Sunday, December 27

Daily WHUFC News -

West Ham United 2-0 Portsmouth
All the action as it happened from the Boxing Day meeting with Portsmouth at
the Boleyn Ground
26.12.2009

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United v Portsmouth
Boleyn Ground
Saturday 26 December
1pm
Referee: Lee Probert

Full time - And Lee Probert brings the action to a close and the players
make their way off to a rousing farewell from the Hammers fans. It was tense
and nervous at times but in the end the Hammers could and probably should
have had more. The win lifts the Hammers out of the bottom three for now and
will provide a huge lift before the London derby with Tottenham Hotspur in
two days' time.

90 min - Jimenez nearly makes it three as he stings the fingers of Begovic
with a free-kick from 20 yards.

90 min - We have had two of the four added minutes already. Just two more to
go.

90 min - Franco is the final player to be subbed for West Ham, as Zola takes
off the Mexican for Frank Nouble.

90 min - Well hopefully we have seen the last of the goals today and if we
have then it will be West Ham's third clean sheet of the season.

89 min - GOAL! And that must be that. Radoslav Kovac meets Jimenez's
free-kick to power a header past Begovic for his first goal of the season.

85 min - Behrami's introduction has given everyone a lift and Kovac is the
next to close with rasping effort from 25 yards.

84 min - Well West Ham are going all out for the second now and a one-two
between Behrami and Parker sees the former into a shooting position. Sadly
he drags his shot wide of the post.

82 min - Collison could, and probably should, have wrapped up the points
there but Begovic denies him. The Wales international had made his way into
the area but put his shot a little to close to the Pompey stopper, who has
had a great game today.

80 min - Piquionne has Portsmouth's best shot of the game so far. The
forward chested the ball away from Tomkins and forced Green into a diving
save with a low right-footed drive.

79 min - Grant has makes his final change with Brown making way for John
Utaka.

72 min - Behrami comes on in place of Diamanti and the Italian gets a huge
round of applause as he makes his way off.

68 min - It looks like we may be seeing Valon Behrami shortly as Zola has
called him over. The visitors have enjoyed the better of the last ten
minutes so Zola will be looking to counter that.

63 min - Jamie O'Hara is booked for a late tackle on Radoslav Kovac.

61 min - The visitors have started to threaten a bit more and Green had to
be alert to rush off his line and smother the ball at the feet of Piquionne.

59 min - Diamanti spotted Begovic off his line and tried to lob him from
about 50 yards. It goes a foot high and wide but certainly had the
Portsmouth stopper worried.

58 min - Not much to report on as most of the action has been taking place
in the midfield rather than either penalty area. Having said that, the
Hammers have looked the brighter when on the ball, so hopefully they can
create something soon.

53 min - Well Dindane is to leave the field but due to a substitution and
not another foul. He is taken off and replaced by Nwankwo Kanu.

49 min - We have 33,686 fans inside the Boleyn Ground so not quite a sell
out, but a good Boxing Day turnout nevertheless.

47 min - Only a superb save by Begovic stops Diamanti grabbing both his and
West Ham's second. The winger's shot took a deflection of Finnan and looked
to be looping in until he dived at full stretch and just managed to flick
the ball out from underneath the bar. From the resulting corner, Upson heads
straight at the Portsmouth stopper.

46 min - We are underway in the second period and Avram Grant has used the
break to make a change with Nadir Belhadj subbed off for Boateng.

Half time - Great half from the home side, who go in a goal to the good.
They are clapped off as they leave the field and all will be hoping for more
of the same in the second half.

45 min - Collison goes close to netting for the second consecutive Boxing
Day after firing inches wide from 12 yards. That would have been the perfect
way to end the half.

45 min - Jimenez shows some great footwork to dance around his marker and
deliver a tempting cross to the back post, but there is nobody there to meet
it.

45 min - We will have four added minutes at the end of the half.

43 min - Parker has been superb again so far today. The November player of
the month has run non-stop and has put his body on the line at every
opportunity.

38 min - A rare shot from the visitors as Tal Ben-Haim goes on a jinking run
past four players before blazing his shot well over Green's goal.

34 min - Dindane is doing well to stay on the pitch here as he brings down
Diamanti with another late tackle. I make that at least five fouls this
half. Probert calls him over and issues a final warning.

33 min - After a few niggly little fouls by the visitors, Collison goes
close with a volley similar to the one attempted by Didier Drogba last
weekend. Diamanti had played him in with a quick free-kick and the Wales
international volleyed just over from the angle.

28 min - Vital interception by Faubert, who came across to flick Frederic
Piquionne's pass away from the toe of Dindane.

25 min - That is Diamanti's third goal in as many games following his
strikes against Bolton Wanderers and the Blues last weekend.

23 min - GOAL! Diamanti steps up and just like against Chelsea last week,
puts the ball to the right of the goalkeeper and into the back of the net.
How important could that goal prove to be?

23 min - Penalty to West Ham. Jimenez is tripped in the area by Brown.

20 min - Parker is in the wars a bit here as Michael Brown launches a high
tackle on him. He too is carded by Probert.

19 min - Dindane makes another late tackle, this time on Parker and this
time Lee Probert chooses to issue a yellow card to the Portsmouth No24.

15 min - Brief stoppage now as Mark Noble is down and it looks like he will
not be able to continue. Luis Jimenez will be the man to replace him.

10 min - Good move from the hosts as Ilunga and Collison work together to
set Diamanti free in the area. His low cross is hacked clear by Younes
Kaboul. The best moment of the game so far.

8 min - First shot of the game from Scott Parker as tries to beat Asmir
Begovic with a 30 yard chip. Sadly, if flies about five yards over.

5 min - Diamanti is caught late by Dindane and the referee has a word with
the Portsmouth forward, but opts to keep his cards in his pocket this time.

3 min - Good tracking from Alessandro Diamanti, who is playing on the
left-hand side of the midfield five. After taking a heavy touch the Italian
slid in to block Steve Finnan's clearance.

2 min - Early corner for the visitors but it comes to nothing as the Hammers
win a goal kick.

1 min - Portsmouth get the game underway and will be attacking the Bobby
Moore Stand in the first half.

12.57pm - Portsmouth have not taken the usual half of the Sir Trevor
Brooking Stand so we have a few more claret and blue fans in that stand.

12.55pm - It is 'Bubbles' time and the crowd, which looks to be near a
sell-out, are in good voice. Hopefully they will be able to recreate the
atmosphere that was here last Sunday.

12.50pm - We are in the home straight to kick-off now and the tension is
building. Both sets of players have finished their warm-ups and made their
way back to the dressing rooms. There was nice moment as Mullins and Jack
Collison left the field together and stopped for a hug and a chat. Let us
just hope the friendship stops once they are on the pitch!

Good afternoon from the Boleyn Ground.

The teams are in and Gianfranco Zola makes one enforced change to the team
that drew with Chelsea last Sunday. Danny Gabbidon is ruled out with a
hamstring injury so James Tomkins takes his place in the heart of the
Hammers defence. There is also the welcome return of Valon Behrami to the
substitutes bench. Contrary to some reports, Guille Franco is available and
will lead the home side's attack once more.

Portsmouth make two changes to the team that beat Liverpool 2-0. Former
Hammer Hayden Mullins takes Kevin-Prince Boateng's place in midfield, while
Aruna Dindane comes in up front in place of Hassan Yebda.

West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Tomkins, Upson, Ilunga, Collison, Kovac,
Parker, Noble (Jimenez 16), Diamanti (Behrami 72), Franco (Nouble 90)
Subs: Stech, Spector, da Costa, Stanislas

Portsmouth: Begovic, Finnan, Ben-Haim, Kaboul, Belhadj (Boateng 46),
Hreidarsson, Mullins, Brown (Utaka 79), O'Hara, Piquionne, Dindane (Kanu
53)
Subs: Ashdown, Wilson, Diop, Yebda

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Zola on a high
WHUFC.com
With several catching the eye and a fine result, Gianfranco Zola ended
Boxing Day in upbeat mood
26.12.2009

Gianfranco Zola was full of praise once again for his West Ham United
players after they earned a deserved 2-0 home win against Portsmouth and
moved out of the bottom three. The Boxing Day triumph was secured by
Alessandro Diamanti's first-half penalty, his third goal in three games, and
a powerful Radoslav Kovac header in the closing stages. It was no more than
the Hammers deserved, and was in no small part due to the influence of Scott
Parker who was once again a shining light in midfield. "The importance of
Scott Parker I cannot even measure. For enthusiasm and the way he leads by
example," said Zola, before also singling out Kovac for his defensive play
that has been a major influence on freeing up Parker to roam forward in
recent weeks. This was especially the case in the 1-1 draw against Chelsea
last week before Saturday's triumph over Portsmouth. "I must mention Kovac,
who was outstanding," he added. "The last two games he has been incredible.
I was more delighted than him, trust me. The goal was the final touch but
the whole game was massive. He was digging in. "It was a fantastic win.
Massive I tell you, I rated this as a six-point game. Because it was so
important for the table, for the morale, to give a bit of consistency and
for the crowd. I'm pleased the boys won it with a lot of character and it
will be a big boost for everybody. "I enjoyed it very much. A victory is a
victory and when you are involved like I am you enjoy it very much. We are
all emotionally involved and I am the first one. We are building something
here that will give us belief of what we are doing. It was massive."
It is clear from words and actions that the manager has the full support of
his men, although he played down his influence when asked. "It is a sign
that they are playing that they want to do good things. Whether they are
playing for me I don't know. "I hope they are playing for everybody and I
include myself in everybody because I am part of the group as we are all
together in this. It is this that has produced these results. You can see
the enthusiasm and the crowd is very much involved with us and that is what
is producing good results."
Zola was mindful that Portsmouth have also impressed of late, not least with
a 2-0 defeat of Liverpool, and said that explained the tentative opening to
the match as both sides looked to gain the all-important first goal. "I was
expecting them to come back. They are a side that is playing very well. You
saw it. They passed the ball around the pitch very well and made it very
difficult for us. We held the ball very well and they had a couple of
chances but not very big ones. It was a solid performance and they did
exactly what they expected us to do."
As last year's Boxing Day triumph against Portsmouth kick-started a move up
the table, the manager is hoping his team build on this season's success and
take it into Monday's derby trip to Tottenham Hotspur. "Hopefully it will be
the same. Now we have got other games coming up but we are going to face
them with more security. The boys are there and they are there and they are
showing it."
The manager will be without Mark Noble on Monday after he felt his hamstring
early in the first half but the early signs are that "it is nothing major".
He also had confidence that Guille Franco would be OK to go again against
Spurs after another battling performance leading the line. Luis Jimenez
profited from Noble's 16th-minute departure to have a hand in both goals. He
won the 22nd-minute penalty after being brought down by Michael Brown before
whipping in a delightful free-kick for Kovac to convert for his first goal
at the Boleyn Ground. "He did very well," said Zola about his Chile
playmaker. "Everyone is coming in and doing their job. Jimenez was good. It
hasn't been easy for him but this is an opportunity for him to regain the
terrain he lost in the early part of the season."
So to Monday at White Hart Lane and Zola's parting words were a reminder
that he is well aware of what the match means to the loyal band of
travelling Hammers supporters. "I know the importance to the fans and we
will play with our best and with this spirit we could do something
important."

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Portsmouth downed again
WHUFC.com
Goals from Alessandro Diamanti and Radoslav Kovac helped West Ham United to
a vital Boxing Day win
26.12.2009

West Ham United 2-0 Portsmouth

West Ham United secured their second consecutive Boxing Day victory over
Portsmouth to move out of the bottom three of the Barclays Premier League.
Alessandro Diamanti's penalty - the third game in a row in which he has
scored - and a Radoslav Kovac header were enough to win the match and
deliver a belated Christmas present to the Hammers fans among the 33,686
crowd. With so much at stake, unsurprisingly, the game was an intense if not
slightly scrappy affair punctuated by flashes of individual brilliance.
Diamanti and his fellow Serie A summer arrival Luis Jimenez, on for early
hamstring victim Mark Noble, provided much of this attacking flair for the
hosts. There was also the welcome sight of a late return for Valon Behrami -
all of which looks good for Monday's trip to Tottenham Hotspur.
It was Jimenez and Diamanti that combined forces to conjure up West Ham's
opener as a slick passing move down the left saw Jimenez tripped in the area
by Michael Brown. And just as he had done against Chelsea last week,
Diamanti placed the spot-kick hard and low into the bottom right-hand corner
of the net. Portsmouth rarely threatened in the first half, with just a
harmless Tal Ben-Haim shot their only chance of note. With the other teams
around them either playing later on the day or on 27 December, both sets of
players knew a victory could provide them with an early start on their
competitors. At times the tensions got a little too much with referee Lee
Probert issuing yellow cards to Aruna Dindane and Michael Brown - both for
fouls on the imperious Scott Parker - before the first half was out. The
second period carried on in the same vein and only a truly outstanding save
from Asmir Begovic kept the visitors within touching distance of their
hosts. The Portsmouth stopper had to dive at full stretch to tip Diamanti's
deflected drive over the crossbar.
It was to be the hosts' best effort for 20 minutes as the visitors started
to show the form that had helped them to a 2-0 victory over Liverpool last
time out. Robert Green demonstrated quick feet and thinking to dive and
claim from Frederic Piquionne. Shortly after a diving save thwarted the
French forward in Portsmouth's best moment of the game. In between those
chances Gianfranco Zola had brought on the fit-again Behrami as he looked to
consolidate his side's position. The change seemed to work as both the
Hammers and the claret and blue faithful backing stepped up a grear.
Jack Collison ensured the nails would be bitten right until the end when he
shot too close to Begovic when placed before Kovac fired over from 25 yards.
The Czech international would not have to wait from his first goal of the
season and second in West Ham colours as he rose to meet Jimenez's
right-wing free-kick to thump a header home in front of an ecstatic Bobby
Moore Stand. The win moved the Hammers out of the bottom three, and - along
with the first clean sheet since August - will provide a huge shot of
confidence ahead of the big derby with Tottenham in two days' time.

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West Ham 2 - 0 Portsmouth
BBC.co.uk
Diamanti gives the Hammers fans a late Christmas present from 12 yards
By Mark Ashenden

West Ham hoisted themselves out of the bottom three with a hard-earned
victory over fellow strugglers Portsmouth. After a tense opening, Alessandro
Diamanti scored from the spot for his third in as many games after Hayden
Mullins fouled substitute Luis Jimenez. Pompey were more positive in the
second half with Kevin Boateng and the lively Frederic Piquionne both going
close. But the Hammers held firm at the back and Radoslav Kovac nodded in
Jimenez's curling free-kick to secure the points. Following their excellent
point against leaders Chelsea last week, it was three deserved points for
manager Gianfranco Zola's men to claim only their fourth league win of the
season and their first clean sheet in 16 league games. It was a strangely
timid opening for the table's bottom two clubs with any sign of forward
movement soon quelled by two very congested midfields. After two wins in
five league games for new boss Avram Grant, the Pompey camp would have been
a happy one in the build-up to Christmas but it was the home faithful who
were singing on 23 minutes. Having endured the early departure of injured
Mark Noble, it was his replacement Jimenez who created their opening goal
after being hacked down by former Hammers midfielder Mullins.
It was West Ham's seventh penalty this season and Diamanti had no problem in
tucking the ball past keeper Asmir Begovic, who again deputised for David
James. The Italian's third goal in three games understandably produced a
huge smile from Zola on the sidelines. Portsmouth's best chance of the first
half fell to a player without a goal for nearly five years as defender Tal
Ben-Haim blazed over after a fine run. West Ham picked up the pace and
missed a golden opportunity to double the lead when Jack Collison dragged
the ball wide after being set up by the trickery of the impressive Scott
Parker. Soon after the interval it was only the left hand of Begovic that
prevented a second goal, the 32-year-old Bosnian tipping away Diamanti's
shot after it deflected off Steve Finnan's boot. Nwankwo Kanu was introduced
to provide some much-needed support to striker Frederic Piquionne and the
pair came close to creating an equaliser but keeper Robert Green was alert
to the back-heeled pass. The tension returned to the legs of the hosts and
substitute Boateng begun to pull the strings for Portsmouth from midfield,
although his downward volley was easily caught by Green.
West Ham showed occasional glimpses of creativity despite focusing their
attentions on their rearguard and Collison and Valon Behrami both went close
in the final minutes to killing the game. But with almost the final kick of
the game, Jimenez swung in a free-kick to find the unmarked Kovac leaping
brilliantly to power in his header past Begovic. Portsmouth boss Grant now
has much to ponder as he sees four of his players head to the Nations Cup in
Angola, with the club still under a transfer embargo.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Portsmouth boss Avram Grant on Premier League survival: "Everything is
possible. We have the quality to win. I've said so many times and I'm not a
person to change my mind."

