Collison glad to play his part
WHUFC.com
Jack Collison had a spring in his step after helping the Hammers see off a
stubborn Cardiff City side
25.09.2013
Jack Collison was satisfied with a job well done against Cardiff City, as
his perfect centre paved the way for Ricardo Vaz Te to nod West Ham United
into the last 16 of the Capital One Cup. After racing into a two-goal lead
inside just seven minutes, the Hammers had to contend with a spirited City
fight-back, one that left the contest seemingly poised for extra-time. But
Vaz Te's 88th-minute intervention ensured Sam Allardyce's men would, this
time, finish on the right side of a 3-2 scoreline, a result that Collison
thought was just reward for their evening's work. He told West Ham TV: "We
made a magnificent start to the game, we started like a house on fire. We
had chances and we really should have put the game to bed. "But they're a
side full of quality and [Craig] Noone has come in and scored a good goal to
make it 2-1 at a half time. It was a different game second half. We were a
bit sloppy at times with the passing, but maybe you're going to get that
with boys who haven't played so much. "Fortunately, Vaz pops up with another
important goal, which he always seems to do. I thought we thoroughly
deserved the win, so we're all very grateful that Vaz was on the end of it."
Speaking of his crucial and brilliantly executed role in the winner, the
Welsh midfielder admitted he is working hard to continue producing moments
of such quality in the final third. In fact, but for an athletic one-handed
Joe Lewis stop, he might have had a goal to celebrate too, as his long-range
volley threatened to dip beneath the crossbar. "It's something I'm trying
to work on, getting in those positions more regularly," he explained. "If I
can do it in the League Cup games, then, if the Gaffer ever needs me on the
Saturday hopefully I can take it into a Premier League game. "It would have
been nice if it [the volley] had dropped in, it might have taken the
pressure off us a little bit. But I'm just enjoying playing. It's nice to be
out on the pitch."
Having featured just once in the Barclays Premier League this term, Collison
is, naturally, itching to play his part. First on the agenda is Saturday's
trip to Hull City's KC Stadium, where he has twice netted in the past, most
recently in a 2-0 Championship success in November 2011. He continued:
"On a personal level it has been a frustrating start to the season. So the
League Cup has been a bit of a release for me and a chance to get out on the
pitch and have a go, and try to stake my claim for a place. "We played some
nice stuff at times against Cardiff and hopefully the manager has taken note
of that and if he needs us we're there, we're ready and we'll see what
happens. "I've actually scored two at the KC Stadium. If I'm in the squad,
first of all, it would be nice and it would be nice to get a bit of time on
the pitch. I'm just plugging away, working hard in training and hoping to
give the manager a few headaches. I know we're all looking forward to it and
to get back to winning ways."
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Burnley away in Round Four
WHUFC.com
The draw for the Fourth Round of the Capital One Cup was made on Wednesday
evening
25.09.2013
West Ham United have been drawn away at Burnley in the Capital One Cup
Fourth Round. The Hammers will travel to the Championship club in the week
commencing October 28, looking to continue their best Capital One Cup run
for three seasons. Sam Allardyce's men have overcome Cheltenham Town and
Cardiff City to reach this stage, with Ricardo Vaz Te's late header sealing
victory over the latter on Tuesday. Burnley, who currently sit second in the
Championship, came from behind to beat Nottingham Forest in Round Three this
week, Danny Ings scoring both goals for the Clarets. They have also beaten
York City and Preston North End in their run to the last 16.
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The Big Interview - Ricardo Vaz Te
WHUFC.com
West Ham United's No12 on scoring important goals and being focused on his
future at the Boleyn Ground
25.09.2013
Ricardo Vaz Te has pledged his commitment to West Ham United after scoring
the winner in the 3-2 Capital One Cup third-round win over Cardiff City.
Having submitted a transfer request at the end of August after becoming
frustrated at a lack of first-team action, Vaz Te ultimately remained at the
Club and has been urged to show his worth by manager Sam Allardye and
captain Kevin Nolan. After scoring for the second Capital One Cup tie in
succession, Vaz Te confirmed his ambition to show them, his squad-mates and
Hammers fans why he believes he can be an important player for West Ham
United.
Vaz, you must have enjoyed playing and scoring the winner against Cardiff on
Tuesday evening?
RVT: "Obviously I enjoy playing and that's the reason I came here and I'm in
this business. I guess we all want to play but we can't all play at the same
time, but I got my 90 minutes on Tuesday and I was really pleased. I can
only keep knocking on the manager's door saying 'I deserve to play and I'm
ready to play' and I'm glad we won. "In the past I have created chances and
score goals. I've been asked to play different positions and I tried to
adapt as much as possible for the benefit of the team. "Obviously, I try not
to be selfish. This season I have found myself in a bit of a pickle because
I noticed that I wasn't going to be picked as the first option. I think I
deserve to be the first option so it has been very frustrating. I was happy
to get the 90 minutes and now I have to keep showing that I deserve to
play."
Your goal came at a great time, with just two minutes of normal time
remaining?
RVT: "At that stage, it was hard for Cardiff to react so it was a killer
goal, I guess. I was very pleased for myself and for the team as well. "I
think we deserved to win. We played better than Cardiff throughout but we
lost ourselves a bit in the second half and gave them the chance to come
back into the game when we should have buried them. In the end, we got the
result, we won 3-2 and I'm pleased for everybody."
It was an important result for the squad, wasn't it, particularly after the
disappointing defeat by Everton on Saturday?
RVT: "It's always good to win because you build momentum, you see. Winning
is a habit and the quicker we get that habit, the better. Obviously, it's
easy for the fans to panic when we don't win or we draw and we've lost two
games at home now, but we've got a good team and we're going to keep on
fighting.
"They shouldn't panic because we're going to get results. It's fine."
Ravel Morrison scored the opening goal and played a part in the second. As
someone who also played in the Premier League as a teenager, what do you
make of him as a player?
RVT: "He's a very talented young lad. I can say he's the biggest talent I
have ever seen [in a team I have played in]. I have played with Nani and all
sorts.
"It's up to him to become as good as he can be. If he stays focused and
hungry and shows he wants to keep improving and always learning [he can go
far].
"He has to show the desire and commitment because, in this life, to be the
best or the best you can be you can't think you have done it all. You can't
settle. You have to drive for more.
What was the reaction like from your squad-mates after you made your
transfer request and then ultimately remained at the Club?
RVT: "The players know the business and it's hard. They don't hold grudges.
None of us hold grudges. We're all professionals. Obviously I expressed my
desire to leave because I want to play. I'm not 18 any longer and I can't
keep playing those games. "The players have been wonderful. They know my
intentions, obviously, and know I have huge respect for each individual and
the manager and the Club. I didn't do it to hurt anybody - I just want to
play."
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Hammers face Burnley trip
KUMb.com
Filed: Wednesday, 25th September 2013
By: Staff Writer no,2
United have been drawn away to Burnley in the 4th round of the Capital One
Cup.
The match will be the first time the clubs have met since a 2-2 draw at Turf
Moor in the Championship in March 2012.
The full draw:
Sunderland v Southampton
Leicester City v Fulham
Birmingham City v Stoke City
Manchester United v Norwich City
Burnley V West Ham United
West Bromwich Albion/Arsenal v Chelsea
Tottenham Hotspur v Hull City
Newcastle United v Manchester City
Matches to be played in the week commencing 28 October
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ricardo Vaz Te's transfer request 'in the past' as striker and West Ham bury
hatchet
Last Updated: September 25, 2013 5:46pm
SSN
Ricardo Vaz Te's summer transfer request is "in the past" as far as both he
and West Ham are concerned. The Portuguese forward publicly sought a move
during the transfer window and claimed "it has been made obvious to myself
and my representatives that I am not in the manager's plans". Vaz Te has not
yet started in the Premier League this season, but his winner against
Cardiff on Tuesday was his second Capital One Cup goal in as many starts in
that competition.
And with Andy Carroll injured, Mladen Petric short of fitness and Modibo
Maiga yet to score this term, Vaz Te is an option for this weekend's trip to
Hull City.
Assistant manager Neil McDonald said: "He keeps on telling everyone that he
creates chances and scores and that's what the manager wants - people to put
the ball in the back of the net. "That's a knock on the door for the
manager, he's available on Saturday against Hull and gives the manager a
nice little problem.
"You have to forget what happened in the past, maybe it was bad advice, but
he's a genuine lad who just wants to play." Vaz Te was also in conciliatory
mood when interviewed by the club's website after the game. He said: "I try
not to be selfish. This season I have found myself in a bit of a pickle
because I noticed that I wasn't going to be picked as the first option. "I
think I deserve to be the first option so it has been very frustrating. I
was happy to get the 90 minutes and now I have to keep showing that I
deserve to play. "The players know the business and it's hard. They don't
hold grudges. None of us hold grudges. We're all professionals. Obviously I
expressed my desire to leave because I want to play. I'm not 18 any longer
and I can't keep playing those games. "The players have been wonderful. They
know my intentions, obviously, and know I have huge respect for each
individual and the manager and the club. I didn't do it to hurt anybody - I
just want to play."
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West Ham striker Mladen Petric hoping to be at World Cup with Croatia
By Jure Bohoric | Last Updated: September 25, 2013 3:34pm
SSN
West Ham striker Mladen Petric is hopeful that he will make it to the World
Cup finals with Croatia. Croatia look set to finish second in Group A of the
qualifying section, meaning they will then go into a play-off for a place in
Brazil. And Petric is hoping to be involved, having returned to first-team
action with West Ham earlier this month. Petric missed out on the previous
national squads, but he puts that down to being a free agent at the time
after he left Fulham. "I definitely want to go to Brazil," he told T-portal.
"I didn't play for Croatia in their last matches just because I didn't have
a club. "But national team coach Igor Stimac has assured me that I would be
part of the team if I'm going to play for my club."
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WEST HAM'S DEBT EXPLAINED
By Sean Whetstone 25 Sep 2013 at 14:38
West Ham Till I Die
In this financial article I will attempt to explore and explain West Ham's
remaining debt position. I believe many West Ham fans still believe we have
debts of £100 million or we have to clear £70 million of bank debt before we
can move to the Olympic stadium. That is the not the case as I hope to
explain.
Net debt is just a metric that shows a company's overall debt situation by
netting the value of a company's liabilities and debts such as bank loans
with its cash held in the bank.
In 2010 David Sullivan after the take over famously revealed in a press
conference that West Ham were over £100 million in debt.
Sullivan explained "We've paid down some of the debt and injected some
working capital but there's still more than £100 million of debt. In that
there's £50 million owed to banks, there's £40 million owed to other clubs.
There's not a penny to come in, they (the previous owners) have borrowed
against the next two years of season-ticket money.
The sponsors have paid 70% of their three-years up front. In addition
there's the club's settlement to (former manager) Alan Curbishley, so the
real debt is about £110 million."
Of this non bank debt Sullivan spoke about Sheffield United is believed to
have agreed £21m in an out of court settlement although Gold & Sullivan said
they inherited around 75% that debt on takeover.
The Alan Curbishly settlement was believed to be £2.2m and the advance on
season ticket sales were £7.7m the first year and £7.25m the second year.
The SBOBET sponsorship was believed to be worth £1.2m per year much of which
was advanced also.
A massive financial mess by anyone's standards!
The 2009 accounts were the first to be released under Gold & Sullivan
ownership showed which a net bank debt of £55.47m with a further £33.65m in
other long term liabilities. These included £10m owed to a major
shareholder, £3.8m owed to other clubs for transfers and £18m to be paid to
Sheffield Utd.
In 2010 this quickly reduced to £33.5m of long term bank debt with an extra
£24m in long term liabilities which were principally £7.7m of advance season
ticket sales and £16m left to pay of the settlement to Sheffield Utd. In the
company accounts Chairman's statement David Sullivan confirmed that David
Gold & himself invested £24m into the club which resulted in a reduction of
£12m of bank borrowing and £22m of overall liabilities that year.
In 2011 Sullivan and Gold invested another £3m into the club on top of
buying further shares. In his chairman's statement of that year Sullivan
revealed that Gold and himself had invested £29m of equity and loans to the
club in the past 18 months. Despite this the bank net debt this increased by
£8.1m to £41.6m. Long term liabilities added an £27m which included the
remaining £10.5m due to Sheffield United, £3.1m owed to other clubs for
transfers and £7.25m for second year of the Season Ticket advance.
In that same statement Sullivan said "Since 31 May 2009 bank debt has
reduced from £44.9m to £38m while total net creditors have reduced from
£112.7m to £91.2m. In addition during this period we have refinanced the
bank debt and we are now on schedule to reduce bank debt to under £21m by
2013." The figure quoted by Sullivan of £91.2M obviously included creditors
due within 12 months which were offset by income that year.
In the latest 2012 financial year accounts revealed Gold and Sullivan
invested another £32.2M of cash in the form of loans after West Ham's
turnover fell drastically to £46.2m in our drop to the championship.
This further increased our net debt to £70.7m although £35m of this debt is
now owed to Sullivan & Gold through loans so actually it is only £35.7m of
external bank net debt when you remove share holder loans. Although £16m of
these share holder loans are owed to Sullivan's property company Conegate
Holdings.
Of this remaining £35.7m £5m was due in the year ending 31st May 2013 so
should already be paid off wit the remaining £30m due more than 12 months.
Of this £30M longer term bank debt only £25M is secured against the Boleyn
Ground as a mortgage so it must be paid off before we move to the Olympic
stadium. The remaining £5M of loans are unsecured so do not have that same
restriction.
I saw many papers published the £70M figure that West ham had to clear
before moving to the Olympic Stadium. Well by my calculation it is more like
£25M.
Outside of bank debts our long term liabilities mentioned by Sullivan back
in 2010 are also vastly reducing.
We owe West Ham bond holders £611,000 since 1997 which we will pay back
after 150 years of the scheme. By the time it is payable in 2148 I am sure
£611,000 will be average weekly wage of Premier league footballer so it not
a debt that should bother us too much.
We owe other football clubs £4.6M from player transfers from staggered
payments. It will be interesting how this increases in 2013 with the Carroll
& Downing transfers but more clubs want money up front now or within 12
months so staggered payments are now becoming a thing of the past unless
they are desperate to get shot of a player.
In the 'other creditors' section of our 2012 accounts there is a sum of just
over £5M, this is almost definitely the last payment to Sheffield United
which David Gold confirmed we paid very recently.
We are now also finally free of the advance of season ticket money of £7.25M
in 2011 & £7.7M in 2010. This like a new revenue stream to West Ham as the
Icelandic's banked 2 years of season ticket sales up front!
We also account for £2.5M from the Football Stadia Fund grant scheme in our
long term liabilities even although I understand this is not repayable.
So with the remaining long term liabilities listed in the 2012 accounts we
can add on another approx £5M to bring the total West Ham debt to around
£37M or £72M if you include the loans from owners Sullivan & Gold.
The 2013 accounts are released early next year and I will update the overall
debt picture as soon as they become available. The owners have certainly put
their money where their mouth is and for that I am grateful.
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
Thursday, September 26
Wednesday, September 25
Daily WHUFC News - 25th September 2013
Hammers leave it late in thriller
WHUFC.com
West Ham United recovered from losing a two-goal lead to defeat Cardiff City
3-2 on Tuesday
24.09.2013
West Ham United 3-2 Cardiff City
Capital One Cup Third Round
Ricardo Vaz Te headed West Ham United into the fourth round of the Capital
One Cup, sealing a 3-2 win over Cardiff City on Tuesday evening with just
two minutes left to play. Sam Allardyce's men made a lightning-fast start,
moving into a 2-0 lead with only eight minutes on the clock thanks to Ravel
Morrison and Matt Jarvis. But a fine strike out of nothing by Craig Noone on
the stroke of half-time gave the visitors hope, and they had the Hammers
rocking when Peter Odemwingie levelled things up 15 minutes from the end.
West Ham ensured their manager's 100th game in charge would end as a happy
occassion though with Vaz Te's winner and they will now await Wednesday's
draw with interest. West Ham could not have asked for a better start, as
they moved in front with just 20 seconds on the clock. Morrison was the
goalscorer, bursting into the box before skipping inside the last man and
lashing into the roof of the net. It was the young midfielder's third goal
of the season and another illustration of his undoubted talent and the
Hammers did not take their foot off the gas. With eight minutes gone it was
2-0 and Morrison was involved again, getting the ball out to Modibo Maiga on
the right, and he picked out Jarvis well to bundle the ball past a helpless
Joe Lewis in the Cardiff goal. The chances were flowing and Lewis had to
make an excellent save to deny Ricardo Vaz Te on 15 minutes, getting down
low to his right to push the ball away after right back Leo Chambers had got
forward to play his part in the attack.
With 33 minutes on the clock West Ham should really have moved into a
three-goal lead, but James Collins could not get the ball out of his feet
inside the six yard box after James Tomkins rose well to nod Matt Taylor's
free kick back across goal. Cardiff had barely threatened, but right on half
time they got themselves back into the contest when Noone picked up
possession in the right channel, took a touch inside and blasted a
left-footed shot from 20 yards into the top left hand corner. The visitors
began the second period strongly too, and after Adrian touched a stinging
Jordon Mutch shot behind for a corner, he had to be alert again to block
Nicky Maynard's acrobatic volley from the corner. At the other end Lewis
tipped Jack Collison's fiercely-struck volley over the crossbar, before
preventing Jarvis from making the game safe by cutting out his cross-shot,
but Cardiff were growing in strength, and the impressive Noone could not
quite find the far corner after dancing his way into the Hammers box.
Fifteen minutes from the end they did find a way through for a second time,
with Odemwingie tapping home after Mutch's darting run into the danger area
dragged the Hammers defence out of position. After an opening 40 minutes of
such dominance, it came as a shock to the hosts to be brought back to level
pegging, and they had to regroup and come again. They did so in style,
securing their place in the last 16 of the competition with a Vaz Te header
two minutes from the end, the Hammers man crashing home from close range
after Collison clipped a perfect cross up to the far stick.
West Ham United: Adrian; Chambers, Collins, Tomkins, McCartney (Rat 82);
Morrison (Diame 59), Taylor, Collison; Vaz Te, Maiga (Petric 46), Jarvis
Subs: Henderson, Nolan, Ruddock, Moncur
Goals: Morrison 1, Jarvis 8, Vaz Te 88
Cardiff City: Lewis; Brayford (McNaughton 46), Hudson, Connolly, John;
Mutch, Cowie; Odemwingie, Mason (Smith 56), Noone; Maynard (Gestede 90+1)
Subs: Moore, Lappin, Harris, Healey
Goals: Noone 45, Odemwingie 75
Referee: Roger East
Attendance: 18,611
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Campo lauds centurion Sam
WHUFC.com
Former Spain international Ivan Campo congratulates Sam Allardyce on
reaching 100 games in charge
24.09.2013
When Sam Allardyce is asked which players have been the finest signings he
has ever made, Spain international Ivan Campo is always one of the first
names out of his mouth. Now, on the occasion of Big Sam's 100th game in
charge of West Ham United, the ex-Valencia, Real Madrid and Bolton Wanderers
midfielder has repaid the favour. Campo spent five seasons working with Big
Sam at Bolton after joining the Trotters in 2002. Campo, now 39 and living
in his native Spain, said the Hammers boss is a 'very special' coach who
made sure he settled into English football and life in this country
seamlessly. "I had a very special relationship with Sam because when I
first moved to Bolton from Madrid I was living by myself and Sam was not
just a very good coach, he was a very special friend to me," Campo confirmed
in an exclusive interview with whufc.com. "He helped me whenever I had any
problems off the pitch as well as on the pitch, he supported me and I
appreciated that. "When I was playing in Spain everything was different to
how life in the Premier League with Bolton and Sam Allardyce was. He helped
me to perfectly understand not just how to play football in England but to
understand and adapt to the way of life in England and that was very
important. "I could always speak very openly to Sam about personal problems
that I was having, that is what I appreciate most about him because he
helped me through my personal problems."
Campo, who won the UEFA Champions League with Real Madrid in 2000 and was in
the Spain squad at the 1998 FIFA World Cup finals, was one of a host of
big-name foreign players brought to Bolton by Big Sam. Nigeria star Jay-Jay
Okocha, France FIFA World Cup winner Youri Djorkaeff, Greece midfielder
Stelios Giannakopoulos, Senegal star El-Hadji Diouf and France defender
Bruno N'Gotty also turned out for the Trotters during Big Sam's memorable
seven-year spell in charge. Giannakopoulos, as well as former Bolton
team-mates Kevin Davies and Ricardo Gardner, have spoken to the Official
Programme for the Capital One Cup third-round visit of Cardiff City - Big
Sam's 100th game as West Ham manager. Campo is not surprised that his former
boss has made a successful start to life in east London. "For me, Sam is a
very special coach because he has very clear ideas about football and he
always wants what's best for his players," said the San Sebastian-born
holding midfielder. "Motivating players is very important and Sam knew how
to motivate everyone for every game to how to produce good performances from
us. At key points during the season it's crucial to get big performances
from your players and Sam could do that. "He's a lovely, lovely man. He is a
very good friend and an absolutely fantastic coach. It's very important in
football to be honest about performances, selection and tactics and Sam is a
very honest man. "When I was playing at Bolton with Sam as our coach we
celebrated many good times with the players, fans and the club and a lot of
that success was down to Sam."
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Beer we go
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 24th September 2013
By: Staff Writer
West Ham have announced a three-year partnership with a Danish brewing
company. The deal grants brewers Carlsberg exclusive "pouring rights" for
the company's "extensive beer and beverage portfolio" at the Boleyn Ground.
Carlsberg UK Director of Brands and Insight, David Scott, told whufc.com:
"Carlsberg is proud to be the Official Beer Partner of West Ham, a club with
a strong tradition and rich heritage like our own brand and company.
"Through continuing our partnership we will connect with West Ham United and
wider Premier League supporters at the Boleyn Ground and further cement our
position as the beer brand of football." The deal begins from the start of
the current season, expiring in 2016 when the Club moves to the Olympic
Stadium.
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West Ham edge five-goal thriller with Cardiff
Last Updated: September 24, 2013 10:04pm
SSN
West Ham United burst out of the blocks against Cardiff City, but were made
to work hard for a 3-2 win and a place in the fourth round of the Capital
One Cup.
Two goals inside the opening eight minutes from Ravel Morrison and Matt
Jarvis had the Hammers in complete control, but they required a dramatic
winner from Ricardo Vaz Te after Craig Noone and Peter Odemwingie had
levelled matters. There were just 19 seconds on the clock when Morrison
broke the deadlock, with the rejuvenated midfielder controlling a pass from
Jarvis before crashing high past Joe Lewis. Jarvis then grabbed the home
side's second himself, with luck very much on his side as a blocked shot
ricocheted off him and into the back of the net. There was nothing fortunate
about Noone's strike on the stroke of half-time, as he rifled into the top
corner, and Peter Odemwingie completed the Cardiff comeback when netting his
first goal for the club on 77 minutes. Just when it appeared as though the
tie would head past the 90 minute mark and into extra-time, Vaz Te popped up
for the Hammers to nod home a Jack Collison centre.
Drama
There was little sign of the drama to come when Morrison stunned the
visitors with a goal straight from their own kick-off in an amazing start to
Sam Allardyce's 100th match in charge. His first game as Hammers boss two
years ago was a home defeat by Cardiff, but any chance of repeat was already
looking unlikely. Morrison collected a through ball from Jarvis and ran at
stand-in City skipper Mark Hudson, cutting inside the centre-half before
lifting the ball over Joe Lewis and into the net. It was the former
Manchester United youngster's third goal in four starts for the Hammers, as
he continues to soften the blow of record signing Andy Carroll's absence
through injury. Jarvis doubled the lead following a slick move this time
started by Morrison, who spun away from John Brayford and knocked the ball
to Modibo Maiga on the byline. Maiga's first-time pass found Jarvis in front
of goal and despite two Cardiff defenders sliding in to block, the winger's
effort eventually rolled over the line. And the rampant hosts could, and
probably should, have had five or six before half-time.
Poked
Vaz Te saw a volley superbly palmed away by Lewis and, from the corner,
Collison found the ball at his feet in front of goal but poked it wide. The
much-maligned Maiga, still yet to score this season, then broke clear only
to drag his shot across goal, and Collins missed an open goal from three
yards after James Tomkins had headed Collison's cross back into his path.
