for the Upton Park club, had agreed a new five-year
deal last May but hadn't signed the new contract by the time Liverpool
showed an interest. Curbishley said: "I thought Yossi was staying. He had
agreed a new long-term deal. I went on holiday for a week and when I came
back I was surprised to hear he was going to Liverpool. It was disappointing
as he is a good player."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham matchwinner Noble: I was always confident
tribalfooball.com - January 30, 2008

West Ham matchwinner Mark Noble had no doubts over his injury-time spotkick
against Liverpool last night. "We have only had two this year. I scored the
first one, so my record was 100 per cent," the midfielder told WHUTV. "No
one was going to go against me," he added, well aware that Dean Ashton was
moving towards the ball and also fancied his chances against penalty expert
Pepe Reina in the Liverpool goal. "I was taking it no matter what. As soon
as I picked up the ball I thought Reina's got a reputation...but I was so
confident that I was going to score, I didn't feel that nervous."
Alan Curbishley could not hide his praise for Noble's all-round
contribution. "For a young boy he has shown great maturity," the manager
said. "He really looked as if he was enjoying himself tonight. I left him
out a couple of times just before Christmas and he was playing with an
injury. He had this hernia problem, and he never told anyone. In the end he
had to have it done. The rest he had has done him good."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 1, Liverpool 0 - post match analysis
Jan 31 2008 by Ian Doyle, Daily Post

BEFORE this game Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez called for his side to
start a winning run that would ensure all the talk at the club was about
football rather than the off-the-field issues. But this morning everybody
will be discussing the team again – and they're not uttering the words the
Spaniard wants to hear. The top-four spot that Liverpool should take for
granted slipped further away last night as Mark Noble's stoppage time
penalty inflicted a 1-0 defeat. Benitez's side, whose form in the Premier
League had seen them drawing more than the club's overworked architects who
have been forced to pencil-in a third draft for the new Anfield stadium,
were denied a fifth straight point when Jamie Carragher felled Freddie
Ljungberg in the 93rd minute and Noble slotted home from 12 yards out.
Despite winning their last six top-flight meetings against West Ham,
Benitez's side looked unlikely to extend that sequence to a lucky seven.
Instead, Liverpool, without a Premier League victory since Boxing Day,
increased their winless run to five and this defeat following shares of the
spoils against Manchester City, Wigan Athletic, Middlesbrough and Aston
Villa. Benitez made eight changes from the side that started against Havant
& Waterlooville on Saturday with Jose Reina, Fabio Aurelio, Carragher,
Steven Gerrard, Xabi Alonso, Harry Kewell, Dirk Kuyt and Fernando Torres
coming in for Charles Itandje, John Arne Riise, Martin Skrtel, Lucas, Javier
Mascherano, Jermaine Pennant, Ryan Babel and Peter Crouch.
Hat-trick hero against the non-Leaguers Yossi Benayoun kept his place for
his first return to Upton Park since his summer switch to Anfield. Before
the game, the Israeli midfielder had set that he was looking forward to
going back to his former employers but was unsure as to what kind of
reception he would receive from the home fans. Needless to say, he was
mercilessly booed throughout by the Hammers' supporters who are notoriously
damning to old boys in opposition. In contrast, Lucas Neill, captaining the
hosts, was treated with great indifference by Liverpool's travelling fans
despite seemingly putting his bank balance before ambition a year ago by
favouring a move to the East End ahead of Anfield. Curiously, more than
halfway through the season, this was Liverpool's first trip to London of the
campaign and in similar fashion to the FA Cup fourth round tie at the
weekend, Benitez's side started in jittery fashion. Liverpool did threaten
early on and Fernando Torres looked the most likely to fire the visitors
into the lead with a sprinkling of magic but, often asked to take on the
home rearguard virtually single-handed, he struck a low 20-yard drive just
wide of Robert Green's right-hand post early on.

Benayoun also wasted an opportunity to silence his barrackers behind the
goal in the Bobby Moore Stand when he went for precision rather than power
but failed to get his radar correct with a flicked shot over the bar from a
Kuyt pass after both Green and Matthew Upson had sliced attempted clearances
up in the air. It was a rare piece of influence from the low on confidence
Dutchman who had another quiet evening while Crouch endured a frustrating
27th birthday picking up splinters on the bench. From then on, the Hammers
gradually started to gain a foothold on proceedings and Lee Bowyer should
have done better with a Ljungberg right-wing cross which was whipped low
into the area but the midfielder failed to make proper contact with a back
heel.
Luis Boa Morte blasted over the bar from point blank range after the
visitors were unable to deal with a long George McCartney throw-in from the
left as set pieces became increasingly nervous times for Liverpool. West
Ham's latest homegrown hero Noble curled in an in-swinging free-kick from
the left wing which Steve Finnan could only head back onto his own crossbar
and with Jose Reina forced to punch clear under pressure in an aerial duel
with Carlton Cole after McCartney had lofted another long ball into the
area, Benitez's men were relieved to hear Alan Wiley's half-time whistle.
However, the Hammers kept threatening to nail Liverpool from a dead ball
situation after the interval. The visitors were again all at sea from a
Noble free-kick from the right but among the chaos the ball dropped to Boa
Morte at the near post but he proceeded to scuff his shot wide. Within
minutes of the miss, Boa Morte's number was up as Alan Curbishley made a
double substitution and switched from 4-5-1 to 4-4-2 as Bowyer also made way
with Dean Ashton and Matthew Etherington entering the fray. But if Benayoun
had thought he was getting a verbal bashing from the West Ham supporters, it
wasn't anything like the abuse being dished out to a man still sporting a
claret and blue jersey as Portuguese midfielder Boa Morte became number one
target of the boo boys as he departed the field.
Three minutes later, Benitez shuffled his pack too, introducing Lucas for
Kewell and the Brazilian youngster – fresh from his first Liverpool goal on
Saturday – almost made an instant impact but his instinctive shot from a
Torres right-wing cross was deflected wide for a corner. And soon after he
was off target from just outside the area when making contact with a Gerrard
cross when the skipper broke free down the left flank. Increasingly
frustrated by the physical attention he was receiving from West Ham's
defenders, Torres was booked for bouncing the ball in anger and his
concentration levels also deserted him when he was denied from close range
by a Green block after another Benitez switch almost bore fruit early
courtesy of a Babel delivery from the right after the Dutchman had replaced
Benayoun – a move that proved the home support weren't all "booed out" for
the evening. At the other end, West Ham continued to ask questions when
Noble was able to pick his spot and when his right-wing corner-kick fell to
the feet of an unmarked Neill at the back post, the Australian wasted his
chance with what could only be described as a "defender's finish".
Just as the contest looked to be petering out to what would have been the
most tepid of five-straight Premier League draws for Liverpool, the visitors
threw away a point in the third and final minute of stoppage time. Allowing
the Hammers to break from a corner for the visitors, Benitez's side were
soon back on the defensive and there were no complaints when Carragher
felled Ljungberg in the area. After a delay to re-spot the ball, Noble held
his nerve against Reina, striking his winner low to the Spaniard's left with
the keeper going the right way.

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West Ham boss Alan Curbishley shows foreign managers how it's done - The
Mirror
BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE WEST HAM UTD 1 LIVERPOOL 0 FROM UPTON PARK
Darren Lewis 31/01/2008

So Much for foreign bosses taking the plaudits from English managers in the
Premier League. This was a victory crafted in east London and built on hard
work, team spirit and a unity that Liverpool just do not have at the moment.
Under Rafael Benitez, the Reds are dropping like a stone and his position
looks untenable under the club's American owners. Under Alan Curbishley,
West Ham are going places, having seen off Manchester United this season and
done the double over both United and Arsenal last term. Under Curbishley,
West Ham are heading firmly into the European mix, having lost just three
times in their last 15 matches. Under Curbishley's calm stewardship only the
so-called Big Four have conceded fewer than the 21 League goals they have
let in so far this season. We do like to shout from the rooftops about the
almost mystical powers of the men from overseas but Curbishley is redressing
the balance this season, moulding the sum of his parts together to produce a
tough, battle-hardened outfit. How great it is to have the spotlight this
season on the successes of British bosses. The likes of Everton's David
Moyes, Harry Redknapp at Pompey and Curbishley are blazing a trail for
home-grown managers.

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Wednesday, January 30

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - II 30th January 2008

Attack key for Liverpool visit - WHUFC
With memories of disappointment a year ago, Alan Curbishley expects much
better this evening
30.01.2008

On 30 January 2007, West Ham United lost 2-1 Liverpool at the Boleyn Ground
to leave themselves deep in relegation trouble with just 20 points from 25
games.

