Monday, March 28

Daily WHUFC News - 28th March 2011

Parker set for Wembley bow
WHUFC.com
West Ham United midfielder Scott Parker could win his sixth cap for England on Tuesday
27.03.2011

Scott Parker has remained with the England squad before Tuesday night's home friendly with fellow FIFA World Cup finalists Ghana. The Hammers midfielder is unlikely to begin at Wembley with Fabio Capello hinting that he will rest all of the first eleven from Saturday's 2-0 weekend win in Wales. That could mean that Robert Green will get a first start since last summer's finals, with Parker expected to figure off the bench for his maiden appearance at the revamped stadium. Six of the squad have been released including John Terry, Frank Lampard and Wayne Rooney. Speaking to the BBC, Parker has spoken about his determination to keep on playing since his father Mick passed away a week ago last Friday on the eve of the goalless draw against Tottenham Hotspur. He said it was what his dad would have wanted and culminated in him earning plaudits from all quarters after his midfield display at the Millennium Stadium. He said: "I cracked on with things because I know that is what he would have wanted me to done. It is a shame that he wasn't around to see me play. That is the biggest disappointment but I am glad. He is probably looking down on me and smiling on me up there. "My father was ill for a long while. I knew he was ill. I was with him all day on Friday and I left the hospital and went to the hotel to meet up with the squad. As soon as I got to the hotel I heard he was seriously ill. "I was with him on that Friday and I know the sort of stuff he was saying to me like he would always say. Before I left him he was telling me about the game, how to play and to look forward to it. I needed to go out there for him really. "That [Tottenham match] was the one day when football didn't come into it. However bad I would have played that day I just went out there for him.
"I have just cracked on with it, sometimes it is a relief. You come into football and it takes you away a little bit. When you step out you have to deal with all the other stuff ... I have got a mum and a sister who I have to look after now. We will stay strong."

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Obinna and Ilunga triumphant
WHUFC.com
The latest round of African qualifiers finished with two more happy Hammers on Sunday
27.03.2011

Victor Obinna and Herita Ilunga were both winners in CAF 2012 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying action on Sunday. Obinna's Nigeria were 4-0 home winners against Ethiopia while Ilunga's DR Congo triumphed 3-0 at home to Mauritius. Nigeria's success means they are just a point behind Group B leaders Guinea while the Congolese have a harder task as they sit five points behind Group E's runaway side Senegal, who had Demba Ba to thank for a 1-0 win against fellow African heavyweights Cameroon on Saturday.

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Forwards fire for Carr
WHUFC.com
A strong strikeforce did the damage for the Under-18s at Little Heath on Saturday morning
27.03.2011

West Ham United Under-18s 4-0 Bristol City Under-18s

An inexperienced Academy side still proved too strong for Bristol City with four forwards in goalscoring form for Tony Carr. Danny Purdy, Elliot Lee, Dylan Tombides and Robert Hall all found the net, with the first three goals coming inside a rampant first half for the Hammers at Little Heath on Saturday. Academy Director Carr was delighted with the way his team bounced back after going down 3-1 at Tottenham Hotspur the previous weekend. Carr said: "It was a good performance, especially as we had a very young team because of the reserve game on Monday. We started off really well, it was a bright start. We scored early and went on from there.
"We started in some respect like Tottenham did against us last week. It was a complete role reversal. I thought we did very well."

Irish youngster Danny Purdy broke the deadlock within the first five minutes. It came after a well-worked one-two involving Lamar Hurley and Tombides, before the ball was cut back to Purdy to fire in first time. Lee, the younger brother of Oliver, an unused substitute for Dagenham and Redbridge on Saturday, hit the second with an individual goal that saw him beat a defender and score with a low finish. Tombides, who will not feature for the reserves away to Blackburn Rovers on Monday because of first-team commitments, added a well-taken third after more good work from Jake Young and Hurley down the right flank. Carr said: "We went in at half-time in complete dominance and could have had more. Bristol rarely threatened in the second half and it never lived up to the same intensity as the first half. It was nice to have a comprehensive win and a clean sheet. It boosted the lads confidence."

Hall, a late substitute, sealed the victory with a fourth after cutting inside from the right and shooting beyond the visiting keeper with his left. The clean sheet was even more satisfying as Carr tried out Paul McCallum in a centre-back role, a position he had played as a youngster, while also getting the opportunity to blood three schoolboys. As well as promising striker Lee, he introduced England Under-16 centre-back Leo Chambers and Republic of Ireland Under-17 midfielder Kieran Sadlier as replacements. "At this time of year we start to blood the young ones and see what they are about. It is a good opportunity for them and they did well."

Chambers will go off to represent England in the Victory Shield match against Scotland on Wednesday, with Carr having been without U17 duo Blair Turgott and Matthias Fanimo this weekend because of their own Young Lions commitments. Turgott scored in Saturday's 3-1 win against Northern Ireland, the first of three UEFA European Under-17 Championship Elite round fixtures between Saturday and Thursday. The next match is against Belgium on Monday. Meanwhile, midfielder Sebastian Lletget was on target for the United States Under-20s in a 3-0 friendly win against FC Dallas reserves as they warmed up for the 2011 CONCACAF U20 Championship in Guatemala. The Americans will face Surinam on Tuesday and Panama on Saturday in the group stage, with the four semi-finalists qualifying for the 2011 FIFA U20 World Cup in Colombia in July.

West Ham United: Mehmet, Young, Potts (Sadlier 70) , McCallum (Chambers 55) , Hunt, Powell, Hurley, Vose, Lee (Hall 80), Tombides , Purdy

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Parker's patience paying dividends
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 27th March 2011
By: Staff Writer

Scott Parker admitted that he was 'over the moon' with his part in England's comprehensive 2-0 Euro 2012 win over Wales. West Ham's vice-captain played for 89 minutes at the MIllenium Stadium as goals from Frank Lampard (penalty) and Darren Bent secured a vital qualifying win for Fabio Capello's side in the Group G clash.
Parker - winning only his fifth cap at the age of 30 - has been criminally overlooked at international level during the past two seasons by a manager unwilling to tinker with a tried and tested (and failed) midfield. But he has taken his chance with some style - something recognised by the England supporters in Cardiff yesterday who gave Parker a standing ovation as he left the field. Speaking after the game, he told reporters: "Obviously it was very pleasing. First and foremost we got three points. We've come to a very difficult place, the atmosphere was very intense but we quietened the crowd and got the three points which was crucial. "I've been quite patient. I got 45 minutes in Copenhagen and felt like I'd done well. Today I got my start and personally I'm over the moon with the way I played. But most of all we won and that's the most important [thing]; I'm in a winning team and we're top of the table."

Parker in review - what the papers say

"Scott Parker was an unqualified success as a holding midfielder - though the real test will be against genuine opponents."
- Rob Draper (Daily Mail)

"Parker sat in front of the back four as a shield and suddenly looked the natural heir to the unfortunate Owen Hargreaves. The West Ham man brought his good club form in East London to the Millennium Stadium as, playing the deeper holding role in the midfield four, he snuffed out the potential for danger promised by the great Welsh hope, Aaron Ramsey. Stuck to defensive duties so conscientiously that he had little occasion to make a telling impact in the opposition's half."
- Steve Tongue (Independent)

"Scott Parker, England's most natural defensive midfielder during the terrible injury travails of Owen Hargreaves, patrolled the centre like a diligent sentry. It was Parker's constant hounding of Wales players, notably captain Aaron Ramsey, that afforded England their midfield hegemony. Central to the 4-3-3 system in every sense, Parker impressed until departing to sustained applause from the 9,000 visiting fans, having completed 88 per cent of his 60 passes."
- Henry Winter (Telegraph)

"We've got to get away from football snobbery, we've tended to look at players who play in the Champions League and playing for the so called big clubs. Scott Parker has been playing this kind of football for the best part of two years and [his involvement with England is] too late for me. You've got to have players who are playing with confidence and playing with form."
- Stan Collymore (Talksport)

"With Parker impressive not just in his tackling (he made more passes than any other on the field) and Lampard comfortable playing in a narrow midfield three (as he does at Chelsea), Capello has a new system to work with. Young, Wilshere, Parker: post World Cup, Capello is gradually giving this team a new identity."
- Duncan White (Guardian)

"The most depressing thing about today's game is Scott Parker. By all accounts Parker was brilliant today as he is on almost every occasion for West Ham but Fabio Capello won't keep playing him. Parker should be in the England team but once Steven Gerrard and Gareth Barry return the rotating and uncertainty will continue. "
- Pope and Swift

"Scott Parker worked hard + won the ball back for us nicely. Looked our most comfortable performance all round in a long time."
- Rio Ferdinand (via Twitter)

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Keane on the up
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 27th March 2011
By: Staff Writer

Robbie Keane insists West Ham have what it takes to avoid relegation at the end of the season. United went into this weekend's international break in 17th place in the Premier League, above the relegation zone by virtue of goal difference. But the Irish international - who marked his return to action with a goal in his country's 2-1 win over Macedonia last night - believes that with the quality of players at Avram Grant's disposal, avoiding the dreaded drop should be well within their grasp.
"You look at the squad of players that we have and I don't think we should be in the position that we are at the moment," he told Goals On Sunday. "But we are, that's the reality. "It's so close down there, there's seven or eight teams down there. But I think with the squad of players we have we're quite capable of staying up."

Keane, who admitted to marking Ireland's narrow win over Macedonia with 'a couple of pints' also insisted that he was delighted to be back in action - and in contention to start against Manchester United at the Boleyn next weekend. "It's nice to score goals - as a striker you're judged on scoring goals," he added. "For me it was juts nice to get out on the pitch again, it's been a frustrating couple of months. "Going to a new club and getting injured, it's not good. In your first couple of games for your new club you want to make an immediate impact and unfortunately I couldn't do that. "But I'm back now and I'm delighted to be back."

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Parker wants England chance
Midfielder feels he is in good form after impressive Wales display
Last updated: 27th March 2011
SSN

Scott Parker is hoping to be given more opportunities for England following his impressive performance against Wales. The midfielder made his England debut back in November 2003, but his appearance in Saturday's Euro 2012 qualifier against Wales was just his fifth for the national team. Parker has been in imperious form despite West Ham United's Premier League struggles this season and was rewarded with a start at the Millennium Stadium. The 30-year-old ran Ashley Young close for the man-of-the-match award and is now keen to establish himself in Fabio Capello's side.

Competition

"I got 45 minutes against Denmark, and I thought I did well, and it has gone well personally again against Wales," said Parker. "I just need to keep the form up and hopefully get a bit more of a chance. "There is a lot of competition but I do feel I have been in some really good form this season. "I thought the midfield combination worked pretty well. It is easy for me when you are playing with two very good players in Lamps and Jack. "It gives them licence to go forward a little bit and it makes life easier for me."

Parker feels the key to England's success was silencing the crowd with two early goals from Frank Lampard and Darren Bent. He said: "It was a very difficult place to go. First and foremost we got three points. "The atmosphere was very tense and we quietened the crowd down. We knew we had to do that and we killed the game."

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Green shoots of recovery
The Sun
Published: Today

ROBERT GREEN is set for his first England appearance since his World Cup clanger. The West Ham keeper is likely to be part of Fabio Capello's big shake-up when England face Ghana in a friendly at Wembley tomorrow. The England manager plans to field a B team and make 11 changes from the side which beat Wales 2-0. Green let Clint Dempsey's shot squirm through his hands in the 1-1 draw against America in England's World Cup opener. Capello said: "I will make 11 changes as I want to respect the clubs. I want to look at different players." The Italian will need another captain but when asked who would take the armband, he replied: "I don't know. I have to decide."