West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola: "It was a fantastic win, a massive one. I
rated this as a six-point game, it was so important for the table and for
morale. "The boys won it with a lot of character and it will be a big boost
for everybody."

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Gold spotted - again
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 26th December 2009
By: Staff Writer

Businessman David Gold was in attendance as West Ham beat Portsmouth 2-0
today - hours after rumours of a purported second bid by the former
Birmingham City owner and business partner David Sullivan for West Ham
United surfaced. Gold and Sullivan made an initial £50million bid for the
club a fortnight ago, an offer that was widely reported to be unsatisfactory
to current owners CB Holdings. Since then little has been heard from either
camp bar a brief statement posted on whufc.com on Christmas Eve reaffirming
CB Holdings' intent to retain ownership of the club for up to another two
years. For whose benefit that was remains unclear. However fresh reports
claim that a second, improved offer of £60million was made by Gold and
Sullivan last week - and that a decision is yet to be made by CB Holdings.
In tomorrow morning's News of the World a 'spokesman' for the pair is
quoted, insisting that they would not up their opening bid in stark contrast
to the rumours. Gold and Sullivan appeared to have a clear run as the only
interested bidders following reports that Tony Fernandes had pulled out of
the race - although the CEO of Air Asia posted a cryptic 'let's see' note on
Twitter on Christmas Eve, in response to emails from West Ham supporters
regarding his interest. The club's current owners, who are said to be
looking for around £80million for West Ham have refused to buckle to
pressure to sell as soon as possible and insist that they are in no hurry to
do so. Gold arrived at the Boleyn an hour-and-a-half before kick-off today
and watched West Ham's 2-0 win from the executive boxes. It was the third
time the former Birmingham City owner has been spotted at the ground in
recent weeks. Fernandes was also amongst the 33,686 crowd.

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Parker: leading by example
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 26th December 2009
By: Staff Writer

Gianfranco Zola hailed the contribution of midfield dynamo Scott Parker
after West Ham beat Portsmouth at the Boleyn this lunchtime. Parker has been
in sensational form for United in recent weeks despite the club's lowly
league position - and his efforts were recognised by a beaming Zola who told
the BBC: "I'm used to it; Scott Parker is leading by example. "When he
plays like that he just lifts everyone. He's incredible and it's good to
have him on the team."
Reflecting on the win that leaves the Irons just three points adrift of
11th-placed Stoke, Zola added that he was delghted by the performance -
whilst insisting that he never felt worried - despite Portsmouth's second
half rally. "It was a massive result in terms of points and confidence," he
added. "I knew it wasn't going to be comfortable but on the pitch I had
eleven lions. It was good; we kept our composure until the end. "Right now
the spirit in the camp is very good and today's result will make it even
better. But we need consistency - that is the key. We're not in a position
where we can afford to get a good result and then a bad one."
The win lifted the Hammers out of the relegation zone, four points clear of
today's opponents who remain rock bottom of the Premier League.

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West Ham Utd 2 Portsmouth 0
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 26th December 2009
By: Staff Writer

The Irons moved out of the relegation zone with a relatively comfortable 2-0
win over a rudderless Pompey side at the Boleyn this afternoon. An
Alessandro Diamanti penalty and a late header from Radoslav Kovac secured
West Ham's fourth league win of the season against a Portsmouth side bereft
of invention and ideas in front of an expectant holiday crowd of some
33,000. Gianfranco Zola's side were good value for the win in the end,
despite enduring a worrying period during the second half. The clean sheet
was an added bonus, being as it was United's first since the stalemate at
Blackburn on 29th August, some four months ago. After a fairly uneventful
opening quarter-of-an-hour, one not unexpected perhaps given both teams'
precarious league positions, the Irons began to take control of the game and
finally broke the deadlock on 23 minutes.
Luis Jimenez, on as a 16th minute substitute for the injured Mark Noble was
sent tumbling in the area by a poor challenge from former Hammer Hayden
Mullins, who had received a warm welcome by the home fans prior to the
match. Diamanti, who went into the game with two goals from his last two
games made it three out of three - despite a gallant effort from 'keeper
Asmir Begovic.
With no further goals to follow United went into the break with their
slender advantage intact - a lead they deserved on balance of play. But the
second half was to prove a different story as Zola's side once again
retreated into their collective shell to the dismay of a home crowd that
felt, reasonably enough, that the Irons should be looking for a second goal
rather than settling for protecting the one they already had - a policy that
has too often ended in tears this season.
The visitors, bouyed by West Ham's retreat certainly made a game of it - and
had they a half-decent striker on the pitch would almost certainly have
punished the home side for sitting too deep. Fortunately for the Irons, main
striker Frederic Piquionne, for all his bustle and effort was having a bad
day, summed up best by his failure to beat Rob Green when presented with a
gilt-edged opportunity ten minutes from time.
By that stage Pompey were running out of both steam and ideas, and the
Hammers once again began to take control of the game - a situation greatly
assisted by the welcome return of Valon Behrami as a 72nd minute substitute
for a tiring Diamanti. The Swiss midfielder, back after surgery was the
inspiration for the second goal and the hatful of chances that preceeded it,
which included efforts by himself and Jack Collison that were both only
inches away from finding their intended target.
The second, decisive goal arrived with less than 60 seconds of normal time
remaining and yet again, Chilean playmaker Jimenez was involved. His
inviting free kick was met by a powerful header from Radoslav Kovac, who got
the goal he deserved for two excellent performances within a week.
Kovac's second goal for the club, and his first since making a loan spell
permanent marked the end of the game as a contest and a most welcome victory
for Zola's side, whose win against Portsmouth a year ago to the day sparked
the kind of revival recent performances have suggested could well be
repeated this term. The win initially lifted the Irons four places up the
Premier League to 15th, although later results saw Zola's men drop back to
17th - but most importantly, out of the relegation zone. Any result against
a resurgent Tottenham at White Hart Lane on Monday will be welcome yet
perhaps unexpected - whilst the FA Cup tie against Arsenal a week today will
prove a welcome distraction from a difficult league campaign. But it is then
that the real work begins as Zola's side face fellow strugglers Wolves (h),
Portsmouth (a), Blackburn (h), Burnley (a), Birmingham (h) and Hull (h) all
before the end of February - matches that will go a long way to deciding
West Ham's fate this season.
The good news for Zola is that bar Carlton Cole, he goes into those
forthcoming games with a fully fit first choice XI - and Cole himself is
thought to be just two or three weeks away from a welcome return. The bad
news is that club owners CB Holdings appear intent on flogging at least one
of the club's leading stars during the transfer window - a policy that could
potentially prove disastrous.

West Ham United 2 Portsmouth 0: match facts

West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Tomkins, Upson, Ilunga, Collison, Kovac,
Parker, Noble (Jimenez 16), Diamanti (Behrami 72), Franco (Nouble 90).

Subs not used: Stech, Spector, Da Costa, Stanislas.

Goals: Diamanti (pen 23), Kovac (89).

Portsmouth: Begovic, Finnan, Ben-Haim, Kaboul, Belhadj (Boateng 46),
Hreidarsson, Mullins, Brown (Utaka 79), O'Hara, Piquionne, Dindane (Kanu
53).

Subs not used: Ashdown, Wilson, Diop, Yebda.

Booked: Dindane (19), Brown (21), O'Hara (63).

Referee: Lee Probert (7).

Attendance: 33,686.

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Zola hails 'massive' win
West Ham boss delighted after taking spoils in relegation six pointer
Last updated: 26th December 2009
SSN

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola was delighted after his side beat rock-bottom
Portsmouth 2-0 to climb out of the Premier League drop zone. The Hammers
took the lead via Alessandro Diamanti's first-half penalty before Radoslav
Kovac made sure of the points with a late header. The win lifted Zola's side
up two places from second from bottom and the Italian was delighted with his
side's Boxing Day display. He said: "It was a fantastic win, a massive one.
I rated this as a six-point game, it was so important for the table and for
morale. "The boys won it with a lot of character and it will be a big boost
for everybody." Man of the match Scott Parker put in a box-to-box display
and Zola hailed his influence. "He is so important," said Zola. "You can't
even measure it. He leads with his enthusiasm and example and I feel lucky
to have a player like him." The West Ham boss is now hoping his side can
repeat their efforts of last season when a Boxing Day victory against Pompey
sparked a run that saw them climb the table. "Hopefully it will be the same
as last year," the Italian said. "We will face games now with a bit more
security. "In this period coming up I think we can do something important."
On a less positive note, midfielder Mark Noble suffered a hamstring injury,
which is expected to keep him out of Monday's derby clash against Spurs. "He
felt his hamstring and had to come off," Zola confirmed. "I think he'll be
out for Monday."

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Hammers claim crucial win
Diamanti penalty and Kovac header seal points
Last updated: 26th December 2009
SSN

Man of Match: Scott Parker. Worked tirelessly all game for the Hammers,
making several vital tackles.
Moment of the match: Alessandro Diamanti's penalty. The first goal was
crucial in this game and it went West Ham's way. The Hammers were still
nervous at times afterwards but deserved their win.
Attempt of the match: Diamanti tried an effort from just inside his own half
after spotting Asmir Begovic off his line but was just wide.
Save of the match: Begovic pulled off a great save to deny Diamanti's
deflected shot soon after the restart.
Talking point: Can West Ham now push on and pull right away from the
drop-zone, while does this defeat mean Pompey are dead and buried?
Goal of the game: Radoslav Kovac's. Rose above Hayden Mullins to head home
Luis Jimenez's free-kick.

An Alessandro Diamanti penalty and Radoslav Kovac header proved the
difference as West Ham beat bottom side Portsmouth to climb out of the
Premier League drop-zone.
The home side, who started the day second from bottom, got the crucial first
goal when substitute Luis Jimenez was fouled in the box and Diamanti
despatched the spot-kick after 23 minutes. Soon after the break, Pompey
keeper Asmir Begovic pulled off a fantastic save to deny a deflected shot
from Diamanti, while substitute Kevin-Prince Boateng went close at the other
end. But Kovac made sure of the points when heading home a Jimenez free-kick
with a minute to go. Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola will be hoping this will
be a repeat of last year's Boxing Day win over Pompey as his side then went
on a decent run in the second half of the season. Pompey had never lost at
West Ham's ground in the Premier League but they never looked like
continuing that run with this feeble effort. To make matters worse for
Pompey boss Avram Grant, he now loses several players because of the African
Cup of Nations, not that they made much of an impact here. Grant's men came
into the match off the back of a morale-boosting victory over Liverpool and
there was a mood of optimism during the week. The Hammers also had a decent
result in their previous game, a 1-1 home draw against Chelsea, but it did
not mean this clash was any sort of spectacle.
Both sides were nervous, struggled to keep possession and gave a clear
explanation as to why they started the festive period 19th and 20th in the
table. The first significant moment came when Zola was forced into a change,
in the 16th minute, when Mark Noble needed treatment for a knock, with
attack-minded Jimenez coming on for his first appearance since scoring
against Burnley in November. With chances not being created, referee Lee
Probert was kept busy, firstly by Aruna Dindane's fouls on Diamanti, while
Scott Parker earned a yellow. Michael Brown also went in the book for a knee
into Parker's thigh. With the tackles flying in, it was no surprise that a
mis-timed challenge led to West Ham's 23rd minute opener. The move started
with Julien Faubert's ball forward for Parker, Younes Kaboul failing to
clear when he had a chance and Guillermo Franco getting blocked from his
route to goal. It fell invitingly for Jimenez, who appeared to be tripped by
former Hammers midfielder Hayden Mullins, as well as Brown. Probert pointed
to the spot and Diamanti confidently tucked away the penalty, taking his
overall tally for the season to five, with three goals in his last three
games. Jack Collison almost took advantage of a quick free-kick to double
the lead but the Welshman volleyed over the crossbar. He then fired just
wide from close range in first-half stoppage-time when Parker pulled the
ball back from the byline.
Grant needed to change things drastically so brought on Boateng, who had
been struggling with a virus ahead of the match, for Nadir Belhadj at the
start of the second half. It did not take long for Dindane to be replaced
either after his woeful first half, with Kanu being brought on. But Pompey
could have fallen further behind two minutes after the restart when
Diamanti's angled drive deflected off Steve Finnan and Begovic, in goal as
David James is still nursing a calf complaint, had to pull off a fine save.
Diamanti then also went close with a cheeky long-range lob from just inside
his own half. Boateng caused the hosts problems and almost embarrassed
Herita Ilunga when the Hammers full-back left a ball for Robert Green to
collect. Boateng took the ball away from the goalkeeper and defender but
Ilunga did well to get back and deflect his finish wide. Pompey striker
Frederic Piquionne had an effort saved late on, while Collison and Behrami
both went close for the hosts before Kovac headed home Jimenez's free-kick a
minute from full-time to seal the vital victory.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The moment of truth approaches
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 26th December 2009
By: Gary Portugal

On the surface, West Ham supporters may have plenty to be thankful for as of
the conclusion of activities on Boxing Day.

An unlikely point against Chelsea that was earned with an excellent
performance, coupled with a win against Pompey that by no means looked
certain following their improvement under Avram Grant. We could have bottled
it in both these fixtures, as relegation-threatened sides often do, but
instead we took four points from six. A positive step, along what is going
to be a treacherous road to ultimate safety.

It's no coincidence that in these two fixtures we conceded only one goal in
total with Matthew Upson present - and no coinicidence that in the three
fixtures prior to these two we lost every match, conceding eight goals in
total, without Upson. It tells you all you need to know about how important
Upson is, not only to our defence, but to our survival in the top flight. He
is simply irreplaceable this season, as are Scott Parker and Carlton Cole.
The one player who could be sacrificed, if and only if we got Ben Foster on
loan from Man United, is Rob Green. But even to sell Green would, in my
opinion, be a mistake, at least in this window.

From a supporters' point of view it is simple as could be: with the team in
a relegation battle, why sell ANYONE, as we're struggling as it is? Why do
anything to make life even more difficult for a threadbare squad, especially
if whoever we brought in was not an adequate replacement for who we sold?

That is not what I would call logic; it's simply common sense, which any
schoolboy would understand.

