Thursday, March 4

Daily WHUFC News - 4th March 2010

Green exclusive on WHUTV
WHUFC.com
Robert Green was feeling good after completing another 90 minutes for
England in the win over Egypt
04.03.2010

Robert Green was all smiles after producing a confident display in England's
3-1 friendly victory over Egypt at Wembley on Wednesday. West Ham United
goalkeeper Green shrugged off pre-match discussion over the No1 position,
and an early opener from Pharaohs striker Mohamed Zidan, to put in a
performance that is sure to have impressed head coach Fabio Capello. The
30-year-old, who has kept clean sheets in his last four home Barclays
Premier League appearances, also had words of support for Matthew Upson
after his club-mate's untimely slip allowed Zidan to score. Thankfully for
Upson, England fought back to win through a Peter Crouch brace and a goal
from Shaun Wright-Phillips, further increasingly the feelgood factor ahead
of this summer's FIFA World Cup in South Africa. "It was pleasing overall,"
Green told WHUTV. "Egypt had their chance and took it. We saw a lot of the
lad Zidan before in the build-up to the game and he's a sharp player who
took the chance when it came. "I think it was good for us to bounce back the
way we did in the second half. We put on a bit of a show in the second half
and made Wembley our own, so to speak. It was a feather in our caps."
Green had sympathy for Upson, who slipped on a loose Wembley pitch, while
also refusing to get carried away with playing the full 90 minutes at the
Home of Football.
"There is a lot that has been said about the pitch over the last few days
and he has had the rug pulled out from under his feet. It was something that
was unforeseeable and something that was uncontrollable. What he did show
was that he could shrug it off and continue to play how he wanted to play,
which was as solid as ever after that, if not more so. That's the strength
of character that Matt has. "It's pleasing to play. I just want to play and
I'm just looking forward after the success of Wednesday night's game and
will try to do so in the future. I try not to read too much into it. After
this I just want to look forward to Saturday's game."
A lesser concern for Green was his new luminous yellow goalkeeper kit, which
he suggested had been designed to distract opposing strikers. "It's meant to
put off as many forwards as possible. We're going for the retro look and I
must admit I didn't know they had that many bright colours back in the 50s
and 60s! It's an interesting concept that I'm not going to criticise."

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Three Lions stake claim
WHUFC.com
Robert Green, Matthew Upson and Carlton Cole all featured in England's 3-1
friendly win over Egypt
03.03.2010

Robert Green, Matthew Upson and Carlton Cole staked their claim for a place
in Fabio Capello's 2010 FIFA World Cup squad by appearing in England's 3-1
friendly win over Egypt at Wembley. Goalkeeper Green, who produced a
near-flawless display, and centre-back Upson were both named in Capello's
starting lineup, completing a full 90 minutes against the African champions.
Meanwhile, Cole was sent on as an 86th-minute substitute for Manchester
United forward Wayne Rooney. Green was handed his ninth cap between the
sticks, while Upson earned his 19th in the absence of Manchester United's
injured ex-West Ham United defender Rio Ferdinand, and Cole made his seventh
substitute appearance for his country. Egypt, who had lost to England on
each of the countries' previous two meetings - a 4-0 friendly defeat in
Cairo in January 1986 and a 1-0 group-stage reverse at the 1990 FIFA World
Cup in Cagliari - took the lead through Borussia Dortmund forward Mohamed
Zidan, who capitalised on an unfortunate slip from Upson before confidently
slotting the ball past Green on 23 minutes. At the other end, two of the
eight former or current Hammers in the 24-man squad - Chelsea midfielder
Frank Lampard and Tottenham Hotspur striker Defoe - had England's best
chances of the first half, only to find 37-year-old goalkeeper Essam El
Hadary in inspired form.
Green made a save from Zidan early in the second period before substitute
Peter Crouch - on for club-mate Defoe at the break - smartly swept in Gareth
Barry's right-wing cross on 56 minutes. Having levelled the scores, England
took the game to their north African opponents, with Rooney going close with
a spectacular overhead kick in front of an 80,602-strong crowd at the Home
of Football. England's pressure finally told with 15 minutes remaining, when
Shaun Wright-Phillips rifled past El Hadary after the goalkeeper had parried
fellow replacement James Milner's fierce volley. The Manchester City winger
turned provider with ten minutes to go, sliding the ball square for Crouch
to score his 20th goal in 37 appearances for his country. The Hammers trio
will be hoping to have impressed Capello sufficiently to be named in the
Italian's 23-man squad for this summer's tournament in South Africa - which
England begin by taking on Jonathan Spector's United States at the Bafokeng
Stadium in Rustenburg on Saturday 12 June. Capello will name his final
selection for the tournament on 1 June following two final warm-up fixtures
against Guille Franco's Mexico at Wembley on 26 May and Japan in the
Austrian city of Graz on 30 May. Earlier on Wednesday, James Tomkins was an
unused substitute for England Under-21s as they went down 2-1 at home to
Greece in the race for the 2011 UEFA European U21 Championship. Tomkins had
featured in the previous five qualifiers - three wins and two draws - before
being sidelined for the latest match in Doncaster. The reverse has left
Greece in pole position and five points clear of Stuart Pearce's Young Lions
at the top of Group 9.

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Behrami gets Swiss run-out
WHUFC.com
FIFA World Cup finalists Switzerland saw Valon Behrami play for 75 minutes
of their Uruguay friendly
03.03.2010

Valon Behrami played 75 minutes for Switzerland in their 3-1 friendly defeat
by fellow FIFA World Cup qualifiers Uruguay in St. Gallen. The West Ham
United midfielder was making his 26th appearance for his country in the AFG
Arena on Wednesday night and is a certainty for Ottmar Hitzfeld's squad for
this summer's finals. Wearing the No11 shirt, he played his part in a strong
opening spell and the Swiss took the lead on the half-hour mark from the
penalty spot courtesy of captain Gokhan Inler.

However, Uruguay fought back through Diego Forlan and Luis Suarez either
side of half-time to ensure the victory and give a warning shot to Benni
McCarthy's South Africa and Guille Franco's Mexico, who they will play in
the group stage of this summer's finals. Behrami was substituted with a
quarter of an hour to play before Edison Cavani added a late third.

The Swiss have Spain, Honduras and Chile to contend with in their section in
South Africa. Behrami will hope to figure in home friendlies against Costa
Rica and Italy on 1 and 5 June before they depart for the tournament. The
popular 24-year-old has previously played at the 2006 World Cup and the 2008
UEFA European Championship.

Earlier, left-back Fabio Daprela played for 64 minutes as the Swiss
Under-19s drew 1-1 with Poland. The friendly was a warm-up for May's UEFA
European U19 Championship Elite round mini-qualifying tournament featuring
Serbia, Denmark and Austria - with the group winners going through to the
finals in late summer.

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Wales woe as Collison plays
WHUFC.com
A disappointng defeat by Sweden was not the result Wales wanted as they look
to UEFA Euro 2012
03.03.2010

Jack Collison won his seventh senior cap for Wales as they went down 1-0 in
a friendly loss to Sweden on Wednesday. The West Ham United midfielder
played for 71 minutes in Swansea as Bolton Wanderers forward Johan Elmander
- who Collison will face this weekend in Barclays Premier League action -
scored the only goal just before half-time. Collison's compatriot Danny
Gabbidon did not play as he was focusing on his return to full training at
Chadwell Heath. Collison had reportedly undergone a late fitness test to
line up for John Toshack's men. Wales have missed out on the 2010 FIFA World
Cup and are already looking to their 2012 UEFA European Championship
campaign, when they will meet England in group action.

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Dixon back for Ireland
WHUFC.com
A four-year international exile ended for Terry Dixon with his return to the
Irish Under-21 fold
03.03.2010

Terry Dixon returned to international action with the Republic of Ireland as
they went down 2-1 to Armenia in their UEFA European Under-21 Championship
qualifier on Wednesday night. Dixon was a 62th-minute substitute at the
Tallaght Stadium. By that time, the Irish were 2-0 down but the visitors had
seen a man sent off. The hosts managed to pull one back with ten minutes to
play through Ian Daly. However, the loss means Ireland are adrift at the
bottom of Group 2 with four draws and two defeats.
The striker had been capped as a 16-year-old back in 2006 - and even made it
to the bench for the seniors that year - but has been away from the
international fold ever since because of knee problems. He left Tottenham
Hotspur in 2008 because of his injury concerns but was given a second chance
at West Ham United. Dixon signed a three-year contract back in February 2009
and has since worked closely with the medical staff at Chadwell Heath. He
has recovered to play four times this season for the reserves with one goal.
He headed off on international duty in the hope of regaining some of his
match fitness.

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Diamanti praises the fans
WHUFC.com
Man of the moment Alessandro Diamanti was delighted to be voted SBOBET
Player of the Month
03.03.2010

Alessandro Diamanti has thanked fans for making him the SBOBET Player of the
Month and called on them to reproduce their superb support this Saturday.
The Italian maestro was in sparkling form in February, most notably with his
spectacular free-kick that raised the roof in the 2-0 win against Birmingham
City and then his man of the match display in the 3-0 triumph against Hull
City. He becomes the sixth different winner after Julien Faubert, Zavon
Hines, Carlton Cole, Scott Parker (twice) and James Tomkins. Diamanti is
looking for to maintain his progress in his next outing at the Boleyn
Ground, when Bolton Wanderers arrive this Saturday. The No32 will also be
eager to put right the 3-1 away defeat at the Reebok Stadium last December,
when he was again on target for the Hammers - one of seven goals in 22
league and cup appearances. A firm favourite with the fans, he knows they
will be crucial again this weekend. With less than 1,000 seats left, it
promises to be a noisy occasion. "Every game it is important to have the
support from all the fans and this Saturday again, is an important match.
They are very special. I know that again the support will be 100 per cent
and very warm to us. We will try to play for them to win the game."
He will receive his SBOBET Player of the Month award on Saturday afternoon
and said he will be eager to keep up his excellent progress since arriving
in east London last summer from AS Livorno Calcio. "I want to say 'Thank
you' to all the supporters, to everyone who has voted for me - it is very
good for me to know of their support. There are many matches still to go and
I will be trying to help the team have more good results in the next few
months."

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Return of the dancing girls
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 3rd March 2010
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United are set to welcome a female dance troupe back to the Boleyn
Ground during this weekend's Premier League clash with Bolton. Supporters,
voting in polls on both KUMB.com and whufc.com voted overwhelmingly in
favour of bringing back the half time entertainment which was dropped five
years ago following a number of complaints after the dancers appeared in a
number of risque poses on their subscription-only website. This week the
club have been looking at a couple of options to replace the group formerly
known as the Hammerettes - including a group comprised of the same dancers
that formerly worked under the name. Whoever is given the green light to
perform this weekend will once again feature on a regular basis after new
joint owner David Sullivan - who has been busy making cuts across the board
elsewhere in the club - gave the go-ahead to re-introduce the dancers.

