Monday, September 22

Daily WHUFC News - II 22nd September 2008

Carr's side learn lessons - WHUFC
The Under-18s may have been beaten at the weekend but the experience will be
a valuable one
22.09.2008

Tony Carr may have seen his Under-18 side lose their first game of the
season at the weekend but the youth academy director said his players would
learn much from the experience.

A youthful side, without the likes of reserve-team regulars such as Jordan
Spence, Bondz N'Gala, Junior Stanislas and even the previous week's two-goal
hero Freddie Sears, were outmuscled in a 2-0 defeat at Birmingham City. "We
had our moments, but it wasn't to be," said Carr, who admitted the game
could have turned had there been better fortune for Balint Bajner when his
second-half effort hit the post.

"But we were against a very aggressive team that came at us with a very
direct style. We found it very difficult and we didn't get it down and play
any football. That was the most disappointing thing for me, not the defeat.
We didn't control the game in any way shape or form. They squeezed us and
pressed us."

Given the way the game panned out, Carr will look for his players to take
plenty from the contest which was the first defeat after five games this
campaign. "It is all part of the learning curve for us and we will pick
ourselves up and go on to the next game. They scored two avoidable goals
from free-kicks, which set the pattern and gave them the confidence. It was
disappointing but these are things we can work on in training."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola hails 'new Di Canio' - SSN
Di Michele earns manager's praise
Last updated: 22nd September 2008

Gianfranco Zola hopes that David Di Michele can have the same sort of impact
for West Ham as Paolo Di Canio. Di Michele, who joined the Hammers on loan
from Torino earlier this month, scored twice in the 3-1 victory over
Newcastle on Saturday. He has impressed his new boss and Zola believes his
fellow Italian has the right style of play to become a fans' favourite. "I
hope he can do as well as Di Canio did for these supporters," Zola said in
the Daily Star. "He has got everything in his bag to be a successful player
for West Ham. "I hope he can become a cult hero because we want players to
become important for the club - and successful. "I told him he can do
unbelievable things but he needs to improve his finishing, which shows he
listens to me very carefully."
Di Michele was delighted with his performance against the Magpies and paid
tribute to the Upton Park faithful. The 32-year-old admits he is loving life
in the Premier League, although he has played down comparisons with Di
Canio. "It was an atmosphere that I am not used to," he said. "The fans
helped me to focus. It made me determined to to do my best, because even if
you make a mistake, they are not on your back. "Obviously, I am just David
Di Michele. Paolo Di Canio was a great, great player for West Ham and he has
to be respected for what he did for this club. "My hope is to do well and to
make a name for myself at such a big club."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The full Monty - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 22nd September 2008
By: Staff Writer

Fiorentina manager Cesare Prandelli has dismissed reports linking midfielder
Riccardo Montolivo with a move to East London. Prandelli, talking to the
Italian media at the weekend was speaking in response to reports suggesting
that United were interested in securing the services of the 23-year-old.
"West Ham want Montolivo? This season he will make the leap in quality
here," he said, before adding "twelve million [the fee West Ham are rumoured
to be willing to pay] is not a great offer."
Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola is said to be a big admirer of Montolivio who
began his career at Atalanta in Serie B at the age of just 18, helping his
team clinch promotion to Serie A during his first season. Despite being
relegated the following year Montolivio diid enough to catch the eye of
several major clubs and ended up moving to Fiorentina where he has a been a
regular for the last three seasons. A regular in the Italian under 21 team
formerly co-managed by Zola, Montolivio won his first full international cap
in a friendly against South Africa back a year ago next month. However he
was overlooked for the Italian squad that played at Euro 2008 and played
instead for the under 21s at the Beijing Olympics.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 3 - KUMB
Newcastle United 1
by Gordon Thrower

That was fun wasn't it. The fixtures against Newcastle are particular
favourites of mine. In the past the Gnome playing career was partly spent
playing for a well-known financial institution in a side that consisted of
some players many of whom were winding down their own careers, with the
addition of a few youngsters (as I was back then) to do all the running
around. It was a fine group of reprobates most of whom remain firm friends
nearly 30 years later.
One of the other youngsters was Craggsy, a Watford-based Geordie who was
actually so slow I had to do his running for him as well. Craggsy brought
his young daughter Lucy with him for this one and, as ever, he was late, my
arrival at our traditional Whitechapel meeting point being interrupted by a
call pointing out that they'd only just left Watford. Lucy's summing up was
harsh but accurate –"he's a waste of space!" The despair at the absence of
Craggsy was tempered by the highly amusing sight of a police car reversing
into a bollard at the back of the Royal London Hospital. Some things are
funny just because they are.

Thankfully the rest of the Geordie gang had arrived on time and we soon
settled into our traditional discussions along the lines of "my team's worse
than yours." One of their number even suggested that relegation was on the
cards. Website tales were swapped with nufc.com's Biffa who told a hilarious
tale of having been asked to publicise an anti-Ashley march last week and,
having done so, then receiving annoyed emails from others involved, moaning
that he had given away their plans! Apparently the best way to get a lot of
people on your march is to keep it secret. Football fans do themselves no
favours do they?!

Waste of Space finally arrived and we picked up the team news. There were a
number of surprises. At the back Davenport was dropped to the racing car
seats, Neil pushed in to the middle to partner Upson and, the biggest
surprise possibly, Faubert withdrawn to right back with Behrami taking up
the right hand spot in the middle. The middle was a middle three with
Etheringon pushing up into a more advanced role and there was a start for Di
Michele leaving us with a starting line up of Green, Faubert, Ilungi, Neill,
Upson, Parker, Noble, Behrami, Etherington, Di Michele, Cole.

Yes it was a bright start as the team ran out with with kit newly sponsored
by the characters of cult sci-fi series "The Prisoner." (Look it up if
you're too young to remember). As early as the second minute a long ball in
from Faubert, caused a bit of panic with the ball falling out to Etherington
whose shot was blocked by a desperate lunge from Taylor, though Matty's
preference for his left cost him a touch that delayed the shot and would
have had my dad muttering something about "professional footballers only
having one foot" had he been present. The corner was, unusually for us this
season, fruitless.

As the game settled down our line-up had revealed itself to be a 4-3-2-1
rather than the traditional 4-3-3 with Etherington and DiMichele playing
just behind Carlton Cole. Cole was doing well making a nuisance of himself
and a promising turn looked dangerous until he hit traffic. Ilungi, who our
bit of the ground have hilariously christened "Cheri" then played DiMichele
in down the left but, Cole not being in much of a position to support the
Italian elected to shoot and Given turned the ball out at his near post.
Noble's corner failed to clear the first man.

We took the lead on 8 minutes. Faubert played a ball inside to Cole who
cleverly turned his marker to find DiMichele. The Italian cleverly lost
Coloccini and moved inside playing a shot from 20 yards that caught a
defender on its way and looped up giving Given no chance. "Own Goal" Craggsy
was heard to mutter through gritted teeth but, although he ought to know a
thing or two about such matters what with him having scored so many in his
career, it was DiMichele's goal all the way.

Newcastle seemed in disarray. The ball was given away almost immediately to
Etherington who burst into the box and saw his shot blocked by Taylor. It
may have hit the defender's arm but was never a penalty in a million years
despite the auto-reflex shouts from the Centenary end. Cole was then
up-ended on the edge of the box but Noble's free-kick bothered no-one.
Newcastle then had a shout of their own for a penalty, as Dunn's cross was
driven straight at Parker from about two feet. It also was not a penalty
despite Dunns waving of arms like some sort of crap mime artist. The
clearance reached Cole whose run looked dangerous before running into a
blind alley.

Some good work between Ilungi and DiMichele saw the Italian feed Etherington
down the left. Matty's cross just eluded Cole in the middle. Ilungi then
joined the attack and pulled the ball back for DiMichele who delayed the
shot and forced himself wide leaving himself with a cross to nobody in
particular.

The visitors had produced little though Geremi's dangerous-looking cross
forced Faubert into conceding a corner from which nothing came. Noble then
tried his luck with a curling effort from the left hand side of the box that
didn't curl anywhere near enough to trouble the 'keeper.

The lead was doubled on 36 minutes. Noble's excellent through ball found Di
Michele one on one with Given. The Italian's shot hit the 'keeper on the
head and rebounded out to the right. Taylor elected not to attack the ball
and DiMichele cleverly flicked the ball over the defender before burying a
low shot in at the near post. Fine persistence and skill from the striker
but, it has to be said, awful defending. An entertaining half came to an end
after one minute of stoppage with the hapless Coloccini receiving chants of
"are you Keegan in disguise?" Even more cruel were the "One Mike Ashley"
chants which did nothing to improve "Waste Of Space's" mood.

The purveyor of half-time confectionery being away, we endured a
Kit-Kat-less interval after which there were no changes. Faubert started
proceedings with a fine ball down the right into the path of DiMichele with
the Italian failing to win a corner or keep the ball in. Up the other end
another dangerous looking cross from Geremi had hearts in mouth for a spit
second. Green, however was confident of it's trajectory and, as usual, he
was right as the ball sailed harmlessly past his right hand post.
Cole then headed over from a Faubert cross, Faubert having done brilliantly
to get the cross in over the first place.

Neill became the first to receive a yellow for a mis-timed but hardly
malicious challenge on Owen. A smidgeon harsh perhaps. From the free-kick
the ball hit Taylor on the back and rebounded to a four-yard offside Owen
who headed straight at Green. It might have been interesting had the ball
gone in as the linesman had let his ref down badly by failing to flag the
offside. In the end it mattered naught.

Butt fouled Behrami. Faubert quickly fed Cole who turned and played a
sublime ball inside the full back for DiMichele. DiMichele played the ball
across to the far post where Etherington gleefully buried the simplest of
tap-ins to send us 3-0 up. DiMichele's effort, on a hat-trick, was probably
a shot rather than a pass but, frankly, who cares! It was a proper
footballing move and worthy of the ovation it received.

Faubert then slid in a superb ball in the direction of Cole but Taylor was
always favourite and was able to shepherd the ball clear as the "Down With
The Tottenham" chants started to rub it in even more.

Newcstle did force a corner from which Coloccini hit the bar with a header
but ref Dowd had long since blown for an infringement. DiMichele should then
have got his hat-trick. A marvellous flowing move down the left saw Parker
combine with Ilungi and Cheri's pull-back sat there and begged to be buried.
Unfortunately DiMichele suffered the proverbial "sudden rush of blood" and
got underneath the shot putting it high and wide.

Cole then got in down the right, held the ball up before playing it into the
centre. Noble's dummy fooled everyone, including, unfortunately, DiMichele
and the ball was cleared.

We were then treated to the statutory goal from Michael Owen. Seemingly fed
up with the total lack of service he was receiving from his team-mates he
received a ball on the edge of the box, shimmied inside, leaving Neill on
the floor before curling a superb effort inside Green's far post. As goals
go, it was a bit of a waste really.

Being West Ham, even under new management, the goal brought an element of
nervousness to proceedings and the visitors had a couple of chances to score
a goal that might have made the last 25 minutes a little more interesting.
The defence failed to clear a corner from N'Zogbia and the bell eventually
fell to Cacapa, whose tame effort was easily dealt with by Green. N'zogbia
then played a dangerous ball in from the left that fell out to Duff but
again the shot lacked menace and green saved well to his right.


