West Ham United 2-0 Newcastle United
WHUFC.com
West Ham United 2-0 Newcastle United
Following the famous 3-0 victory over Liverpool at Anfield, the Hammers had
to wait 16 days to make a return to Premier League action and they wasted
little time in finding their stride.
In front of a packed Boleyn Ground under the lights, an air of excitement
tinged with expectation was rewarded with a 2-0 win thanks to a Dimitri
Payet brace.
The Frenchmen put in a sparkling performance to help the Hammers record
their first home win under Slaven Bilic.
While Payet shone, a supporting cast of Mark Noble, Cheikhou Kouyate and
Victor Moses supported admirably as the Hammers got off to a brilliant start
as the French playmaker demonstrated his class by curling an effort into the
top right-hand corner after nine minutes.
While the hosts were certainly in the ascendency, Newcastle had their fair
share of opportunities. Georginio Wijnaldum burst through the midfield
before laying fellow countryman Daryl Janmaat who forced a smart save from
Darren Randolph with an outstretched leg.
Among the substitutes named was star striker Andy Carroll who received a
rousing round of applause when he went to warm up, this was just a taster of
things to come when he made his first return since February with five
minutes remaining.
Livewire Manuel Lanzini again showed flashed of brilliance; he tried his
luck from 25 yards before looked to play in Cheikhou Kouyate with a
delightful dink.
The visitors continued to press and this left space behind which Lanzini,
Moses and Payet were only too keen to exploit. While the enthusiasm and
inventiveness was evident, the final through-ball was lacking.
The half ended on a disappointing note as Angelo Ogbonna, enjoying a
terrific start to life in Claret and Blue, had to be replaced by Carl
Jenkinson with what looked to be a hamstring injury.
Just seconds after coming on, Jenkinson made an important clearance which
set Moses tearing through the middle, he layed it to tormentor-in-chief
Payet who returned the favour with an exquisite threaded-ball. The winger
smashed an effort goal-bound, but off balance, it nestled narrowly wide of
Tim Krul's post.
Into added time and Mark Noble, playing his first home game as official Club
Captain, attempted his volley on the edge of the box from Payet's floated
delivery, yet couldn't quite get his angles right.
During the half-time break the Hammers' faithful were greeted by members of
the Boys of '86 including West Ham legends Tony Cottee and Frank McAvennie.
Upon resumption of play, the Irons were certainly fired up, and inspired by
a combination of their forebears and Bilic's half-time sentiments, raced out
of the traps. Yet again, Moses tore down the flank and fired a wicked shot
goalward. With Krul beaten all ends up, the crossbar came to the Magpies'
rescue, albeit briefly.
The ball fell to Payet who didn't need to think twice, as he placed it
nonchalantly between goalkeeper and defender. Two-nil, too good.
Moses had his head in his hands, a dream debut goal denied. His teammates
rushed to celebrate with the assister while the fans celebrated wildly.
With the Hammers firmly in control, Bilic looked to close the game out with
Pedro Obiang replacing Manuel Lanzini. The tactic seemed to work, however
the Magpies refused to be cowed.
Their never-say-die attitude almost paid off as Janmaat stung Randolph's
palms again, but the Ireland international was determined to keep a second
consecutive clean sheet.
With ten minutes remaining, de Jong fired a fierce effort which deflected
wickedly and was diverted only by Randolph's outstretched fingertips.
There was just enough time for Andy Carroll to make a five minute cameo; his
introduction was met with a huge ovation
All in all, a good night for the Hammers who sit fifth in the table.
West Ham United: Randolph, Tomkins, Reid, Ogbonna (Jenkinson 42), Cresswell,
Noble ©, Kouyate, Payet, Lanzini (Obiang 59), Moses (Carroll 86), Sakho
Subs: Spiegel (GK), Collins, Jelavic, Antonio
Goals: Payet 9, 48
Newcastle United: Krul, Coloccini, Colback, Wijnaldum (Aarons 79), Sissoko,
Anita (de Jong 60), Cisse, Mbemba, Haidara, Thauvin (Perez 60), Janmaat
Subs: Darlow (GK), Gouffran, Obertan, Lascelles
Bookings: Colback, Janmaat
Referee: Anthony Taylor
Attendance: 34,907
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Moses expresses delight with debut
WHUFC.com
West Ham United winger Victor Moses said he believes the best is still to
come from himself and his teammates after the Hammers' 2-0 win over
Newcastle United on Monday 14 September.