Fast forward exactly 12 months and the situation could not be more different
for Alan Curbishley's side as they prepare to welcome the Reds again. With
33 points from three fewer games played than at this time a year ago, the
team are looking upwards from a healthy tenth position and with every hope
of moving to within four points of their opponents.

Curbishley remembers that night under the lights as "such a poor
performance" - but is not expecting a repeat, despite the fact Liverpool are
again pushing for the Champions League places. He said: "We've got another
opportunity against a top-four side. I'm sure if we attack it right we'll
give ourselves a chance. We're really looking forward to it."

The Hammers have not won in their last eleven matches with Liverpool but
Curbishley simply sees that as an opportunity to set the record straight.
"We'll have to try and change it. We've competed so far this year in all the
games we've played against the 'top four'. They've been tight games. We've
got to give ourselves a chance and give the fans something to get behind
because that makes a big difference."

The manager has Dean Ashton available again after a slight back problem but
it remains to be seen whether he will again go with Carlton Cole as a lone
striker, as in previous matches against elite clubs. "Sometimes it depends
on who's available. We're looking at the game and we feel that we've got to
get on the front foot, try and make the atmosphere right and attack it as
much as we can."

Curbishley said the Reds' rotation policy makes it hard to predict their
lineup, but added: "They'll have the same problem with us though - ours has
changed most weeks. They have changed it a bit as they've gone along but the
nucleus of the side is there. They're in a situation where they're drawn too
many games.

"I don't know if they could have won some of them but they've drawn too many
to make a challenge for the top two," he added, before going on to cite the
impressive trophy haul achieved by Rafael Benitez that has included the 2005
Champions League. "I think for Rafa, who had only been there a few years, it
takes time. Whatever we say about the Premier League - they perhaps haven't
won it but they've won everything else. We shouldn't forget that."

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Upbeat duo in good spirits - WHUFC
Two of West Ham United's form players are understandably relishing a return
to league action
30.01.2008

Anton Ferdinand and Carlton Cole found the perfect way to warm up for the
visit of Liverpool with a special appearance in aid of a good cause at
London's Canary Wharf.

As they have done on several occasions this season, the duo, good friends
off the pitch, were helping to promote the club's charity partners - this
time the outstanding work done by the Richard House Children's Hospice.
After signing autographs and posing for pictures with fans, they took time
out to talk to WHUTV about their hopes for this evening's crunch encounter
against the Reds.

Ferdinand has scored in the last two league games at home and cannot wait
for the chance to get back out in front of the Boleyn Ground faithful -
especially as the club have not played for ten days. "We have been training,
preparing for the game and just looking forward to getting out there. I
haven't started in a night game at Upton Park for a long while and I am
looking forward to it."

Cole is also in fine form, not least because of his spectacular overhead
kick away to Manchester City last time out - although he has since taken
some stick for following up his left-foot goal with a celebration of his
right-foot! Such a mistake did not go unnoticed in the squad - see Lucas
Neill's Captain's Blog from yesterday - and if he does score again Ferdinand
is hoping that "when he does celebrate, he polishes the right boot".

Few fans will mind one bit if Cole gets it wrong again against the Reds,
because that will mean he has found the net once more - although he is
looking to sharpen up his predatory instincts in front of goal. "Hopefully I
can get an easy goal, a little tap-in will do like the Tottenham one - that
will be a nice way to score."

However, the man who former Hammers defender Slaven Bilic tipped last week
for a possible England call knows the challenge facing the team. "Liverpool
are going to play some really good football," he said. "But if we can live
with their passing, get in amongst them and rattle them a bit, we have a
good chance of getting a result."

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Dailly departs for Rangers - WHUFC
Christian Dailly - a 'fantastic servant' for West Ham United - has left the
Boleyn Ground after seven years
30.01.2008

Christian Dailly has been allowed to leave West Ham United after a
seven-year stay to sign for Scottish leaders Rangers.

The Scotland defender, and former club captain, was the longest-serving
first-team player at the Boleyn Ground - an honour now shared between Anton
Ferdinand and Matthew Etherington - and has been described by manager Alan
Curbishley as a "fantastic servant". In all, he made 191 appearances for the
club, scoring five goals. Earlier this campaign, he spent two months on loan
at Southampton, playing eleven times, before he returned in early December

The versatile Dailly signed for West Ham United on 18 January 2001 from
Blackburn Rovers and, after his debut four days later in 1-1 draw at
Charlton Athletic, went on to have an instant impact. The following campaign
he helped the club finish seventh in the top flight, playing every minute of
every game in that season. Having also appeared in the 2004/05 play-off
final triumph, Dailly also played in the 2006 FA Cup final against
Liverpool, coming on as a substitute.

The father-of-four, who has been capped 66 times by his country, was a firm
fans' favourite in east London and has only good words to say about his time
in claret and blue. "I will always feel fondly about it," he said in an
interview with the matchday programme. "It's a brilliant club. It's massive.
There are so many West Ham fans everywhere you go. They seem to pop up
everywhere. It's so big. People who aren't involved with West Ham don't
realise quite how big the club is."

Dailly's last first-team appearance for West Ham United came on 24 February
2007, although he was on the bench for the trip to Middlesbrough on 22
December and has been a regular in the reserves during this campaign.
According to Kevin Keen, the 34-year-old was invaluable in setting the right
example for the club's younger talents. "Christian has a real enthusiasm for
the game. He does everything right and he is really fit. He talks to the
players in the way they understand."

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Rangers snap up defender Dailly - BBC

Rangers have signed West Ham United defender Christian Dailly until the end
of the season. The 34-year-old has fallen out of favour at Upton Park and
spent two months on loan at Championship Southampton earlier this season.
Rangers have taken over the Scotland international's contract, in a similar
move to the deal done with Everton 12 months ago for David Weir. He will be
seen as a replacement for Tottenham-bound Alan Hutton.

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Dyer targets return - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Kieron Dyer has revealed that he hopes to be playing again before the end of
the season. The Hammers midfielder - who joined from Newcastle in the summer
for £7.5m - suffered a double fracture to his lower leg during the 2-1
Carling Cup win over Bristol Rovers last August. Initial fears were that he
would miss the whole of this season - however he has shown good progress and
is 'ready to push on again'. "I'm running very comfortably at three-quarter
pace. It's going ahead of schedule and really well," he told whufc.tv. "They
removed the screws last week and I had five days rest. Hopefully I'll be
ready to start sprinting soon. "When you first run you get the shin used to
the constant pounding again. I had a bit of discomfort in the early stages
but now I'm fine and feeling extremely comfortable. "If you set timescales I
think the physios have a nervous breakdown - but I'll definitely be back
before the end of the season."
29-year-old Dyer also praised his team mates for their solid performances so
far this season whilst adding that it may be 'a blessing in disguise' to be
out of the cups so that they may concentrate on the league programme - and
the chase for Europe. "It makes me laugh how everyone says Portsmouth and
Villa and everyone are having such great seasons when we're only five, six
points behind them when we haven't fielded our strongest team at any stage
of the season," he said. "It's testament to this club, the manager and all
the players involved that we're still in there with a great chance."

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If the kids are United - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Alan Curbishley has revealed that he would be happy to throw his emerging
stars in at the deep end. Jack Collison made his debut at Arsenal on New
Years' Day as a replacement for Freddie Ljungberg whilst striker Freddie
Sears and centre-half James Tomkins have also been invloved with the first
team squad this season. And Curbishley - who still has the likes of Kieron
Dyer, James Collins and Calum Davenport on the long-term injured list -
admits that he would be happy to give his youngsters the opportunity to
shine between now and the end of the season. "Why not?," he told whufc.com.
"If the opportunity arises, I'll give them a game. "Freddie Sears was with
us up at Man City - and we've got [Kyel] Reid. I've got four kids who have
been in and around the squad for the last month or two and if I have to,
I'll put them in. "Let's have a look at some of them."

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A signing - at last - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

But don't get too excited - it's only a new member of the backroom staff.
West Ham United are set to announce the arrival of Nigel Dennis as their new
Deputy Safety Officer. Dennis joins the Hammers having spent the last 15
years at Lincoln City. Imps Chairman Steff Wright said this morning:
"On behalf of the Board I would like to thank Nigel for the excellent work
he has put into the Club over the last 15 years. "Although his position as
Stadium Manager covered many different aspects, his role as Safety Officer
has gained him an excellent profile within football and other sports. "That
has resulted in him being headhunted by West Ham and being offered a new
challenge on a Premiership package." Unfortunately there remains very little
movement in the transfer market with no fresh speculation this morning
regarding incoming players. The transfer window closes at midnight tomorrow.

