Monday, September 27

Daily WHUFC News - 27th September 2010

Manager on Monday
WHUFC.com
The manager was rightly elated in victory but has his players back down to
business this week
27.09.2010

Avram Grant was able to reflect on a tremendous week's work with a smile on
Monday but, with more challenges ahead, would not be dwelling too long
despite a trio of eye-catching results. The manager could surely be forgiven
had he chosen to bask in a seven days that saw a point at Stoke, Carling Cup
progress away to Sunderland and then a well-deserved 1-0 home success
against UEFA Champions League contenders Tottenham Hotspur last Saturday.
Indeed, everyone connected with the club was on a high over the weekend -
but a delighted Grant was determined most of all to place even more
expectation on his own shoulders to keep on delivering - starting with
Fulham in this Saturday's Kids for a Quid fixture at the Boleyn. "I feel all
the time under pressure," he said. "I don't want to be even one minute
without pressure in this job as it will damage me more than be a good thing.
"Pressure is not a bad word. It pushes, pushes you to the right place. I
control the pressure and can direct it when I decide. Other people let the
pressure control them."

Although a figure of studied concentration during the match - "it is the job
of the manager to control his emotion" - Grant admitted he was caught up in
the celebrations at the final whistle against Spurs. Nothing will deter him
from achieving the targets he established when arriving back in the summer,
and he has sensed there is a real opportunity to make a difference in east
London. "I had good days with Chelsea and Portsmouth, of course it was
different, but now I am here and I am more pleased we have a project. "I
like that we are playing good football, we have a vision about the players.
We know that we don't have the money [of many rival clubs] because of the
debt, so we took hungry players that want to succeed. We took players that
can develop the team."

The manager said he was pleased to see his players - notably Robert Green -
share their elation with the supporters at the final whistle. "We played
against a very good team in Tottenham and a good manager. I know how much
this means to the fans. We are living to make the fans happy. "It is a good
feeling to win any game. Since the first day of the season, I knew we were
playing well and would get the results we need. In football, people have to
be patient and not make quick judgements. As long as you see effort and
progress, you will get the rewards. "Last season was traumatic for this club
and we know it will take time to change the mentality. We are doing
everything right and it is important that we have stuck to our way. We have
a long way to go."

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'This is a club on the up'
WHUFC.com
Vice-Chairman Karren Brady has updated supporters in a special column
printed in Saturday's programme
27.09.2010

I make no secret of my desire to focus on the balance sheet but there is no
doubt that a more stable balance sheet is what has enabled us against the
odds to invest in the team sheet this summer. This investment has seen two
of our eight signings Freddie Piquionne and Victor Obinna firing home in our
midweek Carling Cup fixture to take us just three rounds from Wembley. This
might have seemed a tall feat given the well documented level of debt that
we inherited from the previous board. The issues surrounding the club's
financial predicament have continued to hit the headlines. This is why I
wanted to set the record straight to you our principal stakeholders and
investors. If there is one thing I have learnt since I first walked through
the front doors of the Boleyn Ground on 19 January it is that you are among
the most savvy supporters in this league. This fits well with our own policy
of honesty when it comes to our supporters.

You had a right to know that we implemented drastic changes but you also
need to know that these changes were part of a long-term considered strategy
to take us forward. We have invested in the team both on and off the pitch
and this has paid dividends in a very short space of time. Off the pitch the
team that lacked strategy and focus now benefits from a commercial and
customer focused culture which will in turn benefit everyone associated with
the club.
The reality is that this is a club on the up once again and everyone knows
their role to ensure this continues. Yes, we have inherited £50million of
long-term debts, to the banks and Sheffield United. But the bank debt will
be down to £25m by 2013, a sustainable level for a business with a turnover
over £80m, and that's only three years away.

In the nine months we have been running the club we have paid back £20m in
bank debt, cut costs by £6m and increased income by £2m. We have achieved
this through sheer hard work. Every department has clear targets that are
being met. We are building the status and image of the club both at a
domestic and global level and continue to expand our CSR policy. We have a
clear vision to take the club forward and are taking our partners with us.
Our excitement and enthusiasm at the possibilities for West Ham are proving
to be infectious. We are at the start of an adventure and people want to be
part of what we are doing. More investors are coming on board. My phone
rings with a new opportunity, a new idea every few minutes. If we've done
that in just nine months, imagine where we can be in a few years' time.

Our Olympic Stadium bid is the only viable solution for the long-term future
of the Olympic Park. It presents a golden opportunity to secure long-term
prosperity. Not just for the Hammers, but for east London itself. We also
have terrific partners in SBOBET, Macron and Newham Council. Our strategy
translates on the field. In addition to the depth we have added to Avram
Grant's squad, our youth system is world class. Most positive of all is that
our best players remain ours - resisting all manner of attempts to lure them
away.

Scott Parker put the seal on that when he signed his new contract a
fortnight ago. We worked hard to secure his signature as he is integral to
our long-term strategy for success. He is a modest man. Probably
reluctantly, he has had to take centre stage in the last few months as
Hammer of the Year and the fans' favourite. He would say that it is all
about the team and the club, and it is precisely that which has kept him
here. He sees what West Ham United means and what puts us above all of our
rivals. And he's right. It isn't about individuals. It is about a team with
clear direction and goals, pulling together to ensure success. It is about
fantastic fans, a real history founded on the best Academy around and a
pledge to move forward while always nodding to the past.
Trust is key and that comes with time. I am not one for rhetoric. I am
confident you will want to share our aspirations as we embark on this
adventure. I will let our actions seal your faith in our leadership but it
is my responsibility to keep our principal stakeholders abreast of all club
affairs - no speculation just hard facts - and at West Ham that means you.

We all want West Ham to succeed.
Karren Brady
Vice-Chairman

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Skipper sets the tone
WHUFC.com
The captain was keen to thank those who gave their all in noisy and
passionate support on Saturday
27.09.2010

Matthew Upson has hailed the Boleyn backing given to the Hammers on Saturday
and said it could play a big part in making October another memorable month.
Home games against Fulham and Newcastle United - either side of a trip to
Wolverhampton Wanderers - are to be followed by a mouthwatering Carling Cup
last-16 date with Stoke City at the Boleyn Ground. Getting set for the
challenges ahead, Avram Grant's men are unbeaten in three games and the
captain was quick to praise the supporters for their part. "Saturday was a
classic derby," the England centre-back said. "Right from the off, the
atmosphere was good. We then set the tempo well and the crowd followed us.
It is up to us to give them something to shout about and they didn't
disappoint us. "When the crowd are like that it adds to the whole atmosphere
of the game and the quality of the performance. It is a big thing for us
when they are like that and we are really pleased we could give them what
they wanted."

Upson, who was an impressive part of an unchanged back four from the
previous top-flight outing, is relishing the prospect of the Kids for a Quid
duel against Fulham next Saturday, with the club's decision to let children
in for just a £1 set to play a big part in getting a packed and passionate
stadium.
"We need that support next week but as I say it is up to us to set the tempo
and get the game flowing. We have to do the job first but they have been
brilliant wherever we have played."

The Stoke game is one to savour, with the club determined to get a full
house when the tie is played in the week beginning Monday 25 October. "We
are very pleased it is a home draw," said Upson. "It is an opportunity to
get into the quarter-finals. We need to give it everything we have got as
the chance to go far would be great for the club. The guys went to
Sunderland on Tuesday and did a great job. They performed really well and
got it done and we will need to do that again when we play Stoke."

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Green fingered for Salute
The Sun
Published: Today

ROBERT GREEN is facing an FA charge after making an insulting gesture on
Saturday. The West Ham keeper was blasted for his World Cup cock-up against
the USA. But he starred in the win over Spurs and then gave a defiant salute
to his critics at the final whistle. Hammers team-mate Danny Gabbidon
revealed no one at Upton Park has even mentioned his England hell. Gabbidon
said: "We have not said anything because we know he's a good goalie. He is a
very strong character. "He knows he made a mistake but we've just let him
get on with it."

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Vinny's Tottenham Report
Vinny - Sun Sep 26 2010
Wesy Ham Online

West Ham United 1 Tottenham Hotspur 0

West Ham recorded their first league victory of the season against rivals
Tottenham with a single goal from Frederique Piquionne enough to cap a great
performance and a superb result. There was a totally different feel around
Upton Park and for me this was our best performance in quite some time.
Anyone who was in attendance will know just how enjoyable the day was and it
reminded me of what going to Upton Park used to be like. It has been a
terrible start to the season but over the last week there had been a shift
with the team looking a lot better and the results against Stoke, and the
midweek victory in the League Cup at Sunderland giving us confidence going
into a game against a side who we have not beaten for over four years.

The game was exciting albeit nerve racking in the second half but
defensively we were superb and I cannot rate the performance of our back
four and goal keeper highly enough. Going forward we were always dangerous
with the lively Obinna and the strength of Piquionne giving us real edge.
There has been so much doom and gloom surrounding this football club over
the last couple of years and whilst this is only one game you could feel
something changing and I just hope this is the beginning of our revival. It
is not of course just this game as the display at Sunderland was also very
positive and had the result to match which now sets us up for a League Cup
4th round tie at home to Stoke City.

Avram Grant made a number of changes to the side who disposed of Sunderland
on Tuesday night. Robert Green returned in goal in place of Marek Stech
despite some fans calling for Stech to keep his place due to the erratic
form of Green so far this season. In defence, Danny Gabbidon came back in at
left back in place of Ben Haim who dropped to the bench with Upson returning
to centre half in place of Tomkins. Manuel Da Costa was alongside Upson in
the heart of the defence with Lars Jacobson returning at right back after
being Cup Tied midweek. In midfield Kieron Dyer started on the right wing
with Pablo Barrera on the bench and Mark Noble came back into the side for
Radoslav Kovac alongside Scott Parker. Luis Boa Morte was on the left wing.
Victor Obinna and Frederique Piquionne on the back of their goals at
Sunderland both started the game which meant that Carlton Cole had to make
do with a place on the bench.

