Wednesday, April 23

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 23rd April 2008

Stech catches the eye - WHUFC
Marek Stech has returned to action for West Ham United and was impressive
this week with the reserves
22.04.2008

Marek Stech made a welcome return to reserve-team action on Monday night as
he played in the reserves 2-0 defeat at Arsenal.

Despite the disappointment of the scoreline, when the home side scored two
first-half goals to seal the contest by half-time, the 18-year-old Stech
enjoyed a memorable game and made a number of key saves. The Czech Republic
youth international has only just returned to action after an ankle ligament
injury suffered just after an impressive display for the reserves in a 1-0
win at Portsmouth on 23 January, with youngster Adam Street filling in
superbly during his absence.

While his compatriot goalkeeping coach Ludek Miklosko and the rest of the
club's coaching staff are tipping big things for the popular Prague-born
shot-stopper, Robert Green is particularly well placed to judge the progress
of his young colleague. "Marek is a good lad," the club's No1 said, while
speaking at a recent fans' forum. "He is still very young and he is probably
got a good inch or two on me. He is filling out, getting stronger - that is
a major part of what he needs to work on. He has got endless potential and,
with Ludo, it will come out."

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McCartney keeps on going - WHUFC
George McCartney has been a model of consistency this season with one
reliable display after another
22.04.2008

George McCartney made it 50 not out for West Ham United at the weekend with
a half-century of consecutive appearances for the club dating back to 17
March 2007.

The popular Northern Ireland left-back was happy to reach the milestone but
admitted he was feeling the effects of a long campaign after the 2-1 defeat
of Derby County. "To be honest, I am starting to feel shattered now," he
told WHUTV. "I will be happy when the season is over. It has been a tough
season but it has been pleasing to play so many games. I haven't had any
rest but that is because I have wanted to be out training every day and
playing as many matches as I can."

McCartney, who turns 27 next Tuesday, added: "Overall I am happy with how
things have gone this season. The last few weeks the results have been
disappointing but we just need the supporters to get behind us for the last
three games and hopefully we can stay in tenth place." Like his team-mates
and fans alike, McCartney is eager to stay in the top half of the table -
ahead of Tottenham Hotspur, who drew at Wigan Athletic. "It gives us a
little bit of breathing space. We have opened up a five-point gap and
hopefully things will stay that way."

Reflecting in detail on Saturday's contest which saw Bobby Zamora's early
goal cancelled out by Tyrone Mears before Carlton Cole's late winner,
McCartney said: "The first half we had our chances to score two or three
goals and didn't take them and in the second half they have come out and had
a right go, and they have equalised. If anything they were probably the
better team but luckily Coley has come off the bench and scored the winner
for us.

"It has been a long season and a major improvement on what was achieved last
year," he added, and while mindful the work never stops he said the efforts
were taking a toll. "You give fans that improvement and people always seem
to want more. Some players have played 40 games this season and now it
starts to catch up on the whole squad. I think you have seen in that in the
last few weeks. All the hard work we have put in at the start of the season
is maybe beginning to tail off. The players are trying their hardest to put
on performances and get the results."

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McCartney happy with progress - SSN
Hammers full-back hails improved campaign
By Lewis Rutledge Last updated: 22nd April 2008

George McCartney believes West Ham supporters should be pleased with the
team's improvement this term. The Hammers only just staved off relegation
last season after a dramatic resurgence in the closing weeks of the
campaign. They have been comfortable in mid-table this season despite a
number of injuries to key players, but manager Alan Curbishley has been
criticised for some of his tactics. West Ham have also endured a
disappointing last few weeks that have killed off their chances of
qualifying for Europe. However, McCartney feels the players should be
forgiven for a late lapse after a hard season. "It has been a long season
and a major improvement on what was achieved last year," said the full-back
on WHUTV. "You give fans that improvement and people always seem to want
more. "Some players have played 40 games this season and now it starts to
catch up on the whole squad. I think you have seen that in the last few
weeks."

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Upton Park dreams come true for Tomka - Echo News
By Rob Pritchard

FORMER Basildon schoolboy James "Tomka" Tomkins' lifelong dream came true
when the 19-year-old stepped out for his full home debut at Upton Park on
Saturday. The teenager, who attended Chalvedon School, was drafted into the
Hammers' starting line-up after both Jonathan Spector and Matthew Upson were
ruled out by injury. And Tomkins, who made his full debut at Everton on
March 22, responded by putting in an assured performance as the Irons beat
relegated Derby County 2-1. Afterwards the youngster, who still lives with
his parents in the new town, was delighted to start at the Boleyn Ground for
the first time. "To play in front of the fans at Upton Park is brilliant,"
said the England Under-19 international, who joined the club as an
eight-year-old.
"The fans have got high expectations and today we needed to win it to show
them we can still hold for this tenth place or even higher. "I thought I did
ok.
Tomkins' debut at Goodison Park was a rollercoaster affair, with the
youngster hitting the crossbar before losing Yakubu for the Toffees' goal.
On Saturday, the centre back was given a slightly easier ride by the Premier
League's worst strikeforce, but he knows there is still more work to be done
before he establishes himself as an Irons regular. "There are obviously
areas of my game that I have got to improve. I've been talking a lot and
learning from the previous game I had at Everton," he admitted. "I'm just
going to keep trying to learn.If I play the next game then I've got to focus
on that. If not then don't get too disheartened. I'm going to be patient and
just try and perform if I get the chance."
If the chances do not come along for Tomkins next season, the teenager
admitted he would be willing to go out on loan in search of further first
team football. "I'm not too sure if I'll get chances next season but fingers
crossed I do," he added. "If there's no room for me then I may go on loan.
But I'm not too sure what's around the corner. There might be a few changes
next season but I will have to wait and see what happens."

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Hammers link to another Newcastle Crock FFS - Cmonyuirons.com

Despite lavishing millions in transfers fees and astronimical wages on
ageing, injury-prone players, Alan Curbishley is being linked with
Newcastle's ageing, injury (and error) prone full-back Stephen Carr. Every
week Curbs trots out the same old excuses about West Ham's injury list, yet
refuses to accept the stricken players were all his purchases. Who's next
Alan? Louis Saha, Ledley King and Harry Kewell?

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Hammers linked with Cameroon ace - ESS
Last Updated: Tue, 22 Apr 2008 11:23

West Ham are being linked with a summer raid on Toulouse to try and persuade
them to release Cameroon ace Achille Emana. The 25-year-old international
midfielder who likes to get forward is said to be on manager Alan
Curbishley's summer shopping list. But he will have to find around £6.5m for
the player's services and he also faces competition from Newcastle as well
as clubs in Spain and Italy. Curbishley is unlikely to be spending big
money come the close season and, according to reports, will be offloading
some of his top earners at Upton Park after an injury-ravaged season. He
will still be given money to spend in the transfer market and it remains to
be seen if he is ready to splash a significant sum on Emana.

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Keegan to return to happy hunting ground - Echo News
By Rob Pritchard

NEWCASTLE United boss Kevin Keegan returns to one of his favourite grounds,
Upton Park, this Saturday with a near fully-fit squad to choose from for the
vital clash with West Ham. The Toon have put together a six-match unbeaten
run to close within five points of the Hammers with three matches remaining.
Should the Tynesiders prevail, with Alan Curbishley's side facing a daunting
visit to Old Trafford and a home game against in-form Aston Villa in their
closing two Premier League fixtures, Keegan's men could yet finish the
season in 10th place. And the ex-Fulham boss has a fine record at the Boleyn
Ground to inspire him, having lost only once in four visits in his first
spell as Toon chief. The Magpies have been flying in recent weeks, beating
Fulham, Tottenham, Reading and Sunderland and gaining draws at Portsmouth
and Birmingham City. And Keegan told the Newcastle Chronicle that his cause
would be boosted still further by the return from injury of Emre, James
Milner, Stephen Carr and Cacapa ahead of Saturday's journey to the East End.
And the quartet could all play in a behind-closed-doors friendly to prove
their fitness. "Just about everybody will be back and available for
selection at West Ham on Saturday," said Keegan. "Emre, James Milner and
Stephen Carr are OK, and Cacapa will be back in full training and we didn't
lose anyone through injury against Sunderland, so that's good. "The problem
we have is that we haven't got any reserve games so we'll try and fix one up
behind closed doors instead." Keegan has enjoyed a fine managerial record
against the Hammers, losing just two of the 11 fixtures between his sides -
Newcastle and Manchester City - and West Ham. Further to that, the former
England manager's Newcastle won on three of their four visits to the Bolyen
Ground between 1993 and 1996. However, one word of caution - on his first
managerial visits to E13 with both Newcastle and Manchester City, the games
ended goalless.

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Green expects Hammers clear-out - Setanta
by Ben Blackmore, 22 April 2008

Robert Green admits it is 'inevitable' that there will be a culling of
players at West Ham during the close season. The England goalkeeper
concedes West Ham have underachieved during the 2007/08 campaign, but he
places the lion's share of the blame on The Hammers' gigantic injury list.
Green believes West Ham have the necessary quality to be matching the
efforts of FA Cup finalists Portsmouth, but he sympathises with Alan
Curbishley who seems to suffer more injuries per game than his team scores
goals. Curbishley is reportedly planning a summer clear-out, with
high-earners Freddie Ljungberg, Lucas Neill and Luis Boa Morte all being
'offered' to other clubs, and Green admits the squad is too big if everybody
was fit. "You look at the squad and it's huge," said Green. "Then you look
at who's playing and we've as many fit players as we have injured players.
"We've got six international centre halves out injured so it's a good job
we've got James Tomkins waiting in the wings and him being as good as he is.
"The situation is incredible and you've never seen anything like it. You
look at something like Portsmouth's squad - it's a lot smaller but they've
got players who have played week in week out. It shows what kind of
situation it has been. So with regards to cutting the squad down, I think
it's inevitable really. "But you look at it and say where can we cut it
down? You look at the players out injured and the players who you'd maybe
look to cut - but being able to cut down on it is another matter."