And then, from out of nowhere, Cardiff pulled one back on the stroke of
half-time with their first attack of the game. There seemed little danger
when Noone collected the ball out on the right but the winger unleashed a
superb 20-yard curler with his left foot which flew past Hammers keeper
Adrian and into the net.
Cardiff looked a different team after the break and Jordan Mutch's swerving
effort produced an unconvincing save from Adrian before, from the corner,
former Hammer Nicky Maynard sent an overhead kick straight at the Spaniard.
And the equaliser came in the 76th minute when Mutch drove into the area and
crossed for Odemwingie to tap in his first goal since his infamous drive to
QPR failed to force a January move from West Brom. However Vaz Te, who
himself requested a transfer in the last window, had the final word when he
got his head onto Collison's cross to send the Hammers through.
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
WHUFC.com
West Ham United recovered from losing a two-goal lead to defeat Cardiff City
3-2 on Tuesday
24.09.2013
West Ham United 3-2 Cardiff City
Capital One Cup Third Round
Ricardo Vaz Te headed West Ham United into the fourth round of the Capital
One Cup, sealing a 3-2 win over Cardiff City on Tuesday evening with just
two minutes left to play. Sam Allardyce's men made a lightning-fast start,
moving into a 2-0 lead with only eight minutes on the clock thanks to Ravel
Morrison and Matt Jarvis. But a fine strike out of nothing by Craig Noone on
the stroke of half-time gave the visitors hope, and they had the Hammers
rocking when Peter Odemwingie levelled things up 15 minutes from the end.
West Ham ensured their manager's 100th game in charge would end as a happy
occassion though with Vaz Te's winner and they will now await Wednesday's
draw with interest. West Ham could not have asked for a better start, as
they moved in front with just 20 seconds on the clock. Morrison was the
goalscorer, bursting into the box before skipping inside the last man and
lashing into the roof of the net. It was the young midfielder's third goal
of the season and another illustration of his undoubted talent and the
Hammers did not take their foot off the gas. With eight minutes gone it was
2-0 and Morrison was involved again, getting the ball out to Modibo Maiga on
the right, and he picked out Jarvis well to bundle the ball past a helpless
Joe Lewis in the Cardiff goal. The chances were flowing and Lewis had to
make an excellent save to deny Ricardo Vaz Te on 15 minutes, getting down
low to his right to push the ball away after right back Leo Chambers had got
forward to play his part in the attack.
With 33 minutes on the clock West Ham should really have moved into a
three-goal lead, but James Collins could not get the ball out of his feet
inside the six yard box after James Tomkins rose well to nod Matt Taylor's
free kick back across goal. Cardiff had barely threatened, but right on half
time they got themselves back into the contest when Noone picked up
possession in the right channel, took a touch inside and blasted a
left-footed shot from 20 yards into the top left hand corner. The visitors
began the second period strongly too, and after Adrian touched a stinging
Jordon Mutch shot behind for a corner, he had to be alert again to block
Nicky Maynard's acrobatic volley from the corner. At the other end Lewis
tipped Jack Collison's fiercely-struck volley over the crossbar, before
preventing Jarvis from making the game safe by cutting out his cross-shot,
but Cardiff were growing in strength, and the impressive Noone could not
quite find the far corner after dancing his way into the Hammers box.
Fifteen minutes from the end they did find a way through for a second time,
with Odemwingie tapping home after Mutch's darting run into the danger area
dragged the Hammers defence out of position. After an opening 40 minutes of
such dominance, it came as a shock to the hosts to be brought back to level
pegging, and they had to regroup and come again. They did so in style,
securing their place in the last 16 of the competition with a Vaz Te header
two minutes from the end, the Hammers man crashing home from close range
after Collison clipped a perfect cross up to the far stick.
West Ham United: Adrian; Chambers, Collins, Tomkins, McCartney (Rat 82);
Morrison (Diame 59), Taylor, Collison; Vaz Te, Maiga (Petric 46), Jarvis
Subs: Henderson, Nolan, Ruddock, Moncur
Goals: Morrison 1, Jarvis 8, Vaz Te 88
Cardiff City: Lewis; Brayford (McNaughton 46), Hudson, Connolly, John;
Mutch, Cowie; Odemwingie, Mason (Smith 56), Noone; Maynard (Gestede 90+1)
Subs: Moore, Lappin, Harris, Healey
Goals: Noone 45, Odemwingie 75
Referee: Roger East
Attendance: 18,611
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Campo lauds centurion Sam
WHUFC.com
Former Spain international Ivan Campo congratulates Sam Allardyce on
reaching 100 games in charge
24.09.2013
When Sam Allardyce is asked which players have been the finest signings he
has ever made, Spain international Ivan Campo is always one of the first
names out of his mouth. Now, on the occasion of Big Sam's 100th game in
charge of West Ham United, the ex-Valencia, Real Madrid and Bolton Wanderers
midfielder has repaid the favour. Campo spent five seasons working with Big
Sam at Bolton after joining the Trotters in 2002. Campo, now 39 and living
in his native Spain, said the Hammers boss is a 'very special' coach who
made sure he settled into English football and life in this country
seamlessly. "I had a very special relationship with Sam because when I
first moved to Bolton from Madrid I was living by myself and Sam was not
just a very good coach, he was a very special friend to me," Campo confirmed
in an exclusive interview with whufc.com. "He helped me whenever I had any
problems off the pitch as well as on the pitch, he supported me and I
appreciated that. "When I was playing in Spain everything was different to
how life in the Premier League with Bolton and Sam Allardyce was. He helped
me to perfectly understand not just how to play football in England but to
understand and adapt to the way of life in England and that was very
important. "I could always speak very openly to Sam about personal problems
that I was having, that is what I appreciate most about him because he
helped me through my personal problems."
Campo, who won the UEFA Champions League with Real Madrid in 2000 and was in
the Spain squad at the 1998 FIFA World Cup finals, was one of a host of
big-name foreign players brought to Bolton by Big Sam. Nigeria star Jay-Jay
Okocha, France FIFA World Cup winner Youri Djorkaeff, Greece midfielder
Stelios Giannakopoulos, Senegal star El-Hadji Diouf and France defender
Bruno N'Gotty also turned out for the Trotters during Big Sam's memorable
seven-year spell in charge. Giannakopoulos, as well as former Bolton
team-mates Kevin Davies and Ricardo Gardner, have spoken to the Official
Programme for the Capital One Cup third-round visit of Cardiff City - Big
Sam's 100th game as West Ham manager. Campo is not surprised that his former
boss has made a successful start to life in east London. "For me, Sam is a
very special coach because he has very clear ideas about football and he
always wants what's best for his players," said the San Sebastian-born
holding midfielder. "Motivating players is very important and Sam knew how
to motivate everyone for every game to how to produce good performances from
us. At key points during the season it's crucial to get big performances
from your players and Sam could do that. "He's a lovely, lovely man. He is a
very good friend and an absolutely fantastic coach. It's very important in
football to be honest about performances, selection and tactics and Sam is a
very honest man. "When I was playing at Bolton with Sam as our coach we
celebrated many good times with the players, fans and the club and a lot of
that success was down to Sam."
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Beer we go
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 24th September 2013
By: Staff Writer
West Ham have announced a three-year partnership with a Danish brewing
company. The deal grants brewers Carlsberg exclusive "pouring rights" for
the company's "extensive beer and beverage portfolio" at the Boleyn Ground.
Carlsberg UK Director of Brands and Insight, David Scott, told whufc.com:
"Carlsberg is proud to be the Official Beer Partner of West Ham, a club with
a strong tradition and rich heritage like our own brand and company.
"Through continuing our partnership we will connect with West Ham United and
wider Premier League supporters at the Boleyn Ground and further cement our
position as the beer brand of football." The deal begins from the start of
the current season, expiring in 2016 when the Club moves to the Olympic
Stadium.
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West Ham edge five-goal thriller with Cardiff
Last Updated: September 24, 2013 10:04pm
SSN
West Ham United burst out of the blocks against Cardiff City, but were made
to work hard for a 3-2 win and a place in the fourth round of the Capital
One Cup.
Two goals inside the opening eight minutes from Ravel Morrison and Matt
Jarvis had the Hammers in complete control, but they required a dramatic
winner from Ricardo Vaz Te after Craig Noone and Peter Odemwingie had
levelled matters. There were just 19 seconds on the clock when Morrison
broke the deadlock, with the rejuvenated midfielder controlling a pass from
Jarvis before crashing high past Joe Lewis. Jarvis then grabbed the home
side's second himself, with luck very much on his side as a blocked shot
ricocheted off him and into the back of the net. There was nothing fortunate
about Noone's strike on the stroke of half-time, as he rifled into the top
corner, and Peter Odemwingie completed the Cardiff comeback when netting his
first goal for the club on 77 minutes. Just when it appeared as though the
tie would head past the 90 minute mark and into extra-time, Vaz Te popped up
for the Hammers to nod home a Jack Collison centre.
Drama
There was little sign of the drama to come when Morrison stunned the
visitors with a goal straight from their own kick-off in an amazing start to
Sam Allardyce's 100th match in charge. His first game as Hammers boss two
years ago was a home defeat by Cardiff, but any chance of repeat was already
looking unlikely. Morrison collected a through ball from Jarvis and ran at
stand-in City skipper Mark Hudson, cutting inside the centre-half before
lifting the ball over Joe Lewis and into the net. It was the former
Manchester United youngster's third goal in four starts for the Hammers, as
he continues to soften the blow of record signing Andy Carroll's absence
through injury. Jarvis doubled the lead following a slick move this time
started by Morrison, who spun away from John Brayford and knocked the ball
to Modibo Maiga on the byline. Maiga's first-time pass found Jarvis in front
of goal and despite two Cardiff defenders sliding in to block, the winger's
effort eventually rolled over the line. And the rampant hosts could, and
probably should, have had five or six before half-time.
Poked
Vaz Te saw a volley superbly palmed away by Lewis and, from the corner,
Collison found the ball at his feet in front of goal but poked it wide. The
much-maligned Maiga, still yet to score this season, then broke clear only
to drag his shot across goal, and Collins missed an open goal from three
yards after James Tomkins had headed Collison's cross back into his path.
And then, from out of nowhere, Cardiff pulled one back on the stroke of
half-time with their first attack of the game. There seemed little danger
when Noone collected the ball out on the right but the winger unleashed a
superb 20-yard curler with his left foot which flew past Hammers keeper
Adrian and into the net.
Cardiff looked a different team after the break and Jordan Mutch's swerving
effort produced an unconvincing save from Adrian before, from the corner,
former Hammer Nicky Maynard sent an overhead kick straight at the Spaniard.
And the equaliser came in the 76th minute when Mutch drove into the area and
crossed for Odemwingie to tap in his first goal since his infamous drive to
QPR failed to force a January move from West Brom. However Vaz Te, who
himself requested a transfer in the last window, had the final word when he
got his head onto Collison's cross to send the Hammers through.
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
Tuesday, September 24
Daily WHUFC News - 24th September 2013
Joey reflects on Everton setback
WHUFC.com
Joey O'Brien was in typically honest mood following Saturday's disappointing
home defeat
23.09.2013
Joey O'Brien was in typically honest mood following Saturday's disappointing
3-2 home Barclays Premier League defeat by Everton. The West Ham United
right-back left the Boleyn Ground with stitches in the back of his head
after challenging Toffees striker Romelu Lukaku as the Belgian powerhouse
nodded in the match-winning goal five minutes from time. The defeat was
difficult to take for West Ham, who had controlled the first half and went
into the final ten minutes leading 2-1. Then Mark Noble was sent-off for a
second bookable offence, Leighton Baines curled in his second magnificent
free-kick of the game and Lukaku thundered home Everton's winner. "It was
very disappointing," said the No17. "I don't think we created an awful lot
of chances, but I thought in the first half we were the better side really.
"In the second half they improved their team with a couple of changes
[bringing on Lukaku and James McCarthy], but to get done by two free-kicks
and losing a player to a red card in the build up to the second one was
always going to make it hard with the players that they have and that led to
their third."
While Baines' set pieces were of the highest order, West Ham have now
conceded three goals from direct free-kicks in their last two home games
following Jermaine Pennant's match-winner for Stoke City. O'Brien admitted
that the Hammers need to stop giving free-kicks away within shooting range
to prevent the same scenario from happening again. However, he refused to
blame Noble for Saturday's defeat. "Of course in an ideal world that would
be the thing to do, but in the heat of the moment, when players are going
through players make decisions and if they think that they are going to get
shots away, that is the reason they are trying to make those tackles. But
when the ball then flies into the top corner, it is hard to take. "Of course
[Noble's sending-off was pivotal] and they had the momentum with their two
free-kicks as well as us going down to ten men. The way they play, with a
lot of possession, certainly frustrates you, and with only ten men it makes
it even more difficult. "We have conceded four goals this season and three
of those have been from free kicks. It is just one of those things at the
moment."
O'Brien himself saw a change in roles on Saturday, moving from left to
right-back in place of the injured Guy Demel. As a natural right-footer, the
Irishman had no trouble settling back into a position he has filled many
times before during his career. I have been training there all week as I
knew it was coming after the injury to Guy. It was grand. There are perhaps
always a couple of moments in games where I was slightly out of position,
but I am trying to get back into the swing of things."
Looking ahead, O'Brien may be rested for Tuesday's Capital One Cup
third-round visit of Cardiff City, but he is already determined to get back
to winning ways in the Barclays Premier League at Hull City on Saturday.
There, he could come up against fellow Dubliner Robbie Brady, with the
winger enjoying a fine start to the season. "It is a massive game at Hull
City on Saturday and we will be going up there to get three points and
bounce back."
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Big Sam on: Cardiff City
WHUFC.com
The West Ham United manager has spoken to the press ahead of Tuesday's
meeting with Cardiff
23.09.2013
Sam Allardyce will celebrate his 100th game in charge of West Ham United
when Cardiff City visit the Boleyn Ground for a Capital One Cup third round
tie on Tuesday. The Hammers manager spoke to the press to preview his side's
second meeting with Cardiff in a little over a month. It's a landmark game
for you tomorrow night against Cardiff, your 100th game in charge.
Your record is played 99, won 42, drawn 27 and lost 30, how proud are you of
that record?
SA: "Obviously I'm very pleased with the record we had in the Barclays
Premier League last year and the year before we were expected to do well in
the Championship. If you look at the stats for how many teams are promoted
the season after they were relegated you'll find that there are very few,
around 20 per cent who actually manage it. We've done everything that we
said we would do, not just me and the backroom staff, but also the Chairman
and the Vice-Chairman and everyone else behind the scenes. "We set out with
the plan to get promoted in the first year, we did that. The second year we
planned to stay up and in the end we surpassed expectations and finished
tenth. Now we've got to bring a sustainable balance to the squad which is
going to keep us in the Premier League for many, many years. We need to grow
slowly, it's probably unacceptable in today's football but we have to
convince everybody that growing slowly is the right way. It sustains the
ability to get better and better and when you do that you are then able to
achieve more and you can start looking at bigger things."
You made eleven changes in the last round against Cheltenham, will you do
the same for Cardiff?
SA: "We will make some changes. We're in a difficult position with our
points total which we're very disappointed that we haven't achieved more. We
had a huge blow to us on Saturday losing the game against Everton which we
didn't deserve, but that happens. This is a ruthless league and if you don't
do what you should do then it ends up punishing you. "I watched Norwich
versus Aston Villa before our game and Chris Hughton will have been
absolutely gutted when he woke up to review that game and saw how many
chances they had to bury Aston Villa, they didn't and ended up losing. In
our case it wasn't quite like that because we had the lead twice but Mr
Baines was on top form. I don't think he's ever scored two in a game,
particularly like he did. Our fault came in giving the free-kicks away,
that's where the responsibility lies for us. All the lads know about his
quality, everybody does, the ordinary supporter in the stand knows. The last
thing you do is commit fouls and give them free-kicks in dangerous areas, we
did that twice and got punished heavily."
Will Joe Cole and Stewart Downing feature against Cardiff?
SA: "No they won't feature in this game. I would have loved the match to be
next week rather than this week as they both would have played. They won't
be involved on Tuesday because both of them are only due back in training
with the other players on Monday and putting them into what will be a hugely
competitive game has come too early for them. It will be a hugely
competitive match because there will be a lot of players out there who will
be trying to convince both myself and Malky [Mackay, Cardiff manager] that
they should be playing in the first team on a more regular basis."
You've reached the 100 game mark here, something which is becoming rarer in
today's climate. Are you proud when you reach a landmark like this?
SA: "I enjoy working in football and have enjoyed it for so many years now
that it's the only thing I really know. When you're in the job you're
obviously fearful of getting the sack. It's a survival game no matter what
anybody says, particularly for young managers. They've got to learn how to
survive and then evolve. When you reach 100 games and people say well done,
it worries me. If it's 300 games or 400 games, fine, but 100 games should be
more commonplace than it is. The constant change of managers which we're now
faced with has turned reaching 100 games into a bit of an achievement. For
me, that's pretty disappointing that in our professional leagues we change
managers so much."
You've had a good result against Cardiff already this season and since then
they've shown some resilience. Are they a side in the mould of their
manager?
SA: "I think that Malky and his staff do a really good job in terms of
playing to their strengths and organising the team. He's learnt over his
time at Watford and now at Cardiff that his job is about results and using
his squad to the best of their ability. When we played them at our place,
him, his team and his players have adjusted very quickly to life in the
Premier League. "We won that game comfortably on the day but since then
they've reorganised themselves and had some fantastic results. Malky's done
a great job, his team are well organised and they know what's expected of
them. We had a tough match against Cheltenham in the last round and I'm
expecting another tough game against Cardiff."
Mladen Petric made a positive impact from the bench on Saturday. Will he
start against Cardiff?
SA: "I don't think a start because we're talking about a player who's only
had half-an-hour in a highly competitive game in the Barclays Premier
League. The physicality is greater than anywhere else in the world and he's
only in week two of his pre-season. Normally he would be playing 45 minutes
against Cork City but instead he's had 30 minutes against Everton so he's
feeling the stresses and strains of that. We have to be careful because we
don't want him to get injured, but he will be in the squad."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Cardiff
KO 19:45
23 September 2013
Last updated at 12:51
CAPITAL ONE CUP THIRD ROUND
Venue: Upton Park Date: Tuesday, 24 September
Coverage: Watch highlights on The League Cup Show on Wednesday at 23:05 BST,
BBC One.
West Ham midfielders Joe Cole (hamstring) and Stewart Downing (knee) will
not feature as they have only just returned to training after injury. Mark
Noble will also definitely be absent as he serves a one-match ban. Like
Hammers' manager Sam Allardyce, Cardiff boss Malky Mackay will also rotate
his squad.
New signing Peter Odemwingie could make his first start but Andreas
Cornelius is still struggling with an ankle injury picked up in the last
round.
MATCH PREVIEW
West Ham and Cardiff go into Tuesday's League Cup tie locked together in the
Premier League, with both teams having won one, drawn two and lost two of
their five league matches so far. In fact, the only difference lies in the
goals conceded column, where Cardiff have let in two more than the Hammers -
goals that can be traced back to their 2-0 defeat at Upton Park on the
opening day of the season. West Ham's only subsequent win was against League
Two Cheltenham in this competition, and they have suffered home defeats to
both Stoke and Everton. The League Cup has been bitter-sweet for Cardiff in
recent years. The Welsh club reached the final in 2012, only to suffer the
heartbreak of losing to Liverpool in a penalty shoot-out. And they fell at
the first hurdle last year, with League Two side Northampton dumping them
out.
MATCH FACTS
Head-to-head
The two sides have met five times before in the League Cup, including in
1966, when West Ham won the two-legged semi-final 10-3 on aggregate and went
on to lift the trophy.
West Ham have won the last four meetings with Cardiff in all competitions,
including the Premier League meeting between the two sides in August.
West Ham
The Hammers have won eight of their last 10 League Cup matches played at
Upton Park (W8, L2).
This match will be Sam Allardyce's 100th in charge of West Ham. His record
so far is P99, W42, D27, L30
West Ham have not won any of their last four league matches (D2, L2).
Cardiff
Cardiff have won just one of their last seven away games in all competitions
(W1, D4, L2).
The Welsh side have lost both their matches against London clubs so far this
season.
They have won just one of their last 12 League Cup clashes against
top-flight sides (including replays), with that victory (against Blackburn)
coming on their way to reaching the 2012 final.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Paolo Di Canio: Sam Allardyce says sacking was 'knee jerk'
BBC.co.uk
West Ham boss Sam Allardyce believes Sunderland have made a knee-jerk
decision by sacking Paolo Di Canio. Italian Di Canio, 45, was dismissed as
Black Cats manager on Sunday after only five Premier League games this
season. The former Swindon boss was appointed in March to replace Martin
O'Neill.
Di Canio's journey
Born in Rome, 9 July 1968
Played in Italy for Lazio, Juventus, Napoli, AC Milan, Cisco Roma
Played in Britain for Celtic, Sheffield Wednesday, West Ham and Charlton
Fined £10,000 in 1998 by the FA for pushing referee Paul Alcock to the
ground after being sent off against Arsenal
Wins Fifa Fair Play award for sportsmanship in 2001 for catching ball and
stopping play v Everton to allow injured keeper Paul Gerrard to receive
treatment
Criticised in 2005 for making fascist-style salute in Lazio game
Appointed Swindon boss in May 2011; guides them into League One a year later
Resigns as Swindon boss in February 2013 citing issues with the club's
hierarchy after sale of star player Matt Ritchie
Replaces Martin O'Neill as Sunderland boss in March 2013; club avoid
relegation
Sacked after four defeats in five league games of 2013-14
"If it doesn't go well they seem to be making a knee-jerk decision to change
the manager," said Allardyce, who left Newcastle in 2008 after eight months
by mutual consent. None of Sunderland's last four managers, Ricky Sbragia,
Steve Bruce, O'Neill and Di Canio, have lasted 100 games - which is the
landmark Allardyce will achieve at West Ham on Tuesday when they face
Cardiff. "They've been pretty quick at pulling the trigger recently, in the
last three managers," continued the ex-Bolton boss. Di Canio won only three
of his 13 matches after replacing O'Neill and took one point from five
top-flight games this campaign.
Sunderland had brought in 14 new players in the summer with Di Canio working
with director of football Roberto De Fanti and chief scout Valentino
Angeloni on their transfers. "I find it very difficult to see where the
logic lies in it, particularly when there has been a full clear-out [of
backroom staff]," said Allardyce. "To go through that process in a
particular season which has got under way is a huge task for whoever is
going to be the next head coach."
Di Canio immediately attracted controversy following his appointment in
March but Sunderland narrowly avoided relegation last season, thanks partly
to a famous 3-0 win over Newcastle - their first victory at St James' Park
over over their local rivals in 13 years. However, public criticism of his
squad at the end of last season was followed by bans on mobile phones,
tomato ketchup, mayonnaise and ice in Coca-Cola at the club's training
ground. After Saturday's 3-0 loss to West Brom, Di Canio was verbally abused
by travelling supporters and further criticism of his players led to anger
among the squad. Allardyce believes the controversial manager may have to
change his style if he is to return to the Premier League. "The man says
he's not going to change and I think you are what you are," he said. "You've
got to be true to yourself; if that's your style, that's your style. If it
doesn't work you've got to hold your hands up and say, 'it might have worked
at Swindon but in the Premier League it hasn't worked'. "You have to look at
yourself and say, 'if I get the next job do I do it like that or don't I?'"
Former Blackburn boss Allardyce believes managers should be given more time
to settle in at clubs but fears management has now become about just
surviving. "What you fear for is the sack, obviously, and it is a survival
game," said the Hammers manager. "Particularly the young managers who come
in, you've to learn how to survive and then evolve. "When it is seen to be
100 games well done, it really does worry me. If it's 300 games or 400
games, fine. But 100 games? "This should be more often across the board than
it is now because of the constant changing of managers and coaches that we
are now faced with, that 100 games is now something of an achievement. For
me, I think that is pretty disappointing."
