Sunday, August 5

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 5th August 2007

West Ham United 2 AS Roma 1
Pre-Season 4th August 2007 Kick-off: 15:00
Venue: Upton Park

West Ham United rounded off their pre-season preparations with an impressive
2-1 victory against Italian giants AS Roma on Saturday. In a hard-fought
encounter at a sun-drenched Upton Park, two goals in the space of three
second half minutes from George McCartney and Dean Ashton gave Alan
Curbishley's men a morale-boosting victory after Ludovic Giuly had put the
visitors into a first-half lead. The Hammers boss had asked for fitness,
performance and an injury-free outcome from his side's final warm-up game
before next week's Premier League curtain-raiser against Manchester City,
and he got all three, along with the added bonus of seeing Ashton fire a
superb winner. The hosts made a bright start and fashioned a handful of
attacking moves early on, but the Italians - led by their talismanic captain
Francesco Totti - quickly began to show their class, and opened the scoring
with a well-worked goal after 13 minutes.
Winger Taddei created some space on the left and cut the ball back for
French playmaker Giuly, who took one touch before sending a superb
right-foot drive beyond Robert Green and into the top corner. Seven minutes
later, Roma came close to making it two, when Giuly skipped down the right
and clipped in a cross that was met by Esposito, whose acrobatic effort
clipped the top of the bar. As the first half wore on, Hammers were made to
work hard by the stylish Romans, who finished runners-up behind Inter Milan
in Serie A last season and will be fancied to progress in next year's
Champions League campaign.
Green was called upon on three occasions to make decent saves before the
break, twice from Taddei and once from Esposito and, as the half-time
whistle blew, the hard-working Hammers would have been grateful for the
opportunity to regroup.
Curbs made two changes at the interval, handing back-up goalkeeper Richard
Wright his Upton Park debut in place of Green, while Bobby Zamora was
replaced by Dean Ashton, who stepped out in front of the Boleyn Ground
faithful for the first time since April 2006 - a fact emphasised by the
standing ovation he received. The 23-year-old striker immediately became the
focal point of the Hammers' attack and, after firing a left-foot shot wide
of the target three minutes in, he went closer on the hour mark with a
rasping 18-yard drive that Curci did well to tip over the bar. Three minutes
later, though, the Roma keeper was finally beaten, and from the most
unlikely of sources. A Freddie Ljungberg corner from the right dropped
invitingly 12 yards out and, as the assembled pack rose to meet it, a
Hammers attacker got there first to plant a powerful header into the roof of
the net. Ashton? Upson? Ferdinand? No, the claret and blue shirt wheeling
away in delight belonged to none other than George McCartney, who seemed
almost as surprised as his team-mates and the 26,425 crowd to have notched
his first goal for the Club. The Irish left-back didn't get to enjoy his
moment in the spotlight for long, though. Just three minutes later, the
resurgent Hammers strode forward on the break, as Mark Noble's searching
pass found Ashton wide on the right. Faced with one defender to beat, the
powerful striker proved he is well and truly on his way back to full fitness
by pulling off a deft step-over and surging past his marker into the box,
before slamming home a low 12-yarder that gave Curci no chance. Not
surprisingly, the cheers that greeted the effort were more suited to an FA
Cup final than a pre-season friendly and, for the manager and his staff
watching from the sidelines, hopefully the first of many similar
celebrations in the coming campaign.
Showing greater stamina than their opponents, who don't kick off their new
Serie A campaign until September, Hammers saw the game out comfortably and
walked off to rousing applause from the satisfied supporters, who will back
in even louder voice next Saturday when Sven Goran Eriksson's men arrive in
town.

Minute-by-minute:

2 - As a loose ball bounces around in the box, the grounded Boa Morte
sustains an accidental kick to the head, causing a delay of two minutes as
the physio and doctor rush on to attend to the winger. Thankfully he is soon
back on his feet and able to continue.

10 - Ljungberg's powerful free-kick from the edge of the penalty area is
punched away by Curci.

13 - GOAL. Roma take the lead, as the ball is cut back to the edge of the
box for Giuly, who tees it up before firing a superb strike past Green into
the top corner. West Ham United 0 AS Roma 1.

20 - Noble curls a free kick over the bar from 20 yards out after a foul on
Bowyer

21 - Giuly's cross from the right is met by an acrobatic effort from
Esposito that clips the top of the bar.


22 - Boa Morte's deep free-kick from the left is met by Upson, whose header
bounces up and over the crossbar.

28 - WHU substitution, Etherington on for Boa Morte.

30 - Totti's threaded pass finds its way through to Taddei, who is denied by
an excellent save from Green.

35 - Green again comes to the rescue, this time tipping a low Taddei effort
round the post after Hammers are caught on the break.

43 - Totti's ball releases Esposito but Green rushes out to push the striker
wide and he can only divert his effort into the side-netting.

45 - De Rossi booked for foul on Ljungberg.

Half-time: West Ham United 0 AS Roma 1.

Second Half:

46 - WHU double substitution, Wright on for Green, Ashton on for Zamora.

46 - Roma substitution, Cassetti on for Kuffour.

48 - A neat move sees Bowyer lay the ball off for Ashton, who fires wide
with his left foot from the edge of the penalty area.

56 - Roma substitution, Brighi on for Esposito.

59 - Ashton almost produces an equaliser, as his fierce left-foot shot is
tipped over the bar by Curci at full stretch.

60 - Roma substitution, Rosi on for Cassetti.

62 - Giuly is released through the middle and rounds Wright, but fires his
effort wide of the target.

63 - GOAL! Hammers draw level from an unlikely source, as Ljungberg's corner
from the right is met by a towering header from left-back George McCartney
that flies past Curci into the roof of the net. West Ham United 1 AS Roma 1.

66 - GOAL! TThe game is turned on its head in the space of three minutes, as
the hosts take the lead thanks to a moment that Hammers fans have been
waiting to see for more than a year. Picking the ball up on the right wing,
Dean Ashton superbly beats his marker before sending a low drive under Curci
from an acute angle, for his first goal at Upton Park since March 2006.


70 - Roma substitution, Vucinic on for Aquilani.

74 - WHU substitution, Pantsil on for Ljungberg.

77 - Roma triple substitution, Barusso on for De Rossi, Nonda on for Totti,
Alvarez on for Taddei.

78 - WHU substitution, Mullins on for Bellamy.

84 - Roma substitution, Pit on for Giuly.

86 - WHU double substitution, Cole on for Bowyer, Gabbidon on for Ferdinand.

90 - Ashton breaks clear on the right but this time his powerful effort is
pushed away by Curci.

Final score: West Ham United 2 AS Roma 1.


West Ham United: Green (Wright 46); Neill, Ferdinand (Gabbidon 86), Upson,
McCartney; Ljungberg (Pantsil 74), Bowyer (Cole 86), Noble, Boa Morte
(Etherington 28); Zamora (Ashton 46), Bellamy (Mullins 78). Subs unused:
Spector, Collins, Walker, Davenport, Reid.

AS Roma: Curci, Panucci, Mexes, Aquilani (Vucinic 70), Totti (Nonda 77),
Taddei (Alvarez 77), Giuly (Pit 84), De Rossi (Barusso 77), Esposito (Brighi
56), Tonetto, Kuffour (Cassetti 46, Rosi 60). Subs unused: Bertagnoli,
Andreolli.

Att: 26,425

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Dyer deal is off, says Curbishley - BBC

West Ham manager Alan Curbishley has said that Kieron Dyer's move from
Newcastle is "definitely off". The two clubs had agreed a fee thought to be
£6m for the 28-year-old midfielder but Curbishley has blamed Newcastle for
the move collapsing. "We made an offer, had it accepted, agreed personal
terms and the player passed a medical," he said. "But it was pulled at the
11th hour by Newcastle and there's not much we can do about that." He added:
"It has never happened to me before. We are disappointed and the player is
very disappointed but it's definitely off."
Dyer is keen to leave the north-east club and move south for "family
reasons" and a move looked set to be completed after Newcastle boss Sam
Allardyce's comments earlier this week. "We've agreed a deal so you would
have thought he will end up where he needs to be in order to solve his
family problems," Allardyce said after his side's 1-0 defeat to Hull in a
friendly. "From our point of view and from his it's a satisfactory result."
The reasons for Newcastle's apparent change of heart are not yet known. They
have signed striker Alan Smith and centre-back Claudio Cacapa in the last
two days. The St James' Park outfit are also close to signing left-back Jose
Enrique from Villarreal, according to the Spanish side.

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Dyer move off, says Curbs - KUMB
Filed: Saturday, 4th August 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

Alan Curbishley has told SkySports that the deal to bring Kieron Dyer to
West Ham United has been canned. The Hammers had agreed a deal worth up to
£5m with Newcastle for the England midfielder, who had also agreed personal
terms. However for reasons unknown the Magpies upped the fee on Friday by
£2m to £7m - which the Hammers have refused to pay. Curbishley, talking
after today's morale-boosting 2-1 win over Roma, told reporters: "We had
agreed a deal with Newcastle and terms with the player, who also passed a
medical. Then at the eleventh hour the move was pulled by Newcastle for
their reasons. There's not much we can do. "The boy is left in limbo a bit;
he was about to come and train with us. The likelyhood is that it will stay
this way. "It's the first time I can remember anything like this
happening."

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West Ham Utd 2 Roma 1 - KUMB
Filed: Saturday, 4th August 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

West Ham have won their final pre-season friendly thanks to second half
goals from George McCartney and Dean Ashton. Alan Curbishley's side
completed a busy pre-season programme with a win over Italian Cup holders -
and Serie A runners-up - Roma at the Boleyn this afternoon, despite being a
goal down at the break. The game - which kicked off around half-an-hour late
due to a number of late arrivals and minor scuffles between rival groups of
fans - had began in lively fashion with a couple of stern challenges from
both sides, whilst a number of late tackles ensured that the match had an
edge not normally associated with a pre-season run-out. Former Barcelona
winger Ludovic Guily - playing through the centre - scored the only goal of
an action-packed first period on 13 minutes to give the Italians a half-time
lead that they just about deserved on balance of play. Robert Green had had
to be at his best to deny Roma a second goal when he saved bravely with his
legs after being left one-on-one with Brazilian midfielder Rodrigo Taddei.
Meanwhile Mauro Esposito also went close when he fired against the woodwork
on the half-hour mark.
The Hammers - although lively in patches - rarely threatened the Roma goal
in the first half although Bobby Zamora and Freddie Ljungberg both created
good opportunities; Ljungberg going closest with a smart 10th minute
free-kick which produced a good save from Roma's Curci. Having been run
ragged in the centre of the park for the first 45 minutes Alan Curbishley
decided to pull Craig Bellamy back to form part of a five-man midfield for
the second half. The new formation proved much more effective and the likes
of Francesco Totti were far less effective after the break as a result.
United's equaliser arrived 18 minutes into the second half when George
McCartney latched on to a Freddie Ljungberg corner to nod home at the far
post. Just three minutes later the Hammers were ahead through half-time
substitute Dean Ashton - Ashton weaving his way in from the right flank
befre driving home across Curci. Due to a string of substitutions in the
final 20 minutes action was limited, and neither side looked like adding to
the score.

West Ham United: Green (Wright 46); Neill, Ferdinand (Gabbiddon 86), Upson,
McCartney; Ljungberg (Pantsil 74), Bowyer (Cole 86), Noble, Boa Morte
(Etherington 25); Zamora (Ashton 46), Bellamy (Mullins 78).

Roma: Curci; Panucci, Kuffour (Cassetti 46) (Rosi 60), Mexes, Tonetto;
Aquilani (Vucinic 70), De Rossi (Barusso 77); Esposito (Brighi 56), Taddei
(Alvarez 77), Giuly (Pit 84); Totti (Nonda 77).

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Spalletti: lucky West Ham -KUMB
Filed: Saturday, 4th August 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

Roma coach Luciano Spalletti has claimed that his side were unlucky to lose
this afternoon's pre-season friendly at the Boleyn. Spalletti - who saw his
side go down 2-1 despite having taken a first-half lead through Ludovic
Guily - insisted that the result was far from a true reflection of the game.
The result was not important but we [still] dominated three quarters of the
game," moaned Spalletti. "Clearly someone who didn't see the 90 minutes will
look at the scoreline and remember the two incidents that allowed West Ham
to win." And on the numerous scuffles and incidents which broke out
throughout a niggly game, he added: "I was glad to see the right aggressive
approach from my men. The fact we are smacking into a strong opponent that
doesn't back down helps players to find that attitude during training and
matches."