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Hammers hope for Upson stay
Sullivan thinks it is payback time for centre-back
Last updated: 3rd March 2010
SSN

West Ham co-owner David Sullivan believes he is owed a favour by Matthew
Upson as he attempts to persuade the defender to stay at Upton Park. The
centre-back has just more than one year remaining on his current contract
and the Hammers are offering an extension, but reportedly with no pay rise.
Upson currently earns £65,000-a-week, however, he has been linked with
former club Arsenal, Manchester City and Tottenham where he would earn a
salary increase. Sullivan, though, hopes the 30-year-old will sign as a
token of gratitude after the ex-Birmingham supremo allowed the England
international to leave for West Ham in 2007. "We all really want Matthew to
stay," Sullivan said in The Sun. "I did him a favour letting him leave
Birmingham and I hope he can return it." Upson has remained coy on his plans
and in mid-February was only prepared to say that this summer's World Cup is
his immediate focus.

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London 2012: future use of Olympic Stadium should be decided by the end of
this year
The post-Games future of the 2012 London Olympic Stadium must be decided by
the end of this year, the woman charged with overseeing its legacy said on
Wednesday.
Telegraph.co.uk
By Telegraph staff and agencies
Published: 8:12PM GMT 03 Mar 2010

"This is a £540 million public asset so it goes without saying that we are
not just going to have some conversation off stage left and someone is going
to take over the stadium," Baroness Margaret Ford, chairman of the Olympic
Park Legacy Company (OPLC), told lawmakers at a parliamentary committee
hearing. "I am quite confident that we can get to a good decision on the
stadium but we must do it this year because it cannot be left to just drag
on."
Britons face battle for 2012 tickets Part of London's bid to win the 2012
Games centred around a pledge that a Grand Prix standard athletics track
would be left in place after the event. Under present plans, the 80,000-seat
Olympic Stadium in Stratford, east London, is due to be reduced in size to a
25,000 capacity venue complete with an athletics track. But there are
concerns an athletics stadium alone will not be economically viable, leaving
taxpayers to pick up the bill for running costs years after the 2012
Olympics have ended.
David Gold and David Sullivan, the new co-owners of the nearby West Ham
football club, have expressed an interest in relocating the Premier League
side to the Olympic Stadium. However, it is doubtful if they would, ideally,
want to retain an athletics track that would prevent football fans being as
close to the action as they are at West Ham's Upton Park ground. "We know
that the amount of times that athletics will be used in the stadium will not
be a huge amount of times, maybe a couple of dozen times a year, but for me
premier athletics must be part of the mix because that was part of the bid
commitment," Ford said. She added that, as happens at Berlin's Olympic
Stadium, it was possible for football and athletics to co-exist at the same
venue. "Technically the pitch within the track is absolutely FIFA (the world
football governing body) compliant, from the point of view of size and sight
lines, and evidently the stadium is IAAF (International Association of
Athletics' Federations) compliant. "These things could technically co-exist,
it is whether people would want to co-exist. "Ed Warner (UK Athletics chief
executive) I know is quite happy to share with football and it is now for
football to tell us, if they want to come in to the stadium, how they would
want to keep their part of the bargain in terms of the bid."

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West Ham 'not the only show in town' over future of Olympic Stadium
Decision must be taken on Olympic legacy by end of year
'It's for football to tell us how they'll keep their part of bargain'
Owen Gibson guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 3 March 2010 19.21 GMT

The body deciding the future of the Olympic Park today warned West Ham
United they were not "the only show in town" when it came to finding a
tenant for the main stadium and said the Premier League club would have to
accommodate a running track if they were to move in.

Margaret Ford, chair of the Olympic Park Legacy Company, revealed that a
decision would be taken on the stadium's future before the end of the
financial year. West Ham's new co-owners, David Sullivan and David Gold,
have made clear their ambition to move in but uncertainty remains over how
the £100m-plus conversion costs would be met.

"We need to get this settled once and for all this year," Ford told the
culture, media and sport select committee. "The planning status quo is for
the stadium to be taken down and rebuilt into a 25,000-seat athletics
stadium, the new Crystal Palace. If that happens, I don't think we should
apologise for that. We have Wembley, we have Twickenham, we would have a new
athletics stadium.

"If, alongside that or complementary to that, other things can happen in the
stadium that make it more viable, more animated, that give loads of access
and involve the community then absolutely fantastic. I am confident we will
get to a good decision on the stadium but we must do it this year."

The 80,000-capacity £537m Olympic Stadium was originally designed to be
reduced to 25,000 or 28,000 seats after the Games and be used for elite
athletics. But a succession of influential figures have urged officials to
reconsider, retaining a capacity of 55,000 or 80,000 and also becoming a
venue for the 2015 Rugby World Cup and a potential 2018 football World Cup
site.

Ford said that West Ham or any other potential tenant would have to co-exist
with athletics. "Technically, the pitch within the track is absolutely
Fifa-compliant in terms of the size of the pitch, the sightlines and so on.
It is IAAF-compliant, obviously," she said. "These things were built to
coexist, it's whether they want to coexist. Ed Warner [UK Athletics
chairman] is quite happy to share with football and it's for football now to
tell us how they would keep their part of the bargain."

Local east London boroughs and the Tory shadow sports minister, Hugh
Robertson, have suggested that only by persuading a Premier League club to
move in can the OPLC secure a viable legacy for the stadium. "West Ham are
not the only show in town, there are plenty of other people who are
interested in other uses for the stadium," said Ford. "West Ham have gone
public but we are in lots of discussions with many other people."

Prospectuses will be issued in the next few weeks, with a formal six-month
procurement process to follow. Recent reports from the National Audit Office
and the London Assembly have urged the OPLC to decide on the future of the
stadium as a matter of urgency.

"This is a £540m public asset so it goes without saying we're not just going
to have some conversation stage left and then somebody is going to take over
the stadium," said Ford. "It has to be a publicly managed process to
demonstrate value for money and to demonstrate the bid commitments are being
kept."

Ford said that agreement was close on a deal with City Hall and the
government to ensure that the OPLC would not be responsible for the £600m
debt incurred in buying and regenerating the land. Up to £500m in additional
funding will be required in order to run the park in legacy mode. She said
the deal would enable the OPLC to restructure plans for the park to include
more family housing and less high density apartment-style developments.

Andrew Altman, chief executive of the OPLC, told the committee that finding
a tenant for the cavernous International Broadcasting Centre was "a
challenge" and "a serious concern". The hope is to find a major media
company to move in which could act as a magnet for other creative businesses
and educational establishments.

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Peterborough's Lewis lined up by West Ham?
Romfordrecorder.co.uk
03 March 2010

Peterborough keeper Joe Lewis is the favourite to make the move to Upton
Park should Rob Green depart. ONE OF the biggest surprises conjured up by
current England boss Fabio Capello was the inclusion of goalkeeper Joe Lewis
in his squad in 2008, writes DAVE EVANS. The Peterborough number one was
drafted in for the matches against Trinidad & Tobago and the United States
that summer, and though he was an unused sub in both, he certainly came to
the attention of English football fans. Now Lewis has been linked with a
move to West Ham in the summer with many suggesting he will be an ideal
replacement for current England goalkeeper Rob Green. The West Ham custodian
has not asked for a transfer away from Upton Park, but there seems to be a
distinct difference in his body language this season, as well as his form.
Two seasons ago he walked away with the Hammer of the Year award, last
season he wasn't far behind, but this time round his patchy form has been
indicative of the way the team has struggled. Green has made no secret of
the fact that he wants to win trophies and even harbours ambitions of
playing abroad. West Ham have hinted that they will not stand in the
30-year-old's way should he ask for a move to one of the top clubs, as he
will have just one year left on his contract in the summer. The England man
is hoping to prove himself at Wembley tonight when Capello's men begin their
World Cup warm-up campaign with a clash against Egypt. He was sent off in
his last England appearance against Ukraine last October, with David James
taking the opportunity to reclaim his number one spot. Since then, Joe Hart
has muscled his way into the picture with some superb performances on loan
at Birmingham City, and he will also look for a start against the African
champions. Hart was linked with a move to West Ham a couple of weeks ago,
with David Sullivan keen to copy the deal he did for the youngster while he
was at St Andrews, but it seems that Lewis may be a better bet should Green
depart. The 22-year-old comes from similar stock as Green. He was a Norwich
City trainee before joining Peterborough in a £400,000 deal in January 2008.
Since then he has clocked up over 100 appearances for the Posh, collecting
runners-up medals in both League One and League Two along the way. This
season has not been so easy as Peterborough have struggled at the bottom of
the Championship, but the England under-21 international has still received
rave reviews, not least from his display against Spurs in a 4-0 FA Cup
defeat. Once again, it could be Harry Redknapp and Tottenham who are the
main competition for the signature of Lewis, with bidding expected to start
at around £3million. Green's departure is by no means cut and dried, but
West Ham need to economise and if that means cashing in on the England
goalkeeper, then having Lewis as a replacement will certainly cushion the
blow.

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West Ham facing new Tevez compo claims
04.03.10 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham United could face another compo pay-out over the Carlos Tevez
affair. The London Evening Standard says West Ham still face potential
claims of £4million from the Tevez affair despite having paid out £21m to
Sheffield United. Tevez helped West Ham avoid relegation in the 2006-07
season but it was later ruled that his signing broke rules on third-party
ownership. Although reaching an out-court-settlement with Sheffield United,
who were relegated that term, the players want a total of £3.5m for loss of
earnings.
Fulham are considering a claim of £500,000 for loss of merit money having
finished two places below West Ham.

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West Ham's Dixon could be on the move to Colorado
04.03.10 | Andrew Slevison

West Ham kid Dixon again in Ireland U21 action four years on A loan move for
young West Ham striker Terry Dixon could be on the cards according to
reports. The club in question is MLS outfit Colorado Rapids who would
benefit greatly from the 20-year old Republic of Ireland forward who began
his professional career with Tottenham Hotspur in 2007. But Dixon is intent
on winning a place in Gianfranco Zola's Hammers first team after recovering
from several injuries. "It was frustrating because when they had a lot of
strikers out, I was injured too and now they've brought in some more
strikers. But I think if you're good enough, you're good enough and you'll
come through anyway," he said.
"The physios and medical staff at West Ham have saved me. My knee only
swells up now when I go on a flight. I ice it every day after training and
it's fine. "I've spoken to Zola a few times but without match fitness I
can't show what I'm about. It's just glimpses at the moment. The manager has
been encouraging but I've got to do it myself."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 3

Daily WHUFC News - 3rd March 2010

'We've turned a corner'
WHUFC.com
Birthday boy Jonathan Spector believes the only way is up for West Ham
United
02.03.2010

Jonathan Spector believes West Ham United have 'turned the corner' and are
well on the way to securing their Barclays Premier League safety. The
Hammers full-back believes the arrival of new chairmen David Sullivan and
David Gold has given the club the stability required to get what had been a
difficult season back on track. Spector also has words of praise for manager
Gianfranco Zola in an interview with world-renowned American magazine Sports
Illustrated's website ahead of Wednesday night's friendly between the United
States and the Netherlands in Amsterdam. Speaking to sportswriter Grant Wahl
- the man who wrote the 2009 New York Times bestseller 'The Beckham
Experiment' - Spector, who turned 24 on Monday, revealed he cannot wait to
return to league action against Bolton Wanderers on Saturday. "[The season
has] had its ups and downs. It's been good with the new owners coming in and
providing a sense of stability. They brought in some strikers, which we were
desperate for with the injuries that we had to Carlton Cole and [Guillermo]
Franco, who are both back now. "You can see with our goal-difference it
hasn't been as if we've been out of many games. We're obviously in the
minus, which is fair because we haven't had a great season. But if you look
at the teams around us, we're at minus eight and they're at minus 20, minus
25. We've been in every game but just haven't had results go our way. "I
think we've turned a corner now. We lost to Manchester United last game, but
the two before that [Hull City and Birmingham City] were a couple of wins.
We're looking forward to the Bolton game [on Saturday]. It's a massive game
for us, because after that we've got Chelsea and Arsenal away, which will be
difficult to get anything from."
Aside from the arrival of Mr Sullivan and Mr Gold, Spector puts West Ham's
recent improvement down to the positivity of manager Zola. "With Zola, some
of his strengths are that he was a fantastic player, everyone knows that.
One of the things about him is that he's such a positive person, maybe
overly positive at times. But I'd say that's a strength, because you don't
get that very often, especially in England, where some of the managers can
be very critical. So it's refreshing and nice to have someone like that
around."