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I'm sure dad was looking down
The Sun
By CHARLIE WYETT
Published: Today

ENGLAND hero Scott Parker was choked with emotion as he spoke about his finest performance in a Three Lions shirt. It was his fifth cap and came just eight days after the death of his father, Mick. The 30-year-old had insisted on playing for West Ham against Tottenham only hours after his dad had died and the time since has been very hard. He admitted following a vital Euro 2012 win for Fabio Capello's side: "It has been a tough week. I suppose the one disappointing fact was that my dad wasn't here to see me play. "But I am sure he is looking down and is very proud. "My father had been ill for a long time and I have been dealing with that in my own way and trying to stay strong in my own way. "I was with him on the Friday and then met up with the West Ham team in the hotel. He passed away on the Friday night, so I went back to the hospital. "He would have wanted me to play on the Saturday against Spurs. I suppose it was the one time when I have gone out on a match day and whether we won, drew or lost or whether I played badly or well, it didn't really matter. "I needed to be out there for him. It sounds cliched but that's why I played. "On an England team level, we have won the game, which was massive. "It is a very difficult place to come. When the national anthems were going, it was obvious how intense it was. "The first half, we literally killed the game. Personally, it was easier for me. "I was really happy I got a start, got to play and finished up on a winning side. I took massive confidence from the second half against Denmark. "But I have taken confidence from the way I have played all year. "I feel like I am probably playing the best football of my career. "I went into the game confident and in form and, hopefully, I showed that out there. I think we can take a lot from the performance, though whenever I have played at international level it has been difficult. "There is no doubt that when we play Wales we expect to win. That's the way it is. "But in that first half we did what we did and made them look average, despite them having some very good players. "Technically, they are a good team. We had a game-plan, though. We pressed them high and they couldn't get out of their half. "I think we have to take great credit from that. We are not going to get too carried away, of course not. "But we need to look at the positives and, first half, there were massive positives."

Parker smiles when reminded of the fact four of his caps have come under different managers but does not waste time wondering why he has not had more international opportunities. He declared: "It hasn't baffled me. In football, nothing baffles me. At times, it has been a bit disappointing for me. But, as always, I have just cracked on with it and seen what happened." Even so, he is clearly gutted that, despite his current form, he is unlikely to be going to a World Cup. "I would like to think I can keep going the way I am going and doing what I am doing. If I can do that and keep impressing the right people, hopefully, I can get a few more caps under my belt. But I doubt I will go to a World Cup. "I went to the training camp in Austria last year fully expecting to try and get in the squad for South Africa. "I did everything I possibly could but it wasn't meant to be. "That's life. You need to move on but, obviously, I was disappointed. "Yet I have come back this year for West Ham and hope I can progress. "The one thing I have noticed in my career is that, when the opportunity comes, you need to try and grab it with both hands. "If you go back through my career, take the time in 2000 when I went out on loan at Norwich from Charlton and I came back and Alan Curbishley put me in the Charlton side.
"It was my one chance to get in the team and I took it. "That's the way it is for me. That's the way it always seems to be. "I thought about that before the kick-off here. "I knew I had to take my chance in this game. For definite. "Jack Wilshere and Frank Lampard helped me out and it gives them a licence to do their stuff."

Parker left the pitch before the final whistle due to an injury. It means that he is unlikely to start tomorrow night's Wembley friendly against Ghana. He revealed: "I got a knock on my shoulder and didn't strap it up because I thought I would be OK. "Then the first time I landed, I hurt it once again. I got a bit of pain in a calf as well. "I didn't want to put myself under pressure team-wise if somebody hit us on the break and I was struggling a bit."

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Parker wins praise despite personal tragedy
Published 23:00 27/03/11 By Oliver Holt
The Mirror

It was just after Scott Parker had stopped to talk that he got the kind of gesture of acceptance he has been yearning for throughout his stop-start international career.
He was standing near the dressing rooms at the Millennium Stadium, looking back with pride at a fine individual performance against Wales. He had begun to speak about his hopes for the future when Wayne Rooney walked past. Rooney did not break his stride but reached out a hand as he headed towards the team coach and flicked Parker on the ear. Parker smiled. He has always been popular with other players, a committed professional who gives everything. He is admired by the fans, too, particularly at West Ham where he has held their team together this season. Before Saturday he had played four times for England in eight years while playing for four different clubs. But he has kept fighting his way back into contention. Parker showed his strength of character again last weekend when he played for West Ham against Spurs hours after his dad Mick died. "My father has been ill for a long time and I have been dealing with that in my own way and trying to stay strong," Parker said after the Wales game. "I was with him on the Friday before our game at Spurs and then met up with the team in the hotel. "Then he passed away on the Friday night so I went back to the hospital but I knew he would have wanted me to play on Saturday. "I suppose it was the one time when I was going out on a Saturday and whether we won, lost or drew and whether I played bad or good, it didn't matter. "I needed to be out there for him. It sounds cliched but that's the reason I played."

Parker is, of course, still grieving for his father and his one regret was that his dad had not been there to see him play against Wales. Because Parker seized his chance for England with a performance that suggested he may be at the core of the side for some time. Parker was superb. He played beautifully in a holding role that demands discipline and the confidence to be self-effacing. He broke up Welsh play time after time, reading the game superbly and stifling Aaron Ramsey's fitful attempts to get into the game. And when he won the ball, he did not try to be too ambitious. He played it short to Jack Wilshere or Frank Lampard.

Capello has been searching for that kind of performance for a while. Gareth Barry seemed to be the answer but his limitations were exposed in South Africa. Barry wandered too much. He was caught out time after time, most glaringly against Germany. But with Parker content to sit in front of the back four and give Wilshere and Lampard the freedom to roam, England looked more secure. "I'd like to think if I can keep going the way I am and impressing the right people, then hopefully I can get a few more caps under my belt," he said. "My lack of opportunities hasn't baffled me. In football, nothing baffles me. At times, it has been disappointing, but I have just cracked on with it. "It was disappointing when I didn't make the final World Cup squad. I doubt I will go to a World Cup again. "So I knew that when I made the provisional squad, I went to the training camp in Austria and did everything I possibly could but it wasn't meant to be. "That's life. You need to move on. I was disappointed. But I have come back this year for West Ham and hopefully I can progress. "The one thing I have noticed in my career is that when the opportunity comes, you need to try and grab it with two hands. "I thought about that before kick-off today. I knew I had to take my chance in this game." Parker took it with style. "It's been a tough week after my father's death," he added. "I suppose the one disappointing fact was that he wasn't here to see me play today for England, but I am sure he is looking down and very proud."

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Scott Parker shines for England in Wales after death of his father
West Ham midfielder re-states his international case after more than four years following a week of personal trauma
Dominic Fifield in Cardiff
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 27 March 2011 23.01 BST

An emotional Scott Parker expressed regret that his father had not witnessed his first competitive appearance for England in more than four years but said that he had felt compelled to play on for club and country in his memory. Mick Parker passed away the night before Parker's West Ham United played Tottenham Hotspur earlier this month, having failed to recover from major surgery after a long illness. Last month, Parker dedicated his goal against Liverpool to his father, and he chose to play on after his death. The 30-year-old midfielder was arguably England's most impressive player against Wales at the Millennium Stadium on Saturday and he earned praise from team‑mates and management staff. "It has been a tough week," said Parker, who at one stage was excused training with the national squad, as he came to terms with his father's death. "He had been ill for a long while and passed away on that Friday," said Parker, who is a doubt for Ghana game due to shoulder and calf injuries. "I have been dealing with that in my own way, trying to stay strong in my own way, and I suppose the one disappointing fact about the Wales game for me was that [my father] wasn't here to see me play for England, but I'm sure he was looking down and was very proud.

"I'd been with him on the Friday and then met up with the [West Ham] team in the hotel ahead of the Tottenham match. He passed away late that night, so I went back to the hospital. He would have wanted me to have played on the Saturday. I suppose it was the one time I've gone out for a game and, whether we won, lost or drew, or whether I played well or poorly, it didn't really matter. I needed to be out there for him. It sounds clichéd, but that's the reason I played."

The midfielder, who has been in inspirational form at West Ham this season, on Saturday made his first competitive international start since the Euro 2008 qualifying defeat in Croatia in the autumn of 2006. He excelled in a central role that allowed Jack Wilshere and Frank Lampard greater freedom. Parker – whose first four caps were won under four managers – conceded that he had to take this chance to impress if he was to be a part of Fabio Capello's long-term plans, having endured life on the fringes of the national team for too long.

"At times it has been a bit disappointing for me, but I have just cracked on with it and seen what happens," he said. "One thing I've learnt in my career is that, when the opportunity comes, you need to grab it with two hands.

"If you go back through my career, whether it be when I went out on loan at Norwich and I came back and Alan Curbishley put me in the team at Charlton, there have been occasions like that. It was my one chance to get in the team and I took it.

"That's the way it is for me. That's the way it always seems to be. I thought about that before kick‑off on Saturday: I knew I had to take my chance in this game, for definite."

Wilshere said that Capello had shown his squad re-runs of Barcelona's recent Champions League defeat of Arsenal, in an attempt to illustrate how he wanted them to pressurise the Wales team into conceding possession. On Saturday the tactic proved spectacularly successful – particularly in the first half. "We tried to press like they do, high up the pitch," said the 19-year-old Arsenal midfielder. "Barcelona are the best at it in the world and we have to learn from teams like that. It wasn't painful for me to watch – at my age I am always learning and I can only learn from players like that."

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Wales v England: Man of the match Scott Parker at last hopes to have gained a foothold in Fabio Capello's team
By Jason Burt, Deputy Football Correspondent 11:00PM BST 27 Mar 2011


Saturday's start against Wales was, for Scott Parker, his final opportunity to stake a claim to be a regular England international. "It was my one chance to get in the team and I took it," Parker said after his man-of-the-match performance in the Euro 2012 qualifier. "That's the way it is for me. That's the way it always seems to be. I thought about that before kick-off. I knew I had to take my chance in this game. For definite."

There was a clear determination in Parker's voice, a recognition that five years after his last competitive start for his country, and now aged 30, there would be no other chance. It was a case of carpe diem for the West Ham United midfielder who is one of the most popular members of Fabio Capello's squad despite having suffered one of the most irregular of international careers with his five caps in eight years under three managers. "The one thing I have noticed in my career is that when the opportunity comes, you need to try and grab it with two hands," Parker said, which has been all the more galling for him given the widely-held belief that he has not had that chance in the past. Certainly Parker came away from England's pre-World Cup training camp in Austria last year, when he was dropped for the final squad without being given any time on the field in the warm-up matches, fearing he would never play for his country again. And certainly not in a World Cup finals. "I doubt I will go to a World Cup," Parker said. "I went to Austria fully expecting to try and get in the squad. I did everything I possibly could but it wasn't to be. That's life. You need to move on. I have come back this season for West Ham and hopefully I can progress."

In fairness, this is the former Charlton Athletic, Chelsea and Newcastle United midfielder's best campaign to date which he admits himself. There is a greater consistency and discipline to his game which has convinced Capello to play him as the holding player in England's midfield. Parker has far more aggression than Gareth Barry — as he showed in hunting down Wales captain Aaron Ramsey at the Millennium Stadium — and is far more mobile. "When the national anthems were going, it was obvious how intense it was," Parker said. "In the first half, we killed the game. I have taken confidence from the way I have played all year. I feel like I am probably playing the best football of my career."

His form also persuaded Capello to change the shape of his team to accommodate Parker behind Jack Wilshere and Frank Lampard in a midfield three. "We haven't played that shape before and I think it worked pretty well. It gives them a bit of freedom to go and do their stuff going forward." Parker has also been coping with the death of his father, Mick, a week ago last Friday. "It has been a tough week," Parker said. "I suppose the one disappointing fact was that he wasn't there to see me play for England but I am sure he is looking down and is very proud." Ten days ago Parker played for West Ham, away to Tottenham Hotspur, just hours after his father's death, and added: "My father has been ill for a long time and I have been dealing with that in my own way and trying to stay strong. "I was with him on the Friday and then met up with the team in the hotel. And then he passed away that night, so I went back to the hospital. He would have wanted me to have played and I suppose it was the one time when I was going out on a Saturday and whether we won, lost or drew and whether I played bad or good, it didn't really matter. I needed to be out there for him. That's why I played." Having hopefully given himself a foothold in the England team, he will probably not face Ghana in tomorrow's friendly when Capello will make wholesale changes. Parker received "a knock" to the shoulder he damaged earlier this season and also a stiff calf. West Ham need him for next weekend's game at home to Manchester United and, more significantly, England now need him after that.

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Parker holds key if Capello is to unlock talent of Wilshere
Wales 0 England 2: West Ham holding player excels in Cardiff by bringing best out of midfield colleagues
By Sam Wallace at the Millennium Stadium
Monday, 28 March 2011SHARE PRINTEMAILTEXT SIZE NORMALLARGEEXTRA LARGE

Before last year's World Cup finals, Scott Parker was selected in the provisional squad and then ignored by Fabio Capello for the two friendlies England played at Wembley and in Austria before the cut was made and the squad went to South Africa. He was given not a single minute in which to prove himself a candidate for the final 23-man party. It was as if Capello was punishing him for something.