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Dailly on the move? - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Christian Dailly is once again being linked with a transfer deadline move to
Rangers. 34-year-old Dailly, whose last game for West Ham was almost a year
ago had been linked with a move to the Scottish Premier League club earlier
in the transfer window before Gers boss Walter Smith dismissed the link last
week. But fresh rumours this morning suggest that the move could be back on
as a result of right-back Alan Hutton's proposed move to Tottenham.
Dailly joined West Ham in 2001 in a £2.5m switch from Blackburn. However he
has barely figured for the Hammers since Alan Curbishley succeeded Alan
Pardew (his last game coming in the 4-0 defeat at Charlton last February)
and recently spent time on loan with Championship outfit Southampton.

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Curbishley on Liverpool - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Alan Curbishley has told his side that they need to give the supporters
something to shout about tonight. West Ham host Liverpool tonight with the
visitors yet to record a victory in 2008. A United win would reduce the gap
between the two clubs to just four points but Curbishley has told his
players that they will need to hit the ground running. "If we attack it
right we'll give ourselves a chance," he told whufc.com. " We've competed so
far this year in all the games we've played against the 'top four'. "I've
said to them that we've turned the corner and we're on our way home now in
terms of the run-in. If we can put some results together we can start
attacking the teams above us. "We've got to give ourselves a chance and give
the fans something to get behind because that makes a big difference. We
feel that we've got to get on the front foot, try and make the atmosphere
right and attack it as much as we can."
With regard to personnel, Curbishley confirmed that Julien Faubert, Danny
Gabbidon and Craig Bellamy are all unlikely to feature. "[Faubert] has got a
slight calf strain, which is something we were hoping to guard against on
his way back," he confirmed. "It's nothing serious, we think he'll be okay
for Saturday. "We'll wait and see on Craig, but he's got through the games
and is doing very well. Gabbidon played in the reserves on Wednesday but
he's not 100 per cent either. He won't be risked."
Meahwile Curbishley has described how he was 'disappointed' at Yossi
Benayoun's decision to renege on his decision to sign a new contract with
West Ham last summer. "I thought Yossi was staying," he said. "He had agreed
a new long-term deal. I went on holiday for a week and when I came back I
was surprised to hear he was going to Liverpool. "It was disappointing as
he is a good player."
The game kicks-off at 8pm tonight. The Hammers will be seeking their first
win over Liverpool since November 1999 when a first-half Trevor Sinclair
strike was enough to secure victory.

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Benayoun on return - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 30th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Yossi Benayoun says he can't wait to return to the Boleyn Ground - but
admits he is unsure what kind of reception awaits him. The Israeli playmaker
walked out on the Hammers last summer despite having previously agreed to
sing a new five-year contract, angering many United supporters who stood by
him after a poor second season which was punctuated by injury and embroiled
in controversy. Now beginning to find his feet at his new club, Benayoun is
likely to start for Liverpool tonight. Despite the uncertainty over his
reception, he says he is looking forward to once again appearing in front of
the Boleyn faithful. "I'm really looking forward to going back because West
Ham will always be a special place for me," he said. "I had a really good
time there and the fans were always good to me. "I don't know what kind of
reception I will get from the fans but I am hoping that it will be a good
one. Even if it isn't it won't change the way I feel about West Ham; I will
always love them and the fans are among the best you could find anywhere in
the world."

Benayoun - whose new club will be just four points ahead of the Hammers
should they lose tonight - also claimed that the pressures of being at
Liverpool were greater than at West Ham due to the increased expectation
levels. "It is different at Liverpool because we are nearer to the top of
the table," he added. "When you play for a big club you are the favourites
to win every game and because you get more chances you get more goals. "It
was more difficult at West Ham because we were not near the top of the
league and last season we were fighting relegation."

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Positive news for Dyer - SSN
Midfielder recovering well from horrific injury
By Chris Burton Last updated: 30th January 2008

Kieron Dyer is still hoping to play again for West Ham this season as he
continues his recovery from a double leg fracture. The midfielder completed
a £6million move from Newcastle back in August but managed just three games
for the Hammers before picking up the horrific injury in a Carling Cup tie
at Bristol Rovers. Now, after undergoing surgery to help heal the break, he
is well on the road to recovery and has his sights set on forcing his way
into Alan Curbishley's plans before the end of the current campaign. "I have
progressed a lot," he told West Ham's official website. "I am running very
comfortably. I am at three-quarter pace and I am ready to push on again. It
is ahead of schedule and going really well. "My leg got pinned and so I had
a very simple operation where they removed the screws because they cause you
a bit of discomfort. I had that last week, five days rest and I can crack on
again. "I feel fine, obviously when you run you are getting the shin used to
the constant pounding. I had a bit of discomfort in the early stages but now
I am fine and feeling extremely comfortable. I am ready to push in to
sprinting soon. "If you set timescales, I think the physios have a nervous
breakdown, but I definitely believe that I will figure before the end of the
season."
Dyer feels that the Hammers have not been receiving the recognition their
performances have deserved as they chase a place in Europe. "It makes me
laugh how everyone says Portsmouth, Villa and everyone are having such great
seasons," he said. "But we are only five or six points behind them and we
haven't fielded our strongest team at any stage of this season. "That is
testament to this club, to the manager and all the players involved that we
are still in there with a great chance. "Hopefully being out of the cup
competitions can be a blessing in disguise because we can concentrate on the
league and give it a good push."

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Rangers take on Christian Dailly - Daily Mail
Last updated at 14:58pm on 30th January 2008

Rangers have signed Scotland international Christian Dailly from West Ham
until the end of the season. The 34-year-old leaves West Ham after falling
out of favour with the Barclays Premier League club. Rangers have taken over
his contract, in a similar move to their capture of David Weir 12 months
ago.

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Curbishley was left 'stunned' by Yossi's Hammers exit - Daily Mail
Last updated at 11:01am on 30th January 2008

Alan Curbishley was "surprised and disappointed" when Yossi Benayoun went to
Liverpool in a £5million deal last summer. Benayoun returns to Upton Park
tonight for the first time since his move to Anfield. The Israeli, who
scored eight goals in 63 appearances for the Upton Park club, had agreed a
new five-year deal last May but hadn't signed the new contract by the time
Liverpool showed an interest. Curbishley said: "I thought Yossi was staying.
He had agreed a new long-term deal. I went on holiday for a week and when I
came back I was surprised to hear he was going to Liverpool. It was
disappointing as he is a good player."
Hayden Mullins believes the speculation about the futures of Liverpool and
manager Rafa Benitez will have taken their toll on Steven Gerrard and his
team-mates. A fallout between the club's American owners and Benitez have
left the Reds in a state of turmoil. "We've been there with West Ham last
season when we were in the news all the time for various reasons," said
Mullins. "It can't be unsettling for the players."
Craig Bellamy is back in full training but unlikely to face his former club.
Julien Faubert (calf) is unlikely to be risked but Matthew Etherington and
Dean Ashton are both fit again.

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West Ham return has Yossi Benayoun buzzing
Jan 30 2008
by Tony Barrett, Liverpool Echo

YOSSI BENAYOUN returns to Upton Park tonight – confessing he hopes Liverpool
can land a crucial victory at a place he still loves. The Israeli
international spent two seasons at West Ham where he became a firm fans'
favourite and tonight's Premier League clash will be the first time he has
returned there since making a £5m move to Liverpool last summer. He said:
"I'm really looking forward to going back because West Ham will always be a
special place for me. "I had a really good time there and I made lots of
friends and the fans were always good to me so it will be good to go back
there. "I don't know what kind of reception I will get from the fans but,
obviously, I am hoping that it will be a good one. "But even if it isn't it
won't change the way I feel about West Ham. I will always love them and the
fans are among the best you could find anywhere in the world."
Benayoun scored eight goals in 72 appearances for the Hammers. Just 28 games
into his Liverpool career, he has already netted 10 times, including
hat-tricks against Besiktas and Havant & Waterlooville. And he puts his
improved scoring rate down to the fact he is now playing for a team which
sits at the top table of English football. "It is different at Liverpool
because we are nearer to the top of the table," he said. "When you play for
a big club you are the favourites to win every game and because you get more
chances you get more goals. "It was more difficult at West Ham because we
were not near the top of the league and last season we were fighting
relegation."
Despite enjoying the start he has made to his Liverpool career, Benayoun has
been frustrated by the Reds' recent form in the Premier League and wants
them to get back to winning ways against his former club. He said: "We have
to improve because we have drawn our last four league games and we cannot
afford to drop any points. But we have a lot of confidence that we will win
a lot of games – hopefully starting with tonight's match – and that we will
still end up having a good season."
Another former Hammer, Javier Mascherano, misses tonight's match through
suspension after picking up five bookings. His place is likely to be taken
by Xabi Alonso. Pepe Reina, Jamie Carragher, Steven Gerrard and Fernando
Torres will also return to the starting line up having been left on the
bench for Saturday's FA Cup win over Havant.