In the dug out for Tottenham was of course former West Ham manager Harry
Redknapp. Since leaving the club in 2001 and going to manager both
Portsmouth and Spurs we have failed to record a single victory over the
twitching one.

The atmosphere was electric within the Boleyn ground and you did get the
feeling that the supporters sensed that today may well be a turning point.
We started quickly and looked the better side in the first fifteen minutes
with Spurs struggling to get a hold of the ball as we attacked with pace
down the flanks and the movement of both Piquionne and Obinna were causing
constant problems for the Spurs backline. Within the first few minutes we
could have well had the opening goal as a long ball forward from Da Costa
was flicked into the path of Obinna by Piquionne which saw the Nigerian
forward race towards goal but he dragged his left foot shot wide.

We kept the pressure on and another half chance fell to Dyer just inside the
area as a poor clearance was directed straight at him and Dyer hit a left
foot shot which took a deflection and went wide for a corner. Corners would
be something we would have in abundance during the game with a massive
fourteen corners being won. From the resulting corner taken by Noble the
ball was met by Da Costa but his header looped in the air. As it came down
Gabbidon head towards goal but a slight deflection put it out for another
corner.

The first chance of the game for Tottenham came from a long range effort
from Jermaine Jenas who hit a shot which was well saved by Robert Green.
At this point we were dominating possession and the crowd even this early on
were cheering every pass made by a West Ham player. Spurs again had a long
range effort saved by Green as the Dutch Midfielder Van Der Vaart hit a shot
which was well saved by Green again as he turned it around the post.

A ball won in midfield by Boa Morte saw the winger play the ball through for
Dyer into space and he used his pace to retrieve the ball and went up
against Hutton in the area but a good challenge from the right back saw it
put out for yet another West Ham corner. The resulting corner would bring
the first goal of the game as Noble played it in for Fredrique Piquionne to
meet it with an excellent header which was planted away from the goal keeper
putting West Ham a goal up on 29 minutes. A goal is exactly what we had
deserved and for the second consecutive league game running we have scored
from a corner kick. As this is something we have struggled to do for many
seasons I can only presume this is an aspect of the game Avram Grant and his
team have been working on.

Parker went on a mazy run into the area as he bulldozed his way through the
Tottenham defence but he took too long to get his shot off and it was put
out for another corner. Spurs had their best spell of the game in the last
ten minutes of the first half and were close to getting an equaliser.

It started with another clumsy tackle from Boa Morte on Hutton which saw the
Portuguese midfielder yellow carded. The resulting free kick was put into a
dangerous area but cleared to Obinna and it looked as though we would be
able to counter attack but the pass from Obinna was too casual and it gave
Spurs back possession of the ball. The ball was played out to Lennon who
used his pace to get down the touchline and cross for Luka Modric to hit an
excellent left foot half volley which was surely going in only for Robert
Green to make a quite stunning save tipping the shot onto the bar. If you
have not already seen the save by Green I suggest you do so as it was a
magnificent stop from a player who has had so much criticism over the last
few months. With half time approaching a Spurs goal would have totally
changed the game and Green had a massive part to play in our victory.

Spurs looked poised to score when Van Der Vaart played a ball to the back
post with Crouch there to surely finish only for Lars Jacobson to make a
last ditch challenge which diverted the ball away. A few minutes before the
half time whistle Kieron Dyer pulled up with an injury and had to be taken
off with Pablo Barrera replacing him. This was just more rotten luck for
injury prone Dyer who had been playing quite well. I had feared that the
second half may be a Tottenham onslaught but it was nothing of the sort with
the visitors from North London only managing one really good chance which
came early on in the half.

It was only ten minutes after the restart when Hutton played the ball
through to Huddlestone who had kept himself onside and he knocked the ball
past Green but his finish was appalling and went high and wide. This was a
real let off and told us that the best form of defence would be to attack
and I was pleasantly surprised that throughout the half we were always in
the game as an attacking force having a few chances of our own. This was not
a smash and grab victory and we were always competing.

Around the hour mark Frederique Piquionne came off with injury and was
replaced by the much maligned Carlton Cole. Another shot at goal came around
this time when Boa Morte lifted a great pass over the top of the Spurs
defence for Obinna to run on to and he managed to dig out a left foot shot
into the ground which Cudicini in the Spurs goal had to turn around the
post.

A goal kick from Robert Green towards Carlton Cole saw the striker put
pressure on the Spurs defenders and forced Gareth Bale into giving away a
cheap corner. From the resulting corner (taken on this occasion by Victor
Obinna) the ball was cleared only as far as Mark Noble who hit a shot from
around 30 yards out which was superbly saved by Cudicini as it looked
destined for the back of the net.

If anyone was going to get another goal it looked liked ourselves and
another chance presented itself as a long ball forward was won in the air by
Cole who flicked it through to Barrera who got into the area and crossed the
ball only for the Spurs keeper and defenders to make a mess of it as it
bounced around the six yard box by neither Obinna nor Boa Morte could apply
the finish.

With four minutes remaining Spurs had their final opportunity as the ball
broke for Robbie Keane in the area but the striker hit a tame shot easily
saved by Robert Green. Three minutes added on time were awarded but the
retaining of possession was something we did well and as that final whistle
blew Upton Park erupted into pandemonium. A win was always vital but to get
it by beating them made it a fantastic day.

Player Reviews

Robert Green
After receiving so much criticism from the media and even West Ham
supporters Green needed a performance like this to give everyone including
himself confidence in his ability. His first clean sheet of the season was
deserved and Green made a few wonderful saves.

Lars Jacobson
I am fast becoming a fan of the no nonsense Dane who does all the simple
things but is highly effective. The left hand side with Bale is usually a
threat Spurs possess but I cannot recall them having any joy down the side
Jacobson occupied. In the first half he saved what looked like a certain
goal as he diverted the ball away from the incoming Peter Crouch. We may
have finally signed a proper right back.

Matthew Upson
A solid display from both the centre halves as they kept Spurs at bay
throughout the game. Upson was dominating in the air and was strong in the
tackle. Spurs were forced into having long range shots for the majority of
the game on only once did they get in behind Upson.

Manuel Da Costa
A top performance from Da Costa who seems to have no cemented his place in
the back line. He won just about everything in the air and dealt with Crouch
superbly. Despite Crouch being taller he anticipated his jumps and seemed to
be able to beat Crouch on numerous occasions.

Danny Gabbidon
The fact that I would still play Gabbidon even if Ilunga was fit shows how
much I am being impressed by a player who I thought had no future at the
club given his injury problems and total loss of form. Like at Stoke
Gabbidon played very well, and to see Aaron Lennon hauled off on 65 minutes
goes to show how little Gabbidon let him have.

Kieron Dyer
We look a better team when he is playing and for him to be forced off with
yet another injury was probably the only disappointing aspect of the game.
Hopefully he wont be out for too long.

Mark Noble
I was really impressed by Noble as he was really on top of his game during
this one. He was putting his foot in, spraying passes about and his set
pieces caused all sorts of trouble. He put in a dominating midfield
performance.

Scott Parker
Fantastic once again and with him and Noble in the centre they controlled
the game with Parker putting in another complete performance which showed
the best of his defensive and attacking side. Top stuff from the centre of
midfielder.

Luis Boa Morte
The nasty element of our team and playing against a good footballing side
such as Tottenham you need someone there to give them a bit of a kick and
Boa Morte did just that. He hasn't got the pace to take on his man any more
and beat him but some of his passing was quite good as he set Obinna through
a couple of times.

Victor Obinna
All that was missing from his performance was a goal because he buzzed about
giving the Spurs defence a torrid time. His movement is a big positive as he
drags defenders away and also gives the midfielders an option of a pass as
he will run into space.

Frederique Piquionne
Two goals in the last two games for the French striker as he looks to really
be coming into this own. He was outstanding in the air and the Spurs
defenders couldn't seem to get near him. His goal was an excellent header
but his all round performance was strong, threatening and he really made the
difference.

Subs Used

Pablo Barrera (on for Dyer 43 mins)
With Dyer injured we needed Barrera to continue what he had been doing and
that is running at the Spurs defenders with pace and that is exactly what he
did. I thought Barrera was excellent and I think we will see him getting
better and better as the weeks progress.

Carlton Cole (on for Piquionne 64 mins)
He worked hard in his time on the pitch and looked to make an impact forcing
the Spurs defenders in to errors with just his presence. With Piquionne and
Obinna in fine form Cole will be on the bench next week and will need to be
ready when the time comes because despite him being dropped he will still
have a part to play this season.

Radoslav Kovac (on for Obinna 89 mins)
A time wasting change which got rid of a minute.

Subs Not Used: Stech, Faubert, McCarthy, Ben Haim

Bookings: Boa Morte, Cole

Man Of The Match: Manuel Da Costa

Tottenham Hotspur: Cudicini, Hutton, Corluka, Bassong, Bale, Lennon (Keane
66), Jenas, Huddlestone, Modric, Van der Vaart (Giovani 78), Crouch
(Pavlyuchenko 80)
Subs: Pletikosa, Palacios, Sandro, Kranjcar

Attendance: 34, 190

Overall

Getting the first win of the season was of course vital but to get it over
Spurs just made it even more special. The atmosphere, the performance, the
result - everything was perfect about this game and this was surely our best
display in well over a year. Of course there is the fear of getting too
carried away by one result but for me I have to take optimism when it
presents itself given the depressing time it has been supporting West Ham
for the last few seasons.
Whilst one result does not mean everything with this season will now be
great it does give us hope that we can turn things around and move forward
as a football club. We are still in for a tough season but if the players
can perform like that and the fans get right behind them like we did during
this game then we can maybe look forward to better times.

