Wednesday, April 5

Daily WHUFC News - 5th March 2017

Preview - Arsenal
WHUFC.com

Arsenal's Emirates Stadium

When and where?

Arsenal v West Ham United
Premier League
Wednesday 5 April 2017, 7.45pm BST
Emirates Stadium

What's the story?

West Ham United's busy April continues on Wednesday with the short trip to
north London to take on Arsenal.

With six games to come this month, the assignments come thick and fast, with
Wednesday evening's game offering an opportunity to end a four-game losing
streak.

Slaven Bilic's men have suffered single goal defeats to Chelsea, AFC
Bournemouth, Leicester City and Hull City since the beginning of March, and
have to go back to 4 February for their last win, when Andy Carroll, Pedro
Obiang and Mark Noble struck in a 3-1 success at Southampton.

With just two points from the six games that have followed, West Ham have
dropped to 14th in the Premier League table with 33 points – although they
are just three points behind Stoke City in ninth place in a very crowded
mid-table section.

Arsenal have had well-documented problems of their own, with their
most-recent league win coming just a week after the Hammers' – 2-0 against
Hull on 11 February.

With back-to-back defeats either side of that, and a 2-2 draw at home
against Manchester City at the weekend, pressure has intensified on Gunners
boss Arsene Wenger as they have slipped away from the head of the table and
out of the top four.

In fact, they enter this match seven points in arrears to fourth placed
Manchester City and are in danger of seeing a run of 19 years of consecutive
UEFA Champions League action come to an end this term.

Sunday's draw with Manchester City saw plenty of attacking success, but less
solidity at the back, as the north Londoners twice came from behind to take
a point thanks to Theo Walcott and Shkodran Mustafi.

Team news

Michail AntonioWest Ham United will be handed a boost for Wednesday's game
by the return from injury of Michail Antonio.

The winger missed Saturday's trip to Hull with a hamstring injury, but has
overcome that and is set to take his place in the squad.

Mark Noble could also return to the starting XI after sitting on the bench
at the KCOM Stadium, while Diafra Sakho is getting closer and closer to a
return.

However, Aaron Cresswell will miss out, having picked up a muscle problem on
Saturday, meaning Arthur Masuaku will have an opportunity from the start at
left-back.

For Arsenal, Laurent Koscielny is an injury absentee. The Frenchman had to
go off against Manchester City with an Achilles problem.

Fellow defender Per Mertesacker and midfielders Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and
Aaron Ramsey are available.

Last time out

It was an evening to forget for the Hammers when they took on Arsenal in
December, as an Alexis Sanchez hat-trick powered the Gunners to a 5-1
victory.

Andy Carroll scored his first goal of the season as a consolation, adding to
the Boleyn Ground hat-trick he notched against Arsenal last season.

On their last trip to the Emirates, Cheikhou Kouyate and Mauro Zarate scored
to give West Ham a stunning 2-0 win, back on the opening day of the 2015/16
campaign.

Player head-to-head

Olivier Giroud v Andy Carroll

How do I get to the game?

A comprehensive guide to getting to Emirates Stadium can be found here.

Whether you're travelling to the game by tube, train or road,
up-to-the-minute travel news can be found by clicking here.

A cloudy night is in store for Wednesday, with temperature at kick-off of
11C (52F).

How can I watch the game?

This match is not being broadcast live in the UK. However, if you are tuning
in from overseas the game could be televised in your territory. Full details
can be found in our widget below.

You can follow all the action as it happens right here on whufc.com, with
live audio commentary in our Match Centre. We also have social media updates
as they happen, in-running stats, photos and more. Get involved in the
conversation on social using #ARSWHU.

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Duo set to strike back?
WHUFC.com

Michail Antonio set to return in Wednesday's Premier League fixture at
Arsenal
Diafra Sakho could also feature after four months out following back surgery
Aaron Cresswell will miss the trip to Emirates Stadium, with Arthur Masuaku
in line to start

Slaven Bilic is weighing up whether to unleash two of his star forwards when
West Ham United make the short trip to Arsenal on Wednesday.
The Hammers travel to Emirates Stadium eager to end a four-match Premier
League winless run, and the manager has been boosted by the potential
availability of both Michail Antonio and Diafra Sakho. Antonio missed
Saturday's defeat at Hull City with a hamstring problem, while Sakho has
been out since undergoing surgery to rectify a long-standing back injury in
November, but Bilic says both could feature in north London. "Mikey Antonio
is back, which is of course good news for us, great news for us," the boss
told the media at his pre-match press conference. "Mikey trained the last
couple of days and he had a small chance to make it for the Hull game, but
it was too early for him. "We're going to see him on Tuesday and he's
definitely going to be involved in the game, but whether he is going to
start or not depends. It looks really good and it's a big boost for us
because we are talking about one of our best players.
"He can definitely make the difference we need, because he is making that
difference week-in, week-out, this season and last season after he came into
the team over the Christmas period. He's been doing it all the time and, as
I said, it's a big boost for us ahead of a big game against Arsenal."

Could all four of these players feature at Arsenal?

Bilic, who also confirmed that Antonio will 'definitely' be offered a new
contract by the Club in the near future, is also considering naming Sakho in
his matchday squad for just the third time this season. The Senegal
international has the best Premier League strike-rate of any West Ham
forward – 16 goals in 46 appearances – and his presence would add a new
dimension to the Hammers, but the manager is considering the merits of
returning him to the pitch in what will be a high-intensity London derby.
"Diafra is back," he confirmed. "When you talk to him, he is ready, he can't
wait and all that. It was only because it was not like a hamstring injury,
he was out for a long time, he done the operation on his back and he is
looking really good. "Of course he is lacking match practice, but he has to
start somewhere and he may be on the bench tomorrow, even. I have not
decided yet, because of the length of his absence, but he is very, very
close to that."

One player who definitely will not feature at Emirates Stadium is Aaron
Cresswell, who suffered a muscle injury in Saturday's 2-1 defeat at Hull.
The left-back's place is expected to be taken by Arthur Masuaku, who has
featured as a substitute in the last two matches. "Cresswell is out for this
week and it should be only this week, so it should only be a couple of
games," Bilic confirmed. "We are talking about him being out against Arsenal
and Swansea, but he should be back in training next week and available for
the Sunderland game."

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U17s in Japan - Day One
WHUFC.com

West Ham United began their J-League Challenge campaign with two wins from
two
They beat Renofa Yamaguchi and V-Varen Nagasaki to ensure qualification to
the semi-finals
The Hammers face Gamba Osaka tomorrow in their final group fixture

West Ham United U17s qualified for the semi-finals of the J-League club
challenge with two victories from two on day one. The youngsters made the 12
hour trip to Japan a day prior, but that didn't seem to affect them as they
made it through to the semi-finals with a game to spare. The Hammers kicked
off the group stage in Osaka with a hard-fought victory over Japanese side
Renofa Yamaguchi.

It was a warm day at the J-Green Sakai facility, but the youngsters showed
terrific resolve to fight back from a goal down and earn a crucial three
points. Yamaguchi took the lead within the opening 15 minutes. A misplaced
Ben Johnson pass allowed the opposing striker a route to goal and he duly
obliged, firing past Joseph Anang. But Danny Searle's players responded
brilliantly and stuck with their possession game, which enabled them to
frustrate their opponents. Their equaliser was created down the left hand
side after great work from Reece Hannam and Amadou Diallo. Diallo crossed
for Sean Adarkwa who finished excellently into the top corner.

Bernardo Rosa gave the Hammers the lead just before half-time - again,
Hannam was involved in the build-up, squaring for the Brazilian who found
the bottom corner with great accuracy. They could have added to their lead
in the second half, particularly when Jeremy Ngakia struck the crossbar, but
the Hammers picked up a well-deserved three points going into their second
group fixture. The team remained unchanged going into the next game against
V-Varen Nagasaki, with Searle keeping faith with the same eleven from the
start, although changes were to be expected with the demands of two 70
minute matches on the same day. The Hammers were imperious in the first half
scoring three unanswered goals, and they could have easily scored more.
Diallo gave them the lead with a neat finish from a Ngakia cross before
Adarkwa scored his second of the tournament with a delightful chip over the
Nagasaki keeper. Hannam gave Searle's men some breathing space just before
half-time, finishing well after a jinking run and 3-0 was how the game
finished. The Hammers next opponents are Gamba Osaka, who will join United
in the semi-finals regardless of the result tomorrow. The match kicks off at
2:30am BST on Wednesday morning.

West Ham (v Renofa Yamaguchi): Anang; Johnson, Mingi, Wells, Hannam:
Coventry, Rosa (Dalipi); Ngakia, Watson (Chesters), Diallo; Adarkwa. Subs
not used: Sanneh, Forson, Okotcha, Ashby, King.
Goals: Adarkwa, Rosa.

West Ham (v V-Varen Nagasaki): Anang; Johnson (Forson), Mingi (Ashby), Wells
(Okotcha), Hannam: Coventry (Wells), Rosa (Dalipi); Ngakia (Chesters),
Watson, Diallo (King); Adarkwa (Ngakia).
Goals: Diallo, Adarkwa, Hannam
Bookings: Johnson.

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Five Talking Points – Arsenal
WHUFC.com

The major subjects of discussion as West Ham United prepare to tackle
Arsenal at Emirates Stadium...

1. Three in, one out?

After four consecutive defeats, Slaven Bilic will again delve into his
tactical bag of tricks to select a team he hopes will end that run at the
Emirates. Last season, he selected the unheralded teenager Reece Oxford, who
produced a performance that belied his tender years in a stunning 2-0
Premier League success. This time around, Bilic hopes to be able to call
upon the fit-again Michail Antonio, while his wild card could be Senegal
striker Diafra Sakho, who is eager to play his part after four months out
after undergoing back surgery. With Aaron Cresswell sidelined with a minor
muscle injury, Arthur Masuaku looks set to come in at left-back, where he
will hope for better fortune than his last Premier League start – a 5-1 home
defeat by Arsenal in December. Finally, captain Mark Noble was left on the
bench at Hull City, but the midfielder's experience and work-rate could be
considered vital.

2. Happy Aluminium anniversary!

The dictionary definition of 'Aluminium' describes it as a silvery-white,
soft, nonmagnetic, ductile metal which will bend without breaking when under
stress. Well, this week marks the tenth – or Aluminium – anniversary of West
Ham United's amazing 1-0 Premier League win over Arsenal at Emirates
Stadium. Alan Curbishley's team were bent all over north London that
afternoon in April 2007, when the Gunners unleashed 29 shots to the Hammers'
one, only for Bobby Zamora's sole looping effort to land in Jens Lehmann's
net. At the other end, Robert Green produced the performance of his life and
West Ham did not break, earning the third of seven wins in nine matches as
part of their 'Great Escape' from relegation. Another 'Aluminium'
performance on Wednesday evening would make it an anniversary well worth
celebrating!

3. Wexit

A section of Arsenal supporters have been campaigning for some time now for
manager Arsene Wenger to end his 21-year reign. Flags have been flown at
matches, a fan-run YouTube channel has attracted millions of views, while
this week a group of unhappy Gunners even took their protest to the club's
London Colney training ground. The tabloids have wittily labelled the
potential departure of the Frenchman 'Wexit' but, on a more serious note,
the uncertainty and dissatisfaction over the manager's position could easily
spread onto the pitch on Wednesday evening.

4. At a loss without Laurent?

While West Ham United will head to north London without Winston Reid and
Angelo Ogbonna, Arsenal also go into the game lacking an influential central
defender. Laurent Koscielny limped off in Sunday's 2-2 Premier League draw
with Manchester City and his place is reportedly set to be handed to
Gabriel. The Brazilian had a nightmare against Andy Carroll at the Boleyn
Ground back in April, when the No9 scored an unforgettable hat-trick in a
thrilling 3-3 draw. The substitution of Koscielny cost Arsenal dear in both
legs of their UEFA Champions League Round of 16 tie with Bayern Munich and
the Hammers will hope his absence leads to more uncertainty at the back for
the Gunners.

5. Goals galore

Whoever comes out on top at Emirates Stadium on Wednesday evening, the
likelihood is that there will be plenty of goals scored. West Ham United
have conceded at least two in their last four Premier League matches and no
clean sheets in their last nine dating back to a 3-0 win over Crystal Palace
at London Stadium on 14 January. Arsenal have conceded at least two in five
of their last six Premier League games, while two of their three clean
sheets kept since the start of February came in Emirates FA Cup ties against
non-league clubs. In the last six Premier League meetings between the two,
24 goals have been scored – an average of four per game.

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Slaven - We must be solid
WHUFC.com

Slaven Bilic dismisses claims Arsenal's players are no longer giving 100 per
cent for Arsene Wenger
Hammers travel to Emirates Stadium in the Premier League on Wednesday
evening
Bilic says West Ham United need to be organised if they are to secure a
positive result

Slaven Bilic is not fooled by suggestions that Arsenal's players are no
longer giving their all for manager Arsene Wenger.

Uncertainty over Wenger's future after 21 years in the Gunners' dugout has
led some commentators and supporters to claim some of his star players are
no longer putting in 100 per cent effort for the Frenchman.

But Bilic does not go along with those suggestions, citing Arsenal's
determined display in Sunday's 2-2 Premier League draw with Manchester City
as reason to dismiss them.

"I think the players are playing for their manager and playing for their
club and individually playing for their futures, either in that club or
somewhere else," said the Hammers boss. "The players are sportsmen, so they
want to play better.

"I watched their last game on telly on Sunday against Man City and, before
the game, those kind of subjects and issues were in the 'papers and on the
TV, about whether they were going to play or not. When I saw them in that
game, which I watched twice, they were very, very motivated and a team which
was very up for it physically, mentally and with determination and all that.

"Some people are saying that they didn't celebrate the [Shkodran Mustafi's
equalising] goal the way they should, but I saw Arsenal with a lot of energy
and I also saw Arsenal fans who were behind Arsenal and behind the club, but
that's basically what I expected."

While Bilic was asked to comment on his opposite number's position
repeatedly in his pre-match press conference, his overriding concern is
ending West Ham's run of four straight Premier League defeats when they
visit Emirates Stadium on Wednesday evening.

The Croatian led the Hammers to victory in north London last season in his
first league game in charge, and followed up with an Andy Carroll-inspired
3-3 draw in the final meeting at the Boleyn Ground in April.

However, Arsenal won comfortably at London Stadium in December and Bilic is
experienced to know Wenger's side will still present formidable opposition
this time around.

"We saw a few things we can manipulate on Wednesday in Sunday's game," he
explained. "They have their problems, of course, otherwise all this that we
are talking about would not be an issue now.

"Still, they are a team with a lot of pace, that you can't afford to lose
the ball in your own half against because the transition and pace they have
up front are unbelievable.

"They are still attacking with numbers which makes them more likely to
create something, but when they lose the ball they are very, very vulnerable
because they leave a big space behind and hopefully we can use it."

Before West Ham can think about threatening Arsenal, however, they need to
sort out the defensive issues that have seen them fail to keep a clean sheet
in any of their last nine Premier League matches.

"We want to get something out of the game," Bilic insistead, "but first we
have to be solid and organised and to concentrate.

"We can't expect that we're going to have more possession than they will
have, so first and foremost we have to be a good as a unit, close those gaps
in between that [Alexis] Sanchez and [Mesut] Ozil are really good in and
then mark them two-against-one when the ball goes to one of their players
who can really hurt you if they are one-against-one or not marked.

"Then, when we have the ball, we have to try to use the space and keep the
ball to frustrate them. If we play like that, we are brave and confident and
everything, then we have a chance against any team in this league."

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The Big Interview – James Collins
WHUFC.com

A decade on from West Ham United's famous win at Emirates Stadium, Wales
defender James Collins prepares to face Arsenal again...

Ten years ago this week, West Ham United travelled to Emirates Stadium
seeking to achieve an unlikely victory over Arsenal.

The Hammers set off for north London sitting 19th in the Premier League
table, five points adrift of safety, but with confidence rising after vital
victories over Blackburn Rovers and Middlesbrough.

In West Ham team on 7 April 2007 was a 23-year-old centre-back named James
Collins, who had returned to the starting XI for the 2-1 win at Blackburn
after a two-month absence.

A decade on and Collins, now 33, returned to West Ham's starting XI after a
two-month absence on Saturday, and looks set to keep his place as the
Hammers prepare to face Arsenal again.

Ginge, you must have had mixed emotions on Saturday, returning to the
starting XI but in a 2-1 defeat at Hull City?

"I was obviously buzzing to be playing but then very disappointed after the
game. I thought we were really comfortable, but then their first goal has
got the crowd lifted and they've got a bit of inspiration from it and we've
conceded again from another set play so bitterly disappointed.

"I have done it a lot in my career but I was disappointed to come out of the
team in the first place. The last time I played we beat Crystal Palace 3-0
and it was a good performance and a clean sheet, but then I didn't play for
seven weeks, which was disappointing when I thought I probably should have.

"But that's football, I kept my head down and got a chance. I was
disappointed Saturday but I'm ready to go again on Wednesday."

You played as the left centre-back on Saturday, which was not your normal
position…

"I played there a fair bit, I played there at Villa a bit. It's the same
really, you just have to deal with it. I am right-footed but I've been a
professional footballer for 18 years so I can use my left a bit! But I don't
mind where I play, I'd play in goal for West Ham!"