The England manager, we know by now, is not one who tends to consider the sensitivities of his players. As for Parker, at the age of 30 you could not have blamed him last summer for looking at his four caps – each of them won under a different manager – and calling it a day on international football. Other fringe players, such as Paul Robinson and Wes Brown, did just that in the last 12 months. Something must have told Parker to hang on.

It has taken him eight years to win five caps and on Saturday it finally felt like he might have cracked the England team. Capello switched his formation to 4-3-3, or 4-1-2-3 depending on how you viewed Parker's position, in order, the England manager said, to combat Wales's similar formation. Funny that he did not do that against Germany in the World Cup, but that is another story. Parker was promoted ahead of Gareth Barry as the holding midfielder and was the game's outstanding player.

For England this is an interesting formation that looked a good deal more sophisticated than Capello's usual humdrum 4-4-2 that can leave his players so isolated. In this system Jack Wilshere and Frank Lampard, both excellent against the woeful Welsh, were free to dominate the game. It meant that Wayne Rooney had to play wide in a front three, but equally you could see him in the central role occupied by Darren Bent in the future.

Early days yet, but for Parker it must have been extremely satisfying. The long days spent in England's pre-World Cup camp in Austria without so much as a run-out on the pitch must have been deeply frustrating. Capello's general manager, Franco Baldini, has always been an advocate of playing Parker but it seems that only recently has his boss been converted to the player's usefulness as a holding midfielder.

Parker's father Mick died ten days ago after a long illness, with his son at his bedside that Friday evening. The following day Parker played for West Ham against Tottenham at White Hart Lane. "He would have wanted me to have played," Parker said. "I suppose it was the one time when I was going out on a Saturday and whether we won, lost or drew and whether I played bad or good, it didn't really matter. I needed to be out there for him. It sounds cliched but that's the reason I played.

"It has been a tough week. My father was ill for a long while. I suppose the one disappointing fact was that he wasn't here to see me play for England but I am sure he is looking down and very proud. My father had been ill for a long time and I have been dealing with that in my own way and trying to stay strong in my own way."

Parker has come a long way since he was the 11-year-old kid in the McDonald's ad juggling the ball in his garden. He has reinvented himself as an aggressive, tackling midfielder who last Saturday took care of Aaron Ramsey, the one major threat in the Wales team. There were times when Ramsey was forced back 30 yards with Parker snapping at his heels before he could find the pass to get the ball away and out of trouble.

The new formation and Parker's key role in it asks some interesting questions of Capello too. Is this is a new way forward for England? What happens to Barry now? Against Ghana tomorrow the England manager has promised 11 changes to the XI that started against Wales. Whether he does that is debatable but it would appear that we will not really know whether he has changed his thinking fundamentally until the game against Switzerland at Wembley on 4 June.

"The one thing I have noticed in my career is that when the opportunity comes, you need to try to grab it with two hands," Parker said. "If you go back through my career, like when I went out on loan at Norwich, came back and Alan Curbishley put me in the team at Charlton. It was my one chance to get in the team and I took it. That's the way it is for me. That's the way it always seems to be. I thought about that before kick-off. I knew I had to take my chance in this game. For definite."

It is never more the case than in international football, when the team can change so radically from game to game. Andy Carroll faces the same kind of opportunity against Ghana: he is young so he will presumably get more chances, but then Parker probably thought the same when he played his first game for England just five weeks after his 23rd birthday back in 2003.

Carroll will have to do well if he is to take the mantle of Peter Crouch as England's go-to big man. On Saturday, the Spurs man with 22 goals in 42 caps for England was not even deemed worthy of a place on the bench.

If Carroll starts tomorrow then it will probably be alongside Jermain Defoe. With six players pulled out of the squad yesterday, the team selection for the Ghana match is looking increasingly like a sop to the clubs in the hope they will play ball with Capello over the last 16 months of his reign as manager.

With Parker at the helm Saturday's Group G Euro qualifier was won inside 15 minutes. First James Collins collided with Ashley Young to concede an early penalty that Lampard converted, then Bent tucked away his second goal in two games from Young's cross.

Parker was later asked if he ever wondered why it has taken so long. "In football, nothing baffles me," he said. "At times it has been a bit disappointing, but as always I have just cracked on with it and seen what happens." In Cardiff, it all happened for him.

Subs: Wales Evans (Morison, 66), Vaughan (King, 66). Unused Myhill (gk), Eardley, Gabbidon, Allen, Church. England Milner (Rooney, 70), Downing (Wilshere, 82), Jagielka (Parker, 88) Unused Green (gk), Lescott, Defoe, Carroll.

Booked: Wales Crofts, Ledley, Vaughan, Bellamy, J Collins. England Rooney, Johnson
Man of the match Parker Match rating 5/10.
Possession Wales 45% England 55%.
Attempts on target Wales 0 England 5.
Referee O Benquerenca (Por). Att 68,959.

Man-for-man marking
By Steve Tongue

England

Joe Hart

Not given a shot to save, only corners and occasional crosses, which he dealt with well, punching firmly. Kicking less certain at times 6/10

Glen Johnson

Like the match, his afternoon could have been a different tale with Gareth Bale playing. Eased through it and played a superb ball to Young for second goal 7

Michael Dawson

Quietly efficient alongside Terry and caught only once, when Morison turned him in the first half. No chances at the other end from set-pieces 6

John Terry

After two assured performances in midweek media conferences, he produced another one where it really matters. Even set up the opening goal when pushing forward 8

Ashley Cole

Held his own after a couple of feisty clashes when Bellamy started down his flank. Involved in the move for the first goal and might have expected more attacking success later 6

Scott Parker

Emerging as the most natural holding midfielder since Owen Hargreaves, he did his job perfectly in winning the ball and playing it short. Deserves long run 9

Frank Lampard

Even more than Wilshere, he benefited from being allowed to play further forward than in recent internationals, with Parker offering security behind him 7

Jack Wilshere

Demonstrated his astonishing maturity again, keeping his head amid some heavy tackling and playing through-balls only a fraction too heavy for Bent 7

Ashley Young

Had earned his place with a good display in Denmark and justified it by dominating the hapless Danny Collins. Won the penalty and crossed for second goal 8

Darren Bent

Growing in confidence as an international, he led the line and held the ball up to good effect. Positional sense brought another poacher's goal 7

Wayne Rooney

Can cope playing wide on the left but not on the right, and familiar frustration set in after switching. Two wild fouls brought booking and suspension 5

Substitutes

James Milner

Tightened up midfield

for last 20 minutes 6

Stewart Downing

One good effort n/a

Phil Jagielka

Late entrance n/a

Wales

Wayne Hennessey

A strange afternoon for the Wolves goalkeeper: no chance with either goal but barely a save to make otherwise despite England's domination 6/10

Chris Gunter

Happier against Rooney than Young, he managed to get forward down the right occasionally but had little joy having done so6

James Collins

Will have to face some stick from Villa team-mates Young and Bent later this week after struggling against both. Clumsy foul to concede penalty6

Ashley Williams

Was too busy trying to stop Bent's runs to help overstretched team-mate Danny Collins on his left deal with Young. A difficult day for the Swansea City centre-half 6

Danny Collins

Dreadful afternoon for the left-back, who was constantly caught out of position, as when Johnson's pass down the line sent Young away to create the second goal 4

Andrew Crofts

Looked a dogged workhorse, who occasionally got close enough to an England midfielder to whack him. Rightly booked for one of his fouls5

Joe Ledley

Cardiff followers will have been disappointed by their former hero's efforts alongside Crofts. He is used to easier days than this at Celtic5

Craig Bellamy

The most likely source of inspiration for Wales, he came into the game more in the second half, playing a couple of neat passes inside Cole 6

Aaron Ramsey

Did Gary Speed ask too much in adding the captaincy to his playmaker role? Utterly outshone by club-mate Wilshere5

Andy King

Surprisingly picked ahead of David Vaughan in a position he is unfamiliar with on the left of midfield, the Leicester man was rarely in the game5

Steve Morison

Former England non-League striker looked out of his depth, admittedly with little support from his midfield or wide players. No goals after six caps 5

Substitutes

David Vaughan

An improvement

on King 6

Ched Evans

Had no more success up front than Morison 5

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Jamie Redknapp: Wilshere and Parker are made for each other
By JAMIE REDKNAPP Last updated at 1:51 AM on 28th March 2011
Daily Mail

The highlight of England's victory in Wales was the successful partnership of Arsenal's Jack Wilshere and Scott Parker of West Ham in central midfield. They complement each other; Parker gives Wilshere the platform to attack and create at the top end of the pitch, Wilshere always makes himself available and creates angles to demand the ball, always providing an outlet. Neither went to the World Cup finals, now both have been given the opportunity to prosper, in a 4-3-3 formation. They are made for the system and made for each other. The Arsenal midfielder glides all round the pitch; he can take the ball under pressure, on the half turn, and plays with his head up. He is comfortable on the ball and dangerous when it is at his feet, which is why he should not be wasted in the holding role; let's push him further up the pitch, where he can hurt the opposition. He's a very special player and England are right to look for a system that brings the best out of him. He knows where he is on the pitch and he knows what's on around him. It's a joy to watch him play. He took advantage of the fact Wales didn't seem to want to upset anyone. They showed England too much respect. I understand he will want to play for the Under 21s in the European Championship - and I can see why Stuart Pearce wants him there - but let's wrap him in cotton wool and give him the summer off. He needs to be nurtured, because he can be a top England player for the next 10 years if we look after him. He has a swagger and edge to his game too, although it is nothing nasty and his temper seems controlled and unlikely to jeopardise his team. He is a very impressive footballer.

SCOTT PARKER
Every team needs one. Now England have one. We should call Scott Parker 'The Fireman', because that's what he is so good at doing: putting out fires for England.
Parker's job is to protect and to win the ball. Ask the England central defenders if he did his job on Saturday. He won the ball and looked assured and comfortable in front of the defence. He has had the season of his life for West Ham - he has dragged them back into contention for survival - and he has now taken that form on to the international stage. He looks at home and should have been given the chance before, in the World Cup. England were very comfortable in Cardiff, but they had players in the positions they occupy for their clubs - Parker, Wilshere and Frank Lampard, whose penalty gave them the start they wanted. England never looked back. You have to earn the right to play in these games and the energy from Parker's performance gave England that platform.

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Wilshere and Parker point England's way ahead
By Mike Collett
19:38 BST, Sat 26 Mar 2011
Reuaters.co.uk

CARDIFF, March 26 (Reuters) - Frank Lampard and Darren Bent gave England an easy 2-0 win over Wales in their Euro 2012 qualifer but midfielders Scott Parker and Jack Wilshere got most of the plaudits after Saturday's one-sided victory. The 19-year Wilshere and Parker, 30, may be at opposite ends of their careers in terms of their ages but they gave the England midfield a fresh and balanced approach, winning only their third and fifth caps respectively. England were far too good for the home side, ranked 116th in the world by FIFA, who improved in the second period following a woeful opening half but never looked like saving the game after Lampard's seventh minute penalty and Bent's 15th minute strike. Wales had suffered a big blow with the absence of their best player Gareth Bale, who has a hamstring injury, but even his presence would have been unlikely to change the outcome. England coach Fabio Capello, as staunch an advocate as anyone in world football of 4-4-2, changed his formation to 4-3-3 with Wilshere, Parker and Lampard playing in midfield and Wayne Rooney, Darren Bent and Ashley Young in attack.
It worked perfectly albeit against inferior opponents. Capello stressed to reporters after the game that he used that system after studying the way Wales played in their first match under their new coach Gary Speed. Whether he keeps it for Tuesday's friendly against Ghana, when he will make 11 changes to his lineup, is doubtful. "I decided on the formation after watching games that Wales played. It is really good because players like Ashley Young are improving a lot. I'm happy with the spirit, we worked together to win back the ball, each player helping the others," he said.

