Wednesday, October 5

Daily WHUFC News - 5th October 2011

Hendon hails young Hammers
WHUFC.com
Development squad coach Ian Hendon was pleased with a terrific team display
in the win at Thurrock
05.10.2011

Ian Hendon was delighted after his young West Ham United team rose to the
occasion away to Thurrock. The Hammers won 2-0 with goals in each half from
Freddie Sears and Sebastian Lletget (pictured) and the development squad
coach was most pleased with the clean sheet. He had named a young back four
of Callum Driver, Danny Potts, Kenzer Lee and Frazer Shaw but they coped
well. "It was a good work-out," Hendon told West Ham TV. "A very competitive
game as normal. It was good to come and play on a magnificent surface. It
made for a good game of football. "The team passed the ball quite well at
times once we got into it. There were a lot of young lads out there
especially by the end. I was more pleased with the clean sheet than the
goals almost because we had a very young back four. "Callum Driver was
probably the oldest at the tender age of 18. We got the goals we deserved
but could have had one or two more but that might have flattered us."

Hendon singled out Sears for his 45-minute performance, with the England U21
forward a willing performer as ever, whatever the level. "He always works
hard when he comes and plays in this game and credit to him for it." There
were also words of praise for skipper George Moncur and his exciting
midfield link-up with Lletget, the American Under-20 international. "George
trains every day, plays every minute, always wants the ball and works his
socks off. Seb has just come back from injury, so it was good to see him out
there and alongside George because they play well together."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Thurrock 0-2 West Ham XI FT
04.10.2011
WHUFC.com

THURROCK FC v WEST HAM UNITED XI
DEVELOPMENT SQUAD MATCH
TUESDAY 4 OCTOBER 2011
KICK-OFF: 7.45PM

Full time - Thurrock 0-2 West Ham XI

90 mins - No added time will be played. The referee blows his whistle and
both teams get a good hand. Stay close to whufc.com and West Ham TV for all
the reaction and action.
89 mins - Late corner here for Thurrock. Montenegro clears brilliantly at
the near post. The Paraguayan has done his job well tonight.
88 mins - Moncur takes it but flashes it high and wide.
86 mins - The livewire Elliot Lee wins a free-kick 25 yards out. Moncur will
take it but Lee is receiving some treatment first.
85 mins - Dean Cracknell nearly gets clear but Driver comes inside to help
out his central defenders. West Ham counter and superb skill from Elliot Lee
helps set them away. It all comes to nothing, though.
83 mins - Montenegro wins a corner. Lletget takes but Terry heads clear.
Siafa plays it back in but Thurrock get it away again. Jake Young then does
well stepping into midfield. Still the Hammers probe.
81 mins - Siafa heads clear but the ball comes straight back in and Thurrock
substitute Reece Morgan just lashes over on the volley. He will feel he
should have scored that.
80 mins - Elliot Lee just heads wide after a lovely cross from the right
wing by Turgott. Another Thurrock change. Will try and tell you who it is
shortly.
78 mins - Montenegro would love to get on the score-sheet. He hasn't stopped
running. Elliot Lee goes close with a fizzed effort. The young striker
doesn't need an invitation to shoot, that's for sure.
76 mins - Can Thurrock come back and get a goal. At the moment, the Hammers
look hungrier. Lletget is fouled again but the referee waves play on.
75 mins - Lletget has deserved that. He may be up against older heads in
midfield but he has kept on going. He uses the ball well and has plenty of
vision. He started and finished that move in style.
74 mins - GOAL! - Lletget holds off Terry in midfield before feeding Moncur.
The skipper finds Elliot Lee to the left of goal. The young forward beats
two before feeding Lletget and the American slots in from 15 yards. Great
finish.
73 mins - Driver is back up and the Hammers break through Sadlier.
71 mins - Driver is down with cramp. The right-back has been up and down
that flank all game and is feeling the effects.
70 mins - Montenegro does well to the right of goal before hooking the ball
into the area. It finds Lletget but he cannot direct his shot on target.
68 mins - The contest has suffered a little for all the changes but is still
watchable. The Hammers youngsters are getting a good test, with Thurrock
getting plenty of men behind the ball. Turgott drives into the area and
plays a pass to Moncur. He is crowded out and the visitors have to build
again. They do just that and Elliot Lee has a go from 20 yards. Hughes was
never troubled in making that save.
65 mins - The corner comes to nothing and the referee spots a home
infringement in the area. West Ham can clear their lines.
65 mins - Lletget goes down under a heavy challenge. Thurrock are still up
for this and Okojie wins a corner.
63 mins - Right-back Siafa does well to deny Osborn. The Thurrock striker
picks it up again in-field and goes for goal but it never worries Kurucz.
61 mins - We now have virtually an Academy team in action, or even younger.
Kurucz, Driver, Moncur, Lletget and Montenegro all remain. The Hammers are
on top and Sadlier looks to shoot from range. He hits it from 30 yards but
it is straight at Hughes.
59 mins - We have three Hammers subs. Off go Kenzer Lee, Potts, Piquionne
and Shaw and on come Elliot Lee, Lamar Hurley, Josh Siafa and Jake Young.
Thurrock made a change too.
58 mins - Hendon is readying a couple of subs. Piquionne will be one to make
way after a planned hour's work-out. A great passing move finishes with
Driver forcing the home side to concede a throw-on deep in their own half.
56 mins - Turgott nearly picks out Piquionne with a decent cross. The
Frenchman only just missed that. He then gets on the end of a Shaw cross 20
seconds later. He might be coming off on the hour so time is running out for
him to get on the score-sheet.
55 mins - News from Aldershot Town, where Robert Hall has scored again for
Oxford. That's three in four starts for the 17-year-old. Meanwhile, back
here, the Hammers are building patiently and stroking the ball around. This
is better from Hendon's young side.
53 mins - Potts does well at the other end to find Sadlier with a raking
pass. He feeds Piquionne but the Thurrock defence stand firm.
51 mins - Great save from Kurucz. Hockton got past Potts but could not beat
the keeper despite being clear on goal. That will do the Hammers
shot-stopper the world of good.
50 mins - It has been a bit scrappy so far this half. Neither side has
really shown or got their passing game going.
48 mins - Well done Turgott. Thurrock had broken away down their left wing
but the England youth international read the danger. He knocked the ball
behind for a corner. From the flag-kick, the Hammers clear well.
47 mins - Thurrock have also brought on Reece Hewitt. The Hammers look to
have gone to a 4-4-2 with Montenegro and Piquionne in attack. Sadlier and
Turgott are in the wide positions.
46 mins - We have a few changes here. Baldock and Sears are off. Blair
Turgott and Kieran Sadlier have come on in their place. Thurrock have made a
few changes. Paul Terry, brother of John is on. There is also a No19 but I
don't have a No19 on my team-sheet. Bear with me a bit this half, I think.

Half-time - Thurrock 0-1 West Ham XI

45 mins - The half-time whistle goes almost immediately. Not a bad half that
with plenty of good passing play from both teams. Hendon will have a few
positive things to say about his young charges no doubt at the interval.
44 mins - Just brilliant from Potts. The defender flings himself at a Okojie
cross to head clear. The young Hammers defender has shown great positional
sense this evening and has been in the right place at the right time
constantly. Up the other end, Sears curls one into Hughes' hands. Not too
far away that.
42 mins - Baldock wins a header but Piquionne just can't latch on to it. The
Hammers No7 has worked hard but is covered by two men whenever he gets the
ball.
41 mins - Driver is down after a late challenge. He needs treatment in
midfield so we have the first real break in play.
40 mins - There are a lot of kids here tonight. Young Hammers fans are
reminded they can take advantage of the Kids for a Quid scheme running for
the next home game against Blackpool on Saturday week. It means a parent can
take two children for a total of £34.
39 mins - Osborn goes for glory from 30 yards and isn't far away. Kurucz was
worried enough to dive for it but the ball just flashed wide.
38 mins - A bright period of passing play started by Moncur finishes with
the young skipper lashing one over. The build-up warranted better than that
but the No4 was entitled to shoot as the defence backed away.
37 mins - Hendon will be pleased with his young back four. They have stood
up well to a physical and pacy Thurrock attack. Potts and Kenzer Lee have
been dominant when they've needed to and read the game well on the fast
Thurrock counterattacks.
35 mins - Sears and Baldock combine before putting Montenegro in to the left
of goal. The young striker goes for goal and works the keeper at the near
post. There were three team-mates screaming for the ball in the area,
though.
35 mins - Piquionne rises highest but his header is off target. Baldock
pounces on the loose ball but Hughes makes the save. Thurrock counter
quickly and win a corner of their own.
34 mins - Moncur hits the bar with a great strike from fully 30 yards.
Hughes got a hand to it so we have a corner.
32 mins - Potts does superbly to block after a quick Thurrock counter. The
home side are up for this and giving it all they've got.
30 mins - Gemili does brilliantly up from right-back. He crosses for Osborn
who shoots but Driver does brilliantly to block. Piquionne wins a majestic
header from the resulting corner and the Hammers break away.
28 mins - Sears picks out Piquionne with a lovely 30-yard pass. Shaw gets
upfield from left-back and crosses. The ball eventually comes to Sears
again, and he shows good footwork to force a chance for Lletget. The
American lets fly but the ball clears the bar and keeps rising.
27 mins - Baldock gets in behind but instantly has two men on him. He tries
to cross on the run but his ball goes high and wide.
26 mins - Okojie is one to watch for Thurrock. He has two good feet and is
causing the visitors' young defence to be on their toes. Thurrock have a
long-range effort from Glenn Poole that just misses to show for that bright
period of play.
24 mins - The set-piece comes to nothing but West Ham build again. Piquionne
picks it up to the right of goal and blasts one from 25 yards. That's
blocked but the ball eventually reaches Sears 12 yards out. He lashes
goalwards and his effort only just clears the bar. Should have been his
second.
23 mins - More good play from Lletget and Baldock leads to a chance for
Sears at the far post. Thurrock are on to him quickly and force a Hammers
corner.
22 mins - Sears slips in Driver down the right. The full-back crosses but it
is too long. Thurrock counter quickly but Kenzer Lee crowds out Hockton
after good work by Okojie.
21 mins - Sears again drives at the defence. He feeds Baldock who in turn
lays out wide to Piquionne. The cross fails to beat the first man and the
Hammers have to regroup.
19 mins - Outstanding 40-yard crossfield ball from Lletget. He picks out
Driver on the move and the right-back nearly breaks free in the area. The
ball just went out of play before he could cross.
18 mins - Adam Gemili shows great pace to burst forward from right-back for
the home team. Eventually he crosses in but the chance goes begging.
Goal-kick for West Ham but they will be wary of Gemili's pace from now on.
That was electric.
17 mins - Montenegro runs at the home defence before slipping a pass to
Piquionne. Thurrock crowd him out and the Hammers are foiled again.
16 mins - Terrific play from the Hammers moves the ball from right to left.
Shaw does well to keep the move going but the home side force the Hammers
back. Moncur and Lletget are seeing a lot of the ball and the latter just
fails to pick out Montenegro in behind on the left flank.
15 mins - The Hammers are keeping the ball well at the back. Sears drives
again before slipping in Piquionne in behind. The Frenchman was just
offside, though, and the chance goes.
13 mins - Baldock is flagged for offside. That was close and he was in on
goal there.
12 mins - More good play from West Ham nearly creates an opening for Sears
again. Thurrock break well but Callum Driver does well to stop Loui
Hazelwood.
11 mins - Piquionne takes it but his curled effort flies over.
10 mins - Moncur and Lletget tease the home defence with some neat passing
before the American wins a free-kick on the edge of the area. Piquionne and
Baldock are over it.
9 mins - More great work from Okojie out wide picks out Hockton again. The
shot is first time but Danny Potts blocks brilliantly.
8 mins - GOAL! - Freddie Sears runs from fully 40 yards out at the Thurrock
defence. When he gets to within 20 yards he lets fly with a fierce effort
that leaves David Hughes no chance.
8 mins - Good play from Dee Okojie has Frazer Shaw back-pedalling before a
decent ball picks out Danny Hockton. The header is weak though and Kurucz
claims.
7 mins - Hendon has his team lined up in a 4-3-3 with Montenegro to the
left, Baldock through the middle and Piquionne to the right. The front three
are likely to change at will, as the game progresses.
6 mins - Brian Montenegro drops deep to get involved. You can't miss him
with his bright orange boots, although they are not a patch on the yellow
pair being worn by Moncur.
5 mins - Down in front of the main stand are the Hammers Ladies team, who
play here for their home matches. Good play from Sebastian Lletget in
midfield but Thurrock hack it away and we start again with Kurucz.
4 mins - An over-hit pass from Alf Wren gives possession back to the
Hammers. Goal-kick for Kurucz, who is playing only his second game after 14
months out with a knee injury. It is great to see the popular Hungarian
keeper back in the claret and blue, or should I say grey and green given the
colour of his top.
3 mins - Sam Baldock very nearly gets on to a long ball forward. Thurrock
get the danger away before losing out in midfield.
2 mins - Kenzer Lee brings down Alec Osborn 20 yards from goal. Early
shooting opportunity this for the home side. Glenn Poole takes it but the
effort fizzes wide to Peter Kurucz's left-hand post.
1 min - We are under way. The Hammers are keeping possession well in the
opening minute and every member of the back four has a touch before Thurrock
force a throw-on.