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Dennis Secures Hammers Move - redimps.premiumtv.co.uk
Posted on: Wed 30 Jan 2008

After 15 years with the Club, Operations & Safety Manager Nigel Dennis will
leave Sincil Bank this week to join West Ham United as their Facilities
Manager and Deputy Safety Officer. Nige, who joined the Imps in December
1992, initially as groundsman, leaves with the best wishes of all at Sincil
Bank and we wish him all the best for the challenges that lie ahead. "On
behalf of the Board I would like to thank Nigel for the excellent work he
has put into the Club over the last 15 years," said Chairman Steff Wright.
"Although his position as Stadium Manager covered many different aspects,
his role as Safety Officer has gained him an excellent profile within
football and other sports. That has resulted in him being head hunted by
West Ham and being offered a new challenge on a Premiership package."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 30th January 2008

Liverpool match preview - WHUFC
All the team news and background for Wednesday night's visit of Liverpool to
the Boleyn Ground
29.01.2008

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United v Liverpool
Boleyn Ground
Wednesday 30 January
7.45pm
Referee: Alan Wiley

WHUTV - Live audio commentary plus delayed highlights

Team news

Tenth-placed West Ham United return to league action against Liverpool,
seven points ahead in sixth, on Wednesday having not played since the 1-1
draw at Manchester City on Sunday 20 January - when Carlton Cole scored an
eighth-minute overhead kick. It is thought the game will be too soon for
Danny Gabbidon and Craig Bellamy, despite a reserve-team run-out. Nolberto
Solano, who has not figured since a hamstring injury on 29 December, may
also just miss out.

Matthew Etherington and Dean Ashton have trained after knee and back
problems respectively caused them to miss the City trip. Julien Faubert has
a slight calf strain and is doubtful, while Bobby Zamora continues to train
fully, on his way back to match fitness. John Pantsil and Henri Camara are
still on Africa Cup of Nations duty while, after a serious reserve-team
injury last week, James Collins (knee ligaments) has joined Scott Parker
(knee), Calum Davenport (neck), Kieron Dyer (leg), Nigel Quashie (foot) on
the long-term list - although Parker has returned to Chadwell Heath after a
period of rest.

Liverpool have played twice since the Hammers were last in action - a 2-2
draw at Aston Villa on 21 January before Saturday's 5-2 FA Cup fourth-round
win against non-league Havant and Waterlooville - with Yossi Benayoun
scoring a hat-trick in between a stunner from Lucas and a late fifth by
Peter Crouch. The Reds, who have sold Mohamed Sissoko to Juventus, left
Fernando Torres and Pepe Reina out but called upon Jamie Carragher, Steven
Gerrard and Dirk Kuyt as late substitutes.

While Benayoun will hope to figure against his former club, Javier
Mascherano will be denied the chance because of a one-match suspension
caused by his fifth caution of the season against Villa. Andriy Voronin has
been ruled out for six weeks with ankle ligament damage - joining Alvaro
Arbeloa (abdominal) and Daniel Agger (foot) on the sidelines. As a result of
their defensive injuries, Liverpool have made a move in the transfer window,
bringing in Slovakia centre-back Martin Skrtel from Zenit St Petersburg and
he made his first start at the weekend.

Last time out

West Ham United v Manchester City: Green, Neill, Ferdinand, Upson,
McCartney, Ljungberg, Noble, Mullins, Bowyer (Spector 90), Boa Morte
(Faubert 71), Cole
Subs not used: Wright, Collins, Reid

Liverpool v Havant and Waterlooville: Itandje, Finnan, Skrtel, Hyypia
(Carragher 84), Riise, Pennant, Mascherano (Gerrard 87), Lucas, Benayoun
(Kuyt 72), Crouch, Babel
Subs not used: Martin, Torres

Background

Curbishley's side are in fine league form, with six wins and five draws from
the last 14 fixtures. The only three reverses came against strong opposition
in the form of Chelsea, Everton and Arsenal. With ninth-placed Portsmouth
going to Manchester United on the same night, the Hammers will know there is
the possibility that a victory could move them to within a point of Pompey
with a game in hand. Blackburn Rovers are in eighth, five points in front of
Curbishley's men but have played two games more.

Depending on results, the Reds could jump to fourth place in the table with
a win - underlining the difficulties facing the hosts. West Ham United have
not played Liverpool this season as the away fixture was originally due to
be played in mid-August but was postponed because of the Reds' Champions
League commitments. It has now been fixed for 8pm at Anfield on Wednesday 5
March.

The teams' last met exactly a year ago, on Tuesday 30 January 2007, at the
Boleyn Ground. On that date, West Ham United were 18th in the top flight,
with just 20 points from their opening 25 games - 13 fewer than they have
from 22 games this time around. Dirk Kuyt and Peter Crouch goals early in
the second half put Liverpool on course for a 2-1 win, with on-loan Kepa
Blanco then scoring with his first touch in a claret and blue shirt.

The lineups were:

West Ham United: Carroll, Spector, Dailly, Davenport, McCartney, Benayoun,
Quashie, Reo-Coker, Boa Morte, Cole (Zamora 73), Harewood (Kepa 76)
Subs not used: Green, Pantsil, Mullins

Manchester City: Reina, Finnan, Hyypia, Agger, Carragher, Bellamy (Gonzalez
85), Gerrard, Alonso, Riise, Kuyt (Fowler 90), Crouch (Pennant 71)
Subs not used: Dudek, Zenden

The Hammers have still not lost in all ten league games this season when
they have taken the lead while three of the last six league games have seen
the side come from behind to win 2-1. George McCartney - who like Mark Noble
and Luis Boa Morte is on four cautions and would earn a one-match ban if
yellow-carded again before the trip to Fulham on 23 February - is bidding
to make his 29th appearance this season in all competitions. He is the only
West Ham United player who has featured in every game to date, starting in
each one.

In terms of the Premier League, only Green and Upson have played every
minute of the 22 matches. No other top-flight club still has two league
ever-presents while Upson, along with Stephen Kelly of Birmingham City, is
one of only two outfield players in the whole division to have achieved that
feat. Ashton, with six goals, five in the league, is the club's leading
scorer.

Torres is Liverpool's top marksman with 17 goals, eleven in the league. Xabi
Alonso and Carragher are both on four yellow cards. Only Reina has played
every minute of the top-flight campaign so far and no other player has
featured in each one of their games.

Liverpool have not lost to West Ham United in eleven games since Trevor
Sinclair's goal gave the Hammers a 1-0 home win on 27 November 1999 - a game
in which both Hyypia and Gerrard played the full 90 minutes, while Carragher
was an unused substitute. Anton Ferdinand's older brother Rio was in the
Hammers rearguard that day.

With Mascherano suspended, only Bellamy for West Ham United and Benayoun for
Liverpool could potentially be facing former their former clubs. Bellamy
spent a year at Anfield, making 42 league and cup appearances, scoring nine
times. Benayoun was at the Boleyn Ground for two years until last summer. He
played 72 times in all competitions and found the net on eight occasions.

Head to head (last six meetings, league unless stated)

30 January 2007 - West Ham United 1-2 Liverpool
26 August 2006 - Liverpool 2-1 West Ham United
13 May 2005 - Liverpool 3-3 West Ham United, 3-1 on pens (FA Cup final)
26 April 2006 - West Ham United 1-2 Liverpool
29 October 2005 - Liverpool 2-0 West Ham United
2 February 2003 - West Ham United 0-3 Liverpool

Overall record v Liverpool (all competitions): W 22, D 33, L 59

Barclays Premier League fixtures (all 7.45pm unless stated)

Wednesday 30 January

Chelsea v Reading
Derby County v Manchester City
Everton v Tottenham Hotspur (8pm)
Manchester United v Portsmouth (8pm)

General information

Please note this match is SOLD OUT. For general ticket information, click
here. For details of getting to Boleyn Ground, click here

Weather: The forecast is for a chilly evening, with the threat of rain. The
temperature is set to peak at around 6C.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbs raring to go again - WHUFC
An enforced break has allowed the squad to rest ahead of a major meeting
with Liverpool on Wednesday night
29.01.2008

Alan Curbishley is looking forward to West Ham United getting back in action
against Liverpool on Wednesday night after a ten-day break.