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Holmar holds Germans
WHUFC.com
Holmar Orn Eyjolfsson's Iceland U21s have secured an impressive Euro 2011
qualifying draw in Germany
02.03.2010

Holmar Orn Eyjolfsson's Iceland snatched an important 2-2 UEFA European
Under-21 Championship qualifying draw in Germany on Tuesday. The Icelanders
went into the match at the Magdeburg Stadium in the east of Germany knowing
victory would take them level on points with Group 5 leaders Czech Republic,
while also putting the home side virtually out of the running for
qualification. With a point. Iceland remain in contention to qualify for the
U21 finals - to be held in summer 2011 - for the first time in the island
nation's football history. The Germans took a tenth-minute lead through VfB
Stuttgart midfielder Timo Gebhart, only for AZ Alkmaar midfielder Kolbeinn
Sigthorsson to equalise for the visitors three minutes later. Unfortunately
for Iceland, who are coached by Eyjolfsson's father and former international
player Eyjolfur Sverisson, they were unable to keep the Germans at bay. Five
minutes after half-time, Gebhart's Stuttgart team-mate Julian Scheiber put
the hosts back in front, and Germany looked on course on to clinch a vital
victory. However, Iceland were not done and maintained their impressive
recent form when captain Bjarni Vidarsson - Eyjolfsson's team-mate at
Belgian club KSV Roeselare, where the 19-year-old is currently on loan -
pounced with just 13 minutes remaining after Sigthorsson's shot had come
back off the post. Second-placed Iceland have two fixtures remaining - at
home to Germany on 11 August ahead of a potential group decider in Czech
Republic on 7 September. Sverisson's men have collected 13 points and scored
24 goals in six matches, while the Czechs have amassed 15 from a game fewer.
The Germans, in third place, have eight points from five matches played.
With such an impressive record, Iceland have a realistic chance of
qualifying for the play-offs for next year's finals in Denmark even if they
finish second in the group. The ten group winners and four best runners-up
will play-off for seven places alongside the host nation.

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Upson leads England trio
WHUFC.com
Rio Ferdinand's absence could see Mathew Upson earn his 19th cap at Wembley
stadium on Wednesday
02.03.2010

Matthew Upson, Robert Green and Carlton Cole were all hard at work on
Tuesday as Fabio Capello put his England squad through their places before
the Wembley friendly against Egypt. The West Ham United contingent were able
to enjoy some early spring sunshine at London Colney in the Hertfordshire
countryside but there was no chance to relax during an intense training
session. Green, Upson and Cole are all pushing for starting berths - let
alone cementing their places in the squad for South Africa - after some good
form of late for the club. Speaking in his pre-match press conference,
Capello did not give too much away. He said Green would have to wait until
Wednesday to find out whether he, Joe Hart or David James would get the No1
spot while Upson can take confidence from Rio Ferdinand's absence. With
Wayne Rooney a certain starter, Cole is vying with Emile Heskey, Peter
Crouch and Jermain Defoe for a starting berth. "They have to recreate the
spirit of the group and the team," said Capello when reflecting on a very
productive session. "They trained today with a lot of focus and I was
pleased because I saw the same thing as I did in November [for the game
against Brazil]." Regarding tomorrow's opponents, Egypt, he added: "Its not
easy to win the Africa Cup of Nations three times [in a row] if you are not
a good team. Egypt have good organisation on the pitch, their players know
what they have to do at every moment and tomorrow will be a test for us."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fabio pushing forward
WHUFC.com
A promising young defender, Fabio Daprela is looking to take the next step
sooner rather than later
02.03.2010

Fabio Daprela is eager to make his Barclays Premier League bow with eleven
matches of the season remaining and plenty of expectation on his young
shoulders. The 19-year-old left-back has made great strides in his first
season at the Boleyn Ground. An established Switzerland Under-19
international, Daprela caught the eye in the FA Cup defeat by Arsenal back
in January and has since risen to captain the reserve team. He was also an
unused substitute in last week's Barclays Premier League reverse at
Manchester United.
Daprela's hopes have been furthered by the likely absence of Herita Ilunga
for much of this month with a tendon injury, although he knows he will have
to get past the in-form Jonathan Spector to stake his claim. He did his
chances no harm in front of the senior coaching staff with a star turn in
last week's 2-1 win against Chelsea reserves. "I want to play in the Premier
League, that is my goal. We will see what the manager decides. I can only
show myself on the pitch and in training and then it is up to him. It is
very different to go from the first team at Old Trafford to the reserves,
but that is what makes football. Daprela, currently with his national team
ahead of a Wednesday friendly against Poland, added: ""You have to take your
opportunities when they come. I hope to get more games and show what I can
do. I really want to play in the Premier League and will do my best."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tuesday test for Nouble
WHUFC.com
England U19 coach Noel Blake is looking for the likes of Frank Nouble to
impress this evening
02.03.2010

Frank Nouble will hope to lead the line for England tonight when they play
an Under-19 friendly away to the Netherlands in Waalwijk. The striker, on
loan at West Bromwich Albion, is looking to impress to ensure his place in
coach Noel Blake's plans for the Elite round qualification mini-tournament
in Ukraine this May. There, England will be bidding to win a four-nation
section to book their place at the summer finals of the UEFA European U19
Championship. "It's always nice to get together with the squad," Blake told
TheFA.com about tonight's match. "We'll be looking to keep improving again.
It's a great opportunity for the players involved to put in a performance to
say to me, and all the staff, that they want to be involved in the Elite
Round squad in a few months. "The only way to make an impression is with
their performances. Some of them have come in and done well in the past, and
the opportunity is there for more of them to do that this time. "We often
play games against the Dutch right from the U16s upwards and they're always
technically good and it will be a very good test for us, no question. That's
why we play these games, we all want a challenge and we all want testing."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Collison wants Swede success
WHUFC.com
The West Ham United midfielder is relishing the chance to show his stuff on
the international stage
02.03.2010

Jack Collison is fired up for a major international meeting with Sweden on
Wednesday calling it a "great opportunity" to prepare for UEFA Euro 2012
qualification. The Welsh may not have qualified for this summer's FIFA World
Cup but they know there is the incentive of the European Championship to
look forward to - and the small matter of a qualifying group featuring
England. Collison revealed he has already been looking forward to that
prospect with his Three Lions rivals back at Chadwell Heath. "There is a lot
of banter flying about," the 21-year-old midfielder said as he faced the
media before the Swansea showdown with Sweden. "It is nice. England have got
a World Cup to worry about but I am sure after the summer I am sure it is
going to start again. It is a great opportunity on Wednesday. "It was
brilliant to draw England and we're all excited, it is a mouth-watering
game. But we are not there to make up the numbers, we are to there to start
showing we are good players and we can compete."
Collison, whose compatriot Danny Gabbidon has stayed behind at the club to
work on his fitness, said a positive performance against the Swedes, who
have won the last four meetings between the nations and never lost in five,
would be a good step forward. The team has been shorn of Aaron Ramsey's
services for at least six months but the Hammers youngster is not focusing
on the negatives. "We've a lot of a good young players who have come through
together and there has been a lot of talk about this good group. It's about
time to start showing it."

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Limited tickets for Bolton
WHUFC.com
Around 1,000 seats are all that is left for the crunch match with Bolton
Wanderers this weekend
02.03.2010

Tickets for Bolton Wanderers continue to sell well with little more than
1,000 seats left for fans wanting to see the Hammers go for a third straight
home win. After 3-0 and 2-0 successes against Birmingham City and Hull City,
West Ham United can take a major step towards survival with another winning
performance. Gianfranco Zola's men have not conceded a league goal at the
Boleyn Ground for four matches and not lost in five - an unbeaten run
stretching back to 5 December. Saturday's contest also marks the start of
the special six-match mini-season tickets available at reduced prices.
Demand is high for these one-off tickets for those not wanting to miss out
on a thrilling run-in with the club's England contingent looking to head
into a World Cup summer on a high and new recruits eager to show their
worth.

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Gold warns on administration risk
By Simon Atkinson
Business reporter, BBC News

West Ham co-owner David Gold has said he is "concerned" that heavy debt
levels will push more Premier League clubs into administration. Mr Gold was
speaking in Manchester during a BBC debate on the finances of football
clubs. His comments follow Portsmouth becoming the first top-flight British
club to go into administration last week. Mr Gold added that he considered
clubs borrowing money beyond their means was "a form of cheating". "The
Premier League's a great league, but we're seeing a chink in the armour,"
said Mr Gold, who with his fellow ex-Birmingham City co-owner David Sullivan
bought a 50% stake in West Ham earlier this year, valuing the club at £105m.
"It's possible that more will go. Portsmouth have gone, imagine if next year
one or two more go. I'm concerned. I fear for the league if we do not act."

'Tragedy'

The Premier League accounts for 56% of the total debt of European football.
Liverpool owe £237m and Manchester United £716m. And while these clubs are
still seen as very strong finnacially, Mr Gold warned that a top-flight team
may eventually go bankrupt and be forced out of business completely. "Going
into administration I could almost live with but what I fear is that a club
could eventually go bust. That's a great possibility and that would be a
tragedy... for the fans," he said. "If one club is borrowing money beyond
its means it's a form of cheating and that's why debt has to be addressed.
"Premier League clubs, in the main, say we run our clubs and don't
interfere. But what about the fans? You can't take that attitude then find a
club like Portsmouth going into administration. Dan Johnson, chief spokesman
for the Premier League told the debate - held at the Soccerex event - that
"the important thing is preventing things from going wrong". He said the
league was "ownership neutral" in terms of who it allowed to control clubs.
Portsmouth entered voluntary administration with debts of about £60m. The
club will be docked nine points as a result and face almost certain
relegation to the Championship.
Pompey, who have had four owners this season, were due to face a winding-up
order on 1 March but decided to go into administration in a bid to survive.
BBC chief economic correspondent Hugh Pym suggested that it was too easy for
clubs to go into administration.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham's spending ill-judged, says finance director
BBC.co.uk