Kick-off
7.40pm - Here come the teams to a special mix of music including House of
Pain's Jump Around and Queen's Don't Stop Me Now. There are a few hundred
here which is not a bad turnout given the awful traffic in the area. George
Moncur is in the middle for the captain's duties.

Thurrock: Hughes, Gemili, Wren, Smith, Robinson, Bowditch, Okojie, Poole,
Hockton, Osborn, Hazelwood
Subs: Hewitt, White, Terry, Cracknell, Morgan

West Ham United: Kurucz, Driver, K Lee, Potts, Shaw, Sears, Moncur, Lletget,
Montenegro, Piquionne, Baldock
Subs: Cowler, Siafa, Hurley, Young, Turgott, E Lee, Sadlier

Welcome to the Ship Lane home of Thurrock FC for live text coverage of West
Ham United's development squad in action. Manager Ian Hendon has named a
strong side, with an experienced forward line combining with some of the
club's best Academy talent at the back. Among those watching on will be
assistant manager Neil McDonald, meaning there is every incentive for the
likes of Brian Montenegro and Freddie Sears to impress.

Montenegro scored his first goal in Hammers colours last week in the 4-4
draw at Dagenham & Redbridge. Highlights of that game are playing now on
West Ham TV, while you can also watch the best action from every single
Under-18 contest this campaign. Click here to view it all now.

In goal, Peter Kurucz has been given the starting berth in a late change.
Ruud Boffin will figure on Friday at MK Dons, with Sam Cowler on the bench
this evening.
George Moncur has been handed the captain's armband, and should form an
exciting midfield duo with fit-again US starlet Sebastian Lletget. On the
bench, the likes of Blair Turgott, Kieran Sadlier and Elliot Lee will all be
aiming to repeat their sensational form at U18 level.

The home side compete in the Conference South and boast a couple of
recognisable names in their ranks. Former Academy ace Lee Boylan, who played
one Premier League game back in 1996/97, is in the attack while in midfield
is Paul Terry, the brother of England defender John.
Thurrock have just won through to the FA Cup third qualifying round with a
1-0 replay win against VCD Athletic and have a home tie with Arlesey Town to
look forward to on Saturday week.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Big Sam sets record straight
WHUFC.com
The manager has spoken out after assessing the analysis from the weekend
draw at Crystal Palace
04.10.2011

West Ham United were back in training this Tuesday fresh from a spirited
display at Crystal Palace when their poised passing performance should have
earned more than the single point. Despite Dougie Freedman's claims to the
contrary, the Hammers analysis staff will be showing the players how they
came out on top in all aspects of the derby, save for the score-line. But
for better defending on just two of the three Palace attempts on target, it
would have been a fourth away win in five unbeaten. Speaking post-match, the
Palace manager had said: "Two teams, playing two different ways; very much a
physical powerful team in West Ham, knocking a lot of balls into your box,
against the team that we had with the guile, the sharpness and the
interchange to play and try to create chances."

However, the Hammers had 366 passes in play compared to the home side's 224.
They completed nearly 80 per cent of these while Palace's success rate was
just 72 per cent. The visitors also carried the ball into the final third of
the pitch on 93 occasions as opposed to the Eagles' 68 times. In fact, the
home side only bettered the Hammers in terms of fouls conceded. Other
statistics of note were 25 crosses for West Ham against eight for Palace
plus a total of 16 shots for Sam Allardyce's men against nine for the hosts.
Finally, the Hammers' dominance was underlined by the fact they had 56 per
cent of the time in possession against 44 per cent for the Eagles. Speaking
to whufc.com, Big Sam said: "We had more than 4,000 travelling fans at
Selhurst Park. That is fantastic support again and they all saw another
exciting team performance to go with the big wins we had at Watford and
Nottingham Forest. "We dominated the Palace game and outplayed the home side
so it disappoints me to hear a young manager talking in the way that he did
about my team. Just to get the facts straight, we were on top in terms of
passing and possession and should have won the game with the chances we
created."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Papa happy
WHUFC.com
Debutant Papa Bouba Diop is pleased to be up and running as a West Ham
player
04.10.2011

Papa Bouba Diop should have been all smiles after making an impressive West
Ham United debut in Saturday's 2-2 npower Championship draw at Crystal
Palace. However, being the ultimate professional that he is, the towering
Senegal midfielder was disappointed that his new club did not pick up all
three points at Selhurst Park. Bouba Diop told West Ham TV that the Hammers
should have clipped the Eagles and will have to improve in future matches if
they are to maintain their promotion challenge "I'm happy to play and to
come into the team. It was a hard game, but we had opportunities to win this
game," said the experienced No21. "They scored in the first minutes and we
came back and in the second half it was the same again. It was difficult
when they scored before and we had to come back and try to equalise. We
can't play like this. "Everyone is not happy with what's happened, because
we need to defend more solidly and work harder because we are scoring a lot
of goals. "We had a lot of chances and just scored two goals. We could have
won this game."

While the 33-year-old was disappointed by the final result in south London,
he was naturally pleased to make his first competitive appearance for the
club he joined in August. Having turned out for the development squad in a
victory over Brentford and draw at Tottenham Hotspur, Bouba Diop is now
targeting more first-team starts as the Hammers embark on an October run of
fixtures that includes trips to leaders Southampton and Brighton & Hove
Albion and home games against in-form Blackpool and big-spending Leicester
City. "I'm very happy to come back to the pitch and into the team. I was
very excited before the game and was happy to play 90 minutes. "I've just
had two reserve games - one 90 minutes and one hour - and now I've had 90
minutes in the first team and I had a good tempo. "I just need one more game
to make West Ham stronger and make a difference in the midfield. We help
each other and that's better. "During the international break, everyone will
go back to their houses and think about when we come back. We have two tough
games and if we want to stay at the top level, we have to do better."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ilunga off to Doncaster
WHUFC.com
Sam Allardyce has loaned Herita Ilunga to Championship club Doncaster Rovers
until January
04.10.2011

West Ham United have agreed to loan Herita Ilunga to fellow npower
Championship side Doncaster Rovers until 3 January. The left-back moves to
the Keepmoat Stadium on an emergency loan, having not played for the Hammers
since the 2-1 defeat by Aldershot Town in the Carling Cup first round on 24
August. Ilunga has found chances limited with the arrival of George
McCartney. The 29-year-old played when the Hammers won 1-0 at Doncaster on
13 August, and will become manager Dean Saunders' second new signing after
the arrival of Pascal Chimbonda.

He is the latest Hammer to be loaned out following Pablo Barrera (Real
Zaragoza), Jordan Spence (Bristol City), Cristian Montano (Notts County),
Ahmed Abdulla (Swindon Town), Jordan Brown (Aldershot Town), Callum
McNaughton (AFC Wimbledon), Robert Hall (Oxford United), Olly Lee (Dagenham
& Redbridge) and Frank Nouble (Gillingham).

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Two new kick-off times
WHUFC.com
West Ham United have learned the games against Derby County and Birmingham
City have new start times
04.10.2011

Two forthcoming West Ham United games have new kick-off times to allow for
screening on Sky Sports. The home game against Derby County on Saturday 26
November and the Boxing Day trip to Birmingham City will both now start
later in the day. Derby has moved from 3pm to 5.20pm, while the Blues start
time has changed from 1pm to 5.30pm. The Hammers are next due to be on
television for the trip to Brighton and Hove Albion on Monday 24 October,
kick-off at 7.45pm.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Lansbury the SBOBET winner
WHUFC.com
Midfield marvel Henri Lansbury has seen his great first month at the club
recognised by fans
04.10.2011

Henri Lansbury has been voted the SBOBET Player of the Month for September
after the latest supporter poll. In one of the closest votes seen since the
prestigious prize began, Lansbury took 30.7 per cent, just ahead of Robert
Green on 29.9 per cent. Lansbury enjoyed a memorable month, playing in all
four games and starting his Hammers loan from Arsenal with a debut goal in
the 4-3 win against Portsmouth on 10 September. He also won a penalty for
Mark Noble in that match as he did in the 1-0 home win against Peterborough
on 24 September. In between, he was impressive in the goalless draw away to
Millwall on 17 September, going close to a stunning first-minute goal with a
snap-shot from fully 40 yards that just missed. Currently away on England
duty for two big UEFA U21 EURO qualifiers, Lansbury will receive his award
just before the home match against Blackpool on Saturday 15 October. The
20-year-old follows on from James Tomkins, who took the honour in August
after a tremendous first month of the campaign.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Doncaster Rovers sign West Ham's Herita Ilunga on loan
BBC.co.uk

Doncaster Rovers have signed defender Herita Ilunga on a three-month loan
deal from West Ham. The 29-year-old left-back played in the UEFA Champions
League with Toulouse before joining the Hammers, initially on loan, in 2008.
The Congo international moves to the Keepmoat until 3 January and becomes
Rovers manager Dean Saunders second signing since taking charge. Defender
Pascal Chimbonda signed on a short-term contract until January.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Christmas on the motorway
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 4th October 2011
By: Staff Writer

Ever wanted to spend Boxing Day night on the motorway? Thanks to Sky Sports,
your dreams have been realised...

The TV company, who somewhat farcially call the shots with regards to kick
off times - irrespective of the difficulties they may cause supporters -
have moved the Boxing Day fixture at Birmingham from 1pm to 5:30pm, meaning
that travelling fans are unlikely to get back to London until around 10:00pm
at the earliest.

Sky's scheduling incurred the wrath of Hammers fans last month when it was
revelaed the forthcoming away game at Brighton - initially scheduled for
Saturday, 22nd October - had been moved to Monday, 24th meaning that
hundreds of Hammers fans who had already bought train tickets and booked
accomodation stood to lose out financially or face the task of having to go
through the whole process again.

The TV company - who earlier today lost their legal battle with a pub
landlord over the rights to broadcast foreign satellite feeds in the UK -
have also changed the date of West Ham's home fixture against Derby. That
has been moved from a 3:00pm kick off on Saturday, 26th November to 5:30pm
the same day.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Allardyce denies 'long ball' claims
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 4th October 2011
By: Staff Writer

Sam Allardyce has admitted that he was disppointed by comments from Crystal
Palace manager Dougie Freedman regarding his purported direct tactics.
Freedman, speaking after the 2-2 draw claimed that Allardyce's side spent
much of the game hitting long balls at Carlton Cole - the very style he was
criticised for during his time at Bolton and one that caused many Hammers to
harbour concern regarding his appointment during the summer. But Allardyce -
speaking via whufc.com this afternoon - insisted that Freedman had got it
wrong. "We dominated the game and outplayed the home side so it disappoints
me to hear a young manager talking in the way that he did about my team," he
said. "Just to get the facts straight, we were on top in terms of passing
and possession and should have won the game with the chances we created."

Allardyce's tactics have been the subject of muuch discussion amongst West
Ham fans in recent weeks. His purported 433 formation is actually 451, many
claim, with the aforementioned Cole - or in his absence, John Carew -
playing that sole pivotal role.

Meanwhile supporters of the various teams faced in recent weeks - as
highlighted in KUMB's post-match 'Opposition View' round-ups - have also
been heavily inclined to criticise Allardyce's set-up, given the quality of
players available to him.

Despite the criticism, West Ham sit fourth in the Championship and remain
unbeaten away from home - and all whilst Allardyce continues to discover for
his best team, having signed 14 players since becoming Avram Grant's
successor just four months ago.

The opposition views: in quotes

Crystal Palace

"West Ham were physically very big, strong and used it to their advantage. "

" A good side, but when the going got tough they hid for long periods and
went for hoofball."

" I thought West Ham looked like a poor man's Bolton - loads of big guys and
only ever looked dangerous when the ball was lumped into the box. "

Ipswich Town

"After the break West Ham had more of the ball but never matched the flowing
football which has been characteristic of the Blues."

"West Ham started to show some semblance of threat nearer to half-time with
Cole's physical power the main danger."

Peterborough United

"To play a lone striker at home against a newly-promoted side that has been
known to concede a few is a joke."

"Big Sam would walk over hot coals to manage England. If that happened I
would emigrate; a dinosaur of a manager."

"West Ham for me were a poor footballing side - typical Allardyce hoof-ball
apart from a couple of passing moves."

Millwall

"They are no longer the Academy of Football. What I saw today was a long
ball humped up to a big lump up front , who tries to get his nut on it."

Portsmouth

"Seeing the way West Ham used Carlton Cole was a perfect example of how to
play with the long ball and winning the knock downs."