The club has not played since the 1-1 league draw at Manchester City on
Sunday 20 January, but the manager admitted he wished the team had not had a
free weekend caused by the FA Cup elimination against the same opponents.
"We would rather have been in the cup," he said. "But with the squad we've
got at the moment and the same people playing most games it has given us a
bit of a rest. We're looking forward to it now."

Curbishley has seen both Matthew Etherington and Dean Ashton return to full
training after knee and back problems respectively caused them to miss the
second City game, while Danny Gabbidon, Nolberto Solano, Craig Bellamy and
Bobby Zamora all continue to make good progress in full training. The
manager is unlikely to use any of them against Liverpool, while there is
also a worry over Julien Faubert, who has made three substitute appearances
since his return from a serious achilles injury.

"He has got a slight calf strain, which is something we were hoping to guard
against on his way back," explained Curbishley. "It's nothing serious, we
think he'll be OK for Saturday but he's probably a big doubt for Wednesday.
That was our big fear with bringing some of these players back and putting
them in the first team." The weekend trip to Wigan Athletic could also be
when Bellamy comes back into contention. "We did push Faubert a little bit,
so we'll wait and see on Craig, but he's got through the games and is doing
very well.

"Bobby Zamora trained most of last week and is training fully now. We're
really pleased that one or two are coming back. He trained really well on
Monday and he's got to do a pre-season stint in terms of getting some games
in. Nobby trained the last four days but he's been out for a month so it may
be a bit too soon for him on Wednesday. Gabbidon played in the reserves as
well on Wednesday but he's not 100 per cent either. He won't be risked."

The manager updated on James Collins, who hurt his knee a week ago in a
reserve-match at Portsmouth. "He may have cruciate damage but we'll have to
wait and see how severe it is," Curbishley said. "If it's something like
that he will be [out for the season]. It's just what's happened, one goes
out, one comes in. As we've done all season, we've managed just to get along
with it. We've come out of the two Man City games full of confidence and
looking forward."

That last City encounter saw Lee Bowyer and Luis Boa Morte continue their
return to fitness in the first team and Curbishley is focused on the
positives. "That's the way things have been going all season. I've said to
them that perhaps we've turned the corner and we're on our way home now in
terms of the run-in. We can see an opportunity. If we can put some results
together we can start attacking the teams above, starting on Wednesday.

"We've got lots of players coming back: Faubert, Nobby, and I've got a
couple of kids in [Jack] Collison, [James] Tomkins who - why not? If the
opportunity arises, I'll give them a game. Freddie Sears was with us on
Sunday up at Man City - and we've got [Kyel] Reidy. I've got four kids who
have been in and around the squad for the last month or two and if I have
to, I'll put them in. Let's have a look at some of them."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
England call again for Tomkins - WHUFC
James Tomkins has an international date to look forward after two major
matches for West Ham United
29.01.2008

James Tomkins is looking forward to a big week with club and country.

The 19-year-old central defender may be the one to benefit from the
unfortunate knee ligament injury suffered by James Collins and the fact that
Danny Gabbidon is not quite match-fit yet after his recovery from a groin
problem. Tomkins came close to his senior-team debut when he made the
matchday 16 against Arsenal on New Year's Day and Alan Curbishley has
reiterated that he would not hesitate to use him in future.

"If the opportunity arises, I'll give them a game," said the West Ham United
manager when asked about the chances of Tomkins, who has been a regular of
late for the reserves, and midfield colleague Jack Collison breaking into
the first-team picture. As well as the Wednesday night visit of Liverpool,
West Ham United go to Wigan Athletic on Saturday. After that, Tomkins will
join up with the England Under-19 squad for a Tuesday night friendly against
Croatia in Swindon.

The match will be the perfect opportunity for England to prepare for the
next qualifying phase of their bid to reach this July's final European U19
Championship final round in Ukraine. The Young Lions will meet Poland,
Serbia and Belarus on 26, 28 and 31 May respectively with the group winners
from this Elite round going forward to the eight-team finals. Jordan Spence,
Junior Stanislas and Freddie Sears have also been in the U19 frame this
season and all will have hopes of being involved as well.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Pantsil enjoying Ghana experience - WHUFC
John Pantsil says the host nation are rising to the challenge of the 2008
Africa Cup of Nations
29.01.2008

John Pantsil has been speaking about Ghana's progress to the 2008 Africa Cup
of Nations quarter-finals.

The defender, who headed off to the finals earlier this month after an
impressive run of form for West Ham United, has played in all three Group A
games as the host nation comfortably won through to a last-eight meeting
against Nigeria next Sunday. "As we all know, the team is getting better
gradually," Pantsil told the Ghana FA website.

"Each game the team improves, so we have to keep our heads up and continue
training hard and keeping the team spirit high. We are ready for any team
which will come our way and we will beat any team that comes." Pantsil has
also overcome the dizziness which he suffered immediately after the 2-1
opening day win against Guinea and led to hospital tests.

Despite their perfect progress, as hosts of the 16-nation tournament, the
Black Stars have been under pressure to add flair to their play, especially
after a gritty 1-0 win against Namibia last Thursday. They more than did
that on Monday with an impressive 2-0 success against Morocco, and Pantsil
said the players were doing their all to keep the supporters on side.

"Everyone is a professional and we know what we have to do on the pitch. In
terms of football, things happen like that sometimes. We are happy that
we've got the fans back. They want us to do more but we've promised them
that we would make it. We are going to make them happy."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Liverpool - BBC

Striker Dean Ashton (back) and winger Matthew Etherington (knee) return to
the West Ham squad but winger Julian Faubert (calf) is doubtful.
Craig Bellamy (stomach), Bobby Zamora (knee), Nolberto Solano (hamstring)
and Danny Gabbidon (groin) have resumed training but are unlikely to feature


Liverpool welcome Steven Gerrard, Jose Reina, Jamie Carragher, Fernando
Torres and Xabi Alonso back to the squad. The quintet return after being
rested for the Havant and Waterlooville game.

West Ham (from): Green, Wright, Neill, Spector, Ferdinand, Upson, McCartney,
Bowyer, Faubert, Ljungberg, Noble, Mullins, Etherington, Boa Morte, Reid,
Ashton, Cole, Tomkins, Collison.

Liverpool (from): Reina, Finnan, Arbeloa, Carragher, Hyypia, Skrtel, Riise,
Aurelio, Pennant, Babel, Alonso, Benayoun, Gerrard, Mascherano, Kuyt,
Torres, Crouch, Kewell, Itandje.

BIG-MATCH FACTS
Having established a solid mid-table platform with one loss in six Premier
League matches, West Ham take on draw specialists Liverpool.

The Merseysiders play their first Premier League match of the season in
London, and take to the field for the first time since trailing Havant &
Waterlooville twice in the FA Cup, before winning their home fourth round
tie 5-2.

Rafa Benitez' side may be unbeaten in six league outings, but the last four
have ended all-square and left them scrapping for a top four Champions
League berth.

West Ham have lost three against the "Big Four" so far this season, and won
one (against Manchester United).

Liverpool are unbeaten in 10 top-flight contests with West Ham, winning the
last six.


CLUB FORM
WEST HAM UNITED


Club stats
Fixtures
(all statistics are ahead of the current round of Premier League fixtures)
1. Lost only three of the last 14 Premier League matches; against Chelsea
(a), Everton (h) and Arsenal (a).

2. Their 22 league games have yielded 49 goals (28 for, 21 against); at 2.23
it's the lowest goals per game average in the highest league.

3. Let in 21 goals in their 22 Premier League fixtures; only the 'Big Four'
clubs have conceded fewer.

4. Not lost a league game in which they scored first; won six and drawn four
of 10.

5. One of five clubs not shown a red card in Premier League competition so
far this season.

6. All four penalties awarded against them in the Premier League have been
missed.

7. Conceded one goal in each of five of the last six league games, and let
in two in the other game. Not kept a clean sheet in seven, since the 0-1
away win over Blackburn on 9 December.

8. Lost one of the last seven home league games, and won the last two at
Upton Park against Manchester United and Fulham.

9. Kept just one clean sheet in home Premier League matches; 3-0 against
Middlesbrough on 15 September.

10. Away to Wigan after this, and home to Birmingham. Then the Eastenders go
to the West End to play Fulham, before Chelsea visit Upton Park and the
reverse fixture at Liverpool.