If that is the case, then why all the speculation about possible sales of
key West Ham players in the window? Surely, if the owners want to sell the
club, their best chance of doing so at a good price is if the club is NOT
stripped of its key player assets, and if its position in the table is
improved. Of course,holding on to your best players and moving up the table
go hand in hand. Then why is the media so convinced that the likes of Upson
in particular, and Green, Parker and Cole could all be sold? Surely the sale
of one or more of these players would see us relegated. Yet CB Holdings
claim that they are no pressure to sell the club quickly. If that is the
case, then why would CB want to sell players and jeopeardize their entire
investment?

Why? Because the interests of CB Holdings do not appear to be aligned with
the interests of West Ham supporters . CB Holdings do not seem to be
terribly concerned one way or the other whether West Ham avoid the drop or
not. If they were concerned about our potential relegation they would not
have sold Collins, and they would have successfully re-signed Neill for
another season to ensure that we did not have the fourth-worst defence in
the League. And they would have bought both cover for Cole and a strike
partner for him in pre-season, as opposed to waiting til the season was five
weeks old to get Guillermo Franco. And therein lies our problem as
supporters - not only is our club competing against 19 others in the Premier
League, but it is also competing against a 20th opponent, the club's
ownership.

The owners of West Ham don't appear to be bothered about our potential
relegation, which would of course see them lose their entire investment in
the club. Sky revenues would disappear, ticket sales would plummet and
merchandising profits would vanish etc. Even the money that we would get
from sales of players would be marginal as the sales would all be cut-rate
desperation deals. So why are CB Holdings seemingly oblivious to all this?
For a start, at the moment the only thing on their minds seems to be selling
the club at some unrealistically high price. If they can find some fool to
pay over the odds for the club in a recession they'll have it. Otherwise,
they have no intention of selling - and certainly not for under
£80-100million.

Well if CB Holdings are not going to sell in the near future, then certainly
they don't want to see us get relegated, right? WRONG. It is a damn good
thing that we got results against Chelsea and Pompey because if we did not,
there could have been a firesale in January. Were we sitting bottom of the
table New Year's Day, with little prospect of beating the drop and no chance
of finding that "magic buyer" prepared to reach CB's sky high valuation of
the club, what would stop CB from selling all our top players? Absolutely
nothing. Which is why a point would not go amiss at White Hart Lane either.

Simply put, I think CB Holdings' game is to extract as much cash out of West
Ham as it can in the short term, meaning in the January window, even if it
results in our relegation. They don't seem at all concerned about the
terrible impact that all the window speculation has had on the morale of the
players, managers and supporters and on our results thus far this term. From
the selfish perspective of CB Holdings if we go down,so what ? If we go
down, that could force the club into admistration. And who holds the bag
then? Not CB Holdings. Because if the club goes into administration, then
all those debts that West Ham have could disappear in smoke. Leaving CB with
no obligation to make good on those debts, nor to honour contracts with
players, managers and other staff.

After all, if CB are really broke or skint, who is going to be able to come
after them here or in Iceland? If CB are facing insolvency themselves, then
who is going to be able to collect anything from them? Nobody. So one could
argue that in essence, CB Holdings are sitting on a free option. If it all
goes pears, it's not their problem - they may be able to just walk away from
it and say "blame it on the credit crunch and the recession." In which case
it will be the players, managers, staff and most importantly, the supporters
who are hung out to dry.

Upson has 18 months left to go on his deal and you can easily understand why
he does not want to extend it under the current West Ham ownership. But that
is no excuse for selling him in January. He could still be sold in June, at
a decent, even if somewhat lower price than now, without putting the club's
survival in doubt now. But that assumes that the Icelandics actually care
about West Ham United as a going concern. Which, in my opinion, they don't.

And that is why CB Holdings, ladies and gents, are a cancer which must be
exterminated from West Ham United, before they exterminate our club.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham set to snub former Birmingham City owners David Gold and David
Sullivan
Daily Mail
By Rob Draper, Mail on Sunday Chief Football Writer Last updated at 8:53 PM
on 26th December 2009

West Ham's statement during the week that they are in no hurry to sell the
club is due to the fact that none of the bidders has come up with an offer
that troubled Icelandic bank Straumur consider acceptable. The four
interested parties are understood to be former Birmingham City owners David
Sullivan and David Gold, London-based financial analysis firm Intermarket,
Air Asia founder Tony Fernandes, who has since withdrawn, and an
unidentified American individual. Sullivan and Gold are unlikely to succeed,
given that their £50million bid falls below Straumur's valuation and they
have antagonised the club by the manner with which they have conducted
themselves.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers strike blow in relegation fight
ESPN
Updated: December 26, 2009, 8:06 AM UK

Alessandro Diamanti scored his third goal in as many games to maintain West
Ham's hopes of survival and keep Portsmouth rooted to the bottom of the
Premier League.
The Italian forward struck from the penalty spot at Upton Park midway
through the first half of a match short on quality, clear-cut opportunities
or reasons to suggest either team deserves to be higher in the table.
Radoslav Kovac added the second just before the end. Hammers boss Gianfranco
Zola will be hoping this was a repeat of last year's Boxing Day win over
Pompey as his side then went on a decent run in the second half of the
season. Pompey had never lost at West Ham's ground in the Premier League but
they never looked like continuing that run with this feeble effort. To make
matters worse for Pompey boss Avram Grant, he now loses several players
because of the African Nations Cup - not that they made an impact in this
game. Pompey will be reminded they have to defy the odds to retain their
top-flight status this season as most teams bottom at Christmas go down -
West Brom in 2005 are the only team to avoid it in Premier League history.
Grant's men, however, were coming off the back of a morale-boosting victory
over Liverpool and there was a mood of optimism during the week. The Hammers
also had a decent result in their previous game, against Chelsea, but it did
not mean this clash was any sort of spectacle. Both sides were nervous,
struggled to keep possession and gave a clear explanation as to why they
started the festive period 19th and 20th in the table. The first significant
moment came when Zola was forced into a change, in the 16th minute, when
Mark Noble needed treatment for a knock, with attack-minded Luis Jimenez
coming on for his first appearance since scoring against Burnley in
November. With chances not being created, referee Lee Probert was kept busy,
firstly by Aruna Dindane's fouls on Diamanti while Scott Parker earned a
yellow. Michael Brown also went in the book for a knee into Parker's thigh.
With the tackles flying in, it was no surprise that a mistimed challenge led
to West Ham's 23rd minute opener.
The move started with Julien Faubert's ball forward for Parker, Younes
Kaboul failing to clear when he had a chance and Guillermo Franco getting
blocked from his route to goal.
It fell invitingly for Jimenez, who looked to be tripped by former Hammers
midfielder Hayden Mullins, but replays showed that Brown was the culprit.
Either way, Diamanti confidently tucked away the penalty when Probert
pointed to the spot. After goals against Bolton and Chelsea in his last
games, it took his overall tally for the season to five.
Jack Collison almost took advantage of a quick free-kick to double the lead
- but the Welshman volleyed over the crossbar. He then fired just wide from
close range in first-half stoppage-time when Parker pulled the ball back
from the byline. Grant needed to change things drastically so brought on
Kevin-Prince Boateng, who had been struggling with a virus ahead of the
match, for Nadir Belhadj. It did not take long for Dindane to be replaced
either after his woeful first half, with Kanu being brought on. They could
have fallen further behind two minutes after the restart when Diamanti's
angled drive deflected off Steve Finnan, and Asmir Begovic, in goal as David
James is still nursing a calf complaint, had to leap across his goal to pull
off a fine save. Diamanti also went over with a cheeky 45-yard lob. Boateng
caused the hosts problems and almost embarrassed Herita Ilunga when the
Hammers full-back left a ball for Robert Green to collect. Boateng took the
ball away from goalkeeper and defender but his finish went wide. Pompey
striker Frederic Piquionne had an effort saved late on, while Collison and
Bahrami both went close for the hosts. Kovac headed home Jimenez's free-kick
a minute from full-time to seal the win.

After the match manager Gianfranco Zola hailed the character of Scott Parker
and the rest of his players as they fought for a vital victory. "It was a
fantastic win, a massive one," said Zola. "I rated this as a six-point game,
it was so important for the table and for morale. The boys won it with a lot
of character and it will be a big boost for everybody." He may not have got
on the scoresheet but Parker was the clear man of the match with his
box-to-box display. "He is so important," Zola said. "You can't even measure
it. He leads with his enthusiasm and example and I feel lucky to have a
player like him." Zola is hoping his side can repeat their efforts of last
season when a Boxing Day victory against Pompey sparked a run that saw them
climb the table. "Hopefully it will be the same as last year," the Italian
said. "We will face games now with a bit more security. In this period
coming up I think we can do something important." The only negative aspect
of the afternoon was a hamstring injury to Mark Noble that is expected to
keep the midfielder out of Monday's clash against Tottenham. "He felt his
hamstring and had to come off," Zola confirmed. "I think he'll be out for
Monday."

Pompey boss Avram Grant could only bring on Kevin-Prince Boateng at
half-time as the midfielder was ill prior to the match. "Boateng had a virus
so we couldn't play him for the start as he hadn't trained all week," he
said. "In the second half we dominated the game apart from a few
counter-attacks. The game didn't start well for us and we conceded a ninth
penalty of the season." Grant loses four players to the African Nations Cup,
while Jamie O'Hara will miss the game against Arsenal next week through
suspension. There is still uncertainty over whether Pompey will be allowed
to make transfers in January due to their financial situation, with Grant
adding: "We will know this week." The former Chelsea boss is still positive
about staying up. "Everything is possible," he said. "We have the quality to
win. I've said so many times and I'm not a person to change my mind."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Alessandro Diamanti's gem lifts West Ham clear of Premier League relegation
rivals
West Ham 2 Portsmouth 0
The Times
Ivo Tennant at Upton Park

As if to emphasise the slender difference between two clubs at the foot of
the Premier League table, a penalty was all that divided Portsmouth and West
Ham until the London side's second goal a minute from time settled the
matter. On Boxing Day a year ago West Ham won 4-1 against a considerably
stronger team than Portsmouth fielded yesterday, which says something about
how standards have fallen at both clubs.

Alessandro Diamanti, a consummate penalty taker, scored after 23 minutes
when Michael Brown brought down Luis Jimenez. West Ham had the better
chances, not least when Radoslav Kovac directed a powerful header from
Jimenez's free kick to assure themselves victory.

"It was massive, massive," said West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola, repeating
that same adjective in his smiling way when summing up the contribution of
Scott Parker. "We showed a lot of character — the team is playing for
everybody else, not just for me. Kovac was also outstanding, apart from his
goal. Portsmouth passed the ball around very well but we had big chances."

In a strange kind of way, Portsmouth might well have benefited had Brown
been sent off for an assertive challenge on Parker: it was the kind that
stricter referees than Lee Probert would have penalised with a red card.
Four minutes later, he caught Jimenez on the shin inside his own penalty
area. A spot kick it unquestionably was.

Diamanti, who opened the scoring from the penalty spot in last week's 1-1
draw against Chelsea, beat Asmir Begovic with his left foot — his third goal
in three matches. Other than that, it was a first half of two shots from
Jack Collison, one volleyed over and the other struck low and just wide from
Parker's cross, and further crass challenges, this time from Aruna Dindane.
He, too, could be said to have been lucky to stay on the pitch.

So sleepy Boxing Day fare for the most part, but after half-time came the
moment of the match. A shot from Diamanti was deflected by Steve Finnan over
the head seemingly of Begovic. Yet here was a one-handed save of the highest
order, and by an understudy to boot at a time when David James' fitness as
well as his future at Fratton Park is far from assured.

As for Portsmouth farther up the field, their game picked up when they
sensibly brought on Kanu early in the second half. One instantaneous flick
was of a class above anything bar the goalkeeping but, as when Kevin-Prince
Boateng, an earlier substitute, manoeuvred past Robert Green only to drive
into the side netting, it came to nought. So, too, did low drives from
Frederic Piquionne and, for West Ham, Collison.

"I wish we were a little more aggressive," said Avram Grant, Portsmouth's
manager, "but we deserved to get something out of this match.

"That is now nine penalties scored against us this season. The squad is okay
but I want to boost it and make it stronger, which is the same thing I say
after each match."

Star man: Alessandro Diamanti (West Ham)
Yellow cards: Portsmouth: Dindane, Brown, O'Hara.
Referee: L Probert
Attendance: 33,686

WEST HAM: Green 6, Faubert 6, Upson 6, Tomkins 6, Ilunga 6, Collison 7,
Kovac 6, Parker 7, Noble 5 (Jimenez 15min, 7), Diamanti 8 (Behrami 71min,
6), Franco 6 (Nouble 90min) PORTSMOUTH: Begovic 7, Finnan 6, Ben-Haim 6,
Kaboul 6, Hreidarsson 6, Dindane 5 (Kanu 53min, 7), O'Hara 6, Mullins 6,
Brown 4 (Utaka 78min), Belhadj 6 (Boateng h-t, 6), Piquionne 6

1 The number of times West Ham have beaten Portsmouth in the Premier League
at Upton Park after yesterday's 2-0 win. It is also the number of times
Portsmouth have failed to score in six games under manager Avram Grant

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 2 Portsmouth 0: match report
Read a full match report of the Boxing Day Premier League game between West
Ham United and Portsmouth at Upton Park on Saturday Dec 26 2009.
Telegraph.co.uk
By John Ley at Upton Park
Published: 3:00PM GMT 26 Dec 2009

Portsmouth, 2-0 winners over Liverpool last week, remain at the foot of the
Premier League after losing narrowly in a nervous Boxing Day battle with a
goal in either half, from Alessandro Diamanti and Radoslav Kovac, separating
the bottom two. West Ham United have won more penalties than any other team
and Diamanti successfully converted the club's seventh spot-kick out of
seven to put his team on the road to three valuable points off their
relegation rivals. And Kovac confirmed the win with a firm header late in
the game. Sport on television Both teams started nervously and early chances
were rare, although Frederic Piquionne had the ball in the West Ham net in
the 12th minute but had already been ruled offside. West Ham responded when
Jack Collison fed Diamanti but his cross was cut out. And when Guillermo
Franco sped down the flank and into the area only the diligence of Nadir
Belhadj prevent the game's first chance. Soon afterwards West Ham were
forced into a change when Mark Noble had to be replaced by Luis Jimenez.
Aruna Dindane, one of four Portsmouth players on their way to the African
Cup of Nations after this game, was booked for a robust 19th-minute
challenge on Scott Parker. The West Ham midfield was involved again two
minutes later when Michael Brown caught him with his knee and was also
cautioned. And, in the 23rd minute, West Ham took the lead when former West
Ham midfielder Hayden Mullins and Brown combined to fell Jimenez. It allowed
Diamanti to take West Ham's seventh penalty of the season and he maintained
his team's 100 per cent success rate from the spot when he converted with
confidence to claim his third goal in three games. West Ham were dominating
and when the impressive Parker sent Collison free from a free kick the
Welshman was unlucky with a dipping volley that rose just over the
Portsmouth bar. And on the stroke of half time West Ham almost increased
their lead when Parker crossed, the ball was cleared only to Collison but
the youngster put the ball narrowly wide when he should have scored.
For the second half, Kevin-Prince Boateng replaced Belhadj but still they
came under pressure, with Diamanti's shot deflecting off Steve Finnan and
saved superbly by Asmir Begovic.
Diamanti tried to test Begovic on the hour with an audacious lob,
dispatching the ball from just inside the Portsmouth area, but it flew just
over the bar. At the other end another, substitute Kevin-Prince Boateng
slipped the ball around Robert Green but succeeded only in finding the side
netting. West Ham have shown a tendency to throw away leads and as the game
progressed so they became nervous - Piquionne forced Green into a crucial
save late on - but they actually came close four times in the final 10
minutes to a second goal with Collison denied by Begovic, James Tomkins
heading just over, Valon Behrami rolling the ball an inch wide and Kovac
firing just off target. And the pressure paid off when, in the 89th minute,
Jimenez's free kick was headed home powerfully by Kovac.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Battling Franco Boxing clever
Marc Isaacs
The People
West Ham 2 Portsmouth 0