On 71 Mullins replaced the impressive Parker who may have been suffering
from the effects of a brave block of a full-blooded shot and, shortly after,
Boa-Morte took over from Etherington. The trio of substitutions was
completed when Sears replaced Cole who had had a fine game. Sears' first
action was to go down under a sly challenge from Coloccini – very sly
indeed. It was unsurprisingly missed by Mr Dowd who had an otherwise decent
match.

DiMichele then had an infuriating couple of minutes, firstly by failing to
play in either Sears or Boa-Morte when either was well-placed. Then shortly
after the Italian then tried to play in Sears when really he ought to have
taken the ball on himself. The infuriation continued. Boa-Morte ruined a
three v three break by going for goal and putting the ball into row z. Then,
as the three minutes of injury time were running out, he missed an even
better chance when one-on-one with Given, sidefooting the ball a yard wide
when he really ought to have scored.

That was the last meaningful action of the game as an entertaining match
came to a close. It was a good performance – though I suppose it has to be
said that Zola and Clarke couldn't have wished for more accommodating
opponents to start off their first jobs at a proper club. According to my
Geordie chums, the squad they had for this match is just about it in terms
of talent and they'll need to sort out the background stuff sooner rather
than later if it is not to be a long cold winter for them.

As for us, the new formation served us well. Having two smaller guys playing
off Cole sees us playing the ball quickly and on the deck, the way we all
like to see. There were a number of decent performances, not least from
Parker and Cole, who held the ball up marvellously well. If Heskey is deemed
worthy of international honours, surely a player who can do all that he does
with the added advantage of being infinitely more mobile and stable must be
worth a look? In defence Faubert looked twice the player at right back and
Neill and Upson played well together. Yes it's the honeymoon period I know
but early signs are encouraging and I'll settle for leaving the Boleyn with
a smug grin on my face every week if I have to!

Player Ratings

Robert Green (7)
Barely tested, made two comfortable saves just after they scored but they
weren't the most testing of shots.

Julien Faubert (7)
A fine game. Not given the hardest of days but looks much better in this
position.

Herita Ilunga (7)
Continued on from where he left off at West Brom. Solid defensively and
played some fine balls down the line.

Lucas Neill (7)
Mugged by Owen for the goal but otherwise comfortable.

Matthew Upson (7)
Kept Xisco very quiet. A fairly easy afternoon really.

Scott Parker (8)
Best game in ages for the midfielder. Hopefully the knock that saw him
withdrawn is nothing serious.

Mark Noble (7)
Revelled in the extra responsibility that a 3-man midfield brought him. Some
decent passes too.

Valon Behrami (7)
A lot of hard work – much of it un-noticed by most.

Matthew Etherington (7)
Another who enjoyed a new role. It suited him and the goal was deserved.

David Di Michele (7)
A typical West Ham player in that he delights and infuriates in equal
amounts. Spot of luck for the first. Good work for the second. Should have
had a third.

Carlton Cole (8)
Held the ball up superbly and, whilst he didn't score, he worked his socks
off throughout.


Substitutes

Hayden Mullins (6)
(replaced Parker, 72) Replaced the impressive Parker but slotted in well and
even found time to play some decent passes.

Luis Boa Morte (5)
(replaced Etherington, 73) Ought to have scored but his confidence is
clearly at a low ebb at the moment.

Freddie Sears (6)
(replaced Cole, 87) Full of running and might have got a penalty had the ref
spotted Coloccini's sneaky trip.


Jan Lastuvka (0)
Did not play.

Calum Davenport (0)
Did not play.

Walter Lopez (0)
Did not play.

Kyel Reid (0)
Did not play.

Match Facts
West Ham United: Robert Green, Julien Faubert, Herita Ilunga, Lucas Neill,
Matthew Upson, Scott Parker, Mark Noble, Valon Behrami, Matthew Etherington,
David Di Michele, Carlton Cole.
Substitutes: Hayden Mullins, Luis Boa Morte, Freddie Sears, Jan Lastuvka,
Calum Davenport.
Goals: David Di Michele 9 David Di Michele 37 Matthew Etherington 53

Booked: Lucas Neill 51
Sent Off:

Newcastle United: Given, Edgar, Taylor, N'Zogbia, Coloccini, Geremi, Cacapa,
Butt, Duff, Owen, Xisco.
Substitutes: Bassong (Edgar 59), Gonzalez (Cacapa 81).
Subs not used: Harper, Tozer, Doninger, Donaldson, Ameobi.
Goals: Owen (67)
Booked: Kim (71)
Sent Off: None

Referee: Phil Dowd
Attendance: 34743
Man of the Match: Carlton Cole

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
David Di Michele helps fellow Italian get off to perfect start - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 22nd September 2008
By: |Thomas Rooney

New West Ham United manager Gianfranco Zola made a winning start to his
reign as two goals from David Di Michele helped his team to a 3-1 victory
over struggling Newcastle United. It was an encouraging display from the
Hammers and although there is still plenty of work to be done, I think we
can be hopeful of what the future may bring.

Let's not be fooled though. Not a lot can be judged from beating Newcastle
United right now. They are without a manager, their owner is looking to
sell, the fans are protesting every five minutes and the players must be
considering the quickest way out of the club. I don't think Zola could have
chosen more ideal opposition for his first game. Perhaps that's why he
wasn't 'officially' in charge at West Brom – he wanted to guarantee a
winning start and a home game against Newcastle is as close as he was going
to get. The football odds are leaning towards Newcastle relegation, after
all.

The win shouldn't be considered as a write off though – far from it. There
were a number of positives to take from the game. First of all - Di
Michele's home debut was superb. He took his goals very well and acted as a
perfect partner to the physical Carlton Cole. Throughout his career, he has
a decent enough scoring record so hopefully there is plenty more to come.
Presumably, as an Italian striker himself, he will admire and respect Zola.
Therefore, the new manager should be able to get the best out of his very
own Italian goal scorer.

The second big positive for me was Scott Parker. I thought he was phenomenal
and the driving force in the midfield – he ran the show against his former
club. Perhaps more significantly though, after only playing 18 Premier
League games last season, he has been an ever present so far. Not that I
want to curse things, but he looks as if he could be starting to perform to
the standards that saw him secure a move from Charlton to Chelsea back in
2004. Should this be the case, he will quickly become one of West Ham's most
important players.

As ever though, there were some slight concerns despite the decent overall
performance. The defence was far from convincing and when Michael Owen
pulled a goal back for Newcastle, there was a horrible feeling that they
could get back into it. Julien Faubert in particular – who was playing out
of position at right back – looked rather shaky and Damien Duff got the
better of him on more than one occasion. This probably highlights the injury
problems more than anything else though. I'm presuming Calum Davenport
wasn't fit enough to start the game, because I'd have preferred seeing him
alongside Matthew Upson with Lucas Neil back in his comfort zone at full
back.

Overall, Zola will be delighted with getting a win under his belt but he is
wise enough to know that there are tougher tests to come. He will also know,
having watched the game at West Brom as well as taking charge of this game,
that the defence is a little shaky. Individual errors need to be cut out. If
they are, the attacking ability West Ham have, combined with the positive
mentality of Zola can result in a very successful season with lots of goals
and attractive football.

Next up is a Carling Cup game at Watford. In my opinion, this is a much
tougher game than the one just gone. In terms of football betting, West Ham
will be favourites for this clash, but the Championship side will provide
Zola's men with tough game – I'm certain of that.

Then it is a trip to Fulham followed by a home game against Bolton. After
these three games, hopefully the positivity surrounding the new era of
management is still present because the atmosphere in and around Upton Park
on Saturday was back to what it should be. Long may it continue.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fiorentina boss insists West Ham target Montolivo is not going anywhere -
Daily Mail
By Sportsmail Reporter
Last updated at 3:44 PM on 22nd September 2008

Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli has insisted midfielder Riccardo Montolivo
will not be sold to West Ham or any other club in January. New Hammers
manager Gianfranco Zola is a great admirer of the Italian playmaker and
reports have linked the 23-year-old with a move to Upton Park in January in
a transfer deal worth £12million. 'West Ham wants Montolivo?" Prandelli said
when asked about the situation. 'This season he will make the leap in
quality here. £12million is not a great offer.' Montolivo is under contract
with the Florence outfit until June 2012 and has been a regular in
Prandelli's side since last season.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola's West Ham Set To Be Snubbed By Fiorentina As Montolivo 'Too Important'
To Sell? - PremeirshipLatest.com
Submitted by Niraj Prabhu on Mon, 2008-09-22 14:58. West Ham United
Premiership Transfer News

West Ham United new boss Gianfranco Zola may have to look elsewhere as
Hammers' reported target Riccardo Montolivo is "too important to lose" for
Serie A side Fiorentina. Reports over the weekend suggested that Italian
tactician Zola, who has just started his career as a manager in the
Premiership, has identified the 23-year-old Azzurri midfielder as the
transfer target for January window with a bid of around £12million being
readied. However, Fiorentina boss Cesare Prandelli is determined to keep
Montolivo at the Viola where he has been since 2005. "Montolivo is a crucial
player for our season," he is reported as saying. "He is a champion and he
is too important for us to lose." Montolivo was part of the Italian squad at
the Beijing Olympics after having been left out of the final Italian squad
for Euro 2008.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Cole sits out Carling Cup clash - teamTalk

West Ham will rest Carlton Cole for the Carling Cup tie at Watford on
Tuesday night as the striker has a slight foot injury. Dean Ashton (ankle)
is still sidelined, along with fellow forward Craig Bellamy
(hamstring/groin), so youngster Freddie Sears could be handed the chance to
impress. Defenders Danny Gabbidon (groin) and Jonathan Spector (thigh)
remain sidelined, while midfielder Kieron Dyer continues his rehabilitation
after a broken leg.

West Ham (from): Green, Behrami, Upson, Neill, Ilunga, Faubert, Noble,
Parker, Etherington, di Michele, Sears, Lastuvka, Lopez, Davenport, Reid,
Mullins, Boa Morte, Collison.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mourinho wants success for West Ham United - Cmon Yu Irons
22 September 2008 317 views

Under the guiding eye of Steve Clarke, Jose Mourinho believes West Ham will
be successful. Jose believes that 1 day Steve Clarke should and could manage
a team in the Premier League and said that at present Clarke is probably a
better manager than most in the EPL. Jose is also pleased that close friends
Zola and Clarke have teamed up to manage West Ham and insists they are more
like brothers than friends and that Clarke will share his experience from
his days as 2nd in command to Mourinho, to Zola.
Mourinho said : "Of course, I'm not a West Ham fan, but with Steve having
this responsibility there, I want them to succeed. Steve is a really top
coach and a really top man."
The future for once looks bright for the Hammers, with our New manager Zola
and his experienced assistant Clarke that will take West Ham United to where
they rightly belong.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Chant wars - Just how did the Hammers and Magpies bait each other at Upton
Park? - Daily Mail
By DAVE MUIR
Last updated at 12:37 PM on 22nd September 2008

As West Ham emerge from their managerial upheavals and Newcastle stay deeply
entrenched in theirs, both sets of fans enjoyed baiting each other during
Saturday's Premier League clash at Upton Park. But it was all done in the
best of spirits with the Hammers warming up pre-match and immediately after
David Di Michele's opening goal with a rousing chorus of; 'There's only one
Mike Ashley.'
With Magpies owner Ashley doing a very good impression of the invisible man
since manager Kevin Keegan quit a couple of weeks ago, it was the opening
salvo in healthy fan banter that the Toon army was more than happy to
respond to. West Ham duly walloped Newcastle 3-1 to leave the Tyneside club
second bottom of the table and better only than Tottenham. But not to be
outdone, their ever-loyal fans drew laughter from the Hammers faithful with
chants of: 'You stole my holiday', a reference to West Ham's sponsor -
travel company XL - going bust last week and leaving thousands of
holidaymakers stranded around the world.
They then basked in the applause of the home supporters when they started
singing: 'You're not flying anymore' while doing John Fashanu-type aeroplane
goal celebrations. All very ironic given Newcastle's sponsors are none other
than Northern Rock, the bank that caused financial meltdown over a year ago
by going bust and needing government help just to stay afloat. Who said
gallows humour is not dead?