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Magpies pull Dyer deal - SNN
Midfielder's Hammers move off
By Mark Buckingham Last updated: 05th August 2007

Newcastle United midfielder Kieron Dyer's move to West Ham United is off.
Dyer appeared set to be reunited with a clutch of his former Newcastle
team-mates at Upton Park after agreeing personal terms. But Hammers boss
Alan Curbishley has told Sky Sports News that the transfer has been 'pulled'
by The Magpies. Curbishley also doubted the prospects of the deal for the
England international being resurrected before the start of the season. "We
agreed a fee with Newcastle and we agreed personal terms with the player,"
Curbishley told Sky Sports News. "The player passed a medical, but at the
11th hour, the 11th-and-a-half hour, it got pulled by Newcastle for their
reasons. "There is not much we can do about it. "The boy has been left in
limbo, obviously. He was just about to come and train with us. "It's been
pulled and the likelihood is it's going to stay that way. "It's the first
time I can remember anything like this happening. It's happened and we have
got to get on with it."

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Joorabchian 'delighted' with Tevez transfer - Soccernet

Carlos Tevez's representative Kia Joorabchian revealed the striker hopes he
will be a Manchester United player for 'a long time to come'. Although the
final paperwork on Tevez's United contract has yet to be completed, the
Argentina star has already passed his United medical and trained with his
new team-mates after West Ham agreed a £2million settlement for the
23-year-old to leave the club. Joorabchian told Sky Sports News: 'We tried
in the last couple of months to do it very quietly and quickly and I'm very
happy, we're all very delighted it has come out to be a victory for
everybody in this case. 'He made it clear he was very happy last year but he
knew the ambition had come now to progress and he's absolutely thrilled to
move on. He's very happy that he left West Ham on a good note. 'And he's
absolutely thrilled now to join Manchester United and hope that will be his
club for a long time to come.'

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Tevez affair symbolises a game without honour - Telegraph
By Patrick Barclay, Sunday Telegraph
Last Updated: 12:09am BST 05/08/07

Let's say you have a £500,000 house with a £100,000 mortgage. You put it on
the market and it attracts a full-price offer. You pocket the £500,000 - and
tell the building society to whistle for their share because you have torn
up the mortgage agreement. Well, if West Ham can try it, why can't we all?
Because, of course, you and I live in the real world.

Having fled football for a few weeks - at a certain age I have finally come
to realise that unless people are actually playing matches in earnest the
game is not even remotely likeable, let alone worth loving - I could hardly
believe that the Carlos Tevez affair (understandably, no one seems too
bothered about the ethics of Javier Mascherano's short spell at West Ham or
his transfer to Liverpool) was still being discussed in terms that insulted
the intelligence.

War-weary newspapers intoned that the contract which brought Tevez to east
London from the Brazilian club Corinthians last summer had been torn up, as
if such a unilateral act could be legitimate, when it hardly needed a court
hearing to determine that Kia Joorabchian and anonymous associates retained
an interest in the player so bleedin' obviously authentic that Manchester
United were negotiating with them rather than the club.

The agreement reached out of court towards the end of last week gives
Joorabchian and company £10 million, conceivably rising to £35 million, and
West Ham a mere £2 million, which Joorabchian convincingly hints is a
facesaver calculated, like so many elements of this long-running farce, to
fool at least some of the people, presumably including the sections of the
press that, to their credit, have kept drawing attention to it over the past
year. In which case the chief beneficiaries are undoubtedly the Premier
League, under whose auspices this extraordinarily sustained masterclass in
maladministration has been conducted. They walk away from it with the air of
bemused bystanders.

If football were politics, Richard Scudamore, the Premier League's able and
affable chief executive, would have been put under pressure to resign long
ago. But football at England's highest level no longer so much as genuflects
towards such concepts as honour and fairness. So how could Scudamore and his
colleagues have been expected fiercely to uphold them? Scudamore's job, at
which he excels, is to establish a measure of coherence in the organisation
and make a lot of money and, to give him his due, he often goes beyond that
in being sensitive to sporting criteria. For him to have gone in such
circumstances would just have made matters worse. What the game does need,
nevertheless, is a bit of honest reality, however belated. For the affair
has not really been laid to rest, as Kevin McCabe, the chairman of Sheffield
United, has stated in arguing that the offence for which West Ham were fined
rather than docked points was not the only one they committed.

To recap: West Ham, with Tevez at the forefront of their team both before
and after they were fined £5.5 million for breaking Premier League
regulations, escaped relegation at the expense of Sheffield United. It then
became apparent, however (as if everyone did not know), that West Ham's
assurances that they had terminated the contract in question, a condition of
their being allowed to keep fielding the Argentine, were worthless. Thus
arose a second and inevitably more serious offence against League
regulations, for which the only reasonable punishment could be West Ham's
relegation and the reinstatement of Sheffield United.

McCabe also notes that a revised contract was drawn up for Tevez by the
current West Ham regime, headed by Eggert Magnusson, and observes: "One of
the reasons why West Ham were fined and not docked points was that it was
all done by the old regime and that the new regime under Eggert Magnusson
had clean hands. The whole thing is a shambles and a disgrace to the
national game and we are weighing up our options.'' But in football, sad to
say - and as the Joorabchian case has most recently demonstrated - a dispute
seldom goes to a fully just and transparent conclusion.

Perhaps, too, the South Yorkshire club acknowledge in their hearts that West
Ham's squad belong in the Premiership while theirs would just clutter it up
the place, especially now Neil Warnock has quit as manager and Phil Jagielka
been sold to Everton. I should certainly rate West Ham's chances of making a
contribution to the division higher than Sheffield United's. But that is
hardly the point and what I should like most, as we contemplate the
Premiership season that kicks off with a few relegation battles on Saturday
(most of the big boys await televised encounters on Sunday), is for football
to stop living lies. No one has put this one better than Warnock in his
forthcoming book, as serialised last week in The Sun: "Carlos Tevez,
football's equivalent of a murderer out on bail, scored the goal that kept
West Ham up and sent us down. So much for the integrity of the Premier
League.''

There is likely to be increasing discussion of club ownership, too, as the
number of foreigners in charge edges towards half the Premiership. Should
the American Stan Kroenke pursue his interest in Arsenal to a successful
conclusion, 10 of the 20 clubs (including the Irish-owned Sunderland) would
be in overseas hands. It would also complete a clean sweep of the top four
and the most significant factor is that all of the clubs but Fulham have
been taken over in the period of little over two years since the Glazers
acquired Manchester United. At the current rate of overseas acquisition it
could be only a season or two before Premier League policy is being dictated
from abroad, mainly across the Atlantic, where a distinguishing principle of
top-level organised sport is the absence of promotion and relegation - and
who then will defend the characteristics that have underpinned our national
game for a century and more?

Yet there are more profound issues involved in the way the game is going:
the ethical acceptability, for example, of Manchester City's purchase by
Thaksin Shinawatra, the Thai former prime minister accused of human-rights
abuses. I find it slightly odd that Shinawatra, whose alleged crimes include
the ordering of thousands of drug dealers to be shot (far from the worst
idea I've ever heard, even if his PR people have denied it), is subjected to
infinitely more scrutiny than Roman Abramovich, whose obscene profiteering
figured prominently in the appalling political tragedy of Russia's botched
transition to capitalism.

And what of the Glazers? Are even they playing the game? They are being very
clever in raising ticket prices by several times the rate of inflation to
service their self-incurred debts - but once more the success of Sir Alex
Ferguson's Manchester United is buttressing private fortunes more than the
club, for all the impressive declarations emanating from Ferguson's
assistant, Carlos Queiroz, about United's further investment in young
players such as Nani and Anderson from Portugal: "Our aim is to school
players so that, ahead of being players, they are artists who bring
innovation, magic, creativity and fantasy. We are building a group to
sustain success for the next 10 years and United have to be an opera as well
as winners.''

It is all very well, exciting and gratifying even, until you listen to the
plaintive voice of Sir Trevor Brooking, who, as the Football Association's
director of football development, is charged with ensuring that the global
boom benefits the game's homeland. "How many strikers have we got coming
though?'' he asks, meaning young English ones. "Not enough in depth. How
many left-sided players have we got coming through? Not enough. How many
creative, individual players who can go past people?'' How many Nanis and
Andersons, he might have added, amid his plea for serious investment by the
professional game in its, and England's, seedcorn. Poor Brooking. The
chairmen are only half-listening to him now. What chance will he have of a
hearing when the likes of Abramovich, Shinawatra and the various Americans
have their feet firmly under the table and the last notion of an obligation
to Englishness is abandoned?

www.telegraph.co.uk/barclay


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Robert Green: West Ham 'spy' failed
By Patrick Barclay, Sunday Telegraph
Last Updated: 1:20am BST 05/08/2007

West Ham had a saboteur in their dressing room last season, the source of
the continual leaks that left the club on the cusp of foundering. Robert
Green, the West Ham goalkeeper, does not know the identity of the
perpetrator. All he is sure of is that it cannot be allowed to happen again.
"The stuff that was getting out was very strange," Green said. "It was
obviously coming from within because it was happening every week. It wasn't
one person listening in at a changing room door. It was from somewhere
within. I'm sure now that this season has come about it will change."
The dressing room is supposedly a privileged forum, where managers and
players can say exactly what they think of each other. It is a bit like the
Cabinet only, perhaps, more civilised. Green was the victim of one such leak
himself, when it was reported that he had rowed with manager Alan Curbishley
in the aftermath of the 6-0 defeat at Reading on New Year's Day. "That was a
low point for me, that game," Green said. "Later on I went to see the
manager and he said to me, 'What's this about us having an argument?' It was
news to me as I try not to read the papers - especially after losing 6-0. "I
mean we're all professionals and passionate about the game. Of course the
manager gave us what-for when we came in after that performance. But there
was nothing personal directed against me. The stuff that was getting out was
very strange. "It was one of those bizarre things, and you start thinking
'who said that? No one really knows. Whoever it was looking at the paper was
generally mystified as to how it got there. You couldn't start to think who
would do that."
The repercussions of these repeated betrayals could be seen in the
despairing demeanour of Curbishley, who was having a difficult enough time
getting his players to do their jobs on the field with being undermined with
stories of dressing room unrest. "The stuff going on around the club, off
the field, the stuff coming out of the dressing room mystified him as much
as everybody," Green said. "It didn't break him but it could have broken a
lot of people."
Having taken over from Alan Pardew in December, Curbishley found himself
dealing with the melodrama that is inevitable at West Ham, even before the
scandal of Carlos Tevez's illegal registration broke. His captain, Nigel
Reo-Coker, had been the subject of hate mail from fans who blamed him for
the club's abject form and it was of little surprise that he left this
summer, joining Aston Villa for £8 million. Reo-Coker believes he was "hung
out to dry" by the club.

Marlon Harewood, Paul Konchesky, Yossi Benayoun and Teddy Sheringham have
also left as West Ham reportedly made 14 players available for sale at the
end of the season. Curbishley's determination to have a thorough overhaul of
personnel - including the backroom staff - makes all the more sense after
hearing Green's account. Still Curbishley is not beyond forgiving
indiscretion. Anton Ferdinand will be an important part of the squad this
year despite going to South Carolina to celebrate his 22nd birthday, having
told Curbishley he was off to visit his sick grandmother on the Isle of
Wight. That lack of respect was something that Curbishley was not used to
and Green believes that, after 14 years of relatively sedate work at the
Valley, the intensity of the West Ham job came as a surprise. "I think he
walked into something that I don't think he fully anticipated, with the
frenzy surrounding the club," Green said. "He was used to press conferences
of about 12 people at Charlton, the same people every week. You come to West
Ham and it's a media frenzy."
Curbishley has survived and grown stronger. A series of ambitious signings,
Kieron Dyer may become the latest - has instilled a hunger for success and
Curbishley has reintroduced a code of discipline. "There's a whole new
feel," Green said. "He's got his own backroom staff and he is bringing his
own ideas and way to train. The players he's brought in are used to winning.
In that respect it will be a more solid, professional outfit. As a manager
and person he looks more comfortable, building up his team now rather than
working with someone else's. "It's a different regime. You get the feel that
everyone knows their job. It's a lot more structured. I'd be very surprised
if there were leaks from the dressing room this season."
Team-mate Mark Noble, the emerging England under-21 midfield prospect,
agrees that West Ham will prove to be an entirely different entity this
season, far from last season's perpetual troubles, particularly now the
protracted Tevez saga has reached a conclusion. Noble said: "Carlos is a
great player and above all, a great person, meaning it was a credit to play
with him. But with all the new players we've now got here at the club, it's
important that we improve on last season's showing and really push on in the
league." "The yo-yo days are certainly over at West Ham. Last year, everyone
thought we were gone but in typical West Ham spirit we dug in deep and
proved that we deserve our place in the Premier League. Now, the sky's the
limit here."