There is something about Portsmouth on Boxing Day which brings out the best
in West Ham. You could sense from Gianfranco Zola's celebrations at the
final whistle that this victory could prove to be the biggest of his
managerial career. West Ham recorded one of their best performances of the
season 12 months ago when they came away from Fratton Park with a 4-1
victory, which helped turn their campaign round and ensured they secured a
top-10 finish. It may not have been the same emphatic scoreline but the
importance of yesterday's result cannot be underestimated as Zola celebrated
a win which saw his side move out of the bottom three and left Pompey rooted
to the foot of the table. A first-half penalty by Alessandro Diamanti and a
late header from Radoslav Kovac handed West Ham only their fourth victory of
the season. After getting their season back on track with a 1-1 draw against
Chelsea last weekend, West Ham's players showed they are fully behind Zola
and are desperate to keep the club in the Premier League.
Despite facing financial turmoil off the pitch and the threat of having to
sell his best players once again in January, Zola believes this result could
prove crucial in his team retaining their top-flight status. Zola said:
"This was a fantastic win. It was a massive result and this was one of my
biggest wins as a manager. I rated this game as a six-pointer and it was so
important for the table. "The boys showed a lot of character and this is a
big boost for everyone. It is a sign that they believe we want to do good
things and they are playing for everyone. We are building something here."
Speculation surrounds the future of England trio Robert Green, Matthew Upson
and Scott Parker. But if West Ham are to stand any chance of beating the
drop, Zola will surely be doing everything to ensure Parker remains at Upton
Park. The former Chelsea midfielder was quality once again and his battling
spirit played a vital role in helping West Ham pick up all three points.
Zola added: "You cannot measure the importance of having Scott in the team.
I feel lucky to have a player like him. He has so much enthusiasm and is a
leader by example."
Avram Grant must wish he had a player like Parker in his side and should
have strong concerns over Portsmouth's ability to move out of the bottom
three following this latest setback. Portsmouth looked to have got their
season back on track with a 2-0 win over Liverpool last week, but they
failed to produce the same form and will now lose four key players to the
African Cup of Nations. Aruna Dindane, Nadir Belhadj, Kanu and Hassan Yebda
will jet off to the tournament in Angola which leaves the Portsmouth squad
extremely light at such a crucial stage of the season. Grant is still unsure
if he can bring any new players into the club with the current transfer
embargo at Fratton Park, but will find out this week if the punishment will
be lifted. He said: "I think we deserved something from this game. We
dominated the second half but lost. "I think we showed last week that we can
win games so anything is possible. I won't change my mind about our
prospects. We want to make the team stronger and I will find out this week
if that will be possible."
Despite a nervy start from both teams, West Ham opened the scoring on 23
minutes when the ball fell to Luis Jimenez, who was brought down in the area
by Hayden Mullins.
Diamanti scored from the penalty spot against Chelsea last weekend and again
he made no mistake, firing the ball past Asmir Begovic. Jack Collison had a
golden chance to double the home side's lead on the stroke of half-time but
he fired wide. Pompey looked a different team after the interval and the
introduction of Kevin-Prince Boateng gave them a different dimension. But
West Ham defended for their lives and wrapped up a crucial victory right on
full-time when Kovac powered an unstoppable header past Begovic.
Outstanding display. If all players show same commitment, the Hammers will
have no problems staying up.

West Ham: Green 6 - Faubert 6, Upson 6, Tomkins 6, Ilunga 6 - *PARKER 9,
Kovac 7- Collison 5, Noble 6 (Jimenez, 16mins, 6), Diamanti 8 (Behrami,
71mins, 7) - Franco 7.

Portsmouth: Begovic 7 - Finnan 6, Kaboul 7, Ben-Haim 7, Hreidarsson 6 -
Mullins 6, Brown 6 (Utaka, 78mins, 6), *O'HARA 7, Belhadj 5 (Boateng,
45mins, 7) - Dindane 5 (Kanu, 54mins, 6), Piquionne 6.

Referee: Lee Probert 7

Shocker Dindane Failed to have any impact. Taken off at half-time and must
fear for his place after the African Cup of Nations

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
GIANFRANCO ZOLA: WEST HAM ARE LUCKY TO HAVE SCOTT PARKER
Daily Star
27th December 2009 By Colin Mafham
West Ham 2 Portsmouth 0

Gianfranco Zola has had some heady moments in his time but this one was up
there with the best of them. Okay, so the match was a long way off a classic
but the result Radoslav Kovac's last-gasp header gave him and West Ham was
incalculable. It took them out of the bottom three and set them up for
tomorrow's clash with arch-rivals Tottenham. No wonder the little Italian
wore the smile of a man who had got all his Christmas presents on Boxing
Day. "That was our biggest win for so many reasons," he said.
It was massive."
Then he hailed the midfield general who made it all possible. Zola said he
couldn't measure the importance to his team of man-of-the match Scott
Parker. "He is a leader by example and I feel lucky to have someone like him
in my team." He also singled out Czech international Kovac, who capped his
best display of the season with that dramatic last-minute goal. "He was
absolutely outstanding," said Zola. "In our last two games he has been
incredible. "Now we can go into the Tottenham game with a bit more
security."
But any talk of the season of goodwill soon went out of the window very
early. It was too important for that. Pompey's Aruna Dindane and Michael
Brown received Christmas cards of a different kind before Brown handed West
Ham a gift-wrapped lead. With a little help from Hayden Mullins he sent
Luis Jimenez fl ying in the box Parker set him up. That apart, it was a
Boxing Day battle without any punch. The second half started better and
West Ham might have wrapped it up but Pompey keeper Asmir Begovic stretched
to tip Alessandro Diamanti's deflected shot round the post. At the other
end Robert Green dived at the feet of Frederic Piquionne to deny the
Frenchman a rare chance. And rare was the operative word. To be honest,
Pompey kicked a lot more than they created.
Except, that is, for one piece of attacking quality which Piquionne
produced late on. He brought the ball down on his chest, skipped past two
defenders and finished off with a shot that was well worth a goal but wasn't
good enough to beat Green. It should have been all over soon after- wards
when Begovic brilliantly saved from Collison, then watched helplessly as
Valon Behrami's shot shaved the post. West Ham deserved a goal then, if only
as a reward for the peach of a pass Parker supplied. But they didn't have to
wait long the goal that sealed it. With two minutes to go sub Jimenez took a
leaf out of Parker's book with a super free-kick that Kovac headed
powerfully home. Game over. Pompey boss Avram Grant looked even glummer
than usual as he faces an even steeper uphill battle from the bottom of the
league. Grant also revealed that he will learn this week if the transfer
embargo on the club will be lifted and whether he With a little help from
Hayden Mullins he sent Luis Jimenez flying in the box the club will be
lifted and whether he will have the funds to strengthen his squad. "The
squad is okay but we need to be stronger he said."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mark Noble feeling 'hurt' over relegation fight but vows to lead West Ham to
safety
Published 23:00 26/12/09 By Steve Stammers Exclusive
The Mirror

West Ham have always been and always will be Mark Noble's club. So he makes
no excuses for feeling the pain of the Hammers' relegation fight more than
most in the dressing room, even though they boosted their bid to stay up
with a vital 2-0 home win over Portsmouth yesterday. "It hurts," said Noble,
who limped off yesterday with a hamstring injury that is almost certain to
rule him out of tomorrow's match at Tottenham. "Every day I think about it,
I can't have a moment's rest. Yes, it has been a tough, tough three or four
months for us." There are distractions that help to ease the pressure of the
battle to stay in the Premier League, notably his nine-month-old daughter
Honey. "That does put things in perspective," said Noble, only 22 but
already the longest-serving player at the club. "But my job is to help West
Ham get up the table and that is bound to be on your mind. "We are not where
we want to be with the manager we have and the players we have got. We just
shouldn't be there. "You try not to take it home. You want to go home, see
the baby and not be in a miserable mood. You want to be happy but sometimes
you can't. That only comes when you win and, quite simply, we have got to
get back to basics and put points on the board."
The manager Noble respects so highly is Gianfranco Zola. The Italian has
made it clear he will not abandon the club's principles and that is music to
the ears of Noble. "We haven't got the players to just go back-to-front and
win headers," he said. "We got praise for the way we played last season and
we have actually played as well this season. But things just haven't gone
our way. We have been ahead in games like Hull, Fulham and Sunderland and
not won. We didn't deserve to lose to Liverpool. "If we had those points we
would we well away from the bottom. But it is important that we look forward
to the games ahead, not what has gone. And we will continue playing our way.
"The manager is never going to make us boot the ball up the field. The
dressing room is fine, no problem. We train well every day. But we know we
have to tighten up. I mean, we were beating Burnley 5-0 and then let in
three goals in the last five minutes. Then you get a boo when you leave the
field! "You think you are going to have to score five goals to win a game!
There is no doubt in my mind, though, that we can get out of this. No doubt
- not with the players we have. And we know we have to buck up our ideas.
We are going to have to stand up, every one of us."
If there is one source of encouragement Noble can rely on, it is his dad
Mark Snr. It was thanks to him that Noble, before he had reached the age of
16, had played for various school and district teams at venues like Stamford
Bridge, Old Trafford and Wembley. "When you join an academy like I did at
West Ham, they say, 'We don't want you playing for other teams like the
school'. My dad said if I could not play for the school, I was not playing
for West Ham! "I remember him saying there is no way I would say, 'I can't
play for the school because I am at West Ham'. He has always supported me
and let me do what I wanted where football is concerned. "You get parents
these days who, if their kid is in the Under-8's, think they are going to be
superstars. He let me do what I enjoyed. I really appreciate that."

Mark Noble is a supporter of the Richard House Children's Hospice – an
official charity of West Ham United. It was one of the places visited this
week by the West Ham first-team squad as part of their annual Christmas
visits. To donate to Richard House, please go to www.richardhouse.org.uk

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 2-0 Portsmouth match report: The Sunday Mirror verdict
Published 06:00 27/12/09 By Steve Stammers

Gianfranco Zola was in no doubt. "This," the West Ham manager said, "was a
massive win. "I always rated this as a six-point game. It was important for
the table, for morale and for the crowd – for so many things." He didn't use
the word survival – and arguably it would have been the most relevant of
all. This was far from a classic. West Ham are bereft of players because of
injury and short of money to replace them during next month's transfer
window. Portsmouth appear bereft of ideas. They have assembled a squad that
will be hit by the loss of a quartet for the African Nations Cup – Hassan
Yebda and Nadir Belhadj to Algeria, Aruna Dindane to the Ivory Coast and
Kanu to Nigeria. Manager Avram Grant hopes the transfer embargo imposed on
the club by the Premier League will be lifted this week. The League's bottom
club need re-inforcements as soon as possible if they are to stay among the
elite. Grant clearly has a major job on his hands. "I don't know yet if I
will be buying players," he said. "I will know more during the week."
With a revived Arsenal at Fratton Park on Wednesday night, Grant needs help
sooner rather than later. At the moment, Portsmouth do not have the quality
to stay up. The win eight days ago against an imploding Liverpool and,
before that, three points from a Burnley outfit who panic when they are
outside their own city limits merely camouflage their problems. Zola can
look forward with a tad more confidence. He has a central midfield axis in
Radoslav Kovac and Scott Parker who, in tandem, could be a Duracell advert.
They chase, they harry, they close down, they score. It was the Czech Kovac
who allayed East End fears with a second goal two minutes from time. The
celebration combined both joy and relief. Even the substitutes sprinted from
the bench to join in. And Zola admitted: "I was more delighted than him. In
our situation this has to be one of the biggest wins of the season."
Any genuine football fan wants Zola to succeed. He has stayed true to
traditions of the club, no matter what restrictions have been put on him by
the uncertainty at Upton Park. "And that won't change," he insisted. What he
needed yesterday was an early break. What he got was another injury when
Mark Noble was forced to off after 15 minutes with a hamstring strain that
rules him out of tomorrow's White Hart Lane clash. Aruna Dindane and the
combative Michael Brown did their best to ensure Scott Parker joined him
with shuddering fouls. But Parker stayed strong – as did West Ham. And after
22 minutes, they went ahead with a penalty that was beyond dispute. Luis
Jimenez – the replacement for Noble – was hacked down by Hayden Mullins and
Alessandro Diamanti drilled the spot-kick past the impressive Bosnian
goalkeeper Asmir Begovic. "That was the ninth against us this season," said
Grant with some scepticism. The answer to that is simple – advise his
defenders against kicking opponents four foot into the air in the box. The
advantage should have been doubled on the stroke of half-time but James
Collison shot wide after an excellent run from Parker. Portsmouth revived in
the second half when Kevin Boateng replaced the ineffective Belhadj and
Jamie O'Hara – by some distance Portsmouth's most dangerous outfield player
– had an ally. O'Hara is on loan from Tottenham and Portsmouth want to keep
him for the rest of the season. Good idea. But while they were on the back
foot for long periods in the second half, West Ham always threatened on the
break and two minutes from time Kovac nodded in Jimenez's curling free-kick
to secure the points.

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Liverpool planning to offload trio to fund moves for Carlton Cole and Victor
Moses
Published 23:00 26/12/09 By Jeremy Butler
The Mirror

Liverpool hope to offload Ryan Babel, Andrei Voronin and Andrea Dossena in
the transfer window to free up cash for new signings. Boss Rafael Benitez is
hoping to move the trio on after fielding calls for the stars in recent
weeks. Babel is wanted by Bayern Munich, Dossena by Napoli and Voronin is
interesting Panathinaikos, although Liverpool will have to take a hit on the
£18million they splashed out to land the internationals. Benitez wants the
money to fund moves for West Ham frontman Carlton Cole and Palace winger
Victor Moses. He said: "We know at this time that we have to manage the
squad and try and do some changes in the transfer window. "Normally, players
that are not playing will be looking at other options, especially with a
World Cup coming up. "There has been interest in some of our players."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
GIANFRANCO ZOLA'S CUDDLE AFTER SIX
West Ham 2 Portsmouth 0
News Of The World
By Rob Shepherd, 26/12/2009

GIANFRANCO ZOLA greeted the final whistle with a clenched fist and a cuddle
for every single player as they strutted off the pitch. A Boxing Day win
over the bottom club would not normally cause such elation, even at Upton
Park. But Zola's reaction emphasised this was a real six-pointer for a West
Ham side who finally seem to have woken up to the reality they are involved
in a relegation battle. The delighted Hammers boss admitted: "It was a
massive win... trust me. Thanks for reminding me it is only our fourth win
but, yes, this was our biggest of the season. "We went into this seeing it
as a six-pointer. It gives us a bit of security going into our next few
games."
The Hammers had started the match just one place and one point above Pompey,
so the win not only widened that gap to four points but also meant Zola's
side moved out of the bottom three. On the back of last week's stoic 1-1
draw against Chelsea, one could sense Zola feels a renewed sense of belief
after two dire defeats against Birmingham and Bolton had left the Hammers
boss admitting he would consider anything, even recruiting a sports shrink,
to turn around the club's season. Instead, good old-fashioned team spirit
and flashes of skill in key moments saw the Hammers respond to what was
becoming a crisis. Even fancy dan forwards Guillermo Franco and Alessandro
Diamanti showed stomach for the fight by getting stuck in, as well as
offering some sublime touches. The heartbeat of the Hammers side, though,
was midfield anchormen Scott Parker and Radoslav Kovac. Despite the blow of
losing Mark Noble early on, West Ham seized control after a tentative start
with Parker and Kovac the driving force. They took the lead in the 23rd
minute when sheer weight of traffic forced Pompey into conceding their ninth
penalty of the season. Parker caused panic in the Portsmouth box as he
surged forward and although Franco's shot was blocked, Noble's replacement
Luis Jimenez pounced on the loose ball and was brought down by a combination
of Michael Brown and Hayden Mullins as he shaped to shoot from 10 yards.
Diamanti stroked home the spot-kick with the same aplomb as he had done
against Chelsea to chalk up his third goal in three games. It was West Ham's
seventh penalty of the season, all converted, the most in the Premier League
so far. And they ought to have gone into the break with a more comfortable
cushion.
In stoppage time Parker did superbly to reach the line and pull it back to
Jack Collison but from 10 yards out he shot tamely wide. But the game then
changed. Pompey boss Avram Grant took off Nadir Belhadj, one of four Pompey
players heading for the African Nations Cup, and replaced him with
Kevin-Prince Boateng, who has not been called up by Ghana. Boateng did not
start because he was suffering with a virus. It certainly did not seem to
affect him. After Asmir Begovic had tipped over a deflected Diamanti shot,
West Ham suddenly found themselves under the cosh as Boateng made one
surging run after another. Along with Jamie O'Hara, he posed serious
questions of a Hammers defence where Matthew Upson had another unconvincing
game. But Pompey lacked penetration up front. In the 69th minute Boateng did
manage to nick the ball around Robert Green but ran out of ground and shot
into the side-netting from an acute angle. And a couple of minutes later
lively frontman Frederic Piquionne beat Upson and James Tomkins but fired
wide from the edge of the area. Zola urged his team to wind things up again
and Parker rallied the troops as he made tackles, passes and probing runs.
The Hammers cannot afford to sell HIM in the transfer window.