"West Ham have by far and away the best squad in the Championship, littered
with internationals and they have bought well in pre-season."

Nottingham Forest

"West Ham play in their manager's image – big, strong, brawny and trying to
take advantage of every set piece."

"Our visitors didn't really have to get out of second gear to register an
impressive looking scoreline."

Leeds United

"I didn't think West Ham were anything special, they lacked attacking ideas
and rarely troubled us."

Watford

"People can laugh about Allardyce and the concept of 'football', but West
Ham tonight were the Championship's 'Barcelona of Europe'."

"They tried to take the sting out of the game by getting the ball down,
passing it about and spreading the play."

"We were totally outplayed football-wise by a Same Alladyce team. That is
saying something!"

Doncaster

"West Ham struck me as a bit like Newcastle [last season], not a great
'team' but [with] good enough players individually to go up."

"Their defence looked solid. They will be in the mix at the end of the
season simply because they will not concede a lot of goals."

" If anything West Ham were fitter, and their midfield was all over ours
most of the match."

Cardiff City

"West Ham played numerous long ball that rolled harmlessly into touch."

"How often did West Ham kick the ball straight out of play and lose
possession?"

"West Ham will win this league. With this midfield they'll overrun every
team in the league. Five in the middle all season for them."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ilunga gone
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 4th October 2011
By: Staff Writer

Herita Ilunga has completed his temporary switch to Doncaster Rovers. The
Congolese full-back, who first joined West Ham in September 2008 has joined
Rovers on a three-month 'emergency' loan deal that expires at the beginning
of January 2012. No doubt Sam Allardyce will be keen to shift the
errant-full back on a permanent basis during the next trasnfer window. West
Ham are understood to be picking up the majority of the 29-year-old's wages.
Ilunga is set to make his debut for Donny against Leeds next Friday evening
(14th October). He should be joined in the side by manager Dean Saunders'
other new signing, former Wigan and Tottneham defender Pascal Chimbonda.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Leen on me
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 3rd October 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham youngster Olly Lee has extended his stay at League Two Dagenham &
Redbridge by a further month. The 20-year-old midfielder, who joined the
Daggers initially at the beginning of August has had his loan extended for a
second time and will now remain at Victoria Road until the beginning of
November. Lee, who previously spent a couple of months on loan with the
Essex-based club between March and May of this year has made a total of 12
appearances for Dagenham & Redbridge so far this season, scoring twice -
with both goals coming in his last three appearances. The Daggers - whose
win over Crewe last weekend ended a run of four consecutive defeats that saw
them plummet down the table - currently sit in 20th place in League Two, yet
just six points off the play-off zone.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Rovers tie up Ilunga loan
Saunders makes second signing since taking charge
Last Updated: October 4, 2011 1:05pm
SSN

Doncaster Rovers have completed the signing of defender Herita Ilunga on a
three-month loan deal from fellow Championship side West Ham United.
Skysports.com revealed on Monday that new Rovers boss Dean Saunders was
poised to land Ilunga following last week's capture of Pascal Chimbonda. The
29-year-old full-back brings a wealth of experience to the Keepmoat Stadium,
having represented St Etienne and Toulouse before joining the Hammers on
loan in 2008. He established himself as a first-team regular for the
then-Premier League side after making a permanent move to Upton Park in
2009, but has fallen behind George McCartney in manager Sam Allardyce's
pecking order this season. Ilunga has not featured in the Hammers' first
team since the shock Carling Cup defeat to Aldershot and will stay with
Doncaster until 3rd January. He becomes Saunders' second signing after
former Tottenham defender Chimbonda joined Rovers on a short-term deal last
week.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Talk About Give a Dog a Bad Name!
October 5th, 2011 - 12:24 am by S J Chandos
West Ham Till I Die

It was interesting to see the reaction to Dougie Freedman's post-match
comments that West Ham played a 'long ball' style, last Saturday, against
Palace. Whereas, it appears that the opposition manager labours under the
delusion that Palace play a stylish passing game. KUMB have published a
post linking Freedman's comments to those made by opposition fans this
season. The consensus view being that Sam Allardyce is not making best use
of the talent available in his squad.

Well, firstly, lets put to bed this notion that Crystal Palace are the 'pass
masters' of the Championship. West Ham dominated the match and it was only
those troublesome, lingering, defensive issues that cost us the two points.
Allardyce, himself, has criticised Freedman's comments and pointed out that
the Hammers were by far the better team. I have not looked at the match
stats, but you can bet that Sam Allardyce has and I would not be at all
surprised if our passing completion % rate was better than Palace's.
Secondly, the KUMB article in question is good, as they usually are, but it
is based on the flawed assumption that opposition fans would give a fair and
unbiased estimate of the opposition. Some Millwall follower asserting 'that
'West Ham are no longer the Academy of Football' or Leeds fan arguing that
'West Ham are not all that' is neither objective nor particularly
surprising. It's just the type of angst that supporters of one club
harbours for a rival club. No, Freedman's comments should have been
juxtaposed to the comments of the managers the other sides that have played
us so far this season. I have read a summary of most of their post-match
comments, very helpfully provided by KUMB, but I do not recall any of them
referring to West Ham's alleged direct style, nor did they suggest that
Allardyce was not making best use of the talent in his squad!

Personally, I have no axe to grind with Sam Allardyce. He is a far better
manager than I ever gave him credit for when he managed Bolton. And I
admire the way in which he has set about the task at West Ham, restructuring
the squad, making some quality signings and gradually changing the culture
and ethos at the club. In all honesty, I have not been alienated by the
football that his West Ham team have served up. On the contrary, I have
enjoyed watching much of it. It appears that Freedman's comments are based
upon a commonly held misconception about Sam Allardyce's preferred style of
play, one that he is desperate to dispel during his time at West Ham. Talk
about 'give a dog a bad name!'

This West Ham team has players of the ability of Tomkins, Noble, Collison,
Lansbury, of course they are going get the ball down and play. I have seen
West Ham play some excellent inter-passing moves so far, but they have also
mixed it up with some more direct play. But where they have done the latter
it has not been % football, of the lob it into the box and get on the knock
down" variety. It has largely been accurate, putting balls in to the box
with skill and intent. What's wrong with that? Do you think that
Greenwood's teams passed it into the net every time? Of course not, a major
Greenwood innovation, tactically, was hitting the striker at the near post,
usually Geoff Hurst or Martin Peters. All three of Hurst's goals in the
1966 WC Final were the product of long, accurate, balls in to him. Two of
them were delivered by Bobby Moore, was he a ' long ball merchant' a la
Wimbledon in their hay day? Was Trevor Brooking a proponent of 'direct
football' when he used to curl those beautiful, weighted balls in to the box
for the likes of David Cross or David Swindlehurst? Was Lyall's 1985-86
title chasing team playing it overly direct when Devonshire and Dickens
played those long balls forward for Cottee and McAvennie to run on to? Of
course not, on all counts.

I have said it before, and I will say it again, there is nothing wrong with
a long ball played to good effect. Not a aimless pump in to the box, but a
measured ball forward to find your man in a good offensive position. There
is nothing wrong with being direct if the situation requires it. Why play
eight passes, if four passes and a well placed ball in to the box achieves
better results? If a striker runs to the near post, losing his marker,
surely you should seek to deliver the ball in to him? The answer to these
questions seem obvious to me and I am sure Ron Greenwood would not have
advocated going for the short pass every time, when a longer ball forward
delivers a better potential outcome.

As I have stated, I have enjoyed much of the football this season. I have
also enjoyed seeing some very professional performances away from home. The
4 goal demolitions of Watford and Notts Forest were a sight to bring joy to
the heart any Hammers fans, especially after the numerous insipid
capitulations last season. Freedman was right about one thing though, this
West Ham team is physically large and very strong. Allardyce has brought in
some big, strong players and they are going to be needed during the course
of this Championship season. Having said that, it was right that we added
height and strength to the squad to prevent us being intimidated and
physically bullied by opponents, even if we were still in the PL. One thinh
is certain, we are not likely to be pushed around with the likes of Faye,
Nolan, Demel, Diop, Carew, etc, in the claret and blue.

We were rightly disappointed not to take maximum points against Millwall and
Palace, but thinking about it, both away games were huge potential banana
skins and Allardyce's team neither buckled, nor allowed themselves to be
overwhelmed. That could not be said about some previous West Ham teams that
have gone to The Den and Selhurst Park. No, the away form is very good, but
we are badly letting ourselves down at Upton Park. We must sort out our
home form out as a matter of urgency. At the moment teams are coming to
Upton Park and playing without fear and that is a problem. We must get it
right and start punishing teams. A couple of heavy victories at home will
radically change the situation, build our self-confidence and make opponents
more fearful.

Of course, we still have the residues of a defensive problem. The answer
probably lies in pairing Tomkins with Faye at centre-back and introducing
Demel at right-back, to partner McCartney in the full-back slots. The loss
of Rob Green is most unfortunate, but it was a eventuality that we should
have factored in to our contingency plans. Hopefully, we will be able to
get through the period of his absence without too much of a problem. And
talking of keepers, I am most saddened to see that Stech has refused to sign
a contract extension and is heading for the exit door. He is currently on
trial at Burnley and, if he does go there, they will have been handed a very
good prospect. I can understand Stech's unhappiness at his lack of first
team opportunities and I cannot help thinking that he should have played far
more first team games by this point in time. Least ways, Stech should be
the deputy to Rob Green and firmly in line to succeed him. Instead, we
brought in Boffin and placed him and Kuruz higher up the pecking order.
That could well prove to be a major, costly mistake!

Elsewhere, Ian Hendon was fullsome in his praise of Brian
Montenegro-Martinez's performance after a recent Development Squad match.
Apparently, BMM played with pace, vision, skill and good movement off the
ball. Hendon seems to think that we may have hit the jackpot with BMM and
we can only hope that he is proven right. Sam Baldock has had a quiet start
to his Hammers career, but sometimes it is better that way. It gives
Baldock a chance to settle in, adapt to Championship football and progress
without undue expectation and pressure. I have no doubt that Baldock will
prove his value this season, given time and patience. And the Tevez to
Hammers stories? The club are obviously trying to do a loan deal, lets hope
that they pull it off. Because Tevez would be far too good for Championship
defences. Here's hoping, after all dreams do come true sometimes!

And finally, Illunga and Picquionne have been moved out on loan to Doncaster
Rovers. That should make a lot of Hammers fans happy, as both players had
become unpopular due to a widely perceived lack of effort and application.
The question then becomes whether Sam Allardyce has moved them out to make
way for a couple of free agent or loan signings that he has in the pipeline?

SJ. Chandos.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ilunga departs West Ham for Doncaster loan
4 Oct 2011
Evening Standard

West Ham defender Herita Ilunga has joined fellow npower Championship outfit
Doncaster on a three-month loan deal. The 29-year-old full-back brings a
wealth of experience to the Keepmoat Stadium, having represented St Etienne
and Toulouse before joining the Hammers on loan in 2008. He established
himself as a first-team regular for the then-Premier League side after
making a permanent move to Upton Park in 2009, but has fallen behind George
McCartney in manager Sam Allardyce's pecking order this season. Ilunga has
represented Congo 19 times and will remain with Doncaster until January 3.
He becomes Dean Saunders' second signing after former Tottenham defender
Pascal Chimbonda joined the Yorkshire outfit on a short-term deal last week.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sports minister blasts Tottenham over 'pointless' Olympic Stadium review
By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 3:47 PM on 4th October 2011
Daily Mail

Sports minister Hugh Robertson has labelled Tottenham's legal action over
the Olympic Stadium's future as 'completely pointless'. The Conservative MP
was speaking after the IAAF evaluation commission completed a two-day visit
to London to assess the city's bid for the 2017 World Championships. One of
the main contentious issues surrounding the bid is the continuing legal row
over the Olympic Stadium's future, with Tottenham seeking a judicial review
of the decision to award it to West Ham after the London 2012 Games. The
review will be heard on October 18 but Robertson believes it is pointless
after Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy previously expressed his intention to
remain in north London. 'It would clearly be a good thing (if Tottenham
dropped the judicial review),' he said. 'I think the point about the
Tottenham legal action is that ultimately now it is completely pointless
because their chairman has come out and made a commitment - and I
congratulate him for that - to stay and redevelop in Tottenham. 'He made
that commitment in the wake of the travels last summer so there is really no
point trying to judicially review this stadium any more. 'He has had a full
and final offer from (London mayor) Boris (Johnson, to stay in Tottenham)
and I think it is now completely pointless keeping that judicial review in
place.'