Next Game - Fulham (h)

There are no easy games in the Premiership and any side managed by Mark
Hughes will be hard to beat and physical. Fulham are struggling to score
goals at the moment so as long as we can stay solid and cut out any unforced
error we should be keeping them out. It is whether we can break them down
which will be the question and judging from this performance if we can keep
the same level of intensity when attacking we may well come out with a win.
We have had so many so called 'turning points' over the last eighteen months
but this week has seen us play three and win two and not being beaten. This
shows progress and I am going to put my optimistic hat on for a little while
and see how it fits.

Brilliant day, fantastic result and it is about time we got one over North
London's second team.

The View From Grant

"It was the best performance since I arrived. It was a good three points.
"It was the first time we took three points and I am happy because we know
how much it means to the supporters. To win against a very good team and
keep our first clean sheet. "We were the better team. lt was a good game. We
stuck to our way of playing good football even though you always worry about
the other team coming back." "It was a typical Robert Green performance, he
is a good goalkeeper, sometimes keepers have good days and bad days but this
was his normal performance. He did some great saves. It is not easy,
especially the one from [Luka] Modric." "Our team has character. Our first
game was not good against Aston Villa and we had zero points. Then we become
stronger and stronger when people thought we would be weaker and weaker.
"The mental thing is very important. Rob showed today in the only place that
a sportsman needs to show it - on the pitch, not in the media, not with
excuses or explanations - that he is a good goalkeeper. "One thing I am very
proud about this team is that we are making mistakes but we learn from them
very quickly and it is good because it is only the beginning of the season.
We have a long way to reach our targets."
"The attitude of the strikers is very good, they are working hard and they
are very quick. They understand the game. I know Freddie from Portsmouth, he
is a team player, first for the team and then for himself. He scored a good
goal in midweek and he scored today. "Obinna is an intelligent player. He is
part of our vision of the club, and not just because of the financial
situation, which is to take players that are hungry to succeed. You saw a
few of them together including Pablo Barrera when he came on." "We have
turned the corner. Football is results - we deserved more from the Bolton
and Chelsea games but there is no deserve in the table - but only two weeks
ago we started to train all the team together, except the injured players.
"This is a team, they are developing well and I must say they are
progressing quicker than I thought."

Season 2010/11 Scorers and Bookings

Top Scorers

Scott Parker 3 (2 League, 1 Cup)
Frederique Piquionne 2 (1 League, 1 Cup)
Mark Noble 1 (1 league)
Victor Obinna 1 (1 Cup)

Bookings

Noble - 3
Cole - 2
Parker - 2
Tomkins - 1
Faubert - 1
Behrami - 1
Upson - 1
Boa Morte - 1

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Green set to discover his press gesture fate
Published 23:00 26/09/10 By MirrorFootball
The Mirror

Robert Green will find out today if he faces FA action over his gesture at
the end of West Ham's win over Tottenham. The Hammers keeper appeared to
make a sign towards the Press box at Upton Park just after full-time on
Saturday.FA officials are aware of the pictures of the 30-year-old's actions
and will study the referee's report before deciding whether to act. They
could ask for footage of the incident but will not punish players from still
images. Green has been in the spotlight after his gaffe against USA during
England's disastrous World Cup. He made another error against Chelsea
recently and has lost his place in Fabio Capello's squad. Green could be
fined if he is found guilty of misconduct by the FA.

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West Ham 1 Tottenham 0: Rob Green is making a good fist of it
By MATT BARLOW Last updated at 12:31 AM on 27th September 2010
Daily Mail

The air around Rob Green took a proper pounding. Above Avram Grant, it had
to be satisfied with a flimsy tickle. Two men on the same side, both under
pressure, similar relief, different celebrations. Grant stood on the
touchline and flapped both arms above his head as Martin Atkinson's final
whistle confirmed West Ham's 1-0 win against Spurs, their first victory of
the Barclays Premier League season. Harry Redknapp snapped him from this
moment of pleasure to shake hands before the Spurs boss darted down the
tunnel, beaten at Upton Park for the first time since leaving the club nine
years ago. Enlarge
Green was only just launching into an extended routine. His big, gloved
fists were pumping towards home fans who, in turn, hailed his display and
first clean sheet in almost six months. There was a sarcastic, cheery wave
for those Tottenham fans lingering behind his goal. A bottle arched from the
stands, spewing its contents into the turf as it landed short of the
goalkeeper. Green gave them another wave and soaked up more plaudits before
jogging around the pitch to deliver a classic 'Up Yours' gesture towards the
press box. Not surprisingly, he declined a request to talk to the media
afterwards. The FA will examine footage of the incident before deciding
whether to charge him with misconduct for making an insulting gesture. But
it would be churlish to punish Green for a retaliation to the criticism
directed at him since THAT World Cup howler against the United
States.'Players are not computers,' said Grant. 'I don't think emotion is a
negative word. I don't want my players to be without emotions.' In 105 days
since Rustenburg, Green has been under scrutiny. Overlooked by England, he
made a costly error against Chelsea and got away with one against Stoke
before a terrific save from Kenwyne Jones, to earn his team a point and stop
the rot of four defeats. He was superb against Spurs on Saturday, with one
exceptional save to tip a Luka Modric volley on to the bar.
It may have closed an uncomfortable chapter were it not for a date on
Saturday with Fulham and Clint Dempsey, who's shot slithered from his grasp
in Rustenburg.

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Premier League players could lose £100m to taxman
By Harry Harris, Football Correspondent
September 26, 2010
ESPN

HM Revenue & Customs suspects the image rights deals are being used by clubs
to top up payments to players at the Treasury's expense, because the image
rights payments are taxed at a lower rate than normal wage payments. The
Revenue's special civil investigations unit has a team of 20 tax inspectors
sifting through players' image rights deals, and it has written to all the
top players who receive part of their income through image rights. Clubs
contest that the image rights deals are legitimate licensing payments, which
are taxed at 21% or 28%, but if the Revenue determines the payments should
be counted as wages, they would be levied at 40%, with a new 50% top rate
from April. Premier League clubs, led by Premier League finance director
Javed Khan, have attempted to strike a collective deal with the Revenue. The
clubs face a backlash and possible legal action from players who would be
receiving decreased net payments compared to what was promised in their
contracts. Sullivan said the Hammers are trying to resolve issues between
their players and the Revenue as quickly as possible, and that the club will
withhold the image rights payments until an agreement is reached. Sullivan
told ESPNsoccernet: "We are in negotiations with the Revenue and we hope to
resolve things within three months, via a global settlement relating to all
players of West Ham United.
"If any player can agree things quicker in relation to their image rights
payment and any possible tax due to HMRC we will pay them immediately [when]
they resolve their position with HMRC. Every football club is in the same
position. It wouldn't surprise me if the Revenue are aiming to recoup
something like
£100 million."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United break ice and launch party following victory over Tottenham
Hotspur
West Ham United 1 Tottenham Hotspur 0
By Ian Chadband
Published: 7:00AM BST 27 Sep 2010
Telegraph.co.uk

Stringfellows can wait when you have got Upton Park. Before heading up West
for his stag do, Russell "he kissed a girl and he liked it" Brand was to be
found gallivanting in the East End, inviting his celebrity chums — Baddiel,
Walliams, Noel Gallagher, the usual suspects — to join him in a kickabout at
the Boleyn Ground on Saturday evening an hour after his beloved Hammers had
launched his party there. Joy appeared unconfined. As the home fans trekked
home celebrating the derby win which spirited them off the bottom of the
table, co-owner David Sullivan, Scott Parker, assorted players, rock stars
and comedians all seemed to have been infected by the feelgood factor as
they enjoyed a laugh under the floodlights. Evidently, the old place had
really needed a lift like this. "The sweetest win," Sullivan called it.

Even Avram Grant was smiling, doing his best to give the impression this had
not been a must-win affair for him. How had he handled the pressure? "I
control the pressure and can direct it when I decide. Others let the
pressure control them. For me, it was nothing exceptional." Fair enough;
after Portsmouth and Chelsea, presumably he could cope with anything? "You
are close to the truth," mused Grant. Still, although he talks of West Ham
being a long project, a short-term return had never been more sorely or
urgently required. Sullivan suggested afterwards that no manager could
survive nine successive defeats; until last week, Grant had been almost
halfway to the gallows. Yet here his team, who have been improving by the
game, delivered robustly. "Not a relegation team," sniffed Sullivan, and who
could argue? Manuel da Costa was towering at the back, Parker offered the
sleeves-up leadership Spurs seemed to lack and the muscular strike pairing
of Victor Obinna and match-winner Freddie Piquionne was a persistent pain
for Spurs' makeshift back four. Then there was the Robert Green makeover. An
assured display, topped by one astounding effort to tip Luca Modric's volley
on to the bar, was marked afterwards by a defiant "stick it" gesture to the
press box which looked like the public exorcism of Clint Dempsey torment.