West Ham have wasted money and certain players have not performed, according
to the club's financial director. Writing in the latest accounts, Nick Igoe
said renewing Dean Ashton's contract and signing Freddie Ljungberg and
Kieron Dyer were major mistakes. Figures show wages totalled around 80% of
their annual turnover in 2006-2007, 20% above the Premier League average.
Igoe said: "Many of the group's investment decisions in the last two to
three seasons have been ill-judged." The financial chief added: "No football
club can sustain this level of expenditure on underperforming members of its
squad. "It must be concluded that the investment in the playing squad has
not generated an appropriate return, either financially or in terms of
performance. "It follows that an eighth and 10th place league finish, one
Carling Cup last eight and one FA Cup last 16 represent an unsatisfactory
return on this expenditure. "Clubs with fewer resources and lower levels of
expenditure on their squad have achieved a greater level of league and cup
success."
Former Birmingham City owners David Gold and David Sullivan took control of
West Ham in January, but it is the Icelandic regime, led by Eggert Magnusson
between 2006 and the end of 2007, that came under fire in the accounts
published on Monday. Taking on former Arsenal midfielder Freddie Ljungberg,
who left in 2008 just one year into a four-year deal, and former England
midfielder Kieron Dyer were highlighted as two bad deals. The pair started a
combined total of 32 matches for West Ham since the summer of 2007, and
according to Igoe will cost the group £34m over the term of their contracts.
"It is a truism to observe that a club's playing success (and almost
certainly long-term financial success) is largely dependent on how wisely it
invests its available resources," he added. The accounts also revealed the
extent the club went to last season in trying to avoid a financial meltdown.
Team wages were reduced and £10.8m was made from selling players - but that
accounted for less than a quarter of the transfer expenditure from the
previous two seasons. The club's turnover was down to £76.1m, due mainly to
the collapse of title sponsor XL, while "exceptional expenses" such as the
Ashton pay-out certainly did not help to alleviate the club's losses which
were £16.2m before tax. Ashton broke his ankle in an England training
session in 2006, recovered to play again for the Hammers in the 2007-08
season, and then signed a lucrative five-year deal just 18 months before he
was forced to retire. The bank debt of £45m was considered "not excessive"
for a club of West Ham's size but the club claimed the debt remained
"challenging".
The accounts added: "The debt is relatively short term in nature, expiring
as it does in August 2011, and has to be viewed alongside other liabilities
such as the Sheffield United settlement and net transfer fee creditors of
£14.4m." The Hammers and the Blades reached an out-of-court compensation
deal over the 'ineligible' striker Carlos Tevez, who played for West Ham for
a year from August 2006, helping to seal Sheffield United's relegation in
2006/2007.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers criticised for spending
Ljungberg and Dyer will have cost £34million in contracts
Last updated: 1st March 2010
SSN

West Ham's investment in players has not generated an 'appropriate return',
according to the club's finance director after the publication of a latest
set of accounts. The Hammers have been criticised for the deals offered to
Freddie Ljungberg and Kieron Dyer, who will have cost £34million over the
terms of their contracts, having only started a combined total of 32
matches. The decision to award Dean Ashton a new contract in December 2008
can also be viewed as a mistake as the striker's retirement left the club
owing a £5.81million payment and investment has been described as
'ill-judged'. For two years under the Icelandic regime, West Ham's wages
totalled around 80 per cent of their annual turnover, nearly 20% higher than
the Premier League average. The club's finance director Nick Igoe wrote in
the accounts: "It is a truism to observe that a club's playing success (and
almost certainly long-term financial success) is largely dependent on how
wisely it invests its available resources. "It has to be concluded that many
of the group's investment decisions in the last two to three seasons have
been ill-judged. "Two players who signed in the summer 2007 transfer window,
one of whom has since left the club, have started a combined total of 32
games and will have cost the group £34m over the term of their contracts.
"No football club can sustain this level of expenditure on underperforming
members of its squad. "It must be concluded that the investment in the
playing squad has not generated an appropriate return, either financially or
in terms of performance. "It follows that an eighth and 10th place league
finish, one Carling Cup last eight and one FA Cup last 16 represent an
unsatisfactory return on this expenditure. "Clubs with fewer resources and
lower levels of expenditure on their squad have achieved a greater level of
league and cup success."
The figures also reveal the major belt-tightening programme which West Ham
undertook last season in the hope of staving off financial meltdown.
"2008/09 saw the group take steps to generate essential cash flow by a
programme of player sales and wage savings," wrote Igoe. "This comprised a
reduction in the size of the playing squad and the trading of certain
players for less costly replacements."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Freddie Ljungberg and Kieron Dyer cost West Ham £1m a game
Dyer and Ljungberg cost club £34m for 32 games
Dean Ashton left West Ham with £6m bill
Jon Brodkin
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 2 March 2010 02.13 GMT

Freddie Ljungberg and Kieron Dyer will have cost West Ham effectively £1m a
match, it was revealed in the club's latest accounts. Ljungberg, who has
left Upton Park, and Dyer will have cost £34m over the terms of their
contracts, having started a combined total of only 32 matches for West Ham
since the summer of 2007. The club's ill-judged spending over recent seasons
also included their decision to give Dean Ashton a new contract, which left
them liable for a £5.81m payment when he was forced to retire because of
injury.
For two years under the ill-fated Icelandic regime, West Ham's wages
totalled around 80% of their annual turnover, nearly 20% higher than the
Barclays Premier League average. Nick Igoe, the club's finance director,
said West Ham's performance on the pitch was poor following their huge
outlay. "It is a truism to observe that a club's playing success (and almost
certainly long term financial success) is largely dependent on how wisely it
invests its available resources," Igoe wrote in the accounts. "It has to be
concluded that many of the group's investment decisions in the last two to
three seasons have been ill-judged. "Two players who signed in the summer
2007 transfer window, one of whom has since left the club, have started a
combined total of 32 games and will have cost the group £34m over the term
of their contracts. "No football club can sustain this level of expenditure
on underperforming members of its squad."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Q&A with U.S.' Jonathan Spector
Jonathan Spector has played all over the back line in his international/club
career
The versatile Spector, 24, doesn't worry about position -- he just wants to
play
Sports Illustrated

AMSTERDAM -- On a U.S. soccer team that has several versatile players,
Jonathan Spector might be the most extreme example. The 24-year-old
Chicago-area native is a natural right back, but he has played on the left
side for England's West Ham United this season, while for the Yanks he has
split time between the right side and (in the team's last two European
friendlies) the center.

When the U.S. meets the Netherlands in their A-squad exhibition here on
Wednesday (2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2, Galavisión), Spector will probably be the
U.S.' starting right back, which means he'll face a tough challenge to slow
down either Arjen Robben or Dirk Kuyt.

Spector's grandfather Art was the first player ever signed by the Boston
Celtics, but Jonathan has become a pro in an entirely different pursuit. On
Tuesday, he and I sat down at the U.S. team hotel and spoke about his
versatility, the Dutch team, the U.S.-England World Cup game and what it's
like to play for his West Ham manager, former Italian star Gianfranco Zola.
Here is an edited version of the interview:

SI.com: You've played left back of late for West Ham. Last year you played
right back for the U.S. mostly. How do you manage the transition?

Spector: I've played all along the back four. I've always been comfortable
in any position, but there are some differences. At West Ham, I'm
comfortable at left back. I'm actually right-footed but comfortable on my
left side as well. Defensively, playing the two outside-back positions is
the same. There's no difference positionally, and the 1-v-1 defending is the
same. But going forward is a little bit different. I like to cut inside a
little more on my right foot when I'm playing left back.

SI.com: One thing Bob Bradley mentioned last week is that from the right
side you're able to send an early cross in sometimes, like you did to Clint
Dempsey at the Confederations Cup in South Africa, that maybe isn't quite as
readily there from the left side.

Spector: Probably not. I'll maybe cut in on my right and I can still send
that ball in [from the left], but I'm not as likely to send that in on my
left foot from there. As opposed to being an outswinger, it'll be an
inswinger from the left side. That can be good or bad depending on if the
striker is ready for it and where the defender is.

SI.com: Do you have a position preference?

Spector. Not entirely. My preference is to play. I'm happy to do that, and
if the manager asks, my versatility has been well-known for a number of
years now.

SI.com: There's a good chance you'll be going up against Arjen Robben or
Dirk Kuyt on Wednesday. Could you take each guy and describe the dangers he
represents?

Spector: I've played against both of them previously. Robben is in really
good form for Bayern Munich right now, so it's a tough time to come up
against him. He's obviously very quick, and he cuts inside quite a bit
depending on where he's playing. From the right I've seen him cut inside a
lot onto his left foot. He's got a really good strike on him. He's a quick
and crafty player, so he likes to go at you 1-v-1.

I think Kuyt is a little different. He's got a really good work rate, so
he's more of a nuisance than anything else. He's a tough person to play
against because of how hard he works, both when they have the ball and when
he's defending.

SI.com: I'm trying to rack my brain. Have you ever played left back for the
U.S. senior team?

Spector: Yes. I played left back early in the Gold Cup [in 2007]. That may
be the only time I've played left back for the senior team.

SI.com: So it hasn't been often?

Spector: No, it hasn't. It's been mostly at right back. The only reason I'm
playing left back for my club team now is that there's been an injury [to
Herita Ilunga]. The manager [Zola] has been happy with me, so he's been
keeping me there.

SI.com: The U.S. meets England in the first game of the World Cup on June
12. You play in the Premiership. How excited are you for that game?


Jonathan Spector will face many familiar faces when the U.S. opens World Cup
play against England on June 12 in South Africa.
Mike Hewitt/FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images
Spector: There's that side of it, that we'll be coming up against some guys
who are on my club team: possibly Carlton Cole, Matt Upson, Robert Green,
and then the guys I see week in, week out in England. But it's a much bigger
game than just that, obviously. We kind of have somewhat of a history with
England, and we'd love to win that group and to beat them in the process.
But we know it'll be a tough game. They're a great side with world-class
players. We're all looking forward to it. It's a really good test for us.

SI.com: When you've been on the left at West Ham, you've gone up against
England right midfielder Aaron Lennon, right?

Spector: Yeah, twice this season. He's a good player. He's been injured for
a while, so we'll see how he comes back. But he's a key for them. He's a
great outlet and extremely quick, so he's a tough player to play against.

SI.com: If he is healthy, how do you try to defend a guy like that?

Spector: You try to close him down early and not give him a lot of time on
the ball. They've got some good passers on the ball who can switch the play
pretty quickly, so that makes it tough. You just want to try to not let him
get a run on you, because there's not many guys who will be able to keep up
with him.

SI.com: West Ham is in 13th place right now in the Premiership. How do you
feel like your club season is going?

Spector: It's had its ups and downs. It's been good with the new owners
coming in and providing a sense of stability. They brought in some strikers,
which we were desperate for with the injuries that we had to Carlton Cole
and [Guillermo] Franco, who are both back now. You can see with our
goal-difference it hasn't been as if we've been out of many games. We're
obviously in the minus, which is fair because we haven't had a great season.
But if you look at the teams around us, we're at minus-8 and they're at
minus-20, minus-25. We've been in every game but just haven't had results go
our way.

I think we've turned a corner now. We lost to Man United last game, but the
two before that [Hull City and Birmingham] were a couple wins. We're looking
forward to the Bolton game [on Saturday]. It's a massive game for us,
because after that we've got Chelsea and Arsenal away, which will be
difficult to get anything from.

SI.com: You're still just 24, but you've been playing for the U.S. senior
team since 2004. Do you feel like you're becoming a veteran on this U.S.
team?

Spector: To an extent, I suppose. I come in and try to make the new players
feel welcome, which the older players did for me when I came in. There's a
great sense of team camaraderie here. That's probably one of our strengths.
I can't say for sure what other national sides are like, but being in a
number of different teams, I know the camaraderie within this group is a lot
better than within most teams.

SI.com: What's it like playing for Gianfranco Zola, and how does it compare
to playing for Bob Bradley?