AGE-OLD DEBATE
Wilshere and Parker gave a glimpse of a future freed of the seemingly age-old debate about whether Steven Gerrard and Lampard can play together in midfield or whether Gareth Barry is really the answer to the perennial left-sided problem. Gerrard, out with injury, clearly still has an England future, as does Lampard, but Barry, 30, was not even on the bench on Saturday and after some fairly anodyne performances for his country, he is unlikely to add to his 45 caps. Parker, almost single-handedly leading West Ham United's fight against relegation from the Premier League this season, had an outstanding game as the holding midfielder.
He made the most passes on the pitch -- 60 excluding crosses, completing 53 of them for an 88 percent success rate. Wilshere, as he has done several times for Arsenal this season, gave a polished performance that belied his age and experience and clearly impressed Capello. Before Saturday, he had only played 53 minutes for England in his two previous appearances but more are likely to come very quickly.

EXCELLENT WILSHERE
"Wilshere's performance during this season has been incredible. The performance of this player has improved so much in such a short time. He played like a player of 28 or 29 with 35 or 40 caps. I hope he will keep on improving, good players always improve," Capello told reporters. "I spoke to Arsene (Wenger) about him and he agrees. He was excellent again today." England captain John Terry said Capello's tactics to stop Wales playing their way out of defence worked perfectly, especially after the visitors took an early grip on the game, "The new system was very positive, the attitude was to get at them and press them very high up the pitch. It stopped them breaking out early," he said. Wales manager Gary Speed said the early goals sent Wales reeling but they improved after the break. "I'm disappointed with the first-half performance. We are a developing team and used to getting beat. We have not got that winning mentality at the moment. "Losing a goal in the first five minutes killed us really. But we were much better in the second half, I was very pleased and proud of the way we played."

Lampard put England ahead from the spot after James Collins tripped his Villa team mate Young to concede the penalty, while striker Bent scored eight minutes later, sweeping home a cross from his club mate Young. Those goals subdued the atmosphere leaving Welsh fans facing the stark reality that not only have their team got no chance of reaching the finals in Poland and Ukraine next year but hopes of reaching the World Cup in Brazil in 2014 are also slight. "Thats our aim," said Speed. "I hope we can learn from this and it will help us in getting to the World Cup."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Sunday, March 27

Daily WHUFC News - 27th March 2011

Parker pleased
WHUFC.com
West Ham United talisman Scott Parker carried his good form over to
international duty on Saturday
26.03.2011

Scott Parker was at his best again as he helped England to a comfortable 2-0
victory against Wales in Cardiff on Saturday afternoon. The Hammers
midfielder was named by Fabio Capello in a strong midfield alongside Frank
Lampard and Jack Wilshere and played his part in keeping the home side at
bay. Wearing the No4 shirt, Parker was most effective at keeping Wales
captain Aaron Ramsey quiet in what was a disciplined defensive performance.
Parker played 88 minutes before being replaced by Phil Jagielka in a match
that saw early goals from Frank Lampard, from the penalty spot, and Ashley
Young decide matters. Parker said: "It was a very good. First and foremost
we got three points. We came to a difficult place, the atmosphere was
intense. We quietened the crowd down and got the three points which was
crucial."

The midfielder was given a standing ovation by the travelling support when
he made way just before the end - a gesture he returned. "I just appreciate
the fans along with all of us," he added. "They have made the trek here and
supported us. They have been great supporters. That was my appreciation to
them.
"I was personally over the moon with the way I played and most of all we
won, that's the most important thing."

Robert Green was an unused substitute, as was Danny Gabbidon for Wales, but
the goalkeeper is set to start when England play Ghana in a Wembley friendly
on Tuesday night, with Capello intending to rest all of his Saturday
starters.

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Barrera on song, Specs solid
WHUFC.com
Flying winger Pablo Barrera was in devastating form for Mexico in a
keenly-fought friendly against Paraguay
27.03.2011

Pablo Barrera and Jonathan Spector were both in action on American soil this
weekend. Barrera was outstanding on the right wing for Mexico in a 3-1 win
against Paraguay in Oakland, California. The flying winger made the first
with a cross to the near post for Manchester United forwar Javier Hernandez
to head in before playing a part in the build-up for Andres Guardado to
score the second. Barrera could feature once more against Venezuela in San
Diego on Tuesday.

Spector played the first 45 minutes in front of 80,000 fans in New Jersey as
the United States drew 1-1 at home with Lionel Messi's Argentina thanks to
Juan Agedelo's equaliser on the hour after Esteban Cambiasso had opened the
scoring. The versatile Hammer was used at right-back and could play again
when the US take their turn to play Paraguay in Nashville on Tuesday.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Keane a winner, point for Lars
WHUFC.com
There were positive results for Robbie Keane and Lars Jacobsen in UEFA EURO
2012 action on Saturday
26.03.2011

Robbie Keane scored the winner as the Republic of Ireland made a positive
step in UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualifying with a 2-1 home win
against FYR Macedonia. After Aiden McGeady's opener inside the first two
minutes on Saturday night, Hammers forward Keane pounced on a loose ball
from close range on 21 minutes for his 46th goal in 105 internationals. The
visitors to Dublin pulled one back just before the interval but captain
Keane led the Irish to a deserved win, made all the more sweeter by Russia's
goalless draw in Armenia. Ireland sit joint top with Russia and Slovakia at
the top of Group B with ten points

Elsewhere in the race for UEFA EURO 2012 in Poland and Ukraine, Lars
Jacobsen played 90 minutes as Denmark drew 1-1 with Norway in Oslo. The
Hammers full-back was cautioned in the 34th minute of a match that the
visitors will feel happier about although they sit three points behind their
opponents, who lead Group H.

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Ba brilliant for Senegal
WHUFC.com
In-form Hammers forward Demba Ba settled a heavyweight contest between two
of Africa's finest teams
26.03.2011

Demba Ba was the hero for Senegal as they won a tense 2012 CAF Africa Cup of
Nations qualifier against Cameroon on Saturday. The Hammers striker kept his
nerve to score with a superb strike three minutes into added time to make it
three wins from three for his country, sparking wild celebrations among the
60,000 fans gathered in the capital Dakar. Ba had only entered the fray as a
substitute for the final 15 minutes. Senegal's victory - their first in 20
years against their old rivals - moved Senegal five points clear of their
opponents in Group E with only the winners certain to qualify for the finals
in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea next year. The tournament will take place
between 21 January and 12 February 2012. Herita Ilunga's DR Congo are third
in the same group with one point from two games and have a chance to cut the
gap on Senegal when they host Mauritius in Kinshasha on Sunday. Also on
Sunday, Victor Obinna's Nigeria, second in Group B with three points from
two games, play host to Ethopia in Abuja.

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Kurucz keeping the faith
WHUFC.com
Hammers prospect Peter Kurucz has stepped up his training after a
season-ending knee injury
26.03.2011

Peter Kurucz can see the light at the end of the tunnel as he battles hard
to return after a serious knee problem. The Hammers shot-stopper is the last
long-term casualty at Chadwell Heath, with Jack Collison nearing a playing
return from his own serious ligament injury. Kurucz, 22, was hurt just
before the start of the season on 7 August and has admitted he will not play
at all this campaign, even if he is closing on a training comeback. "I'm
doing some stuff outside now, doing some basic goalkeeping, kicking and some
running," he told West Ham TV. "I think I still need four weeks to be fit
and get back to training with the first team. It has been almost six months
now, so hopefully in about a month I'll be ready to play."

The Hungarian Under-21 international admitted he has found it tough at times
to cope with the long hours in rehab work, but has never given up. "The
first few months were very hard, because I couldn't do anything outside. "I
was just working hard in the gym to build up the muscle. Then in the last
two or three months it has got a little bit better since I started to do
some work outside, so it was much better for me. In the next few weeks I'm
going to start training with [goalkeeping coach] David Coles so I'm looking
forward it."

Kurucz has received plenty of encouragement from team-mates Robert Green,
Marek Stech and Ruud Boffin - with the goalkeepers' union in full effect.
"Everyone has been looking after me every time, asking me how I am doing and
what I have been doing."

The visit of Manchester United on Saturday week reminds of Kurucz' only
first-team experience to date - a 17-minute substitute appearance against
the Red Devils on 5 December 2009 when he actually kept out Sir Alex
Ferguson's men in what was ultimately a 4-0 loss. Kurucz is hoping to be
back in contention for a second senior appearance in 2011/12. "The plan is
not to play this season, so then I can be 100 per cent for the next season.
Everyday I'm at the training ground, so I'm working hard as if I was with
the first team but doing different stuff. We have a very good physio, Tom
Smith and I really appreciate his help."

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Kurucz closing on comeback
Keeper making steady progress in rehabilitation
Last updated: 26th March 2011
SSN

West Ham goalkeeper Peter Kurucz has stepped up his recovery from a serious
knee problem, but will not figure again this season. The 22-year-old is set
to see a long-term injury rule him out for the entire 2010/11 campaign. He
picked up the knock on 7th August and has been sidelined ever since. The
Hungarian is closing on a return to training, though, and hopes to be
welcomed back into the Hammers fold by the end of April. "I'm doing some
stuff outside now, doing some basic goalkeeping, kicking and some running,"
Kurucz told the club's official website. "I think I still need four weeks to
be fit and get back to training with the first-team. It has been almost six
months now, so hopefully in about a month I'll be ready to play."

Help

Kurucz admits he will not rush his recovery and risk suffering a setback,
with being ready for the 2011/12 campaign his sole target. "The plan is not
to play this season, so then I can be 100 per cent for the next season," he
added. "Everyday I'm at the training ground, so I'm working hard as if I was
with the first-team but doing different stuff. "We have a very good physio,
Tom Smith, and I really appreciate his help."

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Wilshere praises England's newlook midfield
Published 18:43 26/03/11 By MirrorFootball
The Mirror

Jack Wilshere believes England's new look midfield is an ideal combination
as victory over Wales put their Euro 2012 qualifying campaign back on track.
Wilshere impressed on his competitive debut for his country as a Frank
Lampard penalty and a Darren Bent goal - his third in three games - secured
a 2-0 success. It means England have moved back ahead of Montenegro as group
leaders on goal difference. Wilshere looked confident alongside Lampard when
venturing forward while Scott Parker excelled in the holding role in front
of the back four. The Arsenal star said: "It was a good game to come into. A
big game, a derby game, and we won, so we are happy and the 4-3-3 system
worked well today. "We got the opening two goals and that was the idea, to
press them high, get early goals. We did that and we made it comfortable for
ourselves. "They had some chances but we felt in control of the game."

Wilshere added: "The midfield shape worked well. We play it at Arsenal and
it works better with one holding and two going forward. "Scotty was great
and so was Frank in there. It made it easy for me to play. "You have to
thank Scotty for that performance today and Frank is always great for
England and they were brilliant again today." Defender Phil Jagielka said:
"The players were at it from the world go. "We had a fantastic start to the
game and thankfully saw it out and we've got the three points to go back top
of the group. "That fast start did make a difference. It quietened the crowd
down and we were pretty much in control for the rest of the game. "Getting
back on top of the group was the whole purpose of the exercise."

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Lampard praises Capello's 'clever' tactical change
Published 20:11 26/03/11 By MirrorFootball
The Mirror

Midfielder Frank Lampard felt England were rewarded for a clever change of
tactics by manager Fabio Capello against Wales this afternoon. Lampard and
Darren Bent both scored in the first 15 minutes as England eased to a 2-0
win in their Euro 2012 qualifier at the Millennium Stadium. Capello deployed
a 4-3-3 formation with Scott Parker playing deep behind Lampard and Jack
Wilshere in midfield with Bent, Ashley Young and Wayne Rooney up front. The
victory took some of the heat off Capello after suffering heavy criticism
for the manner in which he reinstated John Terry as captain. Lampard said:
"Scotty did the stuff he's been doing brilliantly for West Ham all season,
sitting in front of the back four. "Jack's shown what he can do with Arsenal
and England now and it was nice to play with an extra body in there, to get
a bit more possession with a bit of insurance behind you. "The way we
played, with the front three breaking, I think it worked very well. "It's
the manager's prerogative to use different systems at different times and I
think he did it today cleverly, and that gave us the dominance in midfield."