Green's team-mates could not have been more thrilled for him. "We never
needed to say anything to Robert because he's a very strong character and
never let what happened affect him," explained Danny Gabbidon. Green helped
seal Harry Redknapp's wretched week, though, and Spurs' defensive injury
woes offer no guarantee that Wednesday's Champions League tie with Twente
will see a rapid change of fortune. William Gallas, with a torn groin
muscle, could be out for a few weeks, Ledley King was "struggling" with
groin and knee problems and Younes Kaboul a hamstring strain, so Redknapp
may have to rely on Saturday's unconvincing pairing of Vedran Corluka and
Sebastien Bassong in central defence. This was not Harry's day. "Yep, first
time I've ever been beaten by the super Hammers," sighed the old super
Hammer. Even he, though, had to applaud the revival for no one knew better
what this afternoon had meant to West Ham's exultant faithful, be it the
lads in The Boleyn pub or Mr Brand's Stringfellows crew. "He's following me
on Twitter but he hasn't invited me to his stag do," muttered Gabbidon. Good
job; West Ham's revival was at least safe for the moment.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
WEST HAM v TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR
HARRY ACCUSES WEST HAM OF 'TAPPING UP' O'HARA
ComeOnSpurs.com; 25 September 2010

West Ham and Spurs came to blows this summer over Scott Parker, who was the
subject of a rejected £7million bid from Harry. David Sullivan accused Spurs
of unsettling Parker with the bid and Parker signed a new four-year contract
at Upton Park. And Harry believes that his former club are hypocritical as
they also contacted Jamie O'Hara about a move to Upton Park. Redknapp
claimed: "They were talking to Jamie O'Hara all through the summer. Jamie
told me he'd been getting phone calls all summer." If this is true West Ham
would have broken Premier League rule K3, which states that the buying party
in a transfer must contact the player's club before speaking to him
directly. Harry has called for this rule to be scrapped as 'tapping up'
players is widespread within the game. "Listen, it ("tapping up") happens in
the game. "We're all kidding ourselves if we think it doesn't go on in the
game. Every player that gets transferred, someone's ringing him. "It doesn't
just suddenly happen. An agent will speak to an agent for a player. He will
speak to the player. The player says 'yeah, I'd like to go to that club' and
that's how it happens. "If people don't think it happens at almost 99% of
transfers then they are in the wrong world."
West Ham were unavailable to respond to the allegations on Friday evening.

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

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Sunday, September 26

Daily WHUFC News - 26th September 2010

Grant delight at Tottenham triumph
WHUFC.com
The manager was on a high after seeing his side make it three games unbeaten
by beating Tottenham
25.09.2010

Avram Grant hailed the best win of his West Ham United career to date after
masterminding a home win against old rivals Tottenham Hotspur. The Hammers
completed a week to remember - after a point at Stoke City and Carling Cup
progress at Sunderland - with a 1-0 home success thanks to Frederic
Piquionne's first-half header and the manager could only find words of
praise for his team. "It was the best performance since I arrived. It was a
good three points. "It was the first time we took three points and I am
happy because we know how much it means to the supporters. To win against a
very good team and keep our first clean sheet. "We were the better team. lt
was a good game. We stuck to our way of playing good football even though
you always worry about the other team coming back."

While reluctant to single out individuals, the manager could not hide his
admiration for goalkeeper Robert Green. Having earned a point the previous
week with a superb flying save at Stoke, Green made sure the Hammers took
all three on Saturday with save after magnificent save. "It was a typical
Robert Green performance," Grant added. "He is a good goalkeeper, sometimes
keepers have good days and bad days but this was his normal performance. He
did some great saves. It is not easy, especially the one from [Luka]
Modric."

The manager also pointed out the "unbelievable saves" of Green's opposite
number Carlo Cudicini, a reminder that the Hammers went close on several
occasions to adding to Piquionne's bullet header from Mark Noble's corner.
"Our team has character. Our first game was not good against Aston Villa and
we had zero points. Then we become stronger and stronger when people thought
we would be weaker and weaker. "The mental thing is very important. Rob
showed today in the only place that a sportsman needs to show it - on the
pitch, not in the media, not with excuses or explanations - that he is a
good goalkeeper. "One thing I am very proud about this team is that we are
making mistakes but we learn from them very quickly and it is good because
it is only the beginning of the season. We have a long way to reach our
targets."

Time will also help with Valon Behrami and Thomas Hitzlsperger to be added
to the midfield in the weeks to come, while further forward Victor Obinna
and Piquionne are proving a potent partnership. Carlton Cole and Benni
McCarthy make up a lively-looking quartet. "The attitude of the strikers is
very good, they are working hard and they are very quick. They understand
the game. I know Freddie from Portsmouth, he is a team player, first for the
team and then for himself. He scored a good goal in midweek and he scored
today. "Obinna is an intelligent player. He is part of our vision of the
club, and not just because of the financial situation, which is to take
players that are hungry to succeed. You saw a few of them together including
Pablo Barrera when he came on."

The manager confirmed that Kieron Dyer had to be substituted just before
half-time because of illness, having already seen Winston Reid miss out this
week because of his own sickness. "Kieron was sick. He didn't feel so good.
He was dizzy and we needed to sub him. He played well until then."

Such hurdles were overcome well by the team, with everyone playing their
part. "We have turned the corner. Football is results - we deserved more
from the Bolton and Chelsea games but there is no deserve in the table - but
only two weeks ago we started to train all the team together, except the
injured players. "This is a team, they are developing well and I must say
they are progressing quicker than I thought."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Obinna thanks the fans
WHUFC.com
The buzz around the Boleyn at the final whistle on Saturday has captured
Victor Obinna's imagination
25.09.2010

Victor Obinna described the fans as "unbelievable" after they and he played
a starring role in the 1-0 derby victory against Tottenham Hotspur on
Saturday.
The forward was terrific in terrorising the Spurs defence all afternoon,
proving too hot to handle from start to finish. He may not have bagged the
winning goal but he deserved as much praise as scorer Frederic Piquionne,
goalkeeper Robert Green and the rest of his team-mates. For Obinna, though,
the plaudits needed to go to the home supporters after their passionate
backing at a jumping Boleyn. Obinna said: "The atmosphere was incredible. It
was fantastic. I am very used to playing derbies everywhere i have played in
Italy and Spain but today was fantastic. "The weather, the atmosphere,
everybody was crazy [in the stands], It really gave us more morale. "Apart
from the fact we only had one point and we wanted to win, the fans were out
there and we really appreciate their support, they were there at Stoke and
Sunderland as well. I want to thank them for that and I hope they will
continue to support us."

Obinna added that he was loving life in the Barclays Premier League,
especially the speed of the matches, having previously been used to the more
sedate pace of Serie A with European champions Internazionale. "I really
wanted to come here. I believe I have the quality to be here. It is quick
and I am getting used to it gradually. It is very exciting. "It has been
wonderful since I have been here, everyone has been helping me to adapt. I
want to thank them and thank the manager for giving me the opportunity to
play and my team-mates as well for helping me around the squad. It has been
fantastic."

The No33 said the manager's main advice was to "do the right thing at the
right time", and that was certainly his approach in giving Carlo Cudicini
plenty of problems. "It has been a wonderful game for us. To play against a
team like Tottenham, the quality they have. As a team, we were happy to be
able to win. We started the game very well, the passion was there and the
atmosphere. The three points was most important for our fans. "I am very
happy that today we were able to win. We played good football in front of
our fans, we put smiles on their faces by winning the derby. That was what
was important. "This side can get better, we are improving day by day, game
by game. You have to take one game after the other. Today's game will give
us more confidence to face the other games we have. "We play Fulham next
week, it is another tough game. They are a good side and we will have to
work hard and develop our strategy the way the manager wants us to play."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Freddie wins the Golden Ball
WHUFC.com
The 10,000th Barclays Premier League goal with a Nike ball was scored by
Freddie Piquionne
25.09.2010

Frederic Piquionne reached a milestone today as he scored the 10,000th
Barclays Premier League goal with a Nike match ball. The goal was scored in
the 29th minute of the match with Tottenham Hotspur at the Boleyn Ground,
and was netted with the Nike Total 90 Tracer. Nike, official ball supplier
to the Barclays Premier League for the last ten seasons, has unveiled a
limited edition golden match ball to celebrate this landmark. Only 100
golden balls have been produced and are available to buy now from
www.nikestore.com/football

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers draw Potters
WHUFC.com
West Ham United will host Stoke City in the Carling Cup fourth round next
month
25.09.2010

West Ham United will host fellow Barclays Premier League club Stoke City in
the Carling Cup fourth round. The draw, which took place on Saturday, paired
the Hammers with the Potters in a tie that will be held in the week
commencing Monday 25 October. The Hammers have faced Stoke three times
previously in the League Cup, with the Londoners holding a 2-1 advantage.
However, it was Stoke who prevailed when the two clubs met at the semi-final
stage in 1971/72, winning 3-2 in a second replay at the old Victoria Ground.
West Ham defeated Stoke at the second-round stage in both 1982/83 and
1990/91.
West Ham have reached this stage of the competition for the first time since
the 2007/08 campaign, when they reached the quarter-finals before being
defeated by Everton. It is only the second time the Hammers have reached the
last 16 in the last ten seasons. The 2010/11 final will be held at Wembley
Stadium on 27 February 2011. The Hammers have reached the League Cup final
twice in their history, losing out on both occasions. West Bromwich Albion
ran out 5-3 aggregate winners in 1965/66, while Liverpool earned a 2-1
replay victory at Villa Park in 1980/81 after the initial game at finished
1-1 at Wembley.

Ticket information to come on whufc.com as soon as confirmed. Click here for
all the latest ticket information.

Full Carling Cup fourth-round draw
Ipswich Town v Northampton Town
West Ham United v Stoke City
Manchester United v Wolverhampton Wanderers
Leicester City v West Bromwich Albion
Aston Villa v Burnley
Wigan Athletic v Swansea City
Birmingham City v Brentford
Newcastle United v Arsenal

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 1 - 0 Tottenham
BBC.co.uk
Piquionne's header secured West Ham's first win of the Premier League season
By Chris Whyatt

West Ham moved off the bottom of the table with a display full of promise as
they beat London rivals Tottenham for the first time since May 2006. Playing
with real verve at a buoyant Upton Park, the Hammers won a riveting match
thanks to Frederic Piquionne's powerful 29th-minute header. Spurs were
largely out of sorts, but Tom Huddlestone missed a good chance to equalise
after rounding Robert Green. The hosts dug deep late on to clinch a first
league win of the season. Victory for a West Ham side which was threatened
by relegation during the 2009-10 campaign also marks the first occasion that
Spurs boss Harry Redknapp has been beaten by his former club since he left
Upton Park in 2001. Redknapp may well be concerned that his talented squad
are already stretched from the extra demands of Champions League football
this season, but he knows the north Londoners will not have too many days
like this. The real test was for the Hammers, who went into the match with
only two points from their opening five games. Given that, their supporters
could be forgiven for worrying that their club might be facing a grim fight
for survival - but those fears were washed away in a bewitching opening 15
minutes in which the visitors struggled to get out of their half as West Ham
piled on the pressure.