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Nice one, centurion
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Staff Writer
Sam Allardyce celebrates what will be his 100th game in charge of West Ham
when his team faces Cardiff City tomorrow night. The Welsh club return to
the Boelyn Ground for the second time this season after they were beaten 2-0
on the opening day of the campaign - West Ham's only Premier League win so
far.
For Allardyce, who succeeded Avram Grant in the summer of 2011, it will be
the 100th occasion on which he leads his team out - and a spell which, all
things considered, Allardyce considers to be a successful one. "I'm very
pleased with the record we had in the Premier League last year, the year
before we were expected to do well in the Championship," he said. "We've
done everything that we said we would do. "We set out with the plan to get
promoted in the first year, we did that. The second year we planned to stay
up and in the end we surpassed expectations and finished tenth. Now we've
got to bring a sustainable balance to the squad which is going to keep us in
the Premier League for many, many years. "It's probably unacceptable in
today's football but we have to convince everybody that growing slowly is
the right way. It sustains the ability to get better and better and when you
do that you are then able to achieve more and you can start looking at
bigger things."
Yet despit having reached the milestone, Allardyce maintains that his
biggest fear remains getting the sack. "I enjoy working in football and have
enjoyed it for so many years now that it's the only thing I really know -
but when you're in the job you're fearful of getting the sack," he revealed.
It's a survival game no matter what anybody says, particularly for young
managers. "When you reach 100 games and people say well done, it worries
me. If it's 300 or 400 games fine, but 100 games should be more commonplace
than it is. The constant change of managers which we're now faced with has
turned reaching 100 games into a bit of an achievement."
Sam's Five Finest
5. West Ham Utd 6-0 Brighton: Fellow promotion candicates Albion came to the
Boleyn at the back end of the 2011/12 campaign and were blitzed by a
six-goal drubbing; chief architect being Ricardo Vaz Te whose hat-trick
included an overhead kick.
4. West Ham Utd 1-0 Aston Villa: The first game back in the Premir League is
always a nervy occasion. Featuring new signings such as James Collins and
Jussi Jaaskelainen, this was the perfect start as Allardyce got everything
right tactically.
3. Blackpool 1-4 West Ham Utd: The demolition of a side who were, at the
time, our promotion rivals. 2-1 up when Rob Green was (incorrectly)
dismissed, Henri Lansbury took his place as the ten men added further goals
through Gary O'Neil and Ricardo Vaz Te.
2. West Ham Utd 2-1 Blackpool: A nervy, less than convincing performance at
Wembley - at last! - but still the best day out long-suffering Hammers fans
have had in years. Ricardo Vaz Te is immortalised as Big Sam is spotted
singing 'Bubbles' on the big screen.
1. West Ham Utd 3-1 Chelsea: A simply stunning second half performance from
the Hammers as they recorded a first win over the Blues for a decade. We
were that good, even Modibo Maiga got himself on the scoresheet.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Paolo pushed
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Staff Writer
Former West Ham favourite Paolo Di Canio has been sacked from his post as
manager of fellow Premier League club Sunderland. The 44-year-old Italian,
who spent five years at West Ham between 1998 and 2003 has received his
marching orders less after just 13 games in charge at the Stadium of Light.
A statement on the Black Cats' website late last night confirmed that Di
Canio had been given the push. "Sunderland AFC confirms that it has parted
company with head coach Paolo Di Canio this evening," it said. "Kevin Ball
will take charge of the squad ahead of Tuesday night's Capital One Cup game
against Peterborough United and an announcement will be made in due course
regarding a permanent successor. "The club would like to place on record its
thanks to Paolo and his staff and wishes them well for the future."
It is believed that Di Canio, whose unique management methods previously
ruffled feathers at Swindon was fired after a training ground bust-up with
some of his first team players. That followed a dreadful start to the season
for the Wearsiders, who currently sit bottom of the Premier League having
amasseda total of just one point from their opening five fixtures. News of
Di Canio's sacking comes almost exactly a decade after Glenn Roeder - who Di
Canio was a fierce critic of during his time as a player - was sacked by
West Ham, having failed to maintain the Club's Premiership status.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United v Cardiff City
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Preview Percy
Preview Percy has written another preview about Cardiff City. It's just as
bad as the previous one. Let's hope and pray we don't get them in the FA Cup
as well....
Next up we play host to Cardiff City in the 3rd round of the League Cup.
Kick off on Tuesday night is 7.45pm and I believe that the usual requirement
for Cardiff supporters to pick up their tickets from a disused, uncharted
and unlit North Sea oil rig by 3am has been dispensed with. As ever in this
competition, extra time and penalties are available to settle matters on the
night should they be required. Don't wait up luv.
League form in their first visit to the to flight for a jolly long time has
been patchy. They looked a bit overawed on the opening day as we coasted to
a relatively easy 2-0 victory. This was followed up by an unexpected 3-2 win
over Man City at the City of Cardiff stadium, a match in which the Citizens
gave a whole new meaning to the word "complacent". Draws at home to Everton
(0-0) and away to Hull (1-1) gave them a three match unbeaten run which came
to an end at the weekend with a stoppage time defeat to Spurs. All of which
has left them in one place behind us, level on points and two goals worse
off on the goal difference front. In the previous round of this particular
competition they went up to Accrington and won 2-0.
Like us they can claim to have suffered at the hands of the referee this
weekend, Loris's handball outside the box was close enough for Clattenburg
to get the benefit of the doubt in that case. Spurs went on to have some
silly number of efforts on goal before finally winning in stoppage time.
On decent form in the Spurs match was 'keeper David Marshall. Marshall has
been first choice in the league so far this season, though he did miss out
on a trip to Hull with a hip injury. Let's face it which one of us wouldn't
feign some sort of injury to avoid a trip to Humberside? In the modern style
Joe Lewis was preferred to Marshall for the League Cup trip so we should
probably expect that again.
It is thought that the match may see a first start for Peter Odemwinge. He's
been about this lad hasn't he. The place where he was born – Tashkent. –
used to be part of the USSR. By the time he was 10 it was part of
Uzbekistan. His early career was spent in the youth systems of KAMAZ and
CSKA but he went to Nigeria (his father's birthplace) to play for his first
grown-up club, the wonderfully named Bendel Insurance. From there he went to
Belgium, winning the Belgian Cup with La Louviere. His next trip was from
Belgium (where they speak French even though they don't have to) to France
(where they do), spending three years or so at Lille. Next stop was a return
to the former USSR where Lokomotiv Moscow were his employers for a few
years. The knobhead racist element of the Moscow support celebrated his
departure for West Brom with banners saying "Thanks West Brom".
Even though his passport stamps read USSR, Nigeria, Belgium, France, Russia
and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, it is a rather
more prosaic journey for which he became noted, journeying down the M6 where
he was under the mistaken impression that he had a deal to join QPR. I can't
imagine for the life of me how he might have come about that impression.
After all, it's not as if their manager would have had any illegal contact
with the player or his agents, is it? The journey saw him stuck in the car
park with everyone at QPR hiding behind the curtains pretending not to be
in, prompting chants of "he went to QPR, they left him in his car" and "what
a waste of petrol" from opposition fans at the end of last season. He
eventually left the Hawthorns on deadline day for Cardiff and is presumably
disappointed that he didn't get another stamp in his passport, having been
persuaded by Cardiff that Wales was a proper country, rather than just
somewhere England keeps the mountains that there wasn't room for in
Scotland.
Record signing (for a few days anyway) Andreas Cornelius is likely to miss
out. He had ankle issues during pre-season and had the bad fortune to
exacerbate his injury early on in the Accrington match in the last round.
This may mean a start for ex-Hammer Nicky Maynard. Maynard was on the bench
against Spurs and remained unused. So his will be one of the fresher pairs
of legs available to Malky Mackay, given the mere 48 hours or so between the
end of Sunday's match and the start of this one.
One player I simply have to mention, irrespective of whether or not Mackay
chooses to start him is French defender Kevin Theophile-Catherine who is
currently leading the Avram Grant Olympic Rest Home for the Bewildered
competition for "Most Splendidly-Named Opponent". Theophile-Catherine
(brilliant isn't it) came in just before the deadline from Rennes for a fee
of a shade over £2m, most of which will be recouped as soon as one or two
supporters decide to stick his name on the back of their shirts.
Us? Well here at the Avram Grant Rest Olympic Rest Home or the Bewildered
were frankly gobsmacked at the refereeing at the weekend. Lee Mason gave the
impression that he belonged in one of the padded rooms they have here for
the more "difficult" residents. Ron Vibbentropp, our German resident,
reckons that back in his home country a panel reviews every refereeing
decision and those referees who fail to consistently score a high average
find themselves going down the leagues. It's all open and clear to all,
unlike our own PGMOL, who are responsible for their own marking and hide the
results from everyone, thus ensuring that the likes of Mason don't get what
they deserve. In Mason's case that would be a long stay in Guantnamo Bay
being forced to listen to Bon Jovi 24 hours a day.
In truth, Lukaku's introduction was the catalyst for Everton's revival but I
reckon we would have deserved the point stolen from us by Mason's dishonesty
on the strength of the first half performance.. Thankfully the moronic
decision to send off Noble wasn't more costly. He'll only miss this game –
which he would probably have been rested for anyway.
We may see a start for Petric as he attempts to gin a bit of match fitness.
It was his hard work that led to the penalty and he has to be a better bet
than Maiga who appears to veer between interested and not bothered at the
drop of a hat.
Squad rotation may see us start with a similar side to that which saw off
Cheltenham, especially when you consider the injury list which contains the
likes of Cole, Downing, Demel, Downing and Carroll. So maybe it's time for
another run out for Leo Chambers perhaps? I'd certainly expect to see Adrian
to be given a run out – with possibly Henderson sitting on the racing car in
the squad last time seats to give Jaaskalainen a night off.
Other youngsters who were in the squad for the last round included Seb
Lletget – for whom the editors have been saving the headline "Lletget's
ready to rumble" for several years now - and Elliot Lee for whom they'll
have to be more creative, so expect a similar bench this time round.
Prediction? Well as ever with this competition much will depend on how
strong a team the respective managers elect to put out. I'd fancy us to win
comfortably if the respective first teams were fielded. However, the
permutations are pretty flexibe on both sides – though with the relatively
short time since their match against Spurs you'd have though that there'd be
a few rested. I'll still plump for a win though and I'll be putting the
AGORHFTB Lee Mason Straitjacket Fund (£2.50) on us to win 2-1 though don't
be too surprised if it all goes to extra time.
Enjoy the game!
When Last We Met At The Boleyn – Won 2-0 August 2013. Joe Cole in the first
half and Kevin Nolan in the second sealed the points. Blimey if you can't
remember that maybe you should be here at the rest home instead of me! I
mean I only mentioned it up there near the top of the page. Do try to pay
attention.
Referee: Roger East – last seen in our 6-0 defeat of Brighton the season
before last, when he booked Carlton Cole (who is famous) for complaining,
rather than the defender who was kicking him (who wasn't famous).
Danger Man: Nicky Maynard – difficult to predict a danger man when you have
little idea what side the opponents will put out. The "law of the ex" will
apply assuming Maynard gets the nod.
Daft Welsh Fact Of The Week: The current incarnation of Dr Who is largely
filmed in the Welsh capital. Bit of an obvious location really when you
think about it – all that strange unearthly barren scenery and a strange
almost but not quite human-like population, whose origins are betrayed by
the strange alien tongue that they insist on writing half the road signs in.
I bet they think it's a documentary down there.
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At least we are not Sunderland
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Paul Walker
Five games into the Premier League campaign and we are struggling. No it's
not a crisis yet, and the time now is for calm, patience and strong nerve.
Thankfully we are not Sunderland. Now there is a crisis, a full-blown
shambles. Millions spent on a new squad, new manager, new staff etc, etc,
etc. And our old mate Paolo Di Canio gets the boot five games into the
season. Anyone surprised? No , me neither.
Di Canio's style has been described as "management by hand grenade". You may
be able to get away with that at Swindon when substituting goalkeepers
before half-time, falling out with your players and lashing them in the
media can be dismissed as erratic and comical.
Do that with a squad of 20-something millionaires and you are dead in the
water. Sunderland knew what they were taking on, something our own board
declined to do even though, so says Ms. Brady, Di Canio did keep ringing the
club asking to be given a chance.
I recall the clamour from fans for Paolo to be appointed our manager. But I
always sensed that it was romance against reality. A few of our West
Ham-supporting journalists wrote pieces at the time warning of the devil we
didn't really know. Di Canio was high risk, high maintenance and highly
likely to explode at any minute. Too much of a risk, as Sunderland have
discovered.
Hands up out there anyone who secretly wanted Paolo to succeed at Sunderland
so he would one day march back into the Boleyn. Hands up those who thought
he could handle a Premier League club.
Hands up anyone who wants him back now. Not so many as before, I bet.
And it's a generational thing. My match day mates are all half my age, they
remember him as the great entertainer. My own son has named his Dalmatian
dog, Paolo. The dog is lovable, beautiful to behold at full speed, crazy as
a box of frogs and hugely unpredictable. Remind you of anyone?
When Paolo was at his peak at West Ham, I was working in the north and
heavily involved with big clubs there that win things. I barely had time to
get to the Boleyn those days. I only saw my beloved Irons when they came
north for their ritual beatings at Manchester United, Liverpool, Everton
etc. And in fact I rarely saw our Italian then either, because of his
obvious dislike for cold, wet northern grounds (so why go to Sunderland).
I did manage to wangle covering the FA Cup third round defeat at Tranmere in
1999, when Di Canio had managed to negotiate his way that far north. The
pitch was bare, bumpy and the day cold and bleak. We were awful and Paolo
was a waste of space.
I recall talking to Redknapp after the press conference that day, he
shrugged and was resigned to such a performance. Then there was the famous
"catching the ball" trick at Everton when their goalkeeper was injured.
Redknapp said all the right things about sportsmanship in that press
conference, but talking to him as we walked down the stairs together after
that match, and 'arry's view was very different. Basically, put the ball in
the net and then worry about their 'keeper.
The erratic side of Di Canio gets lost in the misty eyed memories of his
breathtaking talent. I also recall being in a Cardiff 'Aussie' bar on the
Sunday that Di Canio scored that amazing goal against Wimbledon. The place
was almost empty, apart from the professional afternoon drinkers, and there
I was jumping around screaming 'you beauty' at the TV screen on the wall,
almost begging the drunks to watch the replays!.
So I do understand the appeal of the man, the thrill of his talent and the
passion he showed us for the game. But, my God, he is a liability.
Our owners could have taken the plunge with Di Canio, and who knows what
would have happened. Di Canio certainly wouldn't have been able to predict
anything, such is his nature and desire for the unexpected.
Our owners must be happy now they did not go down that road. Now I know
Paolo is a hero at the Boleyn, a stunning, gifted footballer who brought
entertainment and joy on many a damp, cold, east London day.
And I know this will not go down well with plenty of our fans, but you must
have guessed by now that somewhere along the line I did not go for the Paolo
for Pope routine. There was too much baggage, too many things that went
wrong and far too much of the me, me, me character in the Italian.
We went down with him in the side - or to be accurate, we went down with him
home in Italy having fallen out with Glenn Roeder. Frankly, inexcusable
behaviour from a professional. He may not have liked the manager, but his
job was to play for the club. And too often he didn't.
Frequently we now see the amazing cameo of the game when he demanded that
'arry should take him off because he didn't like the referee. There were
times in that game when Paolo was playing in his own panto, oblivious of the
game going on around him.
Redknapp has made something of a living with amusing recollections of Di
Canio's antics and maybe in the pantomime that was Redknapp's management
style at Upton Park, it all fitted in. But a few seasons down the line, we
were relegated with a side that included Di Canio, Trevor Sinclair, Jermain
Defoe, Michael Carrick, David James, Glen Johnson, Joe Cole and Freddi
Kanoute in the side. An unforgivable shambles with such talent.
That season, Di Canio played when he felt like it. Trevor Brooking had to
almost go on bended knee to get him back into the team. And we still went
down. Now it is Sunderland picking up the pieces from the car crash. What do
they do with the 14 players he signed, the Italian agents he has worked
with, the Italian coaches and scouts on the pay-roll?
All this has hit us with the backdrop of our own less than stunning last
couple of weeks. The Andy Carroll saga rolls on. We can't get Carlton Cole
fit and have expensive people like Joe Cole and Stewart Downing on the
sidelines. Claims that we are a one-trick pony (Carroll) are hard to argue
against.
Successive home defeats to Stoke, a truly terrible game, and Everton - where
we were winning with 15 minutes left - has left us with a growing cloud over
our season. But it is not that bad.
If you compare like-on-like results to last season (and substitute QPR at
home for Cardiff), we are just two points down on last term. We drew at home
to relegated QPR and beat Cardiff on the opening day. We won last term at
Newcastle and drew this time, we drew with Stoke and lost this time around
while we lost to Everton last season as well
You could hear the moaning as we all walked back down Wakefield Street on
Saturday about Sam, tactics, transfers, style of play. It puts immense
pressure on us to get something at Hull, with tough games against Spurs,
Manchester City and Swansea to come next.
But it's not a crisis, not yet. But Sunderland, well are you glad you are
not in their boots. And maybe the clamour for Di Canio will take on a more
realistic look.
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Sam Allardyce proud of West Ham record ahead of 100th game
Last Updated: September 23, 2013 6:08pm
SSN
Sam Allardyce has declared himself proud of his West Ham record, ahead of
his 100th game in charge. The former Bolton and Blackburn boss reaches his
century on Tuesday when Cardiff visit Upton Park in the third round of the
Capital One Cup. A lone win has made for a difficult start to the new league
campaign but having secured promotion and then a top-10 finish back in the
Premier League, the 58-year-old is pleased with his overall achievements.
"Obviously I'm very pleased with the record we had in the Premier League
last year and the year before we were expected to do well in the
Championship," he said. "If you look at the stats for how many teams are
promoted the season after they were relegated you'll find that there are
very few, around 20 per cent who actually manage it. "We've done everything
that we said we would do, not just me and the backroom staff, but also the
chairman and the vice-chairman and everyone else behind the scenes. "We set
out with the plan to get promoted in the first year - we did that. The
second year we planned to stay up and in the end we surpassed expectations
and finished 10th. "Now we've got to bring a sustainable balance to the
squad which is going to keep us in the Premier League for many, many years.
It's probably unacceptable in today's football but we have to convince
everybody that growing slowly is the right way."
Allardyce, who has also managed at Blackpool, Notts County and Newcastle,
lamented the fact that managing a club for 100 games has now become a
celebrated achievement. Speaking after Paolo Di Canio became the first
Premier League casualty of the season, he added: "If it's 300 games or 400
games, fine, but 100 games should be more commonplace than it is. "The
constant change of managers which we're now faced with has turned reaching
100 games into a bit of an achievement. For me, that's pretty
disappointing."
Allardyce has already masterminded a league victory over Cardiff but expects
a tough test. "Malky (Mackay's) done a great job; his team are well
organised and they know what's expected of them. "We had a tough match
against Cheltenham in the last round and I'm expecting another tough game
against Cardiff."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mladen Petric confident he can get goals for West Ham
Last Updated: September 23, 2013 11:42am
SSN
Mladen Petric believes he can help to cover Andy Carroll's absence at West
Ham United and carry the goal-scoring burden. The Hammers remain without the
services of their record signing as he continues to nurse a foot complaint.
It is possible that Carroll will be out of action until January, leaving Sam
Allardyce short on attacking options. He has moved to bolster his ranks with
the capture of former Fulham frontman Petric as a free agent, and the
Croatian made his debut off the bench in Saturday's 3-2 defeat to Everton.
The 32-year-old is a proven marksman at domestic and international level and
is confident he can make an important contribution at Upton Park. Petric
said: "I am a striker and I want to score. I hope I can help the team not
only scoring goals, but in the games. "I feel I am getting better every day
and I'm sure I can help the team." Allardyce said of a player who is still
working on his match sharpness: "He's been tired and had aching limbs. "But
with a lot of massage and ice baths he's got through it well. We'll see him
again against Cardiff (in the Capital One Cup) on Tuesday."
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
WHUFC.com
Joey O'Brien was in typically honest mood following Saturday's disappointing
home defeat
23.09.2013
Joey O'Brien was in typically honest mood following Saturday's disappointing
3-2 home Barclays Premier League defeat by Everton. The West Ham United
right-back left the Boleyn Ground with stitches in the back of his head
after challenging Toffees striker Romelu Lukaku as the Belgian powerhouse
nodded in the match-winning goal five minutes from time. The defeat was
difficult to take for West Ham, who had controlled the first half and went
into the final ten minutes leading 2-1. Then Mark Noble was sent-off for a
second bookable offence, Leighton Baines curled in his second magnificent
free-kick of the game and Lukaku thundered home Everton's winner. "It was
very disappointing," said the No17. "I don't think we created an awful lot
of chances, but I thought in the first half we were the better side really.
"In the second half they improved their team with a couple of changes
[bringing on Lukaku and James McCarthy], but to get done by two free-kicks
and losing a player to a red card in the build up to the second one was
always going to make it hard with the players that they have and that led to
their third."
While Baines' set pieces were of the highest order, West Ham have now
conceded three goals from direct free-kicks in their last two home games
following Jermaine Pennant's match-winner for Stoke City. O'Brien admitted
that the Hammers need to stop giving free-kicks away within shooting range
to prevent the same scenario from happening again. However, he refused to
blame Noble for Saturday's defeat. "Of course in an ideal world that would
be the thing to do, but in the heat of the moment, when players are going
through players make decisions and if they think that they are going to get
shots away, that is the reason they are trying to make those tackles. But
when the ball then flies into the top corner, it is hard to take. "Of course
[Noble's sending-off was pivotal] and they had the momentum with their two
free-kicks as well as us going down to ten men. The way they play, with a
lot of possession, certainly frustrates you, and with only ten men it makes
it even more difficult. "We have conceded four goals this season and three
of those have been from free kicks. It is just one of those things at the
moment."
O'Brien himself saw a change in roles on Saturday, moving from left to
right-back in place of the injured Guy Demel. As a natural right-footer, the
Irishman had no trouble settling back into a position he has filled many
times before during his career. I have been training there all week as I
knew it was coming after the injury to Guy. It was grand. There are perhaps
always a couple of moments in games where I was slightly out of position,
but I am trying to get back into the swing of things."
Looking ahead, O'Brien may be rested for Tuesday's Capital One Cup
third-round visit of Cardiff City, but he is already determined to get back
to winning ways in the Barclays Premier League at Hull City on Saturday.
There, he could come up against fellow Dubliner Robbie Brady, with the
winger enjoying a fine start to the season. "It is a massive game at Hull
City on Saturday and we will be going up there to get three points and
bounce back."
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Big Sam on: Cardiff City
WHUFC.com
The West Ham United manager has spoken to the press ahead of Tuesday's
meeting with Cardiff
23.09.2013
Sam Allardyce will celebrate his 100th game in charge of West Ham United
when Cardiff City visit the Boleyn Ground for a Capital One Cup third round
tie on Tuesday. The Hammers manager spoke to the press to preview his side's
second meeting with Cardiff in a little over a month. It's a landmark game
for you tomorrow night against Cardiff, your 100th game in charge.
Your record is played 99, won 42, drawn 27 and lost 30, how proud are you of
that record?
SA: "Obviously I'm very pleased with the record we had in the Barclays
Premier League last year and the year before we were expected to do well in
the Championship. If you look at the stats for how many teams are promoted
the season after they were relegated you'll find that there are very few,
around 20 per cent who actually manage it. We've done everything that we
said we would do, not just me and the backroom staff, but also the Chairman
and the Vice-Chairman and everyone else behind the scenes. "We set out with
the plan to get promoted in the first year, we did that. The second year we
planned to stay up and in the end we surpassed expectations and finished
tenth. Now we've got to bring a sustainable balance to the squad which is
going to keep us in the Premier League for many, many years. We need to grow
slowly, it's probably unacceptable in today's football but we have to
convince everybody that growing slowly is the right way. It sustains the
ability to get better and better and when you do that you are then able to
achieve more and you can start looking at bigger things."
You made eleven changes in the last round against Cheltenham, will you do
the same for Cardiff?