England took control of the game after Young was brought down by James
Collins in the seventh minute and Lampard struck from the penalty spot. Bent
added the second with an emphatic close-range finish after more good work by
the outstanding Young. Lampard added: "We did the damage early on and made
what could have been a very difficult game quite a comfortable game. "It was
a bit more difficult in the second half, they had a bit of a go, but from
being 2-0 up it was always going to be us that won it. "These games are big
derbies, some of us played in one a few years back. "It was a tough day all
round and the only way to make that more comfortable was to start well and
take the momentum out of them. "We certainly did that. We pressed hard, won
the ball back and dominated that first half. That's what won it for us.
"Everyone expected us to come here and roll over Wales but it was a derby,
with that atmosphere, everyone here knows it's not easy. "We did a very
professional job."

Lampard's penalty was his 21st international goal - moving him level with
Mick Channon and Kevin Keegan in joint 17th place on England's all-time
scoring list - while Bent struck for the third time in three appearances.
The Chelsea player said: "It was very important - you know it could be a
long day if you miss it. "I was just pleased to get us off to a good start.
"We then established ourselves and went on to get the second." Capello is
now likely to make a number of changes as England face Ghana in a friendly
at Wembley on Tuesday. "It is another important game," said Lampard. "I
think it will be a chance for the manager to try some different things,
other players who were here but not involved so much today. "It's great to
have this win behind us going in to that game and test ourselves against the
different style the Africans will bring."

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Beating drop may not be enough to save Grant and Houllier
Published 23:00 26/03/11 By Paul Smith - EXCLUSIVE
The Mirror

Guiding their clubs to survival may not be enough to keep Avram Grant and
Gerard Houllier in jobs this summer. There is a growing belief inside West
Ham amd Aston Villa that their current bosses will get the order of the boot
- even if the dreaded drop is avoided. Despite being given a dreaded vote of
confidence by the Villa board last week with eight games remaining,
Houllier's brief and unspectacular reign at the club looks increasingly
certain come to an end. Villa's decision not to act sooner looks
questionable, as the Frenchman has lost the support of some influential
players in the dressing room. Large sections of the Villa fan base are also
disillusioned with their experienced French manager at a time when unity is
the key to survival. Houllier's appointment as the eventual successor to
Martin O'Neill, who left the club a week before the start of the campaign,
was hardly an inspired choice as far as many supporters were -concerned. The
subsequent uprising by -players, who are fed up with his training regime of
French fitness coach Robert Duverne has -inevitably led to growing
-speculation his tenure will come to an end.
Seemingly waiting in the wings are former Blackburn manager Sam Allardyce
and another former Liverpool boss, Rafa Benitez. Yet the biggest surprise
might come at in-form West Ham, who appear to have found form at the right
time to have a realistic chance of escaping the drop. Grant has been one of
the bookmakers' -favourites for the chop throughout the season. Yet just
when optimism is -arriving around Upton Park it -appears the board are not
entirely happy with Grant and are -contemplating a change whether they
survive or not.

There are already two managers being linked to the post. Former England
coach Steve -McClaren is currently unemployed after failing to -survive a
season in German -football with Wolfsburg. The other is Neil Warnock, who
looks set to lead runaway leaders QPR to -top-flight promotion from the
Championship for the first time since 1993, but may then move on.

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Rio Ferdinand hails Scott Parker and Jack Wilshere as England beat Wales
Metro.co.uk

Rio Ferdinand was full of praise for midfield duo Scott Parker and Jack
Wilshere as England coasted to a 2-0 win over Wales in Cardiff on Saturday.
England coach Fabio Capello confirmed on Friday that Arsenal teenager
Wilshere would start at the Millennium Stadium, but his decision to go with
a three-man midfield, including West Ham captain Parker, was a surprise. The
4-3-3 system worked well and the Euro 2012 qualifier was effectively over as
a contest inside 15 minutes, after a Frank Lampard penalty and a Darren Bent
tap-in put England in control. Ferdinand, who was ruled out of the game by a
calf injury, told his Twitter followers he liked England's tactics and was
impressed by the midfield. 'Scott Parker worked hard + won the ball back for
us nicely. Looked our most comfortable performance all round in a long
time,' the Manchester United defender tweeted. He had earlier said: 'Jack
Wilshere is looking comfy in a 3 man midfield....suiting him nicely!' The
former England captain, who correctly predicted the scoreline, added: 'Well
done the lads, 2-0 + was comfortable. Roll on the summer qualifiers!

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Wales v England: Impressive Scott Parker showed in Cardiff he is central to
Fabio Capello's fresh start
Telegraph.co.uk
By Henry Winter 9:55PM GMT 26 Mar 2011


It was one of the private laments of certain players at last summer's World
Cup that England were using a moribund 4-4-2 system, rather than the more
fluid 4-3-3 adopted by more cerebral footballing nations.It was also one of
the many public frustrations voiced by everyone associated with England in
South Africa that the midfield lacked a true anchorman, a player prepared to
sit and screen the back four. Yesterday, as England moved up a welcome gear
on the road to Euro 2012, they looked so much more at ease with tactics that
gave them greater strength in the centre. Scott Parker, England's most
natural defensive midfielder during the terrible injury travails of Owen
Hargreaves, patrolled the centre like a diligent sentry. Parker's presence
allowed Jack Wilshere and Frank Lampard to attack from a central station.
England looked more balanced, more potent. Substantial allowance must be
made for the poverty of the opposition.

The leek launched at Ashley Cole was one of Wales' few efforts on target.
Gary Speed's side were incredibly disappointing, surprisingly starting
without David Vaughan and defending like strangers as England took an early
2-0 lead through Lampard and Darren Bent. Apart from the tireless Craig
Bellamy, who never stopped running and ranting, Wales certainly resembled a
side ranked 116th in the world.

So some perspective is required. England have not gone from zeroes to heroes
in one afternoon by the Taff. But Fabio Capello addressed some of the
mistakes that so inhibited England last summer. Central to the 4-3-3 system
in every sense, Parker impressed until departing to sustained applause from
the 9,000 visiting fans, having completed 88 per cent of his 60 passes.
Ashley Young was voted man of the match but Parker cannot have been far
behind. Until yesterday, Capello had never been fully convinced by Parker's
ability to hold midfield, shielding a central defence that can be vulnerable
to pace. Having never given up hope of winning over Capello, Parker's
persistence was rewarded here. For all his neat distribution, it was
Parker's constant hounding of Wales players, notably captain Aaron Ramsey,
that afforded England their midfield hegemony. Poor Ramsey. Parker kept
showing the Arsenal midfielder down cul de sacs and then ambushing him.
Midway through the first half, Ramsey tried to guide his team back into the
game, but found Parker and Young harrying him until he gave up the ball. A
sound technique was constantly in evidence in Parker's heavyweight
contribution, even a touch of flair such as when spiriting the ball away
from Andrew Crofts. He also spun away from Bellamy, who responded with a
respectful tap on the head.

Parker shone during England's World Cup training camp in Austria but failed
to make the cut. Euro 2012 surely beckons. The Lam pard-Wilshere axis had
not worked in last month's friendly against Denmark in Copenhagen. Parker's
addition was key. With the West Ham captain anchoring, England's more
forward five were able to press high up the pitch, often turning over
possession. Again, some caution needs stirring into the pot of hyperbole.
Wales yielded possession easily. Against the more technical sides that lurk
in summer tournaments, such as Germany, Spain and Portugal, a breathless
pressing game could be dangerous in the heat. Parker and Wilshere will come
up against opponents who enjoy taking the ball under pressure, who can
manipulate it skilfully away from raiding parties. But 4-3-3 gives England
more insurance.

At 30, Parker is hardly the future beyond Euro 2012, although he deserves to
remain in the engine room until the campaign is complete. At 19, Wilshere is
clearly the present and future, delivering another mature performance to go
alongside his recent eye-catching displays for Arsenal against Barcelona. He
still needs to develop his shooting, missing horribly in the second half,
but he can hone that art.

There is so much to admire in Wilshere's game. The way he always shows for
the ball, even when under pressure. Then there is the way that clever left
foot guides the ball upfield, either in a surging run that carries echoes of
Paul Gascoigne or simply passing and moving. He struck up an immediate
understanding with Parker, often playing one-twos to manoeuvre the ball out
of trouble. With 11 minutes remaining, the pair combined brilliantly to work
the ball away from red shirts to Ashley Cole. When Wilshere was replaced,
even team-mates such as Michael Dawson joined in the fans' applause.

Injuries and occasional suspensions will shape Capello's plans but he must
continue with 4-3-3. Parker and particularly Wilshere must stay in the side,
leaving Capello an interesting call to make on Lampard when Steven Gerrard
regains fitness. The Chelsea man is still easing his way back to full match
sharpness, and was far from his dynamic best yet there were reminders of his
enduring qualities, not least the calm penalty swept home after seven
minutes. Yet there will inevitably be calls for Gerrard's restoration. A
Parker-Wilshere-Gerrard central triumvirate promises much.

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Saturday, March 26

Daily WHUFC News - 26th March 2011

Spence earns U21 call
WHUFC.com
A good run for Jordan Spence at Bristol City has earned him an England
Under-21 call
25.03.2011

Jordan Spence's superb form for Bristol City in helping them to three wins
in four Championship games since joining on loan has earned him a call-up by
England Under-21s. The versatile defender, who prefers to play at
right-back, was drafted in to Stuart Pearce's squad on Friday ahead of
Monday's friendly against Iceland in Preston, meaning he could line up
alongside club-mate James Tomkins. Spence has captained England at every
youth level up to the U20 age group but has yet to figure for the U21s. The
20-year-old's selection came after Micah Richards picked up a hamstring
injury in the 4-0 win away to Denmark on Thursday night. Spence and Tomkins
could face fellow Hammers defender Holmar Orn Eyjolfsson, with the Icelander
a mainstay in their defence.

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Gabbs and Greeny united
WHUFC.com
Hammers favourites Danny Gabbidon and Robert Green have supported three
special naval officers
25.03.2011

Robert Green and Danny Gabbidon may well be on opposite sides when England
travel to Wales on Saturday afternoon but they are also united in a common
cause.
The club-mates met a trio of serving Royal Navy officers at the start of
their Wembley to Cardiff charity walk over the last week - in aid of Help
for Heroes. Petty officers Andy Gibbs and Robert Brown committed to walking
168 miles, accompanied by support driver, warrant officer Dave Chandler, in
good time for the Wales-England UEFA EURO 2012 qualifier taking place at the
Millennium Stadium - a good job, considering they will be bringing with them
the matchball. Gabbidon said: "They are doing a great thing - we wish them
luck and it will be good to see the ball back at the Millennium Stadium when
the guys finish their walk at the match."
The trio first collected the ball from the Welsh Football Association and
national-team manager Gary Speed back in January. Once they make it to the
Millennium, they will stride on to the pitch to hand it over to the referee.
All proceeds will go towards the Help for Heroes appeal, with the Wembley to
Cardiff walk listed on their website at :
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/wembley-to-cardiff.html Green added: "The
Help for Heroes charity is one of two charities the England Footballers
Foundation are supporting, along with Cancer Research. We as a club also
support causes such as these and we hope that everyone puts their backing
behind the officers as they look to raise as much money as they can."

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Spence set to extend loan
Hammers defender likely to finish the season at Ashton Gate
Last updated: 25th March 2011
SSN

Bristol City expect to finalise the loan extension of West Ham United
defender Jordan Spence next week. Spence has made four appearances at
right-back for the Robins since moving to Ashton Gate on an initial month's
loan at the start of March. Robins boss Keith Millen revealed earlier in the
week that he had opened discussions with West Ham regarding an extension for
Spence. The 20-year-old also expressed his hope that a deal could be agreed
which would allow him to stay at Ashton Gate for the rest of the season. The
talks have progressed and Spence's extension is likely to be finalised
before City's next game against Doncaster Rovers on 2nd April.

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Karren Brady's football diary
The Sun
KARREN BRADY - First lady of football
Published: Today

Saturday March 19
WE have known for a long time it will take more than 40 points to be safe in
the Premier League this season. The figure might well end up at 43. At
football clubs, it's a default position to think only of the next match. In
reality, there's someone in every corner making calculations - me in mine at
the moment. And they tell me that even a point a game after today's draw at
White Hart Lane will take us to the usual tide-mark 40. The way we are
playing now I expect many more but it's simple to write that, much more
difficult to achieve. Against Spurs, we defend for our lives and we are
going to need more of this to retain the safety-hold we secure at 17th place
with our goalless draw. Typically, Scott Parker plays despite the death of
his father. I'd like to strike a medal for our captain's exceptional conduct
this season.