Redknapp's new centre-back pairing of Sebastian Bassong and Vedran Corluka
was exposed within the first two minutes, Piquionne easily flicking the ball
on for strike partner Victor Obinna to break free and scuff a shot wide. And
that forward pairing of Piquionne and Obinna quickly set about repaying the
faith of Hammers manager Avram Grant, after he stuck with them following
promising signs of chemistry in the midweek Carling Cup win over Sunderland.
A Piquionne shot was deflected just inches wide by Bassong's block before he
dropped his shoulder cleverly to work space and force the over-worked Spurs
goalkeeper Carlo Cudicini into a smart stop. Nigerian international Obinna
was ready to pounce on both occasions. Brimming with confidence, the sound
of "Ole!" even rang out around a sun-drenched Upton Park as West Ham
comfortably stroked the ball around. But Jermaine Jenas did wriggle free to
fire off a powerful long range shot for Spurs, although the home side's
keeper Green was equal to it. Sometimes England goalkeeper Green then
stretched every sinew to save a stinging shot from Rafael Van der Vaart, who
was trying to nudge Spurs back into the game with his inventive left foot.
But when the visitors forced their first spell of pressure, hard-working
West Ham won the ball back from a corner to break rapidly down the pitch
with forgotten man Kieron Dyer cunningly forcing a corner. Mark Noble duly
curled the dead ball over expertly for Piquionne to overpower a
featherweight aerial challenge from Corluka - and some competition from his
own team-mates - and steer a bullet header high past Cudicini's flailing
arm. The 29th minute goal was well deserved, but Spurs soon showed their
undoubted threat when England man Aaron Lennon made a brilliant jinking run
down the right wing.

When he had raced to the very brink of the touchline Lennon cut the ball
back for Luka Modric, who - showing perfect technique - leaned into a
perfect volley only for Green to tip it brilliantly onto the bar. Misfortune
then once again struck injury-plagued Dyer, who was looking sharp and
influential but had to be replaced by Pablo Barrera just before the end of a
truly entertaining first half. Though West Ham remained more dominant, just,
Spurs should have hit an equaliser 10 minutes into the second period. Onside
when he might have looked off, Huddlestone was put clean through by
marauding right-back Alan Hutton. But, lacking the necessary poise, he made
a real hash of a simple opportunity to score by shooting too early when he
had rounded Green cleanly.
Undeterred by that defensive lapse, the Hammers pressed back with Obinna -
on a year-long loan from Inter Milan - soon forcing a smart save from
Cudicini after holding off Hutton's muscular challenge. With Carlton Cole on
for Piquionne, the home side were given an extra boost of energy and again
Cudicini produced a high-quality stop. Quickly adjusting his body in
mid-air, the Italian tipped Noble's vicious shot over the bar to keep his
side in a game that was becoming more open and scrappy.

A rash of Spurs substitutions saw Redknapp replace Lennon with Robbie Keane,
Van der Vaart taken off for Giovani dos Santos and Peter Crouch replaced by
Roman Pavlyuchenko. Keane - not a natural finisher in the mould of the
injured Jermaine Defoe, who Tottenham appear to be missing - had the best
chance as the clock ticked towards 90 minutes, but he curled a weak attempt
into Green's grateful arms after Modric put him in. Spurs continued to knock
at the door, but without real conviction. West Ham ensured it stayed shut
while also pressing for a second, and they are sure to take heart from a
performance full of spirit. Spurs - for whom centre-back William Gallas tore
a groin muscle in training on Friday - must pick themselves up for the
Champions League visit of Dutch side FC Twente on Wednesday.

West Ham manager Avram Grant:
"We played very good, against a very good team. The atmosphere was great.
"The most important thing is to continue progressing. Robert Green was great
today, but so was Carlo Cudicini. "Like Spurs, we always want to win and
play good football. During the season we will have good times and also not
have good times. If you want to see the real West Ham, you we will to wait.
We will get better and better."

Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp:
"They started strong and their front two were a real handful. They worked
their socks off. It was a great team effort from West Ham and it could have
gone either way. It was an exciting game, end to end stuff. "It was more of
a basketball match. They attacked, we attacked. "If Tom Huddlestone had
scored when he was clean through in the second half it would have been
different. They would have been on the floor and we would have been in the
ascendancy."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Utd 1 Tottenham 0
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 25th September 2010
By: Staff Writer

West Ham are off the bottom of the Premier League after recording their
first win in nine attempts against neighbours Tottenham.

Frederic Piquionne's first half header was enough to give the Hammers their
first league win of the season, a richly deserved victory win that left
supporters - who gave Avram Grant's team a standing ovation at the final
whistle - delighted.

The Hammers had already been written off in some quarters after a poor start
that left them rooted to the bottom of the Premier League. But following the
point earned at Stoke last weekend and the midweek win at Sunderland in the
Carling Cup this latest success suggested that the obituaries had been
written somewhat prematurely.

The Hammers were simply a joy to watch today and outclassed their supposedly
superior opponents who only began to make inroads once the Hammers sat back
in order to defend their narrow lead midway thorugh the second half. But
with Matthew Upson back to his commanding best ably assisted by a
rapidly-improving Manuel Da Costa at the centre of defence, chances for
Spurs were kept few and far between.

That said, Rob Green was called into action on a number of occasions but the
'keeper silenced his critics with a string of top-class saves - none more so
than the stunning stop from Luca Modric which saw one clearly-impressed
pundit rating it as highly Gordon Banks' legendary save from Pele's header
in the 1970 World Cup Finals. After a series of worryingly under-par
performances, the England international - who celbrated widly in front of
the away fans at the final whistle - had definitely rediscovered his mojo.

West Ham amassed a total of 14 corners (to Spurs' seven) throughout the
match so it was no surprise that the only goal of the game came from a set
piece. Mark Noble's 29th minute header was met strongly by an unmarked
Piquionne who found the back of the net from six yards to score what proved
to be the only goal of the game.

United went close to adding a second on several occasions but Carlo Cudicini
was, like his opposite number, in excellent form and denied both Victor
Obinna and Mark Noble when they looked odds-on to score late on in the game.
At the other end, Tottenham's best chance fell to Tom Huddlestone but the
healthily-sized midfielder made a mockery of all the good work he had done
by blasting wildly over having successfully rounded Rob Green ten minutes
into the second period.

Harry Redknapp - mercilessly mocked by a Boleyn crowd that used to chant his
name - had enjoyed a good run since leaving the Boleyn Ground, never having
been beaten whilst manager of either Portsmouth or Spurs. But he was forced
to endure the jeers of the home faithful and a demoralising defeat today
against his former charges - and one that followed a 4-1 defeat against
Tottenham's main rivals, Arsenal, in midweek.

A good week to be a Spurs fan it is not, and no doubt the Lilywhites' misery
will carry on into Monday when the working week reconvenes and the bragging
rights commence.

The only sour note on an otherwise hugely successful day was yet another
injury to Kieron Dyer, who limped off at the end of the first half. There is
no news at present to the extent of the injury.

Next up for Avram Grant's side is another London derby, this time against
Fulham who visit the Boleyn Ground next weekend for the fourth 3pm Saturday
league game in succession.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Redknapp on... West Ham United
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 25th September 2010
By: Staff Writer

Beaten at last, a still-upbeat Harry Redknapp reflects on a narrow derby
defeat whilst somehow avoiding reference to 'bare bones'...

Harry, we just heard you on TV saying Robert Green made some world-class
saves - was that the difference?

No, Carlo made a couple of world-class saves as well, you know. It was
end-to-end stuff, wasn't it? It was a very open game. They started well and
got on top of us early, we started sloppy, then they scored. We got control
of the game and had four or five great opportunities, the 'keeper's made
some good saves and that was how it was; it was end-to-end stuff. There were
chances galore really, at both ends.

But we had a great chance with Tom [Huddlestone] second half, he's gone
round the 'keeper and he should have scored. But that's how it goes.

Van der Vaart looked like he was struggling a bit in the first half, was
he...

Van der Vaart? If he was struggling I don't know what the rest of them were
doing...

[laughs]

I thought he was on another planet...

[more laughs]

He was playing another game wasn't he, that Van der Vaart? He kept getting
hold of the ball and passing to his own team, you know...

I thought he looked like he was limping, Harry.

Oh did he? Oh well. Let's hope he gets fit, him, he'll be a decent player
then I suppose...

[even more laughs]

He looked alright to me.

No, I just took him, he's... you know, he's really not played a full game
since before the World Cup, he didn't play a full game in the World Cup.
We've got a busy week, I just didn't want to kill him off really today you
know, that's why I took him off in the end - not because he was playing
badly but because... I think he really does look like a top player, doesn't
he.

What do you think he's added to your team since he came here?

Well I think he's real class, real quality. He plays in that... in the
position, in... you know, in the hole, in behind... em... he's very
difficult... and he finds space to get the ball. He's always on the move,
he's always looking, he uses his body to shield the ball, if he's marked he
can still receive it which is a fantastic ability to have. In tight areas he
always wants the ball, he sees a pass, he has a great left foot, I think
he's a real quality player.

What do you think he lacks in terms of fitness, because you said...

No, he's just getting fitter. He's done very well I think to come in and
play the games he's played in such a short time, you know? He wasn't playing
at Real Madrid, so he came in and hadn't really had any games.

Harry, is that the first time you've been defeated by West Ham?

First time I've ever been beaten by the super Hammers, yeah...

[laughs]

Does that particularly bother you?

Nah. No, no. I get bothered if I lose any game, whether it's West Ham or
anybody, you know. No-one wants to lose, do they? I don't feel any worse for
losing to West Ham than I would any other team - no, of course not. I've had
a great run coming back here winning, so...