As Pompey ran out of ideas the Hammers had a late surge and in the last
minute Kovac met a Jimenez free-kick with a near-post bullet header, much to
Zola's relief. David Gold and David Sullivan, who still hope to buy the
club, were in an Upton Park box yesterday and Air Asia owner Tony Fernandes,
another possible investor, also watched the game. And they will have seen a
team with a renewed sense of optimism, providing not too many top players
are sold next month. Grant will not know if can spend on any new talent
until a decision is made on Pompey's current transfer embargo in the next
few days. Despite their recent revival, things are starting to look grim.
This time last year West Ham beat Pompey 4-1 at Fratton Park, a performance
which gave their season new momentum and pulled them well awy from the drop
zone. Zola is hoping yesterday's win will prove another springboard for
survival.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FRANCO TARGETS WEST HAM STAY
NOTW
26/12/2009

GUILLERMO FRANCO wants to commit his long-term future to West Ham. The
striker, 33, has finally settled in at Upton Park after agreeing a one- year
deal from Villarreal in September. The Mexico international says he has
fallen in love with the Boleyn faithful and hopes to sign a new contract.
Franco, who has three goals so far, said: "I hope things go well and I can
stay here longer. I'm enjoying the football and the great support we have.
It was a wish of mine to come and experience English football. I'd come
previously with Villarreal to play in the Champions League and seeing the
atmosphere, the supporters, the style of football, it was something I was
excited about. "I'm delighted to be here.
"It's not easy for a player to come to the English league and adapt quickly
and win a starting place but I feel happy." "I'm feeling physically strong
and that's helped me. I'm playing matches so things are going very well
personally. Hopefully there will be more to come."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
HAMMERS' SELL-BY DATE IS NEARLY UP
NOTW
By Rob Shepherd, 26/12/2009

DAVID GOLD and David Sullivan will pull the plug on West Ham takeover talks
on January 7. The club's agents, Rothschild Bank, have been made aware that
if a deal isn't agreed by then the pair will pull out. The two Davids have
made it clear that for the Hammers to have any chance of Premiers League -
and therefore financial survival - they have to get players in next month's
transfer window. A highly-placed Upton Park source said: "David Gold wanted
to end things on Christmas Day but given the business hours difficulties at
this time of the year he's been persuaded to extend the deadline. "Both men
want to give Gianfranco Zola the chance to bring in the players who can lift
the club away from the relegation zone and they know from their days at
Birmingham how difficult that can be. "If they not have taken control by the
7th they know it will be nearly impossible to get anything done and they
aren't going to preside over a club that is heading for financial disaster
in the Championship!"
Both men are huge admirers of Zola and his future will be entirely secure
under the pair who will hand him an £8million transfer market kitty.
However, they are insistent that if the current feet dragging continues they
will pull out of talks which have now been going on for between two and
three months Seventy two year old Gold in particular is deeply frustrated at
the lack of urgency in negotiations but has been persuaded to "hang in
there" until the seventh. Said the source: "The two are aware that they are
now the only show in town and that the other interested groups have pulled
out."
Talks between the two sides continued until late on Christmas Eve and will
recommence tomorrow morning. And a source close to negotiations told Sport
of the World: "If I was a gambling man I'd bet on Gold and Sullivan getting
control. I'd say things are about 60-40 in their favour. "There are two
answers to the West Ham situation now - a Gold/Sullivan takeover or the
Icelandics remaining in charge, following the suspension of their debts,
until next September. "The one certain thing is that the pair will NOT up
their bid from the £46m they have tabled. That too has been made crystal
clear. "The Icelandics now have a dilemma. They gamble on things improving
at a time when all interest is evaporating, apart from Gold or Sullivan, or
trouser the £20 million up front payment they have been offered and get
out."
And the source added: "The truth of it all is they are lucky to have anyone
interested. This club is not des res and were it not for the fact that David
Gold in particular is a Hammers fanatic who was boen across Green Street
there would be nothing but a total financial disaster facing the current
owners. "However, Gold is becoming increasingly annoyed and if he sees no
real progress over the next few days is certain to pull out."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Saturday, December 26

Daily WHUFC News - 26th December 2009

A Christmas message
WHUFC.com
The club's chaplains Elwin Cockett and Alan Bolding have shared their
seasonal thoughts with supporters
25.12.2009

There is something very special about football over the Christmas period.
Whether it's the challenge of travelling to Boxing Day matches, the optimism
of the season, or memories of past performances, there is a buzz to the game
at this time of year.

Maybe you were at the Boleyn Ground on New Year's Day 1983, when that
five-foot-seven product of our youth team, Tony Cottee, scored on his debut
against Spurs?

Maybe, you even remember Boxing Day 1963, when we lost 8-2 at home to
Blackburn Rovers? Two days on, West Ham turned things around in style,
winning 3-1 at Blackburn and Hammers fans were still celebrating a few
months later when Bobby Moore raised the FA Cup in triumph at Wembley. As we
all know, that was the first of three wonderful years for our supporters.

Whether we win, lose or draw, this is a good moment to take stock of our
lives and reflect on the things that are really important to us at
Christmas, like looking out for people who are less fortunate than
ourselves. It's great, for example, that West Ham fans continue to raise
money in all sorts of ways for the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer Research UK,
and for London's first hospice for children, Richard House.

For many of those who are suffering serious illness, or who need the kind of
help that Richard House offers, the support of this world-wide West Ham
family matters. Thank you for that support.

We don't know what 2010 will bring but every one of us can make sure that we
make that the new year as good as it possibly can be for the people around
us.

That includes the club's staff, of course, many of whom will be working very
hard over the holidays. Let's raise a cheer for the people in the ticket
office and the catering teams, for the ground staff and stewards, for the
players and management team, and for everyone who helps to make the Upton
Park experience as good as it can be.

As Chaplains, we have the privilege of working with people of all faiths and
none. So, whether Christmas is for you a celebration of a miraculous and
wonderful gift, or simply a chance to spend time with the people you love,
to reflect and perhaps to give thanks, we want to wish you a very happy
Christmas and a wonderful New Year.

Elwin Cockett and Alan Bolding

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Portsmouth match preview
WHUFC.com
All of the early team news and stats ahead of the Boxing Day game at the
Boleyn Ground
24.12.2009

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United v Portsmouth
Boleyn Ground
Saturday 26 December
1pm
Referee: Lee Probert

• West Ham United play host to Portsmouth in their second consecutive home
match. Gianfranco Zola's side will be looking to build on their impressive
display in the 1-1 draw with Chelsea last time out in the final home fixture
of 2009.

• The teams last met on a memorable afternoon on Boxing Day last year when
West Ham United left Fratton Park with a 4-1 victory. That started a rich
vein of form that saw the club climb to finish ninth in the Barclays Premier
League table.

• The Hammers will be looking to continue their improving home form. In
their last seven matches in east London, the Hammers have won two and drawn
three with the narrow defeat by Everton and the loss to Manchester United
the only blotches on their Boleyn Ground copy book in that time.

• The point against Chelsea meant it was Saturday's visitors and not the
hosts that go into Christmas bottom. West Ham United are 19th in the table
with 15 points but a win could potentially move the club up to 15th in the
table and within three points of tenth place. Portsmouth are a point and
place below with the same goal difference of minus nine.

• This will be the 33rd meeting between the two clubs. West Ham United have
12 wins with five draws.

Last time out

Sunday 20 December
Barclays Premier League
West Ham United 1-1 Chelsea
West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Gabbidon (Tomkins 19), Upson, Ilunga,
Collison, Kovac, Parker, Noble, Diamanti, Franco
Subs not used: Stech, Spector, da Costa, Jimenez, Stanislas, Nouble
Goal: Diamanti 45 (pen)

Saturday 19 December
Barclays Premier League
Portsmouth 2-0 Liverpool
Portsmouth: Begovic, Finnan, Ben-Haim, Belhadj, Hreidarsson, Kaboul, Brown,
Boateng (Mullins 89), O'Hara, Yebda, Piquionne (Kanu 89)
Subs not used: Utaka, Hughes, Wilson, Dindane, Ashdown,
Goals: Belhadj 33, Piquionne 82

Last meeting

• The two sides last met at Fratton Park on Boxing Day last year when a
Craig Bellamy brace helped the Hammers to a superb 4-1 victory. The teams
that day were -

West Ham United: Green, Neill (Faubert 46), Davenport, Upson, Ilunga,
Collison, Noble (Boa Morte 73), Parker, Behrami, Bellamy, Cole (Tristan 87)
Subs not used: Lastuvka, Collins, Mullins, Di Michele
Goals: Collison 20, Cole 67, Bellamy 70, 83

Portsmouth: James, Wilson, Campbell, Distin, Belhadj, Little (Armand Traore
71), Davis, Hughes, Kranjcar, Defoe (Kanu 73), Crouch
Subs: Ashdown, Pamarot, Hreidarsson, Diop, Nugent
Goal: Belhadj 8

Head to head

(Last six meetings, league unless stated)

26 December 2008 - Portsmouth 1-4 West Ham United
15 November 2008 - West Ham United 0-0 Portsmouth
8 April 2008 - West Ham United 0-1 Portsmouth
27 October 2007 - Portsmouth 0-0 West Ham United
26 December 2006 - West Ham United 1-2 Portsmouth
14 October 2006 - Portsmouth 2-0 West Ham United
Overall record v Portsmouth (all competitions): W 12, D 5, L 14

Next up

• West Ham United travel to north London two days after Boxing Day for a
match with local rivals Tottenham Hotspur. Portsmouth play host to Arsenal
on 30 December at 7.45pm.

Referee

• Saturday's referee is Lee Probert.

• It will be Probert's first West Ham United game for 14 months after he
took charge of the 3-2 loss to West Bromwich Albion at the Hawthorns last
September. The Hammers were guided by Kevin Keen that day following the
appointment of Gianfranco Zola as manager the previous day.

• He began refereeing in 1986, in leagues local to Bristol, and later in the
Football Conference South. He was promoted to the assistant referees' list
of the Football League in 1998, and made the step up to full referee in the
League five years later.

West Ham United

• West Ham have never beaten Portsmouth at Upton Park in the Premier League
with one draw and three defeats.

• This is the third time in four years that the Hammers have met Portsmouth
on Boxing Day, including last year when the visitors ran out 4-1 winners at
Fratton Park - their first win over the south coast side since 1993.

• Hanging on to leads is crucial if the club are to pick up their second
away win of the campaign. Three times they have failed to convert a two-goal
lead into a win so far this season.

• The Hammers have lost six of their seven games when they have been level
at half-time.

• At Christmas last season, West Ham were 17th. An impressive second-half
run saw them climb the table to finish in ninth place.

• West Ham have scored 26 goals this season with ten different scorers
registering. Carlton Cole leads the way (seven), with Alessandro Diamanti
(four) and Guille Franco (three) next in line. Jack Collison (two), Matthew
Upson (two), Junior Stanislas (two), Manuel da Costa, Mark Noble, Luis
Jimenez and Zavon Hines have also registered.

• Cole is West Ham's top scorer this season with seven goals in 13 league
games. The England striker has scored 14 goals in 25 Premier League games
since Boxing Day 2008.

• Only Robert Green has played in every league game for the club this
season. He is on a run of 106 successive league appearances.

• If selected, Matthew Upson will be making his 300 club career appearance.

• Scott Parker has been booked seven times this season, while Julien
Faubert, Cole, Mark Noble and Guille Franco are each on four yellow cards.

• No side have been awarded more penalties than West Ham (six) this season,
whereas only Burnley (six) have conceded as many penalties as Portsmouth.

Portsmouth

• Portsmouth are looking for back-to-back Premier League wins for the first
time in 14 months.

• Avram Grant's side have lost eleven of the 12 games in which they have
conceded the opening goal this season.

• If they win, Portsmouth could climb out of the relegation zone for the
first time since the opening round of Premier League matches.

Team news

• Both managers have plenty of time to assess their options. Carlton Cole,
Kieron Dyer, Danny Gabbidon, Zavon Hines, Luis Boa Morte and Calum Davenport
are all definitely unavailable.

• Valon Behrami could return after training with the team all week, although
he faces stiff competition for a place after the impressive display against
league leaders Chelsea.

• Cole is making good progress from his knee injury and is aiming for a
January return.

• Dyer is likely to be out for two to three weeks with a hamstring problem
suffered at Bolton Wanderers on 15 December.

• Gabbidon is missing with the hamstring injury picked against Chelesa.

• Hines will be absent for some time because of a knee problem but it is
still too soon to know how long he will be sidelined.

• Boa Morte (knee) and Davenport (leg) remain long-term absentees.

• Portsmouth have no new fresh injury worries so could start with the same
team that beat Liverpool.

• Former Hammers David James is likely to miss out again with a calf strain,
although has been training. Asmir Begovic is set to deputise for the veteran
goalkeeper once more should he fail to make it.

Old boys

• Hayden Mullins will return to the Boleyn Ground for the first time since
his J26 January 2009 switch to the south coast for an undisclosed fee. He
signed for West Ham from Crystal Palace for £800,000 in October 2003 and had
been the longest-serving first-team player at the Boleyn Ground. The
midfielder, 30, played 178 league games for the club, scoring four goals.

• David James moved to West Ham United for £3.5m on 11 July 2001, signing a
four year contract. He played 102 times for the Hammers before signing for
Manchester City on 14 January 2004.