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers taking a big gamble with their punt on di Michele - Daily Mail
By Sportsmail Reporter
Last updated at 12:58 PM on 22nd September 2008

West Ham fans may be hoping that their new Italian goalscorer David di
Michele becomes a hero to them like Paolo di Canio did, but his signing is a
stupid own goal.
The striker may have looked good against Newcastle (although who wouldn't
against that shambles) but his history is bound to cast a nasty shadow.
Gambling within the West Ham squad has been a problem in recent years when
it helped unsettle the team. Investigations into corruption in the game have
also been going on for a couple of years and despite turning up little, the
image of the game being bent remains. So the last thing either needed was a
player who was banned for three months in Italy for illegal betting on Serie
A matches last year.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
DELUDED INSTINCTS RULE THE ZOLA DAY - Daily Express
Monday September 22,2008
By Mick Dennis WEST HAM 2 NEWCASTLE 1

SIGHTINGS of Mike Ashley were reported at West Ham. If he was there then he
knows the the mess he has created at Newcastle. Their plight was summed up
by Geremi, who said of the Carling Cup clash with Spurs on Wednesday: "We
need that cup; it's a way of qualifying for Europe." Another deluded player
was David Di Michele, who scored two of West Ham's goals and made the other
for Matthew Etherington. The Italian, who was the last signing of the Alan
Curbishley era, praised the home crowd, saying: "The atmosphere was
unbelievable. I could tell that even if you make a mistake they are not on
your back." Oh dear. West Ham fans can turn quicker than a teenager with
attention deficit disorder. They think Di Michele is the new Paolo Di Canio
– and there are similarities. Di Michele has a reputation for being
difficult and has served a long ban. In Di Canio's case it was for shoving a
referee. Di Michele, 32, was suspended for three months for betting on games
with an illegal bookmaker. Gianfranco Zola's new West Ham were unpicked with
alarming ease for Michael Owen's late goal, and they are where they were
before Zola arrived. He said: "I think I can be ruthless – otherwise I can
send my boys round." After Geordie complaints about the "Cockney mafia",
that last comment was a joke from the Sardinian. I think.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham's Parker: Pleasure to play with Di Michele
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham midfielder Scott Parker admits he enjoys playing with David di
Michele ahead of him in attack. After Di Michele's brace against Newcastle,
Parker said: "As a midfielder it was particularly good playing with him [Di
Michele] because it was easy to find him. He can't speak a word of English,
but if he keeps banging them in like he did today he can speak whatever
language he likes."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Blast from the past, David Di Michele lights up day one of Zola power at
West Ham - Daily Mail
WEST HAM UNITED 3 NEWCASTLE UNITED 1
By Matt Barlow Last updated at 10:36 AM on 22nd September 2008

Almost a decade after Paolo Di Canio descended on West Ham and declared it
his spiritual home, another restless Roman with a chequered past marked his
arrival at Upton Park with a two-goal home debut. Let the comparisons begin.
David Di Michele, like Di Canio, joins the Hammers as a clubhopping
thirtysomething recently back from a lengthy suspension. He was banned for
three months in March 2007, after being found guilty of illegal betting on
Serie A matches during his time at Udinese. The Hammers are the eighth club
of his career, just as they were for Di Canio, who settled at the East End
club for more than four years and restored an image tarnished by his shove
on referee Paul Alcock during his Sheffield Wednesday days. Di Michele, 32,
is a free agent who joined West Ham just after the transfer deadline
following his release from Torino. He has yet to sign the one-year contract
on offer but expects to do so before Tuesday's Carling Cup tie at Watford.
Like Di Canio, he has a reputation in Italy for technical excellence; quick
feet with plenty of tricks but also erratic, unreliable and often
frustrating. His talents have never been embraced by the big clubs and he
has just six caps for the national team - six more than Di Canio. The goals
which sank sorry Newcastle had a touch of Di Canio about them. The first, on
eight minutes, saw a shuffling run past Steven Taylor and Fabricio Coloccini
on the edge of the box before a lucky double deflection spun his shot over
Shay Given.
For his second, he picked up a rebound after his initial effort hit Given on
the head, flicked the ball over Taylor's challenge on to his favoured left
foot and lashed a fierce drive inside the near post. It settled the
butterflies for Gianfranco Zola, who confessed to prematch nerves ahead of
his first game as a manager, and who is confident Di Michele will prove a
hit signing. 'He has everything in his bag to be a successful player for
West Ham,' said Zola. 'I wish he can do as well as Di Canio did for these
supporters. He can do unbelievable things but he needs to improve his
finishing. That's what I told him before the game. It shows he is listening
to me.'
Wayward finishing cost Di Michele a hat-trick but helped set up Matthew
Etherington for the third. The Italian's right-footer was so far off target
it proved the perfect cross for Etherington to tap in. 'I probably could
have had three goals,' admitted Di Michele, who played against the Hammers
for Palermo in the UEFA Cup. 'I missed a shot in the second half with my
left. I should have been a bit more accurate and I would have got the match
ball. Maybe next time. 'I didn't expect to start in such a nice way in front
of the home crowd. The fans helped me to focus. I could tell that even if
you make a mistake they are not on your back. It made me determined to do my
best.'
The Zola era could barely have started better. The smiling Sardinian brought
happiness back to Upton Park, even though he could not have chosen more
friendly opponents than shambolic Newcastle. With despised owner Mike Ashley
looking down from a private box, the Geordies surrendered meekly. They were
lucky not to have been further behind before Michael Owen's sweetly taken
goal sparked a slight improvement. 'The problems are not affecting us,'
claimed Geremi afterwards. 'We try not to think about things and just get on
with our jobs.' But the farce unfolding on Tyneside provides an excuse for
anyone seeking one. Caretaker manager Chris Hughton saw Tottenham's campaign
damaged last year when Martin Jol's authority was undermined by a hamfisted
hunt for Juande Ramos. The team drifted aimlessly when Jol's power vanished
and the same thing is evident at Newcastle. Chelsea's dressing room may have
been strong enough to stay focused without real leadership last season but
Newcastle, now in the bottom three, look closer to the Spurs model. The
longer it takes Ashley to find a manager, the worse their plight will
become. They have become the butt of all jokes in English football since
Kevin Keegan's exit. Now even the Italians are taking Di Michele.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers' Italian striker is letting his football do the talking - Guardian
Series
8:54am Monday 22nd September 2008

WEST Ham United's new hero David Di Michele may not be able to speak
English, but team-mate Scott Parker claimed the Italian's goals will make
perfect sense in any language. The forward, brought in on a season-long
loan from Serie A side Torino, marked his first start in an Irons' shirt by
scoring twice in Saturday's 3-1 Premier League win over Newcastle United at
Upton Park. And while Di Michele may not be able to communicate perfectly
with his new colleagues just yet, midfielder Parker insisted the entire
Hammers' squad was on the same wavelength under new manager Gianfranco Zola.
"He struggles a little bit (with his English) but if he keeps banging them
in he can speak whatever language he wants," joked the England man, who
enjoyed his finest afternoon of the season so far against his the side he
left to move to the Boleyn Ground a year ago. "He did really well on
Saturday. He is technically a brilliant player and gets into spaces. "He's
good to play with, especially as a midfield player. You can always find him.
He showed his quality today with two good finishes. "He's going to be a
vital player. If he keeps banging in the goals like he did today he'll be
brilliant."
Parker himself also impressed as the anchor-man alongside Valon Behrami and
Mark Noble in Zola's new three-man midfield. While Behrami and Noble broke
forward and found space between the Magpies' midfield and back-four, the
three-times capped midfielder excelled in a disciplined role in front of the
Irons' own defence, regularly breaking up the visitors' attacks. And the
ex-Charlton Athletic and Chelsea player clearly enjoyed his position in
Zola's offensive 4-3-3 formation. "The manager wants us to play football. He
wants to try and control the game, be patient and I think you saw that out
there," he beamed. "He obviously tinkered with the formation a little bit
and it worked well. "It was a good game. I think that's the one thing the
manager has brought in. He really emphasises the fact that you need to enjoy
it. "A lot of time when you play Premier League games you don't, I suppose,
because there's so much intensity and so much pressure on you to win games.
"But I think the manager the one thing he has emphasised with us is enjoy
the game and we certainly did that."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Arrowing? Not for Irons' new boss Zola! - Echo
9:27am Monday 22nd September 2008
By Rob Pritchard »

GIANFRANCO Zola's home island of Sardinia lays claim to being the birthplace
of darts in the mid-15th century. On Saturday, West Ham United's new manager
hit the bull's-eye, starting his Upton Park reign with an impressive 3-1 win
over managerless Newcastle United. Having arrived in the East End with
promises of joyous and entertaining football, the Italian sent his first
Irons' team out in an adventurous 4-3-3 formation. His players responded by
producing a collective performance full of purpose, enthusiasm and, more
importantly, patient, intelligent attacking football. But Zola has spent
long enough on the oche that is Premier League football to know that he is a
long way from completing the nine-dart leg of leading the Hammers into the
promised land of the Champions League. "It was OK. For 70 miunutes it was
very good and we had to concede something because obviously we tried to play
a very offensive game," he conceded. "The players had run a lot and in the
last minutes they went down physically a bit, but I'm very pleased. "A
victory and some good football as well so I'm very proud of the players,
they did fantastically well."
Generally speaking, however, things could not have gone any better for the
former Chelsea man, who took a giant first stride in winning over even the
most sceptical of West Ham supporters. Indeed, Zola's only regret on what
was a triumphant opening afternoon was his ignorance of the home fans'
demands for a wave of appreciation. "The reception has been fantastic, but I
do apologise to them as they told me they were shouting my name but I
couldn't hear anything. My mind was completely crossed," he admitted with a
smile. But the new boss's mind clearly was not "crossed" when he decided to
name fellow countryman David Di Michele, on loan from Torino for the season,
in his starting line-up. The Italy international responded by scoring twice
and setting up a third goal for Matty Etherington, who appeared to have put
the trauma of tabloid headlines surrounding his gambling problems firmly
behind him.
Afterwards, Zola heaped praise on his forward line, claiming the third
member, Carlton Cole, could be pushing for international honours if he can
add consistency and goals to his considerable all-round talents. "Di Michele
played very well, but from my point of view he should share the fame with
the other two strikers," said Zola.
"Etherington and Carlton have been unbelievable. Sometimes Cole was playing
against two or three defenders he was keeping them busy so he's played an
unbelievable game too. "I know Carlton from Chelsea — he started playing
with me (in 1996) and I think he can become much better than he is. "He has
to improve a few things but he's got all the qualities to be playing for the
national team so it's all down to him."
Cole's performance, along with those of Di Michele, Etherington, Julien
Faubert, Mark Noble and Valon Behrami in particular, lifted the Irons,
temporarily, into the top-four. But Zola knows it is too early to start
making bold predictions about his new team, choosing instead to take a
pragmatic approach to his side's chances of securing a top-six finish this
season. "Well, we know that it is going to be very tough. The top four are
really top four," he added. "For us it is important to improve the position
we had last year. "To be honest, if the players work like they did last week
(in training) we can get a lot of satisfaction — that's the way you can
improve.
"It's all down to them, to their attitudes and the way they carry on
working. If we do that we've got a lot of chance to improve the situation."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Zola targets Fiorentina star Montolivo
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola is lining up a £12 million bid for Fiorentina
midfielder Riccardo Montolivo. The People says Zola and Hammers sporting
director Gianluca Nani have both identified the Italy playmaker as a target.
The duo have made an attacking midfielder their priority in the January
window - but they know Montolivo will not come cheap.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham: Zola Wants The Elegant Killer - Cmon Yu Irons
22 September 2008