You made your 150th Premier League appearance for the Club on Saturday,
which must have been a decent milestone to reach?

"Yeah it is. I saw it in the programme on Saturday and I would like to have
made more appearances, but so would anyone you ask. I've had a couple of
serious injuries in my time, one that kept me out for a year-and-a-half and
then some other little niggles, but it is good to get there and hopefully
there's many more in me yet.

"I still feel good, so here's to another 150!"

You mention you had a serious injury in your first spell with West Ham back
in 2008, but you have been largely injury-free since returning to the Club
in 2012…

"It's just little niggles and muscle injuries but I've been quite lucky. I'm
quite intense the way I play, and I have been lucky. The little ones have
kept me out for a few weeks in my time but I'll take that in my career."

So, next up we go to Arsenal on Wednesday. What are you expecting there?

"It's going to be tough, obviously. Going there is always tough but we've
gone there before and got results. We certainly need to defend better as a
team, in any game, but especially there.

"We have to be more solid as a group without the ball. When we have got the
ball we're looking good and creating chances. At the minute without the ball
we aren't really defending as a team which means we are conceding silly
goals. Obviously set-plays are an issue at the minute, too, which we are
working on.

"It's going to be tough but we have to go there with confidence that we can
get a result and perform. It's vital that we do that, as everyone is a bit
down at the minute, but going to somewhere like the Emirates and getting a
win or even a draw would be a lift for everyone."

Can West Ham take any heart from Arsenal's own recent struggles?

"You can't go there thinking anything other than it's going to be a tough
game. They're getting a bit of stick at the minute, as are we, but you have
to go there and be solid and try and take your chances when they come.

"The main thing is being solid and keeping a clean sheet. We've gone there
before and done it so why not? We need a lift and I think a clean sheet at
the Emirates would do it."

Can you believe it is a decade this week since you, Mark Noble, Robert
Green, Bobby Zamora and company went to the Emirates and won 1-0 during the
Great Escape season?

"It's crazy that's ten years ago. I think Robert Green had the game of his
life! We defended well as a team and I was speaking to Bobby only a couple
of weeks ago about how I read after the game we had one shot on goal and
they had 38 and we won 1-0. But all that matters is the result and we won
and stayed up that year."

Another miraculous defensive performance would be just the ticket on
Wednesday, wouldn't it?

"I think that's the secret to all football. If you keep a clean sheet, you
only need to score one goal to win a game.

"So, while it's all attacking football and the flair players going forward
nowadays, at the end of the day, for 20 years after I've gone, you'll still
need one goal to win the game with a clean sheet.

"Everyone is for attacking play but I'm a centre half and I want to keep
clean sheet."

And just finally, on Saturday we host the Premier League's only Welsh
representatives Swansea City before travelling to bottom side Sunderland…

"It's a huge game, there's no point beating around the bush, we need to get
three points on Saturday. It's a huge game. We've got two huge games after
Arsenal and there's no doubt it my mind that we need to get six points.

"There's no doubt in my mind that a good result and performance against
Arsenal will bring confidence to everyone. If we can get that there we'll go
into Saturday obviously confident that we can win anyway, but maybe with
that little edge. So obviously Arsenal is in the front of our minds, but
Saturday is a huge game."

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Stat's A Fact - 50 PL goals for AC
WHUFC.com

Saturday was bitter-sweet for West Ham United's Andy Carroll. The Hammers
centre-forward had the honour of leading his side out as captain for the
first time and in the 18th minute scored the 50th Premier League goal of his
career. However, the disappointment of a 2-1 defeat to Hull City
overshadowed what should have been an immensely proud day for West Ham's
number nine.

Carroll's goal was a beautifully crafted one too - picked up by Manuel
Lanzini in the middle of the park, spread wide to Aaron Creswell on left
side whose cross perfectly picked out the big man in the box. AC then did as
AC does; controlled on the chest, bought down and coolly finished past Hull
keeper, Eldin Jakupovic. It was the neatest way to bring up his Premier
League half-century.

Despite an injury-plagued campaign, which has seen him feature only 16
times, Saturday's goal was his seventh of the season. The same number of
goals scored from 2012-13 and 2013-14 combined.

Since signing, initially on loan, in August 2012, Carroll has bagged 30 of
his 50 Premier League goals in the claret and blue of West Ham United.

AC goal v ChelseaThe 6'4 striker has amassed an impressive 23 headed goals
in his league career – almost half of his total tally. Indeed, for West Ham
alone, the proportion is very similar with 14 of his 30 goals coming from
the head. His winner against Chelsea last season is certainly up there among
his most memorable headed goals.

As good as AC is in the air, he is just as capable and destructive with the
ball at his feet. His wand of a left foot has scored 22 Premier League
goals, while his weaker right foot has five. For West Ham, it is 13 and
three, respectively.

Most recently, he had his right foot to thank when coolly finishing past
Fraser Forster to score the first in a 3-1 victory against Southampton on 4
February. Even more impressive was his sensational over-the-head
right-footed volley against West Bromwich Albion in 2013.

AC Goal v PalaceTo his left foot and it is difficult to look past that
sublime overhead kick against Crystal Palace on 14 January this year as a
stand out goal so far. Carroll himself admitted after the game that "it has
to be one of the best of my career". His curler at Swansea City's Liberty
Stadium in January 2015 and his second of three at home to Arsenal last
season are also worth a mention.

In dead ball situations, Carroll has scored two West Ham penalties and one
free-kick.

What often goes unnoticed is his ability to score those all-important
game-changing goals. Whether as a starter or an impact sub, over 30 per cent
of Carroll's West Ham United goals have come in the final 15 minutes of the
game.

In his whole career, Andy has scored 30 second half goals compared to just
20 in the first 45'.

With eight games remaining, Carroll needs just three goals to enter double
figures for the season. Should he do so, it would be his highest scoring
campaign with West Ham and would be doubly impressive given that he has
missed over four months of action this year through injury.

The next opportunity to get on the scoresheet? A trip to Arsenal: a side he
has scored against four times in just the last two meetings..

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Betway preview - Get 5/2 for an AC goal
WHUFC.com

Just eight matches remain in the 2016/17 season, and for West Ham United,
finishing in the top half of the Premier League table is still very much an
achievable goal.

The Hammers face three of the top flight's current bottom six in their end
of season run-in, but attentions will first be on Wednesday night and the
huge fixture against Arsenal.

Clashes against the Gunners always tend to be entertaining, and while
neither side arrives into this fixture in particularly strong form, West Ham
fans can certainly point to last season's stunning opening day victory at
the Emirates as encouragement of another upset.

The Hammers are 7/1 to win on Wednesday, with Arsenal 2/5 to secure all
three points. A draw is currently priced at 17/4.

Midfielder Cheikhou Kouyate scored the opener that day, as the Irons won
2-0. The Senegalese star has a knack for scoring against Arsenal, having
found the net twice in his last four appearances against them, and is 15/2
to do so again.

For those expecting lightning to strike twice, you can get West Ham to win
2-0, once again, at 33/1.

Another man who likes scoring against Arsenal is Andy Carroll. In his
previous two appearances against the Gunners, Carroll has bagged four goals,
including a memorable hat-trick last season.

The striker is 9/1 to open the scoring and 5/2 to score at any time. Fancy
Carroll to be the last scorer of the match? He's currently priced at 9/1 to
be.

Over the last five meetings, West Ham and Arsenal have mustered an
eye-popping 20 goals between them – so don't be surprised to see goals on
the menu again on Wednesday.

It's currently 8/13 for both teams to score, with West Ham 9/1 to win and
both sides to find the net.

Those looking at Betway's Total Goals markets could be enticed by over 3.5
goals at 21/20, while those expecting more may want to look at over 4.5
goals at 12/5 – a £10 bet on this price would return £34.

The first goal could prove to be hugely important in this one. The Hammers
have broken the deadlock in two of their last three matches and are 9/4 to
do so once again.

However, it's the second half that continues to be the most fruitful for
West Ham in front of goal, with almost 64% of their league goals having come
after the break. They're 21/10 to score their first goal in the second half
today, while you can get them at 17/4 to score in both halves.

There are more than 100 markets on Arsenal vs. West Ham available at Betway.
And if you're an existing customer, why not join our Free Bet Club?

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Arsenal v West Ham United
WED, 05 APR 2017
PREMIER LEAGUE
19:45
Venue: Emirates Stadium
BBC.co.uk

TEAM NEWS

Arsenal will be without defender Laurent Koscielny, who suffered an Achilles
injury on Sunday. However, defender Per Mertesacker and midfielders Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain and Aaron Ramsey are back after injury.

West Ham striker Diafra Sakho could be named among the substitutes after
recovering from a back problem which has kept him out since November. Winger
Michail Antonio returns to the squad after a hamstring injury, but Aaron
Cresswell has been ruled out.

MOTD COMMENTATOR'S NOTES

Steve Bower: "If ever there was a match where both managers were in the
spotlight, then this is it. "While the footballing world waits for
confirmation from Arsene Wenger on his future, Slaven Bilic has received a
public vote of confidence from West Ham's owners on his.
"Wenger has rightly alluded to the challenge he faces to maintain his record
of always delivering a top-four finish for Arsenal. "The fact that they came
from behind and didn't lose to Manchester City was important, but it remains
to be seen if they have the mental strength in the remaining games. "They
will hope to exploit West Ham's low confidence levels, as the Hammers look
to avoid a fifth consecutive defeat."

Twitter: @SteveBowercomm

WHAT THE MANAGERS SAY

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger: "I think it's a good opportunity to remind
people we are not fighting to not go down - we are fighting to have a
positive end to the season. "That's why you want the fans to stand behind
the team and that the debate at the moment is about that. "Let's finish as
strong as we can and show that we have some resilience, some quality and
some mental spirit that we have shown against City."

West Ham manager Slaven Bilic: "Arsenal have their problems, but they are
still a team with a lot of pace, a team you can't afford to lose the ball
against in your own half because the transition and pace they have up front
is unbelievable. "They attack with numbers which makes them more likely to
create something, but when they lose the ball they are very vulnerable
because they leave a big space behind which you can use."

LAWRO'S PREDICTION

I am going for an Arsenal win on Wednesday, and if I am right we will
probably hear a lot more about whether Slaven Bilic is being sacked - or not
- this week.

Prediction: 2-1

MATCH FACTS

Head-to-head

Arsenal have lost just one of their last 17 league meetings with West Ham
(W13, D3).
However, that defeat was in this fixture last season - the Hammers won 2-0
to secure only their second victory at the Emirates in Slaven Bilic's first
match in charge.
Arsenal

Arsenal have the same record after 28 league games as they did last season,
with 15 wins, six draws, seven defeats and 51 points.
The Gunners have only taken four points from the last 18 available.
However, they have lost just one of their 15 matches against sides in the
bottom half of the table (W11, D3) prior to the latest round of matches.
Arsenal have scored 14 headed goals in this season's Premier League, a
figure matched only by West Brom.
Alexis Sanchez has scored four goals and provided one assist in his last two
games against West Ham.
West Ham United

West Ham have lost four successive league games and are without a victory
since 4 February (D2, L4).
They could lose five consecutive Premier League matches for the first time
since they did so under Avram Grant between April and May 2011.
The Hammers currently have 33 points from 30 games, 17 fewer than they did
at this stage last season.
Slaven Bilic's side have dropped 20 points from winning positions in the
Premier League this season, more than any other side.
Andy Carroll has played the full 90 minutes in four successive league games
for the first time since April 2014.

SAM's verdict
Most probable score: 2-1 Probability of draw: 17%
Probability of home win: 70% Probability of away win: 13%
SAM (Sports Analytics Machine) is a super-computer created by @ProfIanMcHale
at the University of Salford that is used to predict the outcome of football
matches.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
New contract for Antonio, confirms Bilic
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 4th April 2017
By: Staff Writer

Michail Antonio is to be offered a new contract in the summer in order to
keep him at West Ham. The 27-year-old has been out of action for a fortnight
due to injury, but is expected to be in the line-up when West Ham face
Arsenal at the Emirates tomorrow night. And according to Slaven Bilic,
Antonio will "definitely" be offered a new deal in the summer. "He can
definitely make the difference we need," said Bilic, addressing the media at
his pre-Arsenal press conference. "Hhe is making that difference week-in,
week-out, this season and last season after he came into the team over the
Christmas period. "He's been doing it all the time and, as I said, it's a
big boost for us ahead of a big game against Arsenal."
The former Nottingham Forest winger joined West Ham on transfer deadline day
in 2015 but had to wait until the end of November before being given a
chance in the first team by Bilic. Antonio, who cost West Ham £7million went
on to score nine goals for the Hammers in 2015/16 which led to him signing a
bumper new contract in July of last summer ahead of the club's US tour.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Vodafone set to complete Olympic Stadium naming rights deal
By Paul Kelso
Last Updated: 04/04/17 7:35pm
SSN

Vodafone is close to agreeing a £20m naming rights deal for the London
Olympic Stadium, Sky sources understand. Negotiations between the telecoms
giant and the stadium owners, the London Legacy Development Corporation
(LLDC), have been ongoing for several months. But they are understood to be
close to agreeing a six-year deal worth £20m, meaning the company will pay
more for naming rights (£3.3m per year) than West Ham are in rent to play
there (£2.5m per year).
Securing a high-profile brand in Vodafone will be seen as an endorsement of
an arena that has had significant challenges since it began being used by
West Ham last August. It is also a fillip to the LLDC's business model, with
all revenue from the deal going to the publicly-owned body rather than West
Ham. Last year, it was revealed that conversion costs of the stadium had
soared by £50m more than previously revealed by former London mayor Boris
Johnson. It also emerged that moving supposedly retractable seats to
facilitate athletics could cost up to £8m each summer. London mayor Sadiq
Khan recently ordered a review of the stadium's costs and financing
following the revelations that will get under way shortly. The arena, which
has cost more than £700m in taxpayer funds, stages the World Athletics
Championships in August.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Slaven Bilic says he didn't need West Ham board's statement of support
By Lyall Thomas
Last Updated: 04/04/17 10:56am
SSN

Slaven Bilic says he did not need a statement of support from the West Ham
board because he already knew they were behind him. In an attempt "to end
speculation once and for all", the Hammers spoke out this week insisting
Bilic's job was not in danger after a run of four straight Premier League
defeats. Widespread newspaper reports spoke of potential successors to the
Croatian, but vice-chairwoman Karren Brady also insisted this week that the
club are not looking to change their manager. "I do not have to read the
papers to know my relationship with the board," Bilic said as his team
prepares to face Arsenal on Wednesday. "I talk with the chairmen before or
after every game. It's nice to read it (their support) but I know I have the
confidence of the board. "I am concentrated on my job and the payers. When I
told you I wasn't worried before it is the situation that I am not relieved
to say 'oh my god, they gave me confidence'. I knew that before. "I like it
that way; that I am not thinking about that a lot."
The Hammers go to the Emirates buoyed by the returns of Diafra Sakho and
Michail Antonio - but Aaron Cresswell is out with a knock - and Bilic is
hoping to throw Antonio in from the start. "We will see today but he will
definitely be involved in the game, whether from start or on bench," Bilic
said. "It is a big boost for us because we are talking about one of our best
players. "Diafra is back and, when you talk to him, he is ready and can't
wait, but only because he was out for a long time. He did the operation on
his back. He is lacking match practise, but he has to start somewhere. He
maybe on the bench tomorrow but I haven't decided yet. He is very close."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Michail Antonio wants West Ham stay, says Slaven Bilic
By Lyall Thomas
Last Updated: 04/04/17 11:17am
SSN

Michail Antonio is "keen to stay" at West Ham, Slaven Bilic has insisted,
despite the attacker still not signing a new contract. The Hammers boss said
in January that he believed a new deal for the 27-year-old was "close" but
now expects it to be done in the summer instead. But Antonio, who is
expected to return from injury against Arsenal on Wednesday, expressed
reservations about signing fresh terms when speaking to Sky Sports News HQ
in February. Bilic said: "The club and the chairmen appreciate the job and
work he has done for us. The club is offering him a new contact definitely
this summer. "He is keen to stay yes and has a long contract here. It's not
like he has one year left and the club has to panic, no. "We appreciate what
he has done and we want to make him happy and keep him for a long time, and
secure him, and the club is preparing that." West Ham travel to the Emirates
on Wednesday on the back of four straight Premier League defeats, which has
seen them slip to 14th in the table and just six points off the relegation
zone with eight games to go.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Arsenal v West Ham preview: Michail Antonio back for Hammers trip to
Emirates
Last Updated: 04/04/17 11:40am
SSN

Michail Antonio is fit for selection as West Ham travel across London to
play Arsenal in the Premier League on Wednesday evening. The winger pulled
out of England duty and missed the weekend's loss against Hull after picking
up a hamstring injury against Leicester before the international break, but
Slaven Bilic confirmed Antonio would be back in action for the Emirates
trip. West Ham will be looking to put an end to a poor run of recent results
that has seen them fail to win their last six Premier League outings, with
the last four coming as defeats. It is a similar story for Arsenal, who have
not won in the top flight since beating Hull at the start of February,
losing twice and drawing 2-2 against Man City since. Some good news for the
Gunners though, is they have lost just one of their last 17 Premier League
games against West Ham, although this came in the exact fixture last season.