But we'll be okay, we'll be ready for Wednesday. Full credit to West Ham,
they worked their socks off today. They worked hard, they pressed us and
closed us, their front two made bad balls into good balls. Every time they
played the ball up the channel they chased it, got there, held it up, worked
hard. No, you couldn't take anything away from them today, they did great.

Do you think the squad is feeling the strain now with the European games?

No not really, it wouldn't be fair to West Ham to say that we felt the
strain today. We had chances... Listen, Tom walks round the goalie, if he
rolls it into the empty net it's probably a different game. Let's be honest
- in their situation, when you haven't won I think they'd have gone on the
floor and we'd have been in the ascendancy. I think, probably, you know.

But it didn't happen, that's how it goes - but no, I don't think we're
feeling the strain, we made enough chances today. We just looked a little
bit open; I felt we looked open at the back. We didn't look solid but it was
a different back four, that's the first time that back four has ever played
together. That's not my normal back four.

Ekotto is out injured, his knee swelled up like a balloon yesterday. He's a
great left back, Benoit Ekotto. He wasn't available. Bale normally plays
wide-left, it was a different back four and we started like it was a
different back four. That's how we started the game, for fifteen minutes we
were all over the show.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Grant on... Tottenham
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 25th September 2010
By: Staff Writer

Avram Grant reflects on a job well done - whilst revealing an
as-before-unseen passionate side to his personality...

The best West Ham performance since you arrived here?

I think so, yes; it was a good three points. It's the first time that we've
taken three points and I'm happy. Firstly because I know how much this game
means to the supporters, and to win against a very good team. It's the first
time we've kept a clean sheet, we won, so I'm happy with this.

How would you describe Robert Green's performance? He needed that for his
confidence, didn't he?

No, for me it was typical of Rob Green. He's a good goalkeeper, sometimes
goalkeepers have their good days and bad days but I think this was a normal
performance. He made a great save from Modric, it wasn't easy - and he was
good today.

All the team worked hard to keep our first clean sheet and against
Tottenham, it's not so easy. But I must say also that Carlo Cudicini was
very good today, he made some unbelievable saves.

He's taken such a battering to his confidence in general since the World
Cup, to pull a performance like that out took something?

But this is the life of a sportsman; I didn't see any athlete or football
player who was good all season. Even with our team, the first game against
Aston Villa was not good then you saw we became stronger and stronger when
people said we would become weaker and weaker.

And I think Robert showed today - in the only place that a sportsman needs
to show, on the pitch - that he's a good goalkeeper.

Harry Redknapp said it was an end-to-end game; do you feel you dominated
that game?

I think we were better. I think it was a good game because we were trying to
play good football, Tottenham always want to play good since Harry came so
it was a good football game. We saw the goalkeepers were very good in this
game which means both teams were good - but I think we were better.

Having created so many chances but only converted one of them did you think
Tottenham might come back in the second half?

You're always worried about these things. Remember what happened against
Bolton, first half we deserved to win 4-0. Even against Stoke, we didn't
score then the other team scored. Even against Chelsea, we started at 0-2,
came back very good - and then they scored.

But we spoke about this with the team. One thing I'm very proud about with
this team is that they are making mistakes but we learn from these very
quickly. It's good because it's only the beginning of the season and we have
a long, long way to [go to] reach our targets.

The two strikers seem to have a decent understanding?

Yes. The attitude is very good. Freddie I know from Portsmouth, he's a
player that plays for the team, he's a team player. He works first for the
team and then for himself. He got his reward when he scored a very good goal
in the middle of the week and he scored again today. He worked hard.

Obinna is an intelligent player and as I've told you [before], the revision
of the club is not just because of the financial situation but [also] to
take players that are hungry to succeed and you saw a few of them together,
including Barrera when he came on in the 40th minute.

There was talk after that Robert Green made a raised-arm gesture towards the
press box? Were you aware of that?

What?

Someone said he went like this [raises fists] to the press box?

No, I didn't see that.

As if to say he's made his point, you know, 'that showed them'?

I don't know what he did. I know that - and I say to the players - when you
are the owner of a restaurant or a politician you can say 'these are my
results'. A footballer can perform and then you don't need to say anything
after. I think his performance today was his best speech...

Are you aware that he's emotionally suffered, or may have been by what's
been written about him?

I like emotions in sport. The first time I was in England I said to the
owners that I don't want to be a cold fish. Football is emotional so if you
come to the game without emotions it's not good.

I'm emotional also, you don't see it because in the game you need to control
it but I think this is part of the passion of the game, you know. All of us
in football, even you the journalists - well, most of you - are here because
you like it. Am I right?

What was the problem with Kieron Dyer?

He was sick, he didn't feel so good. How do you call it... dizzy. But I
think he played well.

After a very positive week do you think you've turned the corner now?

I think yes, because football is all about results at the end of the day. We
deserved more points against Chelsea and against Bolton, but there is no
'deserve' in the table.

Two weeks ago we started to train with all the team together, for the first
two weeks we were training without the injured players. We still have bad
injuries - Behrami and Hitzlsperger - but they are good players.

But for the last two weeks we have all trained together and I think you can
see the team develop all the time. I think we play like a team, quicker than
I thought even.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers hit out at Harry
Brady unhappy over Redknapp's Parker pursuit
Last updated: 25th September 2010
SSN

Karren Brady has criticised Harry Redknapp over the way he pursued Scott
Parker during the transfer window. The West Ham midfielder recently put an
end to speculation about his future by signing a new four-year contract at
Upton Park. But throughout the summer it did not appear certain that he
would stay as Tottenham were interested in securing his services. West Ham
always made it clear that Parkerwas not for sale and rejected an offer from
their London rivals. Vice-chairman Brady nevertheless says the 29-year-old
was affected by the situation, and has hit out at Redknapp for the way he
does business.

'Harry's Law'

"Harry Redknapp has introduced something in the transfer market I call
'Harry's Law'. It goes: 'Do what I like, when I like, with whom I like,"
Brady said in the Daily Mail. "Scott Parker grew unsettled by Spurs' clear
interest in him even though West Ham joint-chairman David Sullivan stated he
was not for sale.
"No permission to speak to Scott was requested or would have been given.
"But this was not good enough for Spurs who were convinced we would be
pressured into selling." Redknapp has insisted that Tottenham did nothing
wrong, saying: "We were told they were willing to sell and wanted to sell
him to raise money."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers earn first win
Piquionne nets only goal against Spurs
Last updated: 25th September 2010
SSN

West Ham climbed off the bottom of the Premier League table with a 1-0
victory over London rivals Tottenham at Upton Park. Harry Redknapp had been
looking to extend his fine record against his former club but the Hammers
were good value for their first league win of the season, which lifts them
above Everton. The key moment arrived after 29 minutes when Frederic
Piquionne beat Vedran Corluka in the air to powerfully head home a Mark
Noble corner and reward West Ham for a storming start. Spurs were denied an
equaliser before half-time by a superb save from Robert Green to keep out
Luka Modric's volley, while Tom Huddlestone blazed off target in the second
half after being presented with a glorious chance. But Avram Grant's side
never came under too much pressure and even went close to doubling their
advantage on a couple of occasions.

Confidence

West Ham were hoping to build on their midweek Carling Cup victory against
Sunderland and the confidence oozed from them, especially in the first half.
They might have taken the lead inside the first minute when Victor Obinna
dragged a left-foot shot wide when clean through, but that set the tone for
a match which swung from end to end. A Kieron Dyer shot deflected just wide
and a Manuel Da Costa header also went close before the Hammers received the
reward for their enterprising play. When it came, however, it had little to
do with thrills. It was simple and direct, Noble swinging across a swerving
corner for Piquionne who rose above the rest to send a glancing header into
the Tottenham net. It was no more than West Ham deserved as they were
playing football which belied their position in the relegation zone, one
mazy Scott Parker dribble into the area typical of their increasing
confidence. But if the Hammers attacking play was impressive then it would
have counted for nothing without Green. Green has taken some fearful stick
since his howler against USA at the World Cup, but there is no doubt that on
his day he is a supreme shot-stopper. He needed to be, tipping away a
thunderous drive from Jermaine Jenas and palming out a 20-yard left-foot
shot from Rafael van der Vaart.

World class

But it was his save to deny Modric which was world class. Brilliant work by
Aaron Lennon down the right saw the ball arrive for Modric to swing his
cultured left boot. It was the sweetest of strikes, which looked goalbound
until somehow Green threw himself to his right to tip it onto the bar and
away to safety.
Tottenham had their chances in the second half, Alan Hutton putting
Huddlestone clear with just Green to beat. The Tottenham captain did the
hard bit, rounding the goalkeeper, but then contrived to send his tame shot
horribly wide of the post. Carlton Cole came on for the limping Piquionne
but it was West Ham who should have extended their lead when Obinna got the
better of the Spurs defence and fired in a left-foot shot which was
brilliantly saved low down by Carlo Cudicini. The Tottenham goalkeeper also
denied Noble in the 73rd minute when he somehow managed to turn the
midfielder's goalbound drive acrobatically around the post. Redknapp threw
on Robbie Keane for the ineffective Lennon in a bid to supply more firepower
but Keane could only shoot straight into the hands of Green when his
clearest chance presented itself. One sour note for the heavily-criticised
Grant was seeing an injured Dyer leave the field after 41 minutes to be
replaced by Pablo Barrera. But it was a match from which he will take great
heart.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 1 Spurs 0
The Sun
Published: 25 Sep 2010

