Wednesday, March 5

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - II 5th March 2008

Liverpool match preview - WHUFC
All the team news and background for Wednesday night's league trip away to
Liverpool
04.03.2008

Barclays Premier League
Anfield
Wednesday 5 March
8pm
Referee: Steve Bennett (Kent)

WHUTV - Pre-match press conference, plus live commentary to come
WESTHAM.WAP.COM - All the news, on the move

Introduction

* West Ham United travel to Liverpool looking to complete what would be a
famous double, having beaten the Reds with a 1-0 home win on 30 January.
That success was secured by a last-gasp Mark Noble penalty but Anfield has
not been a happy hunting ground for the Hammers. The last time West Ham
United took all three points was back on 14 September 1963 - incidentally
that season the club did the double with a 1-0 win at the Boleyn Ground as
well.

* West Ham United are tenth and will remain in that position, regardless of
what happens although a victory would move them to within seven points of
fifth-placed Liverpool. The Reds can go fourth with a win, as they have a
superior goal difference to Everton who currently occupy the last of the
Champions League qualifying spots.

* Liverpool have won the last six meetings between the clubs at Anfield.
This match was originally scheduled to be played in the first midweek
fixtures of the season, week commencing Monday 13 August, but was postponed
because of Liverpool's Champions League commitments. This fixture date
became possible when the Reds' second-leg match of their last-16 tie away to
Inter Milan was pushed back to 11 March as AC Milan are at home on
Wednesday.

* Alan Curbishley has won at Anfield, guiding Charlton Athletic to a 1-0
victory there on 12 April 2004, while his last trip came with Charlton on 4
March 2006 when he picked up a goalless draw. Liverpool have only lost once
at home this season, to the champions Manchester United on 16 December.

* Since the Manchester United home win on 29 December, West Ham United are
on a run, in all competitions, of win, loss draw, win loss, draw, win, loss,
draw, win and loss - with that sequence alone pointing to a draw on
Wednesday night. Liverpool after defeating Middlesbrough (3-2) and Bolton
Wanderers (3-1) can make it a third straight league win.

* Speaking to whufc.com, West Ham United midfielder Mark Noble said: "We
have got to stick together now and get our heads up for Wednesday. We have
just got to go there and do everything we can to put this behind us and get
a result. If we can do that we will go into the Tottenham game [on Sunday]
confident and then push on to the end of the season."

* Steven Gerrard knows Liverpool have to battle hard to secure a Champions
League spot this season. "We're confident that if we play to our
capabilities between now and the end of the season we'll take that fourth
spot," he told Liverpool's official website. "Confidence is high at the
moment but if we don't now go and beat West Ham, the Bolton result becomes
irrelevant."

* The clubs contested the 2006 FA Cup final at the Millennium Stadium in
Cardiff when the sides drew 3-3 before a 3-1 win on penalties.

Last match

West Ham United 0-4 Chelsea (1 March): Green, Neill, Ferdinand, Upson,
McCartney, Faubert (Solano 66), Mullins, Noble, Ljungberg, Boa Morte (Ashton
46), Cole (Zamora 65).
Subs not used: Wright, Spector
Goals: Lampard 17, J Cole 20, Ballack 22, A Cole 64

Bolton Wanderers v Liverpool (1 March): Reina, Carragher, Hyypia, Skrtel,
Aurelio, Gerrard, Alonso, Mascherano, Babel, Kuyt (Arbeloa 86), Torres
(Riise 77).
Subs not used: Martin, Benayoun, Crouch.
Goals: Jaaskelainen 12 og, Babel 60, Aurelio 75.

Team news

* In addition to the matchday 16 that faced Fulham, Alan Curbishley has John
Pantsil and Kyel Reid in contention for selection, along with some in-form
youngsters from the reserves - namely Jack Collison and Freddie Sears who
will both travel. The 18-year-old homegrown Hammers fan Sears scored his
25th goal in 24 matches at U18 and reserve-team level at the weekend while
reserve-team captain Collison, 19, is a Welsh Under-21 midfielder.

* Fit-again after a long-term knee injury that has kept him out since 28
August, Bobby Zamora got the last 25 minutes against Chelsea. He had
previously played in three official reserve-team matches, scoring three
goals.

* Julien Faubert has now made two consecutive starts but been replaced with
just over an hour played in each of them. He picked up a knock on Saturday
and is doubtful for Wednesday night. Meanwhile, his replacement Nolberto
Solano is challenging hard for a return to the first eleven. Dean Ashton got
45 minutes off the bench against Chelsea and is also bidding for a starting
berth. Jonathan Spector is also hoping to be involved in the matchday 16
again.

* Lee Bowyer and Matthew Etherington (both groin) are still out and have not
travelled.

* Scott Parker has been back in training for two weeks, after his recovery
from a knee injury unrelated to the condition he had previously in the
season. He is not expected to be back in time for the Tottenham fixture on
Sunday. Kieron Dyer also continues to make progress from his double
leg-break. James Collins (cruciate knee ligaments) and Calum Davenport
(neck) will not return this season.

* Craig Bellamy has had an abdominal strengthening operation and has been
ruled out until April at the earliest. Danny Gabbidon (groin) is also some
way off a first-team return as is Nigel Quashie (foot).

* As with Chelsea at the weekend, Liverpool are at near full-strength with
defenders Daniel Agger and Martin Skrtel and midfielders Xabi Alonso and
Harry Kewell all in contention after injury. Only Andriy Voronin is
definitely out with his long-term knee problem. Agger has not played since a
metatarsal injury suffered back in September.

Background

* After 27 games last season, West Ham United had half the points (20) they
have achieved from the same number of matches this campaign (40).

* Prior to the Chelsea defeat, the club had been unbeaten in the last six
matches at the Boleyn Ground.

* Alan Curbishley's side are in good overall league form, with eight wins
and six draws from the last 19 fixtures.

* Victory could take the tenth-placed Hammers up to striking distance of
seventh place. Tottenham Hotspur, in eleventh, are eight points behind West
Ham United with the two teams to meet at White Hart Lane this Sunday.

* West Ham United and Liverpool last met on 30 January 2007 when Mark
Noble's penalty deep into added time, after Jamie Carragher fouled Freddie
Ljungberg, was all the separated the sides in a 1-0 home victory at the
Boleyn Ground.

The lineups were:

West Ham United: Green, Neill, Ferdinand, Upson, McCartney, Bowyer (Ashton
58), Mullins, Noble, Ljungberg, Boa Morte (Etherington 59), Cole (Spector
81)
Subs not used: Wright, Solano

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

* Last season's meeting at Anfield came just three games into the campaign
with Zamora's 12th-minute goal being cancelled out by Agger (42) and Peter
Crouch (45). Craig Bellamy played the whole game for Liverpool while Yossi
Benayoun figured for West Ham United.

* The Hammers have still not lost in all 14 league games this season when
they have taken the lead.

* Like Manchester United, West Ham United have conceded only ten goals away
from home in the league this season, a mark bettered only by Liverpool and
Chelsea (both nine).

* Robert Green has kept eight clean sheets in 26 league games.

* Jon Spector turned 22 with the visit of Chelsea. Mark Noble made his 50th
appearance for West Ham United in the same game.

* George McCartney is bidding to make his 34th appearance this season in all
competitions. He has not missed a match since the 4-3 home defeat by
Tottenham Hotspur on 4 March 2007 - 42 games ago.

* McCartney is the only West Ham United player who has featured in every
league and cup game to date, starting in each one.

* In terms of the Premier League, only Green and Matthew Upson have played
every minute of the 27 matches.

* West Ham United have not received a caution in four out of the last five
league matches, while Bowyer's red card against Birmingham City on 9
February was rescinded on appeal.

* McCartney, Lucas Neill, Mark Noble and Luis Boa Morte are all no longer on
the threat of a one-match ban after four cautions each this season. The
'one-match ban for five cautions' rule was for all yellow cards up to the
end of February. However, a player receiving ten cautions before the end of
the second Sunday in April will be suspended for two matches, starting seven
days after the tenth offence.

* No other top-flight club still has two league ever-presents while Upson,
along with Stephen Kelly of Birmingham, is one of only two outfield players
in the whole division to have achieved that feat.

* Only Pepe Reina has played every minute of the top-flight campaign so far
for Liverpool and no other player has featured in each one of their games.

* Ashton, with six goals, five in the league, is the club's leading scorer.
Fernando Torres is the first Liverpool striker for five seasons to break the
20-goal barrier and now has 21, with 15 of those coming in the top flight.

* Javier Mascherano, who was suspended for the 30 January meeting, and Yossi
Benayoun could potentially be facing their former club. Mascherano made five
league and cup starts, and two substitute appearances between August 2006
and January 2007 at the Boleyn Ground. Benayoun was in east London for two
years until last summer. He played 72 times in all competitions and found
the net on eight occasions.

* The injured Bellamy spent the 2006/07 campaign at Anfield, making 42
league and cup appearances, scoring nine times.

* West Ham United will next be in action on Sunday when they go to
Tottenham, the day after Liverpool welcome Newcastle United to Anfield.

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

30 January 2008 - West Ham United 1-0 Livepool
30 January 2007 - West Ham United 1-2 Liverpool
26 August 2006 - Liverpool 2-1 West Ham United
13 May 2005 - Liverpool 3-3 West Ham United, 3-1 on pens (FA Cup final)
26 April 2006 - West Ham United 1-2 Liverpool
29 October 2005 - Liverpool 2-0 West Ham United

Overall record v Liverpool (all competitions): W 23, D 33, L 59

General information

Tickets: Please note this match is SOLD OUT. For ticket information, click
here. For details of getting to the Anfield, click here

Weather: The forecast is for an overcast evening with the temperature is set
to peak at around 8C.

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Boa ready to battle on - WHUFC
Luis Boa Morte is banking on West Ham United getting back on track with a
positive display at Liverpool
05.03.2008

Luis Boa Morte wants to get back in action as quickly as possible and help
West Ham United to a positive result away at Liverpool on Wednesday.

While the Hammers have lost on each of their last six trips to Anfield and
have not even gained an away point since 20 February 1999, Boa Morte has
experience of coming back from the famous old stadium with positive results.
On both 12 December 2001 and 17 April 2004, he played his part as his former
club Fulham earned away draws. The 30-year-old is well aware though that it
will be a tough ask on Wednesday night, but stressed the team were
determined to make amends for the 4-0 defeat by Chelsea.

"We must regroup in the best way and the best manner and that's what we'll
do because we have an important game on Wednesday," he said. "We must go
there and fight for our pride and for ourselves to get a result up there."
Boa Morte would be the first to admit he has not enjoyed the best of luck in
front of goal of late but there is no faulting his effort - as shown in the
previous week's 1-0 win at Fulham where he led the individual player
statistics in terms of covering 1.7km at high intensity and making 67
sprints.

"Of course we're disappointed [about the Chelsea result] because we conceded
three early goals and that killed the game. It was difficult to turn things
round. We tried but it was really hard and difficult. The problem shouldn't
have been the [Frank Lampard] penalty because we should have been able to
fight back and pull one back to get level again but we conceded two quick
goals again. It was hard.

"We knew what to expect and we didn't match them the way we should and
that's why the game ended up like that," he added. Boa Morte made way at
half-time on Saturday for Dean Ashton and with Bobby Zamora also fit again,
the versatile forward may find himself competing again for his more familiar
left-sided berth. Wherever he figures, Boa Morte will give his all to please
the travelling support. "When we play away we have lots of supporters coming
along in very good numbers," he added. "That is something we enjoy. We are
looking forward."