Additional reporting by Matt Lawless

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Newcastle Can Keep Dyer -West Ham Til I Die
August 4th, 2007

It looks like Kieron Dyer's move south has been scuppered by the Newcastle
chairman, who has tried to extort another £2 million out of West Ham. I hope
Eggert Magnusson stands firm and doesn't fall for this con trick. Dyer is
very injury prone, and while he might be an England international, £8
million is way over the top for him, especially as the two clubs had already
agreed a fee of £6 million. People seem to think that at West Ham money is
now growing on trees. That impression needs to be dispelled.

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Winner Ashton ready to take Tevez mantle - This Is London
04.08.07

Dean Ashton put his injury torment behind him and showed West Ham can live
without Carlos Tevez by scoring the match-winner against Roma. Ashton
suffered heartbreak last August when he broke an ankle on the eve of his
first senior call-up for the England team. The injury ruled him out for the
whole of last season and the £7 million striker questioned whether he would
be able to play again. But, after working tirelessly though the summer,
Ashton has regained full fitness and is determined to regain the form which
made him one of the best strikers in the English game. Roma took the lead on
14 minutes when former Barcelona midfielder Ludovic Giuly fired a shot past
Robert Green into the corner of the net. But West Ham bounced back and
scored an equaliser on 64 minutes. Freddie Ljungberg's corner picked out
George McCartney, who rose the highest to head the ball past Roma keeper
Gianluca Curci.
Ashton then showed his class when he netted the second after 67 minutes. The
striker skipped past the Roma defence and drilled the ball through the legs
of Curci. Tevez became a folk hero at Upton Park last season for helping the
club retain their Premiership status, but Ashton clearly has all the
attributes to become an even bigger hero with West Ham supporters. Following
a season of turmoil last season, manager Alan Curbishley is determined to
stabilise the club in the forthcoming campaign and make them a force to be
reckoned with again in the top flight. The Tevez affair has been settled
with his long-awaited move to Manchester United and the dark clouds appear
to have been lifted over the East End of London. Curbishley has stamped his
authority on the club this summer, bringing in his own backroom staff and
implanting new ideas on the training ground. Chairman Eggert Magnusson has
also shown his passion towards the club by spending £24m on new players in
the close season. Big things are expected of Craig Bellamy, Scott Parker and
Ljungberg, who all have a hunger to show they can still compete with the
Premiership's best. The club suffered a major blow when French midfielder
Julien Faubert ruptured his Achilles tendon on their pre-season tour to
Austria and is expected to be ruled out until the start of 2008. Curbishley
acted quickly by bringing in the vastly-experienced Ljungberg from Arsenal
and will be hoping the Sweden captain can reproduce the magic he showed
under Arsene Wenger during a nine-year spell with the north London side.
Bellamy, who has a tarnished reputation after a controversial season at
Liverpool, will also find himself under the microscope and will be
determined to let his football do the talking as he prepares for another new
challenge. Bellamy and Ljungberg made their first appearances at Upton Park
in yesterday's last pre-season game. But there are growing fears that Parker
will miss the big kick-off against Manchester City next weekend because of a
knee injury suffered in Austria.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Shorey rejects Royals deal - SSN [ possibly NON -WHU , possibly WHU ]
Star declines new deal
By Peter O'Rourke Last updated: 04th August 2007

Reading boss Steve Coppell has revealed Nicky Shorey has declined the chance
to extend his contract. The Royals have been holding talks with Shorey in a
bid to tie him down to a new long-term deal to ward off interest from rival
clubs. The likes of West Ham and Newcastle have been credited with an
interest in Shorey following his impressive season in the Premier League
last term. Shorey, who still has two years to run on his current contract,
has turned down the chance to extend his deal as he wants to keep his
options open. Coppell is not worried about the contract situation of Shorey
and team-mate Leroy Lita, who has been in discussions over a new deal.
"Nicky Shorey is going to stick with his current situation and there are no
new contracts imminent," said Coppell.
"Both have two years left so it is not of immediate concern to us. We are
realistic about the situation." Coppell also revealed that he may make one
final foray into the transfer market with Glenn Little struggling with the
Achilles problem. "I'm not anticipating making any more signings but we have
been in the situation throughout the summer that if someone became available
that we liked then we would do something about it," added Coppell.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ashton's finishing touch lifts Hammers
West Ham 2 - 1 Roma (friendly)
McCartney 64, Ashton 68; Guily 13
Richard Gillis
Sunday August 5, 2007
The Observer


West Ham may have had a more interesting close season than they would have
liked, but the long queues for season tickets, which delayed the start of
this match, are testimony to the rising expectations in east London. Before
the game, children and their dads looked through the bars of the players'
car park, catching a glimpse of some of the summer signings. Alan Curbishley
has spent big in the hope of avoiding the need for the final-day escape act
of last season. In come Scott Parker, Craig Bellamy, Freddie Ljungberg and
the Frenchman Julienne Flaubert from Bordeaux.

The first team squad were also reacquainted with Dean Ashton - starting as a
sub here - who missed the whole of last season because of injury. But there
was no Kieron Dyer due to the brinkmanship of the Newcastle United board
and, after taking up yards of newsprint in recent weeks, the name of Carlos
Tevez merited just one mention in the match programme squad list.
'We've been grabbing the back-page headlines recently,' said Curbishley.
'We'd prefer to be on the back pages for football.' Any further interest in
Dyer seems unlikely, as Curbishley distanced himself from the player and the
event of Friday evening, when the Magpies upped the price at the last
moment.

It felt like being gazumped, said Curbishley: 'But nobody else bought him.
We made an offer. It was accepted, a fee was agreed and the player passed
the medical. The deal was then pulled by Newcastle. We're disappointed and
so is the player. It is definitely off as far as I am concerned.'

The team put out by Curbishley yesterday reflected a pre-season dogged by
injuries. No Parker, who is 50-50 for next week, and no Flaubert, who is
likely to miss the first half of the season. Their absence was felt
throughout the first half, which was dominated by Roma, who came here
following a disappointing pre-season tour to Germany. However, they had
sufficient class and invention to pose questions all over the pitch.

In the third minute, the shirt-sleeved crowd were treated to a move in which
one of their new men played to type. A Ljungberg dart down the right was
found by Bellamy, who bustled into the area for the return. It was a rare
glimpse of the energy that makes the Swede such a positive force when fit.
Here, he was a marginal figure and when he took his leave after 75 minutes,
West Ham fans were left to wonder which version of the player they have
bought.

Francesco Totti - the Roma captain, who won the European Golden Boot for his
25 goals last season - strolled through the gaps in front of the West Ham
back four, creating uncertainty whenever he was in possession. Roma took the
lead after 13 minutes thanks to a crisp shot from the edge of the area from
Ludovic Guily and it was only the excellent Robert Green, in the West Ham
goal, who prevented further scoring in the first half.

West Ham came back after the break and in the 64th minute George McCartney
rose above a crowd of players to head home from 10 yards. This was added to
by Ashton, on at half time for Bobby Zamora, who struck a firm shot low
between goalkeeper Gianluca Curci's legs. A mass of substitutions followed
and the game drifted to a tame conclusion.

Upton Park 26,425

WEST HAM Green; Neill, Ferdinand, Upson, McCartney; Ljungberg, Bowyer,
Noble, Boa Morte; Zamora, Bellamy Subs used Wright, Gabbidon, Pantsil, Cole,
Etherington, Ashton, Mullins ROMA Curci; Panucci, Mexes, Aquilani, Totti,
Taddei, Giuly, De Rossi, Esposito, Tonetto, Kuffour Subs used Vucinic,
Nonda, Alvarez, Pit, Barusso, Brighi, Cassetti, Rosi

Referee H Webb

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Curbs: We tried to keep Tevez
tribalfooball.com - August 04, 2007

West Ham boss Alan Curbishley insists they did all they could to convince
Carlos Tevez to resist a move to Manchester United. He said: "I'm
disappointed he didn't want to come back to us. We tried but he decided his
future is elsewhere. So all I can say is thanks for what he did. "I don't
believe he was the only player here last year but obviously had a big say in
things. "He knew we were keen for him to stay, but once Manchester United
came in he decided his future was elsewhere."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ashton continues scoring for West Ham
tribalfooball.com - August 04, 2007

Dean Ashton continued his superb preseason form by netting the winner for
West Ham against Roma yesterday. Curbishley said: "He must be so happy the
way it's going for him. It has been a long year for him but he now comes in
on Monday morning and says 'I have thrown a marker down, it's up to you to
decide whether you are going to pick me'." Scott Parker is described as only
50-50 to make the opening day clash with Manchester City next week.
Curbishley said: "I was expecting him back by now but if he doesn't make the
first game he should be OK for the second."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ashton shows glimpse of class in return - The Times
West Ham 2 Roma 1Rob Maul at Upton Park

EXPECTATIONS that West Ham United can mount a significant Premier League
threat this season, thus avoiding another prolonged battle with relegation,
increased yesterday with a morale-boosting victory over AS Roma, one of the
aristocrats of Italian football.

Against considerably talented, albeit unfit, opponents – the Serie A season
does not start for another three weeks – the Hammers completed their
preseason programme with their fourth victory in eight matches. At times,
though, this did not seem much like a friendly, given the number of cynical
fouls and aggressive, full-blooded challenges, but it was the manner of the
performance, particularly after half-time, and the rehabilitation of striker
Dean Ashton, which would have been encouraging for Alan Curbishley.

"Deano has worked ever so hard, perhaps two months more than the others, to
come back fully fit," the manager said. "I had never seen him play or even
train before. The last three weeks have been an insight."

If this was the closest resemblance to West Ham's strongest first-team
lineup – although Ashton started on the bench and midfielder Scott Parker is
currently "50/50" for the opening match with Manchester City – then,
perhaps, Curbishley will be finally judged on what he has signed and not
inherited from Alan Pardew.

"We made an offer [£6m], had it accepted, agreed personal terms, the player
passed a medical and it was pulled at the eleventh hour by Newcastle,"
revealed Curbishley. "There's not much we can do about it. It is definitely
off."

With Carlos Tevez's protracted transfer to Manchester United set to be
resolved shortly, Curbishley admitted that it has been a testing summer for
the club. "Every day we were on the back pages. I am disappointed that
[Tevez] didn't want to come back to us. I spoke to him and the club have
been in dialogue. Once United came in, he decided his future was elsewhere."


The day began badly for the hosts as Ludovic Giuly guided a shot beyond the
powerless Robert Green on 13 minutes. Roma's attacking prowess was superb to
watch in the first half with Francesco Totti the principal architect.

However, the last time that Roma played in England they lost 7-1 to
Manchester United at Old Trafford in the quarter-final second leg of the
Champions League, and the defensive frailties that plagued them then
returned in the second half. From Freddie Ljungberg's corner, defender
George McCartney leapt highest in a crowded penalty area to direct a
powerful header home.

Ashton, who did not play last season after breaking his ankle while training
with the national team, was introduced at half-time and evidence of his
burgeoning class came shortly before the hour when he received the ball on
the right-hand wing, skipped past one feeble challenge and then slid the
ball through the legs of Curci. "It has been a long year for him but he has
a thrown down a marker [to the rest of the team]," said Curbishley.

Star man: Dean Ashton(West Ham United)

West Ham United:Green (Wright, ht), Neill, Ferdinand (Gabbidon, 86min),
Upson, McCartney, Ljungberg (Pantsil, 73min), Bowyer (Cole, 86min), Noble,
Boa Morte (Etherington, 28min), Zamora (Ashton, ht), Bellamy (Mullins,
78min)

AS Roma:Curci, Panucci, Mexes, Kuffour (Cassetti, ht; Rosi, 59min]),
Tonetto, Esposito (Brighi, 55min), De Rossi (Apimah Barusso, 76min),
Aquilani (Vucinic, 69min), Ferrante Taddei (Alvarez, 76min), Giuly (Florin
Pitt, 84min), Totti (Nonda, 76min)

Scorers: West Ham:McCartney 63, Ashton 66 AS Roma:Giuly 13

Referee:H Webb Attendance:26,425

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 2 Roma 1: Dyer's Hammers deal 'definitely off' - The Independent
By Ronald Atkin
Published: 05 August 2007

The news for West Ham from this niggly friendly is that Deano is back.
Having missed last season with a broken ankle, Dean Ashton thumped the
impressive, brute force winner which destroyed Roma's earlier, classy
domination. It was his third in the last three pre-season games.

"He has thrown down a marker about his intentions", said manager Alan
Curbishley, who confirmed that the proposed signing of Kieron Dyer is
"definitely off", blaming Newcastle's upping of the fee after terms had been
agreed. "That has never happened to me before, that the clubs have agreed a
fee, only for it to be pulled," he said.