Its good to see the relationship between Gianfranco Zola and Gianluca Nani
is proving to be a success, we all knew that Curbs was never going to be the
best of friends with Nani or even agree to Nani's plans on making the club a
success, different cultures and different ideas on new players is why Curbs
went, Di Michelle is a proving factor in this debate that makes Nani right
and Curbs who admitted he never heard of Di Michelle and didn't want the
player along with Illunga, Curbs was more interested in buying Thatcher.

According to the People, Zola has asked Nani if he can buy Riccardo
Montolivo in January, even though the midfielder has 4 years left on his
contract with Fiorentina, the signature could cost West Ham something in the
region of £12m, without any hesitation Nani has supposedly given the green
light to Zola.

Zola has great knowledge of Riccardo Montolivo from when he was an Italian
under 21 player coached by Pierluigi Casiraghi and assisted by Zola.

Montolivo has an incredible ability in midfield with all the style of
Ronaldo and pace of Theo walcott and makes Modric look pretty lame.

There will be problems in buying Montolivo, his coach Prandelli finds that
£12m is a poor price to pay for a player of such quality.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola wants striker to stay sharp - Setanta
by Alex Livie, 22 September 2008

Gianfranco Zola has backed David Di Michele to be a West Ham star, provided
he retains his focus in front of goal. The Italian made a sparkling home
debut for The Hammers as he bagged a brace of goals in the 3-1 win over
Newcastle. Di Michele could have helped himself to a hat-trick but wasted a
couple of chances, one of which he skewed so badly it found Matthew
Etherington who bundled home the third. And it is the 32-year-old's
finishing that Zola feels will determine whether his fellow countryman is
deemed a success. "I told David he can do unbelievable things but he needs
to improve his finishing - which shows he listens to me," said Zola.
"I saw him in Italy many times doing unbelievable things, then missing in
front of the keeper. "I hope he can do as well as Di Canio did for these
supporters. "He has everything in his bag to be successful for West Ham."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers boss Zola tips Cole to make his mark for England - Daily Mail
By KEN DYER
Last updated at 10:37 AM on 22nd September 2008

Gianfranco Zola believes West Ham striker Carlton Cole has the potential to
play for England if he continues to improve. Cole, who played alongside Zola
at Chelsea, could miss tomorrow's Carling Cup tie at Watford with an ankle
injury but the new West Ham manager was delighted with his performance in
the 3-1 win over crisis club Newcastle. Cole led the line with strength and
purpose in a display which must have caught the eye of England coach Fabio
Capello who was at the game principally to check on Michael Owen. It is
understood that Capello has also been impressed by Cole and would be tempted
to call-up the 24-year-old if he begins to score regularly for his club.
Cole was picked the Nigeria squad two months ago but FIFA blocked this,
insisting he was too old to switch countries. 'I know Carlton from Chelsea,'
said Zola. 'He knows that he needs to improve a few things but he has all
the qualities to play for the national team. It's all down to him. Although
Cole shone, David Di Michele was the star with two goals. Zola believes the
striker, signed on loan from Torino this month, could win over the Upton
Park crowd in the same way as fellow Italian Paolo Di Canio. The manager
said: 'I have told Di Michele that he needs to improve his finishing. This
time he listened to me! He did unbelievably well and I've seen him do
unbelievable things in Italy too. 'Compared to the other parts of his game,
maybe his finishing is lacking but he can work on that and improve. I hope
that he can do as well as Paolo Di Canio did for these supporters. 'He has
everything in his bag to be a successful player for West Ham. 'He's a quiet
boy but that doesn't matter as long as he's loud out on the pitch like he
was today.'
Michele, 32, admitted he was flattered by the comparison with Di Canio but
said: 'I am just David Di Michele. Paolo Di Canio was a great, great player
for West Ham and he has to be respected for what he did for this club. 'My
hope is to make a name for myself at such a big club. I will give my all to
do this. 'For me, it was a match atmosphere that I am not used to. It was
unbelievable and the fans helped me to focus. It made me determined to do my
best because I could tell that even if you make a mistake they are not on
your back. 'That is such a big help because it gives you the confidence to
try things.'
Zola made almost the perfect start to his managerial career in East London.
He shuffled the West Ham pack, putting Lucas Neill alongside Matthew Upson
in central defence and playing Julien Faubert at right-back with Valon
Behrami in the centre of midfield. It was a bold move and the West Ham crowd
welcomed it. 'I am sorry I didn't respond when they asked me to wave but I
didn't hear them, I was too involved in the game,' he said. 'I enjoyed it.
The hardest thing for me is not being able to play a player or having to
send him to the stands. I realise that I may have to be unpopular sometimes,
but as long as I make sure that all my choices are honest then there
shouldn't be a problem.'
West Ham midfielder Scott Parker believes the early signs are positive. 'The
manager wants us to play football, he wants to try and control the game and
be patient,' he said. 'He emphasises the fact that you need to enjoy it. A
lot of times when you play, you don't because there's so much intensity and
pressure on you to win games. The manager commands a lot of respect and the
lads have taken to him really well.'

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham should cover up sponsorship hole with Bobby Moore Charity - The
Mirror
By Steve Anglesey 22/09/2008

Bemusement in the East End on Saturday as, following the collapse of airline
XL, West Ham followed last week's bizarre shirt patches by sewing on crude
squad numbers in place of the fallen sponsor's logo. If only there was a
suitable charity related to a Hammers legend that the team could reward with
some much-needed publicity... like The Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer Research
UK, perhaps?

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Di Michele distances himself from Di Canio comparisons - Echo
10:36am Monday 22nd September 2008
By Rob Pritchard »

WEST Ham United forward David Di Michele has distanced himself from
comparisons with former Irons' hero Paolo Di Canio. The on-loan Torino man
marked his full Hammers' debut with two goals and an assist in Saturday's
3-1 Premier League win over Newcastle United at Upton Park, sparking
immediate connections with his fellow Italian. Di Canio thrilled the Boleyn
Ground faithful with his all-action displays and thrilling goals between
1999 and 2003, earning his place in Irons folklore.
And in converting a spectacular individual effort to put his new club 2-0 up
against the Magpies, it was inevitable that Di Michele would be spoken of in
the same breath. "I am just David Di Michele," the new-boy insisted through
an interpreter. Paolo Di Canio was a great, great player for West Ham and he
has to be respected for what he did for this club. "My hope is to do well
and make a name for myself at such a big club. I will give my all to do
this."
Having initially arrived on a season-long loan deal, Di Michele could earn
himself a permanent switch to the Boleyn Ground if he can re-produce his
goal-scoring form on a regular basis. And the former Udinese and Palermo man
admitted he would relish the opportunity to work under yet another Italian,
new manager Gianfranco Zola, on a long-term basis. "There is an immediate
understanding with the manager because we come from the same football
culture," Di Michele told whufc.com "This is a new adventure for the manager
and for all of us. "We are all united to go forward and do our best for him
because he is a great person."
Having experienced the Premier League, Di Michele could be handed his first
taste of English cup football tonight when West Ham travel to Championship
side Watford in the Carling Cup third round. However, at 32, Zola may choose
to rest his fellow countryman and hand a second start of the season to
teenager Freddie Sears.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers' youngsters suffer first defeat of season - Echo
10:52am Monday 22nd September 2008
By Rob Pritchard »

WEST Ham United's Under-18 side have suffered their first FA Premier Academy
League defeat of the season, going down 2-0 at Birmingham City. The Irons,
coached by Tony Carr, conceded a goal in each half in Saturday's Inter-Group
fixture at the Blues' Wast Hills training ground. Birmingham, who have now
won three of their four Group B matches this season, brushed aside the Group
A Hammers. However, one positive to arise out of the loss was the
performance of Hungarian striker Balint Bajner, who hit the post with a
well-struck shot after appearing as a half-time substitute. Benfleet-based
left-back Jordan Brown came through the full 90 minutes, as did highly-rated
captain Josh Payne.

West Ham United Under-18: Street, Brookes, Brown, McNaughton, Fry, Lee
(Bajner 46), Kearns (Barrett 60), Payne, Abdulla (Grasser 75), Edgar, Okus.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Prandelli: Montolivo not joining Zola - Ananove

Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli has insisted midfielder Riccardo Montolivo
will not be sold to West Ham or any other club in January. New Hammers
manager Gianfranco Zola is a great admirer of the Italian playmaker and
reports have linked the 23-year-old with a move to Upton Park in January in
a transfer deal worth £12million. "West Ham wants Montolivo?" Prandelli said
when asked about the situation. "This season he will make the leap in
quality here. £12million is not a great offer." Montolivo is under contract
with the Florence outfit until June 2012 and has been a regular in
Prandelli's side since last season.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola tips Cole to play for England
Ken Dyer, Evening Standard
22.09.08