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Liverpool v West Ham - BBC

Anfield
Wednesday, 5 March
Kick-off: 2000 GMT
Coverage on the BBC Sport website and BBC Radio Five Live

Liverpool boss Rafa Benitez could shuffle his pack for the visit of West
Ham, but defender Steve Finnan will miss out with a groin problem. Alvaro
Arbeloa may play in place of Martin Skrtel, but Peter Crouch and Yossi
Benayoun are eyeing starts.

West Ham could be without midfielder Julien Faubert for Wednesday's match
against Liverpool. Faubert took a knock in a challenge with Claude Makelele
during the Hammers' 4-0 home defeat by Chelsea.

Liverpool (from): Reina, Arbeloa, Carragher, Hyypia, Aurelio, Riise,
Benayoun, Gerrard, Mascherano, Alonso, Babel, Kuyt, Torres, Crouch, Skrtel,
Lucas, Martin.

West Ham (from): Green, Wright, Pantsil, Neill, Spector, Upson, Ferdinand,
McCartney, Faubert, Ljungberg, Noble, Mullins, Solano, Boa Morte, Cole,
Ashton, Camara, Sears.


BIG-MATCH FACTS
Liverpool search for the three points from their game in hand to replace
Merseyside rivals Everton in the top four of the Premier League.

West Ham look to bounce back from their heaviest defeat of the season - the
0-4 home loss to Chelsea on Saturday. They will remain motionless in 10th
spot, whatever the result.

The Reds have not lost a league game, since their 1-0 reverse to West Ham at
Upton Park on 30 January. They have also lost only one home league game in a
calendar year.

Liverpool are defending an unbeaten home record against West Ham in the
Premier League, and are vying for a seventh successive victory over the
Hammers at Anfield.


CLUB FORM
LIVERPOOL


Club stats
Fixtures
Highest achievable: 4th
Lowest could fall: 5th

All statistics and sequences refer to the Premier League only, unless
otherwise stated.

1. Won the last three in all competitions.

2. Unbeaten in four; won three and drew one since the defeat at West Ham -
their only loss in 11.

3. Lost three times; only Arsenal have been beaten less frequently (just
once).

4. Drawn 11 - more than any other club.

5. Conceded 20 goals; only Manchester United (15) and Chelsea (17) have
shipped fewer. Also, allowed the opposition to score first in six games;
only Manchester United can better that (five times).

6. Shown 36 cards (all yellow); only Everton have a better disciplinary
record with 32 cards (29 yellow, three red).

7. Registered five goalless draws. Only Portsmouth have also been involved
in as many as that.

8. One goal short of conceding 600 all-time in this league.

9. Not lost in five home games. Manchester United is the only club to have
left Anfield with three points this season. Indeed, the 0-1 defeat to the
Red Devils on 16 December is their only reverse in 18 home matches over a
year.

10. Home again on Saturday, to Newcastle, before the Champions League return
against Inter Milan in Italy (Liverpool lead 2-0). Then it's home to
Reading, away to Manchester United, home to Everton in the Merseyside derby
and away to Arsenal at the beginning of April.

WEST HAM UNITED


Club stats
Fixtures
Highest achievable: 10th
Lowest could fall: 10th

All statistics and sequences refer to the Premier League only, unless
otherwise stated.

1. Won one of four.

2. The current tally of 40 points is twice as many as were accumulated after
27 games last season.

3. Not suffered back-to-back defeats in 19 since losing to Arsenal (h) and
Aston Villa (a) on 29 September and 6 October respectively.

4. Their 27 games have produced fewer goals than any other club; 58 (31 for,
27 against) at 2.15 per game.

5. Not lost any matches in which they took the lead, but drawn five.

6. The 0-1 victory at Fulham in their last game on the road was their first
away victory since Christmas.

7. Chasing a seventh away maximum of the campaign.

8. The third strongest away defence with 10 goals conceded; only Liverpool
and Chelsea have leaked fewer on their travels (nine each).

9. Away to Tottenham after this, then home to Blackburn, before a visit to
Everton and a long trip to Sunderland at the end of March.


KEY PLAYER NOTES
LIVERPOOL


Fernando TORRES is Liverpool's top scorer with 21 goals, and their leading
marksman in the Premier League with 15. Only Cristiano RONALDO (Manchester
United) and Emmanuel ADEBAYOR (Arsenal) have scored more in the highest
league; 21 and 19 respectively.

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

REINA is one of four jointly leading the race for the Barclays Golden Glove.
Tim HOWARD (Everton), David JAMES (Portsmouth), Petr CECH (Chelsea) and
REINA have all kept 12 clean sheets.

WEST HAM UNITED


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

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

The club's Premier League goalscorers list is predominately comprised of
English players (eight of 12).

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

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

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

Fredrik LJUNGBERG is three shy of 50 Premier League goals (Arsenal and West
Ham).

If selected:-

UPSON will be making his 200th career league appearance (Luton, Arsenal,
Nottingham Forest, Crystal Palace, Reading, Birmingham and West Ham).

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

George McCARTNEY will be making his 50th league appearance in a West Ham
shirt.

Carlton COLE and Jonathan SPECTOR will be making their 50th appearances in
West Ham colours.


HEAD TO HEAD
A last-gasp penalty by Mark Noble sealed victory for West Ham in the reverse
fixture in January. Now they're looking to do the double over Liverpool for
the first time since their last league victory at Anfield in 1963-64.

Home and away
League (inc PL): Liverpool 52 wins, West Ham 21, Draws 28
Prem: Liverpool 14 wins, West Ham 5, Draws 6

at Liverpool only
League (inc PL): Liverpool 34 wins, West Ham 3, Draws 13
Prem: Liverpool 9 wins, West Ham 0, Draws 3


LAST SEASON'S CORRESPONDING GAME
Liverpool 2-1 West Ham United
26 August 2006 - Ref: Alan Wiley
Liverpool scorers: Agger 42, Crouch 45
West Ham scorer: Zamora 12


THIS SEASON'S REVERSE FIXTURE
West Ham United 1-0 Liverpool
30 January 2008 - Ref: Alan Wiley
West Ham scorer: Noble 90 pen


REFEREE
Steve Bennett (Orpington, Kent)

Premier League referees' table
Steve Bennett's 2007-08 Premier League card count

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Liverpool v West Ham Utd -0 KUMB
Filed: Tuesday, 4th March 2008
By: Matthew Coker

We, at last, make our way to Anfield after the game in hand that was
originally scheduled to take place back in August, finally kicks off on
Wednesday night at 8pm.

We all immensely enjoyed our turn at hosting them a few weeks back, a 1-0
West Ham victory courtesy of a Mark Noble penalty was widely celebrated and
overall, in my opinion, deserved. From the red point of view, it was another
disaster in a disappointing season that, at this point in time has them only
in line for one trophy, the Champions League, though given their general
level of performance this season, they are far from favourites to capture
that piece of silverware.

As far as the league is going, their ambitions are not able to run beyond
finishing in the top four, the gap between them and top side, Arsenal is
insurmountable at this stage. They currently sit in fifth place, three
points behind Everton, though the Reds have a superior goal difference and
this, their extra game to play.

The whole season has been set against a backdrop of boardroom unrest. There
have been acres of column inches devoted to what exactly the American
owners, George Gillett and Tom Hicks want to do with the club. The initial
excitement amongst fans that they had attracted the services of men with
sufficient financial clout to enable Liverpool to catch up with their title
rivals has been evaporated and the most likely scenario seems to be that at
least one of the Yanks is ready to sell his share in the club to Dubai
International Capital, most likely at a tidy profit.

This uncertainty at the top has been blamed by fans, managers and players
for upsetting the club but in reality, the biggest problem has been there is
a gap between the top three sides and Liverpool and that they need a
financial fairy godmother to bridge that gulf. There was initially a belief
that the Americans would be able to do this, but that hope has faded and
numerous questions of the Yanks intentions are being asked.

The next problem that it is widely believed has cost Liverpool is Rafa
Benitez's rotation policy. This is not as simple as him playing the role of
tinkerman, but more his recognition that he does not have anywhere near the
strength in depth (or even in the first eleven) to complete with the other
top sides.

He therefore goes for a policy of resting players to ensure that as the team
go into the last few months of the season, they are in as good a condition
as possible. This leads to success in the cup competitions (FA and
Champion's League) as their peak is at the business end of the season, when
they go into the most difficult games at the latter stages of the
competition. However, such a policy is not sustainable in a league
competition, particularly as he often seems to underestimate the weakest
team that he can put out and still obtain a result.

This poor league performance is further compounded by Liverpool's lack of
success over the other top sides. They have got winning cup games against
their rivals down to a fine art, particularly over Chelsea, whom they have
enjoyed success in both domestic and European cup semi finals. However, the
tactics such as away goals and playing for the draw at home and their
excellence in penalty shoot outs, not least from Pepe Reina, don't work in
the league, hence the lack of title charge.

This season has been particularly hard as several teams have used a
combination of a new manager and a glut of Sky or internal investment to
improve their league status and Liverpool are currently up against city
rivals Everton as well as Manchester City, Aston Villa and Blackburn for
that crucial Champions League spot. Their season has been made harder by
their ongoing run in this seasons Champions League competition, only Everton
from the other sides have had any sort of cup run to manage throughout the
season, being able instead to follow the faithful old, strategy of
concentrating on the league.

Nevertheless, Liverpool go into this game aiming to re-capture fourth spot
and will be looking to get the three points from this game, that will put
them back in the top four.

Liverpool Line Up

Defensively, there are a few vulnerabilities, not least if they are unable
to muster any fit right backs and be forced to repeat playing Jamie
Carragher wide right. Not only does Carragher lack the pace and distribution
to play as a wide defender, his absence from the centre leaves the pairing
of Sami Hyppia and Martin Skrtel, who both look fine alongside Carragher,
but as a duo appear a bit suspect, especially at set pieces.

The game at the Boleyn proved that this defence can be undone by pace, the
combination break by Ljungberg and Etherington was enough to panic Carragher
into giving away the penalty and there is no doubt that they have missed
Daniel Agger this season (who is close to a first team return but not for
this game having been included in a reserve team side for Tuesday night).

If Rafa fulfils his recent promise to stick with a tried and tested line up,
they will be featuring a 4-1-4-1 formation with former Hammer, Javier
Mascherano in the holding role, Steven Gerrard and Xavi Alonso in the middle
and two strikers in Dirk Kuyt and Ryan Babel playing wide, the latter on the
left. The significant investment in Babel will clearly reap most of the
rewards in the long term future, but there were definite signs at the
weekend that his confidence is well up and I think that Lucas Neill will
need to have a much better game than he did against Chelsea to contain that
particular threat.

If Rafa decides to have a little play around, then it could be Lucas taking
one of the central roles (probably at the expense of Alonso) or perhaps the
introduction of the rat faced, pre pubescent looking Israeli, Yossi Benayoun
on the right, one of the players who has suffered the most with Rafa's
settled team selection in the last couple of weeks.

Liverpool have featured the strategy of playing with just Fernando Torres
upfront, the Spanish international being of sufficient quality to put away
fifteen league strikes this season, including a hat trick against
Middlesbrough a couple of weeks back. He has a little bit of everything in
his game, not least pace and there has not been as much evidence of his
supposed weakness in one-on-ones as was widely anticipated. There is, of
course, the option of pairing him with Peter Crouch, who has retained his
status of Rafa's forgotten man in recent weeks.