The Nigeria International showed his pace, power and overall ability in a
debut that certainly won over the West Ham faithful at a sell-out Boleyn
Ground.
Speaking after the victory, which takes the Irons to fifth in the Premier
League table, Moses said: "I thought all the lads did really well out there.
We knew what to expect, the manager said 'Go out and express yourself, make
sure you enjoy the game'.
"I thought we worked hard together as a team, we deserved the game and we
dominated really. We created a lot of chances really."
The 24-year-old almost capped an impressive performance with a dream debut
goal. The winger sprinted 50 yards and beat two defenders before unleashing
a venomous shot which beat Tim Krul but smacked against the crossbar. The
rebound fell to Payet who calmly side-footed the bouncing ball home to
double the advantage.
Moses completed an all-action debut by being warmly applauded to the
touchline when he was replaced by the returning Andy Carroll with a few
minutes remaining. For the Chelsea loanee, it was a case of a job very well
done.
"I think I've settled in quickly. I just wanted to go out there and enjoy
it. Everything fell into place and it felt good out there.
"You can see that we've got a lot of quality. Going forward we were all
enjoying ourselves. Payet and Sakho were excellent and Lanzini as well. Our
full-backs pushed on well which also helped, we just enjoyed ourselves
really."
Having set up Payet's second of the night, his third in the league, Moses
had only positive things to say of his new teammate.
The forward, who has played for both Chelsea and Liverpool, went as far as
to say: "Payet is definitely up there with the best players I've played
with; he's got huge ability as his showed with both his goals. His touch,
his skill he's quick too, he's definitely up there with the best I've played
alongside with."
While Moses clearly enjoyed his debut, he refused to get carried away as he
set his sights on Saturday's opponents, and Barclays Premier League leaders
Manchester City.
"Now the most important thing is the game on Saturday and trying to get
three points at City. It'll be tough, Manchester City have been the best
team so far, playing there is always difficult anyway. We need to go there
and be positive, try and upset them and win the game.
"Hopefully we'll get at least a draw but I believe in the quality of the
players we've got. If we play to our best, it's going to be a very hard game
for City."
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Bilic - Payet doesn't surprise me
WHUFC.com
West Ham United manager Slaven Bilic had nothing but praise for two-goal
hero Dimitri Payet following his man of the match display against Newcastle
and said he is not surprised by his immediate impact in the Premier League.
Payet opened the scoring with a superb strike early in the game and doubled
the advantage minutes into the second half after new signing Victor Moses
saw his shot hit the bar and the French international was in the right place
to knock the rebound into the back of the net.
The talented forward has already netted three goals this season and Bilic
knows he can help the Hammers achieve big things this season if he continues
to produce this kind of form.
Bilic said: "He is fantastic but he doesn't surprise me. The only thing that
surprised me is that he gelled straight away but then we have great lads
with a good character in the team. Every new player is welcome straight
away.
"I know Dimitri and I wanted to take him to Besiktas last year but it was
impossible. He is a brilliant player and he is not just a player who decides
a game with his goals, but he is also great at keeping possession and making
all the other players better.
"It is not just him but if you ask me about him he is a brilliant player and
that is why we got him.
"He did the same in training yesterday (with a wonder strike) and also
scored a similar goal against Leicester. We need that extra type of player
and if he does that we are going to be good. But the whole team played well
tonight."
Bilic was also thrilled to see new signing Moses have such an immediate
impact on his Premier League debut for the Club and was glad to see him play
the majority of the game.
Bilic added: "It was some sprint (for the second goal) and that is what
pleases me the most. We knew that Victor has the quality. His fitness was
the only thing on paper.
"He played pre-season for Chelsea but has not played in the Premier League.
But he told me he was okay. I didn't know he would last that long. There was
no need to take him off and he is a quality player."