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Tuesday, October 4

Daily WHUFC News - 4th October 2011

Hendon up for Tuesday test
WHUFC.com
Fans can head along to Thurrock FC on Tuesday night to see a Hammers XI in
action
03.10.2011

Ian Hendon is relishing the prospect of a tough test for a West Ham United
XI away to Thurrock FC on Tuesday evening. The development squad coach will
get to see how his combination of first-teamers and talented youngsters cope
with a crowd at the Ship Lane home of the Aveley club. The Hammers have a
good relationship with Thurrock, with the south Essex side allowing the club
to regularly train and play at their impressive ground. "Thurrock have been
very helpful with us in regard to letting us use the facilities there and I
know the youth team have used the pitch already this season," Hendon told
West Ham TV. "I think it will be nice to take a team down and play against
their first team. "Hopefully we will get good support and get a bit of
revenue in for Thurrock."

Hendon is hoping to have a "strong side" with plenty of options,
particularly in attack where fans could get to see the likes of Frederic
Piquionne, Freddie Sears, Elliot Lee and Brian Montenegro. The latter was
the star man in the development squad's last outing, a 4-4 draw at Dagenham
& Redbridge last Tuesday. Hendon said: "Brian has taken time to settle in.
He is having English lessons up and picking bits and pieces up. Last week he
was the shining light in the performance at Dagenham and scored a good goal
and created two others. "I am looking forward to the match. They are quite
entertaining games and we have a few good young players at the club who want
to show what they can do."

Kick-off is at 7.45pm with tickets priced at just £5 for concessions and £10
for adults. Accompanied Under-10s will be able to get in free of charge.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Carew cheered by goal
WHUFC.com
John Carew is eyeing more goals after netting his first in West Ham United
colours at Crystal Palace
03.10.2011

John Carew is taking aim at npower Championship goals after getting off the
mark for West Ham United in Saturday's 2-2 draw at Crystal Palace. The
Norway international came off the bench to head George McCartney's cross
past Julian Speroni ten minutes from time, earning the Hammers a
well-deserved point. In fact, had Sam Allardyce's side not missed a
succession of first half chances, Carew and his team-mates would have taken
three points rather than one back to east London.
"We had so many chances and Julien [Faubert] had his best game of the
season. I think he was man of the match by far. He put about 20 amazing
crosses in during the first half alone and I would have loved to have been
out there to try and get on the end of them. "Of course, we were very
superior in the game in general, so it was at bit frustrating but at the end
of the day a point is a point."

Carew jets off on international duty with Norway this week, where he faces a
vital 2012 UEFA European Championship qualifier against Cyprus in Oslo, but
in the longer-term his target is to add to the goal he netted at Selhurst
Park. When asked if he would rather start games than appear as a substitute,
the 32-year-old insisted he would contribute in any way that he could. "I'm
just focusing on doing my best when I get on the pitch, being myself and
doing well, rather than just starting all the time. "Obviously you always
want to play as much as possible, but that's not my main focus."

A draw at Palace meant West Ham collected four points from their three
npower Championship matches last week - three from a victory over
Peterborough United and none from a home defeat by Ipswich Town. Carew
admitted that, while the Hammers are tipped by most to make an immediate
return to the Premier League, opposition teams are not simply going to roll
over. "In the Championship, we are almost like Manchester United are in the
Premier League. Everybody wants to get points off us and they will probably
raise their levels slightly and, instead of playing at 100 per cent, they
are playing at 110 per cent almost and better than their level.
"It's always a big challenge when you are the clear favourites and probably
the best team in the league. "I think the throughout whole season, when
teams meet us they tend to raise their game. It's something we have to cope
with. "It's a long season and I'm sure we'll just get better and better. The
players are getting fit and the new players are getting playing time. Papa
Bouba Diop also had a great game, so the new ones are starting to settle in
as well."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dagenham & Redbridge extend Oliver Lee's loan deal
BBC.co.uk
Page last updated at 17:30 GMT, Monday, 3 October 2011 18:30 UK

Dagenham & Redbridge have extended West Ham midfielder Oliver Lee's loan
spell for a third and final month. The 20-year-old ended last season on loan
with the Daggers, making five appearances as they were relegated to League
Two. Lee, who will now remain with the Daggers until 29 October, has made 11
appearances this season, scoring twice. He is the son of former Newcastle,
Hammers, Charlton Athletic and England midfielder Rob.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ilunga Donny-bound?
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 3rd October 2011
By: Staff Writer

Out-of-favour Herita Illunga is poised to join Championship rivals Doncaster
Rovers on loan, according to reports. The Congolese full-back has been
frozen out at West Ham by manager Sam Allardyce since the closure of the
summer transfer window, a situation that resulted from his refusal to join
Scottish club Celtic on temporary terms. Freshly-installed Doncaster manager
Dean Saunders is understood to have stepped in to resurrect Ilunga's career
and is said to be close to sealing a three-month loan deal for the
29-year-old, who was similarly dumped for the second half of last season by
Allardyce's predecessor Avram Grant. Ilunga has endured a topsy-turvy career
in east London since joining the Hammers on a season-long loan back in
September 2008. Less than four months after signing for Gianfranco Zola's
side - and having put in a number of eye-catching performances - Ilunga's
agent went public on his client's desire to land a permanent - and lucrative
- contract at the club.

"West Ham have the situation under control and are free to do what they
want," said his agent, Daniel Striani speaking at the time. "We have not
contacted other clubs who could be interested in signing him. But if they
don't make a move to convert his loan deal into a permanent one, then we
will adopt a different attitude."

Six months later - and in the wake of purported interest from fellow
Premiership outfit Liverpool - Ilunga was rewarded with a four-year
contract, tying him to West Ham, who paid former club Toulouse £2.4million
for his services until the end of the 2012/13 season. It also signalled the
end of his best days as a player, as his performances slowly began to get
more erratic and error-strewn as time passed. With Avram Grant installed as
Zola's replacement once the Italian had been given his marching orders in
May 2010, Ilunga lasted just six months before being dropped from the
Israeli's squad for the latter half of the 2010/11 season, with loanee Wayne
Bridge drafted in to replaced him.

Grant's exit after just one season presented him with another opportunity to
prove his worth - this time to Sam Allardyce. However horrendous errors in
the opening games of this season against Cardiff and Leeds prompted
Allardyce to hastily ditch Ilunga, who was replaced by loanee George
McCartney. The Congolese left-back's refusal to even discuss a loan move to
Celtic as the summer transfer window drew to a close was the straw that
broke the camel's back for Allardyce, who informed the former international
that he would no longer be considered for his first team squad. Having sat
on the sidelines for just over a month, it would appear that Ilunga has
finally agreed to a loan move in order to get regular first team football.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The Terminator meets Mad Dog
KUMb.com
Filed: Monday, 3rd October 2011
By: Staff Writer

Here's an opportunity to spend an evening in the company of arguably two of
West Ham's 'hardest' ever players, Julian Dicks and Martin Allen. The
evening will also be hosted by another West Ham legend and respected TV
pundit, Tony Gale. This is a rare opportunity to see these West Ham legends
together. Tickets are very limited and numbers are restricted. On the 28th
October 2011, you will have the opportunity to hear stories from the legends
about their time at the club and their thoughts on what the club has to do
to get back where it belongs. This event is being held at Dagenham &
Redbridge Football Club, Victoria Road, Dagenham, Essex, RM10 7XL on Friday
28th October 2011 from 7.00pm for an 8.00pm start.

Tickets are £35.00 per person and include:

* Full waitress service Curry with Rice and sides¹
* Cash pay bar
* Q&A opportunity with the legends
* Raffle & Memorabilia Auction
* An opportunity for photos and autographs

¹ There will be a vegetarian option as well as food for non curry eaters.
Please inform us of any special requirements at the time of booking your
tickets.

Tickets can be purchased in tables of 10 or on an individual basis. All
individual tickets will be allocated to a table for the evening. You may
reserve tickets for the event by contact the organisers by email at
world.collectables@yahoo.co.uk or by calling 07783 704893.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Gold eyes promotion
Co-owner expects Allardyce to take Hammers back up
Last Updated: October 3, 2011 10:00am
SSN

West Ham co-chairman David Gold has revealed he would be 'devastated' if Sam
Allardyce does not lead the club back into the Premier League this season.
Allardyce replaced Avram Grant over the summer after the Israeli failed to
keep the London outfit in the top flight. Gold has backed the former Bolton
man in the transfer market, allowing him to bring the likes of Kevin Nolan,
Matthew Taylor and John Carew to Upton Park. Under the 56-year-old the
Hammers have made a solid start to life back in the Championship, currently
sitting in fourth place with 18 points from their opening 10 games.

Surprised

Gold, who bought the club along with David Sullivan in January 2010, admits
he expects Allardyce to lead West Ham to promotion at the first attempt.
"I'd be devastated if this doesn't work, but also surprised," the
75-year-old told The Independent. "We all knew Sam from the TV, we all knew
the remarkable job he did at Bolton. Actually I was expecting a tough,
uncompromising 7ft 6in northerner, but in fact he's got charm and humility,
which I never saw on TV. "I know I can trust this man because I've seen all
four corners."

Gold also revealed his shock at the state of the Hammers' finances when he
took over the club last year, while also denying using the proposed move to
the Olympic Stadium to make money. The club beat Spurs to win the right to
move into the stadium in Stratford after the 2012 games - though Tottenham
are currently challenging the decision.

Crazy

"When I saw the figures, the mess they [the former owners] had got
themselves into...they had bad luck, with the banking crash, but they were
living well above their means," added Gold. "They were giving out
incredible, crazy contracts, pursuing a dream with no plan B, no contingency
for relegation. "I swear to you that it wasn't until we got into the club
that we realised the potential [of a move to the Olympic Stadium]. "At the
time it looked like being a pure athletics stadium. Then it emerged that the
OPLC (Olympic Park Legacy Company) would consider a football club if it
could find a way to retain the running track."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Rovers to land Ilunga
Saunders to snap up Hammers defender
Last Updated: October 3, 2011 5:49pm
SSN

Skysports.com understands Doncaster are poised to sign West Ham defender
Herita Ilunga on loan. New Doncaster boss Dean Saunders has lined up a deal
for the full-back as he looks to bolster his defensive options. Ilunga has
found himself down the pecking order at West Ham with George McCartney
first-choice left-back under Sam Allardyce. The 29-year-old has not featured
in the Hammers first team since the shock Carling Cup defeat to Aldershot
and Sam Allardyce is thought to be willing to loan him out. Doncaster are
thought to have agreed a three-month loan deal for the left-back and he will
become Saunders' second signing after Pascal Chimbonda since his arrival as
manager.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Lee extends loan stay
Last Updated: October 3, 2011 5:37pm
SSN

Oliver Lee has extended his loan stay at Dagenham & Redbridge into a third
and final month. Having spent two months on loan with the Daggers towards
the end of last season, the West Ham midfielder returned to Victoria Road on
August 5. Lee, 20, has played a key role in the club's midfield this term,
starting all 11 of their league games to date and scoring twice. He will now
remain with Dagenham until October 29, meaning the trip to Bristol Rovers on
the same day will be his final appearance before he returns to Upton Park.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham duo set for Doncaster switch
Published 22:30 03/10/11 By Alan Nixon
The Mirror

West Ham pair Freddie Piquionne and Herita Ilunga are ready to sign for Dean
Saunders' ambitious Doncaster Rovers in a loan deal. Piquionne is available
after falling out of Sam Allardyce's plans and is set to join the
Championship side. Left back Ilunga is also out of Allardyce's side since
the arrival of George McCartney and will talk to Rovers about joining them
on Tuesday. Both Piquionne and Ilunga want to play to put themselves in the
shop window and Saunders plans to bring them into a side that has picked up
seven points in three games since he took over. Saunders is still
negotiating with free agent El Hadji Diouf and as he aims to turn around
Rovers' season and drag them into the play-off positions.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss expects goals from 'temperamental' strikers
London 24
Dave Evans, West Ham Correspondent
Monday, October 3, 2011
4:04 PM

Hammers manager Sam Allardyce is looking for between 10 and 15 goals from
both Carlton Cole and John Carew this season if West Ham are to achieve
promotion.
West Ham boss Sam Allardyce is likely to stick to his lone striker formation
for the foreseeable future and that means trying to keep his 'temperamental'
group of strikers happy at the club. With Carlton Cole, John Carew, Freddie
Piquionne and Sam Baldock all vying for one place in the team at the moment,
Allardyce knows that it will be a juggling act for the rest of the season.
"The strikers are the most temperamental," said Allardyce with a smile.
"They are always moaning about something.
"When you bring them off it's 'I wanted to stay on' and if you don't bring
them off, it's 'I should have come off!' "They are the most temperamental,
but they have to live with the pressure of making sure that they are the
headliners, because the hardest thing to do is score a goal and if you don't
score a goal, you get slaughtered."