• Other players to have played for both teams include: Greg Campbell, Lee
Chapman, Jermain Defoe, Bill Ford, Hayden Foxe, Shaka Hislop, Billy James,
Glen Johnson, Bill Joyce, Alex McDonald, Nicky Morgan, Sebastien Schemmel,
Peter Shearing, Teddy Sheringham, Roy Smith, Stephen Smith, Pavel Srnicek,
Alan Stephenson, Ron Tindall, Svetoslav Todorov, Charlie Whitchurch.

General information

For ticket information, click here. For details on getting to the Boleyn
Ground, click here

Weather: The forecast is for a bright day with slight cloud and a top
temperature of around 8C.

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Thursday, December 24

Daily WHUFC News - 25th December 2009

Portsmouth match preview
WHUFC.com
All of the early team news and stats ahead of the Boxing Day game at the
Boleyn Ground
24.12.2009

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United v Portsmouth
Boleyn Ground
Saturday 26 December
1pm
Referee: Lee Probert

• West Ham United play host to Portsmouth in their second consecutive home
match. Gianfranco Zola's side will be looking to build on their impressive
display in the 1-1 draw with Chelsea last time out in the final home fixture
of 2009.

• The teams last met on a memorable afternoon on Boxing Day last year when
West Ham United left Fratton Park with a 4-1 victory. That started a rich
vein of form that saw the club climb to finish ninth in the Barclays Premier
League table.

• The Hammers will be looking to continue their improving home form. In
their last seven matches in east London, the Hammers have won two and drawn
three with the narrow defeat by Everton and the loss to Manchester United
the only blotches on their Boleyn Ground copy book in that time.

• The point against Chelsea meant it was Saturday's visitors and not the
hosts that go into Christmas bottom. West Ham United are 19th in the table
with 15 points but a win could potentially move the club up to 15th in the
table and within three points of tenth place. Portsmouth are a point and
place below with the same goal difference of minus nine.

• This will be the 33rd meeting between the two clubs. West Ham United have
12 wins with five draws.

Last time out

Sunday 20 December
Barclays Premier League
West Ham United 1-1 Chelsea
West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Gabbidon (Tomkins 19), Upson, Ilunga,
Collison, Kovac, Parker, Noble, Diamanti, Franco
Subs not used: Stech, Spector, da Costa, Jimenez, Stanislas, Nouble
Goal: Diamanti 45 (pen)

Saturday 19 December
Barclays Premier League
Portsmouth 2-0 Liverpool
Portsmouth: Begovic, Finnan, Ben-Haim, Belhadj, Hreidarsson, Kaboul, Brown,
Boateng (Mullins 89), O'Hara, Yebda, Piquionne (Kanu 89)
Subs not used: Utaka, Hughes, Wilson, Dindane, Ashdown,
Goals: Belhadj 33, Piquionne 82

Last meeting

• The two sides last met at Fratton Park on Boxing Day last year when a
Craig Bellamy brace helped the Hammers to a superb 4-1 victory. The teams
that day were -

West Ham United: Green, Neill (Faubert 46), Davenport, Upson, Ilunga,
Collison, Noble (Boa Morte 73), Parker, Behrami, Bellamy, Cole (Tristan 87)
Subs not used: Lastuvka, Collins, Mullins, Di Michele
Goals: Collison 20, Cole 67, Bellamy 70, 83

Portsmouth: James, Wilson, Campbell, Distin, Belhadj, Little (Armand Traore
71), Davis, Hughes, Kranjcar, Defoe (Kanu 73), Crouch
Subs: Ashdown, Pamarot, Hreidarsson, Diop, Nugent
Goal: Belhadj 8

Head to head

(Last six meetings, league unless stated)

26 December 2008 - Portsmouth 1-4 West Ham United
15 November 2008 - West Ham United 0-0 Portsmouth
8 April 2008 - West Ham United 0-1 Portsmouth
27 October 2007 - Portsmouth 0-0 West Ham United
26 December 2006 - West Ham United 1-2 Portsmouth
14 October 2006 - Portsmouth 2-0 West Ham United
Overall record v Portsmouth (all competitions): W 12, D 5, L 14

Next up

• West Ham United travel to north London two days after Boxing Day for a
match with local rivals Tottenham Hotspur. Portsmouth play host to Arsenal
on 30 December at 7.45pm.

Referee

• Saturday's referee is Lee Probert.

• It will be Probert's first West Ham United game for 14 months after he
took charge of the 3-2 loss to West Bromwich Albion at the Hawthorns last
September. The Hammers were guided by Kevin Keen that day following the
appointment of Gianfranco Zola as manager the previous day.

• He began refereeing in 1986, in leagues local to Bristol, and later in the
Football Conference South. He was promoted to the assistant referees' list
of the Football League in 1998, and made the step up to full referee in the
League five years later.

West Ham United

• West Ham have never beaten Portsmouth at Upton Park in the Premier League
with one draw and three defeats.

• This is the third time in four years that the Hammers have met Portsmouth
on Boxing Day, including last year when the visitors ran out 4-1 winners at
Fratton Park - their first win over the south coast side since 1993.

• Hanging on to leads is crucial if the club are to pick up their second
away win of the campaign. Three times they have failed to convert a two-goal
lead into a win so far this season.

• The Hammers have lost six of their seven games when they have been level
at half-time.

• At Christmas last season, West Ham were 17th. An impressive second-half
run saw them climb the table to finish in ninth place.

• West Ham have scored 26 goals this season with ten different scorers
registering. Carlton Cole leads the way (seven), with Alessandro Diamanti
(four) and Guille Franco (three) next in line. Jack Collison (two), Matthew
Upson (two), Junior Stanislas (two), Manuel da Costa, Mark Noble, Luis
Jimenez and Zavon Hines have also registered.

• Cole is West Ham's top scorer this season with seven goals in 13 league
games. The England striker has scored 14 goals in 25 Premier League games
since Boxing Day 2008.

• Only Robert Green has played in every league game for the club this
season. He is on a run of 106 successive league appearances.

• If selected, Matthew Upson will be making his 300 club career appearance.

• Scott Parker has been booked seven times this season, while Julien
Faubert, Cole, Mark Noble and Guille Franco are each on four yellow cards.

• No side have been awarded more penalties than West Ham (six) this season,
whereas only Burnley (six) have conceded as many penalties as Portsmouth.

Portsmouth

• Portsmouth are looking for back-to-back Premier League wins for the first
time in 14 months.

• Avram Grant's side have lost eleven of the 12 games in which they have
conceded the opening goal this season.

• If they win, Portsmouth could climb out of the relegation zone for the
first time since the opening round of Premier League matches.

Team news

• Both managers have plenty of time to assess their options. Carlton Cole,
Kieron Dyer, Danny Gabbidon, Zavon Hines, Luis Boa Morte and Calum Davenport
are all definitely unavailable.

• Valon Behrami could return after training with the team all week, although
he faces stiff competition for a place after the impressive display against
league leaders Chelsea.

• Cole is making good progress from his knee injury and is aiming for a
January return.

• Dyer is likely to be out for two to three weeks with a hamstring problem
suffered at Bolton Wanderers on 15 December.

• Gabbidon is missing with the hamstring injury picked against Chelesa.

• Hines will be absent for some time because of a knee problem but it is
still too soon to know how long he will be sidelined.

• Boa Morte (knee) and Davenport (leg) remain long-term absentees.

• Portsmouth have no new fresh injury worries so could start with the same
team that beat Liverpool.

• Former Hammers David James is likely to miss out again with a calf strain,
although has been training. Asmir Begovic is set to deputise for the veteran
goalkeeper once more should he fail to make it.

Old boys

• Hayden Mullins will return to the Boleyn Ground for the first time since
his J26 January 2009 switch to the south coast for an undisclosed fee. He
signed for West Ham from Crystal Palace for £800,000 in October 2003 and had
been the longest-serving first-team player at the Boleyn Ground. The
midfielder, 30, played 178 league games for the club, scoring four goals.

• David James moved to West Ham United for £3.5m on 11 July 2001, signing a
four year contract. He played 102 times for the Hammers before signing for
Manchester City on 14 January 2004.

• Other players to have played for both teams include: Greg Campbell, Lee
Chapman, Jermain Defoe, Bill Ford, Hayden Foxe, Shaka Hislop, Billy James,
Glen Johnson, Bill Joyce, Alex McDonald, Nicky Morgan, Sebastien Schemmel,
Peter Shearing, Teddy Sheringham, Roy Smith, Stephen Smith, Pavel Srnicek,
Alan Stephenson, Ron Tindall, Svetoslav Todorov, Charlie Whitchurch.

General information

For ticket information, click here. For details on getting to the Boleyn
Ground, click here

Weather: The forecast is for a bright day with slight cloud and a top
temperature of around 8C.

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Herita a happy Hammer
WHUFC.com
The visit of Portsmouth will reunite a more than content Herita Ilunga with
a familar face
24.12.2009

Herita Ilunga is relishing the prospect of taking on an old friend when West
Ham United welcome Portsmouth to east London on Boxing Day. Frederic
Piquionne will be leading the visitors' attack and was twice a former
team-mate of the Hammers left-back. The pair were together at Stade Rennais,
before linking up at Saint-Etienne. During that latter spell, Ilunga was
voted player of the year and, unsurprisingly to the Boleyn Ground faithful,
a firm favourite with supporters. He said: "I knew Frederic at Rennes, where
we were together with the reserves. We teamed up again at St Etienne where
we were together two years. He is a good forward. "
Ilunga was pleased to play his part in an encouraging team display against
Chelsea last Sunday after admitting he has found the stop-start nature of
this season frustrating. "It's been difficult for me, " the 27-year-old
said. "The season started badly with a fractured jaw and then I got a
hamstring problem against Aston Villa. But I'm not making excuses,
football's like that - you have to accept it."
A steady presence in the Hammers ranks, Ilunga has had strong backing from
the fans, who have understood the difficulties he has faced this season.
"They're the best fans in England," he said, particularly mindful in return
of the hassles many face when travelling to away games. "It can't be easy
for them but even when we are losing they keep getting behind us and
singing."
With DR Congo not involved in January's CAF African Cup of Nations or the
2010 FIFA World Cup, Ilunga will himself have a supporting role this summer.
He said he has high hopes for his new adopted country in the summer finals.
"I am a supporter of England. I play in this wonderful league in this great
country so I really hope they do well. London is a lovely city and I am
really happy to be here. It's a wonderful opportunity. I love this place. I
like variety and you can find everything you want here."

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A Claret and Blue Christmas
WHUFC.com
The West Ham United players spread some Christmas cheer by visiting sick
children in hospitals
24.12.2009

The West Ham United squad was divided this week with the players dispatched
in different directions across a very wintry east London and south Essex. It
was time for the club's annual Christmas holiday visit but, rather than pick
one deserving location, this time it was decided to reach many more needy
kids by splitting up and covering three in the Hammers heartland - Richard
House Children's Hospice in Beckton, King George hospital in Goodmayes and
Basildon Hospital. Cars loaded with West Ham goodie bags and
specially-bought presents headed out with the players but the main aim was
to bring some festive cheer to those facing a difficult Christmas. The
squad, backed by the club, paid out of their own pockets, but the most
precious gift was that of their time. Crucially, there was also support for
those who give their lives to caring for others - whether staff or families.

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West Ham v Portsmouth
BBc.co.uk
Saturday, 26 December 2009
Premier League
West Ham v Portsmouth 13:00

Venue: Upton Park Date: Saturday, 26 December 2009 Kick-off: 1300 GMT
Coverage: BBC Sport website, BBC Radio 5 Live, local radio, Final Score &
highlights on Match of the Day


TEAM NEWS
West Ham could start with the same side that finished against Chelsea last
week, with James Tompkins continuing to cover for the injured Danny
Gabbidon. Valeron Behrami is back in the squad after a knee injury, though
may have to be content with a place on the bench.

Portsmouth have no fresh injury concerns and could name the same team who
defeated Liverpool a week ago. Goalkeeper David James is still nursing a
calf strain, with Asmir Begovic again set to deputise for the veteran
keeper.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

West Ham

Suspended: None Doubtful: None

Injured: Boa Morte, Cole & Hines (all knee), Davenport (thigh), Dyer &
Gabbidon (both hamstring)

Portsmouth

Suspended: None Doubtful: James (calf)

Injured: None


MATCH PREVIEW
West Ham's crucial point against Premier League leaders Chelsea last weekend
handed opponents Portsmouth the unwanted gift of being bottom of the table
at Christmas. History suggests that Pompey now have only a one in 18 chance
of survival come the end of the season.

People have been saying that if you are bottom at Christmas you are going
to go down... We are still right in there and the people in the dressing
room believe we can get out of it. We don't listen to what others are saying


Portsmouth midfielder Jamie O'Hara
Since the Premier League began in 1992 all bar one club that spent Christmas
at the foot of the table has gone on to be relegated. The exception to the
rule are West Brom, who incidentally beat Pompey on the final day five
seasons ago to stay up.

Two wins from five league games under new boss Avram Grant has given Pompey
fans genuine belief that the club can buck the trend and stay up. His
arrival has coincided with a change in formation, with Algerian Nadir
Belhadj one of the men to have benefited.

His goalscoring performance against Liverpool last Saturday was his first
start for the club since September. He also neutralised the impact of Glen
Johnson, something that would not have escaped the attentions of Fabio
Capello ahead of England's meeting with Algeria in the World Cup next June.

However, Belhadj is one of four Pompey players bound for the Africa Cup of
Nations after this fixture. Hassan Yebda, Aruna Dindane and veteran Kanu are
all likely to be absent until early February, and with a transfer embargo
still hanging over the club, it could prove to be a tricky start to 2010.

The West Ham camp have been in high spirits after their resilient efforts
against Chelsea. Midfielder Mark Noble revealed an out-of-the-blue heartfelt
speech from manager Gianfranco Zola was behind the performance, adding that
the players are united in their efforts for their boss, having let him down
in recent matches.


MATCH FACTS
Head-to-head

• West Ham have never beaten Portsmouth at Upton Park in the Premier League
(D1, L3).

• This is the third time in four years that these two teams have met on
Boxing Day, including last year when the Hammers ran out 4-1 winners at
Fratton Park.

• No side have been awarded more penalties than West Ham (6) this season,
whereas only Burnley (6) have conceded as many penalties as Portsmouth.

West Ham

• Alessandro Diamanti has scored two goals in his last two games. He is the
only West Ham player to have scored in 385 minutes of Premier League
football.

• Three of the last five goals scored by the Hammers have come form the
penalty spot, and they are without a clean sheet in 15 league games.

• Two of West Ham's three league victories this term have come against
newly-promoted sides. Their only win against an established Premier League
club was at home to Aston Villa in early November.

• If selected, Matthew Upson will be making his 300 club career appearance.

Portsmouth

• Since Avram Grant took charge, Portsmouth have scored in all five Premier
League games, with Frederic Piquionne finding the net in each of his last
two matches.

• Portsmouth are looking for back-to-back league wins for the first time in
14 months - since beating Tottenham (h) and Stoke City (h) last season.

• Pompey have lost 11 of the 12 games in which they have conceded the
opening goal this season.

• Depending on other results over the festive weekend, Portsmouth could
climb out of the relegation zone for the first time since the opening round
of Premier League matches.


LEADING GOALSCORERS

West Ham

Cole: 7 goals (7 league); Diamanti: 4 goals (4 league)

Portsmouth

Piquionne: 6 goals (3 league); Dindane: 5 goals (4 league)

MATCH OFFICIALS
Referee: Lee Probert

Assistant referees: Darren Cann & Nick Kinseley

Fourth official: Keith Hill

LAST LEAGUE MATCH LINE-UPS
West Ham (D1-1 v Chelsea, h): Green, Faubert, Gabbidon (Tomkins 19), Upson,
Ilunga, Noble, Kovac, Parker, Collison, Franco, Diamanti.