Sunday March 20
RIO FERDINAND has no reason to make a fuss over losing the England
captaincy. His recent record of appearances on the field is so low, he's
been practically leading from behind. Fabio Capello had little choice but to
find a new leader and I'm sure Ferdinand is big enough to understand that
absent captains are about as much use in battle as cuddly toys. There are
objections from fellow PL directors about the re-appointment of John Terry.
Most think he has been disloyal to those around him. Capello may believe
Terry is Julius Caesar in the making but others think he's more Silvio
Berlusconi. Terry has another Italian supporter in his Chelsea manager Carlo
Ancelotti and played well in the win over Man City that continues to
emphasise how badly another player was missed in the team's mid-winter
collapse. Step up Frank Lampard. Which begs the question most PL directors
are asking: Why not Lamps, Fabio?

Monday March 21
IF anyone has a strategy for combating the consequences of poor results, I'd
like to hear it. I've tried tact, honesty, silence, optimism and, yes,
evasion but none of them has really worked. Seemingly, from out of nowhere,
Aston Villa are in that state. They opted for the vast experience of Gerard
Houllier when Martin O'Neill walked out five days before the start of the
season and while many of us were impressed by the wisdom of the appointment,
he was never going to excite the juices of a band of supporters from
Birmingham who saw him as an unimaginative Frenchman whose better days were
behind him.

Whatever. Houllier has a different, continental philosophy compared with
O'Neill. Short-term at least, the change has only seen Villa slide into the
eight-team relegation zone and it is about as surprising as the appearance
of the moon at night that the fans are in revolt, demanding the guillotining
of heads, of whom Houllier's is prime. Manager-talk of all pulling together
tends to pull apart while a chief executive's pleas are often regarded as
lip service. I know, I've been there. With apologies to my neighbour Randy
Lerner, when you are trying to stave off relegation, as West Ham are,
secretly and inevitably you wish fellow strugglers all the worst.

Tuesday March 22
AFTER the humiliation of the World Cup 2018 bid, anyone standing against
Sepp Blatter as FIFA president is almost bound to win the FA's support.
Possibly a chimp would have done. Instead, they have been encouraged by the
candidacy of Qatar's Mohammed bin Hammam who needs no other proof than that
the World Cup 2022 is to be held in the tiny, desert sheikhdom to show that
he is smart. He could be the perfect answer to the 'Splatter Blatter'
campaign to prevent the Swiss heading FIFA for a fourth term of four years.
By the end of it, Blatter will have reached the tender age of 79.

Even so, I urge a little caution. I don't know what promises Hammam can
fulfil towards the FA and even whether any would be cashable. I imagine he
is regarded as an ultra-ambitious turncoat, too big for his sand-shoes, by
Blatter's people who worked so hard for Qatar's ludicrous bid. Should he
lose heavily, the scraps left of England's credibility as a power in
football will be good only for the bin.

Wednesday March 23
STRONG FA criticism of Sir Alex Ferguson for his angry blast at referee
Martin Atkinson reminds me Avram Grant is preparing his defence of a similar
charge of improper conduct for comments after our FA Cup defeat at Stoke.
The degree is hugely different. Sir Alex's fury led him into territory where
he could be accused, as he is today, of risking damage to football
integrity. Far from saying too much, Avram spent part of his Press
conference trying to say nothing of Mike Jones' reffing until he replied "I
think yes" to a question as to whether he thought Jones was "trying to even
things up" after a poor penalty decision in our favour.

At a personal hearing on April 7, I think he'll say the ref might have been
subconsciously influenced by that decision, a far cry from attacking his
integrity, something I have never known Avram to do. He respects referees
and made little more than a murmured aside in the wake of a controversial
match. The FA's charge is flat on its back. I suspect Avram is a victim of a
backwash against Sir Alex.

Thursday March 24
HERE we are again at a lavish lunch held monthly at a venue a Premier League
chairman owns or at least walks around as if he does. The topic is salary
caps, which are successful in the USA and therefore an attractive option to
all but one of the group. That's me, the only woman. I call the idea "salary
crap" because capping players' wages would demand so many rules and such
policing it would be a nightmare to operate. My bottom line is this: Why do
you need an alternative to saying "No" to players' - or rather agents' -
demands? Next: Why do we have to hide behind rules? I point out we are a
global game and our clubs are subject to competition for players' services.
Outside America you can barely find an American Football pitch or baseball
diamond. If a player doesn't earn in the USA, he doesn't earn much
elsewhere. "You're right," was the general opinion around me. So I order a
cream cake and eat it ever-so-smugly.

Friday March 25
THERE is much commonsense in Gordon Taylor's recommendation of sin-bins and
a five-yard exclusion zone around referees. The PFA chief executive realises
the game is being smeared by the peevish behaviour of some players who can't
take the whistle as final answer. Why men behave in such a manner, I haven't
a clue.
Trouble is that enforcing a stand-away would lead to more yellow cards and,
as Taylor implies, there are too many already. We are already suffering from
yellow fever. His answer to this disease is the sin-bin - 10 minutes or so
off the pitch for players whose sins are serious but do not warrant him
being sent off. Far too many games are unbalanced by dismissals for two
yellows. It works in other sports, why not football? Or are good ideas too
disturbing for old man Blatter?

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Robbie Keane: I have no intention of retiring from Ireland duty
30-year-old denies he would be prepared to stand aside
Keane will win 105th cap against Macedonia in Dublin
Press Association
guardian.co.uk, Friday 25 March 2011 17.16 GMT

The Republic of Ireland captain Robbie Keane has denied that he has any
intention of quitting international football. The striker, currently on loan
at West Ham United from Tottenham Hotspur, appeared to suggest in January
that he would happily move aside if a younger, fitter striker came through
the ranks to take his position in the Irish side. However, he was quick to
clarify his comments as he prepared to win his 105th senior international
cap in Saturday's Euro 2012 qualifier against Macedonia. "I will make it
clear: I have no intention to retire at all. I want to play as long as I
can," he said. The 30-year-old will lead his side out for the 40th time
against Macedonia, equalling Andy Townsend's record in the process. "I think
you have seen over years, I have always been committed and always wanted to
play for my country, and that will never change," Keane said. "I don't like
to predict what is going to happen in three or four years' time with
injuries and what have you. I will just take each campaign as it comes, look
forward to this campaign and hope we can qualify. "I was just asked the
question that if someone came in and the manager felt it was time for me to
be pushed aside, I would be fairly happy. If someone young and fit came in
and did a better job than me, I would be happy enough."

Keane has missed most of the last six weeks with a calf injury which has
restricted him to 22 minutes of senior football for West Ham and a little
more than an hour for the reserves but, he is confident he is fit enough to
play after returning to action a fortnight earlier than expected with the
help of ice chamber treatments which proved more eventful than he might have
thought. "It's an ice chamber that myself and one of the lads went to, and
Frank Bruno was there as well," Keane said. "He was in there singing Danny
Boy, which was a bit bizarre. "You do two sessions a day of nine minutes.
You go in for four minutes, come back out, go on the bike for a few minutes
and go back in again. You don't want to be in any longer than that, trust
me. But it was good, it's probably healed me a lot better."

But if Keane is fighting fit once again after a frustrating spell on the
sidelines, the news of his defensive colleagues is not as good. Richard
Dunne will start after shaking off the shoulder injury which has kept him
out of action for the last few weeks, but his usual central defensive
partner, Sean St Ledger, has been ruled out with a knee problem sustained in
a training ground collision with Ciaran Clark on Tuesday. With Shay Given
and John O'Shea already missing, Trapattoni's defence will have an
unfamiliar and inexperienced look about it with the goalkeeper Keiren
Westwood, Darren O'Dea and Kevin Foley having just 12 caps between them, and
none of them in competitive games.

Ireland starting line-up: Westwood; Foley, Dunne, O'Dea, Kilbane; McGeady,
Gibson, Whelan, Duff, Keane, Doyle

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Friday, March 25

Daily WHUFC News - 25th March 2011

Tomkins shines for England
WHUFC.com
The 21-year-old James Tomkins got a longer than expected run-out for Stuart
Pearce's Young Lions
24.03.2011

James Tomkins was tremendous for England as they cruised to an impressive
4-0 victory away to UEFA European Under-21 Championship hosts Denmark. The
homegrown Hammer had to enter the fray as a fifth-minute substitute for
rMicah Richards, who picked up a hamstring problem, and went on to forge a
solid partnership with Manchester United centre-back Chris Smalling. The
Young Lions scored their first in the 23rd minute through Danny Welbeck and
never looked back after the interval through Scott Sinclair (58), Daniel
Sturridge (62) and Jordan Henderson (72). Tomkins particularly came to the
fore in the first half on Thursday, when the Danes threatened on a number of
occasions only to find him in resolute form. He was also involved in the
build-up to Welbeck's crucial opener with a long ball forward that put the
home side under pressure. Similar passes out of defence from the West Ham
man led to Sinclair and Sturridge's goals after the interval.
The 21-year-old will hope to figure again on Monday night when England
welcome fellow finalists Iceland - boasting Holmar Orn Eyjolfsson - to
Preston. Those two nations - along with Marek Stech's Czech Republic - will
all hope to impress when the UEFA finals take place in 87 days' time at the
end of the 2010/11 club season.

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Keane to get involved
WHUFC.com
Robbie Keane is confident that West Ham United have more than enough to beat
the drop
24.03.2011

Robbie Keane believes West Ham United have the strength at both ends of the
pitch required to safeguard their Barclays Premier League status. The No34
was forced to sit out Saturday's goalless draw at Tottenham Hotspur due to
the terms of his loan agreement with parent club Spurs. The absence halted
Keane's comeback from a calf injury, but the Republic of Ireland captain is
hoping to step up his return to full match-fitness during his country's
forthcoming EURO 2012 qualifier against FYR Macedonia and friendly
international meeting with Uruguay in Dublin. While he is naturally eager to
earn his 105th and 106th caps for his country, the 30-year-old is equally
keen to return to league action for the Hammers when champions Manchester
United visit the Boleyn Ground on Saturday 2 April.
With just one defeat in their previous seven league matches, Keane believes
West Ham have every chance of upsetting the Red Devils and taking another
big step towards safety. "If you look at the last few games - obviously at
Stoke in the FA Cup wasn't the result we wanted - in the Premier League we
are starting to hit form at the right time, so we're certainly in good
shape. Thomas Hitzlsperger coming back in during the last few games has been
a massive bonus for the team. "In the last few games we've played, we have
got the ball down and played. We've certainly got players who can keep the
ball - Scott Parker, Mark Noble and Thomas - and we have a massive threat
going forward in Demba Ba, who is in magnificent form. "Since he has come
in, he has done a tremendous job. He had a couple of niggles when he came to
us but he's back in the side now and has scored some important goals for the
team."

While Keane, Ba and Hitzlsperger have added to the attacking options
available to Avram Grant, another January arrival, Wayne Bridge, was in
outstanding form at White Hart Lane. Bridge, as well as captain Matthew
Upson and midfield talisman Parker, also earned glowing praise from Keane.
"Defensively, we were absolutely solid on Saturday and Wayne Bridge
certainly deserved to get the man of the match award. When you think he was
playing against Aaron Lennon and Wayne Bridge, it just goes to show how well
he did play because they two of them kept chopping and changing sides
because they weren't getting much joy out of him. Full credit to him. "We've
got people like Matty Upson here who demand a lot from the players and you
saw that on Saturday. "Scotty has been tremendous. When you look at a player
from afar when you're at another club, you appreciate players like Scott
Parker. When you see them first-hand, you realise just how good they are."

Although he has been here only a relatively short period, Keane has already
become an influential figure in the dressing room, while his driving skills
helped a team that also included Bridge, Noble and Jonathan Spector to take
the go-karting honours on a recent team-bonding day. "I think, as a group of
players, we certainly believe we won't get relegated. I think we have to
believe that after a defensive performance like that and that we certainly
have the players in the team who can score goals. "The table is so close, so
if we get a couple of back-to-back wins we're right back up there again.
"I'm looking forward to my future at West Ham. It's obviously been a little
bit frustrating. I came back and unfortunately I got injured in my second
game which was disappointing, but luckily enough I'm back fit now and I
played 20 minutes against Stoke and 65 minutes in the reserves. "The
international games have come at a nice time for me. I'm looking forward to
playing two games and hopefully getting myself back in the mix again.
"Manchester United is another tough game. Our next few games are very tough
and it was crucial that we got something out of Saturday's game. "Our home
record is decent and we always do well against the so-called bigger teams so
it's a game I'm certainly looking forward to and I'm sure the lads are too."