Curbishley was pleased with the way his team battled back against a Roma
side who, for the first hour, offered disciplined Serie A stuff in defence
and Francesco Totti-inspired attacking genius.

West Ham's only injury concern was over Luis Boa Morte, who was kicked in
the head in the opening minute and exited feeling dizzy before half an hour
had gone. The more serious incident involved Ludovic Giuly. He took
exception to the close attentions of Lee Bowyer and retaliated with a wild
kick which failed to connect. Referee Howard Webb summoned the two players
and captains to explain that this was a friendly and declined to punish
anyone, although yellow cards were subsequently shown to Rodrigo Taddei and
Daniele De Rossi as Roma continued to dish it out.

That there was no need to mix it was shown by the quality of Roma's 13th
minute goal. Taddei slid a low ball across the edge of the penalty area and
Giuly thumped it first time past Robert Green, who saved a certain second by
sticking out his left boot to deny Taddei when the winger was through.

Ashton's appearance after half-time was wildly welcomed and he was
immediately involved, seeing a piledriver thrust over by Gianluca Curci.
West Ham equalised just past the hour when George McCartney rose
impressively to Freddie Ljungberg's corner to strike a clean header into the
roof of goal. Two minutes later came Ashton's thumping contribution,
executed as he cut in past one defender and drove the ball through Curci's
legs.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Committed Tevez has bright future at United - The Times
Brian Glanville

FOR THOSE of us who frequently watched Carlos Tevez playing last season for
West Ham United, after he was so belatedly selected, it is hard to believe
he will be anything but a salient success with Manchester United. Not only
because he has such a splendid repertoire of gifts, technique, flair, pace
and courage, but because he is irrepressibly committed.

Nothing seems to demoralise him during a game. Perhaps he has not reached
the apex of international football, having somewhat mixed fortunes both in
the recent Copa America in Venezuela, and for Argentina in last year's World
Cup in Germany. But there is no doubt that, whether or not they have been
lucky to stay up in the Premiership, West Ham would never have done so
without Tevez.

Like Diego Maradona, the outstanding Argentine footballer of recent years,
Tevez comes from the back streets of Buenos Aires, in his case from a
notoriously violent slum. If he does not possess — and who does? — the
spectacular brilliance of Maradona, he has the same colossal commitment, no
doubt forged in early years when both had to battle for success. Though in
Maradona's case, it came a good deal earlier, as a mere 16-year-old.

In retrospect, it is almost inexplicable that both West Ham's managers last
season, first Alan Pardew, then Alan Curbishley, should have been, initially
at least, so reluctant to use Tevez. In Pardew's case, the motivation seemed
to be his displeasure that both Tevez and his fellow Argentine World Cup
international, Javier Mascherano, were, so to speak, foisted on him and the
team, threatening, as he may have felt, to disrupt its balance should he use
them.

By the time Curbishley took over, though under Pardew West Ham had achieved
the first leg of what transpired to be a sensational double in the
Premiership against Arsenal, things looked pretty bleak. Yet weeks went by
before Curbishley at last decided to make use of Tevez, and those of us who
were there will not forget how the tides turned when the Hammers found
themselves at home to Manchester City at the turn of the year, beaten
impotently in a thoroughly mediocre game. Early in the second half the West
Ham crowd, long connoisseurs of good football, voiced a persistent chorus,
chanting Tevez's name. After 55 minutes, Curbishley at last conceded, and
brought on the Argentine.

Almost at once, his sheer determination and ubiquitousness galvanised what
had previously been a flaccid team. Neither he nor any other Hammer could
score, but he came closer than anyone on 77 minutes when, exchanging passes
with the Israeli international, Yossi Benayoun, he cut in from the left to
send a shot whistling over the bar. But the Hammers were doomed to a 1-0
defeat.

Two days later, again inexplicably and surely self-destructively, Curbishley
left Tevez out of a team that played and wretchedly failed at Reading. After
the Manchester City game, he had remarked almost plaintively: "They're
calling for Tevez, who's not scored!" At Reading, Tevez never got off the
bench and West Ham, beaten 6-0, never got off the ground.

One heard the excuse that by half-time the game was lost and won, and there
was little point in bringing on Tevez, which blatantly begged the question
of what might have happened to improve the abject display had a never
demoralised Tevez been on the park from the first, to inject some heart and
determination into the rest of the team.

Shortly after the Reading debacle came an FA Cup tie at home to Brighton, an
easy 3-0 win in which Tevez, increasingly incisive as the game went on, set
up a goal for young Mark Noble with a deft flick, driving the ball across
from the right to create another. Once, the typical skill and determination,
he held off no fewer than four defenders before having a shot saved.

In the week before West Ham sensationally beat Arsenal at the Emirates,
Curbishley opined that Tevez had been playing too deep. In a match utterly
dominated by Arsenal, where only the superb goalkeeping of Robert Green kept
West Ham afloat, Tevez was tirelessly active. In first-half stoppage time,
he played the ball back to the defender Lucas Neill, whose long cross from
the right was lobbed in by Bobby Zamora for the one goal of the game. Later,
of course, breathlessly at the 11th hour, came Tevez's goal at Old Trafford,
where West Ham saved their skins.

At the 2006 World Cup, the Argentina coach Jose Pekerman didn't use Tevez in
the opening group game, narrowly won against the resilient Ivory Coast. When
Serbia & Montenegro were thrashed 6-0 in the second game, he came on only as
a 59th-minute substitute, to score his only goal of the tournament. But he
played the whole game against Holland as a lone striker, and both teams
seemed happy with a goalless draw.

In the next match against Mexico in Leipzig, arguably the best of the whole
competition, Tevez was a 76th-minute substitute, played on through extra
time with his habitual energy, Pekerman gave him a full game against Germany
in the quarter- finals, but after a 1-1 draw, Argentina went out on
penalties.

In the recent Copa America, this time under the aegis of veteran coach Alfio
Basile, Tevez was largely firing blanks. His one goal — among the four
Argentina scored against the USA in their opening qualifier — came after his
introduction as a substitute in the 79th minute. A full game against
Paraguay, beaten narrowly 1-0, and 78 minutes in the semi-final when Mexico,
previously resourceful, were beaten easily 3-0.

Alas, it was a false dawn for Argentina. In the final, where Tevez played
the full game and was booked on 79 minutes, his team mysteriously collapsed,
humiliated 3-0 by their eternal rivals, Brazil.

Some wonder how Tevez will combine with Wayne Rooney who, when on form,
shows much of the same skill, persistence and drive, though he is a good
deal more dangerous than little Tevez in the air. Will they, perhaps,
encroach on one another's space? It seems more likely they will find a modus
vivendi, especially if Tevez opts to wander to the right wing. Above all,
despite his manifold talents, he is a team man rather th<NO1>e<NO>an a prima
donna, always ready to run; and with unusual purpose.

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Saturday, August 4

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] -4th August 2007

Dyer deal dead duck? - KUMB
Filed: Friday, 3rd August 2007
By: Gordon Thrower

The proposed transfer of Kieron Dyer to the Boleyn is in doubt. Reports
tonight are suggesting that the deal to bring Lee Bowyer's former
sparring-partner Dyer to the Boleyn has stalled. Although announcements
made earlier this week suggested that a fee had been agreed with Newcastle
and that the move would go through once personal terms had been agreed, news
agencies are now suggesting that there may be a problem between the clubs
concerning the fee.

More on this as it comes in....

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers keento avoid the spotlight
Jon Carter - Soccernet

You could be forgiven for thinking that West Ham only had one player this
summer. Such has been the media frenzy over Argentine Carlos Tevez's move to
Manchester United, the rest of the Hammers' squad have been free to enjoy
their pre-season relatively free of the spotlight.

In fact, the Hammers have been pretty busy in the summer transfer window,
bringing in Freddie Ljungberg, Julien Faubert, Craig Bellamy, Scott Parker
and Richard Wright for a combined fee of nearly £25million, but with one
player dominating the headlines, the new arrivals have taken a backseat.

The summer spending alone could be balanced against the sale of the
highly-rated Tevez, although anyone who has followed the transfer saga since
the Argentine first expressed his desire to quit Upton Park will know that
it is not that simple.

Questions over the ownership of the player have led to delays, court cases
and arguments between the clubs and Kia Joorabchian's MSI company. Nothing
is certain, although the Premier League may eventually sanction the transfer
if West Ham receive an adequate transfer fee for the player. Frankly, a long
drawn out affair is the last thing that the club need.

With a dismal 2006/07 season still lingering in the memory, West Ham will at
least take solace from the incredible run of form in the latter stages of
the league that saw them escape relegation.

Seven wins in their final nine games, coupled with the impressive
goalscoring of Tevez, made the Hammers look like a top flight team again.
Having been in the bottom three since December, it wasn't a moment too soon
and manager Alan Curbishley can at least cite the resilience of his players
as a major positive ahead of the new season.

Some high-profile exits, in Carlos Tevez to Manchester United, former
captain Nigel Reo-Coker and striker Marlon Harewood to Aston Villa and Yossi
Benayoun to Liverpool, have seen a number of players leave the club so far.

Reo-Coker was made a scapegoat for the club's failings last term, and while
the England Under 21 midfielder has a lot of potential, he did not live up
to expectations and West Ham can be well pleased with an £8.5million fee.
Similarly, at least £3million for a striker, in Harewood, who only managed
three goals last season can be seen as an excellent piece of business.

More of a loss will be the little Israeli maestro Benayoun. Unable to resist
the temptation of playing for a club like Liverpool, the diminutive
midfielder has already proved himself to be an excellent top flight player
since his arrival at the club in 2005.

Without his flair and creativity in midfield, West Ham may struggle to make
chances and much will depend on the young Mark Noble to fill his boots.
Indeed Noble was a rare shining light in an otherwise dour season for the
Hammers last campaign and will certainly be looking to carry his impressive
form into the new season.

A player who Curbishley will see as a new signing, having spent nearly the
whole of last season injured, Dean Ashton, will certainly be key to the
Hammers' chances of success this year.

One of the most impressive young strikers in the top flight, Ashton sat out
with a recurring ankle injury last campaign, but has already proved that he
is back on track in pre-season by scoring a cracking 30 yard drive against
Leyton Orient.

Often dropping back to link up play, Ashton is a key component of the
Hammers' team and was sorely missed, despite the impact of Tevez. Boasting a
great first touch and significant aerial threat, Ashton will be pushing to
regain the form that nearly saw him capped for England before he was injured
and his return can only mean that his club benefits.

The return of the youngster may also benefit Curbishley's other summer
signings. Providing a useful foil for the pace of Craig Bellamy, Ashton has
the skill to compliment the Welshman's game and, after a fairly unsuccessful
spell with Liverpool, Bellamy will be keen to show that he is a dangerous
prospect for Premier League defences again.

Scott Parker, another who has a lot to prove in the league after
disappointing spells with Chelsea and Newcastle, could also benefit from
Ashton's link up play. He will be glad to be back under the wing of former
Charlton boss Curbishley and if anyone can get the best out of the verbally
challenged midfielder, then it is Curbs. He may struggle to acclimatise new
French signing Julien Faubert, who had the temerity to expect that a
transfer to Rangers had already gone through before being given an ultimatum
to sign for the Hammers, but in Parker, Curbishley has a future captain.

Completing an odd collection of players unwanted by their previous clubs are
Freddie Ljungberg and Richard Wright. Ljungberg, who many believe has his
best years behind him, will replace Benayoun on the wing and will bring some
grit and determination to the Hammers' midfield; but the acquisition of
Wright remains a gamble.

Having released former Manchester United stopper Roy Carroll at the end of
the season, Curbishley has undoubtedly bought Wright for his top flight
experience and contentment to warm a seat on the bench behind Robert Green
all season. Attracted by the fact that Wright was available for free,
Curbishley opted to give the former Arsenal 'keeper a chance at Upton Park,
although how much of an impact he will have remains to be seen.

In addition to Curbishley's new signing, the players brought to the club in
the January transfer window will also be keen to impress more than they did
in the second half of last season. The likes of Lucas Neill, Matthew Upson,
Calum Davenport and Luis Boa Morte were all hindered by injuries and failed
to make an impression, despite a collective £20million being spent on them.

With the upheaval that comes from a takeover and the introduction of
big-name players like Tevez and Javier Mascherano, one can certainly see
where West Ham were distracted last season. Too often concerned with off the
field actions the disruption caused by the Tevez tranfsfer before the
2007/08 season doesn't look good.

Losing a player of his calibre is be a blow for the side, although they will
be able to point to the return of Ashton as a silver lining. West Ham's
signings should guarantee that they avoid the relegation fight this year.