Anfield Assumption

Anfield has given us more stories of painful trips in the last forty years
than they have heard in the Borough Council's raised pavement claims line
and it will take something special for us to finally take three points home.
Liverpool are into a better run of form than when we last met, since coming
to East London, they have drawn with Chelsea in a game that they were
unlucky not to win (had Torres been available instead of Crouch, the outcome
may have been different) and beaten Sunderland and Middlesbrough, scoring
three in both games.

They did have the embarrassment of the cup exit to Barnsley, though the line
up was very much of the second eleven and even then, Liverpool were the
better side but could not take their chances. They also had the small matter
of the victory over officially, at the time, the most in form team in
Europe, Inter Milan in the Champions League.

You compare that to how we have performed since beating them, only one
victory over a woeful Fulham side with a very fortuitous goal as well as the
poor showings against Wigan and Birmingham and humiliation against Chelsea,
I'm not exactly smelling victory at this stage.

I can only see this going one way, due to the current form of the two sides
as well as Liverpool looking at the league table and this being the game
that will re-instate them to the top four. I'll therefore have us down for a
2-0 defeat, with Yossi probably scoring one of them to continue the
weekend's theme of former Irons putting the boot in.

Enjoy the game.

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Curbishley seeks redemption - SSN
Hammers hoping to bounce back at Anfield
By Chris Burton Last updated: 5th March 2008

Alan Curbishley hopes that West Ham can recover from their disappointing
defeat against Chelsea on Saturday. The Hammers were beaten 4-0 by the Blues
at Upton Park and now face a daunting trip to Liverpool on Wednesday.
Curbishley is confident that his side have the ability to bounce back from
the weekend setback, but admits that a vast improvement is required if they
are to avoid another humiliating loss on Merseyside. "We're still a bit
embarrassed and stunned about losing 4-0 at home to Chelsea at the weekend,"
he said. "We've spoken to the players about it, and we'll never forget it.
"If you give quality players time and space on the ball, you will get
punished, but it will make us ready for Liverpool and Sunday's game at
Tottenham.
"We knew we were going into a tough week, but we started off extremely
badly, and we need to improve on Wednesday against a top team."
The Hammers are still just about in the hunt for a European spot for next
season, but Curbishley acknowledges that defeat at Anfield would virtually
extinguish any hopes they have of breaking into those positions. "If
Liverpool won, it might finish us off in terms of breaking into the European
places. We're in no man's land, and we need to change that," he said. "There
are so many permutations, but it looks this season as though finishing
seventh or even sixth might not be good enough to get into the Uefa Cup. "We
are not too far behind Portsmouth, Blackburn and Manchester City, but we
just can't seem to catch them at the moment. "We don't want the season to
peter out. If we lose, we don't seem to go anywhere, and if we win, we don't
seem to go anywhere. The next three or four weeks will decide our fate."
With the season now entering its final throws, Curbishley could see his
squad boosted at a vital time with the return of a number of long-term
absentees.
Scott Parker and Bobby Zamora are both making good progress in their
rehabilitation and could feature at some point in the coming weeks. "We're
hoping that one or two players will come back from injury and give us a bit
of impetus for the run-in," Curbishley said. "Parker has been training this
week, but it is still a little too early for him and we have been holding
him back. "With the injury situation, we have had to take more care with
some than we have with others. "Bobby has been out a long while with his
knee injury, whereas we had to push Julien Faubert into the team early after
he had come back from his Achilles problem. "We have had to be more careful
with Bobby, but he is raring to go now. "We hope that one or two of those
injured players will come back into the reckoning, to give us some fresh
legs and fresh minds."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool v West Ham preview
Reds hoping to climb up to fourth
By Lewis Rutledge Last updated: 5th March 2008

PREDICTIONS:
Skysports.com prediction: Liverpool 2 West Ham 1
SKY BET odds: Liverpool 2/5, Draw 3/1, West Ham 11/2
One to Watch: Fernando Torres

Liverpool will be looking to recapture fourth spot as they entertain a West
Ham side hammered by Chelsea at the weekend. The Reds have had to play
catch-up on Merseyside rivals Everton in recent weeks but now finally have
the chance to make their game in hand count. Victory for Rafa Benitez's side
would bring Liverpool level on points with Everton but ahead on goal
difference in the race for the final UEFA Champions League spot. Liverpool
are on a three-match winning streak in all competitions, having followed up
their Champions League victory over Internazionale with successes against
Middlesbrough and Bolton on the domestic front. Benitez could still decide
to shuffle his pack and may bring in the likes of Peter Crouch and Yossi
Benayoun - unused substitutes at the Reebok Stadium. Steve Finnan remains
sidelined with a groin problem so Alvaro Arbeloa is likely to come in at
full-back, with Jamie Carragher sliding into central defence. Martin Skrtel
and Sami Hyypia would be left to battle it out for the spot alongside
Carragher, although Daniel Agger is close to a return after injury.
Alan Curbishley has called for there to be more goals at West Ham and there
were four in the game against Chelsea at the weekend, but unfortunately for
the Upton Park faithful they were all at the wrong end. The result seriously
dented West Ham's chances of finishing in the top six and they will be
determined to get back on track at Anfield to ensure they are not perhaps
the only side in the Premier League with neither survival or Europe on their
agenda for the last ten games of the season. Curbishley's main injury
concern is Julien Faubert, who took a knock in a challenge with Claude
Makelele and is struggling to recover in time. If the Frenchman does
recover, manager Alan Curbishley is likely to name an unchanged squad. There
could still be changes to the starting XI after such a disappointing
display, with Nolberto Solano, Dean Ashton and Bobby Zamor all pressing for
places. Craig Bellamy, Calum Davenport, Nigel Quashie and Kieron Dyer all
remain long-term injury victims.

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Hammers boss Curbs ready to blood youngsters at Anfield - Daily Mail
Last updated at 12:34pm on 5th March 2008

West Ham manager Alan Curbishley claims he would not be worried about
playing youngsters Freddie Sears and Jack Collison at Liverpool tonight.
Manager Curbishley said: "I have no fears about doing it. They are in the
squad because they deserve to be there." Curbishley faces a huge task of
masterminding the club's first win at Anfield since September 1963 -
particularly on the back of Saturday's humiliating 4-0 loss to Chelsea. He
told the club's official website: "The players are keen to put the Chelsea
defeat behind them. It was unlike us so far this season. It has steeled us
up for what is coming on Wednesday night and on Sunday [against Tottenham].
We knew we were going into a tough week. We have started off really badly
and can we improve on that on Wednesday?"

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sidwell set for summer Chelsea exit - Daily Mail
Last updated at 14:54pm on 5th March 2008

Frustrated Steve Sidwell will seek a move away from Chelsea in the summer.
He has struggled to break through at Stamford Bridge behind Claude Makelele,
John Obi Mikel, Michael Ballack, Michael Essien and Frank Lampard in the
pecking order. West Ham and Newcastle will lead the race to secure his
signature. Meanwhile Blues winger Shaun Wright-Phillips feels he has a lot
more to offer at the Bridge. I think I should finish a lot more chances,"
said the England winger. "I know I have to be at my best here and one slip
can leave me out of the team."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fernando Torres set to miss Liverpool v West Ham with bug -
liverpoolecho.co.uk
Mar 5 2008

FERNANDO TORRES is a major doubt for Liverpool's meeting with West Ham at
Anfield tonight, having picked up a bug. The Reds' top scorer was absent
from training yesterday and unless he makes a dramatic recovery is unlikely
to be involved against the Hammers. If, as expected, Torres is unavailable,
manager Rafa Benitez is likely to offer a first team recall to Peter Crouch,
who has had to settle for a place on the bench in recent weeks. Should
Liverpool win tonight they will go above Everton into fourth place in the
Premier League and Benitez today called on his players to take advantage of
their game in hand on their Merseyside rivals. He said: "We have been
waiting a long time to play this game and now it is here we must take
advantage of it. "We need to take the confidence from Sunday's win against
Bolton into tonight's game. "But we also have to be careful because West Ham
are a good team with good players and we know it will be difficult against
them."
Benitez is still smarting from a 1-0 defeat at the hands of Alan
Curbishley's side just over a month ago. On that occasion, Liverpool lost
despite having dominated long spells of the game when Mark Noble slotted
home an injury time penalty. "I was disappointed that night," admitted the
Reds boss. "We dominated most of the second half and had chances but could
not score. "But that is in the past and tonight we must be positive because
we are playing well and creating chances." Meanwhile, Daniel Agger came
through his second reserve team appearance in less than a week unscathed.
The Danish defender played an hour of last night's 1-0 win over Bolton and
suffered no ill effects. Having stepped up his rehabilitation from a
metatarsal injury, Agger will now be looking to win his place back in the
team.

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 5th March 2008

Curbs confident in squad spirit - WHUFC
West Ham United are bidding to turn the tide of history at Anfield and the
players are up for the challenge
05.03.2008

Alan Curbishley knows his players are eager to put things right and show
some of the defensive resilience that has rightly brought the club plenty of
plaudits this season.

The Hammers have not triumphed at Liverpool since September 1963 but as
shown by January's first home victory against the Reds for nine years -
there is no need to pay too much attention to such statistics. Instead,
closer inspection has been given to the weekend reverse at the hands of
Chelsea, and how senior players like Lucas Neill, Matthew Upson and Freddie
Ljungberg have led the way in picking things up and wanting better next time
out.

"We looked at it with them," he said. "We spoke about it. They can't quite
believe how it went ... the way we have set ourselves out this season gives
us a chance of getting something and - if we get beat, we get beat - but we
didn't give ourselves a chance." Curbishley, who has plenty of striking
options with Carlton Cole, Dean Ashton, Bobby Zamora and Freddie Sears to
choose from, added: "You have got to keep going because at any given stage
the results can turn around."

He continued: "[Chelsea] was unlike us so far this season. It has steeled us
up for what is coming on Wednesday night and on Sunday [against Tottenham
Hotspur]. We knew we were going into a tough week. We have started off
really badly and can we improve on that on Wednesday?" The manager added
that he and the players understood the fan frustration, claiming "we have
got to try and repay all the people that come to watch us and all the ones
that are going up to Anfield".

Mindful that the club is secure in tenth place compared to last season's
relegation battle when the team had half the number of points achieved now
from 27 games, Curbishley added: "The great thing about football is another
game comes along and you can try and compete and win it. When we were having
that terrible time last year, you look forward to the next one when you can
change your fortunes around."

For all the disappointment caused by the weekend result, he knows the club
are only four points off Portsmouth who most neutrals have claimed "have had
a great season". He added: "I should imagine the next three or four games,
or three or four weeks, will decide where we go and we will see what the
results are like ... I did say at the weekend that we do need to pick up the
majority of our games if we are going to challenge these teams above us."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zamora firmly in contention - WHUFC
Bobby Zamora had a taste of the action on Saturday and could get more
playing time at Liverpool
05.03.2008

Bobby Zamora is "raring to go" ahead of West Ham United's trip to Liverpool
on Wednesday while youngsters Jack Collison and Freddie Sears are also in
contention.

The 27-year-old Zamora scored in a 2-1 defeat at Anfield last year and would
relish the chance of being involved. He returned to first-team action on
Saturday with a 25-minute run-out off the bench, having previously had three
reserve-team games after six months out with a knee injury. Alan Curbishley
said: "Bobby is OK. We have been a little bit more careful with Bobby, but
he is in the squad and he is raring to go. I was hoping that one or two of
the fringe players would come back in the run-in just to give us some fresh
legs and fresh minds. He is one of them."