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'We outgunned them'
WHUFC.com
Steve Lomas was delighted with the way his reserve team dealt with a
swashbuckling Blackpool side
23.03.2011

Steve Lomas has praised his West Ham United reserve team for beating
Blackpool at their own game. The Tangerines threw the proverbial kitchen
sink at the Hammers at Bloomfield Road, regularly attacking with eight
outfield players, only for Lomas' young side to hit them repeatedly on the
counterattack to secure a fine 4-2 victory. Blackpool included
internationals Andy Reid and Sergei Kornilenko in their starting lineup, but
goals from scholars Dylan Tombides and George Moncur and young professionals
Freddie Sears and Cristian Montano proved too much for the home side. The
success put West Ham into second in the Barclays Premier Reserve League
Southern Group and within striking distance of leaders Arsenal, pleasing
manager Lomas. "The lads were very good against a decent Blackpool team who
had a few first-team squad members in their side. Everybody acquitted
themselves very well, they scored four goals and it could really have been
ten, to be fair.
"The way Blackpool play, they open the game out and we exploited them on the
counter-attack. In the second half, we were a lot better and more secure as
a team. Apart from a few little spells, I thought we were in total control
of the game. "It was important that George scored just before half-time. We
were 1-0 up and cruising and then they got back with a fine strike and
scored again to make it 2-1. If we'd come in 2-1 down at half-time, I'd have
felt it was very unjust because they had three shots and scored two. "We had
five great chances so we'd have been down on our luck, so it was a great
goal from George that capped a fantastic performance from him. "I think in
the first ten minutes we were trying to come to terms with the way they
played with two very wide players and two strikers up through the middle - a
bit like what Ian Holloway has done with the first team. "Like the first
team, though, they were susceptible to the counter-attack and conceding
goals, so it was pleasing that we outgunned them at their own game and it
could really have been a final score of 10-5. "We stuck to our principles,
tried to pass the ball and worked really hard on and off the ball."

Lomas has been delighted with the response of his squad to making early
starts for the away matches at Sunderland and Blackpool - both of which saw
them spend more than ten hours on the road. "At the end of the day, it's not
ideal preparation, but on the other hand it's good for the young boys. They
realise that if they work hard they can earn the first-team preparation of
going away the night before. "This is good for them. It's good experience
getting up early in the morning and going away to different clubs and doing
the long distances. "I see it as all part of their education. Sometimes,
they get too much, too young but all credit to them because they have been
fantastic in the away games since I took over."

With the Football League loan deadline on Thursday, Lomas knows a number of
his young players will be on the radars of clubs looking for a late-season
boost.
Although the Southern Group title is within West Ham's grasp, the former
Hammers midfielder said the player's development was more important than any
silverware. "The main thing is for the lads to develop. Of course you want
to win because it breeds good habits and that's what it's all about when you
get into the first team. "It's about players developing and we might have a
few who go out on loan, which I'm very keen on. It does them good to see
what League Two and League One are all about - Matt Fry has done that with
Charlton - and if it's not this season, then next season they've got to go
out and play first-team football.
"It's not easy down there because it's physically demanding. They have been
coached to play open football but sometimes they'll have to learn the other
side of the game by roughing it out for 60 or 70 minutes and then their
technical ability comes to the fore. "First and foremost it's about the
player's development."

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Paolo back at the Boleyn
WHUFC.com
The legendary No10 is returning home again for the visit of Manchester
United
24.03.2011

Paolo Di Canio will join a sell-out crowd for the big Manchester United
match on Saturday 2 April. The Hammers great is hosting the club's Penthouse
Suite, the ultimate corporate hospitality facility that accommodates up to
20 people and offers unrivalled views of the pitch. Guests can watch the
pre-match build-up including the warm-up while they dine in luxury and style
- and then have direct access to VIP padded Directors Box seating.

Other benefits of the Penthouse package at £499 per person including VAT
are:
• Open three hours before kick-off and for 90 minutes after the final
whistle
• Serviced to highest standard
• Match programme and team sheets
• Plasma television screen
• Pre-match betting facility

Di Canio, who will also be paying a visit to the Paolo Di Canio Lounge named
in his honour, will be hoping the team can emulate the 4-0 defeat of the
title favourites in the Carling Cup earlier this season. The legendary No10
enjoyed many memorable matches against Sir Alex Ferguson's men during his
own playing days, including one special afternoon at Old Trafford - as he
recalled in an exclusive interview earlier this season with the matchday
programme.

"Every footballer should want to play in the top-level matches," he said.
"To play against Man United was always a special occasion for everyone at
West Ham when I was playing - for the team, for the individual players.
Certainly for me, too. Every time in these games you have to show your
quality, your character and your professionalism."

Di Canio relished the chance to shine, to prove he deserved his place on the
pitch with his peers. "When you play against the top players in the world,
you can show how good you are. Always I played my best matches against the
top clubs and one of these was Man United."

He is not wrong, either - with four goals in six matches against Ferguson's
men. Most memorable was the winner at Old Trafford in an FA Cup tie back on
back on 28 January 2001. The fourth-round contest looked bound for a Boleyn
Ground replay before Di Canio went through on goal with 14 minutes to play.
Quick as a flash, France goalkeeper Fabien Barthez shot out an arm as if to
say the goal was offside - a tactic designed purely to distract. The striker
was not about to shirk his duty, though. "I knew to carry on, absolutely,"
he said. "It comes from when I was young. I grew up in a very tough area in
Rome where when you want to get something you have to try to do everything,
even if someone stops you, to get it. "In football, it was the same. At Old
Trafford that day, there was the linesman and there was the referee who can
both stop the move. But I didn't hear anything. I would not stop. I had to
finish what I started and then look to see. "There is a time to stop but it
is not down to the goalkeeper to decide. That upbringing as a child helped
me. Barthez was very clever because when you run the ball one v one without
opponents around you, you are concentrated only on the goal and the
goalkeeper. "He tried to distract me but I was cleverer than him. I finished
with the ball in the net and then the referee can say 'sorry Paolo offside'
if he wants. I scored and then waited to see."

Di Canio's stream of consciousness as he recalled the goal that secured a
1-0 victory is rivalled only by his memories of the celebrations that
followed - with 9,000 away fans delirious in the away end. "The celebration
was amazing. 9,000 people, 9,000 people! The celebration was incredible. The
emotion as I ran to the corner flag was I felt in my body that a million
West Ham fans were there on the pitch. In this moment, I felt like people
all around the world were with me. I felt like a warrior that had no fear of
dying. "This is the perfect moment to die. Nothing can be better than this.
The adrenalin rush through my veins, around my body was something else. This
was the defining moment of my life. It was incredible, I didn't feel
anything bad. No pain, no bad thoughts. It was like I was invincible. You
know what I mean?"

To meet the man himself at the Manchester United match, call the corporate
hospitality department right now on 0871 222 2700 or click here.

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Kids for a Quid at Blackburn
WHUFC.com
A limited number of cut-price seats have been made available for the
Blackburn match on 7 May
23.03.2011

Fans are already snapping up their tickets for the last 3pm Saturday
kick-off of the 2010/11 season - when Blackburn Rovers visit the Boleyn
Ground on 7 May.
The match has been designated as Kids for a Quid for the first 3,000 to
book, with fewer than 1,500 places left for this strictly limited first
come, first-served offer.
With Manchester United's arrival on 2 April sold out and high demand already
for the Aston Villa visit on 16 April, the club are expecting bumper Boleyn
crowds for the remainder of the season. However, the club wanted to continue
with the hugely popular Football For All strategy to make football more
accessible for all.
Fans yet to book should move quickly or face disappointment. The match
promises to be pivotal to the club's survival hopes with the likes of Demba
Ba, Carlton Cole and Robbie Keane all looking to lead the line against
Rovers.

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Globe-trotting Hammers
WHUFC.com
West Ham United players are far and wide for the latest round of
international fixtures
24.03.2011

A significant of West Ham United players have been called-up for
international duty by their respective nations. Ten players - Demba Ba,
Pablo Barrera, Danny Gabbidon, Robert Green, Herita Ilunga, Lars Jacobsen,
Robbie Keane, Victor Obinna, Scott Parker and Jonathan Spector - are away
with senior sides, while James Tomkins, Holmar Orn Eyjolfsson and Marek
Stech are on Under-21 duty. Five scholars - Matthias Fanimo, Blair Turgott,
Sebastian Lletget, Danny Purdy, Eoin Wearen - will turn out for their
nations at age-group level, while schoolboy Leo Chambers has been included
by England at U16 level.

On Saturday, Gabbidon's Wales host England - for whom Green and Parker could
both feature - in an eagerly-anticipated Group G tie at Cardiff's Millennium
Stadium.
England sit second in the standings with seven points from three matches,
while Wales are pointless and bottom of the group. However, the Welsh will
be hopeful of pulling off an upset under the guidance of new manager Gary
Speed.

Republic of Ireland captain Keane will be hoping to lead his country to a
Group B victory over FYR Macedonia on the same day at the Aviva Stadium in
Dublin. The Irish sit second in the Group B table, two points behind leaders
Russia. The Irish then play Uruguay in a Tuesday friendly.

Jacobsen's Denmark face a vital trip to Oslo to face Norway on Saturday. The
Danes sit third in Group H, three points behind leaders Norway, with both
teams having contested three matches.

Spector has been included in the United States squad for their home friendly
matches against Argentina in East Rutherford, New Jersey on Saturday and
Paraguay in Nashville, Tennessee, on Tuesday.

Further afield, Ba will be part of the Senegal squad that receives Cameroon
in Dakar for a CAF 2012 Africa Cup of Nations Group E qualifier on Saturday.
In the same group, Ilunga's DR Congo host Mauritius in Kinshasa on Sunday.

In Group B, Obinna's Nigeria will be hoping to overhaul leaders Guinea when
they entertain Ethiopia in Abuja on Saturday.

Barrera will turn out for Mexico in two friendly matches being held in the
American state of California. Mexico will face Paraguay in Oakland on
Saturday before taking on Venezuela in San Diego on Tuesday.

At U21 level, Eyjolfsson and Stech will continue their preparations for this
summer's UEFA European U21 Championship finals.
Eyjolfsson's Iceland travel to Preston take on James Tomkins' England for a
friendly on Monday, while Stech's Czech Republic host Belarus and France on
Friday and Tuesday respectively. Tomkins helped the Young Lions to a 4-0
triumph in Denmark on Thursday night, playing 85 minutes after coming off
the bench early in the contest.

Lletget is in the United States squad for the 2011 CONCACAF U20 Championship
in Guatemala. The Americans will face Surinam and Panama in the group stage,
with the four semi-finalists qualifying for the 2011 FIFA U20 World Cup in
Colombia in July.
Second-year scholars Wearen and Purdy in Republic of Ireland's U19 squad for
a trip to Cyprus, where they will take on the Cyrpiot U19s and a Paralimni
U21 side on Saturday and Tuesday respectively.

At U17 level, Fanimo and Turgott will travel to Belgium as England continues
their defence of the UEFA European U17 Championship title. The first-year
scholars face Elite Round qualifying matches against Northern Ireland,
Belgium and Spain between Saturday and Thursday.
Finally, schoolboy Chambers will hope to be involved when England U16s take
on Scotland in a re-arranged Victory Shield tie at Morecambe FC's Globe
Arena on Wednesday.
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Lee loaned to Daggers
WHUFC.com
Hammers youngster Oliver Lee is joining League One side Dagenham and
Redbridge on a temporary basis
24.03.2011

West Ham United midfielder Oliver Lee is set for his senior bow after being
loaned to Dagenham and Redbridge. The 19-year-old will join the League One
side for a month of their survival fight, with the Daggers sitting just a
point and a place above the relegation zone. Lee has established himself
again in the Hammers reserve team this season, including Wednesday's 4-2 win
at Blackpool, having suffered a bout of glandular fever and a leg injury in
2009/10. A promising player, Lee recovered enough to earn a new contract
last June and will be keen to impress in his stay at Victoria Road. Lee has
already played there this season, getting 45 minutes as the Hammers won 3-2
in a friendly last October. The Academy product could make his Daggers debut
in Saturday's crunch visit of Sheffield Wednesday.
Lee, son of former Hammers midfielder Rob, becomes the fourth player out on
loan - with Kieron Dyer and Jordan Spence at Championship sides Ipswich Town
and Bristol City respectively, while Frank Nouble is with League One team
Charlton Athletic.