Spector: They're slightly contrasting styles. Every manager is going to have
that. With Zola, some of his strengths are that he was a fantastic player,
everyone knows that. One of the things about him is that he's such a
positive person, maybe overly positive at times. But I'd say that's a
strength, because you don't get that very often, especially in England,
where some of the managers can be very critical. So it's refreshing and nice
to have someone like that around.

With Bob, one of his strengths is his attention to detail, and always
getting the players on the same page as soon as we come in. Especially at
times like this when there's one game and we're in camp for only a few days
together. He does a really good job of that.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Give Cole a go Capello
The Sun
TERRY VENABLES - Columnist
Published: Today

WITH Ashley and Joe's places in doubt, tonight seems the perfect opportunity
for Fabio Capello to see if another Cole is worthy of a seat on the plane to
the World Cup this summer. All eyes will be on Wembley as England play Egypt
in the final friendly before coach Capello names his provisional squad for
South Africa. With just 100 days until the tournament begins, now is not the
time for the Italian to make wholesale changes in personnel. Nor is it the
time for him to abandon the tactics, guidelines and principles that have
stood him, his men and the nation in good stead thus far. But it is time to
have a closer look at a few of the players on the periphery of the squad.
Players who may not have had a starring role in qualification. Players who
may not have been considered 'first choice'. Players who may not have
grabbed the headlines. Players who are likely to be on the bench in South
Africa. Players who could be asked to save England's bacon if things go
wrong. Players like Carlton Cole. With no goals from his first six
appearances, the West Ham striker may seem an unlikely candidate to be
England's saviour this summer. But you can never tell. If you had said 12
months ago that Carlton would be the only Cole in the England squad for
tonight's friendly, you would have been laughed out of town. But that is the
case. Football is fickle and you never know which way the hand of fate is
going to point. Wayne Rooney and Jermain Defoe are, of course, in the box
seats for the striking positions at the moment. But what happens if they get
injured? Capello knows his first XI and what they are capable of. We all do.
But football is rarely that cut and dried. Managers going to a major
tournament need to prepare for the worst-case scenario and then keep their
fingers crossed it does not happen. That is why I would like to see Cole
given a starting berth against Egypt. Having been highly rated as a
youngster at Chelsea, he is now starting to fulfil that promise at West Ham
under Gianfranco Zola. He has overcome some difficult times at Upton Park
and won over the fans to become the Hammers' talisman. Despite missing two
months of the season with injury, he has still managed to hit nine goals
which is no mean feat in a team that has battled relegation and financial
uncertainty for most of the campaign. Having returned to fitness, it is now
time to see whether the forward who has performed so well for one Italian in
the Premier League can do the same for another at international level. It is
a big step up. But if Capello does not give him a try, he will never know.
There is no point waiting until the last few minutes of England's final
World Cup group game against Slovenia in Port Elizabeth on June 23 to find
out. We know what Rooney, Defoe, Peter Crouch and Emile Heskey can do.
It's time to see what Cole can do, starting against Egypt tonight. The same
applies to Stephen Warnock and Leighton Baines. Both are in the reckoning to
start at left-back after Ashley Cole's injury and Wayne Bridge's decision to
rule himself out. I would go for Warnock, purely because he is next in the
pecking order. It is time to get him used to playing for England in case
Ashley is ruled out. Behind him, I would put David James in goal. The
Portsmouth stopper has not featured for England for a while. Fit again, Jamo
needs to get back in the international groove. In midfield, I would play
James Milner on the right. The Aston Villa player was outstanding in a
central role for his club in their 2-1 Carling Cup final defeat to
Manchester United on Sunday. But Aaron Lennon's injury opens the door for
him on the right, doing the same job for England that Steven Gerrard does on
the left. In the centre, I would stick with Frank Lampard and Gareth Barry.
Neither are natural holding midfielders, though both do the job very well.
Milner's presence and his ability to track back would toughen up the
midfield defensively. That is something we may not need so much against
Egypt at Wembley. But I believe it could stabilise the midfield if we come
up against the likes of Brazil and Spain this summer. Milner could also
switch to right-back but there is no doubt that it is in midfield where he
is most effective. I would give Wes Brown the nod on the right of defence,
with John Terry and Matthew Upson in the centre. Much has been made of the
reception JT will get from the Wembley crowd.
I am sure Capello and his players will be relieved to get back to football
matters. With the World Cup in sight, now is the time to look forward, not
backward. That means giving a run-out to those who could become unlikely
heroes this summer.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sulli: We won't Up deal
The Sun
Published: Today

DAVID SULLIVAN has told Matthew Upson: It's payback time. West Ham's new
co-owner wants the England defender to extend his present £65,000-a-week
deal with no increase. Sullivan allowed Upson, 30, to move to Upton Park in
2007 when he was in charge at Birmingham. And he said: "We all really want
Matthew to stay. "I did him a favour letting him leave Birmingham and I hope
he can return it."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sullivan : Poor trio in bailout
The Sun
By MARK IRWIN
Published: 02 Mar 2010

WEST HAM co-owner David Sullivan claims at least three Premier League clubs
are being bailed out by a secret benefactor. And he says the trio of
top-flight teams are cashing in on future TV money for a quick fix to pay
their mounting debts. Sullivan and David Gold paid £55million for a 50 per
cent stake in West Ham in January. And he believes it is only a matter of
time before other top teams follow Portsmouth into administration and
possibly out of business. Sullivan said: "A very rich private individual has
loaned tens of millions of pounds to three Premier League clubs. I am not
going to identify him or say exactly how much he has loaned but it is a
considerable amount. "He makes these loans based on the club's agreed
payments from TV income. "I am also aware that financial institutions are
buying up football debts at big discounts. "One bought some of Portsmouth's
debt but they have to wait for their money now, if they get it back at all."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Teddy : Fab must go for Cole
The Sun
Published: 02 Mar 2010

TEDDY SHERINGHAM is urging Fabio Capello to pair Carlton Cole with Wayne
Rooney in England's attack. Capello has tried Cole, Peter Crouch, Emile
Heskey and Jermain Defoe with the Manchester United striker in the World Cup
qualifiers. Sheringham - who once partnered Cole at Upton Park - said: "I
had a little while with Coley and there was a lot of promise at the time.
"He has sorted himself out as a person and made sacrifices in his life. He
realises he wants to be a professional footballer. "He's done himself no
harm in the games he's played. He just has to maintain his performances for
West Ham and get on the scoresheet."

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Fred & Dyer 1m per game
The Sun
By PAT SHEEHAN
Published: 02 Mar 2010

FREDDIE LJUNGBERG and Kieron Dyer cost West Ham more than £1MILLION PER
GAME. The revelation came as the Hammers laid bare the full extent of the
crazy trading that pushed the club close to bankruptcy. In accounts
published yesterday, West Ham's financial director Nick Igoe revealed: "Two
players, one of whom has since left, started a combined total of 32 games
and will have cost the group over £34m over the terms of their contracts."
Former chairman Eggert Magnusson pushed for Ljungberg to sign from Arsenal
in July 2007, despite injury concerns, in a £3m deal. And fellow crock Dyer
arrived from Newcastle in August the same year for £6m. Nigel Quashie and
Calum Davenport played 15 games between them in three years and will have
cost the club £12m in all. Igoe added: "No club can sustain this level of
expenditure on under-performing squad members. "Many of the decisions in the
last two-three seasons have been ill-judged."

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David Sullivan says West Ham are not yet out of financial danger
The Times
Gary Jacob

David Sullivan boasted that he had saved West Ham United from bankruptcy,
but according to figures released yesterday the club remain ill. The
joint-chairman confirmed that several players will have to be sold this
summer if the team are relegated, but the £16 million loss posted in the
annual accounts yesterday was a third lower than Sullivan had predicted in
January. Saving money is paramount to Sullivan, with the club undergoing
drastic cost-cutting and staff redundancies, but it is the picture on the
pitch that will concern supporters. The club are three points above the
relegation zone in the Barclays Premier League. Much of the financial
problems arose from poor signings in 2007 and the club have have aired their
criticism for the first time of four "underperforming" transfers at the
time, namely Calum Davenport, Nigel Quashie, Kieron Dyer and Fredrik
Ljungberg. Dean Ashton's retirement because of injury cost £5.8 million,
including a £2.2 million severance payment. A significant concern is that
turnover, of which players wages' account for more than 72 per cent, fell by
£5 million. The club admitted their bank debt of £44.9 million was
"challenging" when considered alongside other money owed to Sheffield United
and in transfer fees.

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Hammers' horror accounts exposed
Published 09:01 02/03/10 By Pa Sports
The Mirror

West Ham's financial woes were laid bare on Monday night when the club
published their latest accounts. The club's decision to award injury-plagued
striker Dean Ashton a new contract in December 2008 backfired, leaving them
liable for a £5.81million payment when he was forced to retire in December.
Freddie Ljungberg and Kieron Dyer will have cost the club £34million over
the terms of their contracts, having only started a combined total of 32
matches for West Ham since the summer of 2007. For two years under the
ill-fated Icelandic regime, West Ham's wages totalled around 80% of their
annual turnover, nearly 20% higher than the Barclays Premier League average.
The club's finance director, Nick Igoe, wrote in the accounts that the
club's subsequent on-field performances were unsatisfactory following such
major investment. "It is a truism to observe that a club's playing success
(and almost certainly long-term financial success) is largely dependent on
how wisely it invests its available resources," Igoe wrote. "It has to be
concluded that many of the group's investment decisions in the last two to
three seasons have been ill-judged. "Two players who signed in the summer
2007 transfer window, one of whom has since left the club, have started a
combined total of 32 games and will have cost the group £34million over the
term of their contracts. No football club can sustain this level of
expenditure on underperforming members of its squad. "It must be concluded
that the investment in the playing squad has not generated an appropriate
return, either financially or in terms of performance. It follows that an
eighth and 10th-place league finish, one Carling Cup last eight and one FA
Cup last 16 represent an unsatisfactory return on this expenditure. "Clubs
with fewer resources and lower levels of expenditure on their squad have
achieved a greater level of league and cup success." The figures also reveal
the major belt-tightening programme West Ham undertook last season in the
hope of staving off financial meltdown. The wage bill was reduced and West
Ham made £10.8million from player sales - but that accounted for less than a
quarter of the transfer expenditure from the previous two seasons.

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Carlos Tevez affair could cost West Ham a further £4million
Ken Dyer
02.03.10
Evening Standard

West Ham still face potential claims of £4million from the Carlos Tevez
affair despite having paid out £21m to Sheffield United. Tevez helped West
Ham avoid relegation in the 2006-07 season but it was later ruled that his
signing broke rules on third-party ownership. Although reaching an
out-court-settlement with Sheffield United, who were relegated that term,
the players want a total of £3.5m for loss of earnings. Fulham are
considering a claim of £500,000 for loss of merit money having finished two
places below West Ham. The details were revealed today in the club's
financial review, which refers to the unprecedented' level of costs in
recent seasons. West Ham paid striker Dean Ashton £5.8m to terminate his
contract following the serious injury which ended his career. The report
paints a grim picture of the club's finances before David Sullivan and David
Gold took effective control last month. In the last two seasons, wages were
almost 80 per cent of turnover, nearly 20 per cent higher than the
top-flight average. The report says: "Many of the group's investment
decisions in the last two to three seasons have been ill judged."
It says two players, thought to be Calum Davenport and Nigel Quashie, have
started 15 games between them since joining in 2007 and "will have cost the
group £12m over the term of their contracts". Another two, believed to be
Kieron Dyer and Freddie Ljungberg, also signed in 2007 and have started a
combined total of 32 games but will cost the club £34m.