SA: "We will make some changes. We're in a difficult position with our
points total which we're very disappointed that we haven't achieved more. We
had a huge blow to us on Saturday losing the game against Everton which we
didn't deserve, but that happens. This is a ruthless league and if you don't
do what you should do then it ends up punishing you. "I watched Norwich
versus Aston Villa before our game and Chris Hughton will have been
absolutely gutted when he woke up to review that game and saw how many
chances they had to bury Aston Villa, they didn't and ended up losing. In
our case it wasn't quite like that because we had the lead twice but Mr
Baines was on top form. I don't think he's ever scored two in a game,
particularly like he did. Our fault came in giving the free-kicks away,
that's where the responsibility lies for us. All the lads know about his
quality, everybody does, the ordinary supporter in the stand knows. The last
thing you do is commit fouls and give them free-kicks in dangerous areas, we
did that twice and got punished heavily."
Will Joe Cole and Stewart Downing feature against Cardiff?
SA: "No they won't feature in this game. I would have loved the match to be
next week rather than this week as they both would have played. They won't
be involved on Tuesday because both of them are only due back in training
with the other players on Monday and putting them into what will be a hugely
competitive game has come too early for them. It will be a hugely
competitive match because there will be a lot of players out there who will
be trying to convince both myself and Malky [Mackay, Cardiff manager] that
they should be playing in the first team on a more regular basis."
You've reached the 100 game mark here, something which is becoming rarer in
today's climate. Are you proud when you reach a landmark like this?
SA: "I enjoy working in football and have enjoyed it for so many years now
that it's the only thing I really know. When you're in the job you're
obviously fearful of getting the sack. It's a survival game no matter what
anybody says, particularly for young managers. They've got to learn how to
survive and then evolve. When you reach 100 games and people say well done,
it worries me. If it's 300 games or 400 games, fine, but 100 games should be
more commonplace than it is. The constant change of managers which we're now
faced with has turned reaching 100 games into a bit of an achievement. For
me, that's pretty disappointing that in our professional leagues we change
managers so much."
You've had a good result against Cardiff already this season and since then
they've shown some resilience. Are they a side in the mould of their
manager?
SA: "I think that Malky and his staff do a really good job in terms of
playing to their strengths and organising the team. He's learnt over his
time at Watford and now at Cardiff that his job is about results and using
his squad to the best of their ability. When we played them at our place,
him, his team and his players have adjusted very quickly to life in the
Premier League. "We won that game comfortably on the day but since then
they've reorganised themselves and had some fantastic results. Malky's done
a great job, his team are well organised and they know what's expected of
them. We had a tough match against Cheltenham in the last round and I'm
expecting another tough game against Cardiff."
Mladen Petric made a positive impact from the bench on Saturday. Will he
start against Cardiff?
SA: "I don't think a start because we're talking about a player who's only
had half-an-hour in a highly competitive game in the Barclays Premier
League. The physicality is greater than anywhere else in the world and he's
only in week two of his pre-season. Normally he would be playing 45 minutes
against Cork City but instead he's had 30 minutes against Everton so he's
feeling the stresses and strains of that. We have to be careful because we
don't want him to get injured, but he will be in the squad."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Cardiff
KO 19:45
23 September 2013
Last updated at 12:51
CAPITAL ONE CUP THIRD ROUND
Venue: Upton Park Date: Tuesday, 24 September
Coverage: Watch highlights on The League Cup Show on Wednesday at 23:05 BST,
BBC One.
West Ham midfielders Joe Cole (hamstring) and Stewart Downing (knee) will
not feature as they have only just returned to training after injury. Mark
Noble will also definitely be absent as he serves a one-match ban. Like
Hammers' manager Sam Allardyce, Cardiff boss Malky Mackay will also rotate
his squad.
New signing Peter Odemwingie could make his first start but Andreas
Cornelius is still struggling with an ankle injury picked up in the last
round.
MATCH PREVIEW
West Ham and Cardiff go into Tuesday's League Cup tie locked together in the
Premier League, with both teams having won one, drawn two and lost two of
their five league matches so far. In fact, the only difference lies in the
goals conceded column, where Cardiff have let in two more than the Hammers -
goals that can be traced back to their 2-0 defeat at Upton Park on the
opening day of the season. West Ham's only subsequent win was against League
Two Cheltenham in this competition, and they have suffered home defeats to
both Stoke and Everton. The League Cup has been bitter-sweet for Cardiff in
recent years. The Welsh club reached the final in 2012, only to suffer the
heartbreak of losing to Liverpool in a penalty shoot-out. And they fell at
the first hurdle last year, with League Two side Northampton dumping them
out.
MATCH FACTS
Head-to-head
The two sides have met five times before in the League Cup, including in
1966, when West Ham won the two-legged semi-final 10-3 on aggregate and went
on to lift the trophy.
West Ham have won the last four meetings with Cardiff in all competitions,
including the Premier League meeting between the two sides in August.
West Ham
The Hammers have won eight of their last 10 League Cup matches played at
Upton Park (W8, L2).
This match will be Sam Allardyce's 100th in charge of West Ham. His record
so far is P99, W42, D27, L30
West Ham have not won any of their last four league matches (D2, L2).
Cardiff
Cardiff have won just one of their last seven away games in all competitions
(W1, D4, L2).
The Welsh side have lost both their matches against London clubs so far this
season.
They have won just one of their last 12 League Cup clashes against
top-flight sides (including replays), with that victory (against Blackburn)
coming on their way to reaching the 2012 final.
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Paolo Di Canio: Sam Allardyce says sacking was 'knee jerk'
BBC.co.uk
West Ham boss Sam Allardyce believes Sunderland have made a knee-jerk
decision by sacking Paolo Di Canio. Italian Di Canio, 45, was dismissed as
Black Cats manager on Sunday after only five Premier League games this
season. The former Swindon boss was appointed in March to replace Martin
O'Neill.
Di Canio's journey
Born in Rome, 9 July 1968
Played in Italy for Lazio, Juventus, Napoli, AC Milan, Cisco Roma
Played in Britain for Celtic, Sheffield Wednesday, West Ham and Charlton
Fined £10,000 in 1998 by the FA for pushing referee Paul Alcock to the
ground after being sent off against Arsenal
Wins Fifa Fair Play award for sportsmanship in 2001 for catching ball and
stopping play v Everton to allow injured keeper Paul Gerrard to receive
treatment
Criticised in 2005 for making fascist-style salute in Lazio game
Appointed Swindon boss in May 2011; guides them into League One a year later
Resigns as Swindon boss in February 2013 citing issues with the club's
hierarchy after sale of star player Matt Ritchie
Replaces Martin O'Neill as Sunderland boss in March 2013; club avoid
relegation
Sacked after four defeats in five league games of 2013-14
"If it doesn't go well they seem to be making a knee-jerk decision to change
the manager," said Allardyce, who left Newcastle in 2008 after eight months
by mutual consent. None of Sunderland's last four managers, Ricky Sbragia,
Steve Bruce, O'Neill and Di Canio, have lasted 100 games - which is the
landmark Allardyce will achieve at West Ham on Tuesday when they face
Cardiff. "They've been pretty quick at pulling the trigger recently, in the
last three managers," continued the ex-Bolton boss. Di Canio won only three
of his 13 matches after replacing O'Neill and took one point from five
top-flight games this campaign.
Sunderland had brought in 14 new players in the summer with Di Canio working
with director of football Roberto De Fanti and chief scout Valentino
Angeloni on their transfers. "I find it very difficult to see where the
logic lies in it, particularly when there has been a full clear-out [of
backroom staff]," said Allardyce. "To go through that process in a
particular season which has got under way is a huge task for whoever is
going to be the next head coach."
Di Canio immediately attracted controversy following his appointment in
March but Sunderland narrowly avoided relegation last season, thanks partly
to a famous 3-0 win over Newcastle - their first victory at St James' Park
over over their local rivals in 13 years. However, public criticism of his
squad at the end of last season was followed by bans on mobile phones,
tomato ketchup, mayonnaise and ice in Coca-Cola at the club's training
ground. After Saturday's 3-0 loss to West Brom, Di Canio was verbally abused
by travelling supporters and further criticism of his players led to anger
among the squad. Allardyce believes the controversial manager may have to
change his style if he is to return to the Premier League. "The man says
he's not going to change and I think you are what you are," he said. "You've
got to be true to yourself; if that's your style, that's your style. If it
doesn't work you've got to hold your hands up and say, 'it might have worked
at Swindon but in the Premier League it hasn't worked'. "You have to look at
yourself and say, 'if I get the next job do I do it like that or don't I?'"
Former Blackburn boss Allardyce believes managers should be given more time
to settle in at clubs but fears management has now become about just
surviving. "What you fear for is the sack, obviously, and it is a survival
game," said the Hammers manager. "Particularly the young managers who come
in, you've to learn how to survive and then evolve. "When it is seen to be
100 games well done, it really does worry me. If it's 300 games or 400
games, fine. But 100 games? "This should be more often across the board than
it is now because of the constant changing of managers and coaches that we
are now faced with, that 100 games is now something of an achievement. For
me, I think that is pretty disappointing."
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Nice one, centurion
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Staff Writer
Sam Allardyce celebrates what will be his 100th game in charge of West Ham
when his team faces Cardiff City tomorrow night. The Welsh club return to
the Boelyn Ground for the second time this season after they were beaten 2-0
on the opening day of the campaign - West Ham's only Premier League win so
far.
For Allardyce, who succeeded Avram Grant in the summer of 2011, it will be
the 100th occasion on which he leads his team out - and a spell which, all
things considered, Allardyce considers to be a successful one. "I'm very
pleased with the record we had in the Premier League last year, the year
before we were expected to do well in the Championship," he said. "We've
done everything that we said we would do. "We set out with the plan to get
promoted in the first year, we did that. The second year we planned to stay
up and in the end we surpassed expectations and finished tenth. Now we've
got to bring a sustainable balance to the squad which is going to keep us in
the Premier League for many, many years. "It's probably unacceptable in
today's football but we have to convince everybody that growing slowly is
the right way. It sustains the ability to get better and better and when you
do that you are then able to achieve more and you can start looking at
bigger things."
Yet despit having reached the milestone, Allardyce maintains that his
biggest fear remains getting the sack. "I enjoy working in football and have
enjoyed it for so many years now that it's the only thing I really know -
but when you're in the job you're fearful of getting the sack," he revealed.
It's a survival game no matter what anybody says, particularly for young
managers. "When you reach 100 games and people say well done, it worries
me. If it's 300 or 400 games fine, but 100 games should be more commonplace
than it is. The constant change of managers which we're now faced with has
turned reaching 100 games into a bit of an achievement."
Sam's Five Finest
5. West Ham Utd 6-0 Brighton: Fellow promotion candicates Albion came to the
Boleyn at the back end of the 2011/12 campaign and were blitzed by a
six-goal drubbing; chief architect being Ricardo Vaz Te whose hat-trick
included an overhead kick.
4. West Ham Utd 1-0 Aston Villa: The first game back in the Premir League is
always a nervy occasion. Featuring new signings such as James Collins and
Jussi Jaaskelainen, this was the perfect start as Allardyce got everything
right tactically.
3. Blackpool 1-4 West Ham Utd: The demolition of a side who were, at the
time, our promotion rivals. 2-1 up when Rob Green was (incorrectly)
dismissed, Henri Lansbury took his place as the ten men added further goals
through Gary O'Neil and Ricardo Vaz Te.
2. West Ham Utd 2-1 Blackpool: A nervy, less than convincing performance at
Wembley - at last! - but still the best day out long-suffering Hammers fans
have had in years. Ricardo Vaz Te is immortalised as Big Sam is spotted
singing 'Bubbles' on the big screen.
1. West Ham Utd 3-1 Chelsea: A simply stunning second half performance from
the Hammers as they recorded a first win over the Blues for a decade. We
were that good, even Modibo Maiga got himself on the scoresheet.
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Paolo pushed
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Staff Writer
Former West Ham favourite Paolo Di Canio has been sacked from his post as
manager of fellow Premier League club Sunderland. The 44-year-old Italian,
who spent five years at West Ham between 1998 and 2003 has received his
marching orders less after just 13 games in charge at the Stadium of Light.
A statement on the Black Cats' website late last night confirmed that Di
Canio had been given the push. "Sunderland AFC confirms that it has parted
company with head coach Paolo Di Canio this evening," it said. "Kevin Ball
will take charge of the squad ahead of Tuesday night's Capital One Cup game
against Peterborough United and an announcement will be made in due course
regarding a permanent successor. "The club would like to place on record its
thanks to Paolo and his staff and wishes them well for the future."
It is believed that Di Canio, whose unique management methods previously
ruffled feathers at Swindon was fired after a training ground bust-up with
some of his first team players. That followed a dreadful start to the season
for the Wearsiders, who currently sit bottom of the Premier League having
amasseda total of just one point from their opening five fixtures. News of
Di Canio's sacking comes almost exactly a decade after Glenn Roeder - who Di
Canio was a fierce critic of during his time as a player - was sacked by
West Ham, having failed to maintain the Club's Premiership status.
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West Ham United v Cardiff City
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Preview Percy
Preview Percy has written another preview about Cardiff City. It's just as
bad as the previous one. Let's hope and pray we don't get them in the FA Cup
as well....
Next up we play host to Cardiff City in the 3rd round of the League Cup.
Kick off on Tuesday night is 7.45pm and I believe that the usual requirement
for Cardiff supporters to pick up their tickets from a disused, uncharted
and unlit North Sea oil rig by 3am has been dispensed with. As ever in this
competition, extra time and penalties are available to settle matters on the
night should they be required. Don't wait up luv.
League form in their first visit to the to flight for a jolly long time has
been patchy. They looked a bit overawed on the opening day as we coasted to
a relatively easy 2-0 victory. This was followed up by an unexpected 3-2 win
over Man City at the City of Cardiff stadium, a match in which the Citizens
gave a whole new meaning to the word "complacent". Draws at home to Everton
(0-0) and away to Hull (1-1) gave them a three match unbeaten run which came
to an end at the weekend with a stoppage time defeat to Spurs. All of which
has left them in one place behind us, level on points and two goals worse
off on the goal difference front. In the previous round of this particular
competition they went up to Accrington and won 2-0.
Like us they can claim to have suffered at the hands of the referee this
weekend, Loris's handball outside the box was close enough for Clattenburg
to get the benefit of the doubt in that case. Spurs went on to have some
silly number of efforts on goal before finally winning in stoppage time.
On decent form in the Spurs match was 'keeper David Marshall. Marshall has
been first choice in the league so far this season, though he did miss out
on a trip to Hull with a hip injury. Let's face it which one of us wouldn't
feign some sort of injury to avoid a trip to Humberside? In the modern style
Joe Lewis was preferred to Marshall for the League Cup trip so we should
probably expect that again.
It is thought that the match may see a first start for Peter Odemwinge. He's
been about this lad hasn't he. The place where he was born – Tashkent. –
used to be part of the USSR. By the time he was 10 it was part of
Uzbekistan. His early career was spent in the youth systems of KAMAZ and
CSKA but he went to Nigeria (his father's birthplace) to play for his first
grown-up club, the wonderfully named Bendel Insurance. From there he went to
Belgium, winning the Belgian Cup with La Louviere. His next trip was from
Belgium (where they speak French even though they don't have to) to France
(where they do), spending three years or so at Lille. Next stop was a return
to the former USSR where Lokomotiv Moscow were his employers for a few
years. The knobhead racist element of the Moscow support celebrated his
departure for West Brom with banners saying "Thanks West Brom".
Even though his passport stamps read USSR, Nigeria, Belgium, France, Russia
and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, it is a rather
more prosaic journey for which he became noted, journeying down the M6 where
he was under the mistaken impression that he had a deal to join QPR. I can't
imagine for the life of me how he might have come about that impression.
After all, it's not as if their manager would have had any illegal contact
with the player or his agents, is it? The journey saw him stuck in the car
park with everyone at QPR hiding behind the curtains pretending not to be
in, prompting chants of "he went to QPR, they left him in his car" and "what
a waste of petrol" from opposition fans at the end of last season. He
eventually left the Hawthorns on deadline day for Cardiff and is presumably
disappointed that he didn't get another stamp in his passport, having been
persuaded by Cardiff that Wales was a proper country, rather than just
somewhere England keeps the mountains that there wasn't room for in
Scotland.
Record signing (for a few days anyway) Andreas Cornelius is likely to miss
out. He had ankle issues during pre-season and had the bad fortune to
exacerbate his injury early on in the Accrington match in the last round.
This may mean a start for ex-Hammer Nicky Maynard. Maynard was on the bench
against Spurs and remained unused. So his will be one of the fresher pairs
of legs available to Malky Mackay, given the mere 48 hours or so between the
end of Sunday's match and the start of this one.
One player I simply have to mention, irrespective of whether or not Mackay
chooses to start him is French defender Kevin Theophile-Catherine who is
currently leading the Avram Grant Olympic Rest Home for the Bewildered
competition for "Most Splendidly-Named Opponent". Theophile-Catherine
(brilliant isn't it) came in just before the deadline from Rennes for a fee
of a shade over £2m, most of which will be recouped as soon as one or two
supporters decide to stick his name on the back of their shirts.
Us? Well here at the Avram Grant Rest Olympic Rest Home or the Bewildered
were frankly gobsmacked at the refereeing at the weekend. Lee Mason gave the
impression that he belonged in one of the padded rooms they have here for
the more "difficult" residents. Ron Vibbentropp, our German resident,
reckons that back in his home country a panel reviews every refereeing
decision and those referees who fail to consistently score a high average
find themselves going down the leagues. It's all open and clear to all,
unlike our own PGMOL, who are responsible for their own marking and hide the
results from everyone, thus ensuring that the likes of Mason don't get what
they deserve. In Mason's case that would be a long stay in Guantnamo Bay
being forced to listen to Bon Jovi 24 hours a day.
In truth, Lukaku's introduction was the catalyst for Everton's revival but I
reckon we would have deserved the point stolen from us by Mason's dishonesty
on the strength of the first half performance.. Thankfully the moronic
decision to send off Noble wasn't more costly. He'll only miss this game –
which he would probably have been rested for anyway.
We may see a start for Petric as he attempts to gin a bit of match fitness.
It was his hard work that led to the penalty and he has to be a better bet
than Maiga who appears to veer between interested and not bothered at the
drop of a hat.
Squad rotation may see us start with a similar side to that which saw off
Cheltenham, especially when you consider the injury list which contains the
likes of Cole, Downing, Demel, Downing and Carroll. So maybe it's time for
another run out for Leo Chambers perhaps? I'd certainly expect to see Adrian
to be given a run out – with possibly Henderson sitting on the racing car in
the squad last time seats to give Jaaskalainen a night off.
Other youngsters who were in the squad for the last round included Seb
Lletget – for whom the editors have been saving the headline "Lletget's
ready to rumble" for several years now - and Elliot Lee for whom they'll
have to be more creative, so expect a similar bench this time round.
Prediction? Well as ever with this competition much will depend on how
strong a team the respective managers elect to put out. I'd fancy us to win
comfortably if the respective first teams were fielded. However, the
permutations are pretty flexibe on both sides – though with the relatively
short time since their match against Spurs you'd have though that there'd be
a few rested. I'll still plump for a win though and I'll be putting the
AGORHFTB Lee Mason Straitjacket Fund (£2.50) on us to win 2-1 though don't
be too surprised if it all goes to extra time.
Enjoy the game!
When Last We Met At The Boleyn – Won 2-0 August 2013. Joe Cole in the first
half and Kevin Nolan in the second sealed the points. Blimey if you can't
remember that maybe you should be here at the rest home instead of me! I
mean I only mentioned it up there near the top of the page. Do try to pay
attention.
Referee: Roger East – last seen in our 6-0 defeat of Brighton the season
before last, when he booked Carlton Cole (who is famous) for complaining,
rather than the defender who was kicking him (who wasn't famous).
Danger Man: Nicky Maynard – difficult to predict a danger man when you have
little idea what side the opponents will put out. The "law of the ex" will
apply assuming Maynard gets the nod.
Daft Welsh Fact Of The Week: The current incarnation of Dr Who is largely
filmed in the Welsh capital. Bit of an obvious location really when you
think about it – all that strange unearthly barren scenery and a strange
almost but not quite human-like population, whose origins are betrayed by
the strange alien tongue that they insist on writing half the road signs in.
I bet they think it's a documentary down there.
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At least we are not Sunderland
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Paul Walker
Five games into the Premier League campaign and we are struggling. No it's
not a crisis yet, and the time now is for calm, patience and strong nerve.
Thankfully we are not Sunderland. Now there is a crisis, a full-blown
shambles. Millions spent on a new squad, new manager, new staff etc, etc,
etc. And our old mate Paolo Di Canio gets the boot five games into the
season. Anyone surprised? No , me neither.
Di Canio's style has been described as "management by hand grenade". You may
be able to get away with that at Swindon when substituting goalkeepers
before half-time, falling out with your players and lashing them in the
media can be dismissed as erratic and comical.
Do that with a squad of 20-something millionaires and you are dead in the
water. Sunderland knew what they were taking on, something our own board
declined to do even though, so says Ms. Brady, Di Canio did keep ringing the
club asking to be given a chance.
I recall the clamour from fans for Paolo to be appointed our manager. But I
always sensed that it was romance against reality. A few of our West
Ham-supporting journalists wrote pieces at the time warning of the devil we
didn't really know. Di Canio was high risk, high maintenance and highly
likely to explode at any minute. Too much of a risk, as Sunderland have
discovered.
Hands up out there anyone who secretly wanted Paolo to succeed at Sunderland
so he would one day march back into the Boleyn. Hands up those who thought
he could handle a Premier League club.
Hands up anyone who wants him back now. Not so many as before, I bet.
And it's a generational thing. My match day mates are all half my age, they
remember him as the great entertainer. My own son has named his Dalmatian
dog, Paolo. The dog is lovable, beautiful to behold at full speed, crazy as
a box of frogs and hugely unpredictable. Remind you of anyone?
When Paolo was at his peak at West Ham, I was working in the north and
heavily involved with big clubs there that win things. I barely had time to
get to the Boleyn those days. I only saw my beloved Irons when they came
north for their ritual beatings at Manchester United, Liverpool, Everton
etc. And in fact I rarely saw our Italian then either, because of his
obvious dislike for cold, wet northern grounds (so why go to Sunderland).
I did manage to wangle covering the FA Cup third round defeat at Tranmere in
1999, when Di Canio had managed to negotiate his way that far north. The
pitch was bare, bumpy and the day cold and bleak. We were awful and Paolo
was a waste of space.
I recall talking to Redknapp after the press conference that day, he
shrugged and was resigned to such a performance. Then there was the famous
"catching the ball" trick at Everton when their goalkeeper was injured.
Redknapp said all the right things about sportsmanship in that press
conference, but talking to him as we walked down the stairs together after
that match, and 'arry's view was very different. Basically, put the ball in
the net and then worry about their 'keeper.
The erratic side of Di Canio gets lost in the misty eyed memories of his
breathtaking talent. I also recall being in a Cardiff 'Aussie' bar on the
Sunday that Di Canio scored that amazing goal against Wimbledon. The place
was almost empty, apart from the professional afternoon drinkers, and there
I was jumping around screaming 'you beauty' at the TV screen on the wall,
almost begging the drunks to watch the replays!.
So I do understand the appeal of the man, the thrill of his talent and the
passion he showed us for the game. But, my God, he is a liability.
Our owners could have taken the plunge with Di Canio, and who knows what
would have happened. Di Canio certainly wouldn't have been able to predict
anything, such is his nature and desire for the unexpected.
Our owners must be happy now they did not go down that road. Now I know
Paolo is a hero at the Boleyn, a stunning, gifted footballer who brought
entertainment and joy on many a damp, cold, east London day.
And I know this will not go down well with plenty of our fans, but you must
have guessed by now that somewhere along the line I did not go for the Paolo
for Pope routine. There was too much baggage, too many things that went
wrong and far too much of the me, me, me character in the Italian.
We went down with him in the side - or to be accurate, we went down with him
home in Italy having fallen out with Glenn Roeder. Frankly, inexcusable
behaviour from a professional. He may not have liked the manager, but his
job was to play for the club. And too often he didn't.
Frequently we now see the amazing cameo of the game when he demanded that
'arry should take him off because he didn't like the referee. There were
times in that game when Paolo was playing in his own panto, oblivious of the
game going on around him.