Collison, the 19-year-old reserve-team captain, and 18-year-old striker
Sears have been in tremendous form at reserve-team level, having made the
jump from the Under-18s. Both are also youth internationals with energetic
midfielder Collison having scored twice in three competitive games with
Wales Under-21s and Sears forcing his way into the England Under-19 set-up
with two substitute showings.

"I have got no fears of doing it," Alan Curbishley said when asked if he
would be worried about giving his talented youngsters a run-out. "Freddie
Sears and Jack Collison are in the squad because they deserve to be in it
and not just because of the injuries. [Central defender James] Tomkins has
got a slight groin strain from the last reserve game or he would be in it as
well."

The manager added that the trio had all been regularly involved of late with
the travelling squad as a precursor to getting their chance. Collison has
already made his first-team bow as a first-half replacement for Freddie
Ljungberg at Arsenal on New Year's Day and was also an unused substitute for
the Birmingham City home fixture last month. "I have had them with us so if
they do get their chance it is not too unusual," Curbishley said.

Elsewhere, Scott Parker is continuing to train well after his recovery from
a knee injury but will not return until after the Tottenham Hotspur away
game on Sunday. "We think it is a little bit too early," the manager said.
"We will hold him back for the rest of the week." Julien Faubert, hurt by a
challenge from Claude Makelele in the weekend's 4-0 defeat by Chelsea, is
doubtful. "We have got one or two knocks from Saturday - Faubert being one.
We will see what we have got left. It will be a similar squad [to Chelsea]."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Noble knows what's needed - WHUFC
Mark Noble is well aware that West Ham United have to 'get our heads up' for
the midweek trip to Liverpool
04.03.2008

Mark Noble told WHUTV he expects West Ham United to "stick together" and go
to Liverpool with a positive approach despite the weekend disappointment
against Chelsea.

The 20-year-old midfielder was a tireless performer again on Saturday but,
like his team-mates, found the visitors from west London in imperious mood.
Noble felt the side started brightly but lost any foothold in the game once
Chelsea were awarded a 17th-minute penalty which was converted by Frank
Lampard. Quickfire strikes after that from Joe Cole and Michael Ballack
ended it as a contest before Lampard's dismissal. An Ashley Cole goal in the
second half rounded out a frustrating day.

"We are thoroughly disappointed," Noble said of his 50th first-team
appearance in an interview with the club's online video service. "I felt the
first ten minutes we were in it, we had a couple of half chances." He
explained that the opening goal came about when Chelsea quickly countered a
home attack that was stopped in its tracks by the referee blowing for a
foul. "They went straight down the other end and got a penalty and it was
all downhill from there."

Noble, who played a decisive role with the only goal when West Ham United
last faced Liverpool on 30 January, is more than up for the Anfield trip in
midweek ahead of a trip to Tottenham Hotspur next Sunday. "We have got to
stick together now and get our heads up for Wednesday. We have just got to
go there and do everything we can to put this behind us and get a result. If
we can do that we will go into the Tottenham game confident and then push on
to the end of the season."

The England Under-21 international revealed there was a determination at the
interval on Saturday to do better but agreed it was always an uphill task.
"We knew that. We went in three- nil down at half-time and wanted to come
out and give a good account of ourselves and not make it a drubbing but we
just couldn't get a goal back. All fairness to them, they stuck behind the
ball well with ten men and really made it hard for us."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Bob, Fred and Jack in, says Al - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 5th March 2008
By: Staff Writer

Alan Curbishley says that Bobby Zamora is 'raring to go' - whilst youngsters
Fred Sears and Jack Collison have also been named in the squad to face
Liverpool at Anfield tonight. Zamora made his first appearance for the first
team since last August as a substitute against Chelsea last Saturday and is
pushing for a place in the starting XI. Meanwhile the two youngsters are
once again named in the travelling party - as they have been for the last
few games. "Wwe've got one or two knocks from Saturday - Faubert being one,"
said Curbishley. "We'll see what we've got left but it'll be a similar
squad.
"Julien played at Fulham and again on Saturday and still doesn't look 100
per cent - and got another knock from Saturday. "Bobby [Zamora] is okay;
we've been a lot more careful with him as he's been out a long while but
he's in the squad and is raring to go. "Freddie Sears and Jack Collison are
in the squad again tomorrow because they deserve to be in it - and not just
because of the injuries. James Tomkins has got a slight groin strain fromt
he last reserve game otherwise he'd be in it as well. "Scott Parker's
trained for a week but we think it's a little bit too early, so we'll hold
him back for the rest of the week."
With regard to the two youngsters, Curbishley added that if required he
would have no qualms about giving them a place in the team. "I've got no
hesitation in doing it," he confirmed. "I was talking to one or two of the
players yesterday about the youngsters - when do they get a chance to play?
It's so tough in the Premier League now as every game is so important. "But
we've got a run-in now of eleven games so we'll see. I'd like to think
[they'll play], I've got no fears of doing it as they've been in the squad.
"I've taken them consistently over the last six weeks and had them with us -
so that if they do get their chance then it's not too ususual."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbishley: it's payback time - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 5th March 2008
By: Staff Writer

Alan Curbishley is in a positive frame of mind ahead of tonight's Premier
League clash with Anfield. The Hammers - fresh from a 4-0 thrashing at the
hands of Chelsea last weekend - need to pick something up from tonight's
game against Liverpool if European aspirations are to be maintained. Despite
West Ham's appalling record on the red side of Stanley Park, Curbishley
feels that his side are capable of breaking the jinx - and says that his
players owe a good performance to the supporters who were left stunned by
Saturday's spineless display. "We go up there a bit embarrassed about the
weekend," said Curbishley in the pre-match press conference. "We understand
the fans disappointment entirely and we've got to try and repay all the ones
that came to watch us and all those who are going up to Anfield. "We spoke
about it yesterday with the players; if you give them sort of quality
players that amount of time on the ball then you are going to get punished -
and we got punished. "But the great thing is that another game is coming up.
It's a tough one but the great thing about football is that the next game
comes along and you can try and compete and win it. Even when we were having
that terrible time last year we looked forward to the next one where you can
change your fortunes around. "We knew we were going into a tough week. We've
started off extremely badly and can we improve on that Wednesday - because
we've got to really. We're going to a top team and we've got to get back to
where we were."
The Hammers are currently tenth in the Premier League - a safe eight points
ahead of eleventh-placed Tottenham, but four points behind ninth-placed
Blackburn albeit with a game in hand. With sixth place likely to be the
lowest position for a UEFA Cup qualifier the Hammers have to somehow
eradicate an eight point margin - and Curbishley says that must start with a
result tonight. "We're still only a couple of points off Portsmouth who
have had a great season, but we just can't seem to catch Portsmouth and
Blackburn at the moment," he added. "So to do that we've got to win some
games and I should imagine the next three or four weeks will decide where we
go. "I'm hoping one or two will come back to give us more impetus. We had a
great run in last year which conincided with keeping a settled team. I know
I said that we do need to win the majoirt of our games if we're to challenge
these teams above us - and if we don't, we'll stay where we are. "There's so
many different permutations; I finished seventh with Charlton and didn't get
in. If we lose [against Liverpool] it may finish us off in terms of Europe -
but our aim is to finish as high as we can. "We're in no-mans-land a bit at
the moment and we need to get some results to change that. We know we've got
to pick some wins up just to stay in there with a shout. I've won there with
Charlton on a few occasions but I don't think that many people have got good
records against the top four teams. "But we go into it with a bit of
determination after what happened to us at the weekend."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Now there's a surprise - KUMB
Filed: Tuesday, 4th March 2008
By: Staff Writer

Frank Lampard's red card from Saturday's Premier League fixture has been
rescinded by the FA. A statement released on the FA's website earlier this
afternoon read: "At a Regulatory Commission hearing today, a claim for
wrongful dismissal from Chelsea's Frank Lampard was upheld. "As a result,
Lampard's three match suspension has been withdrawn."
Lampard - who was greeted with a chorus of 'you let your father down' during
Saturday's game - was sent off after tangling with Luis Boa Morte ten
minutes ahead of half time. The former Hammer, who deliberately landed on
top of Boa Morte before twice kicking out was finally sent off for raising
his hands. Hayden Mullins was sent off whilst for playing for West Ham
United for a similar offence during the league game against Liverpool two
years ago.
West Ham's appeal against the sending off was subsequently dismissed by the
FA meaning that Mullins missed the FA Cup Final, the biggest game of his
career.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool v West Ham: Preview - Soccernet

With three key matches in seven days, Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez could
shuffle his pack for the game against West Ham, where a win will send the
Merseysiders back into fourth place. Liverpool have Newcastle at home on
Saturday and then Inter Milan away in the Champions League next Tuesday.
And although the Spaniard has intimated he will not be rotating as much now
as the season draws to a climax, he could well change the side that won at
Bolton on Sunday. Steve Finnan is definitely out with a groin strain but it
is unlikely he will continue with Jamie Carragher at full-back, so Alvaro
Arbeloa is a likely replacement. Defender Daniel Agger is still recovering
from injury and will play for the reserves until he regains full match
fitness. Victory over the Hammers at Anfield will have to be achieved with
Liverpool once again distracted by another potential takeover - with Dubai
International Capital keen to take control of the club. And the Anfield
chief, who has lived with this turmoil at the club for months, knows
Liverpool must win their long-awaited game in hand over their closest rivals
if they are to gain the confidence boost of a return to fourth place.
Although West Ham are one of only three sides to beat Liverpool in the
league this season, they have not won a league game at Anfield for 44 years.
So, if West Ham follow up last month's 1-0 win over Liverpool at Upton Park
with another triumph on Wednesday, Benitez will have a real crisis on the
field to surmount anything going on off it. But captain Steven Gerrard is
concerned that West Ham, beaten badly 4-0 at home by 10-man Chelsea on
Saturday, will want to hit back. He explained: "As footballers, when you are
on the end of a battering you hurt and you want to put it right straight
away.
"They will come to Anfield hoping to get a good result, and a good result
for them would be a draw.''
Liverpool have waited the entire season for their game in hand to arrive -
and Gerrard is desperate to pick up three points now it has finally arrived.
But he warned: "West Ham have bought some good players after a disappointing
time for them last season. They have got good players and a good manager, so
we have a lot of respect. "We are desperate for the points though, and we
are at Anfield. We have been waiting for this game for a long time, now we
must make it count.''
West Ham could be without midfielder Julien Faubert for the clash. Faubert
took a knock in a challenge with Claude Makelele during the Hammers' 4-0
home defeat by Chelsea at the weekend, and is struggling to be fit for the
trip. If the Frenchman does recover, manager Alan Curbishley is likely to
name an unchanged squad as his team look to keep alive their hopes of
qualifying for next season's UEFA Cup.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Gerrard wary of Hammer blow - SSN
And Mascherano hails 'world class' Alonso
By Peter Fraser Last updated: 4th March 2008

Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard has warned his team-mates that West Ham
will be keen to ease the pain of their 4-0 defeat to Chelsea when they visit
Anfield on Wednesday. The Hammers crashed to a comprehensive defeat to
London rivals Chelsea at Upton Park at the weekend and Gerrard is wary of a
backlash. Liverpool go into the game knowing that three points would see
them overhaul Everton on goal difference in the battle for fourth spot in
the Premier League. However, Gerrard is demanding the Reds do not take their
game in hand for granted as West Ham - who recorded a 1-0 home win over
Liverpool at the end of January - bid to bounce back.
"As footballers, when you are on the end of a battering you hurt and you
want to put it right straight away," Gerrard told Liverpool's official
website.
"They'll come to Anfield hoping to get a good result, and a good result for
them would be a draw. That's what they'll come here to get, but a draw is no
good for us. "We're desperate for the points, and we're at Anfield. We've
been waiting for this game for a long time, now we've got to make it count."