Team news

Diafra Sakho could also return to the West Ham squad following a lengthy
spell on the sidelines but Aaron Cresswell will not feature for the next few
games. Winston Reid, Angelo Ogbonna and Pedro Obiang also remain out of
action, with the latter certain to miss the rest of the season following an
ankle operation.

Arsenal have a number of ins and outs ahead of the game, with Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain and Aaron Ramsey set for tests and are expected to return
to the squad. Per Mertesacker will also be available for selection, but his
fellow defender Laurent Koscielny will not feature after picking up an
Achilles injury against Man City with Petr Cech - who also missed out on
Sunday - not yet ready to return.

Opta stats

West Ham have won five Premier League away games against Arsenal - they've
only won more on the road in the competition against Fulham (6). Slaven
Bilic could become just the third manager to win his first two Premier
League visits to face Arsenal after Ron Atkinson and Guus Hiddink.
Alexis Sanchez has scored four goals and provided one assist in his last two
games against West Ham, including a hat-trick in the reverse of this
fixture. Should the Gunners win it will be their 10th Premier League double
over the Hammers, more than they've achieved against any other side in the
competition (also 9 vs Everton).
Andy Carroll has scored five Premier League goals against Arsenal - against
no side has he scored more in the competition (also 5 vs Swansea and Man
City).
There have been four hat-tricks in Premier League meetings between these
sides - Arsenal vs Liverpool is the only fixture to see more in the
competition (5).
Arsenal have won just one of their last eight Premier League matches played
in midweek (Tues-Thurs); drawing four and losing three.
West Ham United have won six of their seven midweek Premier League games
(Tues-Thurs) since the start of 2016 (W6 D0 L1).
No team has scored more headed goals than Arsenal in the Premier League this
season (14, level with West Brom).

Merson's prediction

I like Slaven Bilic, I think he's a good manager, but it's just one of those
seasons. West Ham are struggling at the moment, and you'd expect Arsenal to
win this game with the way the Hammers are playing. The last 20 minutes
against Man City for Arsenal was like an Emirates Cup game, like Austria v
West Germany in the World Cup many years back. It was like: "That's a draw,
we're both happy with that." Neither side wanted to lose. West Ham are
struggling, so I'm going with Arsenal.

PAUL PREDICTS: 2-1 (15/2 with Sky Bet)

Betting

Arsenal are the odds-on favourites at 2/5 with Sky Bet to help ease some of
the pressure on Arsene Wenger with victory at home to West Ham on Wednesday
night. The Hammers are on offer at 6/1 to spring a surprise at the Emirates
Stadium and the draw can be backed at 19/5. Arsenal drew 2-2 with Manchester
City on Sunday and the online bookmaker offers a repeat of that scoreline at
14/1.

All of the Gunners' last five matches have contained four or goals and Sky
Bet go 11/10 that this contest contains over the 3.5 goals mark (odds-on at
4/6 that it doesn't).

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Cheikhou Kouyate believes West Ham can take advantage of Arsenal's turmoil
and secure shock win at Emirates
Both teams are fighting very different battles as the season enters the
final stretch - but Kouyate is feeling good about his side's chances
The Mirror
BYDARREN LEWIS
16:36, 4 APR 2017UPDATED16:39, 4 APR 2017
SPORT

Cheikhou Kouyate believes lightning can strike twice for West Ham at Arsenal
on Wednesday night. The Senegal midfielder scored last season at the
Emirates as the Hammers beat the Gunners 2-0. Both clubs are now under
pressure at opposite ends of the table. Kouyate is convinced his side will
be able to take advantage of Arsenal's turmoil. "We had a fantastic result
at the Emirates last season." he said. "I remember it well and it was an
unbelievable day for us, so why can't it happen again this year? "Arsenal is
a nice team which plays good football in a good stadium and they need
points, but it is the same for us. "West Ham need some points and we will
battle for the whole 90 minutes to take all three again. "We had a fantastic
result at the Emirates last season. I remember it well and it was an
unbelievable day for us, so why can't it happen again this year?" West Ham
are six points clear of the drop zone with eight games remaining. The club's
board have backed Slaven Bilic following their fourth defeat in a row last
Saturday. Kouyate added: "For Arsenal, they have had some bad results but
they are still one of the best teams in the league. Arsenal have some great
players and we have to be careful because they are a hungry team and they
need the points. "It's a very, very difficult moment for us, but sometimes
you have this period one time in a year or one time in two years. It is
important that we stay positive, stay together and just focus. "We need to
win some games, just work hard and play hard. We need to take our chances
and defend well, but most importantly we need to work together and be
positive."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Emiliano Martinez set to start for Arsenal against West Ham - but who is the
Gunners goalkeeper?
The Argentine goalkeeper is ready to deputise on Wednesday with Petr Cech
and David Ospina ruled out through injury
The Mirror
BYDARREN WELLS
18:43, 4 APR 2017UPDATED18:46, 4 APR 2017

Emiliano Martinez is set to make his first league appearance of the season
for Arsenal on Wednesday in the crucial Premier League match with fellow
London club West Ham. The Argentine goalkeeper is currently third choice at
the Emirates and has only appeared three times in the league cup this
season. But he will be thrown into the starting line up against the Hammers
due to injuries to regular stoppers Petr Cech and David Ospina.

But who exactly is Arsenal's third-string keeper? ...
Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Martinez joined Arsenal's youth side in
2010 from Independiente.
He made his Arsenal debut aged just 19, in a League Cup tie at home to
Coventry in 2012.
The 24-year-old has spent spells on loan at Sheffield Wednesday, Oxford
United, Rotherham United and Wolves.
During his time at Wolves he kept five clean sheets in 15 matches before
injury caused him to lose his first team place.
Martinez has made three Premier League appearances previously, with his top
flight debut as a second-half substitute against Manchester United in the
2014/15 season.
He kept clean sheets against West Brom and Southampton in the games that
followed his Premier League bow, and has since featured in the Champions
League for the Gunners.
As a youngster he represented Argentina at under-17 and under-20 level, and
was called up to the senior squad in 2011 but did not make an appearance.
Martinez has played three times this season, all in Arsenal's EFL Cup
campaign, where he kept two clean sheets before they were eliminated by
Southampton.
Martinez will be hoping to add to Arsenal's tally of only eight Premier
League clean sheets this season, when he squares off against the likes of
Andy Carroll on Wednesday night.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Vodafone 'close' to agreeing £20million naming rights deal for West Ham's
London Stadium
The six-year deal is set to begin this summer and would be a huge boost for
the ground ahead of the new football season
The Mirror
BYJAMES WHALING
20:50, 4 APR 2017

West Ham are reportedly close to agreeing a £20million naming rights deal
with communication giants Vodafone for the London Stadium. Negotiations
between Vodafone and the owners of the stadium, the London Legacy
Development Corporation (LLDC), have been ongoing for months, according to
Sky News. The six-year deal is set to begin this summer and would be a huge
boost for the ground ahead of the new football season. Sky report that all
revenue from the deal will go to the LLDC rather than to the Hammers. The
60,000-seat venue is already the right dimensions for cricket (Photo: West
Ham United FC) The stadium's transition from an athletics arena to a
football venue has been a troubled one. It staged the track and field events
at the London 2012 Olympics with great success before West Ham attained
permission to play their home games there and move from their Upton Park
ground. But the venue has been plagued with crowd violence problems since
the Irons moved in, with the club receiving criticism for the policing and
stewarding.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Arsenal are vulnerable without the ball, says West Ham boss Slaven Bilic
Mark Brus for Metro.co.uk
Tuesday 4 Apr 2017 11:40 am

West Ham manager Slaven Bilic feels he has seen a few weaknesses in this
Arsenal squad, and says the main one is their vulnerability when they don't
have the ball. The Croatian tactician takes his side to the Emirates Stadium
on Wednesday night, and doesn't seem too phased after watching them continue
their poor form against Manchester City at the weekend. The Gunners twice
came from behind to draw 2-2 at home to City, making it just one win in six
in the Premier League as they prepare to take on the Hammers. Arsenal
thrashed Bilic's side 5-1 when they met earlier in the season, but the West
Ham manager believes his side could punish Arsene Wenger's men when they
lose the ball. 'I saw a few things,' he said. 'They have their problems
otherwise there wouldn't be issues now. 'When they lose the ball, they are
vulnerable.'

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
WENGER ON HOW TO KEEP CARROLL QUIET
arsenal.com

While West Ham may have suffered a recent dip in form, Andy Carroll still
remains their biggest threat. The Hammers have not won any of their past six
Premier League games but the England striker has been their shining light,
scoring five times and setting up another in his last eight appearances.
Carroll also has a good record against us, hitting four in his last two
including a 10-minute hat-trick in last season's 3-3 draw at Upton Park, and
Arsène Wenger has warned his players to respect the 28-year-old on Wednesday
night. "The best way to keep him quiet is to play in their half," the
manager said. "Apart from that, Carroll's strengths are that he protects the
ball well, he's good in the air, he's very forceful with his commitment as
well, so we will need to be good to stop the crosses. Once a cross comes
into the box, he's always very dangerous against anyone."
Sunday's draw against Manchester City was not the three points Wenger
wanted, but he believes his side's performance will give them confidence
heading into the final 10 games of the season. "Confidence is a thing which
goes quickly and comes back slowly," he said. "I would just think that we
didn't lose the game against Manchester City in the end, that we came back
after being 2-1 down, will have a positive impact on our confidence. The
rest is about believing in what we do on the football pitch. We must be
careful because West Ham have done better away from home than at home.
They've struggled a bit at home, moving into their new stadium. They lost
Payet during the season as well. The Premier League is difficult but when
you look at their team, they have quality players."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Leeds United defender has until 6pm today to respond to the violent conduct
charge following 'stamp' on Reece Oxford
42 mins ago / Courtney Friday, Reporter / @ChronCourtney
Reading Chronicle

LEEDS United defender Liam Cooper has been charged by the Football
Association (FA) over an alleged stamp on Reading FC teenager Reece Oxford
on Saturday. Cooper was charged with violent conduct following an off the
ball incident during an ill-tempered 1-0 victory at Madejski Stadium. The
clash was missed by referee Keith Stroud but the FA were shown video footage
of the incident and deemed the officials' punishment as "clearly
insufficient". Following the review by the game's main authority, Cooper was
today charged with alleged violent conduct and has until 6pm tonight to
respond. An FA spokesman said: "The player was involved in an incident in or
around the 74th minute which was not seen by the match officials at the time
but caught on video. Furthermore, The FA has submitted a claim that the
standard punishment that would otherwise apply for the misconduct committed
by the Leeds defender is 'clearly insufficient'. "Off the ball incidents
which are not seen at the time by the match officials are referred to a
panel of three former elite referees. "Each referee panel member will review
the video footage independently of one another to determine whether they
consider it a sending-off offence. For retrospective action to be taken, and
an FA charge to follow, the decision of the panel must be unanimous."
Oxford went down clutching his head after the incident but did not require
further treatment from the club's medical staff. Speaking after the match,
he added: "I didn't see who it was to be fair but I'm going to go home and
watch it to see what happened." Liam Cooper has been charged with alleged
violent conduct. Leeds' boss Garry Monk defended his centre-back after the
match, insisting he is not the kind of player to intentionally stamp on an
opponent. "I didn't see it but I got told about it afterwards," stated the
Leeds boss.
"You know as well as me that Liam's 100 per cent not that type of lad. He's
not in any way that type of player. "With my opinion of Liam, it'll
definitely be an accident and one that he didn't mean to do. He's 100 per
cent not like that."
Just last month Bournemouth's Tyrone Mings was suspended for five game for
stamping on the head of Manchester United's Ibrahimovic, who was also banned
for three game for an earlier elbow on Mings. If Cooper admits the charge or
is convicted, he could also face a lengthy ban as the battle for a play-off
spot heats up. The FA could also investigate an alleged elbow by Reading
defender Tyler Blackett on Leeds striker Chris Wood, another incident which
went unpunished on the pitch.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Full transcript as Slaven Bilic discusses Arsenal, his West Ham future and
an injury blow to Aaron Cresswell
The manager faced the media ahead of West Ham's meeting with Arsenal
tomorrow
Football London
BYSAM INKERSOLE
11:05, 4 APR 2017

Slaven Bilic has ruled out Aaron Cresswell for the next two games as he
faced the media ahead of West Ham's Premier League clash with Arsenal at the
Emirates tomorrow. The left back picked up an injury - not disclosed by
Bilic - which forced him off in the 2-1 defeat at Hull last weekend, meaning
Arthur Masuaku will now come into the side for the next couple of games.
The boss also updated the media on injury news concerning Michail Antonio
and Diafra Sakho, plus he looked ahead to the Gunners clash where his side
will look to end a run of four straight defeats. Here's everything the
manager said to the media this morning.

Injury news

Aaron Cresswell is out for this week, it should be only this one week so a
couple of games, tomorrow against Arsenal and Swansea on Saturday but he
should be OK for the Sunderland game. Mikey Antonio is back which is great
news so apart from Cress, it's all good.
Antonio has trained the last couple of days, Hull was too soon for him so
now we will see today. He is definitely going to be involves in the game,
whether he starts or not we'll see but it is a big boost for us because we
are talking about our best player. He makes a difference week in and week
out, this season definitely and last season when he came in at Christmas.
He's been doing that all the time and it's a big boost ahead of a game like
Arsenal for us. Diafra is back. When you talk to him he is ready, he cant
wait. It was not like a hamstring injury, he has been out for a long time,
had an operation on his back and he looks good. He is lacking match practice
but he has to start somewhre. He could be on the bench tomorrow, I haven't
decided yet because of the length of his absence.

On Antonio's new contract

There have been some rumours and the club and chairman appreciate the job he
has done for us, the club is offering him a new contract definitely, for
sure, this summer. He wants to stay. To be fair, he has a long contract
anyway, it's not like he was one year left. On the contrary. We appreciate
what he has done and we want to keep him happy and keep him for a long time
and the club is preparing that.

On the atmosphere at training

We have a good, positive atmosphere. We are training hard, focused and are a
team that is alive, we are not a flat team. Of course when you lose four
games you just want the next game to come as soon as possible to get some
points. We are there in every game and we have to turn it around. It's a
balance, a mixture. You have to use the hairdryer sometimes but also be
constructive so thats what I am doing since I am here, even before this
period. Sometimes you have to wake them [the players] up. Be that at half
time, warming up, the day before, even the day after, it is a mixture. As I
said, we are very focused and determined to start getting some points.

On the vote of confidence

I don't have to read the papers to know my relationship with the board, I
talk to the chairman before or after every game. It's nice to read it but I
know I have the confidence from the board. I have my job, I concentrate on
that and my players. It's nice to hear the confidence from the board but as
when I told you I wasn't worried before, that is the situation.
I knew that their confidence was there before and I like it that I'm not
thinking about it a lot, but totally focused on my job and the next game.
That's the only way to act and think.

Are you planning for next season?

You're always planning, evening in August if you haven't done the business
you were hoping to, you're planning for the Januray transfer window. During
the season, for 80 per cent you focus on the next game or the next four
games. You're thinking ahead, but the majoirty of your concentration is on
the next game.

Is your situation similar to Arsene Wenger?

Not really. This is my second season here, but he's been there more than 20
years. They are totally situations. There are some similarities over the
last few games because we both need points to achieve our aims, but the
similarities end there. No because the players are playing for the manager,
club and for individually are playing for their future, either at that club
or somwhere else. They're sportsmen and they want to play better. Arsenal's
last game against Man City, there was the issue of are they going to play,
will they be focused. I watched the match twice and the players were very,
very motivated and up for it physically and tactically. Some people are
saying they didn't celebrate the goal the way they should, but I saw Arsenal
with a lot of energy and a lot of their fans were behind the club.

On the game itself tomorrow

Arsenal have their prolems, but they are still a team with a lot of pace, a
team you can't afford to lose the ball against in your own half because the
transition and pace they have up front is unbelievable. They attack with
numbers which makes them more likely to create something, but when they lose
the ball they are very, very vulnerable because they leave a big spacec
behind which you can use.

On a rumoured move for Jack Wilshere

"Of course if we are talking about Jack Wilshere as a player, that's
different. He is a great player with great ability but because of injuries
had to go on loan to Bournmouth but he is a great player at a good age also
- a great age.

Have you been told to change your coaching staff?