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Forget Eastenders get yourself to West Ham v Newcastle if you want real
drama! - blogonthetyne.co.uk
Posted by Lee on April 22, 2008 8:56 AM | Permalink

On the 22nd anniversary of our 8-1 hiding at Upton Park (the one when Peter
Beardsley ended up in goal!) it's fair to say that Newcastle United are
building up to the big one in the East End in fine spirits after seeing off
the Mackems on Sunday in a superb 2-0 win. The emotionally charged day for
Kevin Keegan's boys will live long in the memory with the Geordie Nation
enjoying a day when you were proud to be a Geordie and proud to be from
Tyneside.
Now all of that will be transferred to West Ham and a side that have been
walloped by injuries. The not so happy Hammers will be without former Toon
trio Kieron Dyer, Craig Bellamy and Lee Bowyer so no painful celebrations if
West Ham score are likely but with Scott Parker and Nobby Solano still
lurking, the mandatory goal from an old boy is still a possibility. Upton
Park of course can be a cauldron of hate and even a 2-1 win over Derby
forced boos in their last game. It was only last season but the contrast
between Newcastle United today and last term is nothing short of incredible.
From the players involved in the 2-0 win in September 2006, only goalscorers
Oba Martins and Damien Duff were in action in our last game against the red
and whites at the weekend. And if that isn't staggering enough the fact that
we've also had three managers in that period shows that stability is vital
on Tyneside for the next few years. The scenes were akin to that of TV
series Casualty last time out as Shay Given punctured his bowel following
Marlon Harewood's heavy challenge. What followed behind the scenes was awful
to look at and probably the most serious situation this author has
encountered in football. Given of course collapsed in the dressing room
after the game and was rushed down the tunnel and past the media on a
stretcher much to the distress of his watching team-mates Duff and Stevie
Harper. It certainly took the gloss of the 2-0 win on a day when Glenn
Roeder had been taunted by sick West Ham fans over health fears during his
time at the club. We could all do without the same kind of drama this season
but with confidence high a repeat result is certainly up for grabs against
injury ravaged West Ham.

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Zamora proves to be a top Hammer - Guardian Series

WEST Ham's Bobby Zamora issued a reminder of his talent with one of the
highest scores of the week in the Actim Index, the official player ratings
system of the Barclays Premier League. The striker (pictured, celebrating
his goal against Derby on Saturday) was the highest climber in the Index,
rising 67 places to 367th overall after an injury-hit campaign. His match
score against Derby was bettered by just four other Premier League players
over the week, taking his total for the season to 63 points from just 717
minutes on the pitch. Irons midfielder Mark Noble also enjoyed a profitable
weekend, earning 25 points against the Rams while keeper Robert Green
remains the highest-ranked Hammer in 47th overall. The Actim Index, which is
taking place throughout the season, is calculated using a unique
mathematical formula that rates each player's contribution - such as goals,
shots, tackles etc - in the match.

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Fiorentina linked with West Ham United star - FansFC
18:20 April, 22, 2008

Fiorentina are said to be keen on West Ham United Football Club's Freddie
Ljungberg. It has been claimed that the Hammers would be willing to listen
to offers for the Swedish international in the summer, despite him only
arriving at Upton Park from Arsenal last summer. Fiorentina are known
admirers of Ljungberg and are willing to pay around £4million to sign him,
but the Londoners have hit back at reports and insist the midfielder is
staying at Alan Curbishley's side. "Rumours that Freddie is leaving are
nonsense," chief executive Scott Duxbury told the Echo. "Freddie with his
international experience is an important player for West Ham United in
reaching our goal, to play in Europe. "His pedigree stands for itself. He is
an important part of this club's future. And he has already shown how
important he can be when available. He still has his best years ahead of
him, and I know that Freddie is very happy at the club."

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How long will West Ham fans put up with the mediocrity? -
footballfancast.com
Posted by: Brenchers, yesterday

New Football FanCast columnist David Brenchley looks at the plight of his
beloved West Ham United and is sick tired of witnessing the mediocre
football that Curbishley's side is churning out.

So, another win and Alan Curbishley's job remains for another year, not that
it would have been in danger had Derby managed to escape from Upton Park
with three points. After joining when the club was staring relegation in the
face, Curbishley has done exactly what has been asked of him and stabilised
the club. Then again, stability is his middle name - or should that be
mediocrity?

He did exactly what was asked of him at Charlton as well, and more. After 15
years with one club, it is hard to change mentality. Having reached the
Premier League, all Curbishley had to do was survive. He did that
comfortably. Every season was the same: a good start to the season followed
by gaining the magic 45 points and looking comfortable in the top ten then
trailing off and finishing 14th. Sound familiar? The difference between then
and now is the crowd.

The Charlton fans seemed happy with being a Premier League club. The board
never really had too much money and Curbishley managed that well. Now he is
at West Ham, a club with tradition - no offence meant to Charlton - and
expectant fans. The fans are now beginning to make their opinions on
Curbishley heard and have been widely condemned for it. "You don't know what
you're doing" rang around The Boleyn Ground as Carlton Cole came on and
proceeded to score the winning goal - harsh maybe but surely the fans have a
right to demand a comfortable win against a team relegated before Easter.

Even the most positive fan will admit that, after last season, a mid-table
finish would be a great achievement, this isn't being disputed. What seems
to be the problem is the way Curbishley's teams seem to fade towards the end
of the season. As with his time at Charlton, West Ham's players seem to have
reached the magical 45 points target and patted themselves on the back, not
realising there are still games left to play. Losing to Chelsea, Liverpool
and Tottenham are perfectly acceptable; capitulating 4-0 to all three is
unforgivable to any West Ham fan.

On current form, West Ham will don't look like picking up any points from
their last three games. If Newcastle and Tottenham can pick up two wins in
that time (bearing in mind the former play West Ham at the weekend) West Ham
will finish 12th. As a West Ham fan, I have to stick up for the crowd. The
stick the team is receiving isn't because we feel we should be higher in the
table, it is because of the manner of the performances.

In my lifetime, West Ham fans have always known that their team isn't the
best - even when we qualified for European campaigns. What West Ham have
always been famed for though are attacking performances. With the prices of
season tickets going up every year, surely the fans have a right to demand
value for money, even if it means relegation scraps.

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West Ham's Green impressed by youngster Stech
tribalfootball.com - April 22, 2008

West Ham United No1 Robert Green has been impressed by teenage keeper Marek
Stech. "Marek is a good lad," the club's No1 said, while speaking at a
recent fans' forum. "He is still very young and he is probably got a good
inch or two on me. He is filling out, getting stronger - that is a major
part of what he needs to work on. He has got endless potential and, with
Ludo (Miklosko), it will come out."

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Hammers defender reaches 50 not out
By Guardian-series

GEORGE McCartney admits he is starting to feel the strain after nocthing his
50th consecutive game for West Ham on Saturday. The 26-year-old (pictured)
is the only player in the squad to have played in all 40 league and cup game
for the Irons this season to add to the final ten games he played of last
term.
But, although he is happy to have reached the milestone, the Northern
Ireland full back acknowledged that he is longing for a rest. Speaking after
the Irons 2-1 win over Derby, McCartney told the club's official website:
"To be honest I am starting to feel shattered now. "I will be happy when the
season is over. It has been tough but also pleasing to play so many games.
"I haven't had any rest but that is because I have wanted to be out training
every day and playing as many matches as I can."
Saturday's victory was Hammers first in five games and keeps the team in
poll position to end the season in the top half of the Premier League.
However, an underpar performance against the league's worst side was met
with a chorus of boos by the Upton Park crowd. McCartney though, is eager to
look on the positive side. "Overall I am happy with how things have gone
this season," he said. "The last few weeks the results have been
disappointing but we just need the supporters to get behind us for the last
three games and hopefully we can stay in tenth place."
And the left back is hoping the result can help the club to keep themselves
above bitter rivals Spurs, who are currently in 11th place. "It gives us a
little bit of breathing space," observed McCartney. "We have opened up a
five-point gap and hopefully things will stay that way."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 22

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 22nd April 2008

Reserves go down at Arsenal - WHUFC
Kevin Keen's men saw their season end on a losing note on Monday but have plenty of positives to take
21.04.2008

Arsenal reserves 2-0 West Ham United reserves

West Ham United saw their 2007/08 campaign end on a low note as they went down 2-0 at Arsenal but Kevin Keen's men can hold their heads high after a strong campaign.

The visitors were undone by first-half goals from Rui Fonte and Jack Wilshere, with the latter sealing a man of the match display with his stunning strike from 20 yards that gave Marek Stech little chance. The United goalkeeper was back in Keen's lineup for the first time since 23 January and produced several fine stops to keep the home side at bay while Tony Stokes had the best of the chances for the visitors when he smashed a shot against the post midway through the second half.

With Aston Villa drawing 1-1 at home against Chelsea, the result at Barnet's Underhill home this evening was largely academic. Villa moved three points clear of United and still have one more match to play - against Arsenal next Tuesday. The only other challengers for the Barclays Premier Reserve League southern section title are Reading, who are five points adrift and have two games left themselves.

United's attacking options were increased before the game when Jack Jeffery returned from Cambridge United, having scored and made one in a 2-0 win for the Football League promotion hopefuls at the end of his loan spell last Saturday. Jeffery played alongside Tony Stokes, again operating in an advanced position. Although both worked hard, they were up against an imposing defence and most of the visitors' attacking intent came on the left flank via the right-footed Junior Stanislas - who gave Armand Traore plenty to think about.

Stanislas had a succession of first-half corners to pile on the pressure but was more effective from open play. Arsenal always had the edge though and were the first to strike for goal when Nacer Barazite fired in on Stech on five minutes but missed the target. Five minutes later, Fonte was shaking his head in disbelief after a wonder save by Stech when an Arsenal free-kick fell into his path just eight yards out. It was to be the 19th minute before United's first real chance, Stanislas firing in a piledriver that was just deflected wide.

Arsenal soon stepped up a gear though. Wilshere split the United central defence of Josh Payne - back after a three-match suspension - and Bondz N'Gala with a fine pass. Fonte ran on to it and smashed beyond Stech. A quarter-of-an-hour later the home side doubled their advantage when Wilshere ran at Ashley Miller before unleashing a curling effort that again gave Stech no chance to save. Unsurprisingly, the 16-year-old midfielder's goal had the watching Arsene Wenger smiling.

United had some moments before half-time, notably when Jeffery's shot was blocked just as it looked set to trouble Vito Mannone in the home goal but Nacer Barazite and substitute Gilles Sunu, just on for Abou Diaby, also had their moments. The visitors were a different proposition after the break, with Stanislas and Stokes firing in on goal only to be denied. Jack Collison, back as reserve-team captain after a spell with the first team, was also getting on the ball more.

Just before the hour, Stokes hit the post after Stanislas's corner had Mannone in all sorts of bother but the ball rebounded safely into the keeper's grasp. Stanislas underlined his superb performance on 62 minutes with a lovely piece of control before firing in a shot that Mannone did well to stop. The final 20 minutes saw both teams make their final changes and create few chances on goal. Regardless of the result, Keen's young team can be proud of their efforts over the whole season.