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Daggers add West Ham youngster Oliver Lee
Page last updated at 17:44 GMT, Thursday, 24 March 2011
BBC.co.uk

Dagenham & Redbridge have signed West Ham youngster Oliver Lee on loan until
the end of the season. The 19-year-old midfielder, son of former England
midfielder Rob Lee, has yet to make his senior Hammers bow. He will be
available to Daggers boss John Still for Saturday's visit of Sheffield
Wednesday. "Just as we come to this stage of the season we wanted to make
sure we had enough depth in our squad," Still told the club website. Lee is
the current West Ham Under-18s captain and is a regular in their reserve
side.

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Keane oozing confidence
On-loan frontman backing Hammers to beat the drop
By Chris Burton Last updated: 24th March 2011
SSN

Robbie Keane remains supremely confident when it comes to West Ham's Premier
League survival bid. The striker will see out the season at Upton Park,
having joined on loan from Tottenham during the January transfer window. He
has not seen as much action as he would like since arriving in the East End,
with injury having limited his availability. Keane has, however, been
impressed by what he has seen during his sort time with the Hammers and
believes a 0-0 draw with his parent club last time out underlines just how
capable they are. He told West Ham's official website: "I think, as a group
of players, we certainly believe we won't get relegated.

Tight

"I think we have to believe that after a defensive performance like that
[against Spurs] and that we certainly have the players in the team who can
score goals.
"The table is so close, so if we get a couple of back-to-back wins, we're
right back up there again." Keane admits his time with the Hammers has been
frustrating, with a calf problem sidelining him for more than a month and
the conditions of his loan preventing him from turning out against
Tottenham. He is enjoying his time with Avram Grant'sside, though, and is
hoping to make a telling contribution as the 2010/11 campaign draws to a
close. He said: "I'm looking forward to my future at West Ham.

Unfortunate
"It's obviously been a little bit frustrating. "I came back and
unfortunately I got injured in my second game, which was disappointing, but
luckily enough I'm back fit now and I played 20 minutes against Stoke and 65
minutes in the reserves." Keane will get a further opportunity to work on
his fitness while away on international duty, with Republic of Ireland set
to take in fixtures against Macedonia and Uruguay before domestic
competition resumes. He added: "The international games have come at a nice
time for me. "I'm looking forward to playing two games and hopefully getting
myself back in the mix again."

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Parker should have more England caps - Barry
Published 15:31 24/03/11 By MirrorFootball
The Mirror

Gareth Barry admits he could be vying for one England midfield slot against
Wales this weekend after conceding that Jack Wilshere's form means the
19-year-old is likely to start the Euro 2012 qualifier. Barry was a first
choice under Fabio Capello up to and including the 2010 World Cup which he
played in after battling to overcome an ankle injury. But the rise of
Wilshere and the re-emergence of Scott Parker means Barry's place - and that
of Frank Lampard - are under increasing threat for the Cardiff clash.
Capello hinted strongly last weekend that Arsenal starlet Wilshere was now
one of his first-choice players and Barry agrees his form is worthy of a
major role at the Millennium Stadium. There is a good chance Jack will be
involved. with the way he is playing," he said. "The more he has played this
year, the more his performances have grown and his confidence has grown.
"I've seen a lot of Arsenal's games and Jack has been putting in some great
performances. There is a very good chance he will play in the game. "You
always want to play alongside the best players and, at the moment, Jack is
playing well.
"It is great for England that he has come through so early and hopefully he
can just keep improving. It will be great for the country."

Barry is reluctant to talk up his own chances of starting against Gary
Speed's side. "As with any other game, I'll be going into it not knowing the
team etc, not expecting to play but sort of hoping," he said. "We've got
four central midfielders vying for two places, if it's 4-4-2. I am hopeful I
can be involved but I'm aware there are some very good players vying for
places as well. "All four of us are slightly different players and the
manager has got options. If he wants to change it, the players are there to
do it."

Parker impressed during the second half of last month's 2-1 win in Denmark
in what was his fourth cap under four different England managers. "I'm
surprised Scott has not played more for England," said Barry. "A player like
that should have picked up more caps over the years. But, for whatever
reason, he has not managed to do so."

Barry came in for criticism for his performances in South Africa last summer
and has tried to respond in a positive manner: "You take criticism as a
learning curve. Every player is going to get it throughout a career. At a
World Cup, it is going to be more high profile because of the stage you are
on. "I've come back this season, trying to learn from what happened in the
summer. Sometimes that can make you a better player. "That's in the past
now. I've learned from it and I'm looking forward to the future."

Barry is adamant the captaincy issue has been put to rest with the
reappointment of John Terry in place of injury-prone Rio Ferdinand. Capello
admits the way the armband was passed from one player to another in
Copenhagen last month after stand-in skipper Lampard was substituted helped
make up his mind to reinstate Terry. "It was the manager's initial decision
to take it away from John," said Barry. "In the players' minds, they
probably didn't feel it was down to them to give it back to John (on the
pitch in Denmark). "So the only way it should have been done was for the
manager to reinstate John and that's what's happened and now we are ready to
move on."

Barry added: "The players were asked if they were comfortable with it and
everybody has been. No one has spoken to the manager to say they weren't
happy.
"We feel for Rio, how unlucky he has been since being given the captain's
armband with the injuries he has picked up. "The general sense of the
players is we are really comfortable and we know that John Terry is a great
leader. He did a good job before and I'm sure he can continue that. "Now the
decision has been made, the lads are really comfortable with it and respect
the decision."

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Keane convinced Hammers will stay up
Published 12:40 24/03/11 By MirrorFootball
The Mirro

Robbie Keane has revealed how West Ham's goalless draw at Tottenham has
convinced the squad they are good enough to stay in the Barclays Premier
League.
The Hammers extended their unbeaten run in the league to four matches on
Saturday, with a point at White Hart Lane crucial in ensuring they stayed
out of the bottom three. It was also the first time they had kept
back-to-back clean sheets for more than a year, something which has boosted
the belief of Avram Grant's men ahead of their clash with Manchester United
on Saturday week. On-loan Tottenham striker Keane told his club's official
website, www.whufc.com: "I think, as a group of players, we certainly
believe we won't get relegated. "I think we have to believe that after a
defensive performance like that and that we certainly have the players in
the team who can score goals. "The table is so close, so if we get a couple
of back-to-back wins, we're right back up there again."

Keane's hopes of helping West Ham's survival battle were hit by a calf
injury that kept him out for more than a month. The 30-year-old, who scored
on his debut in February, returned for the recent FA Cup defeat at Stoke but
was prevented from featuring on Saturday due to the terms of his loan
agreement from Spurs. He said: "I'm looking forward to my future at West
Ham. "It's obviously been a little bit frustrating. "I came back and
unfortunately I got injured in my second game, which was disappointing, but
luckily enough I'm back fit now and I played 20 minutes against Stoke and 65
minutes in the reserves."

Keane, who should further boost his match fitness in two games for the
Republic of Ireland in the coming week, added: "The international games have
come at a nice time for me. "I'm looking forward to playing two games and
hopefully getting myself back in the mix again." Those matches are
immediately followed by the United match and Keane said: "Manchester United
is another tough game. "Our home record is decent and we always do well
against the so-called bigger teams so it's a game I'm certainly looking
forward to and I'm sure the lads are too."

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Robbie Keane can take out his West Ham frustrations on Macedonia - Ireland
assistant manager Marco Tardelli
On-loan Tottenham man has impressed in training
By Adithya Ananth
24 Mar 2011 15:07:00
Goal.com

Ireland assistant manager Marco Tardelli is happy with what he has seen from
skipper Robbie Keane after the striker returned from injury and expects him
to use his domestic frustration as a motivation to perform on the
international stage. The West Ham United forward had sustained a thigh
injury that has held back his contributions to the Hammers' survival battle,
but the 30-year-old has since overcome the problem to impress the Tardelli
during training sessions with the national team. Now Ireland are set to take
on Macedonia in a European Championship qualifier that could have a big
impact on the fortunes of both sides and Tardelli believes that Keane can
take his club frustrations out on the international stage. "I think Robbie
Keane has caught the eye because he has been out of action for many days
with his injury," he said, according to the Daily Mail. "I have found him
fit and there has been a smile on his face which everyone around the squad
can see. And he is in good form. "It will be a good motivation for him to
take out the frustrations of this season on Macedonia, but there is still a
long way to go in the Premier League.
"I do think this is a good chance for him to play well. Because of his
experience, Robbie Keane is very important for us. "We have many options but
I think it is possible for Robbie to play. He is fit to play a full match
but for now and the future we have good options in Jon Walters and Shane
Long, who has already played in a very important match in Slovakia. "This
match is very important. Maybe we dropped a point at home but against
Slovakia, who are a very tough team, we played very well. Now it is very
important for us to play well again."

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Keep Your Fingers Crossed!
March 25th, 2011 - 12:06 am by S J Chandos
West Ham Till I Die

It is undoubtedly an honour for the club that ten members of the Hammers
first team squad have been called up for their respective nations during the
current international break. Amongst those selected are Green & Parker
(England), Keane (Republic of Ireland), Obinna (Nigeria), Jacobsen
(Denmark), Spector (USA) and Demba Ba (Senegal).

However, with the justifiable pride at their selection must also come a
certain trepidation at the prospect of them picking up injuries. In our
current position it must be a fear that every Hammers fan secretly harbours.
Especially considering our prior experience of Hammers players getting
injured on international duty. This season we have lost both Hitzlsperger
(Germany) and Obinna (Nigeria), for differing periods of time, as a result
of getting injured on international duty. Prior to that there was the
long-term absence, and eventual retirement, of Dean Ashton as a result of a
poor tackle in a England training session; whilst who can forget the injury
picked up for the newly signed David James, playing for England, before he
had even made his first appearance for the Hammers! All memories sure to
make us wince at the recollection.

To lose a key player like Green, Parker or Ba to injury would be a
potentially devastating blow to the club's PL survival chances. Nothing
can be done about it, players must respond if their country calls. So, we
just have to sit tight, keep our fingers crossed and pray that they all come
through this week unscathed.

There were reports earlier this week that West Ham are considering bringing
Anton Ferdinand back to the club in the summer. He is being touted as a
replacement for Matty Upson if he leaves on a Bosman. Ferdinand is a player
that has ability, but too often it has been undermined by a disturbing loss
of concentration and/or poor defensive positioning. In all honesty, can we
really say, hand on heart, that he has improved those aspects of his game
whilst at Sunderland? On the plus side, he loves the club and would
probably jump at the chance of a return. He might be decent signing if the
fee is right? Although, is there not also a compelling case for arguing
that it is better policy for the likes of Spence and Fry to step up to the
first team?

Talking of stepping up, a number of our promising youngsters have now spent
quite a bit of time, this season, on loan to championship and Division one
sides. Jordan Spence is gaining valuable championship experience at Bristol
City, Matty Fry has performed well on loan at Charlton and Frank Nouble has
been loaned to Barnsley. Hopefully, these loans are an essential part of
the transitory process of becoming first team regulars? Certainly, the
aforementioned players need to return to the club and make a positive impact
next season.

They will need to step up or risk being superseded by the quality in our
U-18 squad. Who will be the first player from that crop of players to make
a break through? How about the impressive young Aussie striker, Dylan
Tombides? Tombides was taken on the recent warm weather training break in
Portugal, a clear indication of his potential. Avram Grant certainly seems
to rate him, he has recently been quoted as stating that he is player that
can make the grade. He also hinted that Tombides might have figured already
at first team level, but for the season long struggle against relegation.

There may be great expectations of Tombides, but the the same could be said
of a number of his U-18 team mates such as Hall, Moncur, McNaughton and Lee.
Indeed, the potential of the players coming through the famous West Ham
Academy really is one of the major sources of optimism regarding the long
term future of the club.

SJ. Chandos.

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