"No, that's not true. My coaching staff is really good and this coaching
staff helped us last season to break so many records

Andy Carroll's record vs Arsenal

"He is a threat in every game. He is the kind of player who is good against
any defence, home or away. The last game he scored, against Leicester he
didn't but on another day he would have had two or three because Schmeichel
made some great saves. And if we are talking about Arsenal of course we are
remebering last season at Upton Park when he scored a hat-trick. We are
expecting a lot from Andy and he is ready to play three games in one week."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boosted by Bilic's admission ahead of Arsenal clash
By Josh Challies - Apr 4, 2017 0
ReadWestHam

West Ham boss Slaven Bilic has handed a positive update to fans ahead of
their crucial London derby against Arsenal. The Hammers travel to North
London on the back of four consecutive Premier League defeats and now sit
just six points above the relegation zone. However, Arsenal are also amidst
their own poor run of form having won just three of their last ten matches
across all competitions- with two of those victories coming against
non-league sides in the FA Cup. Having seen the Gunners hit five past West
Ham at the London Stadium earlier this season, fans will be hoping for a
more positive outcome tomorrow evening and there's good news on the injury
front. Speaking in his pre-match press conference, Bilic revealed both
Diafra Sakho and Michail Antonio could take part tomorrow. "As I said before
the Hull game, we thought it was too early for Antonio but we will see
today." "HE (ANTONIO) WILL DEFINITELY BE INVOLVED TOMORROW BUT WE AREN'T
SURE IF HE WILL START YET." "He's (Diafra Sakho) back. He can't wait to get
playing again." "It was a serious injury and he looks really good. He's
lacking match practice and he may be on the bench tomorrow." Antonio has
been unavailable with a hamstring injury, that ruled him out of England
selection over the recent international break, whilst Sakho has not featured
for the past four months following surgery to a longstanding back issue.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mark Noble: This has been the toughest season of my West Ham career
Exclusive: Noble says West Ham's problems go beyond bad results on the pitch
KEN DYER
Evening Standard

If the football stars had been truly aligned, Mark Noble would be playing
his 400th senior game for West Ham at Arsenal tomorrow night. After all, it
was there, at the indoor centre alongside Highbury, that the adventure began
for the kid from Canning Town. After being an unused substitute in the 2-1
defeat at Hull on Saturday, though, Noble must wait a little longer to reach
that milestone. The West Ham captain and midfielder takes up the story.
"I was at Arsenal as an 11-year-old," says Noble. "I really enjoyed it but I
was at school and my dad used to drive me there after work. Sometimes we
were in traffic for two hours. They wanted to keep me but I wasn't getting
home until nearly 11pm. I loved it there but it wasn't right, so I came to
West Ham and haven't looked back."

Six years later, Noble made his first-team debut in a League Cup tie against
Southend in 2004 and, aside from a couple of spells on loan, has been a
virtual fixture ever since. "When I was a youngster, my dream was to play in
the first team," says Noble, who turns 30 next month. "I was constantly
thinking, 'Will I make a career in football? Am I going to have to go out
and get a job?' "And then, when I got into the first team, I remember
thinking, 'I really don't want this to end.' "I was so hungry. You try to
ride the wave as much as you can but that wears off and then you have to be
mentally strong enough to cope with the challenge of staying there, of
thinking if you have a bad game, 'Is everyone doubting me now? Has the magic
worn off?' "I experienced all those emotions, I went on loan, to Hull and
then Ipswich, before I came back. "I remember Alan Pardew then told me he
was going to send me on loan again and I said I didn't want to go. "So I
waited, trained hard every day and I honestly believe now that, if I hadn't
been a strong enough character, I could have gone on loan again to another
club, maybe become comfortable and ended up signing for them. I wanted to
play in the Premier League, though."

Noble has experienced many things during his West Ham career, including
relegation to the Championship in 2011. As a Hammers supporter, as well as
player, he takes things to heart more than some. "We're not robots, we're
not factory built," he says. "We have feelings, we have families and we go
through tough times that people don't know about. Sometimes your form isn't
good and there's a reason for that. Sometimes the team isn't playing well
and you can't quite work out why. "Bad results affect everyone. When we were
relegated, people here lost their jobs. When you're captain, you worry about
that."

Noble has certainly been concerned this term, with the Hammers picking up
just two points from their past six games, leaving them 14th in the table.
They went six games without a win in the autumn, too, but it's not just
results that have made this Noble's hardest season in his 13 years as a
first-team player. "This has been the toughest yet because last season went
by in a sort of a haze, a dream," says Noble, who captained the side to
seventh place last term. "We did things that, for West Ham, broke the mould,
like winning away at Liverpool and Manchester City and Arsenal. "This season
we've had the move to the new stadium and a new training ground, we've had
the Dimitri Payet situation and we lost Andy Carroll, Aaron Creswell and
Manuel Lanzini [to injury] in pre-season."

And last month, Noble incurred the wrath of some West Ham fans after
questioning, in a TV interview, their football knowledge. "What I was trying
to say was that if we sign a player, everyone is buzzing," he says. "I've
been here for 19 years, so West Ham fans are bored with seeing me. It's like
my wife, who changes the wallpaper every three years because she gets tired
of it. "You can have a player who looks fantastic on the eye, does four
step-overs but doesn't track back and help out his left-back or his central
midfielder."

Noble has mentioned no names but the image of Payet, who left in January
after a stand-off with the club, is not easy to ignore. "I was watching
YouTube recently with my son, Lenny," says Noble. "There was a clip of Paul
Pogba doing an audacious flip-flap thing on [now West Ham team-mate] Havard
Nordtveit in a Champions League game. Pogba was playing for Juventus and
Havard for Borussia Monchengladbach.
"It was only a 30-second clip and we were laughing about it. When I went
into training the next day, I was taking the micky out of Havard and he
said: 'That was the only thing he did in the entire game. It was probably
one of the best games I played but no one mentioned that. It was all about
that one piece of skill.' "That was what I was trying to say and I think I
have earned the right to have an opinion. "I've been down the same road as
everyone else, I've bought all the kits as a kid, hung about outside the
gates when I couldn't afford tickets, was a ball boy at Upton Park. "My
number one ambition now is to stay fit and healthy. Apart from that, I just
want to help look after this football club, as well as I can."

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:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Report discloses the West Ham offer Slaven Bilic has declined
HITC
Subhankar Mondal

West Ham United are struggling in the Premier League at the moment. West Ham
United have asked manager Slaven Bilic to make changes to his coaching
staff, according to The Times. It has been reported that Bilic has rejected
West Ham's offer of new fitness and first-team coaches this season. The
Hammers' chiefs reportedly believe that the team could do with fresh faces
to help with their injuries and poor form. "Bilic backed Miljenko Rak, his
long-term fitness coach, when the West Ham owners first suggested changes in
December," adds the report in The Times. "Some felt that Rak, at 69, could
be helped by a younger man."
Bilic is a good manager, but West Ham's recent results have been hugely
disappointing, and there is a chance that the team could get dragged into
the relegation fight. The Hammers are missing Dimitri Payet, who left for
his former club Marseille in the January transfer window. Finishing in the
top six of the Premier League this season was never going to be possible for
West Ham, but the squad is good enough to challenge for a spot in the top
10. The London outfit are 14th in the Premier League table at the moment
with 33 points from 30 matches, six points above the relegation zone. West
Ham will return to action on Wednesday evening when they take on Arsenal
away from home at the Emirates Stadium in the league.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham closing in on Manchester City defender Pablo Zabaleta - reports
The 32-year-old is a free agent this summer
Fotball London
BYSAM INKERSOLE
06:30, 4 APR 2017

West Ham are reportedly closing in on signing Manchester City right back
Pablo Zabaleta, according to reports coming out of Italy. Gazzetta della
Sport are reporting the 32-year-old Argentinian could be set to join the
Hammers on a free transfer when his contract at the Etihad runs out this
summer. Zabaleta has lifted two Premier League titles, one FA Cup and two
League Cup's during his time in Manchester but doesn't appear to be figuring
in Pep Guardiola's plans for the future, especially since he deployed winger
Jesus Navas at right back for City's 2-2 draw with Arsenal on Sunday.
Zabaleta is valued at around £7m but while the Hammers wouldn't have to pay
that, they obviously would have to pay his wages. It's being reported a
three-year offer is on the table for Zabaleta. Sam Byram could certainly do
worse than learning from someone like the vastly experienced Argentine,
that's for sure.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jose Fonte admits he hasn't made the grade since joining West Ham from
Southampton
JAMES BENGE
Evening Standard

Jose Fonte admits he has not reached the heights he is capable of since his
January move from Southampton to West Ham. The 33-year-old joined the
Hammers for £8million midway through the season but has struggled to bring
order to a West Ham defence that ranks joint-third leakiest in the top
flight. In eight league appearance West Ham have conceded 18 goals and Fonte
is yet to appear in a game in which the Hammers have kept a clean sheet. "I
haven't been as good as I perhaps was before but I am working to get there,"
Fonte told Sky Sports. "Nothing is guaranteed in this league."
Fonte conceded he was not the only player failing to make the grade at the
London Stadium. He insisted that it was the squad, and not their manager,
who should be held responsible for West Ham's recent struggles. "We are all
behind him obviously," Fonte added. "[We must take] the majority of the
blame. We have to take responsibility ourselves. "The players are the ones
on the pitch, so we have got to come up with the goods and help not only the
manager but ourselves and make the fans proud. "It is up to us to work hard
together as one and move on from this situation."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham's Winston Reid set for buyout clause of more than £20m
HITC
Ali Iveson

West Ham United are keen to protect Winston Reid, one of their prize assets.
West Ham defender Winston Reid will have a buyout clause in excess of £20
million if he signs a new contract, it has been reported. The Sun claims
that the Hammers will offer him a fresh deal at the end of the season in an
effort to ward off suitors. As well as the buyout clause of more than £20
million, the New Zealand international will also be rewarded with
£70,000-a-week wages, it says. He signed a six-and-a-half year deal two
years ago, meaning he's already under West Ham's control until 2021, so it's
very possible that the new terms won't amount to a contract extension. Reid
has again impressed this season and been West Ham's most convincing
defender, and with January signing Jose Fonte having had an inauspicious
start to life at the London Stadium he's more important than ever. Arsenal
were heavily linked with a move for the 28-year-old two years ago, and with
quality centre-backs hard to come by it's not unlikely that he is still on
their radar or that of other clubs with big budgets. Meanwhile in the same
report it's said another Irons star, Michail Antonio, will also be presented
with a bumper new deal when the season draws to a close as the club looks
hold onto its best players.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jamie Redknapp urges West Ham not to panic, but claims Slaven Bilic's
contract must be addressed
HITC
Olly Dawes

Jamie Rednapp believes West Ham United need to back manager Slaven Bilic.
Pundit Jamie Redknapp has told the Daily Mail that he thins West Ham United
should support manager Slaven Bilic rather than sack him. The Hammers lost
for a fourth game in a row on Saturday afternoon, as they were beaten 2-1
away at Hull City having initially been 1-0 up at the KCOM Stadium, thanks
to Andy Carroll's opening goal. The defeat followed losses to the likes of
Chelsea, Bournemouth and Leicester City, and it means that West Ham aren't
quite safe from relegation just yet. With just two points picked up in the
last four games, West Ham now lie just six points clear of the relegation
zone, with manager Slaven Bilic under increasing pressure. Speculation was
rife last week that the Hammers could look to replace the Croatian this
summer, with managers such as David Wagner, Jaap Stam, Roberto Mancini and
Rafael Benitez all mentioned as possible targets. Bilic is entering the
final year of his contract with West Ham, meaning that he is heading into
the summer with confusion surrounding his future – but many would suggest
that he's endured difficult circumstances this season.
After taking West Ham to a seventh-placed finish last season, Bilic has had
to deal with poor signings, a number of injuries, struggles in the new
London Stadium home, a lack of a consistent, reliable goalscorer and the
departure of star playmaker Dimitri Payet. Now, pundit Jamie Redknapp has
told the Daily Mail that he thinks West Ham cannot afford to panic at this
crucial stage of the season, and must make a decision on Bilic's future at
the end of the campaign. "West Ham may have lost their last four games but I
would not dream of getting rid of Slaven Bilic at the moment. Now is not the
time to panic," said Redknapp. "Who are they going to get at this stage of
the season? Bilic has had to contend with the loss of his best player in
Dimitri Payet and get used to the new stadium."

"Bilic is going into the final year of his contract and that can leave the
manager in an uncertain position with the players. West Ham need to address
Bilic's contract in the summer," he added.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ANDY TOWNSEND HITS OUT AT WEST HAM FANS, LABELS THEM DELUDED
Football Insider
3rd April, 2017, 9:15 PM
By Harvey Byrne

Former footballer turned pundit Andy Townsend has hit out at sections of the
West Ham fan base and labelled them "deluded". The Hammers are currently
struggling in the Premier League in 14th place with just six points
separating them from Hull in 18th. Over the years the east London club's
support have been urging the club to progress up the English pyramid while
playing proper football, fans have called the 'West Ham Way'. It is believed
that former boss Sam Allardyce ultimately lost his job for playing in an not
so pretty way and he slammed Hammers supporters back in 2015, calling them
"brainwashed". Now, Townsend has taken a similar approach and believes
portions of the West Ham support are deluded for thinking the way that they
play is more important than results out on the pitch. "It's whichever way
you want to look at it," started Townsend speaking to BBC Five Live on
Monday evening. "Are you a fan that just wants to see your team win, or are
you a fan that wants to turn up every week and you want to see the beautiful
game rolling around it. "Now, that's what Sam's saying 'get real, get real'
you want to survive and you want to play regular Premier League football
then we've got slug it out with everybody else. "So, whatever West Ham
historically have done, I think personally is I come from that school of
thought. I know that Slaven as much as he would like to play, his first duty
is to win, just to get over the line. "If fans only want to see their team
go and play wonderful football and aren't bothered about results then I'm
afraid that they are deluded."

BBC 5 live Sport ? @5liveSport
Slaven Bilic is under pressure in East London.
Are #WHUFC fans' expectations unrealistic?
8:32 PM - 3 Apr 2017
21 21 Retweets 46 46 likes

West Ham only returned to the Premier League in 2012 after spending a season
back in England's second tier. They have since moved into their new London
Stadium while entering the qualification stages of the Europa League twice.
However, this season has not gone to plan so far and Slaven Bilic's side
have another tough test coming up on Wednesday evening in the form of London
rivals Arsenal.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Red Bull takeover would've been the best thing to happen to West Ham
HITC
Damien Lucas

When reports emerged in December that West Ham United turned down a £650
million takeover from Red Bull, there was misplaced relief.
People don't like change, it's a common human trait, but the reaction to
reports that the Austrian drinks giant wanted to buy the East London club
were extreme to say the least. Irrational fears were spouted on social media
after The Telegraph reported Hammers co-owners David Sullivan and David Gold
had turned down the huge bid. Supporters were worried the marketing machine
would come in and rename the club, change the badge, the kit and all but
erase Bobby Moore from the history books. In reality none of those things
would have happened, if there is one thing Red Bull isn't... it's stupid.
The company, worth over $8billion, has wide ranging sporting interests
across the globe and is famous for spending big and wisely to make a success
of its ventures. In Germany, the club Red Bill Leipzig - which was
originally fifth division side SSV Markranstädt before being purchased and
rebranded - is reviled mainly because the owners have done everything in
their power to invest as much as possible to make the team a success. And
they have done just that with the side rocketing up the leagues and now
sitting pretty in second place in the Bundesliga behind runaway leaders
Bayern Munich and are set for next season's Champions League.
Two big problems the Hammers have is a lack of the kind of investment needed
to challenge the top six from Sullivan and Gold and the new ground. The oval
bowl is not condusive to a generating the kind of intimidating atmosphere
which made Upton Park famous with fans not close enough to the pitch. Had
Red Bull taken over it would have surprised nobody had they bought the
stadium outright and redeveloped it into a proper football stadium. And in
terms of branding Red Bull would have been the ideal people to take West Ham
to the next level. As an established, Premier League outfit with a huge
stadium, in all likelihood Red Bull would have renamed the stadium the Red
Bull Olympic Stadium, which is certainly no worse than the London Stadium,
for a large sum of money which in turn would have given West Ham the freedom
to compete with the big boys in terms of Financial Fair Play. Fans feared
the club would be selling out or selling it's soul had Red Bull taken over.
In truth that has already happened without any of the success to go with it.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
WEST HAM WANT BILIC TO MAKE KEY CHANGE AFTER WITHERING STAM ASSESSMENT –
REPORT
Football Insider
3rd April, 2017, 8:11 PM
By Harry Sykes

West Ham want Slaven Bilic to shake up his backroom staff after Jaap Stam
suggested the intensity of Reading's training sessions was too much for
Reece Oxford, according to a report. The Times claim Hammers chiefs will try
to persuade the manager to change his support team after he snubbed the
club's offer of new fitness and first-team coaches in December. It is said
the West Ham top brass believe that a the appointment of a fresh face who
can help drill the players might address concerns about the fitness of the
squad. There have been suggestions that Bilic's long-term fitness coach
Miljenko Rak, 69, could be aided by a younger man more in tune with modern
preparation and injury prevention methods. It has not gone unnoticed by
supporters and critics that West Ham have had great difficulty this season
in getting their best players on the pitch at the same time. An injury
crisis has robbed Bilic of key trio Winston Reid, Pedro Obiang and Michail
Antonio, as well as long-term absentees Angelo Ogbonna, Gokhan Tore and
Diafra Sakho. West Ham lost 2-1 away to Hull on Saturday when they conceded
a goal in the last ten minutes for the third time in the past six matches.
Moreover, the Times report that Reading manager Stam suggested that Oxford,
the defender who has been on loan from West Ham since late January,
initially struggled to cope with the intensity of his training sessions.
Oxford has made just three substitute appearances, for a combined total of
38 minutes, since joining the Championship's fifth-placed club on deadline
day. He had been expected to play a much more significant role for the
promotion hopefuls after announcing his arrival in the West Ham senior side
with a series of polished displays last season.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United will not get £16m for Diafra Sakho now
HITC
Mathew Nash

The Senegal striker has struggled with injury all season. West Ham United
fans are still waiting to see Diafra Sakho in action again this season. He
last played, and scored, in a 1-1 draw with Manchester United in November.
Since then, he has been out with a back problem and West Ham have missed his
goalscoring habit. But they very nearly sold him in the summer anyway. In
the summer he tried forcing through a move to West Brom, in a deal reported
by the Birmingham Mail to be in the region of £16 million, which would have
been a club record for the Baggies. However, he failed a medical at the club
and returned, tail between legs, to the Hammers.
The problem for West Ham now is this … who in their right mind would pay £16
million for Sakho now? His failed medical at West Brom appears to have been
justified, based on his lack of action this term. No team will want to
splurge out that amount of money for a player they will not consider fully
fit. West Ham will simply have no chance of getting that amount of money for
the player this summer.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Why did Ashley Fletcher's transfer from Manchester United to West Ham go to
a tribunal?
It took eight months to get to this stage
Football London
BYSAM INKERSOLE
18:31, 3 APR 2017

More than eight months after he originally signed for West Ham, Ashley
Fletcher's transfer fee has finally been settled. You can read our original
piece this morning of the deal here. It currently stands at £1m for the
20-year-old, who joined the Hammers from Manchester United back in the
summer.