Arsenal: Mannone, Rodgers, Nordtveit, Ogogo, G Hoyte, Wilshere (Murphy 84), Thomas, Diaby (Sunu 42), Traore, Barazite, Fonte (Steer 73)
Subs: Szczesny, Murphy

West Ham United: Stech, Spence, Payne (Ashman 88), N'Gala, Miller, Stanislas (Lee 76), Harvey (Edgar 66), Collison, Kearns, Jeffery, Stokes
Subs: Street, O'Neill

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Arsenal reserves 2-0 Reserves FT - WHUFC
All the action as it happened from the home of Barnet as Kevin Keen's men end their 2007/08 campaign
21.04.2008

Barclays Premier Reserve League - Southern Section
Underhill
Kick-off: 7pm

West Ham United end their 18-game season on a losing note but Kevin Keen's men can hold their heads high after a strong campaign. Arsenal were too strong on the night and won it through first-half goals from Rui Fonte and Jack Wilshere.

FULL TIME: 2-0

90min - We are playing two minutes of added time.

90min - Stokes is cautioned for a foul on Barazite.

88min - Anthony Ashman gets a run-out after replacing Payne.

87min - Villa have equalised against Chelsea. A point would be enough for them to see off United's title challenge regardless of the result here at Barnet.

84min - Wilshere is coming off for Rhys Murphy. The departing No10 made the first and scored a fantastic second.

82min - Aston Villa are losing 1-0 at home against Chelsea. If it stays like that and United had won their final game here tonight, they would have gone top of the table with Villa still to play one more match.

82min - Well played Stech again. This time to deny Traore.

79min - Arsenal have remained a threat throughout as shown by Steer's run which, after a neat one-two, finished a shot wide to Stech's right.

77min - Lee fires in from distance but his shot goes high over Mannone's crossbar.

76min - Oliver Lee, the son of former United midfielder Robert, comes on for the impressive Stanislas.

74min - Stech does well to deny Rodgers. The 18-year-old Czech shot-stopper has made some timely blocks on his return to reserve-team action.

73min - Fonte departs with Rene Steer coming on in his place.

72min - Fonte heads for goal after Traore outfoxed Spence. The scorer of the first goal tonight was unable to direct his header on goal though and it ran wide.

71min - Stokes gets another chance to shoot but the angle is tight and he cannot keep it on target.

66min - Anthony Edgar is coming on for Harvey. The No16 will hope to add to the attacking options.

65min - Collison is much improved in this half. Stokes is also getting around the pitch and has another half-chance.

64min - Stokes and Ogogo are spoken to by the referee.

62min - Stokes crosses deep for Stanislas who brings teh ball down superbly to the left of goal. He takes a touch to deceive Abu Ogogo but again Mannone is equal to his effort.

61min - A poor finish from Stanislas after Stokes and Jeffery had combined well. Arsenal counter quickly and Traore gets a chance to shoot but Payne's intervention allows the ball to run safely into Stech's arms.

59min - Kearns and Spence combine well on the right-flank. The move ends with the United No2 sliding the ball across the goal but Arsenal get the ball away.

57min - Stokes hits the post after Stanislas's corner has Mannone in all sorts of trouble. The Arsenal keeper was grateful to claim the ball when it rebounded off the woodwork.

54min - Wilshere's long-range free-kick leads to Stech having to palm the ball away for a corner.

52min - The visitors are giving this a good go, Collison, Stokes and Stanislas are all seeing plenty of the ball.

51min - Payne rises to meet Stanislas's cross but cannot direct his header on target.

50min - Sunu gets lots of space to shoot at Stech. United get a quick counterattack going and Jeffery slips in Stokes, who shoots but the shot is deflected wide for a corner.

48min - Stanislas fires in a free-kick but it lacks power and direction.

47min - Stanislas spurns a great chance to pull the visitors back into the contest. The ball ran right across the area to the No7 but just as Stanislas shot, Gavin Hoyte managed to get something on the ball and it ran through safely to Vito Mannone.

46min - Arsenal get us under way. The home side were clearly the dominant side in the first half but Kevin Keen will hope for a reaction from his team in this second period.

HALF-TIME - 2-0

45min - Barazite is booked for dissent after he fouled Spence.

45min - Sunu gets the chance to shoot after getting plenty of time off the right flank. His shot sails miles over Stech's crossbar. We are playing two minutes of added time.

42min - Spence wins a corner. Arsenal make a change with Diaby going off to be replaced by Gilles Sunu. From the resulting corner, Jeffery's goalbound shot is deflected to safety by a defender.

39min - Collison tries to pick out Jeffery with a free-kick but Arsenal comfortably see out the danger. Arsenal have been too strong in the closing stages of this half.

37min - Stech keeps United's hopes alive with a good save from Jay Thomas's shot before having to react quickly seconds later to keep out an effort from Barazite.

34min - GOAL! - Wilshere scores a stunning goal. The No10 takes a touch or two in front of Ashley Miller with his left foot before curling the ball from 20 yards beyond the outstretched arms of Stech.

30min - Jack Collison shows a good turn of pace to race forward through central midfield before slipping the ball to Jeffery. The cross comes into the box but Stanislas cannot bring it under control.

28min - Jordan Spence is geting the better of Armand Traore in this half. The 17-year-old England youth international has been in fine form of late. Stokes sends another shot wide.

25min - Stanislas tries to get something going on the left wing but comes up short. He has been the most inventive player so far for Kevin Keen's men and could be key to the chances of getting back into the encounter.

24min - GOAL! - This time Fonte beats Stech after a neat left-footed pass by Wilshere split the United central defenders Payne and Bondz N'Gala.

21min - Kearns' piledriver is blocked after Stanislas rolled the free-kick into his path. Stokes had won the free-kick. Tom Harvey then did well at the other end before Stech made another good save from Fonte.

19min - A surging run from the halfway line takes Stanislas deep into Arsenal territory. Lovely play by the young midfielder who then gets a blistering shot away from Stokes' touch-back which is just deflected wide of goal. Arsenal again get the corner away.

17min - Payne does well to block Fonte's shot before Northern Irish youth international Daniel Kearns is penalised for a foul on fellow 16-year-old Jack Wilshere.

16min - Jeffery has been getting treatment for a knock but is back on now.

14min - Stokes fires one from distance that never troubles the Arsenal goal.

12min - This has been an interesting contest so far. The match is United's last of the season and a win could keep alive their title dreams - depending on how Aston Villa get on.

10min - A superb save from Stech from point-blank range denies Rui Fonte. The ball fell to the attacker after the initial free-kick was blocked.

9min - Jack Collison loses out to Abou Diaby before Payne upends Barazite on the edge of the area to give Arsenal a great shooting opportunity.

8min - A lovely ball from Stanislas nearly picks out Jeffery but Arsenal's Paul Rodgers gets the ball away behind. Stanislas takes the corner but again finds only an Arsenal player.

7min - Jeffery is penalised for a foul on Gavin Hoyte just as Stanislas was about to shoot for goal from the left of the penalty area.

6min - Stanislas has another corner but again fails to pick out a West Ham United attacker. Josh Payne was up there for that one, with the versatile performer back after a three-match suspension.

5min - Nacer Barazite goes close with a low drive that misses to the right of Marek Stech. The Czech shot-stopper is back in reserve-team action after overcoming an ankle injury.

3min - Arsenal try and build through young left-back Armand Traore but he overruns the ball. Neither keeper has been tested yet.

2min - Junior Stanislas gets an instant chance with a corner but the delivery is poor. Jeffery is back in the visitors' attack after his loan spell at Cambridge United came to a goalscoring end at the weekend.

1min - West Ham United get us under way, wearing their change strip.

KICK-OFF

Arsenal: Mannone, Rodgers, Nordtveit, Ogogo, G Hoyte, Wilshere (Murphy 84), Thomas, Diaby (Sunu 42), Traore, Barazite, Fonte (Steer 73)
Subs: Szczesny, Murphy

West Ham United: Stech, Spence, Payne (Ashman 88), N'Gala, Miller, Stanislas (Lee 76), Harvey (Edgar 66), Collison, Kearns, Jeffery, Stokes
Subs: Street, O'Neill

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No fringe benfits - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 21st April 2008
By: Staff Writer

Scott Duxbury has denied reports that the club's higher earners will be sold in order to reduce United's burgeoning wage bill. Some sections of the media took Duxbury's previous comments regarding trimming the squad to mean that top earners such as Freddie Ljungberg and Lucas Neill were on their way out of the club. But the club's CEO spoke out today to deny speculation by insisting that only fringe players would be departing this summer. "Our squad is too big," he said. "But we only plan to sell players that are not close of getting into the team. "We have a very young talented team and experienced star players like Freddie [Ljungberg], Craig Bellamy and Lucas Neill are very important in helping those talents develop."
On Ljungberg specifically - who some sources had claimed would be on his way - Duxbury called the rumours 'nonsense', before somewhat bizarrely claiming that the 30-year-old 'still has his best years ahead of him'. "Rumours that Freddie is leaving are nonsense," he added. "With his international experience [he] is an important player for West Ham in reaching our goal, to play in Europe. His pedigree stands for itself. "He he has already shown how important he can be for West Ham when available. He's playing in the Euros this summer for Sweden and is going to be one of the tournament's big stars.
"Freddie is very popular at West Ham and I know that he is very happy at the club."

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Cole's goal - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 21st April 2008
By: Staff Writer

Carlton Cole has revealed that he feels he is fighting for his future at West Ham. The big striker - who was signed by Alan Pardew for £2 million in 2006 - scored his sixth goal of the season during Saturday's 2-1 win over Derby County on Saturday. And contrary to reports that the players are coasting through the remaining games of the season, Cole says that he - and a number of fellow squad members - feel that they have everything still to play for. "Do we have to fight for our futures? Definitely," he said following Saturday's game. "We have to fight all the time. We've had a lot of injuries and a few of the players have not played much. They're going to want to get in the team next season. "There's going to be a lot of competition in terms of who's going to stay and who's going to go. There could be a few worried people this summer. But that's how football is."
Scott Duxbury revealed at a fans' forum last week that Alan Curbishley's first team squad needed to be trimmed by around half-a-dozen faces. With new players also expected in, the number leaving the club could be in double figures.