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Hammered by millions: The costly signings that have crippled West Ham
By Matt Barlow
Last updated at 12:54 AM on 02nd March 2010
Daily Mail

West Ham's dangerous levels of spending have been revealed, including a
reckless transfer policy that left them risking a financial meltdown on the
scale of Portsmouth.
Calum Davenport and Nigel Quashie, signed in January 2007, started a
combined total of 15 games in three years at a cost of £12million over the
term of their contracts. Freddie Ljungberg and Kieron Dyer, signed in summer
2007, have started 32 games between them and will have cost the club £34m
over the term of their contracts.

The club are saddled with debts of more than £100m and are paying a heavy
price for the excesses of Eggert Magnusson and Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson. West
Ham's accounts for the year ending May 2009 recorded a £16million loss but,
more staggeringly, reveal how the club had borrowed themselves to the brink
with a timebomb of debt. But co-owner David Ssullivan has stressed: 'Our
board will work ceaselessly to put the club back on a stable financial
footing and I believe that we have the expertise to achieve this.'
The purchase of 50 per cent of the club by millionaires and David Gold in
January this year has eased the pressure. The club amassed an annual wage
bill close to £68m on turn-over of £76m with the help of £45m of bank loans,
most of which were repayable on demand.

Those bank loans plus interest, £14m of outstanding transfer fees, £21m owed
to Sheffield United for the Carlos Ttevez settlement, tax bills,
compensation to former manager Alan Curbishley and various other debts meant
the club faced the prospect of finding more than £95m by May this year or
going bust. The realisation dawned in the summer of 2008, when West Ham
scrambled to renegotiate the debt repayments and hastily started to sell
players like Bobby Zamora, John Pantsil, Anton Ferdinand and George
McCartney. It was the board's decision to sell Ferdinand and McCartney to
Sunderland on the August deadline which led directly to Curbishley's
departure and his claim for constructive dismissal, which has cost West Ham
another £2m. The retirement of Dean Ashton will cost them £5.8m if they lose
an insurance claim against the FA.

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 2

Daily WHUFC News - 2nd March 2010

Cole ready says Teddy
WHUFC.com
Former England striker Teddy Sheringham considers the fortunes of the club's Three Lions hopefuls
01.03.2010

Teddy Sheringham has spoken exclusively to WHUTV about West Ham United's trio of England hopefuls and their chances of being on the plane to South Africa. The former England striker, who served the club to distinction with 28 goals in 76 league games between 2004 and 2007, is the latest big name to catch up with the WHUTV cameras in recent weeks. Log on now to hear his thoughts including on Carlton Cole's progress since the pair were strike partners in claret and blue.
Sheringham, who also considers Robert Green and Matthew Upson's international ambitions, said: "Carlton has sorted himself out as a person and made sacrifices in his life to realise he wants to be a pro footballer. He is doing very well. "I saw him at first hand for England away to Holland and in other games and he has done himself no harm in the games he has played. It is just about maintaining the performances he has for West Ham and keep getting on the score-sheet."

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Big week for Behrami
WHUFC.com
Valon Behrami may be on international duty this week but he is already prepared for Bolton Wanderers
01.03.2010

Valon Behrami is looking forward to returning to international action in midweek - but insists his priority is on keeping West Ham United in the Barclays Premier League. The Switzerland international is set to be involved in Wednesday's home friendly with fellow 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifiers Uruguay. If selected, the fixture will mark Behrami's 26th cap for his country since making his debut in a 1-1 2006 World Cup qualifier draw with France on 8 October 2005. However, the 24-year-old will be keeping his focus on Saturday's vital league visit of Bolton Wanderers to the Boleyn Ground, which comes after the 2-0 and 3-0 successes in the last two home matches against Birmingham City and Hull City respectively. "This is a game like the Hull one, against a team on the same level and they are a physical team. We need to win as we are at home and keep playing like we played against Birmingham and Hull. This is a very, very important game."
Behrami is the subject of the main interview in the official matchday programme for Saturday's match. The midfielder talks candidly about his childhood, which saw him move from Kosovo to Switzerland at the age of five, his closness to his family, the forthcoming World Cup finals and enjoying life in London at West Ham United.

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Download the accounts today
WHUFC.com
West Ham United have published the club's accounts for the 2008/09 season for all whufc.com users
01.03.2010

West Ham United are today publishing on whufc.com the club's accounts for the 2008/09 season as part of the new board's determination to keep supporters as informed as possible. The new accounts have been submitted to Companies House after being signed off by independent auditors. Fans wanting to read the 35-page document, before they are available anywhere else, can do so by clicking HERE : http://www.whufc.com/staticFiles/a2/4a/0,,12562~150178,00.pdf

In his chairman's statement, David Sullivan said: "It is a great honour to be reporting to shareholders as joint-chairman of West Ham United with my colleague David Gold, following our acquisition of a 50 per cent shareholding in the company.

"These results testify to the amount of work that has to be done to restore this club to a position of financial strength. Our new board will work ceaselessly to put the club back on a stable financial footing and I believe that it has the expertise and experience to achieve this."

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Behrami braced for Bolton
Hammers ace ready for crunch clash
By Chris Burton Last updated: 1st March 2010
SSN

West Ham to win 2-1 7/1, draw 1-1 6/1 or lose 1-0 9/1
1st Goalscorer - Cole 9/2, McCarthy 11/2 or Noble 16/1

Valon Behrami admits West Ham's meeting with Bolton this weekend is a 'very, very important game'. The Hammers have given themselves breathing space in the battle to beat the drop, opening up a three-point cushion on the drop zone.They are, however, far from assured to be playing Premier League football next season and know there is still a lot of hard work to be done.Back-to-back successes on home soil, over Birmingham and Hull City, have helped their cause considerably and results at Upton Park could go a long way to determining their fate.Next up in the capital are fellow strugglers Bolton on Saturday, with both sides desperate to take something from a crunch contest. A number of those on display will have been away with their respective countries in midweek, including Swiss midfielder Behrami, but the match is already weighing heavy on the mind of many of those set to be involved. "This is a game like the Hull one (a 3-0 win), against a team on the same level and they are a physical team," Behrami told West Ham's official website. "We need to win as we are at home and keep playing like we played against Birmingham (a 2-0 win) and Hull. "This is a very, very important game."

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Sullivan: Hammers planned player fire sale
By Harry Harris, Football Correspondent
ESPN
March 1, 2010

West Ham United would have been forced to sell £8 million worth of players in January, £16 million in the summer and £20 million if they were relegated had the club not fallen into new hands, co-owner David Sullivan told Soccernet. On the day Portsmouth were due back in court for a Revenue winding up order, having already gone into administration, the true extent of the financial meltdown at Upton Park was disclosed by the club's new co-owner. Sullivan told Soccernet: "The strategy for survival was in place in case there wasn't a takeover, and we were told that it meant that £8 million worth of players had to be sold in January, which would have meant a player like Scott Parker or Carlton Cole going, or maybe even both. "Then in the summer, the club would have needed to sell £16 million worth of players to carry on surviving, having budgeted to finish 10th in the Premier League, but it might have been more like £20 million if they had been relegated. "It would have reached the stage where the club would have had no one left of any consequence, but when people are desperate they had to design desperate measures. "For West Ham it wouldn't have been long before they would have run out of players to sell. Yet Straumer had put in £7.9 million to keep the club afloat on top of all the debts."
When Sullivan and David Gold took over the running of the club in January there were debts of £110 million. Sullivan said: "We have already trimmed that down to £95 million, as we have paid of some of the debts with a few little deals, so slowly we are making some progress. "But we have to look at the situation in realistic terms. This club had lost £20 million, £40 million and £20 million in the last three years and there are another £20 million losses this year. "Ultimately we have to break even, but that is going to take some effort as we are heading for £20 million losses this year again. So, you can see the first big task is to stabilise the club to give it a brighter future. "We came in and bought players, saved the club from being forced to sell players, and now we are quite capable of staying up, and quite capable of surviving."

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Premier League clubs borrowing from money lender
By Harry Harris, Football Correspondent
ESPN
March 1, 2010

A private individual has loaned three Premier League clubs "tens of millions" as some of the elite have already sold TV revenues and season tickets for forthcoming seasons. Top-flight clubs are turning to a money lender to buy players, pay off debts or simply survive and stave off the kind of predicament that has hit Portsmouth. Peter Storrie revealed to Soccernet that one of the biggest problems was that the banks called in their £40 million loans, and in the recession clubs have turned to this unnamed money lender of some considerable wealth. West Ham co-owner David Sullivan told Soccernet: "A private individual has loaned three Premier League clubs tens of millions. I am not going to name him or say exactly how much he has loaned the clubs, but it is a considerable amount. "A very rich private individual is making these loans based on the clubs' agreed payments from TV income. When we came to West Ham, we found that the club had sold its season tickets for two years in advance. "We are also aware that financial institutions are buying up football debt at big discounts. One such financial institution bought some of the Portsmouth debt, but they are going to have to wait for their money now, if they ever get it all back."
Sullivan, though, does not necessary feel that the Premier League is in the kind of perilous state that has been suggested following Portsmouth's move into administration.
Much is made of the enormous debt at the top end of the Premier League, but Sullivan said: "Arsenal have just posted fantastic figures. Manchester United are the club most quoted as having the biggest debt, but big business does run on debt - look at Marks & Spencer. "Chelsea and Manchester City can be taken out of the equation because their owners are running those clubs as hobbies. "The real pressure is down the bottom, where the lesser clubs fear the financial effects of relegation, when whole income flows are no longer guaranteed if they go down. It creates sheer panic. "That is why I would like to see a full parachute payment for the first season and half for the following two seasons. I have not advocated it, but it makes more sense to me. The fear factor at the bottom has to be addressed, because it is down there that clubs are pushing the financial panic button, and that leaves them wide open to doing things they might not wish to do."

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David Sullivan lifts lid on West Ham's financial plight
Hammers had budgeted to sell £28m worth of players
Sullivan and Gold took over club with £110m debts
James Callow guardian.co.uk, Monday 1 March 2010 16.10 GMT

David Sullivan claims West Ham United would have been forced to sell the majority of their playing staff had he and David Gold not bought the club in January. Now West Ham's joint chairman along with Gold, Sullivan believes the east London club was in such bad financial shape that they would have had to sell £8m worth of players last January, £16m in the summer and £20m if they were relegated to avoid financial ruin. "The strategy for survival was in place in case there wasn't a takeover, and we were told that it meant that £8m worth of players had to be sold in January, which would have meant a player like Scott Parker or Carlton Cole going, or maybe even both," Sullivan told Soccernet.
"Then in the summer, the club would have needed to sell £16m worth of players to carry on surviving, having budgeted to finish 10th in the Premier League, but it might have been more like £20m if they had been relegated. "It would have reached the stage where the club would have had no one left of any consequence, but when people are desperate they had to design desperate measures. "For West Ham it wouldn't have been long before they would have run out of players to sell. Yet [Icelandic bank] Straumur had put in £7.9m to keep the club afloat on top of all the debts."
When Sullivan and Gold took over the running of the club it had debts of £110m. "We have already trimmed that down to £95m," Sullivan said, "as we have paid off some of the debts with a few little deals, so slowly we are making some progress. But we have to look at the situation in realistic terms. This club had lost £20m, £40m and £20m in the last three years and there are another £20m losses this year. "Ultimately we have to break even, but that is going to take some effort as we are heading for £20m losses this year again. So, you can see the first big task is to stabilise the club to give it a brighter future. We came in and bought players, saved the club from being forced to sell players, and now we are quite capable of staying up, and quite capable of surviving."