Without a constant barrage of media attention West Ham have the potential to
do well, although anything above mid-table would be impressive given the
year that they have had. Once the Tevez transfer is complete, the club's new
signings will be key to success, although another injury to Dean Ashton and
the Hammers may find themselves in trouble and back in the spotlight again.


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Carlos Tevez to lead Man Utd's foursome - Telegraph
By Don Howe
Last Updated: 1:15am BST 04/08/2007

Cristiano Ronaldo, Wayne Rooney, Ryan Giggs and soon Carlos Tevez - a
foursome that will be enough to thrill spectators and strike fear into the
hearts of defenders throughout the Premiership next season. Ronaldo, Rooney
and Giggs are all brilliant at running at defenders and in Tevez they will
find they have a kindred spirit and that augurs well for Manchester United
both on the home and European fronts. That quartet's dribbling ability could
well prove to be one of the main talking points of the season. Sir Alex
Ferguson and his No 2, Carlos Queiroz, place tremendous value on that skill,
particularly the Portuguese coach, and will be encouraging Tevez to pick
possession and frighten the life out of their opponents.

After initially struggling with his surroundings last season at West Ham, we
eventually saw the best of Tevez towards the end of the campaign and the
priceless goal he scored at Old Trafford to keep his club up clearly left a
lasting impression on Sir Alex.

It was a trademark goal that encapsulated everything that is good about
Tevez's game. He was determined, brave, showed excellent close control as
well as coolness in front of goal as Edwin van der Sar loomed large.

I would imagine that Tevez will be asked to spearhead the United attack in
the same way that Henrik Larsson did so successfully while on loan last
season.

That will suit Rooney down to the ground because I think that he prefers to
play in a more withdrawn role - some 15 yards or so deeper than his fellow
striker, an intelligent operator whose runs will create space for his
colleague to exploit.

However, their positions won't be fixed ones. Rooney and Tevez will be given
licence to swap roles when they're failing to make in-roads - in a similar
way to Giggs and Ronaldo swapping wings. That fluidity is part of United's
modus operandi.

That's why I don't think that Sir Alex will have a formation set in stone
although I would imagine he'd go for a 4-2-4 formation in the Premiership
but opt for a 4-3-3 system in the Champions League, with Tevez possibly
being demoted to the substitutes' bench.

AC Milan played with a similar formation when they eliminated United last
season on their way to winning the competition. It was a recipe for success
that Ferguson would not be too proud to copy. He will feel that if he is to
give freedom of movement to his front three in Europe then he will need
three in midfield to ensure a sensible balance.

Another signing, Owen Hargreaves, will offer extra protection to a United
defence that at times appears vulnerable and I would imagine him playing
alongside Michael Carrick on domestic duty.

Should Sir Alex go 4-3-3, I would see Paul Scholes, who was invigorated last
season, completing the midfield trio, although he might struggle to play
week-in, week-out in the Premiership.

Without Scholes, I have been wondering where the attacking thrust from
central midfield will come.

The Brazilian midfielder, Anderson, will be groomed to succeed Scholes in
that respect while the Portuguese winger, Nani, will be eased into the frame
over the coming season to bolster the club's attacking options.

Nani is yet another exquisite exponent of the noble art of dribbling. I bet
that one day he will have the Old Trafford season-tickets holders drooling.
But for the time being, it will be Tevez and his new colleagues who lead
opponents a merry dance.

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Football flounders in Carlos Tevez legalese - Telegraph
By Sue Mott
Last Updated: 1:15am BST 04/08/2007


It used to be that football caused excitement at the bar. Now football
causes excitement at the Bar. With the joyful termination of the Tevez case,
the lawyers can celebrate the fact that their input - not to mention
arguments, trades, affidavits, accusations, defences and, of course, bills -
has vastly contributed to the reputation of something we once called The
People's Game. Only if those people are wearing wigs. And we don't mean
Terry Wogan.)

It's M'lud's Game now.

And how perspicacious of the legal eagles to discover that there was a way
round the Tevez affair that threatened to embarrass the Premier League into
discovering that they had allowed a player held by a third party to save
West Ham United from relegation. Note: as part of the out-of-court
settlement, the player's agent Kia Joorabchian (wanted by Interpol, but we
only mention that as an aside) has agreed to acknowledge that West Ham owned
Tevez's registration all along.

So there was no third party agreement. In which case, how come Manchester
United are paying that third party the transfer fee, but for the £2 million
'compensation' being paid to West Ham. It is all right.

Don't even bother. Sheffield United have been grieving about this for months
and no-one is going to do anything about it. The lawyers have tossed it and
crossed it, examined and poked it, and decided that, all things considered,
to let things lie. Then they submitted their bills.

Some of us would say that if West Ham are only receiving a small percentage
of the player's worth, then they only owned a small percentage of the
player. But perhaps their lawyers would argue that if that small percentage
was the boot with which he kept scoring goals, then that is the only
relevant fact. It all reeks, but much does around football these days.

You could accuse the Premier League of being cowardly, negligent and
self-interested in their running of our game, but, of course, they would
merely get their lawyers on to you. In no time, you would find yourself
traduced as not a "fit and proper person" to pass judgment.

Mind you, they have a funny idea of 'fit and proper persons' at the Premier
League, as we have seen with all kinds of foreign gentlemen being deemed
suitable to run a football club, including the new organ grinder at
Manchester City, Thaksin Shinawatra. The Premier League and City fans seem
to be united in the view that the human rights abuses of which he stands
accused are of less immediate moment than the £81 million he has invested in
the club.

Suddenly they are expert in the ways of Asian military juntas, when most of
them have not penetrated that Far Eastern veil further than to eat a
springroll at Bangkok Airport. But there you are.

Even if the ex-Thai PM is convicted of offences in his home country, the
Premier League claim they will have to be guided by the reaction of the
British Government. We have been here before. Remember Zimbabwe. The British
government says: Oh we can't possibly interfere, this is all a matter for
sport. The sport says: Oh we can't possibly interfere, this is all a matter
for the British government. Through this gaping impasse troops any number of
wolves in sheepskin clothing.

For "Fit and Proper" read "Rich and Ready" and then you will have a perfect
understanding of the situation.

So all we can do is watch the new season (of court cases) swim up before us
and hope that our team has a fine formation of lawyers with which to deal
with the inevitable mayhem. There is Joey Barton and his pending court case
for assault, where the England U-21 manager will be called as a witness.
There is Gabriel Heinze's threatened case against Manchester United for
perceived obstruction of his desired move to Liverpool. It is all brewing
nicely and not a ball has been kicked.

Football might argue that they are not the only ones, citing, with some
justice, the ugly legal row between McLaren and Ferrari. And it is certainly
true that poor Lewis Hamilton seems as knee deep in barrister's briefs as
was James Hunt in frilly ones.

How curious that something as essentially innocent as sport should have been
so tainted by Machiavellian ministrations of the law.

And when someone tries to do something to reassert that essential innocence,
look what happens. The Scottish FA decided to test-drive the idea of
punishing divers and cheats by looking at video evidence, taking
retrospective action where necessary. Great. Who could argue? Who but Fifa.

The world governing body caught one whiff of the idea and renounced it.
There is a lesson for us all in that. Rules, like third party ownership, can
be twisted, abused, and messed with until eternity.

But a simple act to clean up the game - no chance. You know why. No money in
it.

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West Ham: Carlos Tevez can join Man Utd - Telegraph
By David Bond
Last Updated: 1:37am BST 04/08/2007

Carlos Tevez will become a Manchester United player next week after the
Premier League and the Football Association yesterday rubber-stamped a £2
million deal between West Ham and his third-party owners.


Come and get me: Carlos Tevez is now free to play for Man Utd
The agreement makes the 23-year-old Argentine striker a free agent, allowing
him to complete his move to the Premiership champions. He passed a medical
at Old Trafford yesterday morning after which he met with his new team-mates
for the first time.

Although League officials will not want to rush the paperwork, the two year
loan deal, which is worth £5 million a year to Tevez's owners, MSI and Just
Sports Inc, and £5 million a year to the player in wages, is expected to be
approved early next week.

With the prospect of a damaging £30 million court case averted, all sides
were united yesterday in relief at the conclusion of what has been one of
English football's most convoluted and bitter disputes.

"Carlos is looking forward to being a Manchester United player and his
ambition is close to being achieved," said a spokesman for Tevez.

West Ham emphasised the settlement confirmed they had held the player's
contract and registration.

The club said: "The settlement ends the current litigation taking place
between the respective parties and provides for a £2 million fee to be paid
to West Ham. The agreement confirms that West Ham do have a valid player's
contract with Carlos Tevez and hold the registration of the player. This
will be released once the agreed fee has been paid to the club."

West Ham chairman Eggert Magnusson added: "I am obviously pleased that we
have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common
sense. All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new
season."

The Premier League said they were satisfied that West Ham had behaved in
line with their undertakings when they terminated the third-party deals with
Kia Joorabchian in April.

Meanwhile the League are expected to confirm next week that they will look
into the row over Gabriel Heinze's proposed move from Manchester United to
Liverpool.

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Tevez deal Dun for Wednesday - The Sun
By PAT SHEEHAN
August 04, 2007

CARLOS TEVEZ should make his Manchester United debut against Dunfermline
next Wednesday after his delayed transfer from West Ham was finally given
the go-ahead. But the Hammers' £6million bid to sign Kieron Dyer from
Newcastle has hit trouble with St James' Park chiefs demanding an extra £2m.
Argentine striker Tevez, 23, trained with his new team-mates yesterday
morning before checking into the Lowry Hotel in Manchester. But he will not
be registered in time to play Chelsea in tomorrow's Community Shield. The
delay is because businessman Kia Joorabchian has to raise £2m to pay West
Ham for the hitman's registration. With Joorabchian's business based in
Brazil and the time difference with London, it will be Monday before the
funds are in place to be transferred.
United boss Alex Ferguson was impressed by Tevez's display during a training
session at Carrington yesterday. Fergie said: "We're delighted it seems to
have been sorted. He trained with us on Friday morning and did very well
considering he's had three weeks off since the Copa America. "He did a good
bit of work and was very enthusiastic. I think it will be Wednesday when we
see him play." Meanwhile, Dyer's move to West Ham from Newcastle has been
delayed. Hammers boss Alan Curbishley was prepared to pay £5m plus another
£1m based on future club success. But it is understood a row has broken out
between the clubs over accusations of unofficial approaches made to the
player.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dyer deal in tattersAug 4 2007
by Luke Edwards, The Journal


KIERON Dyer's move to West Ham United was on the verge of collapse last
night after a last-minute change of heart from Newcastle United.

Dyer was to complete a £6m move to Upton Park yesterday after he passed his
medical in east London, but the deal was dramatically delayed when the
Magpies informed the West Ham board they were increasing the asking price to
£8m for the England international. The request was turned down and Dyer was
informed the deal was off by Upton Park officials and that he had to head
back to the North-East.

A London source said: "Kieron was due to sign for West Ham on Friday but
Newcastle suddenly increased the asking price, which West Ham refused to
pay. As a result Newcastle have refused to sell the player and West Ham have
reluctantly told Kieron that he would have to return to the North-East."

And as confusion surrounded the future of Dyer, Newcastle were also closing
in on the capture of Spanish Under-21 international defender Jose Enrique,
who is set to sign in a £4m deal from La Liga's Villarreal.

Where this leaves 28-year-old Dyer, who declined to comment last night,
remains to be seen, and the midfielder could refuse to return to Tyneside
after his car and home were targeted by angry supporters last weekend,
although the deal could still be revived if the Magpies lower their asking
price.

The collapse of the transfer would also be a major blow to manager Sam
Allardyce, who has always sympathised with the player's wish to move closer
to his young family in Ipswich and who has already invested the money he
thought he was getting for Dyer in his replacement Alan Smith, who was
confirmed as a United player yesterday.

Allardyce revealed that, following the capture of Smith and Brazilian
defender Caçapa, he still wants to make another three signings before the
close of the transfer window. But with Dyer's transfer fee seemingly lost,
it remains to be seen if he has the flexibility to do that.