LIVERPOOL


Club stats
Fixtures
(all statistics are ahead of the current round of Premier League fixtures)
1. Undefeated in nine in all competitions; four wins, five draws.

2. On the joint longest sequence of draws in this Premier League season of
four; Fulham drew all four of their matches in September.

3. Ended level with Manchester City (a), Wigan (h), Middlesbrough (a) and
Aston Villa (h).

4. Lost just two Premier League games; only Arsenal have been beaten less
often (once). Also, conceded 16 Premier League goals at one every 124
minutes (two hours four minutes); only Manchester United have a tighter
defence (11 goals conceded).

5. The Premier League's draw specialists; 10 of 22.

6. Need a victory to pass 250 Premier League points under Rafael Benitez; on
248 at present.

7. Picked up 27 cards in Premier League competition (all yellow); only
Everton have a similar low total, but theirs is comprised of three red and
24 yellow.

8. Their 22 matches have yielded 53 goals (37 for, 16 against); only West
Ham's (49) and Chelsea's (52) matches have produced fewer goals.

9. Hold the third strongest away record in the Premier League (22 points),
behind Chelsea (25) and Arsenal (22), and boast the meanest defence away
from home; conceded just seven goals in 11 games on their Premier League
travels.

10. A home game against Sunderland follows this, before the big match-up
against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge. Then it's the FA Cup fifth round clash
with Barnsley of the Championship at Anfield and the Champions League match,
home to Inter Milan.


KEY PLAYER NOTES
WEST HAM UNITED


Dean ASHTON is West Ham's top scorer with six goals.

ASHTON is also the Hammers' top Premier League marksmen with five.

The club's Premier League goalscorers list is predominately comprised of
English players (eight of 11).

Matthew UPSON and Robert GREEN are the only remaining players to have been
on the field for every minute of every one of West Ham's Premier League
matches this season. West Ham are the only club to have as many as two
genuine ever-presents remaining in this Premier League campaign.

Lee BOWYER is a double shy of 50 career Premier League goals (Leeds,
Newcastle and West Ham).

Nol SOLANO needs a hat-trick to total 50 Premier League goals (Newcastle,
Aston Villa and West Ham).

If selected:-

Matthew ETHERINGTON will be making their 150th league appearances for the
Hammers, and 300th club career appearance (Peterborough, Tottenham, Bradford
City and West Ham).

James COLLINS will be making his 100th career league appearance (Cardiff and
West Ham).

Craig BELLAMY will be facing a former club. The 28 year old Wales
international made 42 appearances (27 in the league) and scored nine goals
(seven league) for Liverpool between June 2006 and his £7.5m move to Upton
Park in July last year.

LIVERPOOL


Fernando TORRES is Liverpool's top scorer with 17 goals, and their leading
marksman in the Premier League with 11.

Goalkeeper Jose REINA is the only remaining player to have been on the field
for every minute of every one of Liverpool's Premier League matches this
season.

REINA leads the race for the Barclays Golden Glove with Edwin VAN DER SAR of
Manchester United and David JAMES of Portsmouth. They have all kept 10 clean
sheets.

If selected:-

Peter CROUCH will be playing on his 27th birthday.

Yossi BENAYOUN will be facing a former club. The 27 year old Israel
international made 72 appearances (63 in the league) and scored eight league
goals in two seasons with West Ham from July 2005 before his move to
Anfield.

Javier MASCHERANO will also be facing the club he controversially played for
last season. The 23 year old Argentine international made seven appearances
(five in the league) in five months with the Hammers before his move to
Liverpool just under a year ago.

If on the field from the outset:-

Harry KEWELL will be making his 250th career league start (Leeds and
Liverpool).


HEAD TO HEAD
The Hammers have not experienced a home League win over Liverpool since the
1-0 Premier League triumph on 27 November 1999, when Trevor Sinclair scored
the only goal of the game.

This is the 101st league fixture between these clubs.

Home and away
League (inc PL): West Ham 20 wins, Liverpool 52, Draws 28
Prem: West Ham 4 wins, Liverpool 14, Draws 6

at West Ham only
League (inc PL): West Ham 17 wins, Liverpool 18, Draws 15
Prem: West Ham 4 wins, Liverpool 5, Draws 3


LAST SEASON'S CORRESPONDING GAME
West Ham United 1-2 Liverpool
30 January 2007 - Ref: Martin Atkinson
West Ham scorer: Kepa 77
Liverpool scorers: Kuyt 46, Crouch 53


REFEREE
Alan Wiley (Burntwood, Staffordshire)

Premier League referees' table
Alan Wiley's 2007-08 Premier League card count

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Neill targets top four - KUMB
Filed: Tuesday, 29th January 2008
By: Matthew O'Greel

Lucas Neill has backed Freddie Ljungberg's recent claim that a top four
finish is still within reach. Former Arsenal star Ljungberg said last week
that a Champions League place was a possibility given United's recent form.
Meanwhile club captain Neill, speaking in his Captain's Blog on whufc.com
today added weight to Ljungberg's optimism when he said: "I said before [the
Manchester City match] it was imperative we didn't lose. The reason for this
is that the mentality within this squad is now gearing itself for a very
high finish. "We all believe that a fourth-place finish is still a genuine
possibility. We have all the teams around us still to play. "It is vital now
that we win as many games as possible but especially against the teams that
are all challenging for fourth, starting this week with Liverpool."
The Hammers welcome back Dean Ashton and Matthew Etherington for the visit
of Liverpool but are unlikely to risk Craig Bellamy, Danny Gabbidon or Nobby
Solano - all of whom have recently recovered from injury. Julien Faubert -
who has made brief appearances in the last three fixtures - is also set to
miss out after experiencing 'tight calves'. Former Hammer Javier Mascherano
is suspended, whilst Yossi Benayoun - who hit a hat-trick against
non-leaguers Havant & Waterlooville in the FA Cup at the weekend - is likely
to make his first appearance at the Boleyn Ground for his new club.

* A recent poll on KUMB saw 63% of voters say that Ljungberg was right to
say the club were aiming for a top four finish, whilst just under a third -
31% - thought that it was an unrealistic target.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Utd v Liverpool - KUMB
Filed: Tuesday, 29th January 2008
By: Matthew Coker

After a weekend's grace from any West Ham activity, we return to action,
fully focused on the Premier League. To that end, the fixture list lines us
up with Liverpool, in a Wednesday night game under the Boleyn lights, kick
off time being 7.45pm.

Our opponents are the team that most remind me of Susan Storm, as they are
the most Invisible of the Fantastic Four. The do, generally, finish in the
league's pre-eminent quartet, but a genuine Scouse title challenge happens
about as often as a Chris Moyles gym session.

Their reputation has been cemented by historical dominance of both domestic
and European football in the 70s and 80s and also by their record in the
European Cup/Champions League competition (if they only remind us about
their European glory five times on Wednesday night, we can count ourselves
lucky) but they are the only of the so called big four to have never won the
Premier League.

The class of 2007/08 is not going to be one to deliver any league
championships back to Anfield. They currently sit in sixth place in the
league, fourteen points adrift of top side Manchester United, though the gap
between them and fourth place Everton is only two points (and they have the
same game in hand as us).

This was despite a promising start to the season, at least where points were
concerned, as they managed to avoid their usual slow start and went
undefeated until early December. However the Christmas period has seen them
fall further behind their title and Champions League qualification rivals
and they are on the back of a run of four consecutive league draws against
less than auspicious opposition including Wigan and Middlesbrough.

Away form has be fairly good this campaign; they have registered six wins
from eleven and only one defeat, a surprise 3-1 reverse at the Madjeski.
They are the side that has conceded the fewest away goals in the league so
far (just seven) but they are yet to face any of the top three sides away on
the road yet and victories, aside from the wins at Everton and Villa, have
come against weaker sides namely Wigan, Bolton, Derby and Sunderland.

There are several encouraging factors that we can look at when going into
this game. Firstly, this is not a side brimming with confidence, certainly
not one that has got into the habit of killing games off. Even relatively
poor teams such as Wigan and Derby have shown that you can get back into
games against them.

There have been several factors off the field that have aided their fragile
state of mind. The ongoing saga with the now unpopular owners and the
manager and the poor state of their relationship may have influenced the
players to a degree. Although footballers generally give the impression that
as long as they are paid they don't care who they play for (and bearing in
mind we have all seen the payslip of one of Liverpool's worst performers
this season, John Arne Riise, we know they are getting paid) but it is sure
to cause doubt as to Rafa's long term prospects and must have some effect on
his ability to focus on the job.