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West Ham's David Sullivan Petrol Station to King Of Canning!
Date: 1st March 2010 at 5:43 pm |
Transfer Tavern

David Sullivan, West Ham's co-owner, has caused quite a stir during his time with the club. This was mainly because he warned that the players and management would have to take a pay cut even if the club avoids relegation. Sullivan, along with David Gold, bought Birmingham City in 1993 and has been involved in football ever since. So, just how did Sullivan end up where he is today? Let's find out about the man. There are some surprising details along the way…

■David Sullivan was born on the 1st of February in 1949, in Cardiff. He graduated from the Queen Mary's university with a degree in economics. That degree was put to use with a 21 year ownership, from 1986-2007, of the Sunday Sport and Daily Sport.

■Apart from being the joint-chairman of West Ham, he is also a British pornography entrepreneur. Believe it or not, this helped him in the initial stages of his career. After working at a petrol station that paid him £30 a week, he entered the porn market at 21 by producing weekly pictures that and selling photos that earnt him around £800 a week.

■On to the football then. Sullivan happened to buy Birmingham when it was advertised in the Financial Times. He helped to transform the club from being bottom of the second tier in English football to where they are now.

■In 2007, Sullivan seemed to have had enough by stating that he wanted to leave Birmingham. If that had alerted potential buyers, then the news of 2008 alerted the police. He and managing director, Karren Brady, were arrested on suspicion of conspiracy which was to do with an alleged corruption in English football. Luckily for the pair, no action was to be taken.

■The long stay as co-owner of Birmingham looked to be taking its toll on him as he blamed previous manager Steve Bruce's player signings for the club's relegation from the Premiership in 2008.

■In January of this year, Sullivan and Gold accquired the 50% stake that was needed to take control of West Ham.

■Amongst Sullivan's other interests, he likes horse racing and with all the money he has it is not surprising to hear that he lives in a house that cost £7.5m to build. He is Britain's 68th richest man.

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West Ham admit to "ill-judged" spending
Fifa.com
(PA) Monday 1 March 2010

The scope of West Ham's "ill-judged" spending over recent seasons has been been revealed in the club's latest accounts, which were published this evening.

West Ham's decision to award injury-plagued striker Dean Ashton a new contract in December 2008 backfired, leaving them liable for a £5.81million payment when he was forced to retire in December. Freddie Ljungberg and Kieron Dyer will have cost the club £34m over the terms of their contracts, having only started a combined total of 32 matches for West Ham since the summer of 2007.

For two years under the ill-fated Icelandic regime, West Ham's wages totalled around 80% of their annual turnover, nearly 20% higher than the Barclays Premier League average. The club's finance director Nick Igoe wrote in the accounts that the club's subsequent on-field performances were unsatisfactory following such major investment.

"It is a truism to observe that a club's playing success (and almost certainly long term financial success) is largely dependent on how wisely it invests its available resources," Igoe wrote in the accounts. "It has to be concluded that many of the group's investment decisions in the last two to three seasons have been ill-judged. Two players who signed in the summer 2007 transfer window, one of whom has since left the club, have started a combined total of 32 games and will have cost the group £34m over the term of their contracts.

"No football club can sustain this level of expenditure on underperforming members of its squad," it continued. "It must be concluded that the investment in the playing squad has not generated an appropriate return, either financially or in terms of performance. It follows that an eighth and 10th place league finish, one Carling Cup last eight and one FA Cup last 16 represent an unsatisfactory return on this expenditure. Clubs with fewer resources and lower levels of expenditure on their squad have achieved a greater level of league and cup success."

The figures also reveal the major belt-tightening programme which West Ham undertook last season in the hope of staving off financial meltdown. The wage bill was reduced. and West Ham made £10.8m from player sales. However, that still accounted for less than a quarter of the transfer expenditure from the previous two seasons.

"2008/09 saw the group take steps to generate essential cash flow by a programme of player sales and wage savings," wrote Igoe. "This comprised a reduction in the size of the playing squad and the trading of certain players for less costly replacements."

The club's turnover was down to £76.1m, due mainly to the collapse of title sponsor XL but the wage bill also dipped. West Ham's losses before tax of £16.2m were not helped by "exceptional expenses" such as the Ashton pay-out - but the figure was still half what it had been the year before.

The club's bank debt of £45m is not considered "excessive" for a company generating £75-80m of annual turnover. But West Ham say the debt "is challenging because it is relatively short term in nature, expiring as it does in August 2011, and has to be viewed alongside other liabilities such as the Sheffield United settlement and net transfer fee creditors of £14.4m."

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West Ham keen on Peterborough keeper Lewis
02.03.10 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham United are being linked with Peterborough United goalkeeper Joe Lewis. The Hammers could be in the market for a new No1 if Robert Green gets a move to a top four club. A highly-placed source at Upton Park told the News of the World that claims Manchester City's Joe Hart, currently on loan at Birmingham, will be on his way to West Ham if Green leaves are "the product of a fertile imagination". "That theory came from the fact that the Hammers' current owners took him to St Andrew's," he added. "His name hasn't been mentioned. "Peterborough's Joe Lewis at £3.5million would be a far more realistic proposition."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Daily WHUFC News - 2nd March 2010

Wayne Rooney asks England fans not to boo John Terry
International friendly - England v Egypt
Venue: Wembley Stadium Date: Wednesday, 3 March Kick-off: 2000 GMT
Coverage: Live on ITV1, full commentary on BBC Radio 5 live and online, live
text updates on BBC Sport website.

Wayne Rooney is urging England supporters not to boo John Terry in the
friendly against Egypt on Wednesday. The Manchester United striker wants
fans to show support for Terry, sacked as England captain last month after
allegations of an extra-marital affair. "He [Terry] hasn't got the armband
but he's still a great player and a great leader," said Rooney. Rooney also
said he was fit for the Wembley fixture despite suffering discomfort in his
knee on Sunday. Wednesday's match is England's first since allegations were
made that Chelsea captain Terry had an affair with the ex-girlfriend of
Wayne Bridge - a former team-mate at Stamford Bridge and with England - who
now plays for Manchester City. Terry, 29, was taunted by City fans during
his team's 4-2 home defeat on Saturday, when Bridge refused to shake his
hand before the kick-off. Bridge said last week he no longer wished to play
for England because his position in the squad had become "untenable and
potentially divisive"
However, Rooney said he expected Terry to get "the same as normal" reception
at Wembley on Wednesday. "The squad has been no different since we met up,"
said the striker, who came off the bench to score Manchester United's winner
in their 2-1 Carling Cup final victory over Aston Villa at Wembley on
Sunday. "I've been in the team when a few players have been booed at Wembley
and it's not nice - it doesn't send the right message. "I hope he gets a
good reception. When you are leading up to a World Cup, you want the fans
behind us and giving us their full support because that will be really
important."
Fears of a hostile reception for Terry follow England fans' boos aimed at
his Chelsea team-mate Frank Lampard during England's Euro 2008 qualifying
win against Estonia in 2007. Lampard's then team-mate Joe Cole slammed the
fans at the time, saying: "Frank has been one of England's most consistent
players over the years and he has never let England down. "It is not nice to
hear that, it is not nice to hear one of your mates getting that. He doesn't
deserve it."
Rooney, who has scored 28 goals in all competitions for Manchester United
this season, added: "Wayne Bridge is a fantastic player and especially now
with Ashley Cole being injured I'm sure he'd have been the one to take his
place. It's unfortunate but it's his decision and you have to respect it."
The striker suffered a knee problem during Sunday's final but said: "It's
OK. I went for a scan and it's just a bit of bruising. I'll be fit to play."
He added that there had been no disruptions in the run-up to England's final
game before manager Fabio Capello's provisional World Cup squad is
announced, despite the unusual circumstances surrounding preparations.
Meanwhile, Villa's James Milner said he is prepared to play at left-back,
should Capello want him to fill the problem position. "To have Wayne Bridge
available would be great but we'll move on," said Milner. "I've had 15
minutes experience at left-back but that was for England. If I'm asked to
play there I'll do the best job I can - but my best position is further
forward, in central midfield or out wide."
And both Rooney and Milner said Stoke defender Ryan Shawcross, who is in an
England squad for the first time and whose challenge on Aaron Ramsey at the
weekend resulted in a double compound fracture for the Arsenal midfielder,
had been made welcome. "I was with him at United for a couple of years and
he's not that type of player," said Rooney. "I'm sure he'll be OK, he'll be
welcomed into the squad and will be hoping to get a game on Wednesday. "It's
unfortunate but he's got to move on now. He's in the squad at a young age,
it's important for him to get a game and if he does I'm sure he'll do well."

Milner said: "He'll come to terms with it. Hopefully this will give him some
confidence, help get his mind back on football." Rooney had earlier revealed
he knew last Wednesday that he would not start the Carling Cup final but
said it was not because of the knee problem. "I had a little bit of a
stomach bug and the manager was looking for an excuse to leave me out," the
forward said. "When he found out about that it made his mind up. I was still
disappointed but it was the correct decision by the manager." Rooney's
Manchester United team-mate Rio Ferdinand did not join the England camp in
Watford. Instead, he will have further treatment on his back injury in the
hope of being fit for Manchester United's Premier League trip to Wolves on
Saturday.

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Portsmouth are ordered back to court by HMRC

Portsmouth are to return to the High Court on Tuesday after Her Majesty's
Revenue and Customs challenged the club going into voluntary administration.
"We're having to go to court to show that the debenture [debt agreement] is
valid," said administrator Andrew Andronikou, the man running the club.
"We're not unduly worried and expect the administration to proceed."
Pompey's move into administration means HMRC is now ranked below their
football-related creditors in priority. Andronikou will also meet the
Premier League on Tuesday to discuss Pompey's proposed nine-point penalty
for entering administration. The deduction would leave the Hampshire club on
10 points - 14 from safety and virtual certainties for relegation to the
Championship. On Thursday, Andronikou will attend a meeting of Premier
League chairmen to explore whether clubs would consider allowing Portsmouth
to sell players and then take them back on loan for the remainder of the
season. There will also be a discussion of the possibility of television
revenue being forwarded early to the club, who have had four owners this
season and on Friday became the first Premier League club to enter
administration. A Pompey spokesman said: "We don't want to pre-empt anything
or pre-judge what will happen, but hopefully the Premier League and our
fellow Premier League clubs will be as sympathetic as possible to our
situation. "The Premier League have been incredibly understanding and [club
owner] Balram Chainrai would like to place on record his gratitude to chief
executive Richard Scudamore, chairman Sir David Richards, company secretary
and head of football administration Jane Purdon, general secretary Mike
Foster and director of finance and administration Javed Khan."
Meranwhile, Culture Secretary Ben Bradshaw said Portsmouth's financial woes
should act as a "wake-up call" to the sport's authorities. The game's
governing body had some "very tough questions" to answer about football
finance, the MP told the House of Commons. He urged the Football Association
to adopt the changes to the way the game is run that were recommended by
Lord Burns in 2005. And the minister said more clubs should follow the
example of Exeter City in his constituency - a football club run by its
fans.
"We do think that there remain some very tough questions for the football
authorities to address, given the events at Portsmouth and elsewhere, issues
around debt, around takeovers and strengthening the whole financial
governance of football," he stated.