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Loan round-up
WHUFC.com
Matt Jarvis enjoyed a successful debut for his loan club Norwich City on
Saturday, scoring the Canaries' third goal in their 3-1 win over fellow
promoted side AFC Bournemouth. Jarvis strode clear in the 67th minute to
place a curled effort beyond Cherries keeper Artur Boruc's reach and add to
earlier goals from Cameron Jerome and Wes Hoolahan. The winger's efforts
helped Norwich to their second Barclays Premier League victory of the season
and meant his Carrow Road career got off to the ideal start.
Elsewhere, Diego Poyet played 90 minutes as Milton Keynes Dons suffered a
2-0 defeat to Middlesbrough in the Sky Bet Championship.
In League One, Reece Burke's Bradford City recovered from falling a goal
down early to Fleetwood Town to earn a 1-1 draw. The result leaves them 14th
in the league table.
Outside the Football League, Moses Makasi played in Chelmsford Town's 0-0
draw at Wealdstone and now returns to the Hammers following the end of his
loan spell with the Clarets.
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West Ham 2-0 Newcastle: Dimitri Payet double leaves Magpies winless
By Lyall Thomas
Last Updated: 14/09/15 10:30pm
SSN
Dimitri Payet scored in both halves to give West Ham a 2-0 victory that
leaves Newcastle winless from five Premier League games. The France attacker
steered home a superb opener on nine minutes before firing in his second
from close-range after Victor Moses had hit the bar three minutes into the
second half. The hosts looked in firm control for the majority of the game
and Newcastle's chances were scant, with right-back Daryl Janmaat going
closest when he forced Darren Randolph to save in the first half. And Slaven
Bilic's side had enough control to hand Andy Carroll a late return to action
after eight months out with a knee injury. But there was little comfort for
Newcastle boss Steve McClaren, whose side arrived at Upton Park less than 50
minutes before kick-off, and seemed to be affected by the delay. Newcastle's
players and staff had to walk the final leg of their journey after traffic
prevented their bus getting close to the ground, and they did not look ready
when Payet fired the Hammers into the lead. Captain Mark Noble stole
in-front of his marker before laying the ball off to Payet on the edge of
the penalty area, and he curled home skilfully into the top corner. The
summer signing from Marseille ran the show in the first half, and he poked
wide from a pass from Moses, who was also excellent on his debut, on 18
minutes.
At the other end, Janmaat was as surprised as anyone to find himself
one-on-one with Randolph after a heavy touch from Vurnon Anita beat West
Ham's back-line, but the Hammers keeper got down low to stop the shot.
Manuel Lanzini and Moses both shot wide of the target and the Hammers
remained unfazed by the loss of defender Angelo Ogbonna, who was replaced by
Carl Jenkinson before half-time. Moses did brilliantly to shrug off
defenders and latch onto a long clearance up-field before curling an effort
against the woodwork, with Payet on hand to punt home on 48 minutes.
McClaren reacted by sending on two strikers in Ayoze Perez and Siem de Jong,
but both were ineffective as Randolph was tested only once by the latter
when he tipped over a volley late on, Carroll emerged with a gleeful smile
and to a rapturous applause on 87 minutes, and he came through the remaining
moments unscathed having not played since February 11.
West Ham: Randolph (7), Tomkins (7), Reid (7), Ogbonna (6), Cresswell (7),
Noble (8), Kouyate (7), Moses (8), Payet (8), Lanzini 6, Sakho 7
Subs used: Jenkinson (7), Carroll (6)
Newcastle: Krul (6), Janmaat (7), Mbemba (6), Coloccini (6), Haidara (6),
Colback (7), Anita 6), Sissoko (6), Wijnaldum (6), Thauvin (5), Cisse (5)
Subs used: Aarons (5), De Jong (6), Perez (5)
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West Ham 2-0 Newcastle: Dimitri Payet at the double as Hammers claim
comfortable win
0 COMMENTS 22:05, 14 SEPTEMBER 2015
BY MIKE WALTERS
The French midfielder scored both goals as the Hammers secured a first home
win, leaving the insipid Magpies winless from their opening five games
The Mirror
Poor old Steve McClaren went from the wally with a brolly to the tuft who
got stuffed in an East End nightmare. As McClaren's pilgrims from Geordie
shore came horribly unstuck in the land of pearly kings, Newcastle joined
neighbours Sunderland in the Premier League dungeon. It's early days, but
already the table looks like a hotbed of English football faces a long
winter as the sickbed of the beautiful game. Screwed by stagnant traffic
before kick-off, forcing them to complete the last mile of their journey to
Upton Park on foot, Newcastle were led a merry dance by two-goal Hammers
hero Dimitri Payet. McClaren is not responsible for most of a miserable 2015
which has yielded the Toon only three league wins in the calendar year. But
so far he has little to show for his £42million trolley dash in the summer
and Newcastle are the lowest scorers in the division. Apart from Daryl
Janmaat's 20th-minute effort and substitute Siem de Jong's deflected shot 10
minutes from time, both saved by Darren Randolph, they looked incapable of
hitting a barn door with a muckspreader. Suddenly, Saturday's home game with
promoted Watford marks the frontier between teething troubles and a
fledgling crisis.