Meanwhile, Javier Mascherano has described his rival for a place in
Liverpool's first-team Xabi Alonso as one of the 'best midfielders in the
world'. Alonso has had limited opportunities at Anfield this season, but he
impressed in a starting role in the 3-1 away win over Bolton on Sunday and
Mascherano - who recently made his loan stay with the Reds permanent -
admits it was a pleasure to play alongside the 26-year-old. "Xabi played
really well against Bolton and I enjoyed playing with him," said Mascherano.
"It was not a surprise that he played well though because he is such a good
player - he is one of the best midfielders in the world. "He was not in the
team but he kept on working hard in training and even though he is a
Champions League winner he still played for the reserves last week and when
his chance came against Bolton he played very well. "Xabi is a very good
passer of the ball and he is also a very intelligent player. It was good to
play with him."

Liverpool 2/5, Draw 3/1, West Ham 11/2

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hard Day's Night likely lies ahead for West Ham United - The Times
Gary Jacob

The Beatles were basking in their second No1 hit the last time West Ham
United won at Anfield and Alan Curbishley's side faces another Hard Day's
Night when they return tonight. Curbishley has spent the past few days
trying to 'work it out' with his players where things went wrong on
Saturday.

He was left "embarrassed" by the 4-0 defeat against Chelsea, a performance
that was out of character with their spirited battles with the other
top-four sides this season - they have beaten Manchester United and
Liverpool at home, and only narrowly lost away to Chelsea in December.

West Ham have certainly lacked ingenuity and invention and goals this term,
in part because of injuries, but their back five have bonded into a strong
and organised defensive unit. On Saturday, they burst open at the seams.
"The dressing room was not too bad but the players were embarrassed and
stunned," Curbishley said. "I told the players 'that was a horrible 68
minutes left for us [after Chelsea led 3-0]' and it was even harder for the
fans. We have to repay the fans."

West Ham have lost on their six previous visits to Anfield stretching back
to 1999.

Peters and Hurst scored in their 2-1 victory in September 1963, on the last
occasion they won at the stadium when The Beatles were top of the charts
with She Loves You. Curbishley enjoyed a victory at the ground as Charlton
Athletic manager four years ago. "We have got to get back to where we were,"
Curbishley said. "I didn't realise our record against them was so bad.
Reading turned around eight matches with defeats [against Middlesbrough on
Saturday]. We look at Liverpool and ask: 'Why can't we turn it around'. We
have had a lot of criticism, so can we answer it?

Curbishley retains hopes of qualifying for Europe next season, but at the
very least, they would need to close the eight-point gap to Aston Villa in
sixth place. He admitted that defeat tonight could end their chances of the
Uefa Cup and has said that he will not enter the Uefa Intertoto Cup because
he wants to give the players a sizeable break in the summer "It [defeat] may
finish us off," he said. "The ambition for us is to finish as high as we
can. We are in no-man's land."

The remainder of West Ham's season could be shaped by Sunday, after their
stern challenge away to Tottenham Hotspur. Curbishley has said that he does
not want the players' attitude to drop, but there is every danger of that
with nothing significant to compete for. End of season dips from promising
positions were common when he was manager of Charlton Athletic. "We knew we
were going into a tough week and we have started extremely badly," he said.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Kia Joorabchian accuses West Ham - Telegraph
By Richard Bright
Last Updated: 3:02am GMT 05/03/2008

West Ham will be accused in the High Court of entering into a deal without
the Premier League's consent in order to get Carlos Tevez to play in the
final three matches of last season. Kia Joorabchian, the player's
representative, makes the accusation in his multimillion-pound compensation
claim lodged at the High Court. It was reported last night that Joorabchian
was claiming payments of £4.5 million and £2.6 million. The money relates to
the transfer of Tevez from his club in Brazil to Upton Park. In his writ,
Joorabchian claims West Ham asked him to act as a broker between them and
the two companies who owned Tevez's rights to ensure the striker could play
against Bolton at the end of last season. That was at a time when West Ham
were fighting against relegation, and the Premier League had asked the club
to terminate the third-party agreement. The two companies, MSI and Just
Sport Inc, refused to cancel the contract and did not want Tevez to play in
case he was injured. It is also alleged that Tevez received a salary and
expenses that exceeded those paid by West Ham. If that money came from a
third party, then it would breach Premier League rules. West Ham have said
they will launch a "vigorous defence" against any accusations.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham face £7m Tevez claim
Martin Ziegler
Wednesday March 5, 2008
The Guardian

West Ham United are alleged to have struck deals over the future of their
former striker Carlos Tevez last season behind the back of the Premier
League. Kia Joorab-chian, Tevez's agent, is taking the club to court
claiming £7.1m which he says he is owed by West Ham for his role in Tevez's
stay at Upton Park and subsequent move to Manchester United.
In papers lodged with the high court Joorabchian alleges he paid the club
£2m for West Ham to release Tevez's registration for the transfer to Old
Trafford and that West Ham agreed orally to return the money, plus costs,
amounting to £2.6m. He says he has not been paid that money or a further
£4.5m for separate dealings over Tevez. The league had insisted West Ham be
paid when Tevez moved to United. West Ham have said they will mount a
"vigorous" defence of their position and deny Joorabchian's allegations

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Principle? Fairness? Kia Joorabchian's stand still all about making money -
The Times
Martin Samuel

Kia Joorabchian would like it to be known that his lawsuit against West Ham
United is not about money. It is about principle. He has 7.1 million of
them, apparently, and all were accounted for when he finally got around to
filing his particulars of claim at the High Court of Justice, Chancery
Division.

This document arrived at about 4pm yesterday, even though the lawsuit was
served on West Ham United, the defendants, on January 16. The standard
procedure is that the particulars of claim document arrives within one week
of the suit. West Ham got the defence in quicker, on February 28, which must
be a record.

Anyway, the legal machinations are of interest, but not the heart of the
matter. It is the 7.1 that is the choice part. For a case that is not about
money, that is a specific figure to reach. Joorabchian claims that he was
due £4.5 million as a result of conversations with Eggert Magnússon, the
former West Ham chairman, and Scott Duxbury, the chief executive, that
enabled Carlos Tévez to play in important matches at the end of last season,
and a further £2.6 million after more discussions with Duxbury around the
time of Tévez's move to Manchester United in August. Clearly, Joorabchian is
not the sort for rounding things up, or down.

Indeed, why should he be? This does, however, make him different from the
driving forces at Sheffield United, who arrive at the problem of suing West
Ham through the FA by a different route, still brandishing a finely honed
sense of injustice but a less finely honed set of ballpark figures, with
room for manoeuvre in the tens of millions.

Depending on the news source, Sheffield United wish for compensation for
relegation totalling anything from £20 million to £50 million. In contrast
with Joorabchian, the club work only in multiples of ten, not decimal
points. Sheffield United seek £20 million according to a report in a local
newspaper, while £30 million seems the going rate in the national press and
the BBC has set a top-end figure of £50 million. No 7.1s here. These are
broad brushstrokes that are being painted and, of course, this case, too, is
not about money. It is, you will recall, a campaign for fairness. And fifty
million quid.

Saying that the fallout from the Tévez transfer from Corinthians, in Brazil,
to West Ham is not about money is a bit like believing that Middle East
policy is not about oil. It is about nothing if it is not about that. As
Joorabchian has admitted in his legal documents, the only reason West Ham
had an exceptional international forward such as Tévez in the first place —
along with Javier Mascherano, his Argentina team-mate and one of the finest
holding midfield players in world football — is because Joorabchian owned
the players through the companies Just Sports Inc (JSI) and Media Sports
Investments (MSI) and had forged a relationship with the previous West Ham
board over his prospective purchase of the club.

The arrival of Tévez and Mascherano became almost a sweetener, an indication
of what benefits would follow were Joorabchian to take charge and use West
Ham as an outlet for the greatest young talent in South America. From the
beginning, Tévez and Mascherano were little more than chattel. Joorabchian's
business is to own human beings. Is that a matter of principle, too, or is
financial gain his motivation?

The agreement that West Ham wrote to secure the signature of the players did
not bear scrutiny and eight months later, as Tévez's goals were keeping the
club in the top flight, a record fine of £5.5 million was handed out for
breaching contractual regulations. Since then, while there has been much
fine talk of fairness and decency, the ethics of modern football, honesty
and trust, every mention of Tévez's name has come with a price tag attached.


When a Premier League disciplinary commission measured West Ham's crime in
pounds not points — and the club escaped relegation at Sheffield United's
expense on the final day of the season — the haggling began. Each twist in
the tale has been financially motivated, whatever high-minded posturing has
accompanied it. Newspaper moralists may still call for West Ham's
relegation, or the reinstatement of Sheffield United, but no one at the
Yorkshire club has been asking for that for months.

An FA panel will decide next month whether it has the jurisdiction over
Sheffield United's claim and, if it does, it may sit again in June.
Sheffield United could be in Coca-Cola League One by then, unless their form
under Kevin Blackwell, the club's new manager, improves. If reinstatement
was the aim, how is the FA to replay and rearrange the consequences of 12
months of football across three divisions? More to the point, how could a
club who are seventeenth in the Championship cope with a summary elevation
to the Barclays Premier League? That is why Sheffield United, like
Joorabchian, want money, preferably in a settlement on the steps of the
court, obtained if both parties shout loudly enough.

This has been Joorabchian's tactic since last summer. He claims to have a
strong case, one that will send shock waves through football. So why conduct
a campaign of vague insinuation through the media, going back to July, when
he threatened to appear on Sheffield United's side in a High Court hearing.
That did not happen and when West Ham and Joorabchian's companies met in
August, the settlement resulted in £2 million going into the coffers of the
club, in exchange for the release of Tévez's registration, which then
facilitated a move to Manchester United. This forms part of Joorabchian's
claim, with the accusation that West Ham privately agreed to pay back the
money, plus legal fees of £600,000.

However, the question remains, if Joorabchian had so much damning additional
evidence over the Tévez transfer, so many entitlements and fees outstanding
— he was still short of the £4.5 million he says was agreed at the end of
last season, remember — why was this not dealt with, formally, at the time?
Why was nothing put in writing? Joorabchian does seem a very trusting sort
if he is willing to do £7.1 million of business, covering loan fees,
transfer fees, insurance fees and sundry agent's fees, on trust.

Do West Ham come out of this business well? Not at all. They have rejected
Joorabchian's allegations, but the mud will stick. Whatever the court
decides, there will always be the suspicion that the Tévez business from
beginning to end was mired in controversy. Even those who are sympathetic to
men who are forced to negotiate the moral cul-de-sacs of the modern game
feel angered by this. West Ham's regime may have changed twice since Tévez
arrived, but Duxbury remains at the club so they are steered on a day-to-day
basis by a man who may be dragged into court to answer the allegations made
by Joorabchian.

Magnússon, an ally of Björgólfur Gudmundsson, the owner, has sold his
interest and left under a cloud, having been held responsible for some
extravagant business in the transfer market. He was seen as the man left
holding the baby over Tévez when news of the third-party agreements broke,
but his reputation is also sure to take a beating over this. At the moment,
though, it is one man's word against another's, and on neither side is there
a character to which neutrals will warm.

The bottom line. Is it possible that a sharp operator such as Joorabchian
got some foolish statements of intent from former board members at West Ham?
Yes. Does anything exist in writing? Not by the sounds of it. "There were
agreements in place," Joorabchian said last week. "It might have been in
conversations, but it was in front of witnesses."