Redknapp has made something of a living with amusing recollections of Di
Canio's antics and maybe in the pantomime that was Redknapp's management
style at Upton Park, it all fitted in. But a few seasons down the line, we
were relegated with a side that included Di Canio, Trevor Sinclair, Jermain
Defoe, Michael Carrick, David James, Glen Johnson, Joe Cole and Freddi
Kanoute in the side. An unforgivable shambles with such talent.
That season, Di Canio played when he felt like it. Trevor Brooking had to
almost go on bended knee to get him back into the team. And we still went
down. Now it is Sunderland picking up the pieces from the car crash. What do
they do with the 14 players he signed, the Italian agents he has worked
with, the Italian coaches and scouts on the pay-roll?
All this has hit us with the backdrop of our own less than stunning last
couple of weeks. The Andy Carroll saga rolls on. We can't get Carlton Cole
fit and have expensive people like Joe Cole and Stewart Downing on the
sidelines. Claims that we are a one-trick pony (Carroll) are hard to argue
against.
Successive home defeats to Stoke, a truly terrible game, and Everton - where
we were winning with 15 minutes left - has left us with a growing cloud over
our season. But it is not that bad.
If you compare like-on-like results to last season (and substitute QPR at
home for Cardiff), we are just two points down on last term. We drew at home
to relegated QPR and beat Cardiff on the opening day. We won last term at
Newcastle and drew this time, we drew with Stoke and lost this time around
while we lost to Everton last season as well
You could hear the moaning as we all walked back down Wakefield Street on
Saturday about Sam, tactics, transfers, style of play. It puts immense
pressure on us to get something at Hull, with tough games against Spurs,
Manchester City and Swansea to come next.
But it's not a crisis, not yet. But Sunderland, well are you glad you are
not in their boots. And maybe the clamour for Di Canio will take on a more
realistic look.
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Sam Allardyce proud of West Ham record ahead of 100th game
Last Updated: September 23, 2013 6:08pm
SSN
Sam Allardyce has declared himself proud of his West Ham record, ahead of
his 100th game in charge. The former Bolton and Blackburn boss reaches his
century on Tuesday when Cardiff visit Upton Park in the third round of the
Capital One Cup. A lone win has made for a difficult start to the new league
campaign but having secured promotion and then a top-10 finish back in the
Premier League, the 58-year-old is pleased with his overall achievements.
"Obviously I'm very pleased with the record we had in the Premier League
last year and the year before we were expected to do well in the
Championship," he said. "If you look at the stats for how many teams are
promoted the season after they were relegated you'll find that there are
very few, around 20 per cent who actually manage it. "We've done everything
that we said we would do, not just me and the backroom staff, but also the
chairman and the vice-chairman and everyone else behind the scenes. "We set
out with the plan to get promoted in the first year - we did that. The
second year we planned to stay up and in the end we surpassed expectations
and finished 10th. "Now we've got to bring a sustainable balance to the
squad which is going to keep us in the Premier League for many, many years.
It's probably unacceptable in today's football but we have to convince
everybody that growing slowly is the right way."
Allardyce, who has also managed at Blackpool, Notts County and Newcastle,
lamented the fact that managing a club for 100 games has now become a
celebrated achievement. Speaking after Paolo Di Canio became the first
Premier League casualty of the season, he added: "If it's 300 games or 400
games, fine, but 100 games should be more commonplace than it is. "The
constant change of managers which we're now faced with has turned reaching
100 games into a bit of an achievement. For me, that's pretty
disappointing."
Allardyce has already masterminded a league victory over Cardiff but expects
a tough test. "Malky (Mackay's) done a great job; his team are well
organised and they know what's expected of them. "We had a tough match
against Cheltenham in the last round and I'm expecting another tough game
against Cardiff."
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Mladen Petric confident he can get goals for West Ham
Last Updated: September 23, 2013 11:42am
SSN
Mladen Petric believes he can help to cover Andy Carroll's absence at West
Ham United and carry the goal-scoring burden. The Hammers remain without the
services of their record signing as he continues to nurse a foot complaint.
It is possible that Carroll will be out of action until January, leaving Sam
Allardyce short on attacking options. He has moved to bolster his ranks with
the capture of former Fulham frontman Petric as a free agent, and the
Croatian made his debut off the bench in Saturday's 3-2 defeat to Everton.
The 32-year-old is a proven marksman at domestic and international level and
is confident he can make an important contribution at Upton Park. Petric
said: "I am a striker and I want to score. I hope I can help the team not
only scoring goals, but in the games. "I feel I am getting better every day
and I'm sure I can help the team." Allardyce said of a player who is still
working on his match sharpness: "He's been tired and had aching limbs. "But
with a lot of massage and ice baths he's got through it well. We'll see him
again against Cardiff (in the Capital One Cup) on Tuesday."
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
Monday, September 23
Daily WHUFC News - 23rd September 2013
Rat reckons Hammers were unlucky
WHUFC.com
Razvan Rat was disappointed to see his full Barclays Premier League debut
end in defeat
22.09.2013
Razvan Rat reckons West Ham United were unfortunate to depart the Boleyn
Ground empty handed on Saturday, as Leighton Baines' wizardry propelled
Everton to a 3-2 Barclays Premier League win. Having made his Premier
League bow a week earlier as a substitute against Southampton, the Romanian
left-back was rewarded with a first league start against the Toffees. It was
not, however, how the vastly experienced defender wanted to mark the
occasion, as Romelu Lukaku's late header consigned Sam Allardyce's men to a
second successive home defeat. "I'm disappointed, because I wanted it to be
in a different way, to celebrate another game and to be happy," he told West
Ham TV. "But sometimes in football, you can't win all the time. I'm really
disappointed for my full game debut."
Disappointed though he was, Rat could hardly fail to be impressed with his
opposite number, as Baines twice beat Jussi Jaaskelainen with sublime
free-kicks.
He continued: "I don't think they had too many moments, too many chances to
score. But Baines had the best free-kicks and two in a row is really
interesting.
"This doesn't happen very often. It's really amazing for the same player to
put in one in the left (corner) and one in the right. So, amazing
free-kicks!"
With Mark Noble's controversial dismissal and Baines' set-piece brilliance,
Rat had every reason to feel hard done by and explained how the visitors'
winner had a slice of luck about it too. "I think for us, we were unlucky
on Saturday. The third goal, when Mirallas crossed, it took a deflection off
Ginge and the ball goes directly to Lukaku's head, so, for me, we were
unlucky."
Setbacks aside, Rat insists he and his Hammers colleagues will continue to
put in the hard yards, hopeful that the results will soon follow. "We just
need to keep going, to try to get better results and get some wins!"
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Allardyce on... Everton
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Staff Writer
Disappointed yet not too downhearted, Sam Allardyce reflects on a game that
once again left him watching his words very carefully...
Sam: you must be disappointed with that result?
Right up to Mark Noble getting sent off I thought the players were great.
When you get a goal in front and you lost your last home game you want a
response from your players and I felt we got that. We were playing against a
very good side and we matched them.
The goal for Rav [Morrison] was great, it gives him a lot of confidence for
his development and growth, but we found a difference when McCarthy came on
and we had to make sure we controlled that situation which was Everton
getting more and more into an attacking mode so playing off him was more
dificult for us to cope with.
Our defensive qualities really shone through again because there were no
chances created by Everton in terms of goalscoring opportunities. I can't
remember Jussi having to make a save up to Baines putting the ball in the
back of the net with the first goal. So we contained them really well, then
we got the penalty on the break. I thought Pet did great for the ball to
Kevin after they tried to let it roll out.
I thought that if we do our defensive job like we have been then we'll be ok
today and we'll probably get the win. Then the game changes, it tos-and-fros
and none moreso than the Mark Noble sending off. Baines not only puts one in
today but he puts in two; how often do you see that? Not very often. It's
three out of two games at home here because Pennant did the same to us for
Stoke. You don't expect three in two games, you might expect three in the
entire season but he's scored two in one game.
Mark Noble's sending off? I've had a look at it and whilst it's easy for me
to say that Mark played the ball, he did because I can see it on the laptop.
The referee sees it from where he is but he's got to be certain as it's a
sending off for Mark Noble. It's an ordinary tackle and it doesn't affect
the game. Baines might put the free kick in but we're still level at 2-2
with 11 men and not 10. Straight after that, having tried to get organised
Lukaku scored the winner and there's little you can do from there, unless
you hope Everton slip up. So it's left us very frustrated at the end of the
game and I'm really disappointed that we lost it.
Mark Noble's first booking seemed harsh as well?
Yeah; I've got to be careful what I say today, unfortunately. We all have to
be careful because what we say about the referees gets brought up and we get
fined. Do I agree with the decision though? No. Why? Because that's the
wrong sort of protection from referees as far as I'm concerned.
If you want to make the referees better then they've got to be open to
criticism like all of us. We all get criticised in this game. But for me to
say too much in terms of how the referee played today will get me in trouble
- and the last thing I want to do is give the FA any of my money that I've
worked really hard for. I'll take it up with their delegate and Mike Reilly,
look again at the performance of our team and the referee tomorrow and make
my report how I see fit. That's all I can do within the system that we have
today.
But fair play to Everton, they took full advantage of us going down to ten
men. The introduction of Lukaku made a huge difference for them but i still
thought we were going to do it; I thought we were going to get a victory,
never mind a draw but there you go. We've ended up losing which is a real
blow to us.
Lukaku was one of the players you were after in the summer; was that a real
kick in the teeth?
It was when he scored the winner, yes. I was talking to Jose [Mourinho] all
summer about will he, won't he and obviously it wasn't "no" until I believe
Demba Ba decided to stay. There was a quick shift around with a few hours
[of the transfer window] left to go and Everton got there before us and West
Brom. That's the way the cookie crumbles, as they say.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Allardyce rues luck as Lukaku scores winner
Last Updated: September 22, 2013 2:50pm
SSN
Sam Allardyce cursed his luck as transfer target Romelu Lukaku fired Everton
to a 3-2 victory over West Ham. Lukaku hit the winner six minutes from time
after two brilliant Leighton Baines free-kicks hauled the Toffees back into
contention as the Upton Park showdown reached a dramatic conclusion.
Allardyce pursued Lukaku throughout the summer only to be told by Chelsea
manager Jose Mourinho he was staying at Stamford Bridge. But Demba Ba's
deadline-day decision to stay with the Blues forced a rethink and Everton
beat West Ham and West Brom to the signing of the 20-year-old, who
transformed the match with his arrival at half-time. "It was frustrating
when he scored. I'd been talking to Chelsea all summer - will he move, won't
he. I was told no, no, no," Hammers boss Allardyce said. "Then Ba decided to
stay and there was a quick shift around with a few hours to go and Everton
got there before us and West Brom. That's the way the cookie crumbles."
Allardyce disagreed with the dismissal of Mark Noble for two yellow cards,
the second coming shortly after he had scored a penalty and moments before
Baines fired his second equaliser. Choosing his words with care, Allardyce
indicated that he felt referee Lee Mason had endured a poor afternoon and
declared officials should be more open to criticism. "I have to be careful
about what I say - we all have to be careful because we get pulled up on
what we say to the referee. We get fined," Allardyce said. "Do I agree with
it? No, because that's the wrong sort of protection for referees as far as
I'm concerned. "If we want to make them better than they have to be
criticised like us all. For me to say too much about how I thought the
referee performed, I'd get myself into trouble."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Harry Redknapp expects QPR to miss out on Carlton Cole
Last Updated: September 22, 2013 3:56pm
SSN
Harry Redknapp is looking to bring another striker into Queens Park Rangers,
but doubts that he will secure the services of Carlton Cole. Cole is
currently available as a free agent after reaching the end of a previous
deal at West Ham United. Various clubs were linked with an approach over the
summer, but the England international is still without a club. He has
returned to training with West Ham as a result, in an effort to earn fresh
terms, and Sam Allardyce has admitted to being keen on getting the powerful
frontman back on board. With it expected that he will re-sign for the
Hammers, Redknapp concedes that he will have to look elsewhere for support
to Charlie Austin - his only fit forward. He said after a 1-0 victory over
Yeovil Town on Saturday: "We want a striker, but clubs won't let them out on
loan. "We need help up front, that's for sure. "Charlie's doing a good job
but he needs some help. He can't keep doing it in every game, we need to
take the pressure off him. "Carlton's a great player, but I think he's going
to sign for West Ham."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
PAOLO DI CANIO SACKED!
By S J Chandos 22 Sep 2013 at 23:52
West Ham Till I Die
It was reported, this evening, on BBC MoTD2 that Paolo Di Canio has been
sacked from the Sunderland managerial hotseat. That makes him the first PL
management casualty of the new season. Although results have not been good,
so far, it had been widely anticipated that the Sunderland board would grant
Di Canio more time to get it right, especially in view of the multi-million
investment that they made this summer on his transfer targets.
However, early reports suggest that there may have been some controversy
that sparked the sacking, perhaps relating to Di Canio's approach to the
players. This is a high possibility considering Di Canio's controversial
approach to player management in his short managerial career to date.
Alternatively, there could also have been conflict with the Sunderland Board
over the players or some other issue at the club. We ultimately await
official confirmation of the circumstances in which the dismissal took
place. And obviously, any response from Paolo Di Canio.
Paolo will always be considered a Hammers great and no one of a West Ham
affiliation will take any pleasure from this news. Hopefully, he will take
some time to think about his approach to management and find the right
appointment to get his career back on track.
However, I guess it has to be asked, in light of this development, would
Paolo's future appointment as West Ham Manager still be welcomed with open
arms by supporters? Alternatively, have fans cooled on that idea a little
now? Or, is it still a case of maybe, one day in the future?
SJ. Chandos.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
http://vyperz.blogspot.com
WHUFC.com
Razvan Rat was disappointed to see his full Barclays Premier League debut
end in defeat
22.09.2013
Razvan Rat reckons West Ham United were unfortunate to depart the Boleyn
Ground empty handed on Saturday, as Leighton Baines' wizardry propelled
Everton to a 3-2 Barclays Premier League win. Having made his Premier
League bow a week earlier as a substitute against Southampton, the Romanian
left-back was rewarded with a first league start against the Toffees. It was
not, however, how the vastly experienced defender wanted to mark the
occasion, as Romelu Lukaku's late header consigned Sam Allardyce's men to a
second successive home defeat. "I'm disappointed, because I wanted it to be
in a different way, to celebrate another game and to be happy," he told West
Ham TV. "But sometimes in football, you can't win all the time. I'm really
disappointed for my full game debut."
Disappointed though he was, Rat could hardly fail to be impressed with his
opposite number, as Baines twice beat Jussi Jaaskelainen with sublime
free-kicks.
He continued: "I don't think they had too many moments, too many chances to
score. But Baines had the best free-kicks and two in a row is really
interesting.
"This doesn't happen very often. It's really amazing for the same player to
put in one in the left (corner) and one in the right. So, amazing
free-kicks!"
With Mark Noble's controversial dismissal and Baines' set-piece brilliance,
Rat had every reason to feel hard done by and explained how the visitors'
winner had a slice of luck about it too. "I think for us, we were unlucky
on Saturday. The third goal, when Mirallas crossed, it took a deflection off
Ginge and the ball goes directly to Lukaku's head, so, for me, we were
unlucky."
Setbacks aside, Rat insists he and his Hammers colleagues will continue to
put in the hard yards, hopeful that the results will soon follow. "We just
need to keep going, to try to get better results and get some wins!"
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Allardyce on... Everton
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 23rd September 2013
By: Staff Writer
Disappointed yet not too downhearted, Sam Allardyce reflects on a game that
once again left him watching his words very carefully...
Sam: you must be disappointed with that result?
Right up to Mark Noble getting sent off I thought the players were great.
When you get a goal in front and you lost your last home game you want a
response from your players and I felt we got that. We were playing against a
very good side and we matched them.
The goal for Rav [Morrison] was great, it gives him a lot of confidence for
his development and growth, but we found a difference when McCarthy came on
and we had to make sure we controlled that situation which was Everton
getting more and more into an attacking mode so playing off him was more
dificult for us to cope with.
Our defensive qualities really shone through again because there were no
chances created by Everton in terms of goalscoring opportunities. I can't
remember Jussi having to make a save up to Baines putting the ball in the
back of the net with the first goal. So we contained them really well, then
we got the penalty on the break. I thought Pet did great for the ball to
Kevin after they tried to let it roll out.
I thought that if we do our defensive job like we have been then we'll be ok
today and we'll probably get the win. Then the game changes, it tos-and-fros
and none moreso than the Mark Noble sending off. Baines not only puts one in
today but he puts in two; how often do you see that? Not very often. It's
three out of two games at home here because Pennant did the same to us for
Stoke. You don't expect three in two games, you might expect three in the
entire season but he's scored two in one game.
Mark Noble's sending off? I've had a look at it and whilst it's easy for me
to say that Mark played the ball, he did because I can see it on the laptop.
The referee sees it from where he is but he's got to be certain as it's a
sending off for Mark Noble. It's an ordinary tackle and it doesn't affect
the game. Baines might put the free kick in but we're still level at 2-2
with 11 men and not 10. Straight after that, having tried to get organised
Lukaku scored the winner and there's little you can do from there, unless
you hope Everton slip up. So it's left us very frustrated at the end of the
game and I'm really disappointed that we lost it.
Mark Noble's first booking seemed harsh as well?
Yeah; I've got to be careful what I say today, unfortunately. We all have to
be careful because what we say about the referees gets brought up and we get
fined. Do I agree with the decision though? No. Why? Because that's the
wrong sort of protection from referees as far as I'm concerned.
If you want to make the referees better then they've got to be open to
criticism like all of us. We all get criticised in this game. But for me to
say too much in terms of how the referee played today will get me in trouble
- and the last thing I want to do is give the FA any of my money that I've
worked really hard for. I'll take it up with their delegate and Mike Reilly,
look again at the performance of our team and the referee tomorrow and make
my report how I see fit. That's all I can do within the system that we have
today.
But fair play to Everton, they took full advantage of us going down to ten
men. The introduction of Lukaku made a huge difference for them but i still
thought we were going to do it; I thought we were going to get a victory,
never mind a draw but there you go. We've ended up losing which is a real
blow to us.
Lukaku was one of the players you were after in the summer; was that a real
kick in the teeth?
It was when he scored the winner, yes. I was talking to Jose [Mourinho] all
summer about will he, won't he and obviously it wasn't "no" until I believe
Demba Ba decided to stay. There was a quick shift around with a few hours
[of the transfer window] left to go and Everton got there before us and West
Brom. That's the way the cookie crumbles, as they say.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Allardyce rues luck as Lukaku scores winner
Last Updated: September 22, 2013 2:50pm
SSN
Sam Allardyce cursed his luck as transfer target Romelu Lukaku fired Everton
to a 3-2 victory over West Ham. Lukaku hit the winner six minutes from time
after two brilliant Leighton Baines free-kicks hauled the Toffees back into
contention as the Upton Park showdown reached a dramatic conclusion.
Allardyce pursued Lukaku throughout the summer only to be told by Chelsea
manager Jose Mourinho he was staying at Stamford Bridge. But Demba Ba's
deadline-day decision to stay with the Blues forced a rethink and Everton
beat West Ham and West Brom to the signing of the 20-year-old, who
transformed the match with his arrival at half-time. "It was frustrating
when he scored. I'd been talking to Chelsea all summer - will he move, won't
he. I was told no, no, no," Hammers boss Allardyce said. "Then Ba decided to
stay and there was a quick shift around with a few hours to go and Everton
got there before us and West Brom. That's the way the cookie crumbles."
Allardyce disagreed with the dismissal of Mark Noble for two yellow cards,
the second coming shortly after he had scored a penalty and moments before
Baines fired his second equaliser. Choosing his words with care, Allardyce
indicated that he felt referee Lee Mason had endured a poor afternoon and
declared officials should be more open to criticism. "I have to be careful
about what I say - we all have to be careful because we get pulled up on
what we say to the referee. We get fined," Allardyce said. "Do I agree with
it? No, because that's the wrong sort of protection for referees as far as
I'm concerned. "If we want to make them better than they have to be
criticised like us all. For me to say too much about how I thought the
referee performed, I'd get myself into trouble."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Harry Redknapp expects QPR to miss out on Carlton Cole
Last Updated: September 22, 2013 3:56pm
SSN
Harry Redknapp is looking to bring another striker into Queens Park Rangers,
but doubts that he will secure the services of Carlton Cole. Cole is
currently available as a free agent after reaching the end of a previous
deal at West Ham United. Various clubs were linked with an approach over the
summer, but the England international is still without a club. He has
returned to training with West Ham as a result, in an effort to earn fresh
terms, and Sam Allardyce has admitted to being keen on getting the powerful
frontman back on board. With it expected that he will re-sign for the
Hammers, Redknapp concedes that he will have to look elsewhere for support
to Charlie Austin - his only fit forward. He said after a 1-0 victory over
Yeovil Town on Saturday: "We want a striker, but clubs won't let them out on
loan. "We need help up front, that's for sure. "Charlie's doing a good job
but he needs some help. He can't keep doing it in every game, we need to
take the pressure off him. "Carlton's a great player, but I think he's going
to sign for West Ham."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
PAOLO DI CANIO SACKED!
By S J Chandos 22 Sep 2013 at 23:52
West Ham Till I Die
It was reported, this evening, on BBC MoTD2 that Paolo Di Canio has been
sacked from the Sunderland managerial hotseat. That makes him the first PL
management casualty of the new season. Although results have not been good,
so far, it had been widely anticipated that the Sunderland board would grant
Di Canio more time to get it right, especially in view of the multi-million
investment that they made this summer on his transfer targets.
However, early reports suggest that there may have been some controversy
that sparked the sacking, perhaps relating to Di Canio's approach to the
players. This is a high possibility considering Di Canio's controversial
approach to player management in his short managerial career to date.
Alternatively, there could also have been conflict with the Sunderland Board
over the players or some other issue at the club. We ultimately await
official confirmation of the circumstances in which the dismissal took
place. And obviously, any response from Paolo Di Canio.
Paolo will always be considered a Hammers great and no one of a West Ham
affiliation will take any pleasure from this news. Hopefully, he will take
some time to think about his approach to management and find the right
appointment to get his career back on track.
However, I guess it has to be asked, in light of this development, would
Paolo's future appointment as West Ham Manager still be welcomed with open
arms by supporters? Alternatively, have fans cooled on that idea a little
now? Or, is it still a case of maybe, one day in the future?
SJ. Chandos.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
http://vyperz.blogspot.com
Sunday, September 22
Daily WHUFC News - 22nd September 2013
'It's a marathon, not a sprint'
WHUFC.com
Sam Allardyce is keeping calm despite seeing West Ham United edged out by
Everton in a five-goal thriller
21.09.2013
Having taken charge of more than 800 matches in his managerial career, Sam
Allardyce knows now is not the time to panic. The West Ham United boss
watched on in near-disbelief as his side twice lost the lead before going
down to ten men and being edged out 3-2 by Everton in a pulsating Barclays
Premier League fixture. The Hammers went in front after 31 minutes through
Ravel Morrison's maiden top-flight goal, only for Baines to curl his first
outstanding free-kick into the top left-hand corner after a James Collins
foul on Ross Barkley after an hour. James McCarthy's trip on Kevin Nolan
allowed Mark Noble to slot West Ham back into the lead from the penalty spot
on 76 minutes, only for the No16's foul on Barkley to see him sent-off for a
second bookable offence - despite it appearing that he got a foot to the
ball. With the Hammers down to ten men, Kevin Mirallas combined with Belgian
compatriot Romelu Lukaku, who bravely headed in the winner with five minutes
to go. The Boleyn Ground faithful were left equally stunned by the Hammers'
second home defeat in succession, but Big Sam insists time is on his team's
side just five matches into a 38-game 2013/14 season. "It was a gut-wrencher
and leaves you feeling so sorry for the players deep down inside," said the
manager. "Obviously the fans are disappointed too because they've seen a
good performance but seen us lose 3-2. "For me the players have done so much
and created a good game in terms of what we've come to expect at Upton Park,
but then unfortunately Everton don't seem to be our team here. Last year, we
went 1-0 up and I remember Carlton Cole getting sent-off and we ended up
losing 2-1. "The game has hinged on a free-kick that the referee has given
that has not only given them a free-kick that they've scored from, but he's
also sent Mark Noble off. Then, they've scored the winner because we were
down to ten men. It's difficult to take. "I have looked at it again and I
know it's easy for me to say because I've looked at it on the laptop, but
he's taken the ball and he's not played the man until after he's played the
ball. For me, that would then be difficult to take.