West Ham - quicker, sharper, more inventive and more clinical - we can deal
with in short measure. Claret and blue, pie and mash or Jekyll and Hyde,
they are probably the only team in the division who can win at Arsenal and
Liverpool but lose at home to Bournemouth and Leicester. But for all their
glorious unpredictability, the Hammers are now fifth - and the ugly
pragmatism of Sam Allardyce's anti-football has given way to flair, with
£10.5million snip Payet at the heartbeat of a pleasing transformation.
McClaren's first meeting with Slaven Bilic since he unwisely took refuge
under an umbrella at Wembley eight years ago, and England veered off the
road to Euro 2008, could not have begun more ominously. With traffic in the
East end gridlocked, and major disruptions on the District Line, Newcastle's
coach was stuck in the urban thrombosis and McClaren's players were forced
to walk the last mile to Upton Park.
Needless to say, the game kicked off promptly with yawning gaps in the
stands. Mustn't keep Premier League baron Richard Scudamore's precious TV
clients in the Pacific or Outer Mongolia waiting, must we? But as usual, the
fans - especially long-haul pilgrims from Tyneside battling through stagnant
traffic - were the last to be considered.
After his enforced sunset stroll along Green Street, McClaren was relieved
to find no brollies were necessary - but Bilic was quick to remind the
former England manager of his darkest hour in the matchday programme. "I had
sympathy for Steve, like I have sympathy now for the Croatia coach who was
sacked this week because we lost in Norway," said Bilic in the manager's
notes. "I have sympathy for every coach who loses his job, but Steve
recovered really well to go to Holland and win the title with Twente."
McClaren, of course, famously cultivated a hybrid Dutch accent when he
rebooted his career among the dykes and tulips. Half a dozen games into his
reign on Tyneside, he has yet to acquire the full why-aye - but there was a
familiar Geordie warhead to remind him of home comforts. Andy Carroll, a
£35million refugee from the north-east in 2011, returned from a seven-month
lay-off like a nuclear deterrent on the bench - but West Ham needed only
nine minutes to demonstrate their firepower. Diafra Sakho's deft back-heel
and Mark Noble, officially installed as captain after Kevin Nolan's release,
set up Dimitri Payet to pick his spot in the top corner from 18 yards. Payet
was miffed to be left out of the last France squad but that exquisite
finish, his second goal for the Hammers, was the perfect response. Daryl
Janmaat was denied an equaliser when Darren Randolph saved with his legs,
but Newcastle struggled to contain Payet's tricks and Hammers debutant
Victor Moses, whose thrusts down the left flank were a constant threat.
Moses, at full tilt and under pressure from Massadio Haidara, shovelled a
decent chance wide two minutes before the break after Payet led a rapid
counter-attack. And although Newcastle's approach was enterprising enough,
they never looked secure when ringmaster Payet was orchestrating all the fun
of the flair. At the interval, West Ham paraded members of their 1986 side
who finished third the League - and any hope Newcastle had of spoiling the
party evaporated within three minutes of the restart. Moses ran half the
length of the pitch only to scoop his shot against the bar - but the rebound
fell kindly for Payet, who buried it with panache.
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Payet hits heights…bring on Man City!