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Hammers keen to keep Ljungberg - SSN
Swedish star remains part of Hammers' plans
By Chris Burton Last updated: 21st April 2008

West Ham chief executive Scott Duxbury has dismissed rumours suggesting that Freddie Ljungberg is set to leave the club. Reports had claimed that the Hammers are keen to cut their wage bill over the summer and that the Swedish international would be among those shown the door. However, Duxbury has rubbished this idea and insists that both parties are keen for the experienced midfielder to remain at Upton Park. "Rumours that Freddie is leaving are nonsense," he told the Echo. "Freddie with his international experience is an important player for West Ham in reaching our goal, to play in Europe. "His pedigree stands for itself. "He is an important part of this club's future. "And he has already shown how important he can be for West Ham when available.
"I mean, he's playing the Euros this summer for Sweden and is going to be one of the tournament's big stars. "He still has his best years ahead of him."

While making it clear that he fully expects Ljungberg to be part of Alan Curbishley's plans for next term, Duxbury did acknowledge that there will be a number of departures from the club during the close season. "Our squad is too big. But we only plan to sell players that are not close to getting into the team," he added. "Freddie is very popular at West Ham. "And I know that Freddie is very happy at the club. "We have a very young, talented team and experienced star players like Freddie, Craig Bellamy and Lucas Neill are very important in helping those talents develop. "They are role models."

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Green calls for understanding - SSN
Goalkeeper backs under-fire Hammers manager
By James Dall Last updated: 21st April 2008

Robert Green has echoed manager Alan Curbishley's pleas for realism and understanding from the West Ham United supporters. The Hammers had been tipped to push for a European berth this season; however a lengthy injury list has stretched Curbishley's resources. West Ham remain 10th in the table following last Saturday's unconvincing 2-1 victory over already-relegated Derby County. But Green has defended his manager, insisting that the side has coped well under the strain of absentees. "Our performance (against Derby) wasn't great," Green told the Evening Standard. "But what we'd appreciate is some understanding that we have a lot of guys out. "We're bringing back some others who have been out injured and we're blooding youngsters as well.

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Prem duo eye Emana - SSN
Chase on for Cameroon ace
Last updated: 21st April 2008

Skysports.com understands Newcastle and West Ham are eyeing Toulouse midfielder Achille Emana. Emana is a target for a host of clubs across Europe after impressing for Toulouse over the last few seasons. The 25-year-old is regarded as one of the best attacking midfielders in Europe and his performances have not gone unnoticed. Newcastle and West Ham have been keeping tabs on the Cameroon international for some time and scouts from both clubs are believed to have watched Emana in action against Bordeaux over the weekend. Spanish duo Sevilla and Almeria and Italian pair Fiorentina and Udinese are also believed to be tracking Emana and are lining up moves for the midfielder in the summer. Emana is believed to be considering his future at Toulouse and is keen on a move away to a bigger club. The African is thought to have made a move to England his top choice and this has alerted the likes of West Ham and Newcastle. Toulouse are unlikely to be able to resist any big-money offers for Emana and their valuation of €8million (£6.3million) would be no problem for either Newcastle or West Ham.

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Wanted: Inspiration - West Ham Online
Alex V - Mon Apr 21 2008

I was very taken with the words of Blackburn manager Mark Hughes this weekend, describing the attitude encouraged among the players at Manchester United. "They want to win things. They don't accept they are ever beaten and when they are, they don't say they have lost, they say they have run out of time. There is always the fear of the manager, too. You always have to go back into the dressing room and that certainly keeps them on their toes. You can go into each game with the same mentality and the same drive and positive thoughts. You expect to win. You don't hope to win. That's what they work on. They work in dreams and miracles and on occasions they produce them. They are never beaten." I can't recall a West Ham squad with this attitude, and we certainly don't have one just now it seems. Perhaps this is the overwhelming factor in our perennial ability to under-achieve - we need to change our character, and encourage winners.

I would argue that winners are actively discouraged at West Ham - the fans simply do not take kindly to those who talk themselves, or the West Ham team, up. Reo-Coker, for me, had a strong winning mentality - he was arrogant, slightly boorish, but he had an unshakable belief in his own ability as a player and a captain. He put his head above the parapet and we shot him down. Lucas Neill, to a lesser extent, has suffered the same fate this season. There was a wobble between the fans and Dean Ashton this season - the moment he came back with an obvious desire and ambition to be in the side, it turned us off and he slightly lost face with the West Ham faithful.

Mark Noble is the perfect West Ham character for the fans - he wears his heart on his sleeve, but has a humility to him. He is seen as a plucky young lad, a trier, and probably will be seen in a similar vein long into his 30s. Were Mark Noble to appear in an interview next week and say "I am a winner - I demand success" he is likely to turn from hero to pariah within hours. We don't like players who talk the talk and walk the walk - we like players who work with their head down, grinding out their existence on the pitch. I don't think we like ambition - if Noble announced he would like to win a title in his career, his West Ham career would be irrevocably damaged, and the rumours about his future would go into overdrive. I wouldn't want to criticise Noble too much, but his is the attitude of the loyal pro and not the winner.

Character is hard to judge. Last year the entire squad was characterised as overpaid prima-donna players with no real commitment to the cause, an opinion based on nothing in particular other than a glance at the fancy cars they drive and the lacklustre performances on the pitch. Meanwhile ex-player Tyrone Mears praised our team spirit last season as key in our survival. Somebody is wrong. Looking back at Di Canio for example, it is hard to pinpoint his exact influence - disruptive, inspiring, dedicated, unreliable, clownish, arrogant. Curbishley clearly came in last season and rooted out Sheringham as a bad influence on other players, when under Pardew he had been a central figurehead. Squads are complex beasts.

I would like to see a West Ham side with a more obvious winning mentality, something along the lines of what Mark Hughes is ascribing to Manchester United. I would like us to show a more obvious arrogance, to turn up on the pitch expecting to win, chomping at the bit, never ever beaten. I would like us to buy and sell players based on this formula. The trouble is that it's not an exact science, and sometimes players with big characters have too much of an influence on a squad.

I am always reminded of one of Sven Goran Eriksson's key tenets, outlined in one of his books on management - he said that he always liked to have three prominent players who set the tone for the rest of the squad. I think he was outlining something that occurs naturally among any group - certain people come to be central and others follow their lead. Chelsea are often lead out by Terry, Lampard and Cech - I would argue that Cole or Drogba are their best players these days, but they definitely do not set the tone at Chelsea. Ronaldo is the best player in the world, but I bet that Giggs has more of an influence on the tone that is set at Man Utd.

I'm not quite sure which three players are playing the same role at West Ham. Clearly Lucas Neill is one, but I'm not sure that he should be. Ashton used to be one before injury, but has maybe been slow to recover that mantle since his return. I expected Parker to be one but having seen him in matches, I'm now not so sure. It just underlines what a strange season this has been and what a state of flux still exists at West Ham - we simply do not know where we are, who we are, how good we are.

Lucas Neill is clearly a key player at West Ham - he is an experienced head, the team captain, and comes across as something of an arrogant player. Some have criticised his form, and I would agree that he has been inconsistent at times since Christmas, but there is no doubt in my mind that he is a good premiership full-back, and probably will continue to be a first-choice player into next season. I actually think he's been one of our better players over the season, and has been overly criticised simply because he is a senior player and captain on a big wage in a season where the football has been quite dull.

But I do continue to be concerned by Neill's position as captain, and in seemingly having such a key influence on the West Ham team. He isn't vocal on the pitch, he is very much a grinder rather than a leader - I don't see him having any sort of extra effect out there. I think he is a good pro very much in the mould of a Christian Dailly - he probably lives fairly cleanly, is a good organiser on the training pitch, perhaps vocal in the dressing room, and has bags of experience. Is he that leader of men, the inspirational figure that leads teams to victory? It just doesn't really look like it. I don't think Neill should be the West Ham captain, and I just don't think he's an inspirational player to rally a team around.

Unfortunately, I don't see an obvious replacement. Upson is the most likely candidate - a strong player, fairly reliable, experienced, with a quiet assurance about him on the pitch. But again he just isn't that vocal or obvious as a leader - I can't imagine him cracking the whip after a misplaced pass. I'm not sure if anyone ever really does that in the West Ham side - no wonder we are drifting now this season. The only other candidate I can see is Dean Ashton, but does he need the captaincy to worry about while he is recovering his form - is he even a guaranteed starter?

The players I would single out as showing creditable spirit would be ones to make fans frown rather than cheer. Luis Boa Morte, for me, has had a great attitude all season - his play has often been woeful, and he must know that, but he has always come back for more with 100%. Carlton Cole is another player whose spirit has been tremendous - he has given everything playing on his own up front, but more recently his appearances from the bench have been quite cavalier and have given us a real impetus on the pitch. The other player to mention is Ljungberg, simply because you can tell how crestfallen he is when we don't win - I guess the years at Arsenal have drilled an expectation of victory into him. But none of these players are leaders - they are triers.

So, put short, I think there is a void in terms of leadership among the players, and I'm just not sure the mix is right in Curbishley's squad. We have too many players who will knuckle down, and not enough who will lift their head to encourage others or dig them out when required. Imagine what one of the great captains could do with this bunch of players - what we wouldn't give for a Roy Keane at the club.

Then there's Curbishley himself - I despise some of his post-match interviews, which are really one of the only insights we get into his thinking. At the moment he is in utterly defensive mode, and seemingly will not speak unless it is to underline how many injuries we have. He seems to utterly lack the understanding that he has some sort of responsibity, if not culpability, for these injuries. He is coming across as a defensive, whinging manager with a siege mentality - it's not a positive thing. Clever managers realise that their relations with the media are to be used for their benefit - to play mind games with opponents, and to improve the spirit within their own squads. Curbishley is just whinging, encouraging his own players into negative attitudes, and actually writing off his own squad.

In terms of his overall leadership qualities, I think Curbishley has shown over his career that he can get the best out of players, so has to be respected on that basis. Even in a short time at West Ham, he has taken individuals and got the very best out of them (Tevez, Green, Zamora, Cole, McCartney, Upson). I think that team performances have been flat this season, anyone could see that, yet I wouldn't really criticise any individual players for that, because I think that everyone this season has really gone out and done their best for the team. What is missing is that inspirational extra 10% that the great teams find, and which we quite obviously do not have at the moment.