At this point, then, before hard evidence has to be produced, the most that
can be said is that Joorabchian and West Ham strayed into the legal
quicksand of the gentlemen's agreement; the sort of verbal understanding
that ensured that Tim Howard could not play for Everton against Manchester
United, his former club, and Steve Kabba could not play for Watford against
Sheffield United, his former club, last season despite being signed as
permanent transfers. The Premier League investigated both cases but, with
nothing formally in writing, said that further action could not be taken.

Indeed, because West Ham were attempting to persuade Tévez to stay and would
have needed to have kept lines of communication open with Joorabchian, all
conversations could be classed as the meanderings of pre-contractual
negotiation until an executed document is produced.

The Premier League has no plans to investigate the Tévez transfer further
unless there is watertight evidence that new arrangements contravened
regulations. Something on paper may do it; something murmured over cocktails
at Les Ambassadeurs would not.

The Premier League told West Ham to end all third-party agreements over
Tévez, knowing that this would leave them open to legal action from his
owners, and the club would have to deal with that as best they could. There
is no shock that the fallout has been messy and protracted; indeed, it was
expected.

As for Joorabchian's threat that the whole truth will now come out, the only
surprise concerns the implication that Tévez's owner could not therefore
have disclosed all his evidence to the Premier League panel or the High
Court. If West Ham have been acting as he suggests why has he not broken
ranks until now? What did he have to gain? Particularly when he is so
concerned about matters of principle and not interested for one second in
all that dirty money.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers owe me £7.1m for Tevez, claims Joorabchian - Daily Mail
By LEE CLAYTON - More by this author »
Last updated at 00:00am on 5th March 2008

West Ham agreed to pay the owner of Carlos Tevez £4.5million to 'make him
available' to play in the final three games of last season, according to
sensational new allegations to be heard in the High Court. Kia Joorabchian
claims that last April, just 24 hours after an original deal had to be torn
up when the Hammers were fined for breaches of Premier League rules, he
reached a new agreement with former club chairman Eggert Magnusson and
executive director Scott Duxbury. Under the deal, he ensured Tevez would not
miss the crucial final games of the season — another clear breach of Premier
League rules. Tevez duly played and his goals kept West Ham in the top
flight. But Joorabchian claims West Ham never honoured the deal. He alleges
they owe him a further £2.6million after a second secret deal was struck
last July to allow the transfer of Tevez to Manchester United. The Premier
League refused to sanction the move unless money was paid directly to West
Ham. According to court papers, Duxbury, 'agreed orally' that, in order to
overcome the difficulty, Joorabchian would pay £2million to satisfy the
Premier League but that the money would be returned to him by January 31
this year. He says he has not been paid. Joorabchian is said to have "tapes,
texts and witnesses" to support the action and Sheffield United, relegated
in West Ham's place, will follow it closely. West Ham deny all the claims.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham's Parker nearing return
tribalfooball.com - March 04, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley has revealed midfielder Scott Parker
will make his playing comeback next week. He told whufc.com: "We will hold
him back for the rest of the week."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbishley hints at surprise West Ham selection tonight
tribalfootball.com - March 04, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley has hinted he may spring a selection
surprise tonight at Liverpool. "I have got no fears of doing it," Curbishley
told whufc.com when asked if he would be worried about giving his talented
youngsters a run-out. "Freddie Sears and Jack Collison are in the squad
because they deserve to be in it and not just because of the injuries.
[Central defender James] Tomkins has got a slight groin strain from the last
reserve game or he would be in it as well."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Curbishley reveals crunch players' meeting
tribalfooball.com - March 04, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley has revealed they've held crunch talks
after Saturday's thrashing by Chelsea. Ahead of tonight's trip to Liverpool,
Curbs told whufc.com: "We looked at it with them. We spoke about it. They
can't quite believe how it went ... the way we have set ourselves out this
season gives us a chance of getting something and - if we get beat, we get
beat - but we didn't give ourselves a chance.

"[Chelsea] was unlike us so far this season. It has steeled us up for what
is coming on Wednesday night and on Sunday [against Tottenham Hotspur]. We
knew we were going into a tough week. We have started off really badly and
can we improve on that on Wednesday?" The manager added that he and the
players understood the fan frustration, claiming "we have got to try and
repay all the people that come to watch us and all the ones that are going
up to Anfield".

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool's Mascherano has nothing to prove to West Ham - Benitez
tribalfooball.com - March 04, 2008

Liverpool boss Rafa Benitez doesn't expect any special attention for Javier
Mascherano against his former club West Ham United tonight. Benitez told
liverpoolfc.tv: "I don't think so. Javier is a player who has already shown
the quality he has. I think it will be another important game for him, but
nothing else."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham face a big challenge at Anfield - The Mirror
By Neil Mcleman 5/03/2008

Alan Curbishley admits West Ham face another Hard Day's Night as they seek
their first win at Anfield since 1963. The Beatles were No.1 with She Loves
You and Martin Peters and Geoff Hurst scored the last time the Hammers
triumphed in front of the Kop. Curbishley wants the "embarrassment" of
Saturday's 4-0 thrashing by Chelsea to inspire West Ham to Get Back into
European contention. "I don't think many people have a good record against
the top four teams - but we go into it with some determination after the
weekend," said Curbishley (inset), whose brother Bill managed The Who.
"'Embarrassed' and 'stunned' are two words we could use and I hope I never
see it again. "It is something we are not going to forget but Liverpool have
got so much quality in their side that on any given day they can hurt
teams."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool ace set for £8million Hammers switch? - FansFC.com
07:03 March, 5, 2008

West Ham United Football Club have been linked with a swoop on Anfield. The
Hammers are still very much in the race for a European place next season,
following a campaign which has been made all the more impressive when all
their injuries are considered. Reports claim Alan Curbishley will be handed
a substantial transfer kitty in the region of £30million at the end of the
season, and £8million of this could be heading to Liverpool. It is believed
the Upton Park club have made a striker their priority for when the window
opens, and Curbishley hopes to tempt Peter Crouch to move south to spearhead
his attack.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Returning Hammers back for finale - TeamTalk

Alan Curbishley believes the return of Scott Parker and Bobby Zamora can
provide West Ham with crucial "impetus" for the rest of the season. Although
neither player is likely to feature in Wednesday night's Premier League
match at Liverpool, both are close to full fitness after long spells on the
sidelines.
The Hammers' season has been notable for the enforced absence of several key
players - with Craig Bellamy, Parker, Zamora and Kieron Dyer just four of
the players who have featured little because of injuries. Curbishley
revealed: "Parker has been training this week, but it is still a little too
early for him - and we have been holding him back. "With the injury
situation, we have had to take more care with some than we have with others.
"Bobby has been out a long while with his knee injury, whereas we had to
push Julien Faubert into the team early after he had come back from his
Achilles problem. "We have had to be more careful with Bobby, but he is
raring to go now. "We hope that one or two of those injured players will
come back into the reckoning, to give us some fresh legs and fresh minds."
Although his team are 10 points adrift of Liverpool with just 11 league
matches still to play, Curbishley continues to harbour hopes of European
football for his team next season. But the former Charlton manager knows
defeat at Anfield - where West Ham have not won since September 1963 - would
virtually extinguish their hopes of qualification for next season's UEFA
Cup. Curbishley admitted: "If Liverpool won, it might finish us off in terms
of breaking into the European places. We're in no man's land - and we need
to change that. There are so many permutations, but it looks this season as
though finishing seventh or even sixth might not be good enough to get into
the UEFA Cup. We are not too far behind Portsmouth, Blackburn and Manchester
City - but we just can't seem to catch them at the moment. "We don't want
the season to peter out. If we lose, we don't seem to go anywhere, and if we
win, we don't seem to go anywhere. The next three or four weeks will decide
our fate."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 4

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 4th March 2008

Anfield aim for McCartney - WHUFC
George McCartney knows Liverpool are determined to perform in midweek - but
so are West Ham United
03.03.2008

West Ham United may be in for another difficult test when they head up to
Merseyside on Wednesday night but George McCartney is expecting maximum
effort from the tenth-placed club.

The left-back is looking for a reaction after a 4-0 weekend defeat by a
Chelsea side he described as "probably the best team we have faced this
year". The consistent Northern Ireland international was well placed to
judge the west London's side credentials as he has been a league and cup
ever-present this season and also not missed any first-team match since
sitting out the 4-3 defeat by Tottenham Hotspur exactly a year ago - a run
of 42 games.

Looking to the midweek game when Alan Curbishley's men will have the chance
to achieve a famous double over the Reds, he said: "We have to forget about
[Chelsea] and move on to Liverpool. It is not going to be easy at Anfield,
they are under a bit of pressure themselves and they will be up for the game
and looking to take the three points. It has been a long season and we have
got eleven left. We have got to try and take as many points as we can. We
want to try and get in Europe."

While things did not go to plan against Chelsea, a draw or victory at the
Reds would set the club up nicely for Sunday's trip to Tottenham Hotspur.
After that, West Ham United will have nine games left and Alan Curbishley
will be keen to get his players thinking of last year's seven wins from that
number of fixtures. Also, with home fixtures against seventh-placed
Blackburn Rovers and Portsmouth, in eighth, on the horizon there is no
reason why the club cannot look to move up.

Certainly, the ever-reliable McCartney will not be wanting a rest. "It does
begin to catch up on you coming towards the last couple of months but it is
the same for everyone," he said. "We have got a big enough squad to cope. It
is just a matter of everyone digging in for the rest of the season." For all
the disappointment at the weekend display, he also knows West Ham United
traditionally "lift our game when the big teams come along" and equally
acknowledged that "football is a crazy game at times".

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Academy aces extend advantage - WHUFC
Tony Carr saw Junior Stanislas make both goals as West Ham United's U18s
pushed ahead in Group A
03.03.2008

Tony Carr was satisfied with his youngsters' efforts at the weekend after
they moved five points clear at the top of Group A of the Premier Academy
League.

A 2-0 home win against Ipswich Town - secured after goals inside the first
five minutes from Josh Payne and Freddie Sears - moved the Under-18s out of
the reach of Southampton who went down by the same scoreline at home to
Crystal Palace. Both clubs have played 24 games but the biggest threat to
West Ham United are probably Arsenal, who are eight points adrift but have
four games in hand after a 0-0 draw at Norwich City.

"We got off to a storming start," said a delighted Carr after the sixth win
in seven unbeaten matches that saw Sears make it 25 goals in 24 U18 and
reserve-team matches this campaign. "Josh Payne scored a spectacular
overhead kick from Junior Stanislas's free-kick. It was a really good goal
and we followed that up when Freddie scored. Junior's cross from the right.
dropped into his path, he controlled it and then drilled it in from close
range.

"It was two assists for Junior, two good goals and we were off to a great
start," Carr added, although he felt the team could have made more of their
advantage at a windswept Chadwell Heath. "We should really have gone on from
there. Although we were never in any danger of losing the game, it just
disintegrated into a bit of a scrappy game to be honest. The wind was
playing havoc with everything and the ball was doing all sorts of tricks."

Carr was also pleased that Adam Street, who has come into the team for the
injured Marek Stech (ankle), was again not beaten, with the help of
defenders like Ashley Miller and Bondz N'Gala. The academy director said:
"It is another clean sheet and that is a real plus for us. We ended up
grateful for the 2-0 win. You couldn't call it a flowing performance but you
don't get that every week unfortunately."