So, what exactly is a transfer tribunal and why was Fletcher involved in
one?

As Fletcher was under the age of 24 and had reached the end of his contract
at Old Trafford, a tribunal was needed to set a fee. Whatever value the
tribunal comes up with, that's final. The player has already changed clubs -
Fletcher was officially unveiled a West Ham player in July - and the fee now
set cannot be appealed.

Manchester United and West Ham couldn't agree of a fee for the striker but
as he reached the end of his deal at Old Trafford, he was technically a free
agent but was approached to sign for the Hammers while he was still a United
player. There was also interest from Leeds United in the striker as well,
who could have valued Fletcher differently.

There is, in fact, a proper name for this tribunal - The Professional
Football Compensation Committee (PFCC). It's not permanent but four of five
people will get together to thrash things out when it's neccessary. It's is
normally made up of people within football that have some sort of legal
experience, such as a football secretary or a lawyer.

A representative from the Professional Footballers Association will also be
on the tribunal, as will someone from the League Managers' Association. We
should know the identities of who made up the PFCC in the coming days as
they aren't known until a decision is made as to ward off any outside
influence.

PFCC hearings require each club to provide evidence to support their
valuation of the player in question - in this case, Fletcher. United may
have suggested more, the Hammers may have suggested less.

The committee will take into account the costs of both clubs in operating an
academy, as well as the age and number of appearances for the player, the
length of time he was registered with his first club, the terms offered by
both teams to the player, the status of the two clubs, interest shown by
other clubs who wanted the player r and any amounts paid by the original
club to acquire the player in the first place.

As mentioned earlier, the fee is final - currently £1m - but that could
rise. The PFCC often requires clubs to make a basic fee payment (that's the
£1m) and then further payments to be made in the future. Think of it like
when new signings contract when they are given goal bonuses, appearance
bonuses etc etc.

So, should Fletcher become a first team regular and bang in 25 goals next
season, United should expect a nice little payment from east London. If West
Ham sell on Fletcher, United will get a portion of that as well.

Fletcher's eventual fee could rise another £1m to £2m if he meets an
appearance clause inserted in his contract. Current Hammer Aaron Cresswell
went through a transfer tribunal as well whe he signed for Ipswich Town from
Tranmere Rovers. Cresswell was 21 when he rejected a new deal at Tranmere
and signed for Ipswich on a three-year deal. The PFCC decided that Ipswich
had to pay Rovers an initial £240,000, plus £45,000 if he made up to 60
appearances. Another £100,000 would have gone to Rovers had Town been
promoted to the Premier League, which they weren't. Finally, Rovers received
20% of the fee West Ham paid to Ipswich to sign Cresswell back in 2014,
which was a reported £3.75m.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
A SHAKE UP AT THE EMIRATES?
By Iain Dale 4 Apr 2017 at 09:10
WTID

Given that we have now lost four games on the spin and haven't won in six,
one could be forgiven for thinking that the team needs a bit of a shakeup at
The Emirates on Wednesday. At Hull we performed well in the first half, but
as usual this season we couldn't keep it up for a full ninety minutes. I do
wonder whether fitness is something to do with it, but I suppose we'll never
know. If anyone has access to the 'distance run' in each game, I wonder how
near the bottom of the league table we'd be.

I think it may be time to bring back Adrian. Darren Randolph has let in some
soft goals in recent games and no longer looks the goalkeeper he did when he
replaced Adrian.

In defence Aaron Cresswell's position is under threat. He always looks
dangerous going forward but his primary responsibility is to defend, and in
that regard he has looked rather lax of late. However, let's remember the
understanding he has built up with Andy Carroll and that he provided the
cross from which Carroll scored on Saturday. However, I have been really
impressed with Arthur Masuaku, although we should remember that the worst
game he had for us was when we lost so badly to Arsenal at home in November.

In midfield and up front we have fewer options for change, although Michail
Antonio and Diafra Sakho may play a role, if only from the subs bench. If
Sakho is fit, I'd thrown him on from the start to play alongside Carroll.
He's clearly raring to go and a Carroll/Sakho partnership could wreak havoc
in the Arsenal defence. But if they play together, we certainly need to
bombard the penalty area from the wings.

So here's my team to play Arsenal…

Adrian, Masuaku, Collins, Fonte, Byram, Kouyate, Noble, Lanzini, Carroll,
Sakho, Antonio
Subs: Randolph, Feghouli, Snodgrass, Ayew, Fernandes, Cresswell, Rice

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 4

Daily WHUFC News - 4th April 2017

Kouyate eyes Emirates repeat
WHUFC.com

Cheikhou Kouyate says West Ham United can win at Arsenal on Wednesday
evening
Midfielder scored opener as the Hammers scored 2-0 victory on last visit to
Emirates Stadium
But Senegal captain warns Gunners are 'hungry' themselves after a difficult
run of results

Nobody gave West Ham United much chance of kicking-off the 2015/16 season by
winning at Arsenal. Likewise, nobody is giving West Ham United much chance
of repeating their stunning 2-0 victory at Arsenal when they return to
Emirates Stadium on Wednesday evening. However, the man whose header set the
Hammers on their way to that famous success, Cheikhou Kouyate, says Slaven
Bilic's side can make lightning strike twice in north London. "This is a big
test and a big game for us against one of the best teams in the Premier
League," he said. "Arsenal is a nice team which plays good football in a
good stadium and they need points, but it is the same for us. "West Ham need
some points and we will battle for the whole 90 minutes to take all three
again. "We had a fantastic result at Emirates last season. I remember it
well and it was an unbelievable day for us, so why can't it happen again
this year?"

When West Ham won at Arsenal 18 months ago, the victory came as a result not
only of clinical finishing and resilient defending and teamwork, but also as
a result of the confidence that was coursing through Bilic's players –
Kouyate among them. While the Hammers' recent record means those
characteristics may be in shorter supply this time around, the No8 insists
they will travel to N7 believing they can win there for the second season in
succession. "You need to believe in yourselves if you are to achieve these
sorts of results and we believe in ourselves," he confirmed. "We know
everything is not good at the moment, but it's possible to turn the corner
on Wednesday. I have my fingers crossed that we can do just that."

At 27 and with more than 400 senior appearances under his belt, Kouyate is
experienced enough to that West Ham are not alone in enduring a testing run
during the course of a Premier League season. Indeed, Arsenal too have
struggled in recent weeks, losing six and winning just three of their last
ten matches in all competitions to be knocked out of the UEFA Champions
League and seemingly drop out of contention for a 21st straight top-four
finish. "It's a very, very difficult moment for us, but sometimes you have
this period one time in a year or one time in two years," observed the
Senegal captain. "It is important that we stay positive, stay together and
just focus. "We need to win some games, just work hard and play hard. We
need to take our chances and defend well, but most importantly we need to
work together and be positive. "Sometimes you lose the game in the last
minute or sometimes you lose the game in the first half by conceding two or
three goals but, at the end of the day, we need to work as hard as we can
and win some games. "A lot of teams experience this type of run in football
but, in my experience, if you can win one game, your confidence returns and
you can turn everything around. "For Arsenal, they have had some bad results
but they are still one of the best teams in the league. Arsenal have some
great players and we have to be careful because they are a hungry team and
they need the points."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Loanee round up
WHUFC.com

Five Hammers were in loan action over the weekend
Though Enner Valencia suffered defeat for Everton, three in action in the
Football League tasted victory
Martin Samuelsen was on the scoresheet for Peterborough United in his second
loan spell at London Road

Only Enner Valencia – one of four loanee Hammers to feature in the top four
leagues during the weekend – did not taste victory as his Everton outfit
were beaten in the Merseyside derby. Having been beaten by the Reds back in
December last year, the Toffees were looking for revenge when they made the
short journey across Stanley Park to Anfield, but once again left empty
handed. Sadio Mane gave the hosts an eighth-minute lead, and though Matthew
Pennington levelled things just before the half hour mark, Philippe Coutinho
curled home brilliantly to put Jurgen Klopp's men back in front. Divock
Origi then gave Liverpool a two-goal buffer, and though Ronald Koeman
introduced Valencia in an attempt to get back into the game, it was to no
avail.

There was more joy for those in action in the Football League, however.
Reece Oxford, who has now come on as a substitute in promotion chasing
Reading's last three games, played 20 minutes for the Royals as they beat
Leeds United 1-0. Yann Kermorgant scored the game's only goal, firing in
spectacularly from just inside the area, and Jaap Stam's side held onto the
advantage to leapfrog their opponents into fourth place in the Championship.

In League One, Martin Samuelsen scored his first goal of a second loan spell
at Peterborough United, heading in Posh's first against struggling Charlton
Athletic at London Road. The Norwegian winger, introduced just a minute
before, was in the right place at the right time to nod home unmarked and
score his third senior goal in English football in the 74th minute. Marcus
Maddison went on to seal the victory over the Addicks with a superb second.

Josh Cullen's Bradford City took on George Dobson's Walsall, though the
latter, an unused substitute, was not given the opportunity to change the
game as the Bantams ran out 1-0 winners. Billy Clarke's 58th-minute strike
was enough to see off their Midlands opponents, and Cullen and co. now look
set for a top-six finish in England's third tier.

Newport County kept their slim safety hopes alive with a 1-0 win over
Crawley Town, though Jaanai Gordon was also left on the substitutes' bench.
Defender Mickey Demetriou scored the game's only goal as both sides ended
the match with ten men following a clash six minutes into the second period.

Finally, Sam Howes was in action for Hampton and Richmond Borough in the
National League South, but Chelmsford City were 2-0 winners at the Beavers'
ground.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Manager on Monday
WHUFC.com

Slaven Bilic knows importance of ending losing run at Arsenal
Manager calls on team to 'show what they're made of' at Emirates Stadium
Bilic bemoans impact of individual errors on recent results

Slaven Bilic says the Hammers need to stand up and be counted as they look
to end a run of four consecutive defeats when they take on Arsenal on
Wednesday. The Hammers fell to a 2-1 defeat at Hull City on Saturday, on the
heels of losses to Chelsea, AFC Bournemouth and Leicester City, to allow the
Tigers to move within six points of them. After taking the lead at the KCOM
Stadium, Bilic felt his side paid the penalty for individual errors once
again and knows the trip to Emirates Stadium will be a test of character. He
said: "I am positive, we are very positive of course. I can't lie and say
that after the game the atmosphere was brilliant in the dressing room.
"Of course it wasn't, after four defeats in a row, but now it about us
showing what we're made of. Showing character and quality over the whole 90
minutes. "First of all, we need to stop the individual, sloppy mistakes that
we are making because there was the goal on Saturday, two against Leicester,
one against Bournemouth, Chelsea, Watford, West Brom. We are conceding too
many from set pieces. "We have to show what we are made of. It's my job to
do that and we will."

The Hammers are set to be boosted by the return of Michail Antonio for
Wednesday's game, with skipper Mark Noble also back in contention.
Bilic revealed: "Michail Antonio is looking really good. He was 50/50 for
Saturday, which gives him a good chance to make it for Arsenal.
"Obiang and Reid are out, Sakho is getting [closer to being] back and Noble
could play. He didn't train with us for a couple of weeks because of injury
and now he's back available for us."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Five-a-side
WHUFC.com

Whufc.com selects five players who have worn the colours of both West Ham
United and Arsenal…

1. Jim Standen

West Ham United's multi-talented cup-winning goalkeeper Jim Standen began
his senior career with Arsenal at the age of 18 in 1953. However, his early
inroads into the first team were delayed by National Service and the
presence of the Gunners' Wales international stopper Jack Kelsey. After four
years as a back-up, Standen debuted for Arsenal against Burnley, but after
38 first-team appearances, he departed for Luton Town in 1960 in search of
regular football. After serving as understudy again, to Luton's England
international Ron Baynham, Standen joined West Ham after regular No1 Lawrie
Leslie broke his leg in 1962. The rest, as they say, is history, as the
Essex cricket all-rounder established himself under Ron Greenwood, lifting
the FA Cup in 1964 and European Cup Winners' Cup a year later.

2. Matthew Upson

One of four West Ham United players to have scored for England at a FIFA
World Cup finals, Matthew Upson, like goalkeeper Standen, played for Arsenal
and Luton before joining the Hammers. A left-footed centre-half,
Suffolk-born Upson began his career with Ipswich Town before following
then-youth coach Terry Westley to Luton. Arsene Wenger spent £2m to take the
18-year-old defender to Arsenal in May 1997, but injuries and competition
for places restricted him to 57 appearances over six years. Upson moved on
to Birmingham City in January 2003, before joining West Ham three years
later. As a Hammer, he won 15 England caps, scoring twice against Germany –
including his World Cup goal in June 2010 – and was appointed captain in
2009.

3. Liam Brady

An elegant Republic of Ireland playmaker, Liam Brady was brought to England
from his native Dublin by Arsenal at the age of 15 in 1971. Two years later,
he debuted for the Gunners against Birmingham City, and he would become a
Highbury legend over the next nine seasons. Despite Brady's outstanding
creativity, however, Arsenal won just one trophy during his time there – the
1979 FA Cup. After losing the 1980 final to the Hammers, Brady enjoyed seven
seasons in Italian football, winning Serie A twice with Juventus, before
returning to London in March 1987. Still only 31, Brady enjoyed three fine
seasons at the Boleyn Ground, scoring ten goals in 119 games, including one
in his final career appearance against Wolverhampton Wanderers in May 1990.

4. Stewart Robson

Another player who enjoyed his finest years as a Hammer in the late 1980s,
Stewart Robson emulated Brady by beginning his senior career with Arsenal. A
versatile England U21 midfielder, Essex-born Robson played 186 times in red
and white, making his debut against West Ham United at the age of 17 in
December 1981, and scoring 21 goals. Injuries slowed Robson's progress and
he departed Highbury for the Boleyn Ground for a £700,000 fee in January
1987. Robson enjoyed an outstanding 1987/88 season in Claret and Blue, which
culminated in a Hammer of the Year award, but sadly his injury problems
returned and he was allowed to join Coventry City on a free transfer in
1991.


5. John Hartson

Burly Wales international striker John Hartson becomes the third of our
five-a-side team to have played for both Luton Town and Arsenal prior to
joining West Ham United. Swansea-born Hartson, who celebrates his 42nd
birthday on Wednesday, joined the Hatters as an apprentice in 1991. Two
years later, he debuted and went on to score eleven goals before Arsenal
snapped him up in January 1995, aged 19. Hartson scored 17 goals in 71 games
for the Gunners, despite competition for his place from the likes of Ian
Wright, Dennis Bergkamp and Nicolas Anelka. The Welshman became West Ham's
record signing for £2.3m in February 1997, and he repaid Harry Redknapp's
faith by scoring 24 goals in the 1997/98 season – his only complete campaign
in east London. In all, he netted 33 times in 73 games for the Hammers.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
EXWHUEMPLOYEE: PLAYERS TO RETURN AND CHANGES TO THE STAFF?
BY EXWHUEMPLOYEE ON 3 APRIL 2017 AT 9:47PM
TheWestHamWay.co.uk

So I had a great time at Hull with Dave from SDCC and meeting up with many
other West Ham fans who we have both got to know over the years. Everything
was a complete laugh and enjoyable apart from the actual game (and losing
money in the casino after). The atmosphere was great, as it always is at
away games, and I was buzzing for the match and the first half was actually
fairly decent. We should have been much more comfortable than we were. The
second half was a different story and yet again dreadful defending has let
us down. We are conceding so many goals in every game to weak opposition.
I thought Hull played poorly, yet they still got two goals and the three
points one from a set piece, again!

Despite another ITK on a well known site jumping the gun again and saying
Bilic was leaving in the next few hours, this was never the case. As I have
stated, time and time again, the board back Bilic. The board back him more
than an increasing number of fans now. They like Slaven, they like his
philosophies and they want him to be successful as do I.

The players also back Slaven, they support him and do not want him to leave.
Some of the more vocal voices in the changing room: Collins, Cresswell,
Carroll, Noble and even Sakho (despite their previous problems) are said to
have openly backed him. Sakho should be on the bench on Wednesday against
Arsenal, following his injury problems. He insisted that he could play
against Hull but Bilic didn't want to risk him. Antonio and Noble are also
fit and I think changes will be made to the team. I would consider
bringing Adrian back. This sounds very hypercritical, as I was very vocal
in calling for Randolph but the early form he had shown is now gone and I
think Adrian deserves a second chance. Masuaku is likely to replace
Cresswell in the starting 11 and there are also calls for Nordtveit to come
into the side.