Curbishley's character is easy to criticise, simply on the basis of a decade of solid but uninspiring progress as Charlton's manager - he has to prove now that he and his staff have the ability to inspire more than just consistency in their players. I would like to see a West Ham side at their opponents throats from the first whistle - too often this season we have taken the best part of half the game to warm up. I think Curbishley is good at promoting a patient attitude - I like that calm assurance that we have, however badly we are playing. But it needs somehow to develop the cutting edge that beats teams - at times we just don't look that bothered that we can't create anything in the final third, and seem content to pass the ball around in midfield and defence for the whole game.

I think solidity is a good base to work from, and West Ham certainly have that in theory - it is the winning mentality and character that will turn that into wins. And I'm concerned that I don't quite know where that extra drive is coming from with Curbishley's West Ham. I don't see it coming from individual players (yet) and I don't see it coming from the manager (yet) - if that doesn't change, we are stuck.

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West Ham kid Stokes hoping for new chance
tribalfooball.com - April 21, 2008

West Ham United prospect Tony Stokes was delighted to be involved in the squad for their victory over Derby on Saturday. The 21 year-old told whufc.com: "I have been working extra hard in the hope of catching the manager's eye. The last two weeks it has been nice to be around the squad and travel with them to Bolton last week. To be in the squad again against Derby was good and it has all been a surprise to me really."

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Jeffery returns to West Ham
tribalfootball.com - April 21, 2008

Jack Jeffery has returned to West Ham United. The young striker is back at Upton Park after a successful loan spell at Cambridge United.

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Ozzy Stan set to retire - CmonYuIrons

Former West Ham and Birmingham star Stan Lazaridis looks set to announce his retirement after being released by Australian club Perth Glory. Stan got his big move to England in 1995 when Harry Redknapp paid £300,000 to sign him for West Ham United. A poor debut and consistent injury problems made his debut season at West Ham difficult. Over four seasons, Lazaridis, played just 87 games for West Ham United leading to him dropping down a division to sign for Birmingham City in the Summer of 1999. The 35-year-old midfielder made more than 260 Premier League appearances and is expected to pursue a career in coaching with the West Australia club. Perth boss Scott Gooch told the Glory website: "Stan is a terrific person and will always be welcome at the club." We wish you all the best Stan in your future Career.

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West Ham's Green makes plea to fans
tribalfooball.com - April 21, 2008

Robert Green has called on West Ham United fans to back the players. A 2-1 victory over relegated Derby did not impress West Ham fans with a section of the crowd booing the team off the pitch. "Our performance wasn't great," said Green. "But what we'd appreciate is some understanding that we have a lot of guys out, we're bringing back some others who have been out injured and we're blooding youngsters as well."

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Cole goal shows Curbishley is in the know
Guardian report Observer report Match facts
Premier League
West Ham United 2 Zamora 20, Cole 77
Derby County 1 Mears 65

Anna Kessel at Upton Park The Observer, Sunday April 20 2008
This article appeared in the Observer on Sunday April 20 2008 on p5 of the News & features section.
It was last updated at 23:17 on April 19 2008.

Alan Curbishley billed this as a 'very important game' for both sides; it wasn't. Not in League terms, anyway - Derby's singular aim is to avoid finishing with the worst points total for a Premier League season and West Ham have nothing to play for. But the statement is revealing about Curbishley's own - recently questioned - position at the club.

It is harsh for a manager who has taken his side from relegation dodgers to mid-table stalwarts in a season dogged by injury - 14 players out in total - to feel the need to defend himself, but fans are a demanding bunch. They booed their team off the pitch, despite the win, and treated Curbishley to a chorus of 'You don't know what you're doing' when he brought Carlton Cole off the bench. Cole promptly scored the winner, but that didn't perturb them.

Afterwards, Curbishley was forced to defend a large wage bill for a 34-man squad and vented his frustrations about the season. 'It's been a catalogue of disasters,' he said, 'surely there's got to be some realisation of what's happened here. Week in week out we've been under the cosh. We've had unbelievable problems just getting out there.'

Curbishley was forced to make seven changes to the starting line-up from the defeat at Bolton last weekend, as Matthew Upton and Jonathan Spector bumped up the injury list just 24 hours before kick off.

Still, the home side took the lead after 20 minutes. George McCartney's free-kick set up Bobby Zamora to head home from close range. Poor defending from Derby's Dean Leacock left him grimacing. Zamora, who has played only 10 League games this campaign, scored his first goal since April 2007.

Derby did not look like providing much of a threat until, five minutes before the break, David Jones' cross set up Robbie Savage for a wicked header from the edge of the box. Robert Green in the West Ham goal reacted well to tip the ball over the bar, but it was a sign of intent from Derby.

West Ham opened the second half with better focus. Youngster Freddie Sears impressed with a mazy run; Scott Parker shot just wide. However, Derby had other ideas. Green was forced to make a save at the feet of Tyrone Mears, set up by Hossam Ghaly, after he got beyond Freddie Ljungberg. Moments later it was déjà vu, but this time Mears - a former Hammer - got the goal. Ghaly again supplied the pass, Ljungberg again was outpaced and Mears fired into the back of the net. The game sprang into life.

A period of end-to-end action followed, and the home side won out. Ljungberg's beautifully worked one-two with Mark Noble provided the build up for substitute Cole to slot home. Ooh, Curbs must have felt smug.

A Savage header at the death could have upset things, but it was not to be. Paul Jewell could only shrug as another decent performance dissolved into a defeat. Had he ever heard a team booed off after a victory? 'I wish I'd had the opportunity', he said. Derby are still looking for a League win under Jewell this season.

THE FANS' PLAYER RATINGS AND VERDICT

Andy Bishop, Observer reader One of those games that makes you long for the end of the season. It was that bad and it could have been worse - when Derby equalised they had a 10-15 minute spell when it looked as though they might win. It was a good job Cole scored, it prevented a riot, as things were getting ugly with the crowd turning on Curbishley. The reaction surprised me. Before the game I would have said he will definitely be at the club next season, but after hearing all the stick he took I'm not so sure. He has only himself to blame - in the past three games we have been really uninspiring and flat, and it looks like he doesn't know how to address it.

The fan's player ratings Green 5; Pantsil 5, Tomkins 6, Neill 5, McCartney 5; Faubert 6 (Solano n/a), Noble 5, Parker 7, Ljungberg 5 (Boa Morte n/a); Sears 5 (Cole n/a), Zamora 6

Carl Walker, RamSpace.co.uk There was a good turnout and we deserved to get something. The first half was OK, but we played really well in the second half and Mears' equaliser was one of our moments of the season - which says a lot. For a spell it looked as though we would go on to win, but West Ham scored when the game seemed to be petering out. A typical goal for us to concede, too, created out of nothing. Stubbs had a blinding game - a West Ham friend reckons he's the fattest player to appear in the Premier League and he's almost playing on one leg because of injury, but he held us together.

The fan's player ratings Carroll 7; Todd 7 (McEveley n/a), Leacock 6, Stubbs 9, Lewis 7; Mears 8, Ghaly 7, Savage 6, Jones 6 (Villa n/a), Sterjovski 5; Miller 7

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The dirty dozen - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 21st April 2008
By: Graeme Howlett

West Ham United have confirmed that a number of first-team squad members face the chop this summer as Alan Curbishley is forced to reduce his playing staff. Scott Duxbury revealed last week that Curbishley had been asked to reduce his squad to 24/25 players - or two decent options for each position.
So join KUMB as we take a look through the squad to see whose positions are most at risk - and to see a list of the 12 players who we feel have most to fear ...

1. Robert Green
One of the most consistent players at the club this year, Curbishley will do all he can to hang on to the England keeper this summer although bids from other interested parties (possibly Arsenal) may be forthcoming.
Stay/go: stay

2. Lucas Neill
Criticised at times this season for some below par performances but still a lynchpin in Curbishley's defence. Will only go if the club are made an offer they can't refuse.
Stay/go: stay

3. George McCartney
As the only recognised left back at the club it would be folly to part with the popular Irishman who will feature highly in this year's end of season player polls.
Stay/go: stay

4. Danny Gabbidon
The Welsh defender has been out of action since Christmas with a groin injury and has now slipped down the defensive pecking order. Rumours of a fall-out with Curbishley and interest from former club Cardiff could see our 2006 Player of the Year on his way out.
Stay/go: go

5. Anton Ferdinand
Just over a year to go on his contract and no new offers from the club have left Ferdinand feeling jittery. However Curbishley is thought to be a fan and unlikely to let him leave without a struggle.
Stay/go: stay

6. Matthew Upson
The club's most consistent defender this season, Upson is just about the safest player at the club. However his recent England call-up may have turned one or two heads.
Stay/go: stay

7. Freddie Ljungberg
Despite having improved greatly in recent weeks the Swede is still a possibility for the axe due to his higher earnings and the number of players who can play in his position. The problem will be finding someone willing to pay his vast wages.
Stay/go: stay

8. Scott Parker
Another to suffer massive injury problems this season, Parker will be a West Ham player next season having arrived for £7m less than a year ago.
Stay/go: stay

9. Dean Ashton
The likes of Newcastle and Aston Villa are likely to be keeping an eye on developments in East London with Ashton still to find the form that earned him an England call-up two years ago. SHould a high-enough bid come in Curbishley may be tempted to cash in although the likely fallout from the fans may be enough to dissuade such a move.
Stay/go: stay

10. Craig Bellamy
Linked with a move to Championship outfit QPR but still has plenty to offer the top flight. Despite massive injury problems Bellamy is set to remain at the club next season.
Stay/go: stay

11. Matthew Etherington
Recently signed a new four-year deal so a swift exit is highly unlikely.
Stay/go: stay

12. Carlton Cole
Six goals this term may not be enough to save the big striker; the fact that his sheer size offers Curbishley a different option may be. However the right offer - perhaps from a newly promoted club - could tempt Curbs' to sell.
Stay/go: go

14. John Paintsil
A cult figure but in all honesty, a pretty average defender. Paintsil - who was signed by Alan Pardew on the back of a good World Cup in 2006 - is one of the hot favourites to go.
Stay/go: go

15. Nobby Solano
His current deal comes to an end this summer and it could well be a toss-up between him and Ljungberg to see who goes. The sheer amount of money invested in the Swede could mean the end for Nobby, who has been a big hit with the fans this season.
Stay/go: go

16. Mark Noble
A no-brainer if Curbishley values his genitals.
Stay/go: stay

17. Hayden Mullins
Several times he has been rumoured to be leaving the club but four years after moving from Crystal Palace the central midfielder remains a solid member of Curbishley's squad. Recent comments by the manager suggesting that Mullins is a bit of an unsung hero point to him remaining at United for a fifth year.
Stay/go: stay