Posted by Hugh5outhon1895 on September 14, 2015 in News, Whispers
C AND H
Irons 2 Newcastle 0
Dimitri Payet's double strike sent the Irons soaring up the league to fifth
place as they scored their first home win of the season over Newcastle
United. But if Payet was man of the match, then new boy Victor Moses wasn't
far behind showing the kind of trickery that is going to make him a massive
favourite. Indeed it was his run from well inside his own half and rocket
shot against the underside of the Newcastle bar which allowed Payet to slide
home his second after smashing home a beautifully placed first from just
outside the box early in the first half. The visitors had their share of
possession and although they were never outplayed we always had control
after finding the net. However, the Hammers remain very much a counter
attacking side and may need to change that at the Boleyn if they aren't
going to be found out by better teams than Steve McClaren's outfit. We lost
Angelo Ogbonna to what looks like a hamstring but James Tomkins switched
back to central defence and looked incredibly composed as Carl Jenkinson
came off the bench to slot in at right back. Payet though was named man of
the match and stood alongside Mark Noble at the end to declare himself very
happy with the three points.
One unsung hero was again Darren Randolph in the Irons goal making a couple
of great saves from close range to show himself a far, far better goalkeeper
than his Europa League form might have suggested. So with the home win
monkey off his back and their best start to a season in many years behind
them, we can look forward with great confidence. So we head for Manchester
Ciy just wondering whether they can become the third leg of an amazing
winning treble after Arsenal and Liverpool. I for one won't be writing that
game off just yet because that counter attacking game might – jut might –
see the impossible dream become a reality.
COYI
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Victor Moses desperate to make a big impression after deadline day switch to
West Ham
Victor Moses made his West Ham debut after Newcastle on Monday night
The forward, on loan from Chelsea, set up the second goal for Dimitri Payet
The Hammers moved up to fifth in Premier League after 2-0 victory
By ADAM SHERGOLD
PUBLISHED: 22:39, 14 September 2015 | UPDATED: 22:50, 14 September 2015
Victor Moses was caught in the middle of two different emotions. He didn't
know whether to extend his arms to the skies in celebration or put them on
his head in exasperation. In the end, he just did both. For it was his
bustling run that had led to West Ham's second goal, his power and
persistence that scythed open the Newcastle defence. But it wouldn't be his
name on his scoresheet. Having done all the hard work, Moses had been denied
a debut goal by the woodwork, lifting his shot just that little fraction too
high. Dimitri Payet though had been alert and slammed home the rebound,
effectively settling the contest. It was obvious that Moses so desperately
wanted a goal on his Hammers debut, to crown a very encouraging start in
claret and blue. But it wasn't to be. As Moses stood with hands on head,
several of his team-mates ran up to console him. You can't finish everything
you start, after all.
In truth, Moses deserved that goal and, on this evidence, it won't be long
before he feels the satisfaction of scoring for the club he joined on loan
in the eleventh hour of the summer transfer window. West Ham's deadline day
business had been as brisk as an East End fruit 'n' veg stall, with deals
for Moses, Michael Antonio and Nikica Jelavic wrapped up before lunchtime in
addition to the return of powerhouse Alex Song the day before. So after the
tedium of the international fortnight, it was with a renewed sense of
anticipation that the Boleyn faithful battled their way through apocalyptic
traffic and District Line delays to see the newcomers. Slaven Bilic only
partially obliged, naming loanee Moses, who moved only after signing a new
four-year deal at Chelsea, in his starting line-up and leaving Jelavic, £2m
from Hull City, and Antonio, £7m from Nottingham Forest, on the bench. Song
is sidelined until late October with an ankle injury, pledging in an
interview ahead of the game that he would work doubly hard to repay Bilic's
faith when he returned.
Newcastle's team coach had fallen victim to the bottlenecks on the Barking
Road, arriving later than scheduled, and, nine minutes in, they may have
wondered why they bothered at all as Payet found the top corner with a
classy flourish. Moses was stationed wide on the left and after a low key
opening began to charge around and get himself involved. Luminous lime green
boots seemed to be in vogue at Upton Park and Moses was a slave to fashion.