"My problem would then be if they don't see it that way, because development
and constructive criticism is a big part of referees getting better and if
they say that's a free-kick and it was the right decision to send him off,
then I would have a problem with that. "I think many decision these days
don't appear to be rectified enough and the responsibility of the referees'
coaches and bosses is to make sure that development is right and clear and
they understand it. Then mistakes get fewer and farther between. That's how
we find players and develop them and coach them into being better players.
"It wouldn't have been a major decision had it been a free-kick and a yellow
card and we still would have said it's not a free-kick in the first place,
but he'd not have been sent-off. Baines then scores a goal, which was great
technique which we could do nothing about, but I don't think we'd have lost
the game."
It had all been a different story before half-time, when West Ham dominated
for long periods against Roberto Martinez's men, not allowing them to settle
into their new patient passing style. As a result, it was no surprise when
Morrison collected Matt Jarvis' pass and fired in a shot that clipped Phil
Jagielka on the way into the net. "Even though Everton had a good part of
the game in the second half, with the players they could introduce from the
bench [in Lukaku and McCarthy] we always knew that could happen. "Jussi has
hardly had a save to make other than the two free-kicks and the header,
which I don't think he could have got to anyway. Other than that, he only
had one save when Mirallas came inside and hit one in the first ten minutes
and Jussi saved it. "It's a great shame with our defensive record and the
way we defended that we actually conceded three goals."
There were positives for the manager to take, with Morrison continuing his
development with an eye-catching, goalscoring performance in central
midfield and debutant Mladen Petric playing a huge role in the move that led
to West Ham's penalty. "Ravel is getting better. He's got to be careful
because I thought he tried to buy a free-kick when he shouldn't have done,
so I'll have a word with him about that. At that stage, he'd been booked as
well, so I'll have to make sure that doesn't happen again. "He's looking
better and better and in the end, you talk about players being ready and
managers not playing young players, but the trouble is that most young
players aren't good enough. When you know Ravel Morrison is good enough then
it's not a hard decision for me to put him in the team. "It's not difficult
for me to stick young ones in when I know he's good enough. I did it many
times at Bolton and at Blackburn Rovers and I'll do it here. They get their
chance and they either step up to the mark or they don't. If they don't, you
either put them back down to develop or you get rid ot them, that's the
bottom line to play in the Premier League. "With Ravel, it's not a difficult
decision as everybody can see. He can only get better with the more
experience that he gets."
Finally, Big Sam has been in the managerial game long enough to know that a
four-game winless run will cause some supporters to get a little restless.
However, the boss is not about to start worrying just yet. "Everybody else
is not scoring goals or having a little wobble. Manchester United lost at
Liverpool, Chelsea have lost two on the trot, Newcastle won two and lost at
home on Saturday. "We would love to have got off to a great start but we
have now made that difficult with our good group of fixtures, especially
losing to Everton. I don't consider it all our fault losing on Saturday, but
we have got to pick ourselves up and make sure we get something at Hull City
and then come back here and try to win the next game to get more points on
the board. "If that doesn't happen, it's a marathon, not a sprint."
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers stunned by late Toffees blast
WHUFC.com
West Ham United saw a 2-1 lead turn into a 3-2 defeat inside the final seven
minutes against Everton
21.09.2013
West Ham United 2-3 Everton
Barclays Premier League
West Ham United twice had the lead wrestled away from them along the way to
a 3-2 defeat to Everton at the Boleyn Ground on Saturday. Ravel Morrison and
Mark Noble were on target for the hosts, but their efforts were cancelled
out by two stunning free-kicks from Leighton Baines. Noble collected a
second booking for the offence which led to the second equaliser just seven
minutes from the end, and the Toffees made use of their extra man two
minutes later when Romelu Lukaku headed home. It was a remarkable turnaround
which left the home crowd stunned as it sent the Hammers to a second home
defeat in succession. Jussi Jaaskelainen was the first of the goalkeepers to
be called into action, diving to his left to push Kevin Mirallas' drilled
shot behind after the Everton wingman cut in from the left hand side to
fashion the opportunity. The first sight of goal for the Hammers came on
eight minutes when Matt Jarvis made a rapid burst of pace to run in behind
Seamus Coleman and advance on the penalty area. Just as it looked as though
a shooting opportunity would arise, Sylvain Distin came across to block his
path to goal. There was plenty of endeavour from both sides in the opening
exchanges, but little in the way of goalscoring chances as West Ham looked
to continue their solid start to the campaign. They were also searching for
their first Barclays Premier League goal since the opening game of the
season, and it duly arrived with 31 minutes on the clock, thanks in part to
a helpful deflection off Everton defender Phil Jagielka.
That will not take any shine off Morrison's debut top flight goal, as he
received the ball just outside the area following good work from Jarvis down
the left and let fly. Tim Howard probably had it covered before Jagielka's
touch, but the home side did not care as the ball flew into the net. Everton
almost hit back immediately when they broke quickly from a corner and all of
a sudden Ross Barkley found himself in on goal. Joey O'Brien got back to
make a tremendous saving tackle to deny the England youngster and allow the
Boleyn Ground crowd to breathe a sigh of relief. The visitors had not been
able to make much headway during the opening period, and they made a change
to their attacking line-up at the break, with both Lukaku and James McCarthy
being introduced from the bench. Seven minutes into the second half they
made their third change as Brian Oviedo entered the fray and the
substitutions had the desired effect as the Toffees upped the pressure. They
were rewarded with an equalising goal on 62 minutes when James Collins was
penalised for a foul on Barkley 25 yards out and Baines stepped up to fire a
pinpoint free-kick into the top left hand corner of Jaaskelainen's net.
Baines very nearly provided the route for a second not long after when he
drove a low cross over from the left which took a nick off Collins and would
have snuck in at the near post had it not been for Jaaskelainen's block.
But West Ham regrouped, and thanks in no small part to the contribution of
debutant sub Mladen Petric, moved back in front 14 minutes from time. Petric
showed great persistence to nick the ball away from Distin on the byline and
knock back for Kevin Nolan, who beat the first challenge and was sent
tumbling by McCarthy's trailing leg. Referee Lee Mason pointed to the spot
and Noble made no mistake from 12 yards, sending Howard the wrong way to
stroke into the bottom right corner. That was not the end of the drama
though, as seven minutes later Noble caught Barkley as he made another
piercing run through the home midfield and having already been booked, was
sent for an early bath. Baines again produced a free-kick from out of the
top drawer, going for the opposite corner this time and giving Jaaskelainen
no chance with his shot which found the net via the upright. Worse was to
follow just two minutes later as the Hammers were dragged out of position by
an Everton attack, which ended with Mirallas crossing for Lukaku to guide a
header home.
West Ham United: Jaaskelainen; O'Brien, Collins, Reid, Rat; Morrison, Noble,
Nolan (Taylor 80); Diame, Maiga (Petric 63), Jarvis (Vaz Te 72)
Subs: Adrian, McCartney, Tomkins, Collison
Goals: Morrison 31, Noble pen 76
Booked: Morrison, Collins, Noble
Sent off: Noble
Everton: Howard; Coleman, Jagielka, Distin, Baines; Osman (Oviedo 52),
Barry; Naismith (McCarthy 46), Barkley, Mirallas; Jelavic (Lukaku 46)
Subs: Joel, Heitinga, Deulofeu, Stones
Goals: Baines 62, Baines 83, Lukaku 85
Booked: Barkley
Referee: Lee Mason
Attendance: 34,952
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Under-18s slip to Sunderland defeat
WHUFC.com
A second-half penalty proved sufficient to consign Steve Potts' men to
defeat at the Academy of Light
21.09.2013
West Ham United Under-18s slipped to a slender 1-0 Barclays U18 Premier
League defeat at Sunderland on Saturday, as Martin Smith's second-half
penalty settled the contest. The game's only goal arrived just after the
hour, when Lynden Gooch turned smartly in the box, before being felled by
Amos Nasha.
Smith took charge from the spot, slotting beyond Hammers keeper Sam Howes.
It proved to be the winner, leaving manager Steve Potts to rue a string of
missed chances. He told whufc.com: "It's frustrating. We're left wondering
how we failed to get anything from the game. We had a lot of the play,
managed to create good chances and didn't take them. When it's like that,
you never know, you're always vulnerable. "The penalty gave them more of an
incentive to hold on to a lead and we just couldn't break them down. But
performance wise, there wasn't a lot wrong with it. It's just a case of
whether we could put the ball in the back of the net and unfortunately we
couldn't."
For Potts, defeat at the Academy of Light represented another missed
opportunity for his young charges, after squandering a 3-1 advantage against
Blackburn Rovers last time out. "Last week, we were in a great position,
played some really good stuff and then gave away a couple of sloppy goals,"
he continued. "Minor mistakes cost us a win there and at Sunderland, our
biggest mistake was not being ruthless enough in front of goal. "We had
very good chances to win the game and we didn't take them. The level we're
at now, it boils down to what happens at either end. In between that, I
thought we controlled the game. We were really good with the ball and I
couldn't fault the boys in that regard."
West Ham United U18s: Howes, Knoyle, Page, Nasha, Burke, Harney, Makasi,
Cullen, Brown, Bywater, Parfitt-Williams.
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Pair named in England U18 squad
WHUFC.com
Defenders Kyle Knoyle and Reece Burke have been named in the England U18
squad for the first time
21.09.2013
West Ham United defenders Kyle Knoyle and Reece Burke have been named in the
England U18 squad for the first time. Right-back Knoyle (pictured) and
centre-back Burke have both begun the second year of their scholarships in
impressive form, and have been rewarded with places in Neil Dewsnip's squad
for two friendly internationals with Hungary. The fixtures will be played
behind-closed-doors at St. George's Park on Friday 11 October and Monday 14
October, for invited guests only. The call-ups continue a fine tradition of
West Ham youngsters being included by England at U18 level. Promising
defender Leo Chambers started a 2-0 win over Italy in Mansfield in October
2012, while Joe Cole, Mark Noble, James Tomkins, Dan Potts, George Moncur,
Blair Turgott, Matthias Fanimo and Jordan Spence have all played for England
U18s previously. A non-competitive age group with no UEFA or FIFA matches
scheduled, the U18s will be coached by Dewsnip, The FA's Technical Lead for
the 17-21s age group and he will be assisted by Dan Micciche, Technical Lead
for 12-16s. They have selected an 18-man squad for the meet-up, which
includes a number of players who were involved with England U17s last season
along with some new faces who will be involved at international level for
the first time. Meanwhile, Hammers schoolboy defenders Reece Oxford and Ben
Sheaf have been named in the first England U16 squad of the new campaign as
the Young Lions prepare for the 2013 Victory Shield. This season England
start with home advantage in the Shield, by hosting Wales at Kidderminster
Harriers' Aggborough Stadium on Friday 4 October at 7.35pm. The Shield
remains an important competition for Swain and all of the England
development team, with a large pool of players selected across the three
games and given a chance to impress.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dev Squad 1-0 Stoke - FT
WHUFC.com
Minute-by-minute report of the Development Squad's game against Stoke
21.09.2013
STOKE CITY U21 v DEVELOPMENT SQUAD
BARCLAYS U21 PREMIER LEAGUE
BRITANNIA STADIUM
SATURDAY 21 SEPTEMBER 2013
KICK-OFF: 3PM
Full-time: That's it! Nick Haycock's team have secured a brilliant away
victory courtesy of Moncur's strike after 15 minutes. The Hammers had a host
of good
chances with Lletget, Tombides and Shaw all going close but in the end one
goal was all they needed to leave the Britannia Stadium with three points.
90 mins: Lletget nearly seals it as we move into stoppage time. A powerful
header produces a good save from Bachmann.
89 mins: Another corner, it's taken short to Fanimo before eventually the
ball makes it's way to Tombides who nearly wraps the game up but places his
shot just over.
87 mins: Henderson does well to control a bouncing back pass before calmly
passing the ball back to Ruddock who clears.
85 mins: Stoke are losing their discipline as they make a couple of dirty
challenges the last of which leaves Moncur in pain on the floor. He's ok to
continue and takes the free-kick which finds a leaping Tombides who's header
is tipped over the bar.
83 mins: Yet another corner as Fanimo trots across to take it. His ball in
doesn't clear the first man however and the attack comes to nothing.
81 mins: Turgott nearly gets the goal his performance deserves but his
powerful effort is deflected onto the post behind the goal. The resulting
corner is then easily cleared away.
80 mins: Just ten minutes left for the Hammers to hold out and secure what
would be an excellent away win.
78 mins: Turgott clips the bar but once again he's strayed just to far and
is caught offside. A second goal would be lovely to calm any nerves right
about now.
76 mins: just over ten minutes to go in this one and, touch wood, West Ham
are looking good value for their lead with their goal under little or no
threat in this second half.
74 mins: Fanimo has a shot charged down on the edge of the box and it
ricochets to Alabi who surges forward before finding Rossi who drags his
shot wide after a jinking run.
72 mins: Moncur is booked after he chips the ball into the net after the
linesman flagged for offside, harsh, very harsh.
71 mins: Shea is having no joy against Ruddock today with the imperious
defender too strong and quick for the American.
70 mins: Moncur is working his socks off in midfield as Stoke have a period
of possession before the centre-back lumps it cross field and out of play.
68 mins: Ironic cheers from the home support as the referee awards them a
free-kick, their cheers are short lived however as the free-kick comes to
nothing.
66 mins: Stoke make their first change, replacing Thomas with Rossi.
64 mins: Fanimo is straight into the action, crossing the ball after good
link-up play with Turgott. His cross is cut-out before it reaches the
awaiting Tombides.
63 mins: Sadlier is replaced with Matthias Fanimo who makes his second
appearance of the season after his recent return from injury.
61 mins: Sadlier jinks his way into the box leaving a defender bamboozled on
his back side before chipping it to Moncur who has time to size up a volley
before striking it into the ground and off target.
59 mins: A rare moment of attacking promise sees Thomas fire a shot at goal
but Henderson deals with it.
58 mins: Turgott skins his man once more and stands up a cross to the back
post which is met by Sadlier, the ball rebounds to Turgott but his shot is
blocked.
56 mins: Driver links up well with Turgott as he swings a cross in which is
lacking in any power and easily cleared.
54 mins: Stoke are really struggling to find any rythm going forward at the
moment with over-hit crosses the best they can muster right now.
52 mins: Turgott is again causing problems this time firing in a low cross
across the face of goal which is cleared by a lunging defender.
51 mins: Alabi has the home side's first shot of the second half as he looks
to place an effort beyond Henderson but only succeeds in picking out the
keeper.
49 mins: Another corner for the Hammers and this time Moncur's ball in finds
Potts just a couple of yards from goal but he can only fire his effort
staright at the keeper. That was a glorious chance to make the lead a lot
more comfortable.
48 mins: Moncur whips in another corner but it's easilt cleared by Grant.
47 mins: Potts has slotted into the centre of defence alongside Ruddock with
Shaw occupying the left and Driver on the right.
46 mins: We're underway for the second half as the Hammers look to hold onto
their one goal lead. Dan Potts has also emerged in his kit for the next 45
minutes replacing Chambers in defence.
Half-time: The referee brings an entertaining first half to an end at the
Britannia Stadium with West Ham ahead and looking good so far. George Moncur
netted his third goal in as many games after turning home a cross from the
impressive Blair Turgott who has run his marker ragged. The Hammers should
lead by more having hit the post twice through a Dylan Tombides shot and
then a deflected Frazer Shaw effort. As things stand Nick Haycock will be
delighted with his team's performance and will ask for more of the same
after the interval.
45 mins: Turgott wins a corner, Moncur takes but finds only the gloves of
the keeper who launches a long throw down field but Chambers is there ready
and waiting to deal with the ball.
43 mins: Stoke are resorting to long balls now as they struggle to find any
chink in the West Ham armour.
41 mins: The gloves are off! For Henderson that is, but it looks as though
he'll be able to continue through to half-time after recieving treatment.
40 mins: Henderson is called into action as Shea shoots from a few yards out
but the Irishman is able to smother the ball and collect his parried save.
He has however stayed down with what looks like a hand injury
39 mins: The return of Sebastien Lletget in West Ham's midfield has provided
the side with even more attacking threat and up to this point they are
controlling the game.
37 mins: The standard of the crossing has so far been superb from the
Hammers today with Shaw the latest man to whip in an inviting ball which is
just to high for Sadlier to reach.
36 mins: Turgott nearly nicks the ball as Stoke again play themselves into
trouble, the defender is able to recover though and launches the ball
forward.
35 mins: The game is in full swing as both sides release the shackles and
look to attack at every opportunity.
33 mins: Lletget is denied by a fine save after a header from Sadlier's
delicious cross. Stoke break and the visitors have Henderson to thank as he
keeps out a powerful effort from Waring.
32 mins: Post! Shaw hits an absolute piledriver and it deflects off a
defender and cannons into the post!
30 mins: Ruddock goes down holding his leg and this break in play sees 19
players head to the touchline for a beverage break.
28 mins: A couple of great defensive blocks from first Ruddock and then
Driver preserves the Hammers lead with shots from Shea and Waring
threatening Henderson's goal.
26 mins: The corner is taken short by Moncur who plays a one-two with
Whitehead before crossing but he's unables to pick out a man in claret and
blue.
25 mins: Stoke's youngsters are clearly following the first team as they
seek to play out from defence. A risky strategy and one which is nearly
capitalised upon after a mix-up between defenders sees them concede a
corner.
23 mins: The Hammers are ahead and looking good so far after a shaky start.
Turgott has been particularly impressive and is causing Stoke's full-backs
no end of trouble on the right-hand side.
21 mins: Tombides has another chance but his glancing header from a Moncur
corner is cleared off the line by Wheeler.
20 mins: Tombides nearly makes it 2-0 with a chance which was identical to
the one Moncur finished to put the Hammers in front. The striker however can
only fire his effort at the post and is unable to reach the rebound as Stoke
clear.
17 mins: The referee waves away a penalty appeal from the home side as the
winger takes a tumble after a light shove.
15 mins: GOAL! West Ham are ahead with their first shot on goal! Excellent
work on the wing by Turgott sees him beat two defenders before pulling the
ball back for Moncur to fire home.
14 mins: Turgott wins a free-kick on the halfway line. Driver takes but his
lofted ball is easily cleared away.
12 mins: The home side are starting to hit their stride with some easy on
the eye passing but as yet unable to find a decent final ball.
10 mins: A let-off for the Hammers as Waring prods the ball over Henderson
after a slick team move, but much to his disgust his shot tbounces inches
wide of the post.
8 mins: A lovely through ball from Lletget has Turgott sprinting on to the
end of it but just before he can reach the ball the on rushing keeper slides
to gather the ball.
7 mins: The Hammers back four are running towards their own goal following a
ball over the top but Shaw is on hand to clear the danger.
6 mins: Shaw launches a diagonal ball towards Turgott but it's easy pickings
for the Stoke keeper who collects with ease.
4 mins: The right hand side looks like it may prove profitable for the
Hammers today, with the lively Turgott keen to make a good impact.
3 mins: Turgott swings a cross in from the right but Sadlier's control lets
him down and the ball runs out of play.
1 min: We're underway at the Britannia with Stoke kicking us off.
The Development Squad travel north to the Britannia Stadium to take on
Stoke, looking to extend their good start to the Barclay Under-21 Premier
League season. Nick Haycock's side are without frontman Elliot Lee who is
involved with the first team's match at the Boleyn Ground against Everton.
The striker has five goals so far this season and the Under-21s will be
looking to the talented Dylan Tombides to fill the void left by Lee.
A 1-1 draw last time out against Manchester City meant the Hammers had
picked up three wins, a draw and just one defeat from their opening five
fixtures of the campaign. Stephen Henderson starts in goal for the young
Hammers having last featured in the 5-4 victory away at Newcastle where the
team rallied from 3-0 down to secure an amazing win. There is also a return
to Development Squad action following injury for Dan Potts who takes a place
on the bench for today's game.
West Ham United: Henderson, Driver, Shaw, Chambers, Ruddock, Turgott,
Moncur, Tombides, Whitehead, Sadlier.
Subs: Fanimo, Nemrava, Maguire, Potts, Miles.
Stoke: Bachmann, Wheeler, Gomez, Edu, Grant, Keane, Thomas, Ness, Waring,
Alabi, Shea.
Subs: Watkins, Eve, Ward, Heneghan, Rossi.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 2 Everton 3
21 September 2013
Last updated at 19:21
By David Ornstein
BBC Sport
Leighton Baines scored two free-kicks as Everton twice came from behind to
win at 10-man West Ham and remain the Premier League's only unbeaten team.
Ravel Morrison put the hosts ahead but Everton brought on Romelu Lukaku at
the break and that helped turn the match. After Baines fired across Jussi
Jaaskelainen to equalise, Mark Noble restored West Ham's lead from the
penalty spot, but was then sent off. Baines curled home his second to level
and Lukaku headed the winner. Everton secured a fine victory over Chelsea
last weekend and rise to fifth with this result, which was a reward for
their superb second-half display. West Ham drop to 14th having still not won
since the opening day, but there were encouraging signs as they ended a
three-match goal drought. The opening half-hour was high in quality but low
in chances - Jaaskelainen reacted well to stop a Kevin Mirallas drive but
that was Everton's only attempt in the first 45 minutes. West Ham pursued
the likes of Jermain Defoe, Loic Remy, Lukaku and Demba Ba during the
summer, and it was easy to see why as Modibo Maiga struggled to make an
impact in the lone striker role. However, they looked more the likely to
break through and did just that when Matt Jarvis surged inside from the left
and found Morrison, whose effort from just outside the area flew in off Phil
Jagielka.
Roberto Martinez signalled his intent at half-time by replacing Steven
Naismith and Nikica Jelavic with Lukaku and James McCarthy, and the response
was instant as Lukaku released Mirallas to round Jaaskelainen, only to see
his low cross scrambled away. A final substitution was enforced on the
Toffees when Leon Osman limped off, but their play continued to improve and
Mirallas narrowly failed to convert a Baines cross following a period of
intense pressure.
With West Ham barely able to escape their own territory, James Collins
fouled Barkley and Baines beat Jaaskelainen with a sublime set-piece.
Hammers boss Sam Allardyce decided to meet fire with fire by introducing two
strikers in Mladen Petric and Ricardo Vaz Te, and it paid off when Nolan
drew a foul from McCarthy after superb work from Petric - Noble dispatched
the penalty. But the momentum took a decisive shift after Noble was given a
second booking for a challenge on Everton midfielder Barkley 18 yards out.
This time Baines picked the opposite corner with another stunning free-kick.
With Lukaku causing West Ham no shortage of problems Everton went in search
of a winner, and it arrived when the Belgium international started a move
before finishing it with an emphatic header from Mirallas's centre.
Everton manager Roberto Martinez: "We knew we were going to be tested, we
knew we had to defend our box well and be strong in dead-ball situations. We
started brightly and should have scored, but then West Ham stopped us from
playing. "They imposed themselves on the game. Last week's result took a bit
of energy out of a few individuals, but the strength in our squad is very
encouraging. "To score three goals with the individual quality Leighton and
Romelu showed is very, very pleasing. "I'm delighted with the attitude and
mentality we have showed in every performance this season. I'm proud at
being unbeaten so far - now we need to work even harder to become better and
make sure we keep improving."
West Ham manager Sam Allardyce on Mark Noble's second yellow card for a
tackle on Ross Barkley: "It is always easy to look at the situation on my
laptop afterwards and say Mark played the ball first. Unfortunately for us,
the referee didn't see it that way and, to make things worse, Leighton
Baines has then fired an unstoppable free-kick right into the top corner.
"With our defensive ability, I thought we would see it out at 2-1 but it is
really frustrating for us that, not only was Mark sent off but we were
punished again by them putting ball in the net straight after we went
ahead."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Utd 2-3 Everton
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 21st September 2013
By: Staff Writer
West Ham's inability to hold a winning position cost them dear this
afternoon as Everton seized all three points at the Boleyn Ground with two
late goals.