18. Jonathan Spector
A jack of a all trader but master of none, Spector is going to struggle to hang on to his place. However his sheer versatility may yet be the thing that saves him.
Stay/go: stay

19. James Collins
Curbishley has a lot of time for the Ginger Pele, whose cruiate injury means he will be going nowhere as he will be benched until Christmas at the earliest.
Stay/go: stay

20. Julien Faubert
With so little playing time this season Faubert is another who has it all to do next year. Despite the injuries - and comments made to Equipe earlier in the season regarding the club's trianing methods - the flying Frenchman stays.
Stay/go: stay

21. Richard Wright
Already in an extended loan spell with CHampionship side SOuthampton, Wright will almost certainly go having complained earlier in the season about a lack of first team football.
Stay/go: go

22. Tony Stokes
Another who is like to be moved on having failed to break through to the first team squad.
Stay/go: go

23. Jimmy Walker
A hugely popular figure around the club despite barely featuring this season, Walker's lower-end-of-the-pay-scale wages could save him - especially if number two Wright does move on.
Stay/go: stay

24. Christian Dailly
On loan with Rangers since the turn of the year, Dailly will offcially leave the club this summer when his current deal expires.
Stay/go: go

25. Bobby Zamora
Having barely featured this season Zamora is another under threat. However one of either him or Cole are almost certain to be retained; we think the Z-man just has the edge.
Stay/go: stay

26. Nigel Quashie
Will be moved on this summer if a buyer can be found - and assuming someone can find him first.
Stay/go: go

27. Calum Davenport
Had he not broken his neck playing on loan at Watford in January he would have been one of the first out of the door having failed to impress. Like Collins, his injury means he will be going nowhere (until next January, at least).
Stay/go: stay

28. Kyel Reid
Another who has failed to impress Curbishley, the young winger could be tempted by a move to Crystal Palace where he spent a successful spell on loan recently.
Stay/go: go

29. Lee Bowyer
Started the season superbly but like many others spent the end of it on the treatment table. His numerous injuries are a concern and the right offer could tempt Curbishley to let one of his former proteges go.
Stay/go: go

30. James Tomkins
Having finally broken through to the first team Tomkins is finally beginning to realise years of promise. Going nowhere.
Stay/go: stay

32. Kieron Dyer
After missing virtually the entire season through injury Dyer is looking forward to returning to action next season. A huge investment, Curbishley will want to see some of his potential realised next term.
Stay/go: stay

33. Henri Camara
Why he's still here is a mystery - as is why he was ever signed in the first place. Thankfully he's only on loan.
Stay/go: go

34. Luis Boa Morte
Possibly the most under-threat of the big-money Curbishley signings. The fans just haven't taken to him and once that happens your days are usually numbered. The problem will be finding a buyer willing to pay a decent amount for a 31-year-old who cost £5 million just 18 months earlier.
Stay/go: go

40. Fred Sears
Likely to be considered a fully-fledged member of the first team squad next season although a loan move may be on the cards should Curbishley sign nother striker this summer to complement his existing options.
Stay/go: stay

Our 22 to stay (allowing for 2/3 new arrivals): Rob Green; Lucas Neill; George McCartney; Anton Ferdinand; Matthew Upson; Freddie Ljungberg; Scott Parker; Craig Bellamy; Dean Ashton; Matthew Etherington; Mark Noble; Hayden Mullins; Jonathan Spector; James Collins; Julien Faubert, Jimmy Walker; Bobby Zamora; Calum Davenport, James Tomkins; Kieron Dyer; Fred Sears; Jack Collison.

Our 12 to go: Danny Gabbidon; Carlton Cole; John Paintsil; Nobby Solano; Richard Wright; Tony Stokes; Christian Dailly; Nigel Quashie; Kyel Reid; Lee Bowyer; Luis Boa Morte and Henri Camara.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Derby's Mears: No spirit at embarrassed West Ham
tribalfootball.com - April 21, 2008

Derby County fullback Tyrone Mears has mocked his former West Ham teammates after Saturday's defeat at Upton Park. Mears said: "The West Ham players were embarrassed when they came off the pitch because they knew we'd battered them in the second half. A lot of their big-name signings haven't been good enough and, with the money they've spent, they should be competing with the top five. "They pulled off a miracle when they stayed up last season and that was all down to their fighting spirit. "But that spirit doesn't seem to be there any more and a shake-up is needed. They need to ship out a few players. "I don't think Alan Curbishley should be sacked because it's been hard for him with all the injuries this season. "But you can never tell what will happen nowadays and West Ham should definitely be doing a lot better than they are."

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Cole admits West Ham players know they're battling for futures
tribalfooball.com - April 21, 2008

West Ham United matchwinner Carlton Cole admits many inside the dressing room fear for their futures at Upton Park. Cole, who struck in Saturday's 2-1 victory over Derby, said: "We're all disappointed that we haven't been able to push higher up the table and there could be a few worried people at the club this summer. "We're all fighting for our futures. It's up to the manager who goes and who stays but I'm contracted to West Ham for another two years and I want to stay here."

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Don't hammer us when we win - Green wants understanding and appreciation from Upton Park faithful - Daily Mail
Last updated at 09:53am on 21st April 2008

Robert Green has joined forces with Alan Curbishley in calling for West Ham fans to understand their team's problems this season, rather than criticise.
A 2-1 victory over relegated Derby did not impress West Ham fans with a section of the crowd booing the team off the pitch. Curbishley was taunted by the chant of "You don't know what you're doing" when he brought on Carlton Cole for Freddie Sears — although he was proved right as the substitute hit the winner. "Our performance wasn't great," said Green. "But what we'd appreciate is some understanding that we have a lot of guys out, we're bringing back some others who have been out injured and we're blooding youngsters as well." Curbishley said: "It would be nice if there was a bit of appreciation for what we've had to put up with."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Monday, April 21

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 21st April 2008

Cole composed after winner - WHUFC
Carlton Cole is going to keep working hard after hitting the decisive goal
in the weekend home win
21.04.2008

Carlton Cole has pledged to continue in a "professional manner" after coming
off the bench to great impact at the weekend with the winner against Derby
County.

With 25 league and cup starts and a further nine appearances off the bench,
the hard-working 24-year-old striker has played more games this season than
in any other campaign since breaking through with first club Chelsea in
2001/02. It took Cole just three minutes to score the decisive goal on
Saturday after arriving in the 73rd minute for Freddie Sears. His
close-range finish was just reward for his extra training sessions working
on his forward play.

Rather than dwell on his latest positive, Cole knows he has to keep going in
the final three games - not least because there is plenty of competition for
places looking ahead to next season with Sears, Dean Ashton, Craig Bellamy
and Bobby Zamora all in Alan Curbishley's forward thinking. "It is how
football is," said Cole about the challenge of proving his worth. "It is an
unpredictable game. You have just got to carry on and do things in a
professional manner."

The former England Under-21 striker, who has played mostly as a lone striker
this campaign, said the situation was the same for all players at all clubs
at this stage of the season as squads are assessed for the future. "We have
got to fight all the time. We have had a lot of injuries this season and a
few players that have not really played a big part in the season. They are
going to want to get in the team next season and try and push for places.
There is going to be lots of competition."

For all the individual aims, the main concern has to be the team and Cole
said there was a feeling of what could have been had selection issues been
more straightforward. He said: "We are disappointed we didn't push up higher
in the table when we had to after the Christmas period. We had it really
hard with injuries and people playing out of position so the manager used
his resources well. It was just frustrating that we couldn't get the few
results that we should have had at home and a few away results as well that
went against us. They could have pushed us higher up the league."

Speaking about his match-winner, Curbishley said: "Coley has had a decent
season. We have told him that. He has played up there a lot on his own and I
have got a lot of time for Carlton Cole. As everyone knows I had him on loan
at Charlton for a season. I think he has had a terrific season. He has a lot
to be pleased with. You are hoping that when there is a lot of competition
they come on and want to do something. When I get that competition
[throughout the team] we have got a decent squad."

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Stokes in the spotlight - WHUFC
The popular 21-year-old midfielder Tony Stokes has enjoyed being in the
first-team mix this month
21.04.2008

Tony Stokes is aiming to help the reserves finish their season on a high on
Monday having enjoyed being back in the first-team picture in recent weeks.

Kevin Keen's reserve team have an outside chance of still winning the
league, although they need to beat Arsenal at Barnet and hope leaders Aston
Villa and third-placed Reading slip up in their respective final fixtures of
the 2007/08 campaign. "All we can do is get a win in our last game, which
hopefully we will do on Monday night and see what happens," said Stokes.
"Hopefully they can slip up, we go back to the top of the league and then
you never know what might happen."

The 21-year-old midfielder travelled with Alan Curbishley's squad for the
away game at Bolton Wanderers last week before being in the frame for
selection with the weekend win against Derby County. Stokes admitted "it has
been a surprise" to be involved, having only figured once for West Ham
United's senior side, in September 2005 when he came on in a League Cup
match at Sheffield Wednesday.

Stokes said: "I have been working extra hard in the hope of catching the
manager's eye. The last two weeks it has been nice to be around the squad
and travel with them to Bolton last week. To be in the squad again against
Derby was good and it has all been a surprise to me really." Stokes, who has
three times left the Boleyn Ground for loan spells - at Rushden and
Diamonds, Brighton and Hove Albion and, this season, Stevenage United, has
also enjoyed being back with the reserves.

In a 2-1 win against Derby County's second string on 9 April, and with with
Jack Collison rested, Stokes regained the skipper's armband he had last
season. "It was good to be captain again. This season Jack has taken the
captaincy and he has done well for us. It is nice when he is not playing to
still be thought of and given the captaincy and the chance to work well for
the team." Stokes did just that and led the line well in an advanced role,
as he scored the penalty opener after forcing the foul in the first place.

He added: "I am always happy to go up front because I can do a job for the
team. I know where I like the ball when I play up there and when I play in
midfield as well I know where the strikers want the ball." Regarding that
spot-kick, there was no doubt in his mind that he was taking it. "I was
definitely having it. As soon as I went down and the ball fell to my feet, I
just picked it up and thought 'yeah, I'll have this'. I don't normally take
them."
.
Stokes is well placed to judge how good the reserves have been under Keen's
stewardship this season. "I have been playing for the reserves since I was
17 and in all my time at the club, we have never been this high up the
table. We are used to being near the bottom of the league. It has been great
this year because we have not had a lot of first-team players so we have
done well. To be in contention right at the end is a high achievement."