With each Group A club playing 28 games, West Ham United have four
inter-group fixtures remaining. Each of these will be against teams from
Group B, starting with the Friday 14 March trip to Bristol City, getting
under way at 1pm. That is followed by the visit of Reading on 29 March, a
trip to Leicester City, the 2006/07 Premier Academy League champions, on 5
April and the final-day arrival of Birmingham City on 12 April. Ultimately,
the Group A, B, C and D winners will go forward to contest semi-finals and
final to see who takes on Leicester's mantle.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Carlsberg backing the Beamback - WHUFC
Adults coming along to the Boleyn Ground for the Spurs game this Sunday will
be able to get a free pint
03.03.2008

West Ham United are delighted to have teamed up with Carlsberg to offer a
free pint for all fans attending next Sunday's beamback of the Tottenham
Hotspur trip.

This special offer of a pint of Carlsberg or Tetley is available to anyone
over the age of 18 attending the Boleyn Ground event. That's not all,
either, with each adult receiving a free pint automatically entered into a
prize draw to win 'beer for a year' - thanks to Carlsberg, the club's
official beer. One lucky fan will be chosen at random on the day.

For all supporters wanting to attend on Sunday, two packages are on offer
featuring your choice of meal and a programme - plus all the action from the
3pm kick-off at White Hart Lane. The teams drew 1-1 when they last met on 25
November with the drama continuing to the final whistle and Robert Green's
last-gasp penalty save.

This time around, Alan Curbishley's men know victory could move them eleven
or 14 points clear of their north London rivals - depending on the midweek
match against Liverpool - and also get them back on track for a strong
finish to the league season. Both sides suffered setbacks at the weekend but
normal service is expected to be resumed when they go head to head at White
Hart Lane. See the Barclays Premier League encounter in warmth and style
with two mouth-watering packages running from 12pm to 5pm at the Boleyn
Ground.

# Pie and mash, and a matchday programme in the Premier Suite (pay-bar
available). Prices are £20 for adults, £18 for senior citizens/disabled and
£15 for children under 16.

# Three-course carvery meal and a matchday programme in the Castle Suite
(pay-bar available). Prices are £35 for adults, £22.50 for senior
citizens/disabled and £17.50 for children under 16.

Derby games against Tottenham Hotspur are always must-see encounters, with
many a classic game over the years. Make sure you are at the Boleyn Ground
to soak up all the atmosphere and get your free pint on Sunday 9 March.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Manager on Monday - WHUFC
Having won the last two home encounters with 'top four clubs', Alan
Curbishley had hoped for better
03.03.2008

Alan Curbishley accepts there was little to be drawn from the weekend and
said his West Ham United team had come up against a side firmly back in the
title race.

The manager may have seen Bobby Zamora get 25 minutes of first-team football
after being out with a persistent knee problem since 28 August and also had
Julien Faubert making his first home start but admitted highlights were few
and far between in the 4-0 home reverse. He said: "We can't take too much
from the game and obviously it is not nice when you have to sit there and
watch that."

"The fans had to," Curbishley added, mindful that expectancy was high after
an excellent 1-0 away win at Fulham the previous weekend and that the
tenth-placed club had a chance to close on the two or three teams above -
especially with Wednesday's game in hand at Liverpool. "They have come in
with great hopes. We picked up a result last week and we desperately need to
put two [wins] together to try and climb up the league but it hasn't
happened again."

Curbishley knows his side are capable of competing with the best - as shown
by the 2-1 and 1-0 home wins against Manchester United and Liverpool
respectively, and even the 1-0 away defeat at the hands of Chelsea back on 1
December when defeat was harsh on his team. The only other 'top-four' game
that had disappointed in a similar manner was the 2-0 loss at Arsenal on New
Year's Day when the leaders were able to take a quickfire lead.

"In the previous games against the top four perhaps we have made the save or
we have made the block," the manager said. "[The top-four teams] are going
to create chances and we went two down very early at the Emirates and that
is massively difficult to come back from. One-nought [then] after a minute
and, after 20 minutes [on Saturday], three goals in five minutes - you are
on to a hiding."

Chelsea's victory owed much to clinical finishing and the depth of a
"massively talented squad", with Avram Grant able to pick from a full
complement again after two months or so without that luxury. After Frank
Lampard's penalty, Joe Cole and Michael Ballack, two players left out in the
Carling Cup final, then put the game out of reach. "When you play against
these sides you know they have got players that if they get in certain
positions, they may finish," Curbishley added.

The visitors added a fourth through Ashley Cole, also left out in the cup
final, after the break, just when the home side had tried to get something
going and nearly scored with a clever Carlton Cole effort that was hooked
away at the last moment. The manager said the interval message had been to
try and make the most of the man-advantage after Lampard's dismissal,
telling his players "We have got to go out there and, if we can get going
for ten minutes, then we will have a go.

"Obviously they had ten men and we were hoping to break them down but we
couldn't do it. The one time we did, John Terry got back and cleared it off
the line so that may have been a change in the situation if we had scored
that but we have played against a top side with a top squad. If you see the
people they had on the bench it is massive - that result and Arsenal's one
has pushed them back in [the title race]."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Youngsters get valuable minutes - WHUFC
Joe Widdowson and Jack Jeffery each played at the weekend as they continued
their respective loan spells
03.03.2008

Academy defender Joe Widdowson has made debut for Rotherham United at the
weekend while young striker Jack Jeffery featured in a win for Cambridge
United.

The 18-year-old left-back Widdowson was making his first start for the
League Two promotion contenders after joining on a month's loan and was
singled out by Rotherham manager Mark Robins for his "solid first-half
performance" before the team as a whole lost their way in the second half
and lost 1-0 to Accrington Stanley.

Meanwhile, Jeffery, also on a month's loan, featured as a late substitute as
Conference outfit Cambridge kept their bid for promotion to the Football
League alive with a 2-0 win against York City, with both goals scored by
former Hammers striker Lee Boylan. Jeffery, 18, said: "I've been impressed
by the players here. I'm really looking forward to playing some games and
helping Cambridge if I can." Meanwhile, 18-year-old full-back Robbie
Blackwell has joined Grays Athletic on work experience after a similar spell
at Colchester United.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Where have the real men gone? - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 3rd March 2008
By: Paul Scanlan

I don't like to complain, I don't like to moan and I really do hope that
next week something happens to make me write a positive article. Having just
started my journey into the world of blog writing, I had already found Pete
Doherty, NME Magazine and the American media as potential subjects for
venting.

That was until I took my seat at Upton Park and watched West Ham against
Chelsea. During the ninety minutes of that match, I saw things that served
to back up my fury against the big teams in England's most popular sport.
The things that I saw made me ask, where have the real men of British
football gone?

I have spoken before about the responsibility that players and managers in
the British game have when it comes to their role in sport. Football is a
passionate environment and the one place where fans can vent feelings and
frustrations that they can't during their regular lives. Young fans treat
the players as heroes to be worshipped and adored while older supporters
like myself, like to see commitment and passion from those who are blessed
with an opportunity that so many of us will never have. In the main, those
players are deserving of our appreciation until you reach the very upper
echelons of the football world, where egotism, narcissism and greed take
over.

My fiancée who supports Manchester United finds it quite frustrating at
times that a non Manchester United fan cheers her team in the title race.
Last week, I slammed Arsenal and their code of conduct and this week, I have
seen Chelsea behave in ways that serve as a disgrace and insult to the game
we love to watch.

While in the nineties it was fashionable to hate a United side that were
dominating England and beyond, never at any time can I remember them playing
in such a black hearted way. Now we watch as they put together a new young
generation centred around the skills of Rooney, Tevez and the world class
Ronaldo for whom the crime of occasional diving is nothing compared to what
we have to endure from the top teams in London. Manchester United play
football the right way while Chelsea, like Arsenal, continue to abuse and
ruin it.

West Ham fans know the importance of playing against Chelsea. It's a London
derby and the arrival of Frank Lampard to his old stomping ground always
serves up bad feeling and anger towards a man who quite happily punished the
fans for actions that they did not commit. It wasn't the supporters who
sacked Frank's father and it wasn't the supporters who treated Frank's
uncle, Harry, badly either. Sadly Mr Lampard Junior does not have the
maturity to differentiate between these events and continues to badmouth the
team he grew up with.

At twenty eight years old however, you would think that the England
International has grown up enough to realise that he carries a certain
responsibility to keep a low profile in such a highly strung atmosphere. By
all means contribute to your teams' success and play a good game but keep
your mouth closed and your tackles and physicality to a minimum. That would
be the mature and responsible thing to do right? So what does the
experienced International do?

He starts a fight.

We all have our hatred for Lampard and the relationship between us and the
player will never be healed. However, for how much longer will he continue
to behave in such an irresponsible way when it comes to dealing with West
Ham United? He knows what a pressure cooker environment he is walking into
each season when he comes to Upton Park, yet he continues to fuel those
flames and then decides to stoke them up further by getting into a fracas
with Luis Boa Morte.

Lampard was blatantly looking for trouble and that is the truth, no matter
how much his manager may deny that. Why? Why risk turning a game of football
into something even more volatile and potentially dangerous? Is Frank not
mature enough to read a situation and realise that he should keep a low
profile rather than make things worse? He was in an environment of
passionate hatred and all it would have taken was for a couple of enraged
individuals to try and get onto the pitch in order for things to really
break down.

While I don't condone fans running on the pitch or looking for trouble, I do
believe that an England international like Lampard should have the
intelligence and maturity to ensure that he acts in a way that will keep
things under control. As it stands, he risked a major incident by his
behaviour yesterday and it is time that the Football Association looked at
these situations in more detail.

While the link between Lampard's behaviour and West Ham United is more
obvious, it did not end there. Ashley Cole, who received no more stick than
anyone else (despite his now weekly appearances in women's magazines for his
treatment of wife Cheryl Tweedy) decided that he would attempt to rile the
crowd by performing a quite frankly ridiculous plane like celebration upon
scoring his first goal. His loving fans were in fact closer to him but
instead of celebrating with them, he decided it would be much more
entertaining to see how many West Ham fans he could incite by showing his
arrogance in his truest form.

There I was thinking that Ashley had been suffering trauma and heartbreak?
He certainly didn't look like a broken man with that big smile on his face
as he pranced around with his arms outstretched. Again, why risk it? What
does it get you? I know this though, had a West Ham fan reacted, I would bet
all the money that I have (or don't as the case may be) that the Chelsea
player would get away with it. How much longer do we have put up with this
arrogant and irresponsible attitude from those at the top?

Add to these incidents, John Terry cupping his ear to the opposition fans
and lauding it around the pitch as if he owned it and you have yet more
evidence of top flight teams being out of control. While I don't wish to
paint a holier-than-thou picture of Manchester United and I do still hate
some of their supporters, there are many reasons why we as football fans
should be longing for the trophy to remain at Old Trafford.

The FA has no control over Chelsea or Arsenal and if they are to win the
Premiership, it won't be done by playing silky football, wowing the crowds
and displaying exemplary fair play. It will be done by bullying,
manipulation and with a smug grin as they look down at the rest of the
Premiership with contempt. What will it take for the governing bodies to
examine the conduct of these sides and finally put an end to their actions?
If the likes of Chelsea and Arsenal are allowed to play the game with such a
disgusting attitude, then the game of football as a whole will continue to
suffer and the only ones to be punished will be the fans for reacting, not
the apparently untouchables.