One thing that has been suggested to Bilic is that his backroom staff are
not up to the job and part of the problem. Jessica Dicks is very vocal in
suggesting that her dad plays no role in the defensive coaching and hasn't
really clarified what it is that he does do and if many people are to be
believed, it isn't much. Julian Dicks is one of my favourite ever West Ham
players and I was delighted that he returned to the fold with us. If Dicks
has no role in the defensive coaching, then I would suggest he is reassigned
to it. If this isn't to be the case there are other options that need to be
considered. Rio Ferdinand has openly offered his services to the club. I
think we would do no harm bringing him in and he would instantly have the
backing of the players and staff through natural respect. If Slav doesn't
think Rio is the man then we already have Steve Potts (a defender who relied
on positioning and quickness of thought when playing centre back at 5 foot 7
to succeed) successfully managing the Under 18s with Mark Philips. Kenny
Brown, who unfortunately works for Millwall at the moment, is another very
qualified option and an ex West Ham defender. Something has to be done to
sort out the defending and I believe the board feel Slaven should take
action at the end of the season. Slaven is a very loyal man though and will
want to keep his backroom staff as it is.

There are other options that could be brought in to the coaching staff too.
Kevin Keen, a coach with us for years, is apparently one of the highest
rated coaches and most popular ones that we have ever had in recent years.
He has been recently appointed as coach at Crystal Palace following his
sacking as manager of Colchester United and could be considered. He may not
wish to return but as a former West Ham player of many year, you never know!
We may also need to think about a forward coach as well, Teddy Sheringham
would welcome a return I have heard and even the likes of
Ashton/Bellamy/Hartson could be interesting alternatives although none with
any major coaching credentials. It is very hard to inflict staff upon a
manager but if I was Slaven and this was suggested to me in the summer, I
would consider it as a potential solution to some of the problems this year.

The main focus of everyone at the club is to make sure that we stay up
obviously so transfers are not a priority at the moment. The main person
that everyone involved in the club wants and most importantly Bilic wants is
Defoe. If/when Sunderland go down he is available on a free transfer. Of
course his wages will be high and around £80k but he is certainly the top
priority. He is very keen to join the club and has even suggested to
someone I know that he would be prepared to join us if we went down, such is
his desire to put right the wrongs of his departure all those years ago.
Another top target as I have stated many times is Batshuayi, who is out of
favour at Chelsea. We have also scouted Modeste who has been a scoring
sensation in Germany this year. I tweeted in the week that we have held
talks with Zabaleta's agent and this is the case. He is our number one
choice for the right back position and I think he will be a great signing.
Against Hull, I didn't even know who the captain was and this lack of
captain figure is also a problem for us I think. Bringing in the ex
Manchester City and Argentina captain will be a great move in that respect.
We are also considering centre backs with Maguire of Hull being a top choice
as well as a few other options. Sakho, who is on loan to Palace from
Liverpool, is also a target (as he was in January) but it appears Liverpool
are expecting a large check for him. I am keen to stress though that it is
very early days and things will change.

The Arsenal game is one that I am going to and I can't wait for. I don't
expect us to get anything but Arsenal are off form and when you least expect
us to do something we usually do. An early goal there could get the fans
on the back of the manager and play to our advantage.

I am delighted to say that we have Matty Etherington on the radio show
tomorrow. We are doing a prerecord which will go out at 7pm on Wednesday.
I expect most people will be at the game, or watching that so please
download the podcast or listen to the link after. Matty is a very
interesting person to speak to and I am sure there will be some fascinating
answers. Please get your questions in for Matty by using the hashtag
askthewesthamway.

We have our event with Keith Robson before the Swansea game. Tickets are
now selling well and I am particularly looking forward to learning more
about '70s West Ham from a big character. The raffle prizes at the event
are great and include two Sunderland away tickets if you were unsuccessful
in getting these!

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
THIS WEEK'S FIVE TALKING POINTS
BY EXWHUEMPLOYEE ON 2 APRIL 2017 AT 10:25PM
TheWesTHamWay.co.uk
by Steve Claydon @trbeat

1) Players playing scared

The fact that we scored first still does little to hide how scared we are
playing. Going one up did not calm the nerves of the players. There was some
sloppy goalkeeping by Randolph in the first half that nearly gifted Hull an
easy goal. We still do not defend with any authority and that defending
needs to start at the front line and work back by harassing the other team
and making life difficult for them. Carroll has been excellent helping out,
but he is the one shining example of doing all he can to aid the cause. It
would be easy to say we missed Obiang in the middle but I was very
disappointed with Kouyate. Finally playing in his preferred position, I
wanted to see him boss the game, something he did not. Our play reminds me
of the games we played before going to Palace and nicking a win. In that
Palace game, while we rode our luck, we played as a team and looked fairly
solid. Somehow Bilic needs to get that mentality back into this team. During
the offseason Bilic needs to swallow his pride, assuming he is still our
Manager (See point later on), and hire the best man to do that defensive
coaching job. Both seasons under Bilic we have never been great at defending
the only difference is last year we could score goals with ease, that is not
the case this year.

2) Run, Run and Support the Man

Watching our build up play reminds me of my days playing Subutteo when there
was only one or two figures or players doing anything at one time. Too many
times Lanzini was picking the ball up deep and given limited options to
continue to move forward and was left with trying to do it all. The full
backs were poor moving forward up the wings supporting or offering options
and Ayew and Snodgrass don't look on the same page as everyone else. More
movement is needed to open up teams, stretch them and allow our skill
players to get more involved and do what they are good at

3) Plan A, B, C and D

Who fears out strike force? When teams neutralised Carroll, we have nothing
to plan out attack around. So let's change the formation, maybe play two up
front?
Remember the day Allardyce played a false nine and we ended up beating
Spurs, or go back just over a year when Bilic played Oxford in front of the
back four and Ozil was negated. My point is that we need to think outside of
the box, switch our game plans up, to come away with wins or stem this
barrage of defeats.

4) Let the battle begin

Make no mistakes we are in a relegation battle. Listening to Ex the other
day on the radio he mentioned that one team makes a dramatic drop and gets
sucked into the battle, this year that is going to be us. Palace will
overtake us when they win their game in hand, Burnley is more resolute and
stout, and that leaves Sunderland, Middlesborough, Hull, Swansea, and us
contesting those three spots. Sunderland and Middlesborough are gone. Are we
saying that we are too good to go down – We just lost to Hull 2-1.

5) Bilic Sacked

If this had been yesterday, it may or may not have been an April Fool joke.
Hours ago the board came out and said they were 100% behind Bilic. A month
or so ago the Leicester board stated that they were 100% behind Ranieri –
two days later he was fired. I love Bilic, but no man is bigger than what we
need to achieve safety, harmony and improvement. I'm not sure sacking him
now would change much with regards to the results, what I will say I that
eight games into next season if we are still in this same position then he
goes. Don't wait until January saying he needs time; he's had the whole of
this year. Allow that new manager to evaluate the players and figure our the
game plan for January. To be clear, I love Bilic, and I am not convinced
there are that many great options out there.

See you Wednesday. #COYI.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ONE TO WATCH – WYLAN CYPRIEN
BY BRIAN KNOX ON 3 APRIL 2017 AT 6:41PM
TheWestHamWay.co.uk

Personal Information

Wylan Cyprien

Age: 22 years

Height: 5 ft 11 in

Positions : Central Mid/Attacking Midfielder

Nationality: French

Current Team: Nice

Background

Born in Les Abymes , Guadeloupe , Wylan progressed through the youth ranks
of Lens football club.
He then made over 100 appearances before signing for Nice in July 2016.

He has made waves for Nice in the French Ligue 1 contributing massively to
their very high standing.

Currently 3rd place at the time of writing.

Wylan has been regular in the France national youth teams.

Style of play

Cyprien is a player who I think is fantastic to watch and he is very
effective in driving forward with the ball , exploiting space.

He handles the physical side of the game well, strong enough to fight it out
in the Prem, protects the ball very well.

He will knock the ball past players and out pace them , he uses his
athleticism very well.

He has fantastic long shots with good accuracy, you can't give him too much
space because he will 9 times out of 10 hit the target with his rocket of a
right foot.

His free-kicks are very good, from far or short range, he has good accuracy.

In counter attack moves this is where Wylan really thrives in open play.

He is very useful at breaking through teams, dangerous when opposition teams
are not completely solid at the back with numbers forward.

His vision and passing is strong enough to exploit the gaps left by
oppositions teams, making that final pass or getting on the end of a pass
scoring himself.

He is a Box to Box midfielder who can start from deep positions and all of a
sudden be right in the final third in a flash.

Hard too contain and a real danger.

Certainly a player who I would love to see at West Ham in the summer.

I think in the current West Ham side we lack pace and players in general who
are a real threat with the ball other than Lanzini.

Wylan would be a great addition and make us a far more dangerous side.

Written by Richard Jones – via twitter @emagehtjr

STRENGTHS : Passing – Set Pieces – Long shots – Pace – Agility – Technique –
Skill

WEAKNESSES : Defensive contribution

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
SLAVEN BILIC – HEAD OVER HEART BY DAVE WALKER FROM SDCC
BY EXWHUEMPLOYEE ON 3 APRIL 2017 AT 8:37PM
TheWestHamWay.co.uk

A lot of people will not like what I`m about to say but I`m going to say it
because it`s my opinion and one that I am entitled to. I love Slaven Bilic,
I think he`s a nice fella, he`s passionate about this club, he is good with
the fans and he was part of a memorable season at the Boleyn last year BUT
he is not the future of West Ham United. From the fans perspective, most of
us were prepared to leave the Boleyn Ground on the condition that this club
would be taken to the next level and whilst I accept that the first season
at the London Stadium was going to be difficult, the Payet situation
challenging and the list of injuries frustrating, I look at Slaven`s
all-round ability to manage and I don't see a top class manager there and
that`s what I want for my football club, a top class Manager. To be
specific, this is why I think we should part company with Slaven at the end
of the season or after the Swansea game should we lose or draw.

Firstly, I don`t trust Slav`s ability to judge a player. A lot of people
believe that the board are responsible for bringing players to the club but
categorically, Slav has the final say on all signings so ultimately the
decision is his. The two transfer windows this season has been a disaster.
Feghouli, Nordveit, Calleri, Tore, Zaza and Fletcher top the list of piss
poor signings who are just not good enough for the Premier League. I see
alot of people say "I feel sorry for Slav, the board just haven`t backed in
the transfer market". This is bollocks. The board were prepared to pay over
£40m for Lacazette but he didn`t want to come, the board were prepared to
pay £32m for Batshuyai but Slaven took so long deciding on whether he wanted
him that Chelsea came in so we lost him. Bilic wanted Ayew so the board
bought him for a club record fee, he wanted Snodgrass and Font for £18m so
the board gave it to him. Let`s be clear on this, the board will pay the
right money for the right player but £14m for Gokhan Tore (which is what
Bilic wanted to buy him for) was not the right player, so the board took him
on loan instead and thank god they did.

Secondly, he is not getting the best out of his current squad of players.
Look at our starting eleven? When fully fit, on paper that is a top eight
side all day long, yet we now sit in 14th place just six points away from
the relegation zone and the really worrying thing is that in my opinion 14th
flatters us! The only reason we are not in the bottom three as it stands is
because apart from just four games this season (Palace (H), Swansea (A),
Southampton (A), MIddlesborough (A), we have been poor but fortunately still
managed to nick a win from other sides that have been just as poor
(Sunderland 1-0, Burnley 1-0, Bournemouth 1-0, Hull 1-0 for example). All I
hear from people is how much the players like Slav? If that`s the case, why
don`t they fucking play for him then?! One theory, and this has been
confirmed by various sources including two players publicly, is that
training is like a holiday camp at Rush Green. By all accounts there is no
intensity with his sessions, not enough individual player focus, nothing
impressive tactically and it`s so relaxed to a point where Slav even brings
his dog with him in the mornings!! Now if this is the case, how mentally and
physically prepared are the players going into a game on a Saturday? I see
these players week in week out and they look like they just don`t care and
I`m sorry, pre match preparation and player motivation is the Managers job.

Thirdly, I have to question his tactical ability. Why he persisted in
playing Antonio, at times our top goalscorer and biggest threat going
forward as a right back I`ll never know. Then, having finally admitted
defeat with that, this season he then does exactly the same thing with
Kouyate, one of our best midfielders. Again this decision has cost us points
and he made this choice over an established right back in Sam Byram, god
only knows what this would`ve done to his confidence. Slav made these
choices over going to the market and making this position a priority. Slav
also has no plan B. If we are getting beaten he seems to be out of ideas.
Take Hull on Saturday as a prime example. I was there and when Hull were 1-0
down Marco Silva moved to a 4-2-4 formation and it changed everything, they
won the game. What did Slav do when we were losing? He turned to Jonathon
Calleri for the answer who is about as useful as a pair of sunglasses to a
bloke with one ear!



Fourthly, how can a man who had a successful career as a Defender concede so
many goals? He turned down the offer from Rio Ferdinand to be a defensive
coach and I can`t help but think he made the wrong choice there because the
players obviously need some direction on that training pitch. I also
struggle to understand the role that Julian Dicks plays at the club? like
all fans, I adore Julian but his daughter, Jessica Dicks has confirmed that
he is not a defensive coach so what does he actually do? I`m starting to
feel the the coaching staff is seriously lacking structure which again at
this level just isn`t good enough.

Finally, I don`t know if Slaven has somehow used a Jedi mind trick on the
fans at West Ham but Sam Allardyce used to get absolutely slaughtered for
his "style of play" yet as a season ticket holder let me tell you that what
I have seen this season is no better than what I saw under Allardyce. In my
opinion, in the entire season so far we have played JUST 45 minutes of
quality, dominating football at home and that was in the second half against
Crystal Palace. Every other Premier League home game has been painful to
watch! How can the fans call for John Lyalls sacking after finishing third
but think Slaven is the best thing since Pornhub? I remember when West Ham
got booed off the pitch after beating Hull under Allardyce, yet we get
absolutely battered at home by Hull this season, incredibly manage to get a
1-0 win with the goal post being man of the match and the fans celebrate
like we have won the Champions league?! I just don`t get it? Why does
everyone think Slaven walks on water? Yes last season was a great season
filled with some excellent memories but it`s not as if we won the league?
Last season still came with its disappointments? We were embarrassed in
Europe like we was again this season, we lost at home in the FA Cup Qtr
final to an out of form Man Utd which if we would`ve won, we would've
unquestionably have gone on to win the competition and then we fizzled out
towards the end of the season which cost us a chance of a top 4/5 finish.
Like I say, I love Slav as a man and I`m not saying he is a bad manager, I
am saying that I don`t think he is a great Manager and a great Manager is
what I expect for my football club these days. Unlike other fans, mediocracy
isn`t good enough for me and in my honest opinion, people that want Bilic in
charge at West Ham for the long term are thinking with their hearts, not
their heads. Of course, I would love him to prove me wrong, honestly I would
but I just don`t think he will.

Do I think the board are blameless for the season we`ve had so far? No, of
course I don`t. Do I think the players are blameless? No, of course I don`t
but unfortunately this is a results based business and the buck has to stop
with the manager. Look at Leicester, they won the league last year but
parted company with Ranieri and since doing so have gained four straight
wins and a ticket to the Champions League Qtr Final. Chelsea were mid table
when they parted company with one of the greatest Managers the game has ever
seen, since doing so they are now on course to walk away with the Premier
League Title. Palace have won four straight games under Allardyce now, a
change in Manager was what they needed too and they are seeing the benefits.
Swansea are a better side after appointing Paul Clement. I`m sorry, I love
Slav but I love West Ham United more.

I understand that I represent the minority with this opinion but the game is
about opinions and this is mine.

Dave Walker

(Sex, Drugs & Carlton Cole)

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
An empty feeling
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 1st April 2017
By: Gary Steer

Are David Gold and David Sullivan really West Ham fans?

Before I begin writing this article I just want to say that West Ham fans
are brilliant! I am not too sure about the two above though. Are they really
interested in what the fans want? I know football is a business (blah blah
blah) and these two guys are businessmen, but they are not turning out to be
good football club owners.

I have written previous articles elsewhere and been slated for having an
opinion, but we are all entitled to have a say. I listen to TalkSport and
like most people I believe Jason Cundy doesn't speak too much sense! But the
other night he said "Bilic should walk" - and I totally agree with him on
this.

Slaven has been treated abysmally by the Board, but why should anyone be
surprised? What a pile of crap they recruited in the summer! There's no
point moaning at the players. If another company offered you better money to
do a job you knew you weren't good enough for would you still take the job?

You cannot blame Bilic because his hands were tied. There is no way on earth
he would've wanted the likes of Sofiane Feghouli and Havard Nortvedt - and
building a team around Andy Carroll again is suicidal! The owners must be
able to see he's a liability. Yes, great on his day but injured every other
month - yet they continue to make him the focal point!