Sam Allardyce's side were looking reasonably comfortable at 2-1 with 15
minutes of normal time remaining, before disaster struck. Firstly, Mark
Noble received his marching orders for a second bookable offence - then
Everton struck twice in two minutes to record a second successive Premier
League victory against London opposition.
In stark contrast to their last outing here against Stoke, the Hammers
started brightly and were good value for the 1-0 lead they held at the break
courtesy of Ravel Morrison's first Premier League goal. On the half hour
mark, Matt Jarvis jinked his way down the left wing before darting inside
and passing short to the youngster, whose shot was diverted in the opposite
direction by Phil Jagielka's flailing right foot and into the back of a
prone Tim Howard's net.
The game changed as a result of Roberto Martinez's decision to introduce
James McCarthy - who shackled the previously marauding Ravel Morrison
effectively - and Romalu Lukaku, who tormented West Ham's defence throughout
the second half. That would have been particularly hard to swallow for
Allardyce, for whom the on-loan striker was a key summer transfer target.
Both substitutes played a major part in swinging the game Everton's way, but
it was a desperate lunge from James Collins that proved to be the catalyst
for the visitors' revival. The Welshman lunged in on Ross Barkley as the
youngster was poised to shoot and conceded a free kick on the edge of the
box; an opportunity that Leighton Baines took full advantage of by expertly
guiding the resulting free kick into Jaaskelainen's right hand corner.
Everton, full of confidence having restored parity drove on in search of a
second, yet it was to be West Ham who unexpectedly grabbed the next goal.
Completely against the run of play, United restored their slender advantage
from the penalty spot as Mark Noble, unerringly accurate from 12 yards, made
it 2-1 with just 15 minutes of normal time remaining.
Although it was captain Kevin Noble who won the spot kick when he fell over
substitute McCarthy's trailing leg, all credit goes to debutant Mladen
Petric whose persistence prior to the foul had kept the ball in play.
Determined to make the most of the 70 per cent of possession they'd enjoyed
up to that point in the second period, Everton continued to apply the
pressure. Having failed to clear their lines once or twice, West Ham began
to get decidedly edgy and that slight whiff of panic eventually manifested
itself in a late challenge from Noble on Barkley - again - on the edge of
the box. Again.
Having already been booked, Noble knew he was in trouble and referee Lee
Mason had no hesitation in pulling out a red card - although many inside the
stadium were convinced the midfielder made contact with the ball before
colliding with Barkley. Once Noble departed and the debate had ceased, up
stepped Baines to send the ball into the opposite side of Jaaskelainen's
goal to where he'd placed his first, equally stunning, free kick.
So with just seven minutes remaining the question on everyone's lips was
"could West Ham hold out for a point?" Just a minute later they had their
answer, when sub Lukaku stopped bravely to head home what proved to be both
the winning goal and the first West Ham have conceded from open play this
season. Lukaku's reward for his bravery was a head butt to the face from
marker James Collins and several minutes' medical treatment.
Seven minutes of added-on time ensued but the Hammers never looked like
grabbing a third goal and a share of the spoils, leaving Allardyce and his
troops reflecting on a second successive home defeat. The season may be
young but worrying signs are beginning to emerge - whilst yet again the
Hammers failed to trouble the opposition 'keeper (two shots on target today
took the season total from five games to just eight).
Next weekend, Big Sam takes his squad to newly-promoted Hull City for their
next Premier League clash. Prior to that is the second visit of Cardiff City
already this season for Tuesday night's Capital One Cup clash. Whilst that
game has no impact on the league, it at least offers Allardyce and his squad
- who have now taken just two points from their last four games - the
opportunity for brief respite from the league campaign and the chance to
rebuild some flagging morale.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ricardo Vaz Te remains part of West Ham manager Sam Allardyce's plans
Last Updated: September 21, 2013 11:37am
SSN
Ricardo Vaz Te will not be frozen out at West Ham United, with Sam Allardyce
prepared to consider him for selection. The Portuguese forward handed in a
transfer request late in the summer window in an effort to force through a
move elsewhere. He was, however, to be left frustrated as the deadline came
and went with him still on the books at Upton Park. A lack of first team
opportunities led Vaz Te to look elsewhere, but he must now re-focus on the
battle for starting berths. Allardyce is happy to still have the 26-year-old
involved, with West Ham searching for an attacking spark - with Andy Carroll
injured and Modibo Maiga goalless. The Hammers boss said: "Ricardo has never
had a bad attitude. "What he is is a frustrated footballer. He thinks he
should be playing on a more regular basis. "Opportunities will arise. If he
takes them, he will be in the team."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Sam Allardyce frustrated by Mark Noble's dismissal in Everton
defeat
Last Updated: September 21, 2013 6:06pm
SSN
West Ham United boss Sam Allardyce felt referee Lee Mason cost his side
against Everton, with Mark Noble's red card the turning point in a 3-2
defeat. The Hammers, who brought to an end their long wait for a Premier
League goal, were undone in the final nine minutes against the Toffees. They
led 2-1 entering the closing stages, but saw Noble collect a second yellow
card for a foul on Ross Barkley and the game suddenly swung in Everton's
favour. Two fantastic free-kicks from Leighton Baines and a powerful header
from Romelu Lukaku ultimately left them empty-handed, but Allardyce believes
it was the performance of the match officials which hit them hardest. "What
we should have done is not get a man sent off, but I'm not too sure that's
Mark Noble's fault more than the referee's."
He told Sky Sports on the decision to dismiss Noble: "He's played the ball
actually. I've just had five or six looks at it before I've come out and I
think the lad has took the chance to go down on the tackle, but you see Mark
Noble plays the ball first and then the lad goes down. "I know it looks like
a free-kick but, from where the referee is, he has got to be absolutely
certain in that area and the fact that it's Mark Noble, because he's going
to get sent off. "I think he made a huge mistake there. Mind you, other
people might see it different. "If you look at the other free-kicks today
that he didn't even give as fouls, in terms of consistency, I thought he was
very inconsistent today - in particular that decision for us. "Because of
Bainesy hitting the first one, he's hit the second one even better and it's
very costly for us today because not only have they scored but he's also got
sent off in a 2-1 position. So, very frustrated for the players, very
disappointed on that decision and we have to pick ourselves up.
West Ham manager Sam Allardyce says he can't blame goalkeeper Jussi
Jääskeläinen for the three goals they conceded at the hands of Everton. "We
kept Everton to the minimum today - as good a side as they are and the money
they have spent over the years, where they finish - we kept them to the bare
minimum of chances and if it wasn't for Bainesy today with two outstanding
free-kicks, I think we might have won the game."
Allardyce added on what his side could have done differently: "What we
should have done is not get a man sent off, but I'm not too sure that's Mark
Noble's fault more than the referee's. "I could say to Mark Noble don't make
the tackle, but it's difficult for me to say that when the lad is out there
playing and thinks he's going to get it and play the ball. "It's a cruel
blow for us today but one we have to take on the chin and bounce back from."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Everton edge five-goal thriller with West Ham 3-2 at Upton Park
Last Updated: September 21, 2013 7:26pm
SSN
Two brilliant free-kicks from Leighton Baines and a debut goal from Romelu
Lukaku saw Everton to a thrilling 3-2 win at West Ham United. Sam
Allardyce's side, who ended the game with 10 men, thought they had done
enough to secure at least a point as Ravel Morrison and Mark Noble netted
their first Premier League goals since the opening day of the season.
Best of the match
Man of the match: Leighton Baines. Showed his class with two moments of
brilliance which kept Everton in the hunt for three points.
Goal of the match: Both of Baines' efforts are contenders, but his second
just edges it as he bent the ball brilliantly over the wall and in off the
post - with Jussi Jaaskelainen rooted to the spot.
Moment of the match: Mark Noble's dismissal turned the game, with Baines
levelling from the resulting free-kick and Romelu Lukaku grabbing a late
winner.
Talking points: Can West Ham consider themselves unfortunate to have ended
the game empty-handed? Everton are still unbeaten, what can they achieve
this season?
The Hammers had gone more than five hours of top-flight football without
finding the target before edging ahead against the Toffees. They survived an
early scare when Kevin Mirallas forced Jussi Jaaskelainen into a fine
sprawling stop, but broke the deadlock on 31 minutes when Matt Jarvis teed
up Morrison on the edge of the box and his drilled effort took a wicked
deflection off Phil Jagielka to leave Tim Howard wrong-footed. Lukaku came
on for his Everton bow as part of a double change at the interval, and
Roberto Martinez was forced to play his final card within seven minutes of
the re-start as Leon Osman hobbled from the field.
Fresh faces appeared to breathe new life into the visitors and they had been
knocking on the door for some time before hauling themselves level in
spectacular fashion just past the hour mark, with Baines crashing a
trademark 25-yard free-kick into the top corner. It was, however, to be the
hosts who got their noses back in front, with Noble stepping up on 76
minutes to calmly convert from the penalty spot after Kevin Nolan had been
tripped inside the box by James McCarthy. The West Ham midfielder went from
hero to villain in the space of five minutes, though, as he collected a
second yellow card for a foul on Ross Barkley and saw Baines bend another
fabulous free-kick into the back of the net off the inside of the post.
With the Hammers rocking, Everton rammed home their numerical advantage five
minutes from time when Mirallas floated over a cross and Lukaku bravely
powered a header past Jaaskelainen - with a nasty clash of heads suggesting
he may not remember too much about his dramatic clincher. Leighton Baines
scored two goals from free kicks and praised Romelu Lukaku's winning goal in
Everton's 3-2 victory over West Ham.
Options
West Ham - missing attacking options Andy Carroll, Joe Cole and Stewart
Downing to injury - can take comfort from the end of their scoring drought
which had lasted 314 minutes until Morrison fired them ahead after half an
hour. Everton went close after six minutes when Mirallas tested Jaaskelainen
and Steven Naismith was inches away from a second attempt when the ball
sailed past. It was West Ham, though, who showed precision in the 31st
minute as they surged ahead, although a large deflection off Jagielka helped
them to take the lead.
Jarvis, once again proving a handful down the left wing, skillfully threaded
his way infield and teed up Morrison and the former Manchester United
midfielder drilled the ball home. West Ham manager Sam Allardyce says he
can't blame goalkeeper Jussi Jääskeläinen for the three goals they conceded
at the hands of Everton. Lukaku came on for the second half and his delicate
early touch was taken on by compatriot Mirallas, who raced to the byline and
crossed only for West Ham to recover by getting numbers back.
Naismith had also made way for McCarthy as Martinez attempted to invigorate
his side, but the Hammers were more creative with Jarvis galloping free and
just failing to find Modibo Maiga. Showing vision once more, Lukaku played
Barkley into the area only for the England midfielder to run down a blind
alley.
The initiative had been seized and in the 62nd minute the equaliser arrived,
Baines steering a terrific 20-yard free-kick beyond Jaaskelainen into the
top left corner.
Noble flashed a corner wide of the left post and Baines forced a save from
close range as the match opened up. Noble powered home from the spot after
Nolan had been hacked down by McCarthy, but then he trudged off after
receiving a second yellow from referee Lee Mason and Baines delivered the
equaliser.
The outstanding Lukaku deserved a goal and it duly arrived as he nodded
Everton to victory.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
MATCH REPORT: WEST HAM 2 THE REFEREE 3
By Iain Dale 21 Sep 2013 at 19:24
West Ham Till I Die
If I see a worse referee at Upton Park this season, we'll be in real
trouble. Mr Lee Mason gives his profession a bad name. He had an absolute
stinker today. The only thing he got right was our penalty, but that was so
blatant he couldn't really have done anything else. He gave corners when
they were goal kicks and vice versa. He gave fouls when they weren't and
didn't when they were. And he lost us the game. From my vantage point Mark
Noble's tackle on Ross Barklay was a brilliantly timed one. It wasn't a
foul, and it certainly wasn't a yellow card. Sadly Sun Goals haven't shown
the incident, only the goal, so I will have to wait for MOTD to see if I am
right. *UPDATE: OK, having seen MOTD, I admit it, I was wrong!
The first half was scrappy. Everton had a lot of the possession for the
first ten minutes but we gradually made our mark and began to slot some
passes together. There was no lumping it forward and defensively we were
very sound. Everton played a lot of pretty stuff around the penalty area but
I don't remember them really having a shot in the first half. Morrison took
his goal well, and even though it got a deflection which wrongfooted Tim
Howard, it was well deserved. Ravel Morrison improved with every minute of
the game. In the second half he felt confident enough to do some Joe
Cole-esque flicks. To accommodate Morrison in his favourite position Mo
Diame played out on the right and did really well. I thought Mark Noble had
a great game. At times he orchestrated the midfield like a conductor. He won
the ball tenaciously and drove forward at every opportunity. It was just a
pity that his midfield partner Kevin Nolan contributed very little to the
game. His balls forward were invariably hit too hard.
Defensively we were magnificent. The scoreline will never reflect that, but
Reid and Collins were outstanding. And I thought Joey O'Brien was brilliant,
back in his customary position of right back. The timing of his tackle on an
Everton player when he was through on goal was superlative and is probably
the incident I shall remember most from this game. Razvan Rat didn't do
badly in his first premier league game, although I thought the pace got to
him at times. I felt he hadn't really got much of an understanding with Matt
Jarvis, but did better when Vaz Te switched wings.
And as for Maiga… well, the best that can be said is that he had a shot.
Admittedly it flew over the crossbar, but at least he tried. Maybe I just
can't see what he does, but my Everton supporting friend thought he did well
in the first half. Well, he would, wouldn't he? Mladen Petric didn't set the
pitch on fire, but he did play a major part in winning the penalty, so
that's more than Maiga has achieved in five games.
Jussi Jaaskelainen has now conceded three consecutive goals from free kicks
outside the area. Simply not good enough. He was man of the match last week,
but those statistics will give cause for concern. However, would any
goalkeeper have saved any of those free kicks? I'm not sure.
I think we just have the chalk this one down. For most of the game we played
well. We played some good football. The sending off changed everything.
Onwards.
Afterthought: What did we all think of the new stadium announcer? I thought
he did OK initially, but no one could hear the half-times because he wasn't
close enough to the microphone, and he mispronounced Petric's name, which
was pretty poor. He kept saying Petrick.
Jaaskelainen 5
Reid 8
Collins 8
O'Brien 8
Rat 6
Diame 7
Nolan 5
Noble 8
Morrison 7
Jarvis 7
Maiga 4
Petric 6
Taylor 5
Vaz Te 6
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Tottenham set to sign Ciprian Marica on a free as striker rejects Arsenal
and West Ham interest
21 Sep 2013 23:00
The Mirror
Big-spending Spurs are set to land another striker this week – after
splashing £107million in the transfer window, writes Alan Nixon of the
Sunday People.
Romanian hitman Ciprian Marica is set to snub Arsenal and West Ham advances
to join Andre Villas-Boas's new-look Tottenham side. Marica, capped 60 times
by Romania, is looking for a £60,000-a-week three-year deal at White Hart
Lane. After blowing the £86m Gareth Bale cash on stars like Brazilian
Paulinho and Spain's Roberto Soldado, Villas-Boas can net the 28-year-old
for free because Marica had his contract with German outfit Schalke
terminated a year early at the end of last season. His club CV is
impressive, playing for Shakhtar Donetsk and Stuttgart in a wandering career
around Europe over the past decade. Spurs boss Villas-Boas, who takes his
club to Cardiff today, wants to move flop Emmanuel Adebayor and young Harry
Kane out of north London, freeing up a slot for Marica. If the deal cannot
be done, Villas-Boas will be under pressure from Daniel Levy to bring
£100,000-a-week outcast Adebayor in from the cold. The £9.3m striker has
been banished to training with the kids at White Hart Lane. Marica, who has
previously captained Romania, has netted 22 goals for his country.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mixed feelings for Mladen
WHUFC.com
Hammers debutant disappointed to see lead slip away in dying moments against
Everton
22.09.2013
It was an afternoon of mixed emotions for West Ham United debutant Mladen
Petric on Saturday. The Croatian striker was introduced from the bench with
the score at 1-1, then played his part in the Hammers' second goal before
watching on as Everton turned the game around late on to take the points.
The defeat was tough to take for the ex-Fulham man, although he was happy to
get his first run-out in claret and blue. "It was a really tough loss," he
said. "When you go in front twice you shouldn't give it away."We were a bit
unlucky in the end with the red card and the two goals in the last ten
minutes, so it was disappointing.
"They did pressurise us in the second half and played a lot better than they
did in the first, but I think we did enough to keep them to one goal. "The
positive was that we scored two goals in the game. The first half was very
good from our side, we had a lot of ball possession and scored the goal, so
we will try to move on with that. "I'm very happy to be playing again. It's
been a long break for me, so every day I'm feeling better and better. "I'm
doing intensive training, it's hard but you get used to it - and I want to
get really fit and help the team. "For Tuesday [against Cardiff]. we'll see,
I don't know what the manager has in his mind, but I hope to be involved and
get some time on the pitch. "I hope to score as soon as possible, and the
most important thing is that the team wins."
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com
WHUFC.com
Sam Allardyce is keeping calm despite seeing West Ham United edged out by
Everton in a five-goal thriller
21.09.2013
Having taken charge of more than 800 matches in his managerial career, Sam
Allardyce knows now is not the time to panic. The West Ham United boss
watched on in near-disbelief as his side twice lost the lead before going
down to ten men and being edged out 3-2 by Everton in a pulsating Barclays
Premier League fixture. The Hammers went in front after 31 minutes through
Ravel Morrison's maiden top-flight goal, only for Baines to curl his first
outstanding free-kick into the top left-hand corner after a James Collins
foul on Ross Barkley after an hour. James McCarthy's trip on Kevin Nolan
allowed Mark Noble to slot West Ham back into the lead from the penalty spot
on 76 minutes, only for the No16's foul on Barkley to see him sent-off for a
second bookable offence - despite it appearing that he got a foot to the
ball. With the Hammers down to ten men, Kevin Mirallas combined with Belgian
compatriot Romelu Lukaku, who bravely headed in the winner with five minutes
to go. The Boleyn Ground faithful were left equally stunned by the Hammers'
second home defeat in succession, but Big Sam insists time is on his team's
side just five matches into a 38-game 2013/14 season. "It was a gut-wrencher
and leaves you feeling so sorry for the players deep down inside," said the
manager. "Obviously the fans are disappointed too because they've seen a
good performance but seen us lose 3-2. "For me the players have done so much
and created a good game in terms of what we've come to expect at Upton Park,
but then unfortunately Everton don't seem to be our team here. Last year, we
went 1-0 up and I remember Carlton Cole getting sent-off and we ended up
losing 2-1. "The game has hinged on a free-kick that the referee has given
that has not only given them a free-kick that they've scored from, but he's
also sent Mark Noble off. Then, they've scored the winner because we were
down to ten men. It's difficult to take. "I have looked at it again and I
know it's easy for me to say because I've looked at it on the laptop, but
he's taken the ball and he's not played the man until after he's played the
ball. For me, that would then be difficult to take.
"My problem would then be if they don't see it that way, because development
and constructive criticism is a big part of referees getting better and if
they say that's a free-kick and it was the right decision to send him off,
then I would have a problem with that. "I think many decision these days
don't appear to be rectified enough and the responsibility of the referees'
coaches and bosses is to make sure that development is right and clear and
they understand it. Then mistakes get fewer and farther between. That's how
we find players and develop them and coach them into being better players.
"It wouldn't have been a major decision had it been a free-kick and a yellow
card and we still would have said it's not a free-kick in the first place,
but he'd not have been sent-off. Baines then scores a goal, which was great
technique which we could do nothing about, but I don't think we'd have lost
the game."
It had all been a different story before half-time, when West Ham dominated
for long periods against Roberto Martinez's men, not allowing them to settle
into their new patient passing style. As a result, it was no surprise when
Morrison collected Matt Jarvis' pass and fired in a shot that clipped Phil
Jagielka on the way into the net. "Even though Everton had a good part of
the game in the second half, with the players they could introduce from the
bench [in Lukaku and McCarthy] we always knew that could happen. "Jussi has
hardly had a save to make other than the two free-kicks and the header,
which I don't think he could have got to anyway. Other than that, he only
had one save when Mirallas came inside and hit one in the first ten minutes
and Jussi saved it. "It's a great shame with our defensive record and the
way we defended that we actually conceded three goals."
There were positives for the manager to take, with Morrison continuing his
development with an eye-catching, goalscoring performance in central
midfield and debutant Mladen Petric playing a huge role in the move that led
to West Ham's penalty. "Ravel is getting better. He's got to be careful
because I thought he tried to buy a free-kick when he shouldn't have done,
so I'll have a word with him about that. At that stage, he'd been booked as
well, so I'll have to make sure that doesn't happen again. "He's looking
better and better and in the end, you talk about players being ready and
managers not playing young players, but the trouble is that most young
players aren't good enough. When you know Ravel Morrison is good enough then
it's not a hard decision for me to put him in the team. "It's not difficult
for me to stick young ones in when I know he's good enough. I did it many
times at Bolton and at Blackburn Rovers and I'll do it here. They get their
chance and they either step up to the mark or they don't. If they don't, you
either put them back down to develop or you get rid ot them, that's the
bottom line to play in the Premier League. "With Ravel, it's not a difficult
decision as everybody can see. He can only get better with the more
experience that he gets."
Finally, Big Sam has been in the managerial game long enough to know that a
four-game winless run will cause some supporters to get a little restless.
However, the boss is not about to start worrying just yet. "Everybody else
is not scoring goals or having a little wobble. Manchester United lost at
Liverpool, Chelsea have lost two on the trot, Newcastle won two and lost at
home on Saturday. "We would love to have got off to a great start but we
have now made that difficult with our good group of fixtures, especially
losing to Everton. I don't consider it all our fault losing on Saturday, but
we have got to pick ourselves up and make sure we get something at Hull City
and then come back here and try to win the next game to get more points on
the board. "If that doesn't happen, it's a marathon, not a sprint."
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers stunned by late Toffees blast
WHUFC.com
West Ham United saw a 2-1 lead turn into a 3-2 defeat inside the final seven
minutes against Everton
21.09.2013
West Ham United 2-3 Everton
Barclays Premier League
West Ham United twice had the lead wrestled away from them along the way to
a 3-2 defeat to Everton at the Boleyn Ground on Saturday. Ravel Morrison and
Mark Noble were on target for the hosts, but their efforts were cancelled
out by two stunning free-kicks from Leighton Baines. Noble collected a
second booking for the offence which led to the second equaliser just seven
minutes from the end, and the Toffees made use of their extra man two
minutes later when Romelu Lukaku headed home. It was a remarkable turnaround
which left the home crowd stunned as it sent the Hammers to a second home
defeat in succession. Jussi Jaaskelainen was the first of the goalkeepers to
be called into action, diving to his left to push Kevin Mirallas' drilled
shot behind after the Everton wingman cut in from the left hand side to
fashion the opportunity. The first sight of goal for the Hammers came on
eight minutes when Matt Jarvis made a rapid burst of pace to run in behind
Seamus Coleman and advance on the penalty area. Just as it looked as though
a shooting opportunity would arise, Sylvain Distin came across to block his
path to goal. There was plenty of endeavour from both sides in the opening
exchanges, but little in the way of goalscoring chances as West Ham looked
to continue their solid start to the campaign. They were also searching for
their first Barclays Premier League goal since the opening game of the
season, and it duly arrived with 31 minutes on the clock, thanks in part to
a helpful deflection off Everton defender Phil Jagielka.
That will not take any shine off Morrison's debut top flight goal, as he
received the ball just outside the area following good work from Jarvis down
the left and let fly. Tim Howard probably had it covered before Jagielka's
touch, but the home side did not care as the ball flew into the net. Everton
almost hit back immediately when they broke quickly from a corner and all of
a sudden Ross Barkley found himself in on goal. Joey O'Brien got back to
make a tremendous saving tackle to deny the England youngster and allow the
Boleyn Ground crowd to breathe a sigh of relief. The visitors had not been
able to make much headway during the opening period, and they made a change
to their attacking line-up at the break, with both Lukaku and James McCarthy
being introduced from the bench. Seven minutes into the second half they
made their third change as Brian Oviedo entered the fray and the
substitutions had the desired effect as the Toffees upped the pressure. They
were rewarded with an equalising goal on 62 minutes when James Collins was
penalised for a foul on Barkley 25 yards out and Baines stepped up to fire a
pinpoint free-kick into the top left hand corner of Jaaskelainen's net.