Gianfranco Zola believes West Ham striker Carlton Cole has the potential to
play for England if he continues to improve. Cole, who played alongside Zola
at Chelsea, could miss tomorrow's Carling Cup tie at Watford with an ankle
injury but the new West Ham manager was delighted with his performance in
the 3-1 win over crisis club Newcastle. Cole led the line with strength and
purpose in a display which must have caught the eye of England coach Fabio
Capello who was at the game principally to check on Michael Owen. It is
understood that Capello has also been impressed by Cole and would be tempted
to call-up the 24-year-old if he begins to score regularly for his club. "I
know Carlton from Chelsea," said Zola. "He knows that he needs to improve a
few things but he has all the qualities to play for the national team. It's
all down to him."
Although Cole shone, David Di Michele was the star with two goals. Zola
believes the striker, signed on loan from Torino this month, could win over
the Upton Park crowd in the same way as fellow Italian Paolo Di Canio. The
manager said: "I have told Di Michele that he needs to improve his
finishing. This time he listened to me! He did unbelievably well and I've
seen him do unbelievable things in Italy too. "Compared to the other parts
of his game, maybe his finishing is lacking but he can work on that and
improve. "I hope that he can do as well as Paolo Di Canio did for these
supporters. He has everything in his bag to be a successful player for West
Ham. "He's a quiet boy but that doesn't matter as long as he's loud out on
the pitch like he was today."
Michele, 32, admitted he was flattered by the comparison with Di Canio but
said: "I am just David Di Michele. Paolo Di Canio was a great, great player
for West Ham and he has to be respected for what he did for this club. "My
hope is to make a name for myself at such a big club. I will give my all to
do this. "For me, it was a match atmosphere that I am not used to. It was
unbelievable and the fans helped me to focus. "It made me determined to do
my best because I could tell that even if you make a mistake they are not on
your back. That is such a big help because it gives you the confidence to
try things."
Zola made almost the perfect start to his managerial career in East London.
He shuffled the West Ham pack, putting Lucas Neill alongside Matthew Upson
in central defence and playing Julien Faubert at right-back with Valon
Behrami in the centre of midfield. It was a bold move and the West Ham crowd
welcomed it. "I am sorry I didn't respond when they asked me to wave but I
didn't hear them, I was too involved in the game," he said. "I enjoyed it.
The hardest thing for me is not being able to play a player or having to
send him to the stands. "I realise that I may have to be unpopular
sometimes, but as long as I make sure that all my choices are honest then
there shouldn't be a problem."
West Ham midfielder Scott Parker believes the early signs are positive. "The
manager wants us to play football, he wants to try and control the game and
be patient," he said. "He emphasises the fact that you need to enjoy it. A
lot of times when you play, you don't because there's so much intensity and
pressure on you to win games. The manager commands a lot of respect and the
lads have taken to him really well."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham linked with Italy star - metro.co.uk
Monday, September 22, 2008

West Ham have been linked with a £12million bid for emerging Italy star
Riccardo Montolivo. However, Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli has insisted
the 23-year-old will not be sold to the Hammers or any other club in
January. New West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola is reportedly a great admirer of
the playmaker, a player he knows well from his days working with Italy's
Under-21 team, for whom Montolivo has been an important player. The former
Atalanta youngster has one full cap Italy and was a member of the Azzurri's
Olympic team. But, when asked about the rumours, Fiorentina boss Prandelli
said: 'West Ham wants Montolivo? 'This season he will make the leap in
quality here. £12million is not a great offer.' Montolivo is under contract
with the Florence outfit until June 2012 and has been a regular in
Prandelli's side since last season.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Daily WHUFC News - 22nd September 2008

Di Michele's debt to fans - WHUFC
David Di Michele had words of praise for the West Ham United faithful after his Boleyn Ground bow
22.09.2008

David Di Michele has thanked the West Ham United fans for getting behind him on his first appearance at the Boleyn Ground and inspiring him to a debut double.

The Italy striker, who is on a year-long loan from Torino with a view to a possible permanent transfer, had an afternoon to remember on Saturday as he scored the first two goals in a 3-1 win against Newcastle United and then made the third for Matthew Etherington. "It was a great occasion," he said. "It was a very positive experience. I didn't expect to start in such a nice way in front of the home crowd. I am so happy to have scored two goals and that we won.

"For me, it was an atmosphere that I am not used to. It was unbelievable and the fans helped me to focus. It made me determined to do my best because I could tell that even if you make a mistake they are not on your back. That is such a big help, especially when you are a forward because it gives you the confidence to try things."

Di Michele, who also got an assist for Mark Noble on his first appearance away to West Bromwich Albion last week, admitted he should perhaps have been celebrating a hat-trick. "I probably could have had three goals. I missed the shot in the second half with my left. I should have been a bit more accurate with that and I would then have got the match ball but it was not to be. Maybe next time!"

The 32-year-old's performance evoked memories of other flair players to have led the home attack such as a previous wearer of the No32 shirt in Carlos Tevez and, further back, another Italian in Paolo Di Canio. He is playing down any link though. "I am just David Di Michele. Paolo Di Canio was a great, great player for West Ham and he has to be respected for what he did for this club. My hope is to do well and to make a name for myself at such a big club. I will give my all to do this."

Helping him to achieve that aim will be his new manager Gianfranco Zola, and Di Michele acknowledges that the signs are good for the future. "There is an immediate understanding with the manager because we come from the same football culture. This is a new adventure for the manager and for all of us. We are all united to go forward and do our best for him because he is a great person."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Manager on Monday - WHUFC
West Ham United manager Gianfranco Zola is already thinking about the future and keeping things going
22.09.2008

"It is just the beginning. It is the first step and we have got a long way to go. This is the right way to start."

Gianfranco Zola has slowly begun to bring his players back down to earth after a superb start to his managerial career with West Ham United. With the focus already on Tuesday's Carling Cup third-round trip to Watford, the whole squad though could be forgiven for still having the feelgood factor. The 3-1 win against Newcastle United meant the club ended the weekend riding high in sixth and looking forward to another busy week with confidence.

While his natural enthusiasm fuels optimism, the manager knows that there is plenty of hard work needed at Chadwell Heath to keep things going. As such, he only had a "nice quiet celebration" on Saturday night before he, his coaches and the first-team squad were back in on Sunday morning. There was still time for deserved praise though for the way the players had responded to his arrival.

He said: "When you have a team like that which is playing so well and is so focused and tuned in, obviously the manager's life is easier. If they can keep that attitude for a long time, we will get a lot of satisfaction." The humble Zola is still learning the management game but has relished having to look beyond his considerable achievements as a player.

He said: "I have enjoyed it very much. It is a new challenge. It is a difficult challenge ... I really like to test myself with new things and this is a new thing where I am sure that I can do well. I have also got great people around me like Steve Clarke, Kevin Keen and Antonio Pintus. They will be helping me a lot and I am sure we can do a good job."

Zola told his players his first West Ham United selection by simply pinning the team sheet to the wall and he acknowledges that leaving players out is "certainly the hardest thing about being a manager". He added: "I know how important it is for a player to play and that is something that unfortunately has to be done. I always do that with difficulty.

"I realise that sometimes now I will have to be unpopular. As long as I make sure that all my choices are honest choices there shouldn't be a problem. What explanation can you give? They have to be intelligent to understand that I can only pick eleven players and seven can go on the bench. It is a choice. It may sometimes be a wrong choice but I am in the position to make the choice and they have to respect it."

One of his first choices was to hand David Di Michele his first start in West Ham United colours and he was rewarded with an "unbelievable match" from the striker. Zola added that he had worked with the striker during training to make sure his finishing matched the undoubted creative quality that has long characterised his game

No doubt delighted by the way Di Michele had already heeded instruction, Zola said: "He has got everything in his bag to be a successful player for West Ham. He is a quiet boy. But that doesn't matter. As long as he is loud on the pitch I don't mind." Indeed, Zola is eager for his whole squad to step up and take the limelight in the weeks to come. "Obviously we want players to become important for the club and successful. We want these kinds of players."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ashton on the comeback trail - KUMB
Filed: Sunday, 21st September 2008
By: Staff Writer

Dean Ashton is set to return to fulll training next week, according to Gianfranco Zola. The United striker suffered his third injury of the season last week in training, a knock that ruled him out of yesterday's 3-1 win over Newcastle. But according to Zola, he will be back in contention for next weekend's short trip to Fulham. "Dean will have to rest," said Zola. "I think he will start training again next week. Then we will see what his condition is. "At the moment he needs one week to recover. He already had a problem and the ankle got sore as he was training, so we had to stop him."
Zola also revealed that Craig Bellamy has suffered another setback in his return from injury - although he chould be available for selection next weekend and possibly for the trip to Watford on Tuesday night. "Bellamy has had a problem as well," he confirmed. "It's an old problem but he's still recovering." The good news is that there were no further injury concerns from yesterday's match, which was won thanks to goals from David Di Michele (x2) and Matthew Etherington.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
You've got a special one - KUMB
Filed: Sunday, 21st September 2008
By: Staff Writer

Former Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has backed the appointment of Steve Clarke, calling his former number two a 'top coach'. The Portuguese manager, who now works in Italy with Milan worked alongside Clarke at Chelsea for several years during which time they won league titles and a number of cups. Talking earlier this weekend, he claimed that Clarke has the capability to be a manager in his own right, adding that he was good enough to have succeeded Mourinho at Chelsea.
"Getting the coaching structure right is the most important thing if you want success on the field," said Mourinho. "Gianfranco Zola, the new manager, needed support from a man with experience and intelligence; Steve is that man. "Steve and I worked very well together at Chelsea, won many trophies, and I think he is ready for more. In fact, this is what I think about Steve Clarke: if, at this moment, he had the chance to manage a club, even a big club like Chelsea, he would be ready for that. He is that good. "He is an intelligent guy and always looking to improve. He is very open to co-operation and learning. He has a good relationship with the players, knows how to handle them. I think he is much, much better than many managers who are in charge of teams at the moment. "So, while he has the capability to be a manager in his own right, Franco needs Steve because he does not have his experience of being on the training pitch, working with the players, with the methodology of coaching, with training organisation. With them working together they can do good things. Of course, I'm not a West Ham fan, but with Steve having this responsibility there, I want them to succeed. Steve is a really top coach and a really top man."

Meanwhile Gianfranco Zola has apologised to supporters for ignoring their requests to 'give us a wave' during yesterday's match against Newcastle. "I have to say sorry to the fans for not waving at them when they sang," he said. "I did not hear it because I was so focused and my brain was thinking about what I needed to do.
"This whole week I have been nervous because obviously it is a new challenge and you don't know how people are going to react. I must thank the fans for the way they gave me a great reception and next time I promise to wave!"

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola's pride - KUMB
Filed: Saturday, 20th September 2008
By: Staff Writer

Gianfranco Zola has hailed his team's performance after they comfortably beat Newcastle 3-1 at the Boleyn this afternoon. The new manager, talking to the BBC after the win praised his side's effort - and his predecessor, Alan Curbishley - after watching his managerial reign get off to the perfect start. "I'm very happy with the performance," he said. "I'm a little bit drained to be honest - it was very tiring! "I'd like to say we done something to these guys in one week. But to be fair to them it's all down to them and to what Alan Curbishley has done so far. The attitude of the players has been incredible and everything is down to them, so it was very good.
"We knew already that in the last twenty, twenty five minutes our condition had gone a little bit down. But what was important was that even in those moments we kept our shape and maintaned good positions on the pitch. I'm very proud of them."
Zola also had special praise for forwards Carlton Cole and David Di Michele, who marked his home debut with a brace and an assist. "Di Michele has got really good qualities," added Zola. "He needs to be a little bit focused on the finishing but he can do unbelievable things - and today he scored two killer goals. "I will forgive Carlton if he doesn't score many goals if he plays the way he played today. He was unbelievable. Today it was sometimes him against two or three defenders and he was causing problems all the time; he was probably my man of the match. "I am a great fan of his. I said to him that if he improves a few things - his finishing maybe, or getting a few goals, being in the right position at the right time - he can really achieve great results. He has all the qualities there to play for England."