Carew replaced Cole on Saturday at Palace and headed his first goal in West
Ham colours 10 minutes from time to earn the Hammers a point. But it seems
that it is unlikely that we will see the striking pair playing together
anytime soon. "Eventually you think you might play them together, but I
think we are really looking at Baldock and Carew or Baldock and Cole," said
Allardyce. "At the moment we are functioning better in a 4-3-3 rather than a
4-4-2." The West Ham boss was certainly impressed by Carew's cameo role on
Saturday and he has a goal target, both for him and the rest of his team.
"We will be expecting John to score 12 to 15 goals this season and the same
for Carlton," he said. "We know how many players have got to score. "Kevin
Nolan's on song now because that is his third in 10 games which is his
normal stat from midfield which is very, very good. "Of course, we've got to
get Sam Baldock in the frame and scoring. "The other midfielders and then of
course, defenders on set-pieces to get the total we need to get promotion."

So far West Ham have notched 18 league goals.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Freedman pleased with Palace after draw against 'long ball' West Ham
London 24
Michael Farrow, Crystal Palace correspondent
Monday, October 3, 2011
1:17 PM

Despite his team twice surrendering the lead, Crystal Palace manager Dougie
Freedman seemed happy with the result and his team's performance against
West Ham.
The draw leaves his side12th in the Championship table, but against a side
with far greater resources and who have yet to lose on the road this season,
a point is not to be sniffed at. "I thought 2-2 was a fair result on
reflection of the possession," freedman said. "Two teams, playing two
different ways; very much a physical powerful team in West Ham, knocking a
lot of balls into your box, against the team that we had with the guile, the
sharpness and the interchange to play and try to create chances. "I felt 2-2
in the end was a decent result for us."

Taking the lead in the sixth minute, Jonny Williams latched onto a Glenn
Murray flick-on with the youngster putting it on a plate for Darren Ambrose
to score his second goal inside a week, though West Ham pulled one back 10
minutes later through Kevin Nolan's close range shot. West Ham's physicality
was surprising for a team traditionally renowned for their artistry more
than their steel, with Papa Bouba Diop giving Williams extra attention.
Speaking of his youngsters, the Scot said: "One or two of them went into the
game as young boys and came out as men because it's a very powerful,
experienced side that knocked the ball long. "You've got to stand up against
them and I thought we did that so credit to them but that's part of the game
these days, you've got to learn to do that."

Seven minutes into the second half, Murray popped up 20 yards out after
great work on both sides of the ball by Wilfried Zaha. West Ham made changes
and brought on John Carew and Sam Baldock. The former profited from an
excellent centre from George McCartney and the veteran Norwegian striker
sent a bullet header past Julian Speroni on 80 minutes. "I felt that later
on in the game we started getting our passing going again, we were looking
even stronger physically, looking very strong in terms of running power," he
said. "Nothing's easy in this game; you've got to work even harder than you
were in the first half and believe in ourselves that we can get something."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
We're like Manchester United, says John Carew
Julian Bennetts
3 Oct 2011
Evening Standard

John Carew has warned his West Ham team-mates they are the side to beat in
the Championship. The striker scored his first goal for the club after
coming off the bench to grab a 2-2 draw at Crystal Palace and then echoed
comments made by Mark Noble last week of the pressure the Hammers face. "In
the Championship, we are almost like Manchester United are in the Premier
League," he said. "I think that when teams meet us they tend to raise their
game. It's something we have to cope with. "Against Palace we were very
superior in the game in general, so it was at bit frustrating but at the end
of the day a point is a point." Palace boss Dougie Freedman praised his side
for standing up to the Hammers having twice led at Selhurst Park. "That was
a physical and powerful team that will definitely be top two or three," said
the Scot. "They put a lot of good balls into our box - but our lads stood up
to be counted."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Irons quartet close to returns
Football365
Last Updated: 03/10/11 at 11:45 Post Comment

West Ham should be boosted by the return of Joey O'Brien, Winston Reid, Mark
Noble and Matt Taylor when they face Blackpool on October 15. Defenders
O'Brien and Reid (both hamstring) and midfield duo Noble (toe) and Taylor
(calf) were ruled out of Saturday's 2-2 draw at Crystal Palace. Boss Sam
Allardyce will also allow recent signings Guy Demel and Brian Montenegro to
build up their fitness in a friendly against MK Dons. "We've arranged a
behind-closed-doors game on Friday at MK Dons," said Allardyce. "The players
who have not played so much can get a full 90 minutes, have the weekend off,
get back together on Monday and wait for the internationals to some back to
prepare for Blackpool."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss admits interest in Manchester City striker Carlos Tevez
10:52am Monday 3rd October 2011
By Simon Mail »
Guardian Series

West Ham manager Sam Allardyce has admitted he would be keen on bringing
troubled striker Carlos Tevez back to the club. The Hammers have not yet
made an official offer for Tevez but would be keen to bring him to Upton
Park if Manchester City decide to send him out on loan. Tevez, who scored
seven goals for the Irons four years ago, has been suspended after allegedly
refusing to come on as a substitute in City's defeat to Bayern Munich.
Allardyce said: "If he would like to join us and the chairman would like to
pay for it, yes. "Why wouldn't you want a top class player? I've worked with
some top class players in my time, some world class players who will win you
games when you least expect it. "And with a goal record like Tevez's – what
is it 29 goals in 51 games or 30 goals in 52 starts for City, why wouldn't
you want it? "The club hasn't made an official approach to City. I think
what might need to be thought about is to wait and see how the Manchester
City Carlos Tevez situation is resolved and then if he or the club feels a
loan situation might be the right idea, we would love to be in the frame."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
London 2012 Olympics: Treasury offers legal guarantee against removal of
athletics track
Telegraph.co.uk
By Jacquelin Magnay, Olympics Editor9:37PM BST 03 Oct 2011


Inspectors from the International Association of Athletics Federations were
given a signed legal document from the Treasury on Monday guaranteeing the
athletics track will be maintained at the Olympic Stadium regardless of
which football club move in after the 2012 Games. Officials from athletics'
world governing body are in London for a two-day visit ahead of their
decision next month on who will host the World Championships in 2017. London
is competing against Doha and it had been feared that the court battle
between West Ham and Tottenham over the future of the Olympic Stadium would
jeopardise London's chances. But sports minister Hugh Robertson yesterday
offered the IAAF a guarantee that no one will be allowed to remove the
athletics track. Robertson said: "We have now a letter of guarantee from the
Treasury solicitor that says the track will remain in the stadium in legacy
mode and all the indications are that that has now put that argument to
bed."

Tottenham have mounted a legal challenge against the decision to award
occupancy of the stadium to West Ham after the Olympics. They have won a
full judicial review on Oct 18 but are in negotiations with London Mayor
Boris Johnson over a £17 million deal which would see them drop their
opposition. Robertson warned yesterday that if no deal is agreed, the
Government could look at a range of options – including keeping the stadium
in Government control and simply awarding a lease – if forced to restart the
tender process. "It is becoming a slightly ridiculous dispute now,"
Robertson said. The legal challenge has provided an unseemly backdrop to
London's bid for 2017, especially following the failure of previous attempts
to host the championships. When asked if a Treasury guarantee would have
more impact than a Prime Minister's promise, a reference to the embarrassing
backdown to host the 2005 World Championships when Picketts Lock collapsed
in spite of then leader Tony Blair's personal guarantee, Robertson said:
"One has legal force, the other was personal... but [this time] they don't
have to take us on trust, they came here [to the Olympic Stadium] and they
put their feet on it".

Hours before the stadium visit, the IAAF delegation, led by vice-president
Bob Hersh, was met by Robertson who had deferred being at his party's
conference, Mayor Johnson and the chair of the Olympic Park Legacy Company
Margaret Ford. Robertson said he stressed that the legal issues would not
affect the status of having the track remain at the Olympic Stadium. "We
have assured the IAAF that there will be an athletics track at the stadium,
while the legal issue is about the process, and even if Tottenham Hotspur
win, and I am confident they won't, we will still have an athletics track,"
said Robertson. Locog chairman Sebastian Coe, who is also an IAAF executive
board member, said: "They went away with the guarantees they needed, we
didn't leave them in any doubt at all about the commitment to the stadium.
"We made a very strong case this morning and we will continue to make that
case, and it's a compelling case." Tottenham and Orient have claimed that
the £40 million loan provided by Newham Borough Council to the club is
illegal under European Union law.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ilunga departs West Ham for Doncaster on three-month loan deal
By SAMI MOKBEL
Last updated at 11:02 PM on 3rd October 2011
Daily Mail

West Ham defender Herita Ilunga has agreed to join Doncaster on a
three-month loan deal. The full-back featured in Sam Allardyce side's first
four Championship games of the season but has not played a league game
since. West Ham will pay the majority of Ilunga's £33,000-per-week wages to
facilitate the defender's move north. Meanwhile, Burnley have signed
Republic of Ireland under-17s captain Luke Gallagher on a two-year
scholarship deal from Dublin club Cherry Orchard.

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Monday, October 3

Daily WHUFC News - 3rd October 2011

Loanee round-up: Hall on high
WHUFC.com
Robert Hall, Callum McNaughton and Olly Lee all enjoyed positive results in
League Two action
01.10.2011

Robert Hall's terrific start to loan life continued with the winner for
Oxford United on a busy day of action for several Hammers around the
country. The 17-year-old striker headed the only goal for Oxford in their
1-0 win at Hereford United, the second time he has helped them to an away
success in a run of three victories on the road in succession for the Us.
The forward, recognised by Sam Allardyce last week as the brightest of the
club's young talents, got a full 90 minutes under his belt. Oxford are up to
sixth in the League Two standings, while Callum McNaughton has helped
inspire AFC Wimbledon up to fourth in the table. The Dons won 3-1 at home to
Gillingham with McNaughton at the back, while Frank Nouble drew a blank for
the Gills for the first time on his third appearance.

Olly Lee toasted extending his loan stay at Dagenham & Redbridge to the end
of the month by helping them to a 2-1 home win against Crewe Alexandra. It
ended a run of five straight defeats for the Daggers. Finally in League Two,
Ahmed Abdulla did not feature for Swindon Town on Friday night in their 2-0
defeat by Macclesfield Town and Jordan Brown sat out as Aldershot Town lost
3-2 at Accrington Stanley on Saturday. Up in League One, Cristian Montano
had a tough 49 minutes as Notts County went down 3-0 at high-fliers MK Dons,
who the Hammers will meet in a behind closed doors game next week, while
Jordan Spence came on at half-time of Bristol City's 5-0 loss at Blackpool
in the Championship.
.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Freedman on... West Ham United
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 2nd October 2011
By: Staff Writer

Dougie Freedman believes his side can be well-pleased with their last week's
work, which culminated with a draw against West Ham at Selhurst Park
yesterday...

Dougie: a fair result?

I would have taken six points, we are a club that's on the up [going] and
heading in the right direction. We had performances today today and against
Brighton and could have got six points but I look at it that as long as
we're moving forward [it's ok]. Performance-wise, over these last two games
it's been of a very high standard which in most games will get you six
points. Unfortunately it was four this week, but I'd have setlled for six!

We spoke about the youngsters in the squad; it seems they're growing up very
fast here?

They've done fantastically well. The experienced pros are around them every
day and it doesn't half help them. We are a club right now that's producing
our own and we're a team with hunger and desire to win football matches.
We've got a good blend and it's very pleasing to see.

Glenn Murray had another very good game today?

Glenn played fantastically well against Blackpool a few weeks ago when he
came off the bench so I think he's into his stride. He's looking fitter,
he's looking stronger and he's looking confident. As clever as he is you can
work off him.

Is it two points dropped or a point gained?

If we put our fan base, our finances and our expectations against West Ham
we should have been nowhere in sight. It's testament to the club and to the
players that we're hanging in there and we don't take it very lightly with
anybody coming down here. So I'm disappointed not to pick up the three
points but I know we're headed in the right direction.

You say that about competing on financial terms but you had 20,000 here
today; is it about trying to establish Palace as a big club again?

I think we're far from that, I believe the club is on a hangover from
administration and we're still finding our feet. My job is to make us [go]
in the right direction and then hopefully, one day, we'll get back to the
Premier League.

What some people find refreshing is that you come in at the end of these
matches and say you enjoyed them, despite the result?

Well I did enjoy it, that's the reason I say it; if I didn't, I wouldn't! I
did enjoy it because I thought it was a very good game with two very
different sides. One very physical, powerful team that hit a lot of long
balls in the box against a team with energy and pace who tried to cut
through them. So it was a very enjoyable game with two different sides.

I felt in the end it was a decent result, a decent performance and a good,
well-earned point.

Dougie Freedman was speaking to the BBC.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
David Gold: 'My dad was in jail, we were in abject poverty, West Ham was
pure escapism'
The Brian Viner interview: David Gold opens up on his father the villain,
his 'marriage' to David Sullivan, Big Sam's charm and humility, and his
childhood home being bulldozed if Olympic Stadium move goes ahead

Monday, 3 October 2011
The Independent

David Gold's father, known in East End criminal circles as "Goldy", was once
the getaway driver for a gang who hauled a barge off the Thames and up
Greenwich Creek, where they intended to unload £75,000 worth of copper
ingots, in the days when £75,000 could buy a whole streetful of houses.
Unfortunately for him and the gang, happily for the police, Goldy got a
little too cosy sitting in the cab of his lorry and fell asleep. He was
caught not so much red-handed as bleary-eyed.