Staying off the pitch, there is a correlation between the downturn in form
and the departure of Pako Ayesteran from Rafa's backroom staff. A successful
fitness coach, who had worked with Rafa in Spain, he did much of the work on
the training field with the players and his departure would have changed the
level of communication between players and a manager who is well known for
keeping footballers at arms length.

Finally, it must be slightly unsettling for the first team squad to know
that every time they head off to an away game there is the possibility of
some little Everton scally breaking into your mock Tudor mansion and having
it away with your cinema screen size telly. The results of all this angst
are there to see on the pitch.

There have been several players in the Liverpool side that have kept the
standards up. The most concerning for us is Fernando Torres, bought in the
summer for £20m, though his 11 league goals to date suggest he may be good
value for it. The only other player to notch up a decent number of strikes
is Steven Gerrard, currently on 7 Premier League finishes, though his form
has varied from match winning to non-existent at various parts of the
season. There are debates going on as to his best position; injury to Xabi
Alonso has meant he has played mostly in the centre though there is a strong
school of thought for putting him on the right when the Spaniard has fully
recovered.

Defensively the side is strong, underpinned by the excellent Jose Reina and
with Jamie Carragher in his usual rock-like form. They have undoubtedly
missed Daniel Agger this season, Sami Hyppia not being the ideal partner to
Carragher as the two lack pace which would sit nicely with Craig Bellamy
resuming fitness for this one. Fabio Aurealio looked as though he had just
returned from injury against Villa, having just returned from injury. We
will also benefit from Alvaro Arbeloa missing this one (with an injury)
meaning Matty will be up against a slightly out of form Steve Finnan.
Overall though, Liverpool's problems do not sit along the back line.

There are a couple of claret and blue connections in the midfield starting
with one of the squad players we have currently on loan at Anfield.
Argentinian Javier Mascherano has been warmly welcomed by the Mickeys who
are impressed enough with his holding midfield skills and distribution to
warrant paying £17m for him in the summer. By my reckoning this makes the
man who kept him out of our first team, Hayden Mullins, worth at least £20m
- but we will be spared such expense in the middle of the park as
Mascherano's run of not being able to get a game at the Boleyn continues as
he is suspended. The most likely deputy will be Xabi Alonso, though Lucas
Leiva is an outside bet to see some action.

Yossi Benayoun should start on the right hand side of midfield on his return
from having left Upton Park in the summer. His recent run in the Liverpool
side has started to convince the fans that he is a capable player, though
Jermaine Pennant is pushing him for a starting place.

The left side of midfield is a problem for our opponents as neither Harry
Kewell or John Arne Riise has been much cop in the role this season. This
should leave a relatively quiet game for Lucas Neill, who of course chose
the glamour of East London over the chance to work in the City of Culture
last January.

Beyond Torres up front there is not too much to concern us. Peter Crouch is
probably the next best striker but he has not been used much this season,
Rafa's system-over-players philosophy has meant he has tended to shy away
from two big men up front. He tends to favour Dirk Kuyt who works hard but
looks incapable of scoring or, occasionally, Andriy Voronin who looks out of
his depth at this level.

The other option is Ryan Babel who the club spent big on in the summer,
though they do seem to have invested in his future prospects rather than on
his immediate ability. Babel is a pacy striker though due perhaps to his
inexperience and lack of composure up front (as well as his blistering pace)
has found himself used more as a winger than as a front man. The fans hope
that he will ultimately prove to be the strike partner to Torres but he
needs to convince Benitez that is the case.


"We are looking forward to the games ahead and we are looking to get into
the top six or eight"
– Curbs looks onwards and upwards.

With us no longer having to make a choice between league and any cup, the
finishing position is now the measure of this season's success or otherwise.
The rest of February has the potential for putting some real points on the
table and getting something against Liverpool would, hopefully be the
catalyst for a decent run.

I'm going to put us down for a draw and with both defences in fine form, I
suspect a 0-0 is on the cards.

Enjoy the game.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbs happy with owners - SSN
West Ham boss believes current arrangement suits all parties
Last updated: 29th January 2008

West Ham manager Alan Curbishley is happy with his new relationship with the
club's foreign owners. The club was brought last season by a consortium set
up by Icelandic banker Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson. Eggert Magnusson was the
front-man but he has now stood aside, leaving Curbishley happy with his new,
more remote arrangement with Gudmundsson, which he believes suits both
parties. His comments come ahead of Wednesday evening's Premier League clash
with Liverpool at Upton Park. While there has been disquiet concerning the
foreign ownership at Liverpool, Curbishley believes the current arrangement
at Upton Park is harmonious. He said: "When Eggert was here we had constant
dialogue. Since it's changed I've not had that but we speak often and he has
left me to get on with it, which I'm quite happy about. "There is also a bit
of turmoil in his world with the banks but I think he's quite happy with how
things are going here."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbs questions Rafa treatment - SSN
Hammers manager wary of foreign investment
By James Dall Last updated: 29th January 2008

West Ham United manager Alan Curbishley has questioned the actions of
Liverpool's owners. Curbishley's comments follow ongoing uncertainty
surrounding Rafa Benitez's position in charge at Anfield. Reds co-owner Tom
Hicks raised further doubts over Benitez's long-term future at Liverpool by
revealing that he and George Gillett had held talks with Jurgen Klinsmann
about possibly replacing the Spaniard. Benitez has since played down reports
of a rift, and voiced his confidence at staying on as Liverpool boss for at
least another year. And while Curbishley is sure Benitez will remain as
Liverpool manager, he is unsure if the growing investment from abroad is
having a positive effect on the game. He told Sky Sports News: "What is
happening now - in the atmosphere we have got in the Premier League with new
owners appearing every month - is that perhaps they are not really up on the
way football is and the traditions, and the way to perhaps conduct yourself.
"I am sure they are learning. A loose comment here and a loose comment there
can make a big difference. "But I think Liverpool do their talking on the
pitch. If you look at the club, I know the Premier League has been out of
reach but they have won everything else. "Over the years they have always
backed their manager - whoever it may be - and I am sure they are going to
back Rafa. "Liverpool are Liverpool, and I think football is not the same
business vehicle as some of the chairmen have been used to - and they are
going to have to learn that."

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West Ham v Liverpool: Preview - Soccernet

Striker Dean Ashton (back) and winger Matthew Etherington (knee) have been
passed fit and return to the West Ham squad for Wednesday night's visit of
Liverpool but winger Julian Faubert (calf) is again doubtful. Craig Bellamy
(stomach), Bobby Zamora (knee), Nolberto Solano (hamstring) and Danny
Gabbidon (groin) have resumed training but are unlikely to feature and James
Collins (knee) appears to be out for the rest of the season, with Scott
Parker (knee), Kieron Dyer (leg), Nigel Quashie (foot) and Calum Davenport
(neck) also unavailable. However, John Pantsil and Henri Camara remain
absent on international duty as they represent their respective countries in
the African Nations Cup. West Ham manager Alan Curbishley believes the
visitors' American owners have harmed the club's chances of silverware by
their inability to keep quiet off the pitch. Curbishley admitted he had been
astonished by the constant stream of stories emanating from Anfield this
season, including the revelation that Jurgen Klinsmann had been approached
about succeeding the Spaniard. Speculation about a buy-out and reports that
co-owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett have differing ideas about how the
club should be run have also helped turn the current campaign into a soap
opera. ``When I played it was the players that were written about. Then it
changed to the managers and now it's the chairmen more than anyone else.
It's an interesting circle,'' said Curbishley. ``But if the relationship
between the manager and chairman isn't strong then it won't work. I played
against the great Liverpool sides. They won the games, won everything and
nothing else ever came out of the club. ``It was always a club that got on
with things in-house but what's happening now is stories about this and that
and it's distracting for the manager and players.''
Liverpool will have all their star players back for Wednesday's Barclays
Premier League game at West Ham. Skipper Steven Gerrard, Jose Reina, Jamie
Carragher, Fernando Torres and Xabi Alonso were all out of the starting
line-up for Saturday's FA Cup win over Havant & Waterlooville. Reina and
Alonso were not even in the squad. But with Andriy Voronin and Daniel Agger
the only long-term absentees, boss Rafael Benitez will field a far stronger
side than he did against the minnows from the Blue Square Southern
Conference. Meanwhile, Liverpool manager Benitez has expressed his
confidence in the club will completing the permanent transfer of Javier
Mascherano as they prepare for their Premier League clash against his
former. With Mohamed Sissoko having moved to Juventus today for £8.2million,
Benitez has the finance available to rid the Argentinian of the third-party
ownership that has dogged him and Tevez since they arrived in English
football. The Premier League will have a new rule in place soon to outlaw
such agreements, while Liverpool have the funds to make a sizeable
down-payment on the midfield player who is valued at £17million by his
owners MSI group. Benitez said: ``Rick Parry (Liverpool chief executive) is
working on the deal. He has also concluded the deal for Sissoko to go to
Juventus. ``That will be good for him (Sissoko), he wanted to play and
needed to play. But we have enough players in this position. ``We have
Gerrard, Alonso, Mascherano and now Lucas for the midfield roles, and that
made it hard for Momo to play regularly. ``Momo is a fantastic professional
and a nice boy and I feel this was the right outcome for us and him. Now we
are working hard to complete the Mascherano deal, and I believe that will
happen.''
Benitez added: ``I am confident it will be tied up soon. Sissoko has gone
and we are closer to a deal for Javier. ``We are working very hard to
achieve that before the window shuts. I hope for something positive in the
next 48 hours. Javier has made it very clear he wants to stay here and I
believe he will.''