I believe the club is in complete disarray. I'm not surprised Dimitri Payet
left, he is far too good a player and he was poorly let down. Had they gone
out and spent £50-60million on new players to compliment him then we may
have seen a different story.

I'm sick of even looking at that stadium, I absolutely hate it. Designed
with a pitch 50 feet away from the pitch! Mark Noble has suffered becoming
so exposed on such a huge surface and he is so often the scapegoat. It's
hardly ever full, so what's the point of attempting to increase the capacity
when you can't even fill it as it is?!

The owners have spent too much of the last year talking nonsense. The
digital wrap to go right around the stadium and the promise of top four
football? Come on, seriously, who are you trying to fool!? No player with
any ounce of self respect would want to join such an amateur circus!

The manager should've been backed last summer with the £30million striker he
was promised. I know fans will say "oh we did try but nobody wants to go
there", but did they really try that hard? I don't believe they did. They
are so tight with the cash it's unbelievable. They are duplicitous and
always trying to cut corners, whilst the fans are treated like dirt and fed
lie after lie. I refuse now to be part of it.

"Well you're not a real fan!" I hear you groan. And I should stick with my
team through thick and thin. Well, for all these new fans who have become
keyboard warriors slating the team during a match and then waxing lyrical
about the same player ten minutes later, I have attended games for 30+
years, often involving 12-hour round trips.

So before anyone moans, I used to be one of the most loyal fans you could
ever meet. And like most Hammers, it is was as much a joy watching them play
as it was to stand in that fiery atmosphere.

I had heroes whilst growing up: Paolo Di Canio, Frank Lampard Jnr and Joe
Cole. Even though the latter two are roughly my age I loved them and
idolised them. However, I look around now and see very little that inspires
me.

I'm not going to waffle on about how hard life can be - we have all had our
bad times - but when you experience life-changing traumas it makes you
realise that many footballers are simply pampered, overpriced and overpaid
primadonnas.

Many are not heroes, some are clueless about life whilst others don't
possess an ounce of resolve. They don't even have to think for themselves. I
do not get excited or breathless about the thought of watching West Ham
players running out onto a pitch anymore.

In fact, you could offer me a free season ticket and I would happily sell
it. (Like a lot of 'fans' selling their final Upton Park match ticket -
remember?)

So enough is enough and I have voted with my feet. I'm no longer going to
attend games, purchase merchandise and continue to increase the owners' bank
balances and egos. I asked myself "why do I even bother?" on hundreds of
occasions. If something isn't right change it, don't moan!

For five years (from 2011-2015) I was an official partner of the club
(merchandise-related). In that time I was always paid late, my emails were
never replied to until I'd sent 10 and called 10 times more! It used to be a
family club where you could pick up the phone and call, but now you sit on a
premium rate phone line where half the time you don't get through and get
charged £40 for the joy of it!

The unprofessionalism is unbelievable. You have David Gold attempting to
justify the Board's decisions on Twitter and David Sullivan spouting off to
the media. Why would a club be like this and why would you want to join it
as a player or manager?

I wasn't a big fan of Big Sam but he was treated like crap, Zola too.
They're continuing the trend now with Bilic. (The less said about Avram
Grant the better.) The board potentially could've got Martin O'Neill back
then, but as usual their big mouths got in the way!

The fans are fantastic, but my previous 'love' for West Ham United has just
died. I understand fans will say I'm this and that but I refuse to be part
of this anymore.

I used to hear people say "I love West Ham, even though I don't support
them". You just don't hear this anymore because they've just become a
laughing stock in nearly every single department. Other fans and teams have
no respect for the club. It is a below average club with world-class fans,
although these fans are always sold down the river.

I have been blinkered for so so many years but the club are light years
behind and the new stadium will not catapult them into the top four. Some
fans slate me for being honest, but you can't help the way you feel. Some
people can accept being kept in the dark and live a lie.

West Ham United FC died and became history when the club left Upton Park.
It's now a soulless, commercial enterprise and although I still look out for
results and want to see them do well, sadly I'm no longer a die-hard fan.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Vote of confidence for Bilic
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 3rd April 2017
By: Staff Writer

West Ham's Board have given Slaven Bilic the dreaded 'vote of confidence'.
In a statement published on Monday morning, the club declared that Bilic's
position is not under threat, despite a slew or stories appearing in the
media in recent weeks suggesting as such.
"To end speculation once and for all, the West Ham United Board feel it
necessary to announce that we have 100 per cent faith in Slaven Bilic's
ability to lead West Ham United," it read.
"Despite press speculation to the contrary, the manager's position is not
under threat. The Board know that Slaven and his coaching staff have the
full backing of the playing squad and the overwhelming majority of
supporters to lead West Ham United out of this difficult spell. "The Board
now urge all supporters to unite behind the manager, his staff and the squad
as we go into some important games. We all have complete confidence in their
ability to end a testing run of results and finish the season on a high."

The Board's statement comes in the wake of a KUMB poll on Bilic, in which 80
per cent of those pollled voted to retain Bilic's services. You may see the
results of that on the KUMB Forum.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jose Fonte says players to blame for West Ham's recent struggles, not Slaven
Bilic
By Michael Kelleher
Last Updated: 03/04/17 4:02pm
SSN

Jose Fonte insists West Ham's players and not manager Slaven Bilic should
shoulder the majority of the blame for the club's recent poor performances.
The Hammers suffered their fourth consecutive Premier League defeat on
Saturday as Hull City came from behind to snatch a 2-1 victory at the KCOM
Stadium. The result leaves West Ham without a win since February 4 and the
club's board were forced to issue a statement on Sunday backing Bilic. And
Fonte says it is time for the players to take responsibility for
underperforming. "We are all behind him obviously," Fonte told Sky Sports
News HQ. "[We have to take] the majority of the blame. We have to take
responsibility ourselves. "The players are the ones on the pitch, so we have
got to come up with the goods and help not only the manager but ourselves
and make the fans proud. "It is up to us to work hard together as one and
move on from this situation".
The 33-year-old defender has only been at the club since January, when he
completed an £8m move from Southampton, and he admits he is yet to find his
best form. "I haven't been as good as I perhaps was before but I am working
to get there," Fonte said. "Nothing is guaranteed in this league."
Saturday saw West Ham fall to 14th in the table - six points clear of the
relegation zone - and knows it is imperative for West Ham to halt their
slide quickly. "A couple of wins will get you safe or three wins but if you
don't win the next two or three games you are in a dogfight," Fonte said.
"We are aware of the situation of course. We are not happy with where we are
and we are not happy with what has been happening. "We have to change that
and to start we have a big game against Arsenal on Wednesday and we have to
get something out of that."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dean Ashton tells talkSPORT: West Ham board RIGHT to come out and support
Slaven Bilic
West Ham manager Slaven Bilic
By talkSPORT - @talkSPORT
Monday, April 3, 2017

Dean Ashton has backed West Ham's public support for boss Slaven Bilic. The
club released a statement following the 2-1 defeat at Hull on Saturday,
insisting Bilic's position is 'not under threat'. The Croatian has found
himself under pressure, with the Hammers sitting just six points above the
relegation places having lost their last four Premier League matches. Former
West Ham striker Ashton, asked to explain their poor form this season on
talkSPORT, said: "It is the recruitment. "At the weekend they lose [Michail]
Antonio - one of their better players - and it shows. When they lose one or
two, they just cannot cope. "For them [the West Ham board] to come out and
say that about Slaven, that was the right thing to do."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jurcevic speaks to Croatian media about player attitude at West Ham, and
Payet impact
By Sport Witness Team - 3rd April 2017

Nikola Jurcevic's future at West Ham is very much linked to that of manager
Slaven Bilic. The two come as a pair and if Bilic is pushed out of West Ham
this summer then it's almost certain Jurcevic will be going with him.

West Ham's vote of confidence hasn't provided an awful lot of comfort, given
how many clubs have gone back on them previously, but Jurcevic sounds
hopeful about the future.

West Ham lost 2-1 to Hull City on Saturday, and speaking to Croatian
newspaper Vecernji List after training on Sunday, Jurcevic insisted the
attitude of the players is right and they back Bilic: "When you lose four
games in a row, the situation cannot be pleasant. However, as the attitude
of the club's leadership for us has always been a very good one, they came
out and made the statement. Their support means a lot to us, as well as the
realisation that the atmosphere in the team is not undermined. Slaven and I
feel that the players are firmly with us."

It's been a difficult season for West Ham, the move to the London Stadium
hasn't been completely successful and Dimitri Payet forcing a move to
Marseille caused more uncertainty.

Asked if losing Payet was a big reason behind West Ham's current woes,
Jurcevic disagreed: "No, because without Payet we beat Crystal Palace,
Middlesbrough and Southampton. I would say we have responded really well
without him and this crisis has nothing to do with Payet."

West Ham face Arsenal at the Emirates on Wednesday, and are currently six
points clear of the relegation zone in 14th place. Such is the closeness of
mid table, West Ham are also only three points behind Stoke City in 9th.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ghana international Andre Ayew returns to training hoping to put recent
set-backs behind him
Published on: 03 April 2017
ghananews.com

Ghana international Andre Ayew's smile was bright when he returned to
training at the Rush Green complex ahead of their away game against Arsenal
in mid-week. The Ghanaian was toothless in their 2-1 defeat at the hands
Hull City with their manager's future up in the air. It does not get easy
with a trip to the emirates on the cards against a desperate Arsenal side
who are without a win in their last four games. Manager Slaven Bilic has
been given the dreaded vote of confidence but his situation will be almost
unattainable if they fail to pick a point at the Emirates. Ayew's smile
should be the light in a camp that is without any positive.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham fan jailed for breaching football banning order after just eight
days
Newham Recorder
PUBLISHED: 15:19 03 April 2017 | UPDATED: 15:19 03 April 2017 Sophie Morton

A West Ham fan who breached his football banning order after just eight days
has been jailed. Tony Hackett, of Hillview Road, Nottingham, was handed a 28
day sentence at Blackfriars Crown Court on Friday. The court heard how he
was spotted in a Middlesbrough hotel bar on January 21, the day of the
Hammers' 3-1 win over Boro. His five year banning order, which he had been
given on January 13, stipulated that he could not travel to towns and cities
on the day that West Ham were playing there. The 57-year-old was
subsequently arrested and charged by Cleveland Police before appearing in
court in London. Hackett's banning order had been imposed after he was found
to be involved in violence that broke out outside the White Swan pub in
Upper Street, Islington, following West Ham's match at Arsenal on August 9,
2015. Missiles and objects including bottles, tables and chairs were thrown
between the two sets of fans. PC Andy Sheldon, from the Met's Football Unit,
said: "This sentence demonstrates that football banning orders really do
'have teeth.' "Hackett believed he was above the law but he was quickly
caught out and now must serve a custodial sentence where he can reflect on
his actions."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
You really have to be Mad to be a manager... a few bad results and your halo
quickly drops to become a noose
I hope Slaven Bilic is given time to turn things around at my old club West
Ham
Burnley defender Michael Keane is going to be a top player and England
regular
Jermain Defoe fully deserved his first start at international level in four
years
England are ready to progress under Gareth Southagte and finally do us proud

By Martin Allen for the Daily Mail
PUBLISHED: 15:22, 3 April 2017 | UPDATED: 15:22, 3 April 2017

Martin 'Mad Dog' Allen returns with his latest column for Sportsmail. This
month he discusses his old club West Ham, getting back into management and
signs of promise for England under Gareth Southgate.

FROM HALOS TO NOOSES

It's that horrible time of year for managers when results aren't going well.
The team are sliding down the table and with the power of social media and
online forums, the fans all believe changing the manager is the best thing
to do. A year later, they're all saying exactly the same… about the new man
in charge. Most managers get decent results when they've got decent players
and no injuries. When things are going well, all of the supporters regard
their managers as heroes with halos. A few weeks later the results go down
hill and the halo drops pretty quickly into a noose and they want him
replaced. Record numbers of managers have been sacked this season. Thank God
for the LMA, who look after and support managers when they're not working
and fight for the managers when clubs do their utmost to get out of what is
supposed to be paid. You really do have to be Mad, to be a manager.

BILIC DESERVES BETTER

My old club West Ham, for example, have found results recently very
difficult to come by and now further speculation hangs over their top class
manager Slaven Bilic. Injuries to key players, no matter who the manager is,
affects results. Until he gets his full squad together, with some
additional key signings in the summer, it is going to be hard for the club
to pick up points. The transition to that new stadium has most definitely
not helped with supporters being so far away from the action and it will
take time to build the positive energy from the West Ham faithful to create
an atmosphere to match the dynamics of Upton Park. I hope Bilic is given the
time.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham teenager Reece Oxford COULD be in line for his first Reading start
on Tuesday
The teenager has yet to start since joining the club in January
Football London
BYSAM INKERSOLE
14:19, 3 APR 2017

It's taken a long time but Reece Oxford might finally make his first start
for his loan side Reading in their Championship clash with Blackburn at the
Madjeski Stadum on Tuesday night, football.london understands. The
18-year-old joined the Royals on loan for the rest of the season in January
but has had to be patient as manager Jaap Stam has chosen to use the
18-year-old as injury cover instead of first team regular. But, following
Reading's 1-0 win over Leeds United at the weekend, they picked up a few
injuries with doubts heading into Tuesday night over defenders Joey Van den
Berg, Paul McShane and Jordan Obita, Oxford's number could be called for a
starting spot. Former Liverpool Tiago Illori returned to training for
Reading last week but is unlikely to be thrown straight back into the
starting line up by Stam. The defensive re-shuffle would see Liam Moore at
centre half, with Tyler Blackett replacing Obita at left back, meaning a
spot for Oxford. The West Ham man got 20 minutes off the bench for the
Royals on Saturday and was involved in one of the main talking points of the
game when Oxford was apparently stamped on by Leeds' Liam Cooper.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Slaven Bilic set for a clash with the West Ham board over his coaching staff
KEN DYER
Evening Standard

Slaven Bilic could be heading for a clash with the West Ham hierarchy over
his coaching staff. The under-pressure manager has been given a vote of
confidence despite Saturday's 2-1 defeat at Hull — their fourth successive
loss — but the board feel he needs to freshen up his coaching staff.
Managers, though, are reluctant to make changes to their staff and the
Croatian is unlikely to agree to such a request. The team of coaches
comprises assistant manager Nikola Jurcevic, 50, a former Croatia
international who was part of Bilic's team in his previous posts at both
Lokomotiv Moscow and Besiktas, and first-team coach Edin Terzic, the
34-year-old former coach at Borussia Dortmund and also Besiktas. Bilic's
fitness coach is 69-year-old Miljenko Rak, who was part of the manager's
staff during his time coaching Croatia. Rak, a former long jumper, has also
coached the Croatia national handball team and Olympic gold medal skier
Janica Kostelic. Completing the team are former West Ham favourite Julian
Dicks and goalkeeping coach Chris Woods.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Should West Ham, Everton and Newcastle move for France star Olivier Giroud
after striker's admission
HITC
Damien Lucas

West Ham United, Everton and Newcastle United will need proven firepower
next season for different reasons and the answer could come from Arsenal.
The Hammers failed to deliver the big name, marquee striker signing
co-owners David Sullivan and David Gold promised fans last summer. Slaven
Bilic's side have suffered as a result with an over reliance on injury-prone
Andy Carroll who has once again spent as much time in the treatment room as
he has on the pitch this season. Strikers - and a proven Premier League
goalscorer - will be top of West Ham's priority list this summer. That could
be the case for Everton too who look likely to lose ambitious star Romelu
Lukaku.
Ronald Koeman will want a player who has proved he can operate at the
highest level as will Rafa Benitez when - as looks increasingly likely - he
makes his return to the top flight with his Championship-leading Magpies.
Newcastle may have blasted away most of the sides in the second division,
but Benitez knows better than anyone that more quality is a necessity in the
Premier League. So could all three lock horns in a bid to bring just that
striker to the club this summer in the shape of France and Gunners forward
Olivier Giroud. That's after the experienced star spoke out about his lack
of game time under Arsene Wenger in an interview with Canal Plus. "It is
true that I am seeking more playing time with my club and that I need to
play matches consistently in order to feel good," Giroud told Canal Plus. "I
am working a lot to win back a starting spot, but the coach has several
options. So I am not more preoccupied by the situation than that, I have
always known to work with humility and I am confident about the future."
With it being a World Cup year Giroud will be under no illusions that he
must be playing regularly to have a chance of going to Russia next summer.
He has been demoted to a substitute role at the Emirates this season but
showed with his recent brace in World Cup qualifying for France that he
still has plenty to offer. Danny Welbeck was preferred up front for the 2-2
draw with Manchester City last time out and Arsenal fans have been vocal in
their criticism of Giroud during his time in North London. A decent bid from
an attractive club like the Hammers, Toffees or Magpies could prove the best
solution for all parties. And given the fact West Ham are in London, that
could give them the edge if Giroud does not want a big upheaval.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham linked with £30m deal for Arsenal's Jack Wilshere and fresh loan
move for Chelsea's Michy Batshuayi
KEN DYER
Evening Standard

West Ham have been linked with a £30million summer move for Arsenal
midfielder Jack Wilshere. The club could, though, face a battle with
Bournemouth for the midfielder following his season-long loan on the south
coast. West Ham are also likely to ask Chelsea about a loan deal for Belgium
Michy Batshuayi, who has struggled to get a game for the Premier League
leaders. Some good news for the Hammers is the fact they could have Michail
Antonio back for Wednesday's derby at Arsenal. Antonio strained a hamstring
against Leicester two weeks ago but is back in full training and is likely
to return. Diafra Sakho, who has been out since November with a back problem
which required surgery, is also nearing a return. Andy Carroll, who was made
captain against Hull and scored his 50th Premier League goal, said: "It was
great to have the armband but at the end of the day it means nothing if you
don't get the results."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Twitter: Hammers fans angered after Leeds United's Liam Cooper
stamps on Reece Oxford
By Essex Chronicle | Posted: April 03, 2017
By Tommy Wathen

Football fans have been tweeting their anger about the weekend's match - but
not the one involving Slaven Bilic's side. At the Madejski Stadium in
Reading on Saturday [April 1], on-loan Hammers defender Reece Oxford
suffered a nasty injury at the hands - or should I say feet - of visiting
Leeds United defender Liam Cooper. Luckily for Jaap Stam's side, they still
came out on top in the match, winning 1-0 thanks to Yann Kermorgant's first
half goal. West Ham fans have been sharing a video of the other major event
in the match though, when Reading loanee Oxford fell to the floor and had
his head stamped on by Cooper. Speaking to Get Reading after the game about
the incident, manager Stam refused to get drawn into commenting on whether
Cooper intended to stamp on Oxford or not. "I didn't see it myself but Reece
is not the type of person who goes down and stays down. "I've heard from
other people who have seen it he made a move to touch him - I don't know if
he did it on purpose. "But sometimes certain moments - especially towards
the end of the game - can create certain things with some players which make
them react in a different manner. "I don't like to speak about players who
do that."