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West Ham's Ferdinand living by personal motto
tribalfooball.com - August 03, 2007

West Ham defender Anton Ferdinand is spreading his new personal motto
everywhere he can. Ferdinand, 22, has had his motto 'I believe to achieve'
tattooed on his left forearm and stitched into his footwear. And Ferdinand
kept the faith after being charged with assault and violent disorder then
telling porkies about his birthday bash in the US last season. He revealed:
"When I was at school, we were doing questionnaires on how you achieve
things. "My answer was you had to believe in yourself. It has been my motto
ever since and I have it stitched into all my football boots and my
trainers. "If you don't make mistakes in life, then you don't learn. All
that I have been through has made me mentally stronger."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Collapse of Dyer move overshadows Smith deal
West Ham claim price was hiked by £2m at 11th hour
Owen struggles again as injury delays comeback
Louise Taylor
Saturday August 4, 2007
The Guardian


Kieron Dyer's proposed £6m transfer to West Ham United collapsed last night
after sources revealed that Newcastle United inflated the fee to £8m at the
11th hour. The resultant upset at Upton Park overshadowed Newcastle's
recruitment of Alan Smith from Manchester United on a day when it also
emerged that the still injured Michael Owen will almost certainly have to
sit out the start of the Premier League season.
Although Dyer, who nurses an undisclosed liver complaint and has a history
of hamstring and shin trouble, passed a day-long medical at a London
hospital on Thursday, West Ham sent the England midfielder away unsigned
yesterday, complaining that Newcastle had reneged on an agreement reached on
Wednesday by increasing his price at the last minute.

The two clubs had agreed that West Ham would pay £5m plus a further £1m
related to appearances but that basic £5m was raised to £7m shortly before
the player was due to put pen to paper.
Sources close to Dyer - who first suspected a hitch when Newcastle failed to
return West Ham a signed copy of the originally mutally approved transfer
forms - appeared pessimistic that the deal could be revived last night.
However, they were adamant that he will not be returning to Newcastle. It is
understood the only way the 28-year-old will join Alan Curbishley's team is
if Mike Ashley, Newcastle's owner, lowers his total demand to £6m.

What seems peculiar about the affair is that Newcastle - who declined to
comment last night - were widely regarded as having pulled off a coup in
collecting £6m for the injury-prone Dyer, who earns around £60,000 a week at
St James' Park.

Another player almost certain to be missing in Newcastle's start to the
Premier League at Bolton is Owen, whose thigh injury may also see him
struggle to be involved in their home date against Aston Villa the following
weekend. With the trip to Middlesbrough at the end of the month viewed as
his likely comeback date, the striker seems destined to miss England's
friendly with Germany on August 22.

"It doesn't look as encouraging with Michael as we first thought. He's
strained the muscle and it's not healing as quick as we'd like," explained
Sam Allardyce, Newcastle's manager, who completed the signing of the former
Brazil international defender Claudio Cacapa on a free transfer from Lyon
last night and is now pursuing Manchester United's Mikael Silvestre and
Wigan's Leighton Baines. "There's no point in making any rash decisions
about getting him ready for the start of the season. It's about getting him
100% fit for the continuation of playing football matches on a regular
basis. That's what we want."

This aim has been undermined by Owen's lack of pre-season involvement. He
has played 45 minutes, in a win at Hartlepool, for Newcastle this summer
before straining his thigh in training. "Michael's as disappointed as me,
he's desperately short on games and missing them is costly," lamented
Allardyce.

Newcastle's manager fears he may have missed out on signing Silvestre from
Manchester United. Although Allardyce is believed to have agreed a £6m fee
with United for the left-back, Silvestre turned him down due to Joey
Barton's presence at St James' Park. Manchester City's Ousmane Dabo is
Silvestre's best friend and the victim of an alleged training ground assault
by Barton at City. Newcastle are hoping the arrival of Silvestre's former
team-mate Smith may change his mind.

Smith signed a five-year contract yesterday. "People might be surprised I've
gone for Alan Smith," admitted Allardyce. "But I just couldn't turn my back
on a player of his quality. He's a very versatile player who played three or
four positions very successfully for Manchester United."

Smith though hopes to be regarded principally as a striker: "I've come here
to be versatile, the manager's told me I'll have to play in a few positions
and I enjoy playing in midfield but, if someone asks me my best position,
it's striker," he said.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Transfer Talk: Gudjohnsen denies reports of West Ham move and vows to fight
for place - The Independent
Published: 04 August 2007

*West Ham Eidur Gudjohnsen has denied reports linking him with a move to
Upton Park. The Icelandic striker has been pushed down the pecking order at
Barcelona but he said he has not been in contact with the Premiership club
and is determined to fight for his place at the Nou Camp. "My first priority
is to stay and so far I am not thinking about anything else. I remember when
I was at Chelsea and manager Claudio Ranieri said that as he had Jimmy Floyd
Hasselbaink, Adrian Mutu and Hernan Crespo, I was going to be the fourth
striker. I accepted that and in the end I ended up playing many games. I
know that you always get chances and I am not going to give up."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Friday, August 3

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - II 3rd August 2007

Club Statement on Carlos Tevez - WHUFC
03/08/2007 14:40

West Ham United can confirm that a settlement has been reached today with the representatives of Carlos Tevez which will allow the player to leave the Club.

The settlement ends the current litigation taking place between the respective parties and provides for a £2million fee to be paid to West Ham United. The agreement confirms that West Ham United do have a valid player's contract with Carlos Tevez and hold the registration of the player. This will be released once the agreed fee has been paid to the Club.

The terms of the settlement are consistent with undertakings given by West Ham United to the Premier League and the rules of The Football Association.

Commenting on today's announcement, Eggert Magnusson, Chairman of West Ham United, said: "I am obviously pleased that we have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense. "All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season. "I wish Carlos Tevez well for the next stage of his playing career. He is a fine player and I am sure he will be successful wherever he plays football. "Personally, I am looking forward to the next stage of our development as a club and for what I hope will be a very exciting new season in the Premier League."

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Tickets still available for Roma clash - WHUFC
03/08/2007 14:16

A number of tickets are still available for our final pre-season friendly of the summer, against AS Roma at Upton Park tomorrow. Today is the last day for season ticket holders to qualify for a discount on ticket sales for the match. If you are a season ticket holder and wish to purchase tickets for tomorrow, then please click here . However, tickets will also be available on the day, at pay-turnstiles from 1.30pm onwards. These will be priced from £16.00 for adults and from £8.00 for under-16s.

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

Carlos Tevez Q&A - BBC
By James Munro
BBC sports news correspondent

One of the most protracted and complicated moves in English football is set to be resolved with Carlos Tevez poised to switch from West Ham to Manchester United. The matter was set to go to the High Court on 22 August but talks between West Ham and the Tevez camp are set to have avoided any such scenario. After months of complex negotiations, the matter seems to be ending - and this is why the deal has became one of football's most drawn-out sagas.

WHY IS THE TEVEZ DEAL SO COMPLICATED?

It's because Media Sports Investment (MSI) and Just Sports Inc., which owns the player's economic rights, and West Ham, which holds the player's registration, fell out over how much compensation the club would need to release him. And the Premier League needed to be satisfied that the sum would be enough to prove that it was West Ham, and not a third party, which owned the player's registration. Around £2m appears to have satisfied all three parties.

WHY A LOAN MOVE TO MAN UTD AND NOT A PERMANENT DEAL?

A similar deal was struck with Liverpool when his Argentine team-mate, Javier Mascherano, moved from West Ham. It's a complicated formula designed to ensure that the club and MSI don't break the Premier League's rules on third party agreements. But part of the loan deal would be the offer of a permanent transfer, perhaps in 2009.

HOW MUCH DO WE EXPECT MAN UTD TO PAY?

No figures have been made public, but Tevez would be expected to earn more than £4m a year. Any permanent deal could see Manchester United pay around £25m.

WHO IS GETTING THE MONEY FOR THE DEAL?

MSI's representative Kia Joorabchian has negotiated the deal with Manchester United which should be concluded this weekend. The company can expect a one-off payment of more than £5m. West Ham will get around £2m in compensation. MSI would also benefit from any permanent transfer deal.

DOES THE OUTCOME CONTRADICT WEST HAM SAYING THEY HAD TORN UP THE THIRD PARTY AGREEMENT WITH THE TEVEZ CAMP?

In normal circumstances, the selling club would earn the transfer fee but this is no ordinary contract. West Ham insist that the deal proves that it was the club's decision to release Tevez - and part of their compromise deal with MSI is that all legal action is off. The Premier League would only have accepted the deal if their lawyers were sure that it proved beyond doubt that it was West Ham's decision to release Tevez from his contract, and not MSI's. They've got an eye on the threat of legal action by Sheffield United.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR SHEFFIELD UNITED?

If West Ham had have been docked points rather than fined at the initial hearing into the transfers of Tevez and Javier Mascherano it is almost certain Sheffield United would have stayed up at the expense of the Upton Park side. Hence their interest. The club says it will study the deal closely before deciding upon its next course of action.

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Club confirm Tevez departure - KUMB
Filed: Friday, 3rd August 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

West Ham United have released a statement confirming the imminent departure of Carlos Tevez. The statement, released this lunchtime confirmed that Tevez would be a Man United player imminently, following months of legal wrangling between the Hammers, Man U and the MSI Group who claim ownership of Tevez's economic rights. "West Ham United can confirm that a settlement has been reached today with the representatives of Carlos Tevez which will allow the player to leave the Club," the statement read. "The settlement ends the current litigation taking place between the respective parties and provides for a £2million fee to be paid to West Ham United. "The agreement confirms that West Ham United do have a valid player's contract with Carlos Tevez and hold the registration of the player. This will be released once the agreed fee has been paid to the Club. The terms of the settlement are consistent with undertakings given by West Ham United to the Premier League and the rules of The Football Association."
Eggert Magnusson, who only weeks ago was still insisting that Tevez would remain at Upton Park next season, added: "I am obviously pleased that we have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense. All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season. "I wish Carlos Tevez well for the next stage of his playing career. He is a fine player and I am sure he will be successful wherever he plays football."

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Bellamy wants fight club - Sky
Bellamy cultivates fighting spirit
By Alex Dunn

While there has been the odd eyebrow raised by West Ham's recruitment campaign in the close-season, with Alan Curbishley assembling a band of players with somewhat chequered pasts, Craig Bellamy does not envisage any problems. The fiery Welshman is one such player not alien to headlines of the adverse kind and the imminent arrival of the occasionally troubled Kieron Dyer will see him reunited with his former Newcastle United sparring partner Lee Bowyer.
Despite only securing their Premier League status on the final day of last season, Curbishley's side head into the new campaign with heady expectations, following an aggressive recruitment campaign in the summer. Curbishley is confident he can handle an eclectic mix in his dressing room and Bellamy too is of the opinion that volatile temperaments can help cultivate a winning mentality.
"One of the best dressing rooms I have been in was at Celtic where there were fights and arguments every week," he told the Daily Mirror. "They were all close friends but they demanded things from each other and Celtic won everything domestically during that time and got to the 2003 Uefa Cup final. "It is very easy to talk things down and live in the comfort zone and create no expectations because anything else would then be a bonus. "You see a lot of managers and players do that but I learnt off Mark Hughes at Blackburn to expect and demand things of yourself and others and that is what I am trying to do here. "I don't think you are out of order to demand too much from a team-mate."

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Hammers confirm Tevez deal - Sky
Man Utd free to finalise move
By Graeme Bailey Last updated: 03rd August 2007

West Ham United have confirmed that they have agreed a deal for Carlos Tevez to leave the club. The Hammers have revealed that they will receive £2million compensation for the Argentine - who is now free to join Manchester United. The announcement brings to an end weeks of negotiations and speculation about Tevez's future and also sees the threat of High Court action ended. "I am obviously pleased that we have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense," said Hammers chairman Eggert Magnusson "All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season. "I wish Carlos Tevez well for the next stage of his playing career. He is a fine player and I am sure he will be successful wherever he plays football. "Personally, I am looking forward to the next stage of our development as a club and for what I hope will be a very exciting new season in the Premier League." United are now expected to tie up Tevez on an initial two-year loan deal from MSI for which they will pay around £8million. After the two-year spell, they will have first option to conclude a permanent transfer of the Argentine forward.

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Match Preview - West Ham United v AS Roma - West Ham Online
Match Reporter - Fri Aug 3 2007

West Ham United v AS Roma
Saturday 4th August 2007
Kick Off 3 pm
Pre-Season friendly

Ticket Information

Tickets are available, check the clubs website for full details and prices

Having already been beaten by SS Lazio this summer, Alan Curbishley will be looking to round off a fairly successful pre-season by beating the other lot from the Stadio Olimpico when West Ham take on Serie A runners up AS Roma at home on Saturday.

Luciano Spalletti brings his star studded team to Upton Park in the toughest of pre-season tests a week before we kick off against Man City.

Roma are a little bit behind in preparation as their season doesn't start until two weeks after the Premiership when Roma face a friendly trip to Sicily and Palmero.

Roma failed to add to their 3 Serie A Scudetto wins last season when being beaten into second place in the league by Inter Milan but second is still an impressive finish. They also beat Inter to win the Coppa Italia 7-4 over 2 legs and who can forget their quarter final exit from the Champions League? Leading Man United 2-1 from the first leg in the Stadio Olimpico, Man United destroyed them 7-1 in one of the most impressive displays of the season at Old Trafford.