Finally, 18 minutes in, there were sparks coming from his heels as a silky
touch did for Daryl Janmaat and set him clear. His low cross came to Payet
via Diafra Sakho but the shot was off target. One notable feature of Moses's
performance was his industry, tracking back to cover when needed in the
offensive formation Bilic had set out and more often than not bringing the
ball out again. There had been plenty of head-down charges but no sniff of
goal came until two minutes before the break. It began with Moses in his
fetcher and carrier role, flicking the ball off to Manuel Lanzini before
setting off on an 80-yard burst. Payet waited for Moses, very much in the
fast lane, to get past him before playing him in. But the final product was
poor, flashing wide of Tim Krul's goal. After West Ham's second, Moses
gamely battled on in pursuit of that debut goal. A furious shot from the
edge of the area was charged down, an attempted cross-field pass to Payet
blocked. The standing ovation and applause from Bilic when Moses was taken
off for Andy Carroll with three minutes remaining spoke of an all-round
satisfaction. And not least from his parent club Chelsea. West Ham's victory
had spared them the indignity of dropping into the relegation zone as well.
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Chelsea's loss is West Ham's gain as Victor Moses shows Blues what they're
missing
SIMON JOHNSON Monday 14 September 2015 22:22 BST0 comments
Evening Standard
It is very rare for one London club to do another a favour at their own
expense. West Ham certainly look like benefitting from Chelsea's bizarre
decision to give them Victor Moses on loan. Moses made his first start for
coach Slaven Bilic against Newcastle tonight since completing a season-long
deal a fortnight ago. There were a number of players in claret and blue that
impressed as West Ham secured their first home win of the campaign, yet
Moses' display stood out in a different way. The Nigeria international was
one of Chelsea's best performers in pre-season and looked one of the fittest
and sharpest players in the squad. He continued in similar vein at Upton
Park, running at Newcastle defenders with menace, skill and speed. It was
the kind of performance that has been noticeably lacking from the bigger
names plying their trade down the other end of the District Line. Whereas
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has yet to start Moses in a competitive game
since returning to manage the club in 2013 - indeed he has been loaned out
the previous two campaigns to Liverpool and Stoke respectively - Bilic
clearly has no doubt in the winger's abilities.
Moses didn't need much convincing to leave Stamford Bridge either, given
that at 24, he wants to be playing rather than warming the bench.
Chelsea's loss is certainly West Ham's gain as it means Bilic now has an
in-form winger to combine with the skilful Dimitri Payet and dangerous
Manuel Lanzini. Indeed Moses played a major part in the second goal, which
secured West Ham the three points. A thrilling run onto a long ball ended
with him cutting inside Massadio Haidara and unleashing a fierce shot on to
the bar. In truth he should have found the net, but Payet, who had already
finished one move sublimely in the first half, scored himself. His new
team-mates clearly appreciated the effort though, running to congratulate
Moses rather than Payet. Normally Chelsea players aren't given a warm
welcome in these parts, but Moses was given a standing ovation from the
stands as he was subbed late on for his role in Newcastle's demise. The one
consolation for any Chelsea supporters tuning in was that by helping to beat
Newcastle, Moses had made sure his parent club avoided the humiliation of
dropping into the bottom three. Not that their West Ham counterparts will
care as they move to fifth place in the League, with more than Moses giving
them cause for optimism.
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West Ham 2 Newcastle 0 player ratings: Dimitri Payet stars with two goals,
but who else impressed?
The Independent
VAISHALI BHARDWAJ Monday 14 September 2015
Slaven Bilic gave Steve McClaren another miserable evening as West Ham
finally got their home campaign up and running with a 2-0 win over
Newcastle. Goals in each half from Dimitri Payet proved enough to fire the
Hammers up to fifth in the Premier League, and leave McClaren's Newcastle
stuck in the bottom three. Bilic famously masterminded McClaren's darkest
hour in management eight years ago when his Croatia side beat England 3-2 at
Wembley. That defeat prevented the Three Lions qualifying for Euro 2008 and
cost McClaren his job as England boss, as well as a large chunk of his
credibility. And in their first competitive meeting since that rain-soaked
night, Bilic once again came out on top while McClaren's Toon side are still
winless, having not scored in the league since the opening day of the
season.
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