The co-chairman of West Ham United relates this story with the timing born
of a thousand tellings. He is engagingly candid about his late father's
villainy, no matter what ammunition it offers to those who feel that the
apple never falls far from the tree, or at least who feel that there's
something not quite respectable about a self-made multi-millionaire who owes
much of his fortune to girlie magazines and sexy lingerie. Only last month
The Sun was speculating that if and when West Ham move into the Olympic
stadium, it will be renamed the Ann Summers Stadium. But if people have a
problem with the source of his wealth, they're welcome. He is proud of his
business empire.

Moreover, pretty much everyone I have talked to who has worked closely with
Gold, in and out of football, sings his praises. Decent, generous,
respectful and yes, respectable, are the adjectives I keep hearing.
Certainly, the staff at his Surrey estate, from his housekeeper to his
greenkeeper [he has his own golf course], seem to hold 75-year-old "Mr
David" in genuine affection. And many West Ham fans, while evidently less
than smitten with his partner David Sullivan, and not exactly blowing
bubbles of rapture in the direction of vice-chairman Karren Brady, have
embraced Gold as a kindred spirit, who, after all, played for West Ham Boys
in the 1950s and was even offered professional terms. They're satisfied that
his veins run claret and blue, and that he appears willing to underwrite his
sentimental attachment to the club with hard cash.

Nonetheless, I have some challenging questions with which to disturb the
serenity of Gold's handsome drawing-room, and the first of them concerns
Avram Grant, whose disastrous season-long tenure as manager ended in
relegation and whose appointment in June last year no longer looks, to put
it mildly, like the act of two astute businessmen.

"We're human beings, we make mistakes," says Gold. "In my life I've employed
over 100 managers, of whom four have been football managers, but if you're
picking a manager for your print works in Bournemouth, or your distribution
centre in Leicester, you're still looking for the best man available. What
I've learnt is that just interviewing them is never enough. Looking at their
CV is not enough. Nobody gives you a CV saying 'I'm useless'. But you can't
do more than interview him and look at his CV. So you think, 'Do I like this
man? Is there good chemistry between us?' Well, Avram is one of the nicest
men I've met in football. He interviewed fantastic, and maybe with a fairer
wind he would have been a success. But we should have acted sooner [in
letting Grant go], there's no doubt."

Under Grant's replacement, Sam Allardyce, the Hammers sit in fourth place
with 10 matches played. Saturday's draw with Crystal Palace maintained an
unbeaten record away from home, and although there have been more defeats
than wins at Upton Park, the fans I know seem to think that Big Sam is
probably the man to guide the club back into the Premier League. More
significantly, so does Gold. "I'd be devastated if this doesn't work, but
also surprised," he says. "We all knew Sam from the TV, we all knew the
remarkable job he did at Bolton. Actually, I was expecting a tough,
uncompromising, 7ft 6in northerner, but in fact he's got charm and humility,
which I never saw on TV. I know I can trust this man, because I've seen all
four corners."

Trust is important to Gold, and the bedrock of his long partnership with
Sullivan. "It's like a marriage," he says, and so I invite him to recall
their biggest name-calling, crockery-smashing domestic.

A smile. "Bizarrely, in more than 30 years, we've never had a cross word.
We're both compromisers, and we both believe in the value of our
relationship, therefore we don't want to damage it." I tell him I've heard
that he was keener than Sullivan to keep on Gianfranco Zola, before the
Sardinian was sacked last year, giving way to the disastrous tenure of
Grant. "No," he says. "All I can give you is that I would have kept Barry
Fry (as Birmingham City manager in 1996) but David was very keen to bring in
Trevor Francis. My brother was involved then, and I lost the vote two to
one."

Gold and Sullivan took over Birmingham in 1993, and sold up 16 years later.
Gold's subsequent relations with the club have not been especially
harmonious, indeed he was banned from the directors' box at St Andrew's when
West Ham played there last season. So does he look at Birmingham now, and in
particular at the spectacular fall from grace of owner Carson Yeung,
fighting money-laundering charges in Hong Kong, with regret, pleasure or
indifference?

"No, I made many friends there, and I was excited to see them win the
Carling Cup. We sold the club genuinely believing Carson Yeung and the
consortium were wealthy enough to take Birmingham City to the next level. It
was on that basis that we agreed to sell, that these were seriously wealthy
people. And the fans there always treated me with respect, pretty much, even
when we were relegated, which for a fan is the most painful thing to
endure."

Therefore, West Ham's relegation must have been doubly painful for him.
There was a time when almost all chairmen were long-term supporters of their
clubs, but now the chairman/fan is a diminishing breed. I ask Gold whether
he thinks it's dangerous when a club is in your heart as well as on your
spreadsheets?

"Of course it's a danger," he replies. "Pickering at Derby spent millions on
his football club. Jack Hayward at Wolverhampton called himself a golden tit
(there for the club to suckle on). On the other hand, Jack Walker spent
millions and saw Blackburn win the Premier League. The important thing as
fans is to understand that if you're going to gamble, you must gamble with
your own money, not the football club's money. I had a tweet the other day
from someone who said, 'It's not your club, it's the fans' club'. I tweeted
back: 'You're absolutely right, the football club belongs to the fans, only
the debts belong to me'. But you have to have that philosophy. I couldn't
live with myself if what happened at Portsmouth happened at West Ham.

"So we've gambled with our own money. You know, I went to a casino many
years ago, for a boys' night out, and I remember having £200 in my left
pocket, and £50 in my back pocket. The £200 was to have fun, the £50 was for
my cab fare and my overnight stay in a hotel. Only a fool carries on having
fun with the £50 when the £200 has gone. So the money we're gambling with is
not the money for the cab fare and the hotel. It sounds crass to say it's
fun money. I own 150 stores, not 150 oil wells, and there's a big
difference. But it's not life-and-death money."

The Gold family's wealth has been conservatively estimated at £350m, an
unimaginable fortune to most of us but, as he says, dwarfed by the funds
available to Roman Abramovich, not to mention the rulers of Abu Dhabi. So
what happens if Allardyce does not manage to get West Ham promoted, if they
stay in the Championship, and move into a half-empty Olympic Stadium? That
£200 could soon run out, leaving only the £50.

"I'm not in the business of risking my wealth, my granddaughter's
inheritance," he says. "But I will go the extra mile for West Ham. I would
not have come in in the first place if it hadn't been West Ham.

"When I saw the figures, the mess they [the Icelandic former owners] had got
themselves into... they had bad luck, with the banking crash, but they were
living well above their means, giving out incredible, crazy contracts,
pursuing a dream with no plan B, no contingency for relegation."

He denies that he invested in his boyhood club because he also saw the
prospect of a lucrative move to the Olympic stadium. "I swear to you that it
wasn't until we got into the club that we realised the potential," he says.
"At the time it looked like being a pure athletics stadium. Then it emerged
that the OPLC (Olympic Park Legacy Company) would consider a football club
if it could find a way to retain the running track."

And how does he get on with Daniel Levy, the Tottenham Hotspur chairman who
has not entirely given up on the idea of gazumping West Ham? "He believes
he's doing what's right. I don't know that I could do what he's done and
pursue a project with the full opposition of the fanbase. But you could
argue that he's a brave man."

If the move does go ahead, then Gold will see his childhood home, 442 Green
Street (he's always favoured 4-4-2, he quips), bulldozed. It would be part
of the regeneration scheme for which he yearns, having grown up when the
area was one extended slum, indeed it was the discovery that he could sneak
into Upton Park under the turnstiles that first kindled his love for West
Ham. "I'm seven or eight, my father's in prison, my mother's a skivvy, I'm
living in abject poverty, so this was a form of escapism," he recalls.

He then tells me, not with braggadocio but an appealingly wide-eyed
expression of pride, that he was one of the guests of honour at the recent
opening of the Westfield Stratford City mall, where the biggest queues were
outside the West Ham United club store and the Ann Summers shop. "It was
amazing, Brian," he says. "I've climbed a mountain that I didn't think I
would ever get even halfway up."

This is doubtless why he still empathises with the working man, and in
particular with the working man unable to afford match tickets. "It's
obscene that a working-class guy can't go to a football match with his two
children," he says. "I feel crummy about that, and it wouldn't trouble me
quite as much if the players weren't making so much money. I wouldn't want
to control wages, that's abhorrent to me. However, if we have lower ticket
prices, legislated by the governing bodies, there's only one place the clubs
can make up [for the drop in income], and that's by cutting the wage bill."

So why doesn't he put his own money where his mouth is, and lower prices,
and salaries, at West Ham? "Because I don't want to get relegated. You can't
do it in isolation. We all have to sign up to it. We're all breaking even at
best, most are losing money, but I'd feel better about it if we had full
stadiums. Football is an industry awash with money, but it's all being used
in the wrong areas."

Manifestly, Gold is right. And as I say goodbye to this likeable and
perceptive man, whom I had expected to be impossibly brash yet is anything
but, there occurs to me the perfect metaphor, at least in present company,
for a sport which is superficially prosperous, but not at all what it
appears. Football is all fur coat and no knickers, and Gold might be just
the fellow to find it the right underwear.

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Sunday, October 2

Daily WHUFC News - 2nd October 2011

Big Sam on Palace point
WHUFC.com
The manager was frustrated but in the end content with a 2-2 draw away at
Crystal Palace
01.10.2011

Sam Allardyce paid tribute to the resilience of his team away at Crystal
Palace but rueful about two pieces of "shocking defending" that denied valid
hopes of a victory.
The Hammers twice had to come from behind for a 2-2 draw after lapses at the
back allowed Palace to score through Darren Ambrose and Glenn Murray. The
visitors were always the better side and played the best football in
stifling temperatures that belied the October date. Kevin Nolan had levelled
in the first half following the best move of the game before a late headed
equaliser from substitute John Carew earned an away point. Carew could even
have won it at the death with a flicked header that just went wide. On a
scorching day in south London, West Ham had arrived unbeaten on their
travels but Palace were on a high themselves after a 3-1 midweek win at
Brighton and Hove Albion. If Big Sam knew they would be in for a tricky
test, he did not legislate for his team allowing two goals in the manner
they did, both of which left debutant Manuel Almunia with no chance. He
said: "It was shocking defending today on two occasions, which stopped us
winning the game. Just two sloppy pieces of defending has gifted the
opposition two goals and made life very difficult for us on what was a very
accomplished performance other than that."

Although dismayed at those mistakes, the manager was pleased with the way
the team coped with being without Rob Green (knee), Joey O'Brien
(hamstring), Winston Reid (hamstring), Matt Taylor (calf) and Mark Noble
(toe). "What pleases me is we had to make a lot of changes via injury and
play players who were stepping in for the first time and for them to produce
a performance like that is really encouraging for me. These lads can only
get better here on in. "We have 18 points from the first phase, the first
ten matches. It is two points behind what we wanted but I expect we will
make that up if we continue to grow as we showed today. "The full squad is
coming into play. It produced a great performance if not the right result.
It gives us all confidence to go on and perhaps achieve 20, 22 or more
points from the next ten games."

The Hammers had several other good opportunities aside from that late chance
for a Carew winner, with Nolan particularly profligate after doing the hard
part well to find space in the area. It all bodes well for the coming
matches, according to Allardyce, even if frustration was the over-riding
emotion as he departed Selhurst Park.
"I was pleased with the amount of chances we created and we would like to
take those performances into Upton Park. The unfortunate thing for us was
that we've never looked like conceding two goals away from home this season
and certainly not the way we gave them away today. "The spirit of the team
and the quality of the team made sure we didn't lose it in the end which was
very important. "It is a disappointing week in only taking four points out
of three games but overall we are sitting pretty comfortably to move
forward. Now having tested the squad, I am getting more and more confident
that people can drop out and others can come in and deliver a performance as
good as the lads they've replaced."

On Almunia, Allardyce said the Spaniard coped well with being thrown in
after just one training session with his new team-mates following his loan
from Arsenal on Friday. Green will be out for six weeks having undergone a
knee op. "Manny is going to go home bemused because he hasn't had a save to
make and has had to pick the ball out of the net twice. I don't think he
could have stopped either goal because it was such bad defending. Other than
that I can't remember him having to make a save. "His distribution looks
good, he is confident and happy to be joining us, even if it is a big step
down for him from Arsenal and the Champions League. We are pleased to have
him."