West Ham's form has improved in the last 2 games with some impressive displays in the wins over Southend and Norwich.

We will be without long term injury victim Julien Faubert and Scott Parker will be missing with a knee injury which could keep him out of the opening game of the season next weekend.

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Carlos Tevez leaves West Ham - West Ham Online
Match Reporter - Fri Aug 3 2007

West Ham United this afternoon confirmed that one of the longest transfer sagas in football had come to an end after the club reached a settlement with with the representatives of Carlos Tevez which will allow the player to leave the Club.

The settlement ends the prospect of a High Court battle taking place between the respective parties and provides for a £2million fee to be paid to West Ham United.

The agreement also confirms that West Ham United did have a valid player's contract with Carlos Tevez and held the registration of the player. This will be released once the agreed fee has been paid to the Club.

The club said the terms of the settlement are consistent with undertakings given by West Ham United to the Premier League and the rules of The Football Association.

West Ham United Chairmen said "I am obviously pleased that we have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense. All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season. I wish Carlos Tevez well for the next stage of his playing career. He is a fine player and I am sure he will be successful wherever he plays football.
Personally, I am looking forward to the next stage of our development as a club and for what I hope will be a very exciting new season in the Premier League."

Carlos Tevez joined West Ham United with fellow Argentine Javier Mascherano on transfer deadline day last August in a move that shocked football.

However both players failed to settle into their new environment quickly and were blamed by many for upsetting the dressing room.

Mascherano moved to Liverpool in January after FIFA granted dispensation for him to play for a 3rd club in one year.

The Premier League then charged West Ham with a breach of the rules over the 3rd party influence clause in the Tevez contract. An Independent commission found the club guilty and fined them a record £5.5m but failed to dock points to disgust of the clubs relegation rivals.

Sheffield United tried in vain to get the ruling overturned but that was rejected first by an arbitration panel and then by the High Court, after Tevez's goal on the final day of the season saved West Ham and a home defeat at the hands of Wigan relegated Neil Warnock's Sheffield United side to the Championship.

Left on the sidelines after Alan Curbishley took over as manager in December, Tevez name was called for by fans on mass to try and save the Hammers as they lurched from one defeat to another and looked certain to be relegated.

The turning point came when Tevez scored his first goal for the club in the 4-3 defeat at home to Spurs and he went on to play a major role in the Hammers survival, scoring 7 times in the last 10 games including that priceless goal in the 1-0 win at Old Trafford on the final day of the season.

I wish Carlos Tevez all the best at Man Utd, it was an absolute pleasure to witness those performances in the run in and he must go down as one of the best ever players to wear the claret and blue

Carlos Tevez 31/8/2006 – 04/8/2007
League 19 App 7 Sub 7 Goals
FA Cup 1 App
UEFA cup 2 App

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Tévez cleared to join United - uefa.com
Friday 3 August 2007

Manchester United FC are to sign Argentina striker Carlos Tévez after an agreement was reached for his transfer from West Ham United FC.

Agreement
The 23-year-old helped West Ham avoid relegation last season with the only goal of their final match at Old Trafford, having moved to London from SC Corinthians Paulista last summer. A dispute over his contract delayed his transfer to Manchester but the clubs have drawn up a settlement that prevents legal action, with West Ham to receive €3m in compensation.

Statement
A statement on West Ham's website read: "The agreement confirms that West Ham United do have a valid player's contract with Carlos Tévez and hold the registration of the player. This will be released once the agreed fee has been paid to the club. The terms of the settlement are consistent with undertakings given by West Ham to the Premier League and the rules of The Football Association."

'Sensational destination'
Tévez, who will replace Newcastle United FC-bound Alan Smith, becomes the Premier League champions' fourth summer signing following the arrivals of Nani from Sporting Clube de Portugal, Anderson from FC Porto and FC Bayern München midfielder Owen Hargreaves. When the switch was first mooted last month, the former CA Boca Juniors forward said: "For me, Manchester United would be a sensational destination and to be a member of Sir Alex Ferguson's squad will be absolutely spectacular. My dream is to be an idol in English football and I can achieve this now."

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West Ham finally agree to release Tevez
£2m deal ends court case and frees way to Manchester United
Staff and agencies
Friday August 3, 2007
Guardian Unlimited

One of this summer's most arduous transfer sagas appears to have come to a close after West Ham confirmed that they have agreed a settlement with Media Sports Investments, the representatives of Carlos Tevez, which will allow the striker to leave the club.
Tevez, who passed a medical at Old Trafford this morning with a view to a two-year loan deal, is expected to be confirmed as a Manchester United player early next week, when the move's official paperwork goes through.

The agreement confirms that West Ham have a valid player's contract with Tevez and that they hold his playing registration. United, meanwhile, have the option of making the deal permanent for a further £20m. Tevez will earn around £3.5m a season and could make his debut against Reading at Old Trafford on Sunday week.
"I am obviously pleased that we have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense. All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season," said the West Ham chairman Eggert Magnusson. "I wish Carlos Tevez well for the next stage of his playing career. He is a fine player and I am sure he will be successful wherever he plays football. Personally, I am looking forward to the next stage of our development as a club and for what I hope will be a very exciting new season in the Premier League."

Although the Premier League has yet to ratify the move, Joorabchian confirmed the agreement brings to a close the legal proceedings he had set in motion against the club. "We are delighted that a settlement has been reached between all parties to secure Carlos Tevez's move from West Ham United to Manchester United," said Joorabchian.

"Our primary concern has always been to resolve this issue amicably and to allow Carlos to pursue his ambition to play for Manchester United. Carlos is looking forward to being a Manchester United player and his ambition is close to being achieved. We would like to thank Manchester United for all their patience and support throughout."

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Carlos Tevez timeline - The Times

August 31, 2006: West Ham pull off what is seen as a major transfer coup by signing Carlos Tevez and his Argentina team-mate Javier Mascherano.

September 1: West Ham admit having "exploratory discussions" over a possible takeover. Businessman Kia Joorabchian, who engineered the transfer of Tevez and Mascherano, is reported to be interested.

September 4: West Ham deny they are contractually obliged to play Tevez and Mascherano in every game.

September 10: Draw 1-1 with Aston Villa, Tevez making his debut off the bench.

November 21: West Ham accept £85million takeover bid by a consortium headed by Eggert Magnusson.

December 11: Pardew sacked as manager of West Ham.

March 2, 2007: West Ham are charged by the Premier League for breaching their rules in relation to the signings of Tevez and Mascherano in August.

April 4: A three-man panel is appointed by the Premier League to investigate the signings of Tevez and Mascherano.

April 27: West Ham are fined £5.5 million but spared a points deduction after pleading guilty. The verdict also rules "the registration of Carlos Tevez can be terminated by the FA Premier League" but Tevez is later cleared to play on for West Ham.

May 13: Tevez scores the winning goal in 1-0 defeat to Manchester United which ensures West Ham avoid relegation.<QA1> May 15: FIFA say they will investigate Premier League ruling.

May 16: Sheffield United file "arbitration proceedings" against the Premier League in a bid to overturn the decision not to deduct points from West Ham. The same day Premier League chairman Sir Dave Richards and chief executive Richard Scudamore send a six-page letter to all 20 club chairmen defending the decision.

May 22: The Premier League agree to set up an arbitration tribunal to rule on Sheffield United's complaints over the Carlos Tevez affair.

June 2: Premier League chairmen agree a new rule forcing clubs to disclose every document connected to player transfers to improve "clarity" in transfer deals.

June 13: Sheffield United plc chairman Kevin McCabe threatens to turn to the European Commission to seek compensation if the independent arbitration panel rejects their bid to overturn their relegation.

June 28: Tevez turns down a move to Inter Milan after they impose a deadline on his decision.

July 3: Sheffield United lose their legal challenge against the Premier League after an arbitration panel dismissed their claim.

July 4: The Blades investigate the possibility of a High Court appeal, on the basis that the arbitration panel made an "error in law" in not referring the Tevez case back to the original independent three-man panel which fined West Ham in May.

July 6: Representatives of the player confirm he has agreed personal terms with Manchester United. The deal is held up as the Premier League insist any proceeds of the deal must go to the Hammers and not to Joorabchian or MSI.

July 11: West Ham reject an official request from Tevez to cancel his contract with the club.

July 13: Following a private hearing at the High Court, Sheffield United's attempt to gain leave to appeal the arbitration panel's decision is refused.

July 17: Tevez flies into Manchester airport after appearing in the Copa America final for a proposed medical but stalemate between West Ham and Manchester United casts doubt over the examination.

July 18: Manchester United chief executive David Gill announces the club will ask FIFA to arbitrate on the Carlos Tevez transfer.

July 23: FIFA meet with legal representatives of Premier League and Football Association in Zurich to decide whether they will arbitrate over the dispute.

July 24: FIFA recommend case to be referred to Court of Arbitration for Sport after deciding not to become involved. However, Kia Joorabchian opts to issue High Court proceedings against West Ham.

August 3: West Ham have confirmed they have reached a £2 million settlement with Carlos Tevez's representatives which will allow the Argentinian to leave the club. Tevez is expected to join Manchester United shortly.

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HibbsTevez move gets green light - manutd.com
03/08/2007 13:54, Report by Ben HibbsTevez move gets green light

Reds transfer target Carlos Tevez has been given the all-clear to join United after West Ham confirmed that they have reached a settlement with the player's representatives. A statement on West Ham's website confirmed: "The settlement ends the current litigation taking place between the respective parties and provides for a £2million fee to be paid to West Ham United. "The agreement confirms that West Ham United do have a valid player's contract with Carlos Tevez and hold the registration of the player. This will be released once the agreed fee has been paid to the Club. The terms of the settlement are consistent with undertakings given by West Ham United to the Premier League and the rules of The Football Association."
Hammers chairman Eggert Magnusson said: "I am obviously pleased that we have finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense. All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season. "I wish Carlos Tevez well for the next stage of his playing career. He is a fine player and I am sure he will be successful wherever he plays football."

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Fans in flap over Dyer signing - The Sun
By PAT SHEEHAN
August 03, 2007

KIERON DYER will have to convince some angry West Ham fans he has the desire to take the club to the top. The England midfielder signed for Hammers late last night in a £6million deal from Newcastle after successfully completing a medical. That fee includes £1m if Hammers break into Europe while Dyer is at Upton Park on a four-year deal. Dyer, 28, was slammed by a handful of Toon fans after he said he wanted to return south because of family commitments.
He also had an onfield bust-up while at St James' Park with another Hammer, Lee Bowyer — but both publicly apologised for the fight. Now he will have to convince Claret and Blue diehards he is over all his injury problems and can reproduce the form that made him one of the most exciting attacking midfielders in the country. Fans on West Ham's independent chat sites were split over whether boss Alan Curbishley had spent his money wisely. That is despite the fact another wide player was needed following Florent Faubert's freak Achilles injury that has put the French winger out for six months. One supporter wrote on the ITBS website: "There's a few too many 'ifs' about him. 'If' he stays fit. 'If' he doesn't disrupt the good team spirit. 'If' his attitude's OK. "Basically too many factors have to fall in our favour for it to work out and for us to get the best out of him."
On WestHamOnline another fan wrote: "There's certainly gonna be a few egos in the changing room and on the training ground next season. I hope Curbs can handle them all."
Newcastle boss Sam Allardyce was quick to replace Dyer with a double swoop last night for England striker Alan Smith and Brazilian defender Capaca. Both players were on Tyneside yesterday undergoing medicals and the deals are expected to be rubberstamped today. Middlesbrough, Everton and Sunderland were all tracking Smith, 26, who was deemed surplus to requirements at Old Trafford. But Smith has opted to link up with former Leeds strike partner Mark Viduka at St James' Park. Brazilian international Capaca, 31, has skippered Lyon to five French League titles but fell out with boss Gerard Houllier last term.

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West Ham would've paid £35M Tevez fee
tribalfooball.com - August 03, 2007

West Ham United chairman Eggert Magnusson would have happily coughed up the total £35 million Kia Joorabchian was seeking for Carlos Tevez, it has been revealed. Tevez is set to sign for United this weekend in a two-year 'loan' arrangement which will earn Joorabchian £10 million. The Premiership champs can sign the Argie outright for £20 million at the end of the two-year period. Meanwhile, such is West Ham's new spending power that the Daily Express says Magnusson would have happily paid out the £35m to have kept Tevez, knowing full well the money would have gone straight to MSI and Just Sport. But the Argentine, naturally, chose the understandable option of Champions League football at the elite end of the market with Manchester United rather than life without European action in the East End of London.