Zola also dismissed reports that he would be little more than a 'puppet' for the Board, adding that all at the club will need to pull their weight if United are to push on this season. "My duty is to make things work properly on the pitch - and me and all my staff will be working on that, " he said. "Then I need the support and help from Gianluca Nani and the Board, because they will need to play their part. "I trust them, they trust me and if we can work together we can do a good job over here."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Prandelli denies Montolivo talk - SSN
Fiorentina not looking to sell reported Hammers target
By Nadia Carminati Last updated: 21st September 2008

Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli has dismissed reports that Riccardo Montolivo could join West Ham United. Sunday newspaper speculation claimed new Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola was plotting a £12million bid for Montolivo. The midfield playmaker is on a long-term contract at Fiorentina and is one of the brightest prospects in Italian football. Speaking after his side's win over Bologna on Sunday, Prandelli expressed his view that Montolivo is set for a big season at Fiorentina. "West Ham are interested in Montolivo?" Prandelli told Sky Italia. "It's not a big offer. "I'm convinced this season that Riccardo will have a great season. "We are asking him to take on responsibility. He came back from the Olympics a little tired, but he has recovered. "Today, when he entered the pitch, he did good things. We are asking him to take more responsibility and he's doing this."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola - I'm not afraid - SSN
Italian sets his stall out as he embarks on great adventure
Last updated: 21st September 2008

New West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola knows he has tough choices ahead but is not afraid to upset people. After enjoying a fantastic career on the pitch, Zola fully understands that players want to play. But he knows he can not please everyone all the time and - as long as his decisions are made for the right reasons - he will not reproach himself. The new boss said: "The hardest thing is that you cannot play everyone, or that you have to send a player to the stands. I know how important it is for a player to play, but unfortunately it has to be done. "I know that sometimes I may have to be unpopular, but as long as I make sure all of my choices are honest ones, there should not be a problem. "I just put a team sheet up - what other explanations can you give? They have to be intelligent enough to understand I can only play 11 and have seven on the bench. "Sometimes it may be a wrong choice, but I am the one in the position to make it, so they have to respect that."
Zola got off to a winning start as the Hammers overcame Newcastle 3-1 at Upton Park on Saturday. He is relishing the challenge ahead, and acknowledges the support he will get from his experienced backroom team. He said: "I played football always relying on my qualities and now I need to think about many things. "But I like challenges, testing myself on new things and I am sure I can do well at it. "I have also got great people around me, like Steve Clarke and Kevin Keen, they will be helping me a lot and I am sure we can do a good job."
Zola now hopes that the Hammers can continue their winning run and give their supporters something to really cheer about. He added: "When you have a team which is playing so well, focused and tuned in, obviously the manager's life is easier. "If they can keep that attitude for a long time we can get a lot of satisfaction."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Gianfranco Zola claims David Di Michele could become Upton Park's new Paulo Di Canio - Telegraph
West Ham (2) 3 v Newcastle (0) 1
By Oliver Brown
Last Updated: 7:50PM BST 21 Sep 2008

The Italian invasion of Upton Park is such that West Ham are depicted, in more extreme accounts, as being under mafia control. If so, Gianfranco Zola represents an unlikely godfather. The punishment his team meted out to Newcastle was brutal, but you had a hard time imagining him being as harsh on his own subordinates. The Sardinian is so popular, so essentially placid, that he admitted after his first match that his main challenge was to learn some strong-arm tactics.

Not that there were too many complaints to make of his debut, an effective demolition of rudderless opponents, or of his touchline demeanour, as dynamic as Alan Curbishley's had been dour. But the knife should have plunged into Newcastle far deeper, so abject was their resistance, and Zola at least had the courage to claim that the finishing from striker David di Michele was wayward in spite of his two goals.

"Sometimes I have to be ruthless otherwise I send in my boys," Zola said in jest. At least he has Steve Clarke, a headbanger of the highest order after 21 years at Chelsea, to execute difficult decisions from which he might shy away.

But, he explained: "As long as I make sure that all my choices are honest, then it shouldn't be a problem."

Home supporters warmed instantly to his honesty. They are growing attached to Di Michele, too, one of the club's summer acquisitions of whom Curbishley was so sceptical, but who could yet emerge as a latter-day Paolo Di Canio. "I hope that he can do as well as Di Canio, he has everything in his bag," Zola said. "He is a quiet boy, but provided he is loud on the pitch I don't mind."

Newcastle are in sore need of some local heroes. Steven Taylor might realise his full talent were he to partner a decent centre-back. Michael Owen, similarly, might look like being bothered to earn his £130,000 a week were to receive some reliable service.

But here their performance disintegrated with grim predictability. Their supporters chanted, "There's only one Kevin Keegan," and they felt no less nostalgic after seeing their team suffer again from the vacuum of leadership Keegan's resignation has left. Chris Hughton, his interim replacement, is occupying an impossible position.

"The quicker a manager is appointed the better, so we all know where we stand," he acknowledged.

A wider sense of ill-fortune stalked this occasion, as seen in the decline of the clubs' respective sponsors, XL and Northern Rock. But where West Ham, energised by Zola, could perceive a future beyond their logo-less club strips, Newcastle, for sale but never less saleable, are caught in a tailspin apparently without end.

Newcastle owner Mike Ashley has just had what is being describedas a "week from hell". As well as so far failing to sell the crisis-hit club for a staggering £480 million in the Middle East, the sports retail tycoon has also lost £300 million in a bet on stricken bank HBOS. Ashley gambled that the value of shares would increase and placed £50 million, which represented a 10 per cent deposit of the half a billion pounds he was staking in the spread-betting market. It is estimated that Ashley lost £100 million in just one hour as HBOS shares slumped to 88 pence each. The billionaire initially stood to lose £380 million until the share price rallied at the end of last week.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola all smiles as West Ham adapt to Italian's renaissance
Guardian report Observer report Match facts
Premier League
West Ham United 3 Di Michele 8, Di Michele 37, Etherington 53
Newcastle United 1 Owen 67

David Lacey at Upton Park The Guardian, Monday September 22 2008 Article historyGianfranco Zola's priority at Upton Park is to produce not so much a winning team as a team with a winning smile to match his own. West Ham had just won two successive games 4-1 when Alan Curbishley resigned on a point of principle about managerial control of transfers but his sides tended to wear a worried frown. Curbishley's pragmatic approach served Charlton faithfully for years but did not always go down well north of the Thames.

After Zola's new charges had beaten Newcastle on Saturday Carlton Cole, who had played a few games alongside the little Italian at Chelsea, confessed to his arrival being "a bit of a culture shock." Certainly West Ham performed with a new sense of freedom although whether this was down to Zola or the generous amount of time and space they were allowed by the opposition was hard to tell; probably a bit of both.

Either way, feelings of an Italian renaissance were strengthened by the fact that David Di Michele, a striker on loan from Torino, scored West Ham's first two goals and set up the third for Matthew Etherington. Di Michele is one of those fluttering footballers who are inclined to enthral one moment and infuriate the next. West Ham know the type. They had one not so long ago. Name of Paolo Di Canio. Yet if Di Michele was apt to overdo the feints and dragovers his was an alert attacking presence in the absence of Dean Ashton and Craig Bellamy.

Di Michele's opening goal, after eight minutes, was aided by deflections off David Edgar and Steven Taylor which took the ball over Shay Given in a high loop. The second, eight minutes before half-time, owed much to the speed of his reaction after Given had blocked his first shot along with dull defending. First Taylor lunged in blindly, giving Di Michele an opportunity to turn past the challenge, flicking the ball with him as he did so. Fabricio Coloccini then turned his back as the forward prepared to shoot when he could have blocked the drive which beat Given at the near post.

The low centre with which Di Michele set up Etherington to score eight minutes after half-time looked as if it might have been a miscued attempt at a shot but the Italian had done enough to earn the crowd's approval, although Cole's selfless running and willingness to take on defenders in batches were equally crucial to West Ham's victory.

Zola was careful to mention this amid his praise for the win, the team, the performance, the crowd and life in general. "Cole was occasionally up against two defenders today and he was unbelievable." he said. "He started playing with me when I was at Chelsea and I feel he can become much better. There are things he can improve on but he has all the qualities to play for the national team."

Of Di Michele he said: "I wish he can do as well as [Paolo] Di Canio did, for these supporters. He has got everything in his bag to be a successful player for West Ham. We want players to become important for the club and successful. I told him he can do unbelievable things but he needs to improve his finishing - which after Saturday shows he listens to me."

Fabio Capello, the England coach, was watching on Saturday although the presence of his physio, Gary Lewin, alongside him suggested he was there more to check on the match fitness of Michael Owen.

The Newcastle striker obliged Capello with a well-taken goal just past the hour, side-stepping Lucas Neill before curling in a shot at the far post. Otherwise he still looked a fraction short, missing several chances that the old Owen would have taken without blinking.

It was Zola's good fortune to enter Premier League management against Newcastle in their present plight: a rudderless hulk showing an early drift towards the reef of relegation and now in the bottom three. Their owner, Mike Ashley, wants to sell up and has been hoping for a buyer from the Middle East.

On Saturday's evidence, however, it would be hard to swap Newcastle United for a set of dodgy postcards in a Cairo back street.

Man of the match David Di Michele (West Ham United)

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fellow Italian gets Zola off to bright start - The Times
West Ham 3 Newcastle 1
Alyson Rudd at Upton Park

A cynic might say that anyone could have been in charge against Newcastle United and won, but Gianfranco Zola, making his managerial debut, won more than three points. He won over the West Ham United fans, who are notoriously hard to please, he impressed the players and wooed the media. Newcastle may be a limping zebra in full sight of all predators, but this victory belonged to the diminutive Sardinian.

"He is a calm man, when he speaks you listen, he commands respect. He was a brilliant player. He left behind an aura," Scott Parker, who arrived at Chelsea in the 2003-2004 season after Zola had left, said. Zola told the players to enjoy themselves, control the game and be patient. Crucially, he told David Di Michele to sharpen up in front of goal, which the on-loan Italian did, scoring twice and setting up a third goal.

"I told Di Michele he can do unbelievable things, but he needs to improve his finishing – which shows he listens to me very carefully," Zola said. "I have seen him in Italy many times doing unbelievable things, but then coming in front of the goalkeeper and missing. Today he did not do that, so I am very pleased."

Di Michele, on his home debut, soared from being a "Who is he, again?" sort of player to the next Paolo Di Canio. Di Michele, capped six times for Italy, has played for seven Italian clubs and at 32 seems an unlikely star in the making. His first goal was fortunate, the ball looping in over the head of Shay Given from a nasty deflection off Steven Taylor. His second owed more to his quick reactions. After the Italian's initial effort had been saved by Given's head, Di Michele scampered after the loose ball and beat Taylor to open up a second chance.

"There is an immediate understanding with the manager because we come from the same football culture," Di Michele said. "This is a new adventure for the manager and for all of us. We are all united to go forward and do our best for him because he is a great person. For me, it was an atmosphere that I am not used to. It was unbelievable and the fans helped me to focus."