The final word was reserved for Papa Bouba Diop, with the manager full of
superlatives for his first appearance in the claret and blue. "Wow," he
said. "I was expecting I would have to give him oxygen after 60 minutes in
today's heat but he was masterful in front of the back four and setting us
off on more and more attacks. As the game went on, I was really pleased."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
U18s remain unbeaten
WHUFC.com
West Ham United U18s secured a 2-2 FA Premier Academy League draw at
Portsmouth on Saturday
01.10.2011

West Ham United's Under-18s extended their unbeaten start to the FA Premier
Academy League season with a 2-2 draw at Portsmouth. The Hammers, who have
not lost any of their opening seven fixtures, went ahead through Dominic
Vose early on, then conceded twice before Blair Turgott netted a late
equaliser. Academy Director Tony Carr admitted his team created more than
enough opportunities to win the game, only to be forced to settle for their
second successive draw.
"We are a little bit disappointed with the result overall because we had a
lot of the game but didn't take our chances," said Carr. "We went 1-0 up
after 25 minutes when Dominic latched on to a good pass from Taylor Miles
and beat a defender before side-footing past the goalkeeper. "Kieran Sadlier
had two chances and Blair had a very good chance but they went begging, the
Portsmouth were awarded a very soft penalty when one of their players just
ran into Kenzer Lee. "We had a made five or ten minutes and they managed to
get another goal to go in 2-1 up at half-time. "We came out in the second
half and dominated the game and got our reward when Blair scored with about
15 minutes remaining. Dominic did well down the right-hand side before
passing to Blair, who drove a lot shot across the goalkeeper. "We created a
lot of opportunities, but it was not like the opening games of the season
when we scored goals for fun. The quality in our finishing was not there.
"Obviously we're disappointed we didn't win, but we were missing a few
players - Jake Young and Matthias Fanimo didn't play - and some of the boys
are also playing development squad matches in midweek."

The Hammers youngsters return to action next Saturday, when Ipswich Town are
the visitors to Little Heath for an 11am kick-off. Parking and admission are
both free of charge.

West Ham United U18s: Larkins, Siafa, Shaw (Chambers), Potts, K.Lee,
Turgott, Miles, Powell (Hurley), Vose, Sadlier, E.Lee

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Crystal Palace 2 - 2 West Ham
BBc.co.uk
Page last updated at 16:49 GMT, Saturday, 1 October 2011 17:49 UK

West Ham preserved their unbeaten away record thanks to a late leveller from
John Carew at Selhurst Park. The Hammers twice came from behind to secure a
2-2 draw with Crystal Palace, who were ahead after just six minutes. Darren
Ambrose opened the scoring with his second goal in a week, but Kevin Nolan
equalised 10 minutes later. Glenn Murray restored the lead for Dougie
Freedman's side just after the restart, only for Carew to grab a point with
10 minutes remaining. Manuel Almunia was making his debut in goal for the
visitors but he could do nothing to prevent Ambrose opening the scoring, the
former Charlton man firing home from six yards out after being teed up by
Jonathan Williams. But Nolan restored parity when George McCartney's cross
was only cleared as far as Carlton Cole, who headed back across goal for
Nolan to fire in his third of the season. Nolan should have done better with
two more chances before the break - and he was made to pay just after the
break when Murray, who himself had spurned a glorious first-half chance,
beat Almunia from 15 yards after Wilfried Zaha set him up. Palace looked to
be holding out for all three points until Carew struck, heading McCartney's
cross past Julien Speroni for his first goal for the club. The point keeps
Sam Allardyce's side in fourth place but four points behind the leaders
Southampton, who won 4-0 at home to Watford.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Crystal Palace 2 West Ham Utd 2
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 1st October 2011
By: Staff Writer

John Carew's first goal for West Ham earned his new club a share of the
spoils at Selhurst Park this afternoon. The Norwegian striker popped up at
the far post to nod home George McCartney's cross with just ten minutes of
normal time remaining to earn Sam Allardyce's side a point from a game in
which they once again looked far from convincing. The Hammers - who were
forced to come from behind twice in order to take a point - yet again
enjoyed plenty of possession, with the home side content to sit back and
attack West Ham's far from convincing defence on the break. However there
was little quality from the Irons in the final third of the pitch, with
Palace goalkeeper Julian Speroni, who was linked with a move to West Ham
during the summer, rarely called upon to make a save.

Manager Sam Allardyce rang the changes before the game, making four changes
to the team that were beaten by Ipswich in midweek. Manuel Almunia and Papa
Bouba Diop came in to make their Hammers debuts, whilst Jack Collison and
Julien Faubert came in for Sam Baldock and Joey O'Brien respectively. United
found themselvs behind after just six minutes when Palace's Darren Ambrose
grabbed his third goal of the season, tapping in from close range after
being found unmarked at new boy Almunia's far post by Jonathan Williams.
Fortunately for West Ham - who largely controlled the first half - captain
Nolan was on hand to convert a George McCartney cross to the far post, which
the Liverpudlian volleyed home from close range.

Palace started the second half as brightly as they did the first and were
back ahead just seven minutes into the half. Once again questions will be
asked of West Ham's defence, who allowed Glenn Murray to turn on the edge of
the box before finding his spot - even if Almunia perhaps could have done
better with the shot.
Sam Allardyce - whose 442 experiment lasted little more than 20 minutes
against Ipswich last Tuesday evening - threw caution to the wind with 20
minutes remaining by bringing on Sam Baldock and John Carew. And it was the
latter who rose highest to meet George McCartney's cross - his second assist
of the day - which he nodded home beyond the despaiting dive of Palace
'keeper Speroni. Although substitute Jermaine Easter almost snatched the
points for the home side in the fourth minute of added-on time with an
audacious effort, both teams will be reasonably happy with a point each.

That point keeps West Ham in fourth spot in the Championship, albeit four
points behind leaders Southampton - who thrashed Watford 4-0 at St Mary's
this afternoon.
However today's result will have done little to dispel concerns over
United's recent form, which has seen them take just five points from their
last four games - far from the form required to challenge for automatic
promotion.

Crystal Palace 2 West Ham Utd 2: match facts

West Ham Utd: Almunia, Faubert, McCartney, Tomkins, Faye, Bouba Diop,
Lansbury, Nolan, Bentley (Sears 88), Collison (Carew 68), Cole (Baldock 68).
Subs not used: Boffin, Demel.
Goals: Nolan (16), Carew (80).
Booked: McCartney (88).

Crystal Palace: Speroni, Williams (Scannell 66), Wright, McCarthy, Gardner,
Parr, Ambrose (Ramage 70), Jedinak, Moxey, Murray, Zaha (Easter 84).
Subs not used: Price, Tunchev.
Goals: Ambrose (6), Murray (52).
Booked: Easter (90+3).

Referee: Kevin Wright.
Assistants: Nick Kinseley and Mark Pottage.
Fourth Official: Ian Rathbone.
Attendance: 20,074.

KUMB.com Man of the Match: George McCartney.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers go global
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 1st October 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United's International Academy continues to seek the very best
young players from around the world to bring to Upton Park. The
international set-up now enjoys partnerships with a whole host of clubs
worldwide and has begun to see the fruits of its labour with the emergence
of Dylan Tombides (ex-Stirling Lions FC, Australia) and Sebatian Lletget
(ex-Sporting Santa Clara, USA), both of whom have been close to a first team
debut in recent months. The Academy boasts links with more than 25 clubs and
organisations across the globe - mostly in the USA - with the youngsters
regularly receiving coaching from experts in the field such as West Ham
United's Academy Director Tony Carr and coach Paul Heffer, who played for
the Irons briefly in the late 1960s. Speaking about the American set-up
recently, Carr said: "The game is global now. Everybody knows the Premier
League and English football. We thought we musn't bury our heads in the sand
at West Ham and just say 'we're only going to look for local boys'. "We're
trying to spread our wings a little bit and develop relationships with clubs
in the US in the hope that we can spread the word of West Ham United and
what it means in terms of its coaching and welfare of children. "Maybe we
might find a player on our way and bring him over to the UK. We're sitting
here at Santa Clara in San Jose and we've got a young pro who started his
career here, Sebatian Lletget. He's now at West Ham as a young professional,
so it can happen."

WHUFC International Academy: Partner clubs/associations

Australia
Stirling Lions Soccer Club (Balcatta, Western Australia)

Canada
Erin Mills Soccer Club (Mississauga, Ontario)

Caribbean
Bermuda Football Association
Future Sports Club (Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands)

Mexico
Sport Concepts S.A. de C.V. (Mexico City; Monterrey; Torreon; Veracruz)

United States
Alpharetta United (Alpharetta, Georgia)
Arsenal Football Club (Oakdale, Pennsylvania)
Barca FC (Temecula, California)
Blues (Roseville, California)
Cape Fear Soccer (Wilmington, North Carolina)
Carolina Elite Soccer Academy (Greenville, South Carolina)
Central Jackson Soccer Organisation (Jackson, Mississippi)
Challenger FC (Medina/Avon, Ohio)
Darlington School Academies (Rome, Georgia)
Euro Soccer Club (Chicago, Illinois)
FC Alliance (Knoxville, Tennessee)
GACS SParta Soccer (Norcross, Goergia)
International School of Indiana (Indianapolis, Indiana)
Keystone Athletic (Sciota, Pennsylvania)
Long Island Rough Riders (Long Island, New York)
Miglietti Soccer Academy (Los Angeles, California))
Minnesota Thunder Academy (Plymouth, Minnesota)
Newport Mesa Soccer Club (Costa Mesa, California)
Northern Virginia FC (Springfield, Fairfax County, Virginia)
Port St. Lucie Soccer Club (Port St. Lucie, Florida)
Premier UK Soccer (Youngsville, North Carolina)
Princeton Soccer Association (Princeton, Mercer County, New Jersey)
Pure FC (St. Augustine, Florida)
Rio Vista (Montgomery, Nebraska)
Schulz Academy (Boca Raton, Florida)
Sporting Santa Clara (Santa Clara, California)
Super 9 Soccer (Rochester, New York)

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Allardyce bemoans gifted goals
Hammers boss unhappy with how Eagles scored
Last Updated: October 1, 2011 7:08pm
SSN

Sam Allardyce bemoaned two gifted goals after West Ham twice came from
behind to draw at Crystal Palace. Darren Ambrose and Glenn Murray twice gave
the Eagles the lead only for the Hammers to hit back through Kevin Nolan and
John Carew, with his first goal for the club. Ambrose was allowed to prod
the ball past on-loan Arsenal keeper Manuel Almunia after West Ham failed to
deal with a long goal-kick, and Murray swept home from the edge of the area
from Wilfried Zaha's cross. "It was shocking defending," said Allardyce. "We
gifted the opposition two goals and that made life very difficult, in what
was otherwise a very good performance. "But we had to make a lot of changes
due to injuries and to produce a performance like that is encouraging."

Close range

Nolan turned in his third goal of the season from close range and Carew, on
as a second-half substitute, headed in George McCartney's cross 10 minutes
from time.
The Hammers remain in fourth place despite picking up just one point from
their last two games. "We've got 18 points from our first 10 games, which is
two behind what I wanted but I expect we will make that up if we continue to
play like that," added Allardyce. "It was disappointing to take only four
points from three games this week but we are sitting quite comfortably."

Freedman pleased

Palace boss Dougie Freedman was on the bench the last time these sides met,
in the 2004 play-off final which the Eagles won. "I thought it was a fair
result," he said.
"It was two teams playing very different styles. "One or two of my players
went into the game as young boys and came out as men. They are a powerful,
experienced side who knock the ball long and you have to stand up against
them, and we did."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Carew earns Irons draw at Palace
Last updated: 1st October 2011
SSN

John Carew's late leveller preserved West Ham's unbeaten away record as they
twice came from behind to draw 2-2 at Crystal Palace. Darren Ambrose
followed up his first goal of the season in the midweek win at Brighton by
putting the Eagles ahead on six minutes following woeful West Ham defending.
Julian Speroni's long punt forward was flicked on by Glenn Murray and
Jonathan Williamsunselfishly set up Ambrose to side-foot past Manuel Almunia
from six-yards. The visitors hit back immediately and Carlton Cole dragged a
shot wide before Hammers skipper Kevin Nolan restored parity on 16 minutes.
George McCartney's left-wing cross was only partially cleared and Cole
headed back across goal for Nolan to head home unmarked from close range for
his third West Ham goal. Nolan could have added to his tally but headed
straight into the arms of Speroni moments before the interval and then
blasted Henri Lansbury's cut-back wastefully over from the edge of the box.
Murray then squandered a glorious opportunity to put the home side back in
front at the other end. Talented teenager Wilfried Zaha dragged two West Ham
defenders out wide and sent in a low cross that was flicked on by Williams
but Murray bobbled his finish wide of Almunia's goal from six-yards. Dougie
Freedman's side began the second period strongly and Murray atoned for his
late first-half miss by putting Palace back in front seven minutes after the
restart. Zaha was again involved as he flicked the ball square to striker
Murray and the former Brighton man beat Almunia with a composed finish into
the bottom right-hand corner from 15-yards for his third goal of the season.