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Businessman Victor Cattermole hopeful of Pompey deal

New Zealand businessman Victor Cattermole claims his consortium "are still
interested" in buying Portsmouth. Cattermole's Endeavour Plan group was one
of four interested parties unable to agree a deal last week as the
debt-laden club went into administration. But Cattermole said talks had
been reopened with administrator Andrew Andronikou on Monday, and claimed
the chance of a deal "is quite good". "I really don't think the situation is
as bad as people think," he added. Pompey, who have had four owners this
season, became the first Premier League in history to enter administration
on Friday. The club claimed last week that a sale was not possible as none
of the parties had provided the club's chief executive Peter Storrie and
current owner Balram Chainrai with proof that funds were in place. However,
Cattermole contradicted this, saying: "We provided evidence of an offer for
a bank facility of 200m euros (£181m) last Tuesday to Peter Storrie. "That
was obviously not disclosed to any of the media. "We also wrote to them
advising that we were strongly opposed to administration but they had a path
they were on and it didn't matter what we said, that wasn't going to
change," he added. The Premier League is set to deduct the Hampshire club
nine points as a result of administration on Tuesday - which would leave
them 14 points from safety and virtual certainties for relegation to the
Championship. And Cattermole admitted this would be a consideration for his
consortium. "We still have to carry out due diligence and see what is owed,
what is expected to be paid for it and what the value's going to be once the
whole issue of relegation and the nine-point issue is sorted out," he said.
"Obviously if the club gets relegated then a lot of the income in the next
seasons is compromised. The club has to be cheaper because it's been
devalued. "We'll just look at it as a business that's effectively a going
concern and we'll make a decision on value based on what we see and what we
can negotiate."
After seeing his team win 2-1 at Burnley on Saturday, Pompey manager Avram
Grant protested that the points deduction was unjust. "Football should be
decided on the pitch not in the courts, not in the Premier League offices,"
the Israeli said. Andronikou, who has estimated that Pompey's debts will
"bottom at around £78m", said the club aims to challenge the penalty. "The
assumption that there is an automatic deduction of points has never been
tested before but we will do our very best to avoid a deduction," he told
BBC Radio 5 live on Sunday. "Our solicitors believe there may be a slight
opportunity but I don't want to say anything more because that prejudices my
position in achieving it.
"I would say everyone has taken for granted that there will be a deduction
of nine points."

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Neil Warnock is named manager of Queens Park Rangers

Queens Park Rangers have appointed Neil Warnock as their fifth manager this
season after agreeing compensation with Crystal Palace. Warnock, 61, has
joined the Championship club on a three-and-a-half-year contract and
replaces caretaker boss Mick Harford. "This is the perfect time to come in,
with the new chairman and structure in place," he told QPR's website.
"Loftus Road is always a place I love because of the fantastic atmosphere."
QPR chairman Ishan Saksena said Warnock was "always our number one target"
as manager, adding: "He has great experience in English football and a
phenomenal track record." Palace are currently in administration, and
Warnock confirmed to BBC Sheffield last week that the clubs were in talks.
But he said: "There is no way I am going to walk out. If they can agree
compensation then that's different." Rangers are three points off the
Championship relegation places, while Palace went into administration last
month and suffered a subsequent 10-point deduction. It dropped them from
play-off contention in the Championship to a battle against relegation. The
deduction capped a difficult period for Palace during which they were
subject to a transfer embargo and players and staff had their wages delayed.
They also had to sell highly rated leading scorer Victor Moses to Wigan for
a cut-price fee believed to around £2.5m. QPR's turbulent season has also
seen them part company with Flavio Briatore, who stepped down as chairman of
Queens Park Rangers Holdings on 19 February. Warnock, who guided Sheffield
United to the Premier League in 2006, is the west London outfit's 12th
manager in four years.

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Injured Arsenal star Aaron Ramsey in 'good spirits'

John Toshack has revealed his injured Wales star Aaron Ramsey is
"comfortable and in good spirits" in hospital after his horrific double leg
break. The Arsenal teenager had surgery to fix fractures to the tibia and
fibula in his right leg after a challenge by Ryan Shawcross in their 3-1 win
at Stoke. Wales boss Toshack said: "He is as comfortable as can be
expected. "He seemed in surprisingly decent spirits when I spoke to him. We
hope he has a speedy and successful recovery." The Welsh midfielder's double
compound fracture at the Britannia Stadium had echoes of the injury
sustained by Arsenal team-mate Eduardo at Birmingham two years ago. And the
surgeon who operated on Eduardo's injury has offered hope by saying Ramsey
should make a full recovery from the similar setback. The 19-year-old was
stretchered off and taken straight to hospital after the challenge by
Shawcross on Saturday, an incident in which the Stoke defender was sent off.
"It is a horrific injury, it makes you want to vomit," said Toshack. "It is
a sad and unfortunate incident. I saw the aftermath of the injury and I
thought 'oh no.' "I still haven't seen the incident on TV, I have just seen
the disturbing photographs in the newspapers and you can imagine how I felt.
"For anybody it is a sad, sad thing but for a young player like Aaron who
has improved immensely over the last six or seven months. "And the last
couple of games we felt as though we are on the right lines with him, so
this is a big blow for all of us involved with Wales - but the main thing is
the player's welfare at the moment."
Dr Khalid Baloch, who operated on Eduardo, said: "If it's a straightforward
fracture that's been dealt with appropriately with intensive physio then you
stand a good chance of returning back to the previous level of activity. "It
is quite variable, the simplest fractures may heal up in two or three months
and then there is a period of rehabilitation involved - especially with
elite-level athletes. "On the other hand, if it's a very serious injury it
may take many months for the area to heal up and return back to functional
activities. "You've got a time period of anywhere from two or three months
to six months for recovery. If it's a simple fracture then he is more likely
to return to his previous level of activity. "As the injury becomes more
severe then obviously the rehabilitation is much harder and it's harder to
return back to activity. "If you look at the way Ramsey was tackled, it
looks a fairly similar mechanism of injury (to Eduardo). "There are lots of
bones around that area so it's difficult to know whether it's the same bone
that has been injured or not, but the area that's been injured is similar.
"With anyone who breaks the lower part of their leg, what you do is look to
reduce the fragments, or the bone pieces, back to where they should be and
then they are held by screws or plates. "It varies on exactly where the
fracture is but in principle that is what you would do for a fracture around
that area."
Turning to the rehabilitation process, Dr Baloch added: "Initially most
people are trying to get a range of movement back and also try to build up
the muscles around that limb and reduce swelling and discomfort, that is the
early phase of the rehabilitation process. "Beyond that phase there is an
increase in the range of impact activities with gradual progression to
running and then back to sporting activities over a minimum six to 12
months."
Gunners manager Arsene Wenger has condemned the tackle on Ramsey as
"horrendous and unacceptable" while he also criticises Stoke's overall
approach. While Arsenal great Bob Wilson has called on football authorities
to act in the wake of Ramsey's horrific injury. He said: "The game has moved
forward but the Football Association and the Premier League are content to
have a brutal side to the game. He added: "In my opinion this is born out of
most managers and coaches facing Arsenal, plus media pundits and even
ex-players, instructing their players to get in their faces. "Arsenal are a
relatively small team. Opposing players are told to shake them up, get in
their faces, tackle hard, bully them. I would defy coaches and managers to
deny that is the case. "The tackle by Ryan Shawcross was at best mistimed,
at worst reckless and desperate."
Former Gunners keeper Wilson, who had a 40-year association with Arsenal,
revealed he had contacted Ramsey after the incident at the Britannia
Stadium. "I was told that he was feeling very little pain following
surgery," said Wilson so I sent a text to Aaron and I received a little
message back saying 'I'm doing OK'. "But it is a career-threatening injury,
a double compound fracture. "In the time I played, Don Howe had a similar
injury, tibia and fibula through the skin, which is obviously horrific, and
he didn't play again.
"Clearly it's a huge setback but I think Aaron will be back. Modern science
will aid that recovery. He's a very, very special talent."
Stoke midfielder Glen Whelan had a first-hand view of the incident, helping
comfort the Arsenal youngster as he lay in agony. "I was just trying to do
what I could to take the lad's mind off it," said Whelan. "The lad held onto
me with the pain he was going through, and I was telling him not to think
about it. He was in a state of shock. "The medical team came on as quickly
as possible, and then you just let them take over. "First and foremost,
everyone hopes the young lad gets back as soon as possible, and at the
standard he plays at, because he looks a terrific player. "I was the next
one in from the tackle, and saw what had gone on. I was just trying to take
the lad's mind off it. "For Shawcross, he was disappointed what has happened
to the boy. "I have not seen the tackle again but when I first saw it, I do
not think it was a dirty tackle - maybe a bit late but no more. "I do not
think anyone goes into a tackle looking to break a leg or injure a player,
but there is fine line between being hard and being dirty. "The two players
could go in for that tackle 100 times again and nothing would happen.
Hopefully this was just a one-off."
Ramsey joined Arsenal in June, 2008, as a highly rated 17-year-old for £5m
from Cardiff City. He has made 29 appearances in all competitions this
season, scoring four times.

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Group considers United bid
Financiers in secret meeting to discuss potential takeover offer
Last updated: 1st March 2010

Sky News sources understand leading city financiers have met to discuss a
potential takeover bid for Premier League champions Manchester United.
Representatives from law firm Freshfields and investment bank Goldman Sachs,
among others, are understood to have been involved in the secret meeting.
Informally known as 'the Red Knights', the group held talks regarding a
potential offer to buy out the Glazer family, who are unpopular with United
fans. The mammoth debts at Old Trafford have recently sparked a green and
gold protest from supporters as the fans call on the Glazers to leave the
club. A £500million bonds issue has been used to help refinance the debts,
and Sky sources understand the Glazers are not looking to sell. However,
Keith Harris, who has been involved with the group considering a potential
takeover, recently called on supporters to start boycotting matches in an
attempt to force the Glazers' hand. Harris said last week: "Turning up to
games 10 minutes late and things like that just doesn't do the job.
"The green and gold protest is fabulous, a symbolic and significant message
to the owners. It is like the white handkerchiefs in Spain. But that won't
force the Glazers to sell to us. "However, if enough people - and I am
talking about thousands - stop turning up to matches and do not renew their
tickets, then that does it. The supporters have to hurt the Glazers in their
pockets. "They have to be prepared to take the pain of not watching their
club in order to achieve a long-term gain. Supporters have to be galvanised
to say, 'We will not come. We will not buy programmes and merchandise'.
"It's a big ask, it's a risk, but that is what must happen. The Glazers are
thick-skinned and seem impervious to protest. They will not be impervious to
enormous drops in their revenue. "I would not talk about this if I didn't
have full confidence in our ability to raise the money to do this. I never
talk publicly unless I have confidence. Getting the money together is the
easy bit. "But we can't make an offer until the Glazers are placed in a
position where they are forced to consider it."

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