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Rafa reveals Reds are close to Mascherano deal - Soccernet

Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez is confident the club will complete the
permanent transfer of Javier Mascherano as they prepare for their Premier
League clash against his former club West Ham. The timing of Benitez's
comments will not be lost on fans of both clubs, particularly the Hammers,
who were thrown into crisis last season over the contract arrangements that
brought Mascherano and Carlos Tevez to the Boleyn Ground. Mascherano's loan
switch to Anfield last January triggered the uproar that almost cost West
Ham their Premier League status. With Mohamed Sissoko having moved to
Juventus today for £8.2million, Benitez has the finance available to rid the
Argentinian of the third-party ownership that has dogged him and Tevez since
they arrived in English football. The Premier League will have a new rule in
place soon to outlaw such agreements, while Liverpool have the funds to make
a sizeable down-payment on the midfield player who is valued at £17million
by his owners MSI group. Publicly Benitez claims there is no intense hurry
over the deal because Mascherano's loan does not end until the summer. But
after co-owner Tom Hicks agreed to the outlay this week Benitez is keen to
ward off interest from other clubs and ensure the transfer is tied up as
quickly as possible. Benitez said: 'Rick Parry (Liverpool chief executive)
is working on the deal. He has also concluded the deal for Sissoko to go to
Juventus. 'That will be good for him (Sissoko), he wanted to play and needed
to play. But we have enough players in this position. 'We have Gerrard,
Alonso, Mascherano and now Lucas for the midfield roles, and that made it
hard for Momo to play regularly. 'Momo is a fantastic professional and a
nice boy and I feel this was the right outcome for us and him. Now we are
working hard to complete the Mascherano deal, and I believe that will
happen.' Benitez added: 'I am confident it will be tied up soon. Sissoko has
gone and we are closer to a deal for Javier. 'We are working very hard to
achieve that before the window shuts. I hope for something positive in the
next 48 hours. Javier has made it very clear he wants to stay here and I
believe he will. 'But we do not need to do anything quickly - he is our loan
player until the summer, and it could all be sorted out then. 'We have two
days, and if we can finish everything now it will be perfect. He wants to
stay. 'The fee we have got for Momo can certainly help as we try to complete
the deal.'
Benitez has also called on his side put together a winning streak with his
team having not won a league game since Boxing Day. A poor run of
disappointing displays that has seen them sink to sixth in the table, seven
points ahead of the Hammers. Benitez will bring back Steven Gerrard, Jose
Reina, Fernando Torres, Jamie Carragher and Xabi Alonso - none of whom
started in the 5-2 FA Cup win over Havant and Waterlooville. He said: 'As
far as our recovery following the Havant cup tie is concerned, I accept that
I needed to say some things at half-time to ensure that were much better, we
now have to improve in the league too. 'We must now start winning matches,
we have West Ham and Sunderland before we go to Chelsea and we need six
points ahead of that. 'It is difficult to explain why we have not been
getting the results, but we have been creating the chances. We just need to
be more precise in our finishing and things will be OK. 'What we need now is
confidence. We had the players capable of scoring and winning games at in
the first half of the season when were unbeaten in the league until
December, we were doing everything very well. 'We still believe we are best
placed to finish fourth. We are not happy that it has become difficult. But
we have one game in hand and we must get back to fourth and then try to
catch the third-placed team.'

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Alan Curbishley: Unrest will cost Liverpool - Telegraph
By James Masters
Last Updated: 2:03am GMT 30/01/2008

Alan Curbishley believes the actions of Liverpool owners George Gillett and
Tom Hicks have placed Liverpool's distinguished history and tradition in
peril.
The West Ham manager, whose side entertain Liverpool at Upton Park tonight,
said that the boardroom unrest at Anfield had damaged the chances of Rafa
Benitez's side winning the Premier League. Earlier this month Hicks added to
the uncertainty over Benitez's future by revealing that Jurgen Klinsmann had
been approached about taking over as manager. In contrast, Curbishley enjoys
a healthy relationship with his chairman, Icelandic businessman Bjorgolfur
Gudmundsson, and has urged the American duo to change their ways if they
want Liverpool to be successful. "There are lots of things chairmen of clubs
need to realise," Curbishley said. "They need to understand the tradition
and the history - even if it's all new to them. They may think it's normal
business rules, but football is different. "It's not like any other
business, it has different rules. One thing you have to do is adhere to the
history and tradition of the club and I think at West Ham we've managed to
do that. "I speak with the chairman on the phone and he lets me get on with
my job, just like I did under Richard Murray at Charlton, and I'm happy with
that."

West Ham's stability under the Icelandic billionaire is a major contrast to
the upheaval at Liverpool and Curbishley says that the turmoil engulfing
Anfield has severely hindered Benitez's title hopes. "Liverpool are a top
side," Curbishley said. "The only thing which is perhaps happening at
Anfield is there's lots of stuff coming out. "They've always been a club
which has got on with it and everything has been in-house, so nothing has
really come out of the club. But now there are stories about this, stories
about that, and I suppose it's distracting for the manager and the players.
"Rafa has only been there a few years and it takes time, whatever we say
about the Premier League. They've won everything else and we shouldn't
forget that. "I played against the great Liverpool sides and they just got
on with it and won things, and nothing really came out of the club. We're in
a different world now."

West Ham have failed to beat Liverpool in their previous 11 meetings, but
with Liverpool already 14 points behind league leaders Manchester United,
Curbishley believes his team have every chance of victory. "The nucleus of
the Liverpool team is there but they've drawn too many to make a challenge
to the top two," he added. "This time we'll have an opportunity against a
top-four side and I'm sure if we attack it the right way we'll give
ourselves a chance."

Benitez has acknowledged that Liverpool need to be more "ruthless" if they
are to secure a Champions League place. They are seeking their first win in
five Premier League games since defeating bottom club Derby County 2-1 on
Boxing Day. "We could have won our last four league games but we didn't
because we didn't score when we had a chance," said Benitez. The Spaniard is
expected to recall Steven Gerrard, Fernando Torres and Jamie Carragher to
his starting line-up after leaving them on the substitutes' bench for
Saturday's nervous FA Cup win over non-League side Havant and Waterlooville.
Javier Mascherano is suspended but Benitez is confident the Argentina
midfielder, whose future has been the subject of much speculation, will
finally complete a £17 million permanent move to Liverpool before the end of
the week.

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Curbishley excited by next wave of West Ham kids
tribalfooball.com - January 29, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley is excited by the youngsters coming
through Tony Carr's academy set up. He told whufc.com: "We've got lots of
players coming back: Faubert, Nobby, and I've got a couple of kids in [Jack]
Collison, [James] Tomkins who - why not? If the opportunity arises, I'll
give them a game. "Freddie Sears was with us on Sunday up at Man City - and
we've got [Kyel] Reidy. I've got four kids who have been in and around the
squad for the last month or two and if I have to, I'll put them in. Let's
have a look at some of them."

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West Ham boss Curbishley happy with Gudmundsson relationship
tribalfooball.com - January 29, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley insists he has a good relationship with
chairman Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson. Front-man Eggert Magnusson may no longer be
at the helm but Curbishley was happy with his new, more remote arrangement
with Gudmundsson. He said: "When Eggert was here we had constant dialogue.
Since its changed I've not had that but we speak often and he has left me to
get on with it, which I'm quite happy about. "There is also a bit of turmoil
in his world with the banks but I think he's quite happy with how things are
going here."

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