FREDERIC PIQUIONNE sent West Ham into dreamland by downing arch rivals
Spurs. Piquionne nodded home just before the half-hour mark to take the
three points and get Upton Park rocking. His goal was enough to sink the
Hammers' high-flying foes as they climbed off the foot of the table. The
East Enders had NEVER before tasted victory over their old gaffer Harry
Redknapp. But the Spurs boss insists will not be losing sleep at seeing his
record put to bed. He said: "It is the first time I've been beaten by the
Super Hammers. "But I don't feel any worse losing to West Ham. I've had a
great run coming back here. "They started strong and their front two were a
real handful. They worked their socks off. "It was a great team effort from
West Ham and it could have gone either way. "It was an exciting game, end to
end stuff. It was more of a basketball match. They attacked, we attacked and
it could have gone either way."
Rob Green pulled off a string of top-drawer saves to keep the Hammers in it.
And Boleyn boss Avram Grant said: "He has had a difficult time after his
mistake at the World Cup but it looked like he was in great form again
today. "He made two world class saves. It does not matter what is in the
papers he showed on the pitch that he is a very good goalkeeper. "His
performance today was the best speech. I like emotion in the game. I don't
want to be a cold fish."
West Ham stormed out of the traps and Victor Obinna, the Carling Cup hero on
Tuesday, dragged an early shot wide. Kieron Dyer was next to threaten and
Manuel da Costa came close as the hosts showed they meant business. At the
other end, Green tipped away a Jermaine Jenas blockbuster before denying
megastar Rafael van der Vaart. West Ham were now camped in the Spurs half —
and finally managed to make it pay on 29 minutes. Mark Noble swung in a
corner and Piquionne got up high to feather a header home. Green was the
hero again ten minutes later, when the keeper tipped Luka Modric's volley on
to the bar and away to safety. It had been a brilliant half for the Hammers
yet it ended on a low note when Kieron Dyer hobbled off injured on 41
minutes.
Tom Huddlestone fluffed a glorious chance to get Spurs back in it with 55
minutes gone. The Spurs skipper rounded Green yet dribbled his shot wide the
goal at his mercy. Instead, West Ham looked more likely to find the net and
Obinna was denied by a magnificent Cudicini save. But the keeper's heroics
counted for nothing as the Hammers saw it home and took the points.

West Ham: Green, Jacobsen, da Costa, Upson, Gabbidon, Dyer (Barrera 42),
Parker, Noble, Boa Morte, Obinna (Kovac 89), Piquionne (Cole 64). Subs Not
Used: Stech, Ben-Haim, McCarthy, Faubert. Booked: Boa Morte, Cole.
Goals: Piquionne 29.

Tottenham: Cudicini, Hutton, Corluka, Bassong, Bale, Lennon (Keane 66),
Huddlestone, Jenas, Modric, Van der Vaart (Giovani 78), Crouch (Pavlyuchenko
80). Subs Not Used: Pletikosa, Palacios, Kranjcar, Sandro.

Att: 34,190
Ref: Martin Atkinson (W Yorkshire).

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
CRITICS MADE MY ROB STRONGER
News Of The World
25/09/2010

AVRAM GRANT believes Rob Green's performance was the perfect response to his
army of critics. The West Ham boss was finally able to celebrate a first
Premier League win of the season and had his goalkeeper to thank for keeping
Spurs at bay. Grant said: "It was a first clean sheet, we won and I'm happy.
The display was typical of Rob. He's a good keeper and goalkeepers have good
days and bad days. "It's the life of a sportsman. I've never seen an athlete
who is good all season. You get stronger and stronger when people say you
are weaker and weaker. "Rob showed today that the only place any sportsman
needs to speak is on the pitch. No excuses, no explanation, just that he's a
good goalkeeper. "I don't know what Rob did at the end, but I say to my
players you just need to perform - and then not say anything. His display
was the best form of speech. I like emotion in sport. It's part of the
passion."
Harry Redknapp saw his patched-up side defeated for the second time in the
league this term but felt no less disappointed at losing at Upton Park for
the first time as an opposing boss. Redknapp said: "It's the first time I've
ever lost to the super Hammers! "But it makes no difference who I lose to,
I'm as upset as I would be against anyone else. I am lucky to have had a
great winning run here over the years. "To be fair to West Ham, Cudicini
made some great saves as well as Green. It was end-to-end stuff and I think
Tom Huddlestone should have scored with the chance he had."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 1-0 Tottenham: Sunday Mirror match report
Published 23:00 25/09/10 By Anthony Clavane
The Mirror

Robert Green has had a torrid time of late, with fans up and down the
country taunting him over his World Cup howler. He has even suffered abuse
from his own fans - a section of them turning on him after another
unconvincing display during last week's draw at Stoke. But if Green is
facing a crisis of confidence - as Spurs boss Harry Redknapp implied before
the game - nobody seems to have told the West Ham goalkeeper. He was simply
magnificent yesterday, inspiring the revitalised Hammers to their first
league victory of the season. His gesture to the press box at the end of the
game told its own story. You have to go back quite a way to find the last
time West Ham beat Tottenham. It was, in fact, on the final day of the
2005-6 season - and it still leaves a sour taste in the mouth of Spurs fans.
The Hammers' victory over a Spurs side suffering badly with gastroenteritis
denied them a place in the Champions League. The north Londoners have
finally made it into Europe's premier cup competition - which might explain
why they crashed to a 1-0 defeat at Upton Park. Spurs appeared to have one
eye on their first Champions League home game of the season, against FC
Twente on Wednesday. "To say that takes credit away from West Ham,"
protested Redknapp. "They worked their socks off. You can't take anything
away from them. Green was superb."
The Hammers number one pulled off four brilliant saves to deny Redknapp's
men. The first, from a Jermaine Jenas shot, was good. The second, from a
Rafael Van Der Vaart rocket, was superb. The third was simply sublime. A
definite contender for save of the season. Aaron Lennon skipped past two
defenders and pulled the ball back for Luka Modric, whose stunning volley
was somehow pushed onto the underside of the bar by Green. Minutes later,
Green bravely blocked Van Der Vaart's effort from close range. This was the
former England stopper's 131st consecutive match - athough Avram Grant would
not confirm him as his No1 choice before this exhilirating London derby.
Afterwards, a clearly relieved Avram Grant - experiencing his first league
one at the club - said: "Robert Green is a good goalkeeper and he made some
great saves - but Cudicini also made some great saves. "We gave it
everything today. Not just Green, but the whole team played with
determination. They knew how much it meant to the fans to win against
Spurs."
In the first half, Tom Huddlestone carelessly gave the ball away to Kieron
Dyer, whose shot deflected wide. Then both Manuel da Costa and Scott Parker
found themselves in good goalscoring positions - but shot straight at Carlo
Cudicini. Frederic Piquionne then skinned Alan Hutton - but his drilled shot
was beaten out by Cudicini. A goal was coming and, sure enough, after 28
minutes it arrived - courtesy of Piquionne. The 31-year-old hitman has been
finding his range in recent games, having hit the woodwork against Chelsea
and Stoke. He finally opened his goal-scoring account at the Stadium of
Light last week - and yesterday doubled his tally with a powerful header.
Mark Noble floated a corner in from the left and the French striker soared
above both Vedran Corluka and Sebastien Bassong to flick the ball into the
top corner of the net. Piquionne clearly enjoys playing against Spurs,
having scored the first goal in Portsmouth's 2-0 FA Cup victory over them
last season. Just after the interval, Spurs should have drawn level.
Huddlestone was guilty of what will surely prove to be one of the misses of
the season after Modric picked him out with a superb through-ball. But the
midfielder, after rounding Green, inexplicably hoofed the ball wide of an
empty goal.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers keeper Green tells press where they can stick it
Published 23:00 25/09/10 By Anthony Clavane
The Mirror

Robert Green hit back at his critics by making an "up yours" gesture at the
press box after West Ham's 1-0 victory over Spurs yesterday. Green has been
taunted by fans throughout the country since his World Cup howler against
the USA. He turned in a great display but looks certain to face FA action
over his gesture. Boss Avram Grant said: "This is all part of the life of a
sportsman. "I think Rob's performance was the best speech."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Frédéric Piquionne gives West Ham precious win over Tottenham Hotspur
West Ham United 1 (Piquionne 29 ) Tottenham Hotspur 0
Jamie Jackson at Upton Park
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 25 September 2010 17.14 BST

West Ham United's Frédéric Piquionne rises above the Tottenham Hotspur
defence to score. Photograph: Andrew Couldridge/Action Images
Avram Grant's excellent week ended in bouquets after West Ham defeated their
detested enemy with an exhilarating performance. The Israeli said: "That was
a good three points – against a very, very good team – and I'm happy. We've
become stronger and stronger, and the only way to show this is on the
pitch."

The Israeli was correct. After the draw at Stoke City and heartening Carling
Cup win at Sunderland, this first three points of the season came courtesy
of a slick and feisty effort from a side who suddenly appear to have gelled.
Before kick-off West Ham's goals-for column had read a paltry three.

It may have been improved by only one but Frédéric Piquionne's winner
finally gave lift-off to Grant's project.

As the half-hour approached the celebrations began. Kieron Dyer had already
indicated why he was nonplussed to discover he would not be starting against
Stoke last week with some darting runs at Gareth Bale, who had slotted in
for the rested left-back, Benoît Assou-Ekotto.

For Piquionne's goal Dyer's contribution was a burst down the opposing
flank. This forced Alan Hutton into a sharp tackle and a corner was
conceded. Mark Noble drifted in the delivery, and the striker out-jumped
Vedran Corluka to score with a header that corkscrewed beyond Carlo Cudicini
into the left corner.

The goal exposed the hole left by Harry Redknapp's stricken centre-backs.
Michael Dawson is a long-term casualty; Ledley King's knee was judged not
worth chancing with FC Twente in town this week for a Champions League group
game; and injury to William Gallas on Friday ruled the Frenchman out.

"He looked like he tore a muscle in the groin area," said Redknapp, who
remained in jocular form despite the defeat. "It's the first time I've been
beaten as a manager by the super Hammers. I've had a great run. It was a
very open game. Full credit to West Ham, they pressed us, closed us down,
you can't take nothing away from them."

After the goal Spurs were no longer casually building from deep, via the
magic of Rafael van der Vaart. Instead, they were having to douse fires.
Before the break, the most threatening of these came from a Scott Parker run
that resulted in another West Ham corner.