Parker said: "As a midfielder it was particularly good playing with him [Di Michele] because it was easy to find him. He can't speak a word of English, but if he keeps banging them in like he did today he can speak whatever language he likes."

It was Newcastle who looked the team with a language barrier. Their fans lapped up the sunshine and sang heartily, Chris Hughton, their caretaker manager, refused to blame the ownership crisis, but the players performed as if trapped in a corny soap opera.

Hughton said that his experienced players are doing their best – "your Michael Owens, your Nicky Butts, your Shay Givens, Steve Harper, Gérémi. These are experienced players who have seen mangers go and therefore become even more important in these sorts of situations."

But if Owen is offered a package – Liverpool and Everton are keen – that could rescue him from the nightmare at St James' Park, he would surely take it.

There were plenty of glimpses of Owen's class, not least in the manner in which he took his goal, but it is unlikely that he will present Fabio Capello, the England manager, with a selection dilemma while part of such a hapless club.

And so, as happens every season, Newcastle pin their hopes on the cup competitions. On Wednesday, they are at home to Tottenham Hotspur in the third round of the Carling Cup.

Hughton acted as caretaker manager at White Hart Lane after the departure of Christian Gross in 1998 and said that he has been thanked by the Newcastle board for taking temporary charge at Newcastle. He has no idea, however, how much longer he will be running the team.

"The fans see no confidence in us," Gérémi said. "We have to show on Wednesday that that is not the case. We have to stick together. We need the fans to help us win. You can get into Europe from this competition. We need that cup."

Long-suffering Newcastle fans might be tempted to tell Gérémi not to hold his breath.

West Ham (4-3-2-1): R Green 5 - J Faubert 5 L Neill 7 M Upson 5 H Ilunga 5 - V Behrami 5 M Noble 6 S Parker 6 - D Di Michele 8 M Etherington 7 - C Cole 6 Substitutes: H Mullins (for Parker, 72), L Boa Morte (for Etherington, 73), F Sears (for Cole, 87). Not used: J Lastuvka, W Lopez, C Davenport, K Reid.

Newcastle (4-4-2): S Given 5 - D Edgar 4 S Taylor 3 F Coloccini 4 C N'Zogbia 5 Gérémi 5 N Butt 6 C Cacapa 4 D Duff 4 M Owen 7 Xisco 4 Substitutes S Bassong (for Edgar, 59 4), N González (for Cacapa, 81). Not used: S Harper, F Ameobi, B Tozer, M Doninger, R Donaldson.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 3 Newcastle United 1: Di Michele and Hammers quick to heed Zola message
By Steve Tongue
Monday, 22 September 2008
Independent.co.uk Web

Gianfranco Zola passed his first managerial test with ease and can look forward to the next few as West Ham continue a favourable run of fixtures that does not take a more taxing turn until Arsenal and Manchester United loom up in the space of four days at the end of next month. Of course, any club due to meet Newcastle in their current state of disarray – that means Tottenham, Blackburn, Everton, Manchester City and yes, Sunderland – must be rubbing their hands. But Zola, taking charge of a team for the first time, was spot on for tactics, team selection and man-management.

With Dean Ashton as well as Craig Bellamy missing, he adapted the formation to a 4-3-2-1 that offered solidity in the centre of the pitch, plus a threat from the two support strikers, Matthew Etherington and David Di Michele, that took Newcastle aback. Etherington's pace, Di Michele's invention and the fluid movement of both were more than the visitors could cope with. In addition, Carlton Cole at the top of the Christmas tree was far more than mere decoration this time, so much so that Zola, once his attacking partner at Chelsea, mentioned him as potential England material.

"It is a bit different," he said of his first week as a football manager. "So far I have enjoyed it very much. It is a difficult challenge but I like challenges, testing myself on new things and I am sure I can do well at it.

"The hardest thing is that you cannot play everyone," Zola added. "I know that sometimes I may have to be unpopular, but as long as I make sure all of my choices are honest ones, there should not be a problem."

Dealing with unpopularity certainly would be a novelty for the little Sardinian. Calum Davenport, culpable in a 3-2 defeat at West Bromwich the previous week, and the unloved Luis Boa Morte were among those disappointed on Saturday, but events justified both changes; above all when Boa Morte, on as a late substitute for the far superior Etherington, made a horrible hash of a one-on-one with Shay Given.

Di Michele, a Roman who has done the rounds of seven Italian clubs in his 15-year career, surprised Newcastle but not Zola, who said: "I have seen him in Italy many times doing unbelievable things, but then coming in front of the goalkeeper and missing. I told him he needs to improve his finishing. Which shows he listens to me very carefully."

The message certainly got home as his countryman scored the first two goals of the new era at Upton Park, then laid on the third for Etherington. Clipping the ball over Steven Taylor before driving it past Given was pure Paolo Di Canio.

Newcastle's Chris Hughton, who could find himself standing in as manager until somebody meets owner Mike Ashley's asking price for the club – it may be a long wait – did not fault his team's effort, although supporters have done so in recent weeks, but he was forced to admit: "We cannot defend like we did today. It goes without saying that the quicker a manager is appointed the better, so we all know where we stand." Michael Owen was the visitors' one bright spark, even if his beautifully taken goal with 23 minutes left failed to inspire his team-mates.

The two clubs may both have had managers resigning on successive days recently because of lack of control over transfer dealings, but the only other comparison between how they look this morning is in the matter of absent players. Saturday's game suggested how much better West Ham are coping, and being forced to use the talented teenage striker Freddie Sears in tomorrow's Carling Cup tie at Watford if Cole is unfit would not concern them.

Newcastle's wounds, as so often, include shootings in the foot: the midfielders Joey Barton and Danny Guthrie will be missing for a while yet because of wild disciplinary indiscretions and options remain limited for Wednesday's cup tie at home to Spurs. "It's a massive game," Hughton said of his former club's visit, "and the best way of lifting morale is to get a win."

Goals: Di Michele (8) 1-0; Di Michele (37) 2-0; Etherington (53) 3-0; Owen (67) 3-1.

West Ham United (4-3-2-1): Green; Faubert, Neill, Upson, Ilunga; Behrami, Parker (Mullins, 71), Noble; Di Michele, Etherington (Boa Morte,

73); Cole (Sears, 87). Substitutes not used: Lastuvka (gk), Lopez, Davenport, Reid.

Newcastle United (4-4-2): Given; Edgar (Bassong, 59), Taylor, Coloccini, N'Zogbia; Geremi, Cacapa (Gonzalez, 81), Butt, Duff; Owen, Xisco. Substitutes not used: Harper (gk), Ameobi, Tozer, Doninger, Donaldson.

Referee: P Dowd (Staffordshire).

Booked: West Ham Neill; Newcastle Taylor, N'Zogbia.

Man of the match: Di Michele.

Attendance: 34,743.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
€10m Not Enough For Montolivo, Says Prandelli - Goal.com

Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli has scoffed at the supposed €10 million bid from West Ham for Riccardo Montolivo. Rumours are circulating that new West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola is an admirer of Riccardo Montolivo and he is looking to bring the talented midfielder to Upton Park, but Cesare Prandelli has suggested it will take a lot more than €10 million. "Ten million for Montolivo from West Ham? It doesn't seem like a good offer," proposed the former Parma coach. Montolivo is touted to be one of Italy's future stars. The 23-year-old was recently a part of the Olympic national team squad and has carved a midfield role for himself at Fiorentina. "I am convinced that Riccardo will have a great championship, as we have seen a step up in his quality and personality," said Prandelli. "He has just returned from the Olympics and is proving he has the right mentality now." The former Atalanta player did not start in today's 1-0 win over Bologna, but did make a substitute appearance for La Viola. He is expected to be in the first XI on Wednesday when Fiorentina will take on Lazio at the Stadio Olimpico. The Tuscan side currently have four points and sit in mid-table after collecting their first Serie A win of the season on Sunday.

Adam Scime

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
CLARKE IS ZO CRUCIAL - The Mirror
Stan 22/09/2008

Gianfranco Zola got his West Ham reign off to a winning start but I reckon the club's most significant appointment could be Steve Clarke. Most people are fascinated to see how Zola (left) will fare as a manager but I don't have any fears with former Chelsea assistant manager Clarke alongside him. He has served under Ruud Gullit, Jose Mourinho and now Luiz Felipe Scolari and is highly respected. And it says everything about the Scot that he took a pay cut to go to Upton Park.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ZOLA: MICH IS DI ONE TO WATCH - The Mirror
By Martin Lipton 22/09/2008

It Took a matter of seconds for Gianfranco Zola to become an Upton Park cult hero - and the new Hammers boss thinks David Di Michele is ready to join him. Di Michele's first goals in a claret and blue shirt helped ensure the Zola era got off to a flying start. And the 32-year-old with a colourful past admitted he would love to be mentioned in the same terms as the last Italian striker to make an impression in the East End. Paolo Di Canio was never a serious contender for the job as West Ham manager, although Di Michele knows he has a special place in Upton Park folklore. While Di Michele's two goals means he has more leverage when he sits down tomorrow to finally agree the contract on his move from Torino, he hopes to emulate his fellow countryman. Di Michele said: "I'm just David Di Michele. Paolo Di Canio was a great, great player for West Ham and he has to be respected for what he did for this club. "My hope is to do well and to make a name for myself at such a big club. I'll give my all to do this. "For me, the atmosphere was unbelievable and the fans helped me focus. It made me determined to do my best because I could tell that even if you make a mistake they are not on your back. That is such a big help, especially when you are a forward because it gives you the confidence to try things."
Zola, whose trademark smile and relentless chirpiness has already won over any fans who queried his Chelsea roots, said: "I wish for the fans he can do as well as Di Canio did. He has everything in his bag to be a successful player for West Ham. "All week I have told him he can do unbelievable things, but what he needs is to improve his finishing - which shows he listens to me very carefully. "I hope he can become a hero for the fans. He's a quiet boy, but that doesn't matter as long as on the pitchheis loud like he was."
Zola promised he will be ready to make the transition to managerial hard-man, revealing: "I just put a team sheet up, what other explanations can you give? "They have to be intelligent enough to understand I can only play 11 and have seven on the bench. The hardest thing is you can't play everyone, or that you have to send a player to the stands. "But unfortunately it's something that has to be done. I realise that sometimes I may have to be unpopular, but I can be ruthless - or otherwise I can send my boys round."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham's Di Michele: I could've netted hat-trick
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham striker David di Michele admits he could've hit a hat-trick against Newcastle on Saturday. The former Torino and Palermo star settled for a brace and said: "I probably could have had three goals. "I missed a shot in the second half with my left. I should have been a bit more accurate and I would have got the match ball. Maybe next time. "I didn't expect to start in such a nice way in front of the home crowd. The fans helped me to focus. I could tell that even if you make a mistake they are not on your back. It made me determined to do my best."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Zola delighted with his backroom team
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola is happy with the coaching team he has assembled. He said: "I have enjoyed it very much. It is a new challenge. It is a difficult challenge ... I really like to test myself with new things and this is a new thing where I am sure that I can do well. I have also got great people around me like Steve Clarke, Kevin Keen and Antonio Pintus. They will be helping me a lot and I am sure we can do a good job."