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West Ham step up bid for Barcelona's Gudjohnsen
tribalfooball.com - August 03, 2007

West Ham United will push through a deal for Barcelona striker Eidur Gudjohnsen now that Carlos Tevez is on his way to Manchester United. The Daily Mail says the Hammers are resigned to losing the Argentina marksmen, who should finally complete his move to Manchester United next week as the complicated wranglings surrounding his registration are set to be resolved. Former Chelsea star Gudjohnsen has fallen down the Nou Camp pecking order following the arrival of Thierry Henry from Arsenal in the Catalan city. And they view him as the ideal foil alongside Craig Bellamy and Dean Ashton in an attack which will be needed to provide goals to prevent last season's lengthy flirtation with the Premier League relegation zone.

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Eggert: I'm glad Tevez saga's over - Daily Mail
Last updated at 13:38pm on 3rd August 2007

West Ham chairman Eggert Magnusson today spoke of his relief that the Carlos Tevez transfer saga is finally over. The Icelandic businessman said he thought "common sense" had prevailed after the player's move to Manchester United was finally sanctioned by the Premier League. The Hammers confirmed they will receive £2million from Tevez's agent Kia Joorabchian and claimed vindication in their stance over the Argentine's sell-on rights. The "fee" West Ham will get is, however, far below their original £20m valuation of their star player last season. Joorabchian and his company Media Sports Investment (MSI) had been preparing for a High Court battle with West Ham on 22 August to release Tevez from his contract. However, the club are now convinced the deal will end the legal wrangling which has overshadowed their preparations for the new season. Magnusson said: "I'm obviously pleased we've finally reached the end of this saga through agreement and common sense. "All parties involved can now move on and truly focus on the new season. I am looking forward to the next stage of our development as a club."
A club spokesman said: "The settlement provides for a £2m fee to be paid to West Ham." United have agreed a two-year loan deal for Tevez with Joorabchian with a further three-year option. They will pay £5m a year to MSI for his services. Tevez's unusual ownership structure lays at the heart of the contract wrangle.
West Ham broke Premier League rules on third-party agreements when they signed him and were fined £5.5m. The club were then only allowed to play him in the League providing they cancelled the third-party agreement with Joorabchian's companies. As a result, the Premier League ruled West Ham needed to be compensated if Tevez moved. Joorabchian, however, insisted the third-party agreement had remained in place and had, until today, only been prepared to give West Ham £100,000. It is understood Joorabchian changed his stance because of the costs and time involved in legal action. He was also keen to grant Tevez's wish of playing for United as soon as possible. Joorabchian had also threatened last month to produce documents that could help Sheffield United's club's cause in their fight for compensation. That evidence may now never come to light as both parties are believed to have signed a secrecy agreement.
With Joorabchian acknowledging West Ham did own Tevez it severely dents the possibility of Blades chairman Kevin McCabe winning compensation. Tevez will miss Sunday's Community Shield but could feature against Reading at Old Trafford on 12 August.

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West Ham home in on Shorey - Sportigo
Fri, Aug 3, 07 11:38Mark Apostolou

The long-running saga surrounding West Ham striker Carlos Tevez will soon come to an end and the Argentinian will be free to join Manchester United this weekend (BBC). Amen to that. It seems that various sources are claiming that agent/character of disrepute Kia Joorabchian will pay £2m to the Hammers and then receive a reported £10m from the Old Trafford coffers in lieu of an apparent two- year loan deal for the striker. Will that be the end of it? Lets hope so!

West Ham boss Alan Curbishley is still clinging to hopes of signing Reading full-back Nicky Shorey. The 26-year-old defender has still not signed a new deal with the Royals, despite long-drawn-out talks, and the Hammers are willing to pay him around £40,000-per-week (Daily Mail). I had hoped that Shorey would stick with Reading, a side he has helped grow in stature with seasons of consistency taking the Royals into the Premiership. But it appears a very real possibility that Shorey's head will be turned by such an offer, especially given he is a Hammers supporter.


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West Ham Re-United: A remarkable reunion - East Anglian Daily Times
03 August 2007 | 11:00
ELVIN KING

AS WELL as cementing his status as a footballing multi-millionaire, Kieron Dyer's likely move to West Ham will bring about a remarkable reunion with two former team-mates. Nearly 20 years ago, local Ipswich youth league side Whitton Sports boasted three notable starlets: Dyer, Richard Wright, and Matthew Upson, who were all to find fame and fortune as Premiership stars and England internationals. Now, two decades later, the three are reunited at Upton Park.
West Ham boss Alan Curbishley will be hoping that the Suffolk-born trio enjoy better luck than in recent seasons. Dyer has been plagued with injuries during his eight years on Tyneside, Wright has hardly played first-team football for Everton, and Upson cruelly suffered an injury on his West Ham debut. For Dyer, it will represent a fresh start, and the opportunity to be closer to his long-term partner and their two children in Ipswich. The £80,000 a week he will reputedly earn enables him to continue the millionaire lifestyle he has enjoyed during his time at Newcastle: flash homes on Tyneside and in Spain, fast cars, and snappy dressing have become part of Dyer's image. It's all a long way from his early days living in a terrace house in Dillwyn Street, just off Handford Road, in Ipswich. Kieron went to school just around the corner, at St Matthew's Primary, and showed sporting talent from day one.
Paul King, Dyer's best friend at primary school, recalls: "Our PE teacher Peter Robinson dropped Kieron from the school side for one game for disciplinary reasons. We didn't have a sports field, so we played our home games at Handford Hall School. I can remember Kieron peering round the corner and watching the match from the road.''
King, now a PE teacher and member of Suffolk's county cricket squad, said: "Kieron was a natural at all sports and was no slouch at cricket. "I lived in Victoria Street, and this was like a second home for Kieron. We used to play on our bikes around the London Road area, and we were also always kicking a ball about.''
Dyer was a member of the 4th Ipswich Boys' Brigade side which took the Boys' Brigade League by storm. Paul King recalled: "Kieron was always scoring goals, and I remember one when he went round virtually the whole opposing team - keeper and all - and bent down on his knees to head the ball over the line.''
From the Boys' Brigade, it was on to five-a-side football in the 257 Junior Blues league, where Dyer played in the same team as Sergei Baltacha junior, and then to team up with Upson and Wright in what must be the most star-studded youth football team ever. By the time he was 17, a diminutive Dyer was turning out for George Burley's Ipswich Town side which battled year after year to regain its place in the Premiership. The sight of Dyer sobbing inconsolably after the Blues failed to gain automatic promotion ensured his place in the hearts of Town fans. Inevitably, he moved on to bigger things. While Dyer's time at Newcastle has been blighted by injury, and some negative tabloid headlines, it's fair to say he has not forgotten his beginnings. In recent years, he has bought his mother a comfortable new home, and he has also ploughed money into Ridgeons League club Whitton United, and is planning to run soccer schools at the club's King George V ground. Ipswich fans will wish him well at Upton Park.

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I'M ON MY WAY - Daily Express
Friday August 3,2007
By Harry Harris

Carlos Tevez will become a Manchester United player today after a remarkable £2million deal was struck that blew apart any pretence that West Ham ever owned him. The Daily Express has been given full access to the sensational financial details that allow Tevez to move from West Ham to Old Trafford via third-party owners, Media Sports Investments and Just Sports Inc. The Hammers receive a mere £2m for a world-class striker, who is valued in excess of £35m. But they won't get a penny from Old Trafford. Their "fee" will come direct from MSI and Just Sport. Tevez, meanwhile, gets £90,000 a week and joins the most famous club on the planet. United will pay £10m for a two-year "rental" from the third-party owners of Tevez, with the option to purchase him outright for more than £20m. West Ham, who supposedly terminated all third-party agreements and with the backing of the Premier League held Tevez's registration insisting they had the player under contract until 2010, emerge with nothing like the player's true market value. Now, as Tevez signs, the fee goes straight to overseas investors without a penny ending up at Upton Park . In fact, under the terms of the original third-party agreements, amended in December, the Hammers were entitled to only a £100,000 facility fee. But once the owners' representative, Kia Joorabchian, issued a writ last week aimed at securing the transfer, contentious documents were due to be lodged with the High Court. Minutes before the explosive December 1 contracts were due to be put before a judge yesterday, all parties involved finally thrashed out a comprise financial deal to prevent the mess ending up in court.
Joorabchian increased the offer from £100,000 to £900,000 in an effort to avoid the court proceedings, which threatened to embarrass not only West Ham, but possibly the Premier League and high-profile associates of Joorabchian. He felt that his decision to "up the stakes" was justified, having been advised he would win an injunction to prevent West Ham blocking the transfer. But Joorabchian's reason for increasing the facility fee to £2m was to end one of football's longest and most sordid sagas and allow Tevez to end his enforced exile from the game and make sure that his man moved before the transfer window closed. Now, as Tevez signs, the fee goes straight to overseas investors without a penny ending up at Upton Park. Tevez can now pocket his £90,000-a-week salary, with every chance of his registration going through in time for Sunday's Community Shield clash with Chelsea at Wembley. After virtually no training in the last three weeks he is unlikely to play, but could figure on the bench as his "unveiling".
The biggest stumbling block has been the persistence of the Premier League in standing firm in their insistence for a realistic fee going to the Hammers. Yet few could justify £2m as a realistic fee when the player is rated at £35m. How all the parties involved square that particular circle will be the most intriguing part of this entire affair. It has been a scandal, sweeping up relegated Sheffield United in its slipstream, as the Hammers avoided a points deduction
having been found guilty of breaking the rules affecting third-party ownership. It has been a scandal. But the new Hammers' owners can now look to the future. Money seems to be no object as their recruiting drive for manager Alan Curbishley goes on merrily regardless of the small fee received from Joorabchian for Tevez.
Eidur Gudjohnsen remains the preferred choice up front, for £10m, and last night West Ham wrapped up their £6m deal for Newcastle's England star Kieron Dyer.
Where is the money coming from?
In fact, chairman and front man Eggert Magnusson would have happily paid out the £35m to have kept Tevez, knowing full well the money would have gone straight to MSI and Just Sport. But the Argentine, naturally, chose the understandable option of Champions League football at the elite end of the market with Manchester United rather than life without European action in the East End of London. I understand that the Premier League hired a top QC to give them advice on the implications and ramifications of any decision to grant the movement of the Tevez registration under these most contentious circumstances. With a potential £50m law suit pending from Sheffield United, every move of the transactions has been under scrutiny. As the Daily Express reported on Tuesday, the danger to both the Premier League and also West Ham was the impact of unseen and countersigned contract amendments that Joorabchian aimed to lodge with the High Court. It is thought these might even have proved the Magnusson regime knew and affirmed the third-party arrangements for their star striker. Last night's deal, though, has prevented such small print becoming public and has finally allowed the player's move to take place.

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Blades step up battle for Tevez cash - The Star - Sheffield

SHEFFIELD United are preparing to launch a major new offensive in their battle with the FA Premier League over the Carlos Tevez Affair. United, who are poised to unveil the Everton striker James Beattie as the club's record signing, have spent the past four days monitoring West Ham's negotiations with Kia Joorabchian - whose MSI group are continuing to claim ownership of Tevez. Kevin McCabe, United's plc chairman, has criticised the FAPL's decision to allow the Argentina international to represent West Ham during the final three games of last season arguing it led to the Blades being relegated. United want compensation.
Joorabchian is expected to strike a deal with officials at Upton Park today to facilitate his client's transfer to Manchester United. But McCabe is adamant that the protracted negotiations between West Ham and MSI prove that Tevez's registration continued to breach the rules governing third-party ownership.
McCabe said: "All along, our dealings with the Premier League have been unhelpful in the extreme. The whole integrity of the sport has been thrown into doubt. If the Premier League had the backbone, they would have done something. United have been encouraged to learn Jorabchian claims to be in possession of documents which confirm Tevez's registration has never been passed to West Ham. The Blades are understood to have agreed personal terms with £4m-rated Beattie.

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Premier League Rumour Mill: Hammers still keen on Eidur - Daily mail
By DANNY GRIFFITHS - More by this author »
Last updated at 09:17am on 3rd August 2007

West Ham are lining up a bid to bring Barcelona striker Eidur Gudjohnsen to Upton Park as a replacement for Carlos Tevez. The Hammers are resigned to losing the Argentina marksmen, who should finally complete his move to Manchester United next week as the complicated wranglings surrounding his registration are set to be resolved. Former Chelsea star Gudjohnsen has fallen down the Nou Camp pecking order following the arrival of Thierry Henry from Arsenal in the Catalan city. And they view him as the ideal foil alongside Craig Bellamy and Dean Ashton in an attack which will be needed to provide goals to prevent last season's lengthy flirtation with the Premier League relegation zone.

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