Whilst searching through social media, Hammers fans are clearly angered at
the treatment that their Academy graduate received over the weekend.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Arsenal legend Ray Parlour champions possible move to West Ham for Jack
Wilshere as a "great deal"
Wilshere has a year to run on his deal with Arsenal
Football London
BYSAM INKERSOLE
09:54, 3 APR 2017

Arsenal legend Ray Parlour says a move to West Ham could work wonders for
Gunners midfielder Jack Wilshere as he looks to regain a spot in the England
squad. Wilshere's Arsenal career has been wrecked by injuries but his talent
has never been in question - when he's been fit for a long periods but that
has been scarce. Wilshere has suffered a staggering 21 injuries since the
start of 2010 but the 24-year-old has had a relatively clean bill of health
while on loan at Bournemouth this season. He has got just a year left on his
contract at the Emirates. Speaking on TalkSport on Monday morning, Parlour
said that a club like West Ham could "nick" a player like him for £10-£15m,
coming off the back of reports on Sunday that the Hammers were keen on a
£30m switch.Parlour said: "I know he's not playing at the moment, but I
think a lot of clubs would be very interested in him [Wilshere]. The most
important thing was to stay fit and he's done that. He's had a few niggles
but every player gets them but he's stayed away from long term injureis. "I
think West Ham have been mentioned, his dad is a big a West Ham fan , that
might be a move. Their midfield does need a little bit of stregnthening.
"Bournemouth will be interested too as I am sure he's been great for the
dressing room. He wants to get back in the England squad so he needs to play
on a regular basis. whether he gets it at Arsenal , I don't know. "He's got
a year left, so he'll be cheaper than if he has three years left on his deal
so maybe a club can nick him for £10m to £15m, he's got to be worth that.
"He's probably on £80,000 a week so you have to match that but if you can
get him and keep him fit, in this market it's a great deal for a club to get
him."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
5 stats which show why West Ham should ditch Bilic
by Scott Johnson7 minutes ago
greensthammers.com

It's not looking good for Slaven Bilic and West Ham. Poor results and now
the dreaded vote of confidence. Should he stay?

West Ham fans are currently split on this question, with many views being
put forward. Some feel his last season with us should buy him more time.
Others point at the turn around that Leicester have seen since Ranieri's
sacking as a reason he should go. All of them have some weight.

For me the balance has started to tip in favour of letting him go. Recent
matches and comments have concerned me and I think there are a number of
reasons. I think the club board will have a few tough decisions coming up.
Especially if they look at these stats:

Goals Conceded

It's no surprise to most fans that the side are currently in joint third
place for most goals conceded. This season has been one of the leakiest I
can remember, despite a number of 1-0 wins. The team are continuously undone
by their own errors and can't seem to defend anything down the wings on
through the middle. The fact that the right hand side has been so leaky
probably stems from playing players out of position there.

WhoScored list defending against attack on the wings, defending against
through balls and defending against skillfull players as weaknesses on the
team profile. What other ways are there to be bad at defending? I suppose
set pieces isn't there, but in recent weeks it would be. The defence just
seems to be set up poorly.

Slaven Bilic reportedly oversees the defensive strategy and tactics himself,
so he is to blame. And whilst we must adjust for players not playing well,
it is not entirely their fault. Sam Allardyce and Tony Pulis consistently
concede fewer goals with worse defences than ours.

Bilic must stop the side leaking goals and fast. Its not a usual occurrence
where a tight defensive side gets relegated.

Discipline

Usually I wouldn't be concerned about discipline, because a high number of
cards usually correlates to a strong defence. However when players are
picking up suspensions for no reason then it becomes an issue.

West Ham currently have the joint most red cards on four, and the second
most yellow cards. When these cards are shared around the entire team it's
not a huge issue. However it is the main players that are seeing more than
their fair share.

Want your voice heard? Join the Green Street Hammers team!Write for us!
Reid, Obiang, Noble and Lanzini are the 4 Hammers who are currently on 5 or
more yellow cards. Arguably the most influential player not included there
is Antonio, who has four. Cresswell, Antonio and Reid also have red cards to
their names. The side cannot be expected to function when their best players
are missing so many games.

And as I said, this wouldn't be as much of an issue if goals weren't being
conceded all over the place. However Bilic has a team set up which doesn't
allow the defence to hold a team at bay fairly or effectively. This has to
change.

Shot Accuracy

It's a problem that's plagued the side since Bilic took over, but the team
are still wasting chances. And I feel this has as much to do with the style
of play as it does the players.

teams in the Premier League. It's only because we rank 8th in number of
shots that we're actually doing well. However for me the ratio of shots
inside area to outside show where the side are going wrong.

The Hammers have the second highest ratio of shots taken outside the area to
in the area. Given that we have one of the highest number of goals scored
from headers in the league, it shows that the side are not working the ball
into the box on the ground very often at all.

It highlights what most fans would tell you is happening constantly. First
we try to pass it around, but it's so slow that the team can't get through.
As such, the side get frustrated. Usually it ends up with a shot being taken
from long range, or the ball gets pumped into the middle without much
thought or care.

Spurs are the side with a higher ratio, but when they have a multitude of
players who can score from long range that makes sense. They also create a
lot more chances than us, so can afford to be more speculative with their
shooting.

Most points lost from winning positions

If I'm being honest, this stat alone should worry the board. It is a clear
indication that the winning mentality is not there and goals are being
leaked.

Twenty points. That's ridiculous. Given a quick crude analysis, as in not
taking into account who those dropped points benefitted, just taking 10 of
those points would put us a point behind 8th placed West Brom. Ironically,
West Brom were one of the sides who did benefit from us throwing away a
winning position.

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This should show everyone that the team capable of winning matches is there.
However it really isn't being gelled and structured correctly. It's a
similar phenomenon to what is happening at Arsenal, where all the skills
seem to be there but the mentality is not.

This is deep rooted within the Hammers' psyche and with Slaven Bilic at the
helm it's hard to shake that off. The easiest way to change this mindset is
to get a new manager in.

Bilic's Inability to See these Stats

However the biggest issue, in my opinion, is that Bilic can't seem to grasp
the concept behind these stats. Most of these stats point to a leaky
defensive line being the issue. However all he has talked about is adding
goals.

Whilst goals do win matches, the fewer you let in the easier the whole game
is. And the fewer winning positions you let slip. That fact that the side
get in those positions is sign enough that the team is strong enough to
succeed. However management at the top can be seen to be lacking here.

West Ham have to be careful. Whilst there is still a place in football for
loyalty, there is no point sacrificing Premier League status because of it.
Bilic is walking a very fine line right now, and the board must be swift to
act if it doesn't improve.

I know this season was always going to be tough given the stadium move and
the Payet saga. That should be taken into account. But given his blatant
disregard to accept what is happening around him Bilic is very close to
being in an untenable position. I hope I'm proved wrong, but I think Slaven
Bilic needs to go.

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Leeds defender accused of stamp by Reading loanee Oxford
by GRAHAM SMEATON on APR 2, 2017 0

The Reading vs Leeds United game at the Madejski Stadium was always going to
be a tasty affair with both teams neck-and-neck at the top of the table and
Yann Kermorgant's 'no plan B' rhetoric. But the talking point was elsewhere
yesterday.

Kermorgant, as one Leeds United fan pointed out on Twitter, was right about
Leeds not having a 'plan B' yesterday against Reading, pointing out that
they didn't have a 'plan A' either. This lack of cohesion and forethought
left the Whites floundering at times, and they were royally beaten thanks to
Kermorgant's powerful first-half strike.

However, the game will be remembered less for the 1-0 scoreline that saw
home side Reading leap-frog visitors Leeds in the table and more for the
following incident – a 'stamp' by Leeds defender Liam Cooper on Reading's
Reece Oxford, who is on loan from West Ham.

Talk Reading @TalkReading
Hope Cooper gets a long, long ban for this. He's meant that. Disgraceful.
#readingfc #lufc [??: @rfctom]
8:26 PM - 1 Apr 2017
350 350 Retweets 385 385 likes

Whilst fans of both sides dispute the intention behind Cooper's actions,
Reece Oxford himself commented, his views on the matter mentioned in local
newspaper the Reading Chronicle. The on-loan West Ham youngster said of
Cooper's actions: "I thought it was a stamp. I couldn't see it but it felt
like someone just stood on my head. I didn't see who it was to be fair but
I'm going to go home and watch it to see what happened."

Leeds' Cooper was not punished for the incident by matchday referee Keith
Stroud, although there are calls for it to be retrospectively reviewed in
the manner of the incident between Manchester United's Zlatan Ibrahimovic
and Bournemouth's Tyrone Mings, a similar incident to that between
Oxford/Cooper and one that resulted in a five match ban for the Bournemouth
defender.

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Andy Carroll says West Ham lost more than just three points against Hull
HITC
Antony Martin

West Ham United are now firmly entrenched in a relegation battle. Hammers
striker Andy Carroll spoke to reporters in the aftermath of his side's
disappointing 2-1 defeat at Hull City yesterday, and highlighted how he and
his teammates failed to get to grips with the Tigers change in formation and
tactics at half-time, as quoted by the club's official website. West Ham now
find themselves in real trouble, with just six points separating themselves
and yesterday's opponents Hull in 18th position, and with so many injuries
to key players, the next few weeks could prove to be extremely difficult for
Slaven Bilic's side. Yesterday's defeat to Marco Silva's men would have been
a bitter pill to swallow, especially considering the fact that they led
going into half-time. And Carroll explained how the Hammers were not quick
enough to react to Hull's change in system when the two teams came out for
the second-half, as quoted by WHUFC.com: "They came out and changed the
formation at half-time. We didn't really get a grip of it and lost our
shape. We could have finished the game off, but didn't. They took advantage
and scored two."

With Arsenal away next up for West Ham on Wednesday night, things certainly
wont get any easier, and with Hull playing host to fellow strugglers
Middlesbrough on the same night, the East London outfit's situation could
look a whole lot worse come Thursday morning.

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Do West Ham star's comments highlight a major flaw in club's recruitment
process?
HITC
Antony Martin

West Ham United have really suffered with injuries to some of their key men
this season. Hammers striker Diafra Sakho spoke to the club's official
website during an exclusive interview, and explained that the back problem
that he has only just recovered from has been an ongoing issue throughout
his career, and admitted that he was aware of the problem way back in the
summer of 2014, when he moved to West Ham from Metz. The Senegal
international is now back in contention for a first-team spot, having missed
the majority of the Hammers' campaign, making just two appearances all
season. The worrying thing for West Ham fans is that it's becoming a common
theme for many of their star players to spend lengthy spells on the
sidelines.
Andy Carroll, Michail Antonio, Manuel Lanzini, Aaron Cresswell, Winston Reid
and Pedro Obiang have all suffered long-term injuries at various points
throughout the course of the season. And Sakho told WHUFC.com how his back
injury wasn't something that came out of the blue:
"When I arrived in England, I had a back problem which has been troubling me
until now. I needed a back operation, but I kept saying no. I did finally
have one in December and now it's much better. I feel I'm ready to play.
I've already asked to play before, but I think the medical team wanted to
protect me, so that I could do a bit more work in the gym and on the
training pitch individually. I have now resumed training with the first team
and want to play in early April."

So are the Hammers not exercising due diligence when signing players? Or are
the training methods at the club not conducive with keeping their players
fit for prolonged periods? History would suggest that it is a little bit of
both. But if West Ham are to truly move forward as a football club, the way
in which they go about their scouting and recruitment process needs to be
seriously addressed this summer.

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Bournemouth and West Ham set for summer transfer scrap over Arsenal's Jack
Wilshere
Cherries boss Eddie Howe confirms he wants to make England midfielder's
current loan from the Gunners permanent
The Mirror
BYADRIAN KAJUMBA
22:30, 2 APR 2017

Eddie Howe says he still wants to sign Jack Wilshere from Arsenal in the
summer. Wilshere's prospects of making his current season-long loan at
Howe's Bournemouth permanent appeared in doubt after he lost his starting
place. The England international midfielder has been left out of their
starting line-up for the last four games despite recovering from an ankle
injury. But boss Howe is ready to do battle with West Ham for the
25-year-old, whose Gunners deal expires next summer. "I've always said that
we love Jack and we would love to sign him as a football club, but that
decision will rest with Arsenal, Jack and other people," said Howe. "It's
out of our hands. And he may well see his future as being elsewhere. "He
said when he came that he would totally commit to us for the season and then
in the summer he would sort out his future beyond that."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham given huge boost as striker declares himself fit to return from
long injury lay-off
The striker has been out for four months with a back problem
Football London
BYROB GUEST
05:45, 3 APR 2017

Diafra Sakho has given West Ham a major boost by declaring he is ready to
return to first-team action. The 27-year-old's comeback from a four-month
injury layoff due to an operation on a longstanding back problem comes at a
crucial time for the club. The Hammers are now six points away from the
bottom three after yesterday's 2-1 defeat at Hull and the return of the
striker is a timely boost. Sakho has only appeared twice for the club so far
this season but he is now targeting a return with Arsenal and Swansea City
next on the agenda.
Speaking to the club's official website, the striker said: "When I arrived
in England, I had a back problem which has been troubling me until now. "I
needed a back operation, but I kept saying no. I did finally have one in
December and now it's much better. "I feel I'm ready to play. I've already
asked to play before, but I think the medical team wanted to protect me, so
that I could do a bit more work in the gym and on the training pitch
individually. "I have now resumed training with the first team and want to
play in early April."
The striker's injury lay-off has led to him taking up yoga classes as he
bids to prolong his career for as long as possible. Sakho believes his new
fitness regime can only benefit him in the long run. The Senegal
international said: "My body is my work tool now, so I'm trying to work on
everything that is good for my body and who's to say I won't carry on
playing for another 10 or 12 years?"
"After training I used to head straight home, but now I devote more time to
understanding my body and stretching. "I think it's a good thing. I used to
hate it. I didn't want to do it. African players often head straight home
after training and we don't make time to see what our bodies need. "I think
now is a good starting point."

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Could West Ham lure Michy Batshuayi's fellow Chelsea outcast Kurt Zouma in
double loan deal
HITC
Damien Lucas

West Ham United's interest in Chelsea outcast Michy Batshuayi is well
documented but could they also snare another Blues star struggling for game
time. Slaven Bilic missed out on permanent deal for Belgian last year but
could now be set to land him in swoop from their West London rivals,
according to the likes of The Sun. Batshuayi is yet to start a single
Premier League game but the Blues are believed to be reluctant to let him
leave on a permanent transfer as they feel he may still develop into a
top-class striker. The Hammers had a £31million bid accepted by Marseille
last summer before Chelsea trumped them with a higher offer. Ironically,
despite a dearth of striking talent in their ranks, scoring goals has been
the least of West Ham's problems this season. Their leaky defence is amongst
the worst in the top flight so could the East Londoners bolster both ends of
the pitch with a double loan swoop on Stamford Bridge this summer. That's
because Batshuayi's teammate Kurt Zouma has admitted to BeIN Sports he may
have to look for a loan move in a bid to force his way back into the France
squad in what is a World Cup year. "A loan move ahead of the World Cup? Why
not," Zouma told BeIN Sports. "We will see at the end of the season, but I
am focused on Chelsea. I am confident and I know that I will play. I have
not had a discussions with Antonio Conte about the future."
With 33-year-old Jose Fonte failing to impress since his £8 million January
move from Southampton and Winston Reid injury prone, West Ham need quality
reinforcements at the back. While Bilic waits to see if Academy duo Reece
Oxford and Reece Burke have what it takes to step up to the first team,
Zouma would be a good option in the medium term until the young charges are
ready to establish themselves.

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