Subs Not Used: Stech, Jimenez, Spector, Da Costa, Nouble, Stanislas.

Portsmouth (W2-0 v Liverpool, h): Begovic, Finnan, Kaboul, Ben-Haim,
Hreidarsson, Yebda, Brown, O'Hara, Belhadj, Boateng (Mullins 89), Piquionne
(Kanu 90).

Subs Not Used: Ashdown, Utaka, Hughes, Dindane, Wilson.


MOST RECENT MEETING

Portsmouth 1-4 West Ham (26 December 2008)

Portsmouth scorer: Belhadj 8

West Ham scorers: Collison 20, Cole 67, Bellamy 70, 83

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Sell Upson at your peril
KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 24th December 2009
By: Staff Writer

Gianfranco Zola is in danger of falling foul of his employers after
questioning the potential sale of Matthew Upson. The 30-year-old centre
half, who is currently lined up to be one of three West Ham players to
feature for England at next summer's World Cup finals in South Africa has
refused to sign an extension to his current contract which expires in 18
months' time. The club's owners CB Holdings have apparently insisted that
further player sales are made during next month's transfer window despite
having previously claimed that the club is now self-sustaining. Favourite
for the chop, almost by default, is club captain Upson.

Zola however understandably fails to agree with that assessment - and admits
that should Upson, his only remaning top-class defender, become the latest
victim of CB Holdings' year-long fire-sale that his team will have even less
chance of avoiding the drop come May. You know, we want to keep the best
players," he told reporters assembled for the Portsmouth pre-match press
conference. "I don't know what's going to happen next month. "The only thing
I know for sure is that before then we have three games coming up that are
very, very important and I want to focus on them. That's the main thing, the
rest is out of my control. "The first step is to get through this game on
Saturday, which is vital, and let's do it all together and then we'll see
what happens."

Upson, who has been linked with Arsenal, Tottenham and Liverpool amongst
others in recent weeks - has made it clear that he sees his future away from
the Boleyn. However West Ham - or rather owners CB Holdings - could just as
easily wait until the summer to sell, should Upson remain unmoved Of course,
any eventual transfer fee is likely to be far less in the summer which has
presumably led to the notion that Upson is expendable - but relegation from
the Premier League, a much more likely scenario without the club captain,
would cost the club much, much more.

A fire sale by any other name: who's been flogged in 2009

Matthew Etherington: The first to go this year. Stoke coughed up around £3m
to take him to the Brittania where he has impressed in an improving Stoke
team.

Craig Bellamy: Sold to Man City for around £12m amidst rumours of him being
a trouble maker. Rumours which were later refuted.

Hayden Mullins: Flogged to Portsmouth last January. Replaced by Radoslav
Kovac who has been half the player Mullins was.

David Di Michele: Made 34 appearances for Zola last season but still moved
on in the summer. Striker-less West Ham now set to recall Freddie Sears from
Crystal Palace.

Lucas Neill: Offered a far inferior deal to that he was on and told the club
to poke it. Now playing for Everton.

Lee Bowyer: released on a free transfer in June. Scored the winning goal
against his old club in the recent defeat at Birmingham.

Savio Nsereko: Nani's very own Nigel Quashie. Nobody will ever know how much
West Ham lost on this extremely questionable deal.

James Collins: Flogged to Aston Villa on summer transfer deadline day for
£5m.

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Get your boots on Zola
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 23rd December 2009
By: Staff Writer

Gianfranco Zola has been left in the farcical situation of having no fit
first team strikers available after Guillermo Franco was ruled out of the
Boxing Day clash with Portsmouth.

Mexican striker Franco, who took a knock during the second half against
Chelsea last weekend is understood to have sustained the injury during
training on Wednesday and was immediately ruled out of this wekeend's clash
with the league's bottom club, according to the Independent.

With rookie Zavon Hines and Carlton Cole already injured - and Dean Ashton
having recently retired - Zola is left with teenager Frank Nouble as his
only direct replacement, although Italian Alessandro Diamanti has plenty of
experience as a withdrawn striker and could be asked to fill in.

Franco, who has proved a decent acquisition since joining the club on a free
transfer in September is also set to miss the trip to Tottenham on Monday
but should be back in time to face Arsenal in the third round of the FA Cup
the following weekend.

Meanwhile Carlton Cole continues to push for a mid-January return whilst
Zavon Hines could be out for several months should a longstanding injury
necessitate urgent treatment. West Ham are set to recall Freddie Sears,
without a senior goal in 18 months at either Premier League or Championship
level from his loan spell at Crytsla Palace to ease the crisis.

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West Ham v Pompey preview
Hammers host relegation rivals Pompey in relegation six-pointer
Last updated: 24th December 2009
SSN

PREDICTIONS:

Skysports.com prediction: 0-3
SKY BET odds: West Ham 6/5, Draw 9/4, Portsmouth 23/10
One to Watch: Kevin-Prince Boateng

The Premier League's bottom two meet at Upton Park on Boxing Day as West Ham
host relegation rivals Portsmouth. While Gianfranco Zola's Hammers continue
to toil, Pompey are a side on the up after a dramatic upturn in their home
form. Avram Grant's side deservedly beat Liverpool last time out while West
Ham battled bravely in holding league leaders Chelsea. This is a fixture
neither side can afford to lose as it is against a direct rival while the
odds are already against Portsmouth as they are bottom at Christmas.
West Brom remain the only side to have been bottom over the festive period
after staging an unlikely second half of the season comeback and retain
their top-flight status in the 2004/05 campaign.
Zola faces a striker crisis for the visit of Grant's troops as Italian
forward Alessandro Diamanti is his only recognised goalscorer. Guillermo
Franco picked up an injury in training on Wednesday and is set for a short
spell on the sidelines. With Dean Ashton retired and Carlton Cole, Kieron
Dyer and Zavon Hines sidelined through injury, 18 year old Frank Nouble and
ex-Spurs youth team starlet Terry Dixon are his only two options. The
Italian will also be without experienced defender Danny Gabbidon after he
picked up a hamstring injury. The defender lasted just 19 minutes of the 1-1
draw against Chelsea last time out and it looks as though he will be on the
sidelines until the early part of the New Year.
James Tomkins who replaced Gabbidon on Sunday is likely to keep his place in
the side and will partner Matthew Upson who returned against Chelsea and has
shown no ill effects from his hamstring problems. Valon Behrami is closing
in on a return to fitness following a knee injury and although the game
against Pompey could come too soon for him, he could play a part in the
festive period.

Grant could have England international David James back for their crucial
game against fellow strugglers West Ham. The vastly-experienced shot-stopper
has trained this week but is still nursing a calf injury. Second choice
keeper Asmir Begovic will continue to cover between the sticks if he fails
to make it. Manager Grant has no further injury worries, although Kanu,
Hassan Yebda, Nadir Belhadj and Aruna Dindane could all play their last game
before joining up with their national sides for the African Cup of Nations.
Belhadj should keep his place in the side after a lively display against the
Reds last time out that included scoring the opening goal of the game at
Fratton Park.

Possible starting XIs
West Ham: Green, Ilunga, Tomkins, Upson, Spector, Parker, Noble, Kovac,
Faubert, Nouble, Diamanti

Pompey: James, Finnan, Kaboul, Ben-Haim, Hreidarsson, Belhadj, Brown,
Boateng, O'Hara, Yebda, Piquionne

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Zola uncertain over sales
Hammers boss admits decision on sales may be out of his hands
Last updated: 23rd December 2009
SSN

West Ham United manager Gianfranco Zola does not know if his best players
will be sold from beneath him in the January transfer window. Endless
speculation regarding the Hammers' current financial predicament has
suggested that Rob Green, Matthew Upson, Scott Parker and Carlton Cole could
feature in a fundraising exercise. Zola is desperate to keep that spine of
his squad together but the Italian does not know what January will bring and
admits a final decision may be out of his hands. "You know, we want to keep
the best players. I don't know what's going to happen next month," said
Zola. "The only thing I know for sure is that before then we have three
games coming up that are very, very important and I want to focus on them.
That's the main thing, the rest is out of my control." The Hammers tackle
Portsmouth, the only side below them in the Premier League, on Boxing Day
and that fixture is the immediate focus for Zola. "The first step is get
through this game on Saturday which is vital and let's do it all together
and then we'll see what happens (in January)," added the Hammers boss. "I
can only focus on the game and make sure everything goes well on the pitch.
If we keep the same spirit we have against Chelsea I think we are going to
go through everything, that is my personal belief."

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Gianfranco Zola consigned to losing West Ham stars in January transfer
window
West Ham's current financial predicament has led to suggestions that England
quartet Rob Green, Matthew Upson, Scott Parker and Carlton Cole may have to
be sold in January's transfer window.
Telegraph.co.uk
By Telegraph staff
Published: 9:00AM GMT 24 Dec 2009

Zola is desperate to keep that spine of his squad together but the Italian
does not know what January will bring - and he admits a final decision may
ultimately be out of his hands. Former Birmingham City owners David Sullivan
and David Gold are understood to have tabled a £50 million takeover bid -
around half of what the club think the east London side are worth. and Gold
are reportedly also ready to give manager Zola some £20 million for
transfers during the January window to bolster a struggling squad but West
Ham's leading shareholder CB Holding has said they are in no hurry to sell.
"You know, we want to keep the best players. I don't know what's going to
happen next month," said Zola. "The only thing I know for sure is that
before then we have three games coming up that are very, very important and
I want to focus on them. That's the main thing, the rest is out of my
control."
The Hammers tackle Portsmouth, the only side below them in the league, on
Boxing Day followed by high-flying Tottenham on December 28 and Arsenal in
the FA Cup on January 3. West Ham may be in 19th place but they head into
the Portsmouth game on the back of a 1-1 home draw with league leaders
Chelsea. "The first step is get through this game on Saturday which is vital
and let's do it all together and then we'll see what happens (in January),"
Zola added. "I can only focus on the game and make sure everything goes well
on the pitch. If we keep the same spirit we have against Chelsea I think we
are going to go through everything, that is my personal belief."
Defender Danny Gabbidon will miss the Portsmouth game with a hamstring
injury but Zola has midfielder Valon Behrami back in contention.

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Daily WHUFC News - 24th December 2009

Zola wants repeat performance
WHUFC.com
Twelve months ago, West Ham United were rampant against Portsmouth and are
looking for the same again
23.12.2009

Gianfranco Zola is hopeful history will repeat itself when West Ham United
meet Portsmouth at the Boleyn Ground on Boxing Day. On 26 December last
year, the Hammers returned from Fratton Park with a 4-1 victory to
kick-started a revival that ended with the club securing a ninth-placed
finish. The manager is not sure whether he will have Valon Behrami - who has
been in full training this week - available for Saturday as part of his
upbeat squad but he is mindful that the trip to Tottenham Hotspur follows
swiftly next Monday. Zola said: "The good news is that Valon Behrami has
been training with me so he might be available. The squad is the same as
last week other than Danny Gabbidon is out with a hamstring injury and Valon
Behrami might be back. "We need everybody. A team is made of the people that
play and do not play - they are the same importance. Playing two games like
that you have to have fresh legs available. "We are looking for the same
result [as last year] but I know it will be a tough match - tougher than
last year. I am confident because we are in a good moment, in a good spirit
so I'm not afraid of playing this game."
Although Spurs is looming large, all that really matters to the manager is
Portsmouth and the possibility of moving clear of the bottom three. "They
have been playing well recently, they look compact and seem to have found
their way. There is no doubt that it will be a tough game but we have found
our way as well. It's going to be an interesting match. "It's a game that we
need to get a result and it has to be three points but we have to do it
intelligently as we are playing against a team that is in very good
condition. We will like to play very carefully."
The manager emphasised the spirit in the camp, fuelled by the positives of a
1-1 draw with Chelsea on Sunday that could have been so much more. He is not
dwelling on the harshly-awarded penalty last time out though. "Hopefully in
the future some decisions will go for us so I will stick to that. It happens
and is part of the game and we have to accept it - even though it is
painful. "There's a very, very good atmosphere right now and I think the
Chelsea game has lifted everybody up. It is important and it is essential
when you play football that you have that kind of atmosphere. "Tactics are
important in football but if they are not supported by the passion and
desire the players showed the other day then you are always short. That was
the thing I admired the most and training on Wednesday morning was great -
it really makes you pleased. "This time of year you have to be careful with
what you are doing as you can't do very much with so many games coming up.
In our case not having a big squad you have to try to not do too much. I am
trying to keep the spirit alive and the positivity which is very important
and I think it is working."
The squad have been vocal in support of the manager in recent weeks and Zola
was pleased to see the togetherness in the camp show itself against league
leaders Chelsea.
"When you do something you hope that the players share what you are doing
and they work on what you say. For me it was very encouraging to see the
passion the players showed in the game. It means that we are creating
something and they want to work on that."

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Festive fun with Behrami
WHUFC.com
Fans were able to meet Valon Behrami this week when he made a special visit
to one of the club stores
23.12.2009

Valon Behrami proved a popular visitor to the Lakeside store this week as he
helped spread some Christmas cheer. The midfielder went along to the club
shop to sign autographs and pose for pictures, and young and old queued out
the door for the chance to say hello. Behrami, who has been training this
week after a knee problem, was making his first visit to the shopping centre
and enjoyed the experience of meeting fans in the Hammers heartland. He
said: "I enjoyed it very much. It was good to meet all the supporters and
everyone was very nice to me. I would like to wish everyone a happy
Christmas and hopefully I will be back in the team very soon." Keep an eye
on whufc.com for more news of player appearances at both club stores -
Stadium and Lakeside - in the New Year.

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'Back to basics'
WHUFC.com
Jack Collison knows West Ham United will have to work hard to overcome
Portsmouth on Boxing Day
23.12.2009

Jack Collison has told WHUTV he and his West Ham United team-mates are
determined to repay manager Gianfranco Zola by beating Portsmouth on Boxing
Day. The Wales midfielder admitted that the players felt they had let Zola
and first-team coaches Steve Clarke and Kevin Keen down with their recent
performances in the Barclays Premier League defeats at Birmingham City and
Bolton Wanderers. Having taken a positive step by drawing with leaders
Chelsea on Sunday, the 21-year-old and his colleagues are eager to go one
better by beating bottom side Portsmouth at the Boleyn Ground on Saturday.
"It was a massive result, but the bigger bonus was the performance; the way
we went out there and played; the belief; the desire; it's what we really
need right now. It's going to give us a lift going into our biggest game of
the season with Portsmouth. "We were very disappointed with the last two
games. We felt like we should have got points out of both of them and we
didn't. We came into training and everyone is working hard and digging in to
improve the situation. "Everyone is united behind the manager, and also
Steve Clarke and Kevin Keen. They've been massive for us. We're all behind
them and, at the end of the day, it's down to us as players. We're the ones
going out on the pitch and he can only do so much for us. We feel we let him
down in a couple of games and hopefully Sunday went a long way to showing we
can stay in the league and we can push on now."
Collison, who has set high standards since making his debut at Arsenal on
New Year's Day 2008, also conceded that he had not been at his best in the
recent home defeat by Manchester United, when he was given a tough
examination by France left-back Patrice Evra. On Sunday, the youngster kept
another international full-back, England's Ashley Cole, quiet, no doubt to
the irritation of his wife, X-Factor judge Cheryl Cole, who was watching the
action from the stands. "Ashley Cole is a very talented player and I knew it
was going to be a tough game. I was a little bit disappointed with the way I
played against Manchester United and I was a bit happier on Sunday. I'm
going to keep trying to improve and do what I can for the team. "It's
massive that we all work hard and get behind one another and support each
other and we can improve the situation. "We've got to go back to basics. We
did that on Sunday and we've got to do the same against Portsmouth. It's a
massive game for us and hopefully we can get three points and go into the
New Year ready to kick on."