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Reserves still have a chance - WHUFC
Kevin Keen's reserve team end their hugely successful 2007/08 season away to
Arsenal on Monday night
20.04.2008

West Ham United conclude their Barclays Premier Reserve League campaign on
Monday night with an outside chance still of winning the southern section
title.

Kevin Keen's men will face Arsenal at Barnet needing to take all three
points and then have to hope that leaders Aston Villa lose on the same
evening at Chelsea and again when they take on the Gunners themselves on
Monday week at Villa Park. Third-placed Reading could also come into the mix
as they are two points behind United, but still have games at Portsmouth on
Tuesday and then at home to Tottenham Hotspur on 28 April.

The team which eventually clinches the ten-team division will go forward to
the national decider on Wednesday 7 May. This will be staged at Anfield, the
home of runaway northern section winners Liverpool. For any United fans
wanting to travel to Underhill, the home of Barnet where Arsenal stage all
their reserve-team fans, click here for more information. As usual,
whufc.com will have full live text coverage.

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Neill staying put - KUMB
Filed: Monday, 21st April 2008
By: Staff Writer

Lucas Neill's agent has denied reports suggesting that his client is set to
leave the Hammers this summer. A number of media sources plucked club
captain Neill's name out of the hat following Scott Duxbury's revelation at
a fans' forum last week that a number of players face the axe this summer as
the club seeks to trim its first team squad. But Neill's representative
Paddy Dominguez has refuted claims that the Australian is one of those
listed for the chop, adding that he is happy at the club . "We have not been
approached by West Ham in regards to that, reviewing his contract or taking
a pay cut," he told Fox Sports. "It doesn't make sense that a manager who
only 14 months ago brought Lucas to the club and has installed him as
captain would look to sell him. "Lucas' relationship with Alan [Curbishley]
is good - and he is relishing the role of captain." Neill has also
privately expressed his desire to remain at West Ham, despite criticism of
his form this season from some quarters.

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Curbishley: give us some credit - KUMB
Filed: Sunday, 20th April 2008
By: Staff Writer

Alan Curbishley looks back on a day when a winning Hammers team were booed
off the pitch - and asks for a little bit of love ...

"With the situation we've found ourselves in - yesterday morning Matty Upson
and Jon Spector pulled out, which meant with Anton Ferdinand out as well and
Danny Gabbidon and James Collins, to say the least that's a lot of
centre-half's missing.

We had to juggle it up; young Tomkins came in and did fantastically well for
us. We had a few people returning from injury but have gone out and got the
result. Sometimes the result is more important - especially after losing the
last three games, we did need to bounce back.

Derby, I felt, played well all game and with a little bit of freedom. They
bnroke on us and got the goal, they broke on us and nearly scored before
that. So I knew it was going to be a tough game today with all the
expectation levels on us; you're playing Derby with the position they find
themselves in. But I knew with changes and people coming back in from injury
I knew perhaps we were going to run out of steam.

I just think that there's a lack of appreciation of what has happened here.
I can't keep going on about how many times we've suffered injuries, key
players are missing and that the players that have been playing have done
fantastically well.

We've managed to keep ourselves out of any trouble. I know we've been in
striking distance for some time to catch some of the teams above us but I
will look back on this season as a success.

So I'd just like to call for a little bit of appreciation and realism. The
problems that this club have had all season - and it started really in the
second week of pre-season - we've done alright.

I was looking at the game and how we dropped off a bit; one or two were
getting tired, Freddie Ljungberg and Julien Faubert. We'd conceded ground
and were finding it a little bit tough. Derby scored in that period but we
bounced back, we got the goal.

The way the game was going it was 'are Derby going to equalise or were we
going to get the third?' But we held out, and I'll look at the result
tomorrow morning and I'll be well pleased with it. As I said earlier, I know
what's going on here, I know what we've been through so I'm pleased with
what's happened.

I think that if I can pick a team for next week that will be as much as I
can hope for if it's anything like this week. But we've been in the top ten
all season, we'd like to finish at least there, if we can, and we've got
three games left."

* Alan Curbishley was talking to the BBC. KUMB.com remain banned from
attending press conferences at the Boleyn Ground and therefore unable to
bring you full coverage.

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Beauty needs to return to the Boleyn - Echo News

WELL, there is not much to get the blood pumping through the veins down at
the beloved Boleyn at the moment. Yes, I know many football fans (Hammers
included), will be saying I should be happy we are comfortably mid-table and
not embroiled in a relegation rollercoaster. And yes, Curbs has been unlucky
with injuries. But still, he sets the team up and instructs them how to play
and us fans pay for entertainment. West Ham have always tried to play the
beautiful game well, beautifully, and that has just not happened this
season. Yes, Curbs has "shored" us up. Yes, he has made us battle-hardened
and "solid" and deserves credit for that. But the fans deserve more than
hard-fought, ground out results. Expectation is high, as always, but this
stagnant run-in of ours has left a bad taste in my mouth. How dull was
Saturday's win!? Fans pay big bucks to watch players on collossal wages who
should fight as if every game was their last. But I don't care what anyone
says since 40 points was achieved it has seemed a "job done" mentality has
set in. And the motivation and selection buck stops with the manager. I felt
our season evaporate when I heard Curbs' pre-match interview against lowly
Birmingham.
We were only a few points from a European placing, yet the talk was of
Birmingham and how they will be tough to beat, etc, etc. I would have liked
to have heard more positive, fired-up chat about us and our prospects. It
wasn't there and neither, unsurprisingly, was a performance against
Birmingham who left Upton Park with a point after a pitiful 1-1. Still,
Curbs has done what was asked of him. Tenth (well, hopefully). Now, we wait
and see what our first technical director Nani has to offer and see if some
young blood with a bit of flair can be brought to the Boleyn. Next season
Curbs should have his signings fit, many of whom should give us an injection
of pace we have sorely lacked. For me the jury is out. But be sure another
comfortable, often dull, mid-table, Charlton-esqe season will not be
tolerated again.

9:46pm Sunday 20th April 2008

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Alan Curbishley and Paul Jewell both look to the future - The Times
West Ham United 2 Derby County 1

Next season cannot come soon enough for these two teams. West Ham United
will hope to start the 2008-09 campaign with something that more closely
resembles their best side than the ragged, injury-plagued XIs they have been
forced to field for most of this season. Derby County, meanwhile, have
struggled after being promoted beyond the means of most of their players.

But if either manager could take something positive from Saturday's game, it
was probably Paul Jewell, of Derby, whose team recovered some composure
after the 6-0 home defeat by Aston Villa the previous weekend to record a
third successive away defeat by a single goal. That recent record hints at
the sort of character they will need to show on a weekly basis next season
if they are to challenge for an immediate return to the Barclays Premier
League.

"This season is a write-off," Jewell said. "The points are almost
irrelevant, although we want them, but next season is the one that counts. I
know we have got to get it right next season, and I'm fairly confident that
we will."

Jewell's side seemed to have claimed a morale-boosting draw when Tyrone
Mears – who joined Derby from West Ham in January 2007 after failing to
impress in six months at Upton Park – cancelled out Bobby Zamora's overdue
first goal of the season after 65 minutes, outpacing Fredrik Ljungberg to
beat Robert Green, the West Ham goalkeeper.

"It was good to come back and show a few people what I could do," Mears
said. "I hope that they're asking whatever happened to Tyrone Mears now.
Losing to Villa kind of shook us up a bit. People expect us to roll over and
die, and the term 'whipping boys' has been used a lot. But we're trying to
show a bit of pride for the fans. We're going to be completely different
next season. We are going to be animals on the pitch. We are going to be as
fit as fiddles."

West Ham, though, stole the points when Carlton Cole, who took the field to
jeers after replacing Freddie Sears, converted Ljungberg's cross from close
range three minutes later.

Cole is one of the players who has had increased first-team opportunities
thanks to the many bumps and bruises in the East End, not that the locals
have been impressed. The owners, too, have hinted that Alan Curbishley's
squad may have to be trimmed in the summer and Cole knows that he and others
face a more strenuous battle for their futures at the club, let alone for
playing time.

"Do we have to fight for our futures? Definitely," Cole said. "We have to
fight all the time. We've had a lot of injuries and a few of the players
have not played much. They're going to want to get in the team next season.
There's going to be a lot of competition in terms of who's going to stay and
who's going to go. There could be a few worried people this summer. But
that's how football is."

West Ham United (4-4-2): R Green 6 – J Paintsil 5, L Neill 5, J Tomkins 7, G
McCartney 6 – J Faubert 4 (sub: N Solano, 78min), S Parker 5, M Noble 6, F
Ljungberg 5 (sub: L Boa Morte, 90) – R Zamora 4, F Sears 4 (sub: C Cole,
73). Substitutes not used: J Walker, H Mullins. Booked: Noble, Parker. Next:
Newcastle (h).

Derby County (4-4-2): R Carroll 6 – A Todd 5 (sub: J McEveley, 83), D
Leacock 4, A Stubbs 5, E Lewis 5 – T Mears 7, R Savage 5, H Ghaly 6, D Jones
5 (sub: E Villa, 75) – M Sterjovski 4, K Miller 5. Substitutes not used: L
Price, B Feilhaber, D Moore. Booked: Stubbs. Next: Arsenal (h).

Referee: S Tanner
Attendance: 34,612

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West Ham United 2 Derby County 1: Jeers for Hammers leave Jewell rueful -
The Independent
By James Wrigley
Monday, 21 April 2008

If this game was not the most meaningless of the weekend, then it was in the
hunt. Derby doomed, West Ham marooned in mid-table. Paul Jewell came up with
a little anecdote to divert attention, however.

Jewell has yet to see his Derby team win after 21 games in charge which, for
someone who quit his last job at Wigan partly because of mental fatigue, is
a mite worrying. He had been forewarned, though. "I remember one Premier
League manager I spoke to in November after they had played Derby – I won't
tell you who it was – and he said to me, 'Get as much money on as you like
that Derby don't win another game all season.' I said, 'It's funny you
should say that, I'm taking the job next week'."

Derby played Everton in late October, followed by Aston Villa, West Ham and
Chelsea in November, so the tip could have come from Jewell's opposite
number on Saturday after the Hammers' 5-0 win at Pride Park. Alan Curbishley
had the look of a man who had forgotten to put the bet on.