Sam Allardyce sent on strikers Sam Baldock and Carew with just over 20
minutes to go and the latter levelled the contest for a second time 10
minutes before full-time. McCartney sent in another left-wing cross and the
towering Norwegian rose to cushion a header past Speroni from close range
for his first West Ham goal since switching to Upton Park from Aston Villa
in the summer. Palace looked to take the lead for a third time and Paddy
McCarthy headed down at the other end but Murray could only scoop over .
Eagles substitute Jermaine Easter then fired an ambitious 25-yard effort
wide in the final minute as both sides were forced to settle for a point.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Big Sam keen on Tevez deal
Hammers boss keen on striker's return
By Pete O'Rourke - Follow me: @skysportspeteo. Last Updated:
October 1, 2011 6:27pm
SSN

West Ham boss Sam Allardyce has admitted his interest in bringing Carlos
Tevez back to the club. The Hammers are believed to have had a loan enquiry
rebuffed by Manchester City for Tevez. Tevez has been suspended by City for
two weeks with Roberto Mancini claiming the Argentine will never play for
him again after his apparent refusal to go on as a substitute at Bayern
Munich in midweek. Tevez enjoyed a successful spell at West Ham in 2007 and
Allardyce has left the door open for a move back to Upton Park, insisting he
would have no fear of handling the controversial striker.

World-class

"If he would like to join us and the chairman would like to pay for him then
yes, why wouldn't you want a top-class player like that?" said Allardyce.
"I've worked with some world-class players in my time, they win you games
when you least expect it. "With a goal record like his why wouldn't you want
him? "I've had worse than him. I've had some bad ones in my time. Just keep
playing him, that's the answer."

Inter interest

Meanwhile, Tevez's agent Kia Joorabchian has hinted Inter Milan could make a
move for the South American. Tevez was linked with a move to Inter in the
summer in a possible swap deal with Wesley Sneijder and Joorabchian believes
the deal could be resurrected. "I know that Inter Milan have offered to
Manchester City Sneijder in exchange for Tevez and that there was serious
talks between the two clubs to try to define the deal," Joorabchian told De
Telegraaf. "But with the arrival of Samir Nasri it looks like City still
have too many players in midfield."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Crystal Palace 2-2 West Ham: Sunday Mirror match report
Published 21:50 01/10/11 By Steve Stammers
The Mirror

His best days may now be behind him, but John Carew showed he retains the
aerial threat that once made him the scourge of defences all over Europe.
Just when Crystal Palace looked set for a win earned through sweat and
endeavour, the former Valencia, Roma, Lyon and Aston Villa striker, on as a
sub, headed a crucial equaliser from Kevin Nolan's cross to prevent a second
loss in four days for Sam Allardyce's promotion hopefuls. Allardyce wants to
give the Hammers faithful even more cheer by bringing Carlos Tevez back to
Upton Park. He said: "He wouldn't be a problem to me. I have handled a lot
worse than him in my career. "Why wouldn't you want him? If the chairman
agrees to pay his wages and if he wants to join us, then I would love him
here. "Players like him have the ability to win you games and when you need
a goal, they produce it. His goal record is tremendous."

It is now up to West Ham owners David Gold and David Sullivan to make a
second enquiry for the Argentinian after their initial approach was
rejected. West Ham's somewhat tentative early approach had been punished
with a Palace goal after six minutes. A long clearance was headed on by
Jonathan Williams to present Darren Ambrose with the most simple of chances.
Manuel Almunia, who is on loan from Arsenal, was given no chance. But the
strike shook West Ham out of their lethargy and in the 16th minute they were
level. The Hammers had been able to make capital from the forward forages of
their full-backs George McCartney and Julien Faubert. It was from such a
strategy that the equaliser came. McCartney crossed from the left, Carlton
Cole leapt high at the far post to head the ball back across goal and there
was Nolan to score from close range. Gradually West Ham established
ascendancy. Faubert's pace, allied to David Bentley's sublime touch and
Henri Lansbury's eye for a pass, allowed them to capitalise on Palace's
stretched left flank and by half-time they should have been ahead. On the
stroke of half-time a rare Palace appearance in the West Ham penalty area
left Glenn Murray with a chance from six yards that he put wide. But there
was no reprieve seven minutes into the second half courtesy of a flash of
real skill from Palace teenager Wilfried Zaha. The 19-year-old produced a
pinpoint cross from the left that found Murray at the edge of the area who
tucked his shot past Almunia. But in the 80th minute, substitute Carew
headed home the equaliser from Nolan's wicked, swerving cross. Palace boss
Dougie ­Freedman was on the bench the last time these sides met, in the 2004
play-off final which the Eagles won. "I thought it was a fair ­result," he
said. "It was two teams playing very different styles. "One or two of my
players went into the game as young boys and came out as men. They are a
powerful, ­experienced side who knock the ball long and you have to stand up
against them, and we did."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Allardyce: I still want Carlos Tevez on loan
Published 18:06 01/10/11 By MirrorFootball
The Mirror

Sam Allardyce watched his West Ham side salvage a point from a 2-2 draw at
Crystal Palace today - and then left the door wide open for Carlos Tevez to
rejoin the club. Argentinian striker Tevez has been suspended by Manchester
City and told he will never play for them again after his apparent refusal
to go on as a substitute at Bayern Munich on Tuesday. West Ham's initial
enquiry about a loan deal for the player who saved them from relegation in
2007 was given short shrift this week. But Allardyce today insisted he would
love to sign Tevez and claimed his alleged disruptive influence holds no
fears. "If he would like to join us and the chairman would like to pay for
him then yes, why wouldn't you want a top-class player like that?" said the
Hammers boss. "I've worked with some world-class players in my time, they
win you games when you least expect it. "With a goal record like his why
wouldn't you want him? "I've had worse than him. I've had some bad ones in
my time. Just keep playing him, that's the answer."

West Ham could certainly do with the spark the return of Tevez would provide
after they snatched a late point at Selhurst Park. Palace were leading twice
through Darren Ambrose and Glenn Murray only for the Hammers to hit back
through Kevin Nolan and John Carew, with his first goal for the club.
Ambrose was allowed to prod the ball past on-loan Arsenal keeper Manuel
Almunia after West Ham failed to deal with a long goal-kick, and Murray
swept home from the edge of the area from Wilfried Zaha's cross. "It was
shocking defending," added Allardyce. "We gifted the opposition two goals
and that made life very difficult, in what was otherwise a very good
performance. "But we had to make a lot of changes due to injuries and to
produce a performance like that is encouraging."

Nolan turned in his third goal of the season from close range and Carew, on
as a second-half substitute, headed in George McCartney's cross 10 minutes
from time.
The Hammers remain in fourth place despite picking up just one point from
their last two games. "We've got 18 points from our first 10 games, which is
two behind what I wanted but I expect we will make that up if we continue to
play like that," claimed Allardyce. "It was disappointing to take only four
points from three games this week but we are sitting quite comfortably."

Palace boss Dougie Freedman was on the bench the last time these sides met,
in the 2004 play-off final which the Eagles won. "I thought it was a fair
result," he said.
It was two teams playing very different styles. "One or two of my players
went into the game as young boys and came out as men. They are a powerful,
experienced side who knock the ball long and you have to stand up against
them, and we did."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
CRYSTAL PALACE 2 WEST HAM UNITED 2: SAM ALLARDYCE WOULD JUMP AT CHANCE TO
SIGN CARLOS TEVES
Daily Express
John Carew used his head to spare West Ham's blushes 10 minutes after coming
on
Sunday October 2,2011
By Sunday Express Reporter

CARLOS TEVEZ was last night offered an escape route back to West Ham.
Manager Sam Allardyce admitted he would leap at the chance to sign the
maverick Argentinian, who was a cult hero at Upton Park when he first came
to this country. "If he wants to come to us and the chairman is prepared to
put up the money, yes I'd like him. Who wouldn't? "I've had some great
players in my time and some of them a lot worse than him, believe me!"

Allardyce made his surprise – perhaps tongue in cheek – offer just when he
looked more in need of defenders yesterday. Big Sam blasted his defence for
what he described as two shocking blunders that gifted Palace their goals
and a point. "It was shocking defending and that stopped us winning the
match," he said. In the end big John Carew used his head to spare the
Hammers' blushes 10 minutes after coming on as second-half substitute. The
much-travelled Norwegian rose head and shoulders above anyone else to glance
home George McCartney's cross and grab the Hammers a point when they looked
in danger of defeat. Palace will probably feel a bit aggrieved about that
after Darren Ambrose and Glen Murray cashed in on West Ham's defensive
blunders to put them in the driving seat and young Jonathon Williams caught
the eye in Palace's midfield. But McCartney would have felt the same after
setting up West Ham's first-half equaliser from Kevin Nolan and inspiring a
Hammers fightback that deserved what it got.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Carew rises above Tevez talk to answer call
Crystal Palace 2 West Ham United 2

By Conrad Leach at Selhurst Park
Sunday, 2 October 2011
The Independent

West Ham inquired about taking Carlos Tevez on loan this week, although
Manchester City's response to letting their disgraced Argentina striker
leave for east London was "unprintable" according to Karren Brady, the
Hammers' chief executive.

Whether it was a genuine move to bring Tevez back to Upton Park or just
grandstanding, it goes without saying that West Ham could have done with
someone of his quality. With 10 minutes to go of this derby they were
losing, before John Carew, who had a run-in with his last manager, equalised
with a glancing header. Note to Tevez – Carew's goal showed the value of
saying "yes" when asked to come off the substitute's bench. It was the
Norway forward's first strike since joining from Aston Villa, where he fell
out with Gérard Houllier.

Sam Allardyce, the Hammers' manager, also has previous in making outlandish
bids for South Americans. Remember his attempt, when he was at Bolton, to
bring in Rivaldo? That also came to nothing. But Allardyce did have
something to say about Tevez. "We'll have him if he wants to join and the
chairman wants to pay for him." At £250,000 a week, that was presumably a
short-lived conversation between David Gold and his counterpart at
Eastlands. Yet West Ham did have one new Spanish-speaking loanee to show
off. But it was only Manuel Almunia, in from Arsenal, who was a touch slow
to get down to Glenn Murray's strike from the edge of the box.

Almunia, who is emergency cover for the injured Robert Green, conceded his
first goal after only six minutes. Despite their preferred method of playing
neat passing football, Palace went the long route and were rewarded. A high
clearance from inside their half fell for Jonathan Williams and he deftly
touched to Darren Ambrose, who tapped in from six yards. Ten minutes later,
West Ham equalised from their first genuine foray. George McCartney's cross
went to Carlton Cole, who headed back across goal to Kevin Nolan, and the
midfielder was unmarked five yards out.

Palace re-took the lead, seven minutes into the second half. Wilfried Zaha,
Palace's last teenage sensation before Williams, 17, turned up, beat two
players and found Murray, on the edge of the area.

But Dougie Freedman, the Palace manager, was happy with a point despite
twice taking the lead. He said: "It was a fair result, with our guile
against their power. Some of my players came into this game as boys and
finished it as men."

Crystal Palace (4-4-1-1): Speroni; Parr, McCarthy, Gardner, Moxey; Zaha
(Easter, 84), Jedinak, Wright, Ambrose (Ramage, 70); Williams (Scannell,
66); Murray.

West Ham (4-1-4-1): Almunia; Faubert, Tomkins, Faye, McCartney; Diop;
Bentley (Sears, 88), Lansbury, Nolan, Collison (Carew, 68); Cole (Baldock,
68).

Referee Kevin Wright.

Man of the match Williams (Crystal Palace).

Match rating 6/10.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce worried by defence following draw at
Crystal Palace
West Ham manager Sam Allardyce was anything but impressed with the quality
of his side's defending during Saturday's 2-2 draw at Crystal Palace.
Telegraph.co.uk
By Telegraph staff8:58PM BST 01 Oct 20111

Palace led twice, through Darren Ambrose and Glenn Murray, although West Ham
salvaged a point with goals from Kevin Nolan and John Carew, his first for
the club.
Ambrose prodded the ball past on-loan Arsenal goalkeeper Manuel Almunia
after West Ham failed to deal with a goal-kick, and Murray scored from the
edge of the area. "It was shocking defending," said Allardyce. "We gifted
the opposition two goals and that made life very difficult, in what was
otherwise a very good performance." Carew's header ensures that West Ham
remain fourth and Allardyce said: "We've got 18 points from our first 10
games, which is two behind what I wanted but I expect we will make that up
if we continue to play like that." Dean Saunders collected his seventh point
from three matches in charge of Doncaster Rovers with a 2-1 victory at
Peterborough and immediately paid tribute to his predecessor, Sean
O'Driscoll. "The previous manager did a brilliant job," Saunders said. "He
took the club forward and I imagine every fan will always be grateful for
what he achieved. "But sometimes in this game players can become complacent
and the voice of the manager can go in one ear and out of the other."
Bristol City, thrashed 5-0 by Blackpool, replace Doncaster at the foot of
the table.

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com