Baines very nearly provided the route for a second not long after when he
drove a low cross over from the left which took a nick off Collins and would
have snuck in at the near post had it not been for Jaaskelainen's block.
But West Ham regrouped, and thanks in no small part to the contribution of
debutant sub Mladen Petric, moved back in front 14 minutes from time. Petric
showed great persistence to nick the ball away from Distin on the byline and
knock back for Kevin Nolan, who beat the first challenge and was sent
tumbling by McCarthy's trailing leg. Referee Lee Mason pointed to the spot
and Noble made no mistake from 12 yards, sending Howard the wrong way to
stroke into the bottom right corner. That was not the end of the drama
though, as seven minutes later Noble caught Barkley as he made another
piercing run through the home midfield and having already been booked, was
sent for an early bath. Baines again produced a free-kick from out of the
top drawer, going for the opposite corner this time and giving Jaaskelainen
no chance with his shot which found the net via the upright. Worse was to
follow just two minutes later as the Hammers were dragged out of position by
an Everton attack, which ended with Mirallas crossing for Lukaku to guide a
header home.
West Ham United: Jaaskelainen; O'Brien, Collins, Reid, Rat; Morrison, Noble,
Nolan (Taylor 80); Diame, Maiga (Petric 63), Jarvis (Vaz Te 72)
Subs: Adrian, McCartney, Tomkins, Collison
Goals: Morrison 31, Noble pen 76
Booked: Morrison, Collins, Noble
Sent off: Noble
Everton: Howard; Coleman, Jagielka, Distin, Baines; Osman (Oviedo 52),
Barry; Naismith (McCarthy 46), Barkley, Mirallas; Jelavic (Lukaku 46)
Subs: Joel, Heitinga, Deulofeu, Stones
Goals: Baines 62, Baines 83, Lukaku 85
Booked: Barkley
Referee: Lee Mason
Attendance: 34,952
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Under-18s slip to Sunderland defeat
WHUFC.com
A second-half penalty proved sufficient to consign Steve Potts' men to
defeat at the Academy of Light
21.09.2013
West Ham United Under-18s slipped to a slender 1-0 Barclays U18 Premier
League defeat at Sunderland on Saturday, as Martin Smith's second-half
penalty settled the contest. The game's only goal arrived just after the
hour, when Lynden Gooch turned smartly in the box, before being felled by
Amos Nasha.
Smith took charge from the spot, slotting beyond Hammers keeper Sam Howes.
It proved to be the winner, leaving manager Steve Potts to rue a string of
missed chances. He told whufc.com: "It's frustrating. We're left wondering
how we failed to get anything from the game. We had a lot of the play,
managed to create good chances and didn't take them. When it's like that,
you never know, you're always vulnerable. "The penalty gave them more of an
incentive to hold on to a lead and we just couldn't break them down. But
performance wise, there wasn't a lot wrong with it. It's just a case of
whether we could put the ball in the back of the net and unfortunately we
couldn't."
For Potts, defeat at the Academy of Light represented another missed
opportunity for his young charges, after squandering a 3-1 advantage against
Blackburn Rovers last time out. "Last week, we were in a great position,
played some really good stuff and then gave away a couple of sloppy goals,"
he continued. "Minor mistakes cost us a win there and at Sunderland, our
biggest mistake was not being ruthless enough in front of goal. "We had
very good chances to win the game and we didn't take them. The level we're
at now, it boils down to what happens at either end. In between that, I
thought we controlled the game. We were really good with the ball and I
couldn't fault the boys in that regard."
West Ham United U18s: Howes, Knoyle, Page, Nasha, Burke, Harney, Makasi,
Cullen, Brown, Bywater, Parfitt-Williams.
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Pair named in England U18 squad
WHUFC.com
Defenders Kyle Knoyle and Reece Burke have been named in the England U18
squad for the first time
21.09.2013
West Ham United defenders Kyle Knoyle and Reece Burke have been named in the
England U18 squad for the first time. Right-back Knoyle (pictured) and
centre-back Burke have both begun the second year of their scholarships in
impressive form, and have been rewarded with places in Neil Dewsnip's squad
for two friendly internationals with Hungary. The fixtures will be played
behind-closed-doors at St. George's Park on Friday 11 October and Monday 14
October, for invited guests only. The call-ups continue a fine tradition of
West Ham youngsters being included by England at U18 level. Promising
defender Leo Chambers started a 2-0 win over Italy in Mansfield in October
2012, while Joe Cole, Mark Noble, James Tomkins, Dan Potts, George Moncur,
Blair Turgott, Matthias Fanimo and Jordan Spence have all played for England
U18s previously. A non-competitive age group with no UEFA or FIFA matches
scheduled, the U18s will be coached by Dewsnip, The FA's Technical Lead for
the 17-21s age group and he will be assisted by Dan Micciche, Technical Lead
for 12-16s. They have selected an 18-man squad for the meet-up, which
includes a number of players who were involved with England U17s last season
along with some new faces who will be involved at international level for
the first time. Meanwhile, Hammers schoolboy defenders Reece Oxford and Ben
Sheaf have been named in the first England U16 squad of the new campaign as
the Young Lions prepare for the 2013 Victory Shield. This season England
start with home advantage in the Shield, by hosting Wales at Kidderminster
Harriers' Aggborough Stadium on Friday 4 October at 7.35pm. The Shield
remains an important competition for Swain and all of the England
development team, with a large pool of players selected across the three
games and given a chance to impress.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dev Squad 1-0 Stoke - FT
WHUFC.com
Minute-by-minute report of the Development Squad's game against Stoke
21.09.2013
STOKE CITY U21 v DEVELOPMENT SQUAD
BARCLAYS U21 PREMIER LEAGUE
BRITANNIA STADIUM
SATURDAY 21 SEPTEMBER 2013
KICK-OFF: 3PM
Full-time: That's it! Nick Haycock's team have secured a brilliant away
victory courtesy of Moncur's strike after 15 minutes. The Hammers had a host
of good
chances with Lletget, Tombides and Shaw all going close but in the end one
goal was all they needed to leave the Britannia Stadium with three points.
90 mins: Lletget nearly seals it as we move into stoppage time. A powerful
header produces a good save from Bachmann.
89 mins: Another corner, it's taken short to Fanimo before eventually the
ball makes it's way to Tombides who nearly wraps the game up but places his
shot just over.
87 mins: Henderson does well to control a bouncing back pass before calmly
passing the ball back to Ruddock who clears.
85 mins: Stoke are losing their discipline as they make a couple of dirty
challenges the last of which leaves Moncur in pain on the floor. He's ok to
continue and takes the free-kick which finds a leaping Tombides who's header
is tipped over the bar.
83 mins: Yet another corner as Fanimo trots across to take it. His ball in
doesn't clear the first man however and the attack comes to nothing.
81 mins: Turgott nearly gets the goal his performance deserves but his
powerful effort is deflected onto the post behind the goal. The resulting
corner is then easily cleared away.
80 mins: Just ten minutes left for the Hammers to hold out and secure what
would be an excellent away win.
78 mins: Turgott clips the bar but once again he's strayed just to far and
is caught offside. A second goal would be lovely to calm any nerves right
about now.
76 mins: just over ten minutes to go in this one and, touch wood, West Ham
are looking good value for their lead with their goal under little or no
threat in this second half.
74 mins: Fanimo has a shot charged down on the edge of the box and it
ricochets to Alabi who surges forward before finding Rossi who drags his
shot wide after a jinking run.
72 mins: Moncur is booked after he chips the ball into the net after the
linesman flagged for offside, harsh, very harsh.
71 mins: Shea is having no joy against Ruddock today with the imperious
defender too strong and quick for the American.
70 mins: Moncur is working his socks off in midfield as Stoke have a period
of possession before the centre-back lumps it cross field and out of play.
68 mins: Ironic cheers from the home support as the referee awards them a
free-kick, their cheers are short lived however as the free-kick comes to
nothing.
66 mins: Stoke make their first change, replacing Thomas with Rossi.
64 mins: Fanimo is straight into the action, crossing the ball after good
link-up play with Turgott. His cross is cut-out before it reaches the
awaiting Tombides.
63 mins: Sadlier is replaced with Matthias Fanimo who makes his second
appearance of the season after his recent return from injury.
61 mins: Sadlier jinks his way into the box leaving a defender bamboozled on
his back side before chipping it to Moncur who has time to size up a volley
before striking it into the ground and off target.
59 mins: A rare moment of attacking promise sees Thomas fire a shot at goal
but Henderson deals with it.
58 mins: Turgott skins his man once more and stands up a cross to the back
post which is met by Sadlier, the ball rebounds to Turgott but his shot is
blocked.
56 mins: Driver links up well with Turgott as he swings a cross in which is
lacking in any power and easily cleared.
54 mins: Stoke are really struggling to find any rythm going forward at the
moment with over-hit crosses the best they can muster right now.
52 mins: Turgott is again causing problems this time firing in a low cross
across the face of goal which is cleared by a lunging defender.
51 mins: Alabi has the home side's first shot of the second half as he looks
to place an effort beyond Henderson but only succeeds in picking out the
keeper.
49 mins: Another corner for the Hammers and this time Moncur's ball in finds
Potts just a couple of yards from goal but he can only fire his effort
staright at the keeper. That was a glorious chance to make the lead a lot
more comfortable.
48 mins: Moncur whips in another corner but it's easilt cleared by Grant.
47 mins: Potts has slotted into the centre of defence alongside Ruddock with
Shaw occupying the left and Driver on the right.
46 mins: We're underway for the second half as the Hammers look to hold onto
their one goal lead. Dan Potts has also emerged in his kit for the next 45
minutes replacing Chambers in defence.
Half-time: The referee brings an entertaining first half to an end at the
Britannia Stadium with West Ham ahead and looking good so far. George Moncur
netted his third goal in as many games after turning home a cross from the
impressive Blair Turgott who has run his marker ragged. The Hammers should
lead by more having hit the post twice through a Dylan Tombides shot and
then a deflected Frazer Shaw effort. As things stand Nick Haycock will be
delighted with his team's performance and will ask for more of the same
after the interval.
45 mins: Turgott wins a corner, Moncur takes but finds only the gloves of
the keeper who launches a long throw down field but Chambers is there ready
and waiting to deal with the ball.
43 mins: Stoke are resorting to long balls now as they struggle to find any
chink in the West Ham armour.
41 mins: The gloves are off! For Henderson that is, but it looks as though
he'll be able to continue through to half-time after recieving treatment.
40 mins: Henderson is called into action as Shea shoots from a few yards out
but the Irishman is able to smother the ball and collect his parried save.
He has however stayed down with what looks like a hand injury
39 mins: The return of Sebastien Lletget in West Ham's midfield has provided
the side with even more attacking threat and up to this point they are
controlling the game.
37 mins: The standard of the crossing has so far been superb from the
Hammers today with Shaw the latest man to whip in an inviting ball which is
just to high for Sadlier to reach.
36 mins: Turgott nearly nicks the ball as Stoke again play themselves into
trouble, the defender is able to recover though and launches the ball
forward.
35 mins: The game is in full swing as both sides release the shackles and
look to attack at every opportunity.
33 mins: Lletget is denied by a fine save after a header from Sadlier's
delicious cross. Stoke break and the visitors have Henderson to thank as he
keeps out a powerful effort from Waring.
32 mins: Post! Shaw hits an absolute piledriver and it deflects off a
defender and cannons into the post!
30 mins: Ruddock goes down holding his leg and this break in play sees 19
players head to the touchline for a beverage break.
28 mins: A couple of great defensive blocks from first Ruddock and then
Driver preserves the Hammers lead with shots from Shea and Waring
threatening Henderson's goal.
26 mins: The corner is taken short by Moncur who plays a one-two with
Whitehead before crossing but he's unables to pick out a man in claret and
blue.
25 mins: Stoke's youngsters are clearly following the first team as they
seek to play out from defence. A risky strategy and one which is nearly
capitalised upon after a mix-up between defenders sees them concede a
corner.
23 mins: The Hammers are ahead and looking good so far after a shaky start.
Turgott has been particularly impressive and is causing Stoke's full-backs
no end of trouble on the right-hand side.
21 mins: Tombides has another chance but his glancing header from a Moncur
corner is cleared off the line by Wheeler.
20 mins: Tombides nearly makes it 2-0 with a chance which was identical to
the one Moncur finished to put the Hammers in front. The striker however can
only fire his effort at the post and is unable to reach the rebound as Stoke
clear.
17 mins: The referee waves away a penalty appeal from the home side as the
winger takes a tumble after a light shove.
15 mins: GOAL! West Ham are ahead with their first shot on goal! Excellent
work on the wing by Turgott sees him beat two defenders before pulling the
ball back for Moncur to fire home.
14 mins: Turgott wins a free-kick on the halfway line. Driver takes but his
lofted ball is easily cleared away.
12 mins: The home side are starting to hit their stride with some easy on
the eye passing but as yet unable to find a decent final ball.
10 mins: A let-off for the Hammers as Waring prods the ball over Henderson
after a slick team move, but much to his disgust his shot tbounces inches
wide of the post.
8 mins: A lovely through ball from Lletget has Turgott sprinting on to the
end of it but just before he can reach the ball the on rushing keeper slides
to gather the ball.
7 mins: The Hammers back four are running towards their own goal following a
ball over the top but Shaw is on hand to clear the danger.
6 mins: Shaw launches a diagonal ball towards Turgott but it's easy pickings
for the Stoke keeper who collects with ease.
4 mins: The right hand side looks like it may prove profitable for the
Hammers today, with the lively Turgott keen to make a good impact.
3 mins: Turgott swings a cross in from the right but Sadlier's control lets
him down and the ball runs out of play.
1 min: We're underway at the Britannia with Stoke kicking us off.
The Development Squad travel north to the Britannia Stadium to take on
Stoke, looking to extend their good start to the Barclay Under-21 Premier
League season. Nick Haycock's side are without frontman Elliot Lee who is
involved with the first team's match at the Boleyn Ground against Everton.
The striker has five goals so far this season and the Under-21s will be
looking to the talented Dylan Tombides to fill the void left by Lee.
A 1-1 draw last time out against Manchester City meant the Hammers had
picked up three wins, a draw and just one defeat from their opening five
fixtures of the campaign. Stephen Henderson starts in goal for the young
Hammers having last featured in the 5-4 victory away at Newcastle where the
team rallied from 3-0 down to secure an amazing win. There is also a return
to Development Squad action following injury for Dan Potts who takes a place
on the bench for today's game.
West Ham United: Henderson, Driver, Shaw, Chambers, Ruddock, Turgott,
Moncur, Tombides, Whitehead, Sadlier.
Subs: Fanimo, Nemrava, Maguire, Potts, Miles.
Stoke: Bachmann, Wheeler, Gomez, Edu, Grant, Keane, Thomas, Ness, Waring,
Alabi, Shea.
Subs: Watkins, Eve, Ward, Heneghan, Rossi.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 2 Everton 3
21 September 2013
Last updated at 19:21
By David Ornstein
BBC Sport
Leighton Baines scored two free-kicks as Everton twice came from behind to
win at 10-man West Ham and remain the Premier League's only unbeaten team.
Ravel Morrison put the hosts ahead but Everton brought on Romelu Lukaku at
the break and that helped turn the match. After Baines fired across Jussi
Jaaskelainen to equalise, Mark Noble restored West Ham's lead from the
penalty spot, but was then sent off. Baines curled home his second to level
and Lukaku headed the winner. Everton secured a fine victory over Chelsea
last weekend and rise to fifth with this result, which was a reward for
their superb second-half display. West Ham drop to 14th having still not won
since the opening day, but there were encouraging signs as they ended a
three-match goal drought. The opening half-hour was high in quality but low
in chances - Jaaskelainen reacted well to stop a Kevin Mirallas drive but
that was Everton's only attempt in the first 45 minutes. West Ham pursued
the likes of Jermain Defoe, Loic Remy, Lukaku and Demba Ba during the
summer, and it was easy to see why as Modibo Maiga struggled to make an
impact in the lone striker role. However, they looked more the likely to
break through and did just that when Matt Jarvis surged inside from the left
and found Morrison, whose effort from just outside the area flew in off Phil
Jagielka.
Roberto Martinez signalled his intent at half-time by replacing Steven
Naismith and Nikica Jelavic with Lukaku and James McCarthy, and the response
was instant as Lukaku released Mirallas to round Jaaskelainen, only to see
his low cross scrambled away. A final substitution was enforced on the
Toffees when Leon Osman limped off, but their play continued to improve and
Mirallas narrowly failed to convert a Baines cross following a period of
intense pressure.
With West Ham barely able to escape their own territory, James Collins
fouled Barkley and Baines beat Jaaskelainen with a sublime set-piece.
Hammers boss Sam Allardyce decided to meet fire with fire by introducing two
strikers in Mladen Petric and Ricardo Vaz Te, and it paid off when Nolan
drew a foul from McCarthy after superb work from Petric - Noble dispatched
the penalty. But the momentum took a decisive shift after Noble was given a
second booking for a challenge on Everton midfielder Barkley 18 yards out.
This time Baines picked the opposite corner with another stunning free-kick.
With Lukaku causing West Ham no shortage of problems Everton went in search
of a winner, and it arrived when the Belgium international started a move
before finishing it with an emphatic header from Mirallas's centre.
Everton manager Roberto Martinez: "We knew we were going to be tested, we
knew we had to defend our box well and be strong in dead-ball situations. We
started brightly and should have scored, but then West Ham stopped us from
playing. "They imposed themselves on the game. Last week's result took a bit
of energy out of a few individuals, but the strength in our squad is very
encouraging. "To score three goals with the individual quality Leighton and
Romelu showed is very, very pleasing. "I'm delighted with the attitude and
mentality we have showed in every performance this season. I'm proud at
being unbeaten so far - now we need to work even harder to become better and
make sure we keep improving."
West Ham manager Sam Allardyce on Mark Noble's second yellow card for a
tackle on Ross Barkley: "It is always easy to look at the situation on my
laptop afterwards and say Mark played the ball first. Unfortunately for us,
the referee didn't see it that way and, to make things worse, Leighton
Baines has then fired an unstoppable free-kick right into the top corner.
"With our defensive ability, I thought we would see it out at 2-1 but it is
really frustrating for us that, not only was Mark sent off but we were
punished again by them putting ball in the net straight after we went
ahead."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Utd 2-3 Everton
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 21st September 2013
By: Staff Writer
West Ham's inability to hold a winning position cost them dear this
afternoon as Everton seized all three points at the Boleyn Ground with two
late goals.
Sam Allardyce's side were looking reasonably comfortable at 2-1 with 15
minutes of normal time remaining, before disaster struck. Firstly, Mark
Noble received his marching orders for a second bookable offence - then
Everton struck twice in two minutes to record a second successive Premier
League victory against London opposition.
In stark contrast to their last outing here against Stoke, the Hammers
started brightly and were good value for the 1-0 lead they held at the break
courtesy of Ravel Morrison's first Premier League goal. On the half hour
mark, Matt Jarvis jinked his way down the left wing before darting inside
and passing short to the youngster, whose shot was diverted in the opposite
direction by Phil Jagielka's flailing right foot and into the back of a
prone Tim Howard's net.
The game changed as a result of Roberto Martinez's decision to introduce
James McCarthy - who shackled the previously marauding Ravel Morrison
effectively - and Romalu Lukaku, who tormented West Ham's defence throughout
the second half. That would have been particularly hard to swallow for
Allardyce, for whom the on-loan striker was a key summer transfer target.
Both substitutes played a major part in swinging the game Everton's way, but
it was a desperate lunge from James Collins that proved to be the catalyst
for the visitors' revival. The Welshman lunged in on Ross Barkley as the
youngster was poised to shoot and conceded a free kick on the edge of the
box; an opportunity that Leighton Baines took full advantage of by expertly
guiding the resulting free kick into Jaaskelainen's right hand corner.
Everton, full of confidence having restored parity drove on in search of a
second, yet it was to be West Ham who unexpectedly grabbed the next goal.
Completely against the run of play, United restored their slender advantage
from the penalty spot as Mark Noble, unerringly accurate from 12 yards, made
it 2-1 with just 15 minutes of normal time remaining.
Although it was captain Kevin Noble who won the spot kick when he fell over
substitute McCarthy's trailing leg, all credit goes to debutant Mladen
Petric whose persistence prior to the foul had kept the ball in play.
Determined to make the most of the 70 per cent of possession they'd enjoyed
up to that point in the second period, Everton continued to apply the
pressure. Having failed to clear their lines once or twice, West Ham began
to get decidedly edgy and that slight whiff of panic eventually manifested
itself in a late challenge from Noble on Barkley - again - on the edge of
the box. Again.
Having already been booked, Noble knew he was in trouble and referee Lee
Mason had no hesitation in pulling out a red card - although many inside the
stadium were convinced the midfielder made contact with the ball before
colliding with Barkley. Once Noble departed and the debate had ceased, up
stepped Baines to send the ball into the opposite side of Jaaskelainen's
goal to where he'd placed his first, equally stunning, free kick.
So with just seven minutes remaining the question on everyone's lips was
"could West Ham hold out for a point?" Just a minute later they had their
answer, when sub Lukaku stopped bravely to head home what proved to be both
the winning goal and the first West Ham have conceded from open play this
season. Lukaku's reward for his bravery was a head butt to the face from
marker James Collins and several minutes' medical treatment.
Seven minutes of added-on time ensued but the Hammers never looked like
grabbing a third goal and a share of the spoils, leaving Allardyce and his
troops reflecting on a second successive home defeat. The season may be
young but worrying signs are beginning to emerge - whilst yet again the
Hammers failed to trouble the opposition 'keeper (two shots on target today
took the season total from five games to just eight).
Next weekend, Big Sam takes his squad to newly-promoted Hull City for their
next Premier League clash. Prior to that is the second visit of Cardiff City
already this season for Tuesday night's Capital One Cup clash. Whilst that
game has no impact on the league, it at least offers Allardyce and his squad
- who have now taken just two points from their last four games - the
opportunity for brief respite from the league campaign and the chance to
rebuild some flagging morale.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ricardo Vaz Te remains part of West Ham manager Sam Allardyce's plans
Last Updated: September 21, 2013 11:37am
SSN
Ricardo Vaz Te will not be frozen out at West Ham United, with Sam Allardyce
prepared to consider him for selection. The Portuguese forward handed in a
transfer request late in the summer window in an effort to force through a
move elsewhere. He was, however, to be left frustrated as the deadline came
and went with him still on the books at Upton Park. A lack of first team
opportunities led Vaz Te to look elsewhere, but he must now re-focus on the
battle for starting berths. Allardyce is happy to still have the 26-year-old
involved, with West Ham searching for an attacking spark - with Andy Carroll
injured and Modibo Maiga goalless. The Hammers boss said: "Ricardo has never
had a bad attitude. "What he is is a frustrated footballer. He thinks he
should be playing on a more regular basis. "Opportunities will arise. If he
takes them, he will be in the team."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham boss Sam Allardyce frustrated by Mark Noble's dismissal in Everton
defeat
Last Updated: September 21, 2013 6:06pm
SSN
West Ham United boss Sam Allardyce felt referee Lee Mason cost his side
against Everton, with Mark Noble's red card the turning point in a 3-2
defeat. The Hammers, who brought to an end their long wait for a Premier
League goal, were undone in the final nine minutes against the Toffees. They
led 2-1 entering the closing stages, but saw Noble collect a second yellow
card for a foul on Ross Barkley and the game suddenly swung in Everton's
favour. Two fantastic free-kicks from Leighton Baines and a powerful header
from Romelu Lukaku ultimately left them empty-handed, but Allardyce believes
it was the performance of the match officials which hit them hardest. "What
we should have done is not get a man sent off, but I'm not too sure that's
Mark Noble's fault more than the referee's."
He told Sky Sports on the decision to dismiss Noble: "He's played the ball
actually