His team were booed off on Saturday after winning a far closer affair and
the fans also chanted the tiresome ditty, "You don't know what you're doing"
as Curbishley sent on Carlton Cole for the ineffective Freddie Sears. Cole
scored the winner four minutes later, a tap-in after Freddie Ljungberg's
neat one-two with Mark Noble.

"I don't think there's been too much appreciation for what had gone on here
this season," said Curbishley, referring to his well-chronicled injury
problems. Jewell was asked if he had ever had a team booed off after
winning. "I'd like to have had the chance," came the reply.

Bobby Zamora scored his first goal for almost a year in the 20th minute,
heading home George McCartney's free-kick. The leveller came from Tyrone
Mears, who was a flop in his West Ham days. This was his first of the season
but he took it well, using his pace to latch on to Hossam Ghaly's
through-ball before thumping it past Robert Green. "It was good to come back
and show a few people what I could do," said Mears. "Not so much the staff
but the West Ham fans. They turned on their team very quickly."

His good work was undone by Cole's winner 12 minutes later. "There's going
to be a lot of competition in terms of who's going to stay and who's going
to go in the summer," said Cole, who clearly believes he is playing for his
future. Given the injuries, Curbishley is unlikely to want to let too many
go.

Goals: Zamora (20) 1-0; Mears (65) 1-1; Cole (77) 2-1.

West Ham United (4-4-2): Green; Pantsil, Tomkins, Neill, McCartney; Faubert
(Solano, 78), Noble, Parker, Ljungberg (Boa Morte, 90); Sears (Cole, 74),
Zamora. Substitutes not used: Walker (gk), Mullins.

Derby County (4-4-2): Carroll; Todd (McEveley, 83), Leacock, Stubbs, Lewis;
Mears, Ghaly, Savage, Jones (Villa, 75); Sterjovski, Miller. Substitutes not
used: Price (gk), Feilhaber, Moore.

Referee: S Tanner (Somerset).

Booked: West Ham Noble, Parker.

Man of the match: Ljungberg.

Attendance: 34,612.

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It's just like watching ... Wimbledon - KUMB
Filed: Thursday, 17th April 2008
By: Dan Lee

Okay, so I understand that our season is pretty much over but do the team
really have to put us through the misery of the long ball game?

After watching the game against Portsmouth, I found myself banging my fist
against the table on a countless number of times, in frustration with every
long ball we lofted up field, in the hope of finding one of our attacker's
heads.

If god had wanted us to play football in the air then he would have put feet
on our heads!

The thing which certainly got me ticking was the fact that we couldn't even
play the long ball game correctly. The amount of times I watched as Solano
floated in a ball that was either way beyond Ashton or Zamora's reach or
didn't even make it over the first player.

This was a game where I was really expecting a good performance from the
team against a tired Portsmouth side where Harry had decided to rest several
key players. With Jermaine Defoe also absent I thought we really had a
chance to get something out of the game, especially with Portsmouth's only
real attacking threat being Dave Nugent who lets face it, makes Carlton Cole
look like Christiano Ronaldo!

Portsmouth rarely looked like they would give us a scare and the only way in
which they would score would be a shot from one of their midfield players,
and I wasn't wrong. I lost count the amount of shots they had outside our
box, and after the first few I really did expect the team and more
importantly, Curbishly to pick up on this.

The imminent arrival of Freddie Sears obviously got the crowd going but I do
feel sorry for the young lad. He has already shown what a great player he
is, a great player who likes the ball to be played to his feet but sadly the
long ball tactic was still in place so therefore the substitution was a
complete waste of time.

How on earth was Sears going to get a crack at goal if the service was going
way above his head? With his sheer pace surely a ball to his feet would have
left poor old Sol heading for yet another early exit?

I know Alan Pardew had his critics but I did, and still do admired the way
we played in our first season back in the Premiership. That attacking wide
play we used to portray to such good effect is in my opinion sorely missed
and something that we must try to rediscover. The wing play at the moment is
poor and defiantly an issue that needs to be resolved.

With a lack of creativity in the centre of the pitch it is important that we
make use of our wide players, wide players who are prepared to hog that
touchline and make it their own. Back in the Pardew days, Etherington
executed this position and if I'm honest on several occasions this season,
especially in the away fixture at Reading he has done the same.

It is quite obvious that there will be a massive clear out come the end of
the season but for us fans the season is not yet over and we don't expect
the players to just to roll over as they feel there is nothing left to play
for.

I find it hard to point the finger at just one person for our poor end of
the season. The players must be aware that recent performances have not been
good enough and for the first time in a while, with the financial backing
from the board their position in the team can easily replaced.

With regards to the manager, I feel tactically we could be a bit more
adventurous as I find for the first time in my life, being a little bit
bored by the way we play.

Not trying to be all doom or gloom, we do have a lot of key players who will
no doubt, if fit of course improve the team for next season. The
introduction of Sears and Tomkins has also been inspiring and comes with
great comfort that Tony Carr and his team are still doing the fantastic job
of nurturing the talent of the East End.

So Curbishley if you're reading this, ditch the long ball tactic and get us
passing the ball on the grass and not in the sky.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham fans tire of Curbishley's excuses - Telegraph
By Oliver Brown
Last Updated: 2:26am BST 21/04/2008

Listening to Alan Curbishley, you would think West Ham's training ground was
the scene of an outbreak of bubonic plague. Certainly, it is a place to
which any sane person should give a wide berth, if only to avoid hearing
another self-pitying soliloquy about injuries from the manager.

Curbishley was in rare form on Saturday, chastened by a chorus of catcalls
that rang out around Upton Park even in victory. The supporters were
unappreciative, he countered. They did not realise that a likely mid-table
finish constituted a triumph in terrible adversity.

West Ham fans simply looked at a substitutes' bench that included the
not-insignificant talents of Nolberto Solano and Luis Boa Morte and wondered
why their team could not do more than scrape a victory against Derby County.

But Curbishley was having none of it. "Look at the back of the programme and
tick off who is not available," he said. "It's incredible, unprecedented.
I've never known anything like it." True, West Ham were deprived of the
services of Matthew Upson and Jonathan Spector at the last minute on Friday,
taking their number of crocked centre-halves to six. Add in the long-term
injuries to Kieron Dyer and Craig Bellamy and you do form an impression of a
squad ravaged by misfortune.

In the manager's defence, West Ham supporters are not deeply rooted in the
rational either. This might explain why they broke out into chants of "You
don't know what you're doing" even when Curbishley brought on Carlton Cole,
the substitute whose 77th-minute strike sealed the win.

Cole is among many fighting for his future at West Ham, as talk of Icelandic
benefactor Bjorgolfur Gundmundsson's plan for a mass clear-out refuses to
die down. "There's going to be a lot of competition in terms of who's going
to stay and who's going to go," said the striker, himself contracted for
another two years.

Clearly, this was an occasion when players' minds were elsewhere, for Derby
are another club upon whom wrenching transition has been enforced. Tyrone
Mears, who had the brief satisfaction of scoring the equaliser against his
former club, insisted his Derby side would be stronger in the Championship
next season.

"We're going to be completely different," he promised. "We're going to be
animals on the pitch, as fit as fiddles."

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West Ham boss Curbishley defends record
tribalfooball.com - April 20, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley believes they've been wrongly judged
this season because of their heavy injury problems. "Our injury situation
falls into three categories," Curbishley said. "We have got five or six
permanent injuries which are long-term and impact injuries. These are broken
legs, ruptured Achilles and cruciate ligaments. "We have got four players
who have had stomach injuries for most of the season. These have been Lee
Bowyer, Matthew Etherington, Craig Bellamy and Danny Gabbidon, and we have
not got to grips with them. "Then you add the three or four wear-and-tear
injuries, a hamstring or calf that every club gets, and it takes you up to
14. "It's been a tough and frustrating season for the players on that
casualty list. We are doing everything we can to try and get it right."
Curbishley continued: "Week-in, week-out, we cannot keep a settled side.
People talk to me about last year and the run-in. Well the last nine games I
think we used 13 players - it was the first time I could play the same team
every week. "I have never been in that position this year let alone been
able to pick from a fully fit squad. "We have got a big squad and thankfully
that has held us in good stead. I know I have got a big squad and if
everybody was fit I would have a few problems - but they are not. "When I
get everybody fit I think I will have a decent squad and I am hoping that is
going to come to fruition after the summer. "This group of players have
stood up most weeks to be counted when we have unbelievable problems. So, I
think we should have more appreciation."

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West Ham kid Jeffery impressing at Cambridge
tribalfootball.com - April 20, 2008

West Ham United youngster Jack Jeffery is impressing on-loan at Conference
club Cambridge United. Jeffery struck in Cambridge's victory over Salisbury
and manager Jimmy Quinn said: "I told Jack before the game I had a feeling
he was going to score today. "I am delighted for him. He's worked very hard
since he's been here and that will do his confidence the world of good."

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West Ham boss delighted with Tomkins form
tribalfooball.com - April 20, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley singled out James Tomkins for praise
after their victory over Derby County. He told whufc.com: "Tomkins had an
excellent game. He came in [last month in the 1-1 draw] at Everton and got
caught for the goal. I thought he got stronger as the game went on today. I
was really pleased with him and the fact that this group of players have
stood up to be counted most weeks and got us where we are when we have had
unbelievable problems just getting out there sometimes."

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West Ham boss Curbishley happy with Roehampton Uni involvement
tribalfootball.com - April 20, 2008

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley is eager to hear from Roehampton
University staff over their review of the club's fitness facilities.
Roehampton University's Sport Performance Assessment and Rehabilitation
Centre (SPARC) is set to work alongside staff at Chadwell Heath, with the
club also looking at everything from footwear to training pitches.
Curbishley told whufc.com: "We are taking advice on all aspects of where we
are and what we are trying to do and [we will] see what comes out of it.
Roehampton work with elite athletes and go across the board from diets up to
rehab and training."

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West Ham, Sunderland in for Depor striker Xisco
tribalfootball.com - April 20, 2008

Deportivo La Coruna striker Xisco is attracting Premiership interest. West
Ham and Sunderland are battling it out to sign Xisco . The striker is valued
at £10m but the club do not want to sell.

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Sunderland plan £8M bid for West Ham's Ashton
tribalfootball.com - April 20, 2008

Sunderland boss Roy Keane is planning an £8 million bid for West Ham striker
Dean Ashton. The People says Ashton, 24, was wanted by Newcastle under the
club's previous managers Sam Allardyce and Glenn Roeder, but Kevin Keegan is
now happy with his strikeforce, leaving Sunderland in the box seat to snap
up the England hopeful.

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