Again, Noble and Dyer caused the problems following the delivery, and Victor
Obinna, who appears a smart acquisition by Grant, worried Cudicini with a
rasping shot.

While Dyer had to leave the action before the break (maybe indicating
precisely why Grant had chosen him only for the bench against Stoke)
Redknapp should have been furious at half-time and the close.

In Van der Vaart, the £8m bargain of the season, he had a player who was
dominating before Spurs conceded. Twice he floated into the channel in front
of the defence to unload 25-yard shots that drew Robert Green into action.

But Van der Vaart was later replaced by Giovani dos Santos, to illustrate
what West Ham had done to him and his team.

"He hasn't played a full game since the World Cup and we've got a busy week.
I didn't want to kill him off," was Redknapp's explanation. Then came a
range of the superlatives: "He really does look like a top player,
top-quality, world-class, he was on another planet."

For Green, gaffes had been replaced with an afternoon he may view as the
moment the spectre of a torrid World Cup was finally shaken off. Luka
Modric, quiet here for long passages, forced the keeper into his outstanding
save of the game. From Aaron Lennon's fine break down the right the Croatia
playmaker produced a pivot-volley that oozed class. So, too, did Green's
lightning reflex save, which beat the ball on to the bar and away to safety.

At the finish he offered a defiant gesture to the press box that might have
been his answer to the criticism he has drawn following a clumsy start to
the campaign. Grant said: "This is the life of a sportsman. I think Rob's
performance today was the best speech."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 1 Tottenham Hotspur 0: match report
Read a full match report of the Premier League game between West Ham United
and Tottenham Hotspur at Upton Park on Saturday Sept 25 2010.
Saturday, September 25 15:00
Premier League
Upton Park
ATT: 34,190
By Gerry Cox at Upton Park
Published: 5:00PM BST 25 Sep 2010

On the day Robert Green admitted to turning to the club's chaplain to help
him through his troubles, the goalkeeper proved to be the answer to West Ham
United's prayers with a superb display in the victory over Tottenham
Hotspur. Frederic Piquionne scored the game's only goal, in the 29th minute,
but it was Green who did most to keep out Spurs, who were well below their
best. Green, heavily criticised after his error for England against the USA
at the World Cup, made three superb saves to show why he was so highly rated
in the first place. And it allowed West Ham to record their first Premier
League win of the season, following their Carling Cup victory at Sunderland
in midweek. Avram Grant sprang a surprise by relegating Carlton Cole to the
substitutes' bench, preferring to play Nigerian striker Victor Obinna
alongside Piquionne in attack, and the move worked as West Ham took the game
to Spurs from the start.
Tottenham had a makeshift defence, with four central defenders unavailable,
meaning Vedran Corluka had to play an unfamiliar role in the middle of the
back four. The Croatian had a torrid time as the movement of Piquionne and
power of Obinna pulled Tottenham's backline apart, and West Ham created
numerous openings before they took they finally took the lead. Obinna,
Piquionne and Kieron Dyer all had shots saved by Carlo Cudicini, as West Ham
dominated the first half. In response, Tottenham were restricted to shooting
from long range, and when they did find the target, they also found Green in
outstanding form. The West Ham keeper, produced three great saves to deny
Spurs in the opening half alone. First he punched away a stinging 30-yard
shot from Jermaine Jenas in the 15th minute. He then tipped away a fierce
drive from Rafael van der Vaart that was heading for the top corner of goal
in the 21st minute, but produced an even better save five minutes before
half-time, tipping a stinging volley from Luka Modric on to the bar and
scrambling the loose ball clear. Modric then set up Van der Vaart for a
close-range header that Green did well to keep out, but by then West Ham
were ahead. It was Piquionne who finally made the breakthrough in the 29th
minute. Dyer won a corner after a quick break out of defence, and Mark
Noble's kick found Piquionne, who rose above his marker to plant a header
into the far corner of goal. Peter Crouch headed over in first-half stoppage
time, but it was West Ham who took a deserved lead into the break. The
second-half continued in the same vein, with Tottenham playing some neat
football without producing a real goal threat, while West Ham were more
direct and dangerous. Obinna powered through in the 65th minute to hit a
shot off the ground that Cudicini did well to tip away, and when Cole
replaced Piquionne soon afterwards, the England striker lashed a first-time
shot just wide of the near post. Cudicini then did well to tip over a
piledriver from Noble that took a deflection en route to goal. The keeper
was lucky though five minutes later after the ball fell into his hands
following an almighty goalmouth scramble. Harry Redknapp, who had not lost
in ten previous games against his former side, went for broke in the final
stages, sending on strikers Robbie Keane, Roman Pavlyuchenko and Giovanni
Dos Santos as late substitutes, but to no avail as West Ham held on for
their first league win of the season.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Match Report: West Ham 1 Spurs 0
West Ham Till I Die

Well that wasn't a bad day at the office was it? I don't think we have
played as well as that since a home game against Liverpool a couple of years
ago. In the first half we were utterly dominant, constantly attacking and
winning corner after corner. I think I counted eight in the first fifteen
minutes. And in the second half, apart from the middle twenty minutes or so,
we always looked the more likely to score.

I am not saying Spurs didn't have any chances, they did. Indeed if Robert
Green hadn't been in world class form with a couple of outstanding saves
things might have looked a little different. The only Spurs player to shine
was an effervescent Modric. The others didn't seem interested at all in the
first half. We attacked with impunity down both flanks with Boa Morte and
Dyer wreaking havoc time after time.

Dyer was simply superb. He was sharp, pacy, committed and looked on top
form. It was such a shame was forced off with yet another knock just before
half time. But his replacement, Pablo Barrera, was equally troublesome as
the second half went on.

Avram Grant took a calculated risk in dropping Carlton Cole and it paid off.
When he came on in the middle of the second half he played some great
football and played like he did last season. But the player he replaced,
Freddie Picquionne, played a blinder. The faith his manager put in him was
repaid in full. His hold up play and wing play was stupendous and the way he
took his headed goal was immense. If he doesn't retain his place next week
there's no justice in this world.

Defensively it was also a great performance. Da Costa in particular was
immense. He beat Peter Crouch in virtually every headed contest. Upson had
his best game of the season and both Gabbidon and Jacobsen kept the Spurs
wingers quiet.

But this result wouldn't have been possible without the astonishing
performances of four players – Green, Noble, Parker and Obinna. All four put
in performances meriting 9 out of ten. Parker tackled as if his life
depended on it. Obinna frightened the life out of the Spurs players each
time he went on one of his pacy runs. He was extremely unlucky not to get a
goal. Robert Green played exactly how we know he can and the game will have
given him a massive boost in confidence.

But Mark Noble was my man of the match. He was all over the pitch, fierce in
his tackling and delivered some excellent balls into the area. He also
nearly scored a 25 yard screamer into the top left hand corner but somehow
the Spurs keeper saved it. I'd say this was probably Mark Noble's best game
in a Hammers shirt. Agreed?

Green 9
Gabbidon 8
Jacobsen 8
Da Costa 9
Upson 9
Noble 9.5
Parker 9
Dyer 9
Obinna 9
Picquionne 9
Boa Morte 8
Barrera 8
Cole 8

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ROB GREEN IS HERO IN WEST HAM VICTORY
Daily Express
Sunday September 26,2010
By Harry Pratt

FC Twente scouts turned up to spy on Spurs, their next Champions League
opponent, . . . but ended up watching a heartwarming tale of two goalkeepers
as well. Rob Green and Carlo Cudicini chose the day to restore their
fortunes after adversity had threatened to bury them both. Green, battered
and bewildered after his World Cup howler, produced a couple of stunning
saves that went a long way to earning the Hammers their first Premier
League win, claimed thanks to an unstoppable header by Frederic Piquionne.
Cudicini, his career threatened by a horrific motorbike accident, completed
his return with two equally eye catching saves that spared Spurs even more
embarrassment on the day. In the end the Dutch visitors probably went home
none the wiser. West Ham, on the other hand, left singing their bubbles song
for all it was worth, content in the knowledge that they have found a real
jewel in Victor Obinna and, if this is anything to go by, have finally
turned the corner. There was lots of pressure, plenty of work for Cudicini –
and Green still had the chance to settle his frazzled World Cup nerves with
stops from Jermaine Jenas and Rafael van der Vaart. Avram Grant said that
this kind of performance was on its way and the resurgent Hammers were true
to his words just before the half hour. Kieron Dyer earned the corner that
Mark Noble swung invitingly over and Piquionne rose to the task with a
header that left Cudicini without a prayer and gave him his first Premier
League goal for the Hammers.

No doubt that it was deserved. No doubt either that Spurs just didn't have
enough to preserve Harry Redknapp's record of never having lost a return to
Upton Park. To be fair, Spurs would have been level by the break if Green
hadn't gone a long way to restoring his reputation and confi dence with
those two crucial saves.

The first was a spectacular tip onto the crossbar from Luca Modric's
stunning volley; the second was a brave effort to deny Van Der Vaart.

But life's never easy for the Hammers and poor old Dyer looked to have
suffered another misfortune just before the break. The midfielder, who has
been plagued with injuries, went off again to be replaced by Pablo Barrere.
Tom Huddlestone might have wished he could have gone off as well 10 minutes
into the second half.

The cultured midfielder slipped West Ham's offside trap perfectly, but with
Peter Crouch staring into an empty net just to his left, he chose to have a
pop himself and fi red well wide with only Green to beat. No other word for
it – it was a shocker. At the other end the lively Obinna let fly with a
shot that had goal written all over it until Cudicini got in the way.

And the former Chelsea keeper covered himself in glory again soon afterwards
with a superb save from Mark Noble.
But at the end of the day it wasn't enough to save a Spurs side that is
going to have to step up a couple of gears when those Dutchmen return on
Wednesday.
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