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Travel help from TFL
WHUFC.com
TFL have launched aservice that could help your matchday travel plans
22.12.2009

TfL would like to remind all West Ham United supporters that they can
receive the latest travel news direct to their phones and computers. Fans
can find out well in advance if it is going to take longer to travel to the
Boleyn Ground or away games in London. To keep informed, go to TFL's website
by clicking here and sign up for the travel alerts and weekend closures
emails which warn you each Wednesday of closures on the following Saturday
and Sunday.

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West Ham's shareholders in no hurry to sell club
BBC.co.uk

West Ham's major shareholder has reiterated that it is not under pressure to
sell the club. A club statement says CB Holding aims to find new owners in
the next three years, and is not "under pressure to conclude an agreement".
Former Birmingham owners David Gold and David Sullivan have tabled a £50m
bid, which is thought to be well below the club's valuation. The club say
they have had "a number" of other approaches from investors. Gold and
Sullivan wanted to take a substantial shareholding in West Ham, and were
reportedly ready to give manager Gianfranco Zola a transfer fund in January.
However, their hopes of a quick purchase suffered a blow when CB Holding's
parent company - Straumur-Burdaras Investment Bank - had its debt payments
frozen until September 2010. If that had not happened, Straumur Bank would
have been forced to sell off its assets, including West Ham. Nonetheless,
reports continue to suggest that Zola could be forced to sell his best
players in January, including Rob Green, Matthew Upson, Scott Parker and
Carlton Cole. "I don't know what's going to happen next month," said Zola at
a news conference on Wednesday. "The only thing I know for sure is that
before then we have three games coming up that are very, very important and
I want to focus on them. That's the main thing, the rest is out of my
control." The Hammers face Portsmouth on Boxing Day in a match between the
Premier League's bottom two.

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Zola uncertain over sales
Hammers boss admits decision on sales may be out of his hands
Last updated: 23rd December 2009
SSN

West Ham United manager Gianfranco Zola does not know if his best players
will be sold from beneath him in the January transfer window. Endless
speculation regarding the Hammers' current financial predicament has
suggested that Rob Green, Matthew Upson, Scott Parker and Carlton Cole could
feature in a fundraising exercise. Zola is desperate to keep that spine of
his squad together but the Italian does not know what January will bring and
admits a final decision may be out of his hands. "You know, we want to keep
the best players. I don't know what's going to happen next month," said
Zola. "The only thing I know for sure is that before then we have three
games coming up that are very, very important and I want to focus on them.
That's the main thing, the rest is out of my control."
The Hammers tackle Portsmouth, the only side below them in the Premier
League, on Boxing Day and that fixture is the immediate focus for Zola. "The
first step is get through this game on Saturday which is vital and let's do
it all together and then we'll see what happens (in January)," added the
Hammers boss. "I can only focus on the game and make sure everything goes
well on the pitch. If we keep the same spirit we have against Chelsea I
think we are going to go through everything, that is my personal belief."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers deny sale fears
Club in talks with interested parties
Last updated: 23rd December 2009
SSN

West Ham have denied reports that the club is under pressure to find new
owners. Speculation has suggested CB Holdings, the company formed by the
creditor which runs West Ham, is seeking new investment in the cash-strapped
outfit. Former Birmingham City co-owners David Gold and David Sullivan have
already seen one bid for the club rejected by Icelandic bank Straumur, which
owns 70 per cent of CB Holdings. The club have moved to quell rumours they
are desperate to find new owners and insist a number of interested parties
have approached them about a takeover and that talks are ongoing. "Our
shareholder CB Holding has made it clear it would like to find new owners
for the club in the next three years and that is still the case. "In recent
months we have had a number of approaches from parties interested in
investing in West Ham United. The club have held a number of discussions
with those parties and the talks are ongoing. "CB Holding is not under
pressure to conclude an agreement in the immediate future, but the club will
keep supporters informed of any developments when appropriate."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham tell David Sullivan: You can't buy the club on the cheap
Published 17:55 23/12/09 By Darren Lewis
The Mirror

West Ham have shattered the bid by David Gold and David Sullivan to buy the
club on the cheap by insisting they will not be held to ransom. The former
Birmingham owners have tabled a £50millin bid – around half the Hammers'
valuation – in an attempt to take advantage of their cash crisis. In
painting themselves as the saviours of the east London outfit, Gold and
Sullivan have also made it clear they are ready to pump £20million into a
transfer kitty for boss Gianfranco Zola to buy new players for the fight
against relegation. But the club's major shareholder, CB Holding, have
revealed they are NOT under pressure to sell and maintained West Ham are
also talking to other interested parties. The second-from-bottom club's hand
is further strengthened by the fact that their parent company Straumur Bank
has been granted a moratorium on their debts until September. In a club
statement, West Ham said last night: "Our shareholder CB Holding has made it
clear it would like to find new owners for the club in the next three years
and that is still the case. "In recent months we have had a number of
approaches from parties interested in investing in West Ham United. "The
club have held a number of discussions with those parties and talks are
still ongoing. "CB Holding is not under pressure to conclude an agreement in
the immediate future, but the club will keep supporters informed of any
developments when appropriate."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Gianfranco Zola losing grip on Matthew Upson as transfer window looms
Gary Jacob
The Times

Gianfranco Zola could be losing his battle to prevent the sale of Matthew
Upson in the transfer window next month. The West Ham United manager fears
that selling the influential defender could lead to the club losing their
fight against relegation this season and is also concerned about the
negative signal that the departure would send to fans.
The Italian has been told that he will have the final decision on Upson, but
the club may be forced into a change of tack if finances dictate. "You know,
we want to keep the best players," Zola said. "[But] I don't know what's
going to happen next month."
West Ham are conscious that Upson will be 31 in April and has only 18 months
left on his contract. However, Zola is worried that he will be short of
experienced options at the back if he is sold. Upson changed his agent a
year ago in the hope of a move to a top-four club and is still agitating for
a move. Liverpool remain keen on the player after showing interest in the
summer, when they were unable to raise the funds. They face the same problem
now but West Ham may decide to try and create an auction for Upson in a bid
to raise money to strengthen the squad. They believe that Manchester United,
who have had up to six defenders out injured recently, and Tottenham Hotspur
could be interested. Harry Redknapp has four established centre backs but
the Tottenham manager may be prepared to sell Michael Dawson. Alan Hutton,
the Spurs right back, could also move to Upton Park on loan as part of the
deal. Off the pitch, Straumur, West Ham's Icelandic owner, is willing to
sell a stake in the club with a view to a takeover. It would also reduce its
exposure to the liabilities in the event of relegation. It values the club
at £120 million but has concerns about the prospective buyers. Tony
Fernandes, a Malaysian airline entrepreneur who withdrew his interest, and
Intermarket, another party, are not credible buyers. Straumur also feels
that David Sullivan and David Gold, the former Birmingham City owners who
made a £46 million takeover bid this month, have been trying to unsettle the
club. The prospect of Sullivan and Gold taking over is reduced because the
banks owed nearly £50 million by West Ham do not want to deal with them. It
leaves probably one significant unnamed interested party.

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Gianfranco Zola admits West Ham may have to sell their best players
Financial concerns leave Italian in an uncertain position
Rob Green and Matthew Upson among those that could leave
Dominic Fifield guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 23 December 2009 22.11 GMT

Gianfranco Zola's West Ham face Portsmouth in a crucial relegation battle on
Boxing Day. Gianfranco Zola has admitted he cannot be sure that he will be
able to keep hold of West Ham's leading players during next month's transfer
window. The manager is desperate to retain key men such as Rob Green,
Matthew Upson, Scott Parker and Carlton Cole, but acknowledged that their
future is out of his hands because of West Ham's financial predicament. "You
know, we want to keep the best players. I don't know what's going to happen
next month," said Zola. "The only thing I know for sure is that before then
we have three games coming up that are very, very important and I want to
focus on them. That's the main thing, the rest is out of my control."
CB Holdings, the company formed by creditors to run West Ham, had its
position strengthened this month when Straumur, its leading shareholder, was
granted a moratorium on its debts until September. Zola prefers to focus on
a festive programme which starts against bottom-placed Portsmouth on
Saturday and is followed by games against Tottenham, also in the Premier
League, and Arsenal, in the FA Cup. "The first step is to get through this
game on Saturday, which is vital, and let's do it all together and then
we'll see what happens [in January]," Zola said. Upson is wanted by
Tottenham, though their manager, Harry Redknapp, will need to offload
players – most likely David Bentley or Roman Pavlyuchenko – to generate the
necessary funds.

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West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola warns his players: We must stay focused
Published 23:00 23/12/09 By Darren Lewis
The Mirror

Gianfranco Zola last night ordered his West Ham players to remain focused on
their jobs through Christmas, despite the uncertainty surrounding the club.
The second-from-bottom Hammers face tough festive fixtures against
Portsmouth, Tottenham, Arsenal and Stoke over the next two weeks. But they
go into their Boxing Day fixture against Avram Grant's Pompey boosted by
their superb 1-1 draw against league leaders Chelsea last Sunday. West Ham
have also shattered the bid by David Gold and David Sullivan to buy the club
on the cheap by revealing yesterday that they are in talks with several
investors. Fears remain that the club's cash crisis could see the likes of
Scott Parker and Matthew Upson snapped up by Liverpool, while Carlton Cole
is a cut-price target for Arsenal. But Zola has told his players to focus on
the only thing they can control - their performances.
He said: "I don't know what's going to happen next month. "The only thing I
know for sure is that before then we have three games coming up. Very, very
important games - and I want to focus on them. "Then in January, we'll see
what happens. To be honest, right now, I don't know what's going to happen.
But I know that if we play and perform well in these games they will
determine also what might happen in January. "Of course, of course [ we want
to keep our best players]. "We are on the same length that we are before,
what can we do? I can only focus on the game and make sure on the pitch
everything goes well. "That's the main thing. The rest is out of my control.
I can only focus on the things that I can somehow influence."

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West Ham United v Portsmouth: match preview
Read a full match preview of the Premier League game between West Ham United
and Portsmouth at Upton Park on Saturday Dec 26 2009, kick-off 13.00 GMT.
Telegraph.co.uk
By John Ley
Published: 6:00AM GMT 24 Dec 2009

Saturday, 26 December
West Ham United v Portsmouth
Upton Park
Kick-off: 13.00 GMT
TV: BBC1 MotD.

The bottom two clash at the Boleyn Ground. Portsmouth received a boost last
Saturday with a 2-0 win over Liverpool but are expected to be without
goalkeeper David James again but West Ham's point against Chelsea kept them
off the foot of the table. West Ham have beaten Portsmouth once - at
Fratton Park last season - in eight meetings home and away. Last season,
this game ended goalless while West Ham's last home win against Portsmouth
came in 1993 when they went on to win promotion to the Premiership. Their
last home win against Portsmouth in the top flight was in December 1958 -
when they won 6-0.

West Ham United (Probable, 4-4-2): Green; Faubert, Gabbidon, Upson, Ilunga;
Collison, Noble, Parker, Kovac; Franco, Diamanti.
Portsmouth (Probable, 4-4-2): Begovic; Ben-Haim, Kaboul, Wilson,
Hreidarsson; Piquionne, Yebda, Boateng, Brown, O'Hara; Dindane.
Referee: Lee Probert. Matches: 8. R2 Y28.

Last Season: West Ham 0 Portsmouth 0, Portsmouth 1 West Ham 4.

Stat of the game: West Ham have never beaten Portsmouth at home in the
Premier League, in four attempts.

Betting Tip: Tight, tense and exciting. Portsmouth to force a goalless draw
at 9-1.

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Brazil striker Adriano snubs January switch to West Ham
By Sportsmail Reporter
Last updated at 1:38 AM on 24th December 2009
Daily Mail

Brazil striker Adriano has snubbed a move to West Ham United by accepting an
improved deal to stay at Flamengo for the next six months. The 27-year-old
has been handed a 40 per cent pay rise after the Brazilian champions landed
a new sponsorship deal, but the deal is still less than half of what was on
offer if he had returned to Europe. AC Milan, Roma and the Hammers all
approached the former Inter Milan player, but he was reluctant to leave
before next summer's World Cup.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Franco injury leaves Zola short of options
West Ham left with no fit senior strikers ahead of the crunch match with
Pompey
By Sam Wallace, Football Correspondent
Thursday, 24 December 2009
Independent.co.uk

West Ham United manager Gianfranco Zola was plunged further into crisis
yesterday when he lost Guillermo Franco to a freak training ground injury
that leaves him with no fit senior strikers for Saturday's Premier League
relegation game with Portsmouth. His squad is stretched to breaking point
now and Zola will surely have to start with Frank Nouble, the 18-year-old
signing from Chelsea who is still eligible to play for West Ham's under-18s
in the FA Youth Cup. Nouble has played only five times for the Hammers since
he arrived in the summer and he has never started a game for the club, let
alone led the line alone.

Zola has had appalling luck with injuries already this season. Carlton Cole
injured his knee against Burnley last month and will be out until midway
through next month. Zavon Hines is also out with a knee injury and Dean
Ashton has been forced to retire after more than three years battling the
consequences of his broken ankle sustained in an England training session.

Franco, 33, an Argentine-born Mexican acquitted himself well in the 1-1 draw
with Chelsea on Sunday, leading the line on his own in a 4-5-1 formation. He
picked up the injury in a session yesterday at the club's Chadwell Heath
training ground and is now likely to miss the crucial game against
Portsmouth and the game against Tottenham on 28 December.

It means Zola faces the Christmas period with no reliable source of goals in
a team in 19th place and one point above Portsmouth in last place in the
league. The club's owner CB Holdings, which is 70 per cent owned by the
Icelandic bank Straumur, said yesterday that it would not sell the club
cheaply but there are now major fears as to whether the club has the playing
resources to survive in the Premier League.

Even Franco was a free agent when he was signed in September and with the
club operating under financial restrictions, they may come under pressure
next month to sell leading players Scott Parker and Matthew Upson. Gianluca
Nani, the club's technical director, will have to rely upon loan signings if
he is to bring any players in during the transfer window.

Zola has admitted himself that he does not know what the future holds: "You
know, we want to keep the best players. I don't know what's going to happen
next month. The only thing I know for sure is that before then we have three
games coming up that are very, very important and I want to focus on them.
That's the main thing, the rest is out of my control."

West Ham released a statement yesterday in response to the bids from the
former Birmingham City owners David Gold and David Sullivan who have
outlined their interest in buying the club. West Ham have £40m of debt and
CB Holdings, which comprises the major creditors of former owner Bjorgolfur
Gudmundsson, wants to sell for around £80m – with the buyer assuming the
debt.

Gold and Sullivan have offered £50m for the club and have been rejected. The
statement was a clear sign from the owners that although they want to sell
the club they will not be bounced into doing so at a cheap price.

A spokesman for West Ham said: "Our shareholder CB Holdings has made it
clear it would like to find new owners for the club in the next three years
and that is still the case. In recent months we have had a number of
approaches from parties interested in investing in West Ham United.

"The club have held a number of discussions with those parties and talks are
still ongoing. CB Holdings is not under pressure to conclude an agreement in
the immediate future, but the club will keep supporters informed of any
developments when appropriate."

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