Zola told his players his first West Ham United selection by simply pinning the team sheet to the wall and he acknowledges that leaving players out is "certainly the hardest thing about being a manager".

He also told whufc.com: "I know how important it is for a player to play and that is something that unfortunately has to be done. I always do that with difficulty.

"I realise that sometimes now I will have to be unpopular. As long as I make sure that all my choices are honest choices there shouldn't be a problem. What explanation can you give? They have to be intelligent to understand that I can only pick eleven players and seven can go on the bench. It is a choice. It may sometimes be a wrong choice but I am in the position to make the choice and they have to respect it."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Zola: Cole capable of playing for England
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola believes Carlton Cole is capable of playing for England. After victory over Newcastle, Zola said: "He started playing with me and I think he can become much better than he is. He has to improve a few things but he's got all the qualities to be playing for the national team so it's all down to him."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fiorentina coach Prandelli dismisses West Ham talk for Montolivo
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

After victory over Bologna, Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli has cooled talk of a move to West Ham for midfielder Riccardo Montolivo. "West Ham are interested in Montolivo?" Prandelli told Sky Italia. "It's not a big offer. "I'm convinced this season that Riccardo will have a great season. "We are asking him to take on responsibility. He came back from the Olympics a little tired, but he has recovered. "Today, when he entered the pitch, he did good things. We are asking him to take more responsibility and he's doing this."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham hope to secure Di Michele to deal this week
22.09.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham United hope to secure striker David di Michele to a contract this week. The Daily Mail says the Hammers are the eighth club of his career, just as they were for Di Canio, who settled at the East End club for more than four years and restored an image tarnished by his shove on referee Paul Alcock during his Sheffield Wednesday days. Di Michele, 32, is a free agent who joined West Ham just after the transfer deadline following his release from Torino. He has yet to sign the one-year contract on offer but expects to do so before Tuesday's Carling Cup tie at Watford.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola not carried away by debut success - The Star

LONDON: Gianfranco Zola urged West Ham to stay grounded after marking the start of his "new adventure" with a 3-1 win over Newcastle. The Italian was taking charge of his first game since replacing Alan Curbishley at Upton Park and his new charges did not disappoint. A brace from another Italian, David Di Michele, and a third from Matthew Etherington secured an emphatic triumph and Zola ended the afternoon by being granted a standing ovation from the home fans. Zola was thrilled at making a winning start to his tenure €" despite admitting to a few pre-debut butterflies €" but he was determined to keep a check on the club's expectations, with sterner tests looming on the horizon. "I have been nervous €" every single moment of the week," he said. "But that is normal because this is the beginning of a new adventure for me. "In the beginning you don't know how the players will react to what you are telling them. But to be honest, they made me feel very comfortable since I arrived here. "We know that it will be a very tough season. The top four are really top teams but it's important that we improve on what we achieved last season. If the players continue working as they have been, they can achieve that."
Di Michele will hog the headlines in the wake of his bravura performance €" his first goal was deflected in via David Edgar's boot and the second dispatched with cool aplomb after his initial effort had been saved by Shay Given €" but Zola preferred to focus on the contribution of his strike partner Carlton Cole. The former Chelsea striker, who played with Zola at Stamford Bridge, was a constant menace to Newcastle's beleaguered back-line and his display prompted his new manager to trumpet his international credentials. "Carlton was excellent," he added. "He was occasionally up against two defenders but he was still unbeilevable. "He started playing with me when I was at Chelsea and he was impressive then. But he can become much better and if he makes those improvements, he will have all the qualities to play for the national team in the future."
For Newcastle, this was another dismal day, illuminated only by Michael Owen's smartly taken goal which gave them brief hope in the 67th minute. The Tynesiders are managerless, bereft of direction from their owner Mike Ashley, who is desperately attempting to sell up, and the fans are mutinous following the sudden resignation of Kevin Keegan earlier this month. Chris Hughton, the club's reluctant caretaker manager, has now overseen consecutive defeats in his two games in charge and the stakes ahead of Wednesday's League Cup game with Tottenham Hotspur are now even higher. "Newcastle supporters want to see a manager in place and their team getting results," he said. "It would be easy for me to say that all the off-field stuff has not affected the players but you just don't know." €" AFP

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Parker Heaps Praise On 'Brilliant' Di Michele - Goal.com

Scott Parker has waxed lyrical about summer recruit David Di Michele after the Italian striker's Man of the Match performance lifted West Ham to a vital victory at home to Newcastle on Saturday. A memorable brace from Di Michele helped his compatriot Gianfranco Zola celebrate his first win as manager of West Ham at the first attempt. The on-loan Torino man then even managed to put icing on the cake by providing a third for Matthew Etherington "He struggles a little bit (with his English) but if he keeps banging them in he can speak whatever language he wants," quipped Parker. "He did really well on Saturday. He is technically a brilliant player and gets into spaces. "He's good to play with, especially as a midfield player. You can always find him. He showed his quality today with two good finishes. "He's going to be a vital player. If he keeps banging in the goals like he did today he'll be brilliant."
The Italian clan at West Ham is said to be about to grow even bigger pretty soon. According The People, the ex-Chelsea legend has set his sights on gifted Fiorentina midfielder Montolivo.

Derek Wanner, Goal.com

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
I never saw Gianfranco Zola as a boss, but I hope he succeeds at West Ham - Daily Mail
By Matt Lawton Last updated at 4:26 PM on 20th September 2008

Ruud Gullit is admiring £80million worth of paintings at the Royal Hospital Chelsea when someone behind him makes an amusing admission. 'I know this makes me sound like a numpty but I thought Christopher Wren was from a children's book,' he whispers. 'Not the bloke who built this place.' Unlike the chap who appears to be confusing St Paul's Cathedral with Christopher Robin and the Hundred Acre Wood, Gullit seems to have an eye for art. An eye for talent too. Whatever problems he might have encountered during managerial spells at Chelsea and Newcastle, he lured Gianfranco Zola to Stamford Bridge back in November 1996 and his opinion on football is one we should respect. Not least when it comes to Major League Soccer and whether the standard is high enough to prolong David Beckham's international career. Gullit resigned as coach at LA Galaxy last month, citing 'personal reasons' rather than a failure to win for seven games. But in nine months he saw enough of Beckham and the U.S. league to know the 33-year-old can remain part of Fabio Capello's plans. It's only become a discussion now because of the sudden emergence of Theo Walcott,' he says. 'But Beckham can remain an international footballer while playing there. 'The football is different, and the salary cap prevents the league from attracting the very top players, but the standard is higher than people think. It's unfair to make comparisons with football in this country. 'For a start, they play in the summer and that means it can be 90 degrees and 80 per cent humidity. You just can't play high-tempo football. Certainly nothing like the Barclays Premier League, which is all about long ball and pace. 'Then there's the travelling. If you're in LA and you've got a game in New York you're talking about a six-or-seven-hour flight. 'I'd liken it more to the leagues in Holland, Belgium and Norway. The players can play. I watched the All Stars against West Ham in the summer and the All Stars outplayed them. And I think Beckham has already proved he can do it. His crossing and dead ball delivery is still important to England. Sometimes decisive.'
Certain aspects of U.S. soccer frustrate him: the failure to arrange fixtures around the international calendar; the draft system that prevents clubs from building a youth development structure; the salary cap that denied him the chance to lure European players to America. 'We could have a game the day after a round of international matches, that was ridiculous and so was the draft system. I could have players I wanted to promote from the under 21s but they were no use to me because they weren't actually mine, they could go into the draft system and end up elsewhere. It all became very frustrating and it has to change.'
'We have men here who built the bridge over the River Kwai,' explains a hospital representative. 'And one who's now 103. He's lost his sight but he still goes to the gym with a nurse every day and refuses to use a lift.' Gullit listens intently. 'You have to respect these guys,' he says. 'Everyone should be proud of them.' He says he is 'proud' to see Zola appointed the new manager of West Ham. Amazed too. 'I can't say I ever saw Franco as a manager,' he says. 'Although that's true of a lot of players. I never thought Frank Rijkaard would go into management. Or Marco van Basten. 'I was just talking to Gary Pallister and he said the same about Roy Keane, Mark Hughes, Paul Ince. I never thought I'd be a manager but an opportunity suddenly presents itself and you go for it. Because you love the game. Because we all love the game. It's in our blood. 'You know what I missed most when I was in LA? Reading about football in the newspapers. Out there it's just baseball, baseball, baseball. Here I love to read the sports pages. It's part of my culture.'
Gullit agrees that, for a first job in management, West Ham is a difficult challenge for Zola. 'It is, but it was probably something he found impossible to resist. I hope he does well. He has a lot of experience at international level and in two of the best leagues in the world. The man management side of things is what he will have to learn. That can be the hard bit. And it's not so much the guys who play. It's the guys who don't play.' He reflects on those spells at Chelsea and Newcastle and the problems of modern managers dealing with interfering owners. To succeed you need stability and that can be hard to find because everyone knows better,' he says.
'You always have to watch your back. Even for Jose Mourinho that was a problem. 'When I look at the Premier League only Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger appear to be in control. And only if you have that control can you work. 'For me it was worse at Newcastle. There were some great people there, not least the fans, but the club was not together. It was in turmoil and it has been like that for a long time. I had a situation where people were talking behind my back to the local press. It's part of the culture there and it's very damaging. The strength of Milan was the fact that whatever happened in the locker room stayed in the locker room. 'It was consistent with the different managers, (Arrigo) Sacchi and Capello. If someone broke that trust they were out.'
Was it the kind of regime Fabio Capello has introduced at the Football Association? 'Even with us he was very strict,' says Gullit. 'But it was not a problem for the players because we were very serious, very focused and very professional. 'He was a great coach but the Italian players, Baresi and Ancelotti, demanded high standards.' Standards we will see when Chelsea meet Manchester United on Sunday? 'Of course,' he said. 'The culture is changing here. Players no longer spend their time down the pub.' Perhaps they now hang out at art galleries.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Boss Zola To Target £12million Italian International In January? - PremiershipLatest.com
Submitted by Jake Briggs on Sun, 2008-09-21 11:54. West Ham United Premiership Transfer News

New West Ham United boss Gianfranco Zola has wasted no time in identifying his first transfer target. Italian International Riccardo Montolivo from Serie A side Fiorentina, according to The People. 23-year-old midfielder Montolivo has been at the Viola since 2005 and was part of the Italian squad at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Zola is a big admirer of the player, having worked closely with Montolivo during his time as coach of the Italian Under-21 side. Ironically Montolovi was left out of the final Italian squad for EURO 2008, by Roberto Donadoni, who had also been in the running for the job at the Hammers along with Zola. Zola is reportedly ready to offer Fiorentina £12million for Montolivo in the January transfer window. With the former Chelsea player keen to bring some attacking flair to Upton Park and make his mark in management on the Premier League.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers boss lines up £12m Italian ace - Echo
11:18am Sunday 21st September 2008

GIANFRANCO ZOLA is lining up Fiorentina midfielder Riccardo Montolivo as his first West Ham signing, according to The People. The Hammers boss is desperate to add attacking flair to his squad and sees Italian playmaker Montolivo as the ideal solution. And, according to the source, Zola is ready with a £12 million offer for the talented 23-year-old.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

http://vyperz.blogspot.com