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Referee's admission boosts Lampard's appeal against red card
Dominic Fifield
Tuesday March 4, 2008
guardian.co.uk


Chelsea are optimistic that the red card and three-game suspension Frank
Lampard picked up at West Ham United on Saturday will be rescinded at a
meeting of a Football Association regulatory commission today after the
match referee, Peter Walton, privately admitted to making an error in
sending off the midfielder.
Lampard was dismissed after he had grappled with West Ham's Luis Boa Morte
following a tumble, with Walton taking advice from an assistant before
showing the midfielder the second red of his career. The dismissal was for
violent conduct, with the referee allegedly telling Chelsea players at the
time that Lampard had slapped Boa Morte in the face. Television replays of
the incident suggest he pushed the Portuguese in the chest.

Chelsea submitted a formal appeal yesterday, their dossier including a DVD
of footage of the clash and written submissions from player and club. An FA
spokesman confirmed that the club have to prove that the referee made "a
serious and obvious error" when they attend the four-man commission today.
However, it is understood that Walton has written to Soho Square admitting
he made an error and while that evidence is not conclusive, it will carry
weight when it is put to the panel. The sending-off cannot be downgraded to
yellow - it will remain on Lampard's record regardless of whether it is
rescinded or not - leaving the commission with a simple choice.

Chelsea will argue that the push on Boa Morte was not to the player's face
or head, as replays suggest, and therefore does not constitute violent
conduct in the hope that their approach goes the way of Lee Bowyer's
successful appeal against his dismissal against Birmingham this season,
rather than failed recent attempts by the likes of Jérémie Aliadière, Robbie
Keane, Michael Essien and Ashley Cole.

A positive decision would provide Chelsea with a boost for tomorrow's
Champions League tie against Olympiakos, although he is free to play in it
whatever today's outcome. The 4-0 rout of West Ham had restored confidence
damaged by the Carling Cup final defeat, but momentum must now be
maintained.

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Frank Lampard set to win red card appeal - Telegraph
By Jeremy Wilson
Last Updated: 12:28am GMT 04/03/2008

Frank Lampard is today expected to win his appeal against the red card he
received during Chelsea's 4-0 win against West Ham after gaining the
retrospective support of referee Peter Walton.

Walton does not personally have the power to overturn the original decision
but, after studying the video of the match, he has subsequently intimated in
his report that an error was made and the sending-off should be rescinded.

His evidence is certain to carry considerable weight at today's regulatory
commission and is likely to mean that Lampard will escape a three-match ban.

The commission will assess the video evidence and must conclude that "a
serious and obvious error" has been made before overturning a dismissal.

The definition of violent conduct is that the offence has endangered another
player's safety and Chelsea will point out that Lampard's push on Luis Boa
Morte was below head height. It is understood that Walton told Chelsea's
players that he acted on advice from linesman Guy Beale, who believed he saw
the England midfielder push Boa Morte in the face.

Earlier this season, Chelsea manager Avram Grant questioned whether it would
be worth challenging another sending-off after an appeal for Ashley Cole's
dismissal against Aston Villa proved futile. The process came under
criticism last week when an appeal by Middlesbrough against the sending-off
of Jeremie Aliadiere was rejected. It resulted in the French striker
receiving an extra one-game ban after the FA claimed the appeal was
"frivolous".

A successful appeal for Chelsea would give them a lift going into the second
leg of their Champions League first knockout round tie against Olympiakos
tomorrow and also ensure that Lampard is available for the forthcoming FA
Cup quarter-final against Barnsley, as well as league matches against Derby
and Sunderland.

Michael Ballack, meanwhile, has explained why he believes that a woodland
paint-balling trip last week could have put Chelsea back on the path to
success.

Following the 2-1 Carling Cup defeat against Tottenham, Chelsea took part in
a bonding exercise that appeared to help ahead of Saturday's victory against
West Ham. "It is very important," Ballack said. "It comes from John Terry,
our captain. It is a small thing in football but sometimes during the season
you have difficult moments, especially after such a defeat at Wembley, then
you have to do something a little bit different.

"It was not the main key for the victory at West Ham, but at this point we
wanted to do something else to clean our minds and our heads."

Changes are expected for the visit of Olympiakos in a competition which tops
the club's priority list. Grant rested several players on Saturday including
Didier Drogba, Shaun Wright-Phillips and Juliano Belletti, but the response
at Upton Park was impressive.

"We had a bad performance and we got criticised, but we showed we are a good
team," Ballack said.

"In the end we lost one game so everybody spoke about a big crisis at
Chelsea, but that was not the reality. We have to accept any criticism but
we know we lost one game. It was a big game. That is why the criticism was
more than for a normal league game because it is a final and everybody wants
to win the cup."

Joe Cole, who scored Chelsea's second goal at West Ham, added: "We have got
everyone fit now. This is the right time to go forward. We have two big cup
games coming up. We have been in this situation before, which could help us.
We know what we have got to do, and it will go down to the last few games, I
am certain of that."

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Hammers flop moves on
By Guardian-series

FORMER West Ham flop Sergei Rebrov has moved to Russian outfit Rubin Kazan.
The 33-year-old had an unsuccessful one-season spell with the Hammers during
2005-6 that bought just two goals in 32 appearances. Prior to that he had
joined rivals Tottenham for £11 million after being signed by George Graham
in June 2000. But he failed to ever justify the high price tag, managing in
total just 16 goals in 76 games, and was farmed out on-loan to Fenerbahçe
after being frozen out by Glenn Hoddle. He then moved to Upton Park before
returning to his homeland as a free agent to play for his first club, Dynamo
Kiev. But, despite being named as Player of the Year thanks to his 14 goals
in 34 matches in his first season, he struggled to reach such heights this
term and has decided to try his luck elsewhere. He has agreed a two-year
contract with Rubin.

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Young Hammer joins Grays - Thurrock Gazette

GRAYS Athletic have taken West Ham Scholar, Robbie Blackwell, on work
experience. Blackwell is a promising left back who has been with The Hammers
Academy since 2005, he has recently been on work experience with Colchester
United and played in their reserve game against Northampton Town alongside
ex-Hammer, Teddy Sheringham

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Chelsea launch appeal against Frank Lampard red card
Times Online, agencies and Matt Hughes of The Times

Chelsea have appealed against Frank Lampard's red card in Saturday's 4-0 win
away to West Ham United, the FA have confirmed. The case will be heard by a
regulatory commission tomorrow. The club waited to discover the contents of
the referee's report before making a final decision, as they were wary of
the England midfield player being given an additional suspension for making
a frivolous appeal, as happened to Jérémie Aliadière when Middlesbrough
contested his dismissal for slapping Javier Mascherano, of Liverpool, in the
face. A four-match ban would rule Lampard out of the league match against
Tottenham Hotspur at the end of the month. Chelsea's previous appeals this
season against the red cards shown to John Obi Mikel, Michael Essien and
Ashley Cole have been dismissed but they are confident of winning this time.
The club's players claim that they were told by Peter Walton, the referee,
that Lampard was sent off because the assistant referee told him he had
pushed Luís Boa Morte in the face, which television replays disprove. The
pictures showed Lampard shoving the Portuguese winger in the chest after
they had grappled on the floor in the 33rd minute, an offence that was
supposed to be punished with a yellow card, according to the guidance given
by referees at informal meetings held with clubs at the start of the season.
Chelsea expressed initial caution at fighting the red card as a result of
their experience after John Terry's sending-off against Tottenham Hotspur
last season, when the captain accused Graham Poll of changing his story, an
unfounded allegation for which he was fined £10,000 by the FA. Avram Grant,
the Chelsea first-team coach, expressed frustration that, as with the
penalty awarded against Wayne Bridge in last week's Carling Cup final, a
crucial decision was made by an assistant referee some distance from the
incident.

"I didn't see it and I have no problem with the referee, only the
assistant," Grant said. "The referee was closer to the incident than the
assistant referee and the same again as last week, but the assistant was 20
metres away. The referee said clearly that Lampard touched the face of Boa
Morte. If he did then it's a red card and if not then it's not a red card."

Terry called for the red card to be rescinded. "It was very harsh," he said.
"It was the linesman who made the decision. Walton is a very clever referee
and very good as well. I'm sure he'll look at it again and the guys who make
these decisions will look at it and hopefully rescind it."

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What Price Mark Noble? - West Ham Till I Die

This week's News of the World is touting Mark Noble as a replacement for
Flamini at Arsenal. The Gunners apparently considered an approach for Noble
in the last transfer window, says the article. We shouldn't be surprised
that Nobes is attracting attention. Even though he's not the finished
article yet, it's clear that he is going to be one of the best midfielders
in the country. I fully expect him to make the England squad within twelve
months. Arsenal apparently value him at £8 million.

Mark Noble is West Ham born and bred. It's now up to the club to make it
clear to him that they intend to build a side ready to challenge for
honours, and that they will build the squad around him. If his head was
turned by a move to one of the big four, it would be a tragedy. If that is
not to happen he needs to be confident about the club's ambition. It still
breaks my heart to think what might have been if we had been able to hold
onto James, Sinclair, Cole, Carrick, Lampard, Kanoute, Di Canio, Johnson and
Defoe. Best not to go there.

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Chelsea ponder whether to appeal Lampard red card - Daily Mail
Last updated at 10:31am on 3rd March 2008

Chelsea were today studying footage of Frank Lampard's red card at West Ham,
before deciding whether to appeal. Lampard was dismissed by referee Peter
Walton in the 34th minute on the advice of a linesman who believed the
England star had shoved Luis Boa Morte in the face. TV pictures suggest that
Lampard only made contact with Boa Morte's chest, although the England
midfield star did appear to aim a kick at the West Ham player, who also
retaliated, when both were on the ground. Chelsea are mindful, however, of
the recent case involving Middlesbrough's Jeremy Aliadiere who was sent off
for a similar seemingly innocuous push on Liverpool's Javier Mascherano and
then, on appeal, had his three-match ban increased to four. A similar result
for Lampard would mean he would miss the crucial clash against fellow title
contenders Arsenal. West Ham remain in 10th spot, despite their heaviest
defeat of the season, and manager Alan Curbishley is determined to put
things right at Liverpool on Wednesday. He said: "We're desperately
disappointed for the fans and ourselves. A result like that hasn't happened
to us all season and now we have to try and bounce back. "The Chelsea game
was the start of a tough week and now we have Liverpool and Tottenham. It
won't be easy but we are determined not to allow the season to fizzle out."

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Reserves v West Ham - Rearranged - arsenalfc.com
Arsenal v West Ham United
Reserve League South
Underhill, Barnet FC
Monday, April 21, 2008
Kick-off: 7pm

Please be aware that our Reserve League South home fixture against West Ham
United (originally scheduled for Monday, March 3, 2008) will now be played
on Monday April 21, 2008.

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Sears closing in on Hammers debut
By Guardian-series

WEST Ham boss Alan Curbishley has dropped a hint that youngster Freddie
Sears could make his first senior appearance before the season is out. The
18-year-old (pictured) has been in red-hot form this season and has made a
seamless transition from Academy to reserve-team football. In all, he has
banged in 25 goals in 24 games. West Ham have 11 games remaining in the
Premier League and Curbishley revealed that the youngster is firmly in his
plans. "I think the natural progression is to get some sort of football and
we'll see if it's in the remaining games," said Curbishley. "He is different
to what we've got available at the moment - he's quick, wants to get in
behind people and goes about his business very quietly when he's around us.
He's a good finisher.
"He's been on the first-team trips for the last couple of months and luckily
enough has been on the bonuses as well, so he's happy."
Meanwhile, the Irons' reserve team Reserve League South fixture with Arsenal
- scheduled for tonight - has been rearranged. The game will now take place
on Monday, April 21 at Barnet FC's Underhill stadium. Kick off is at 7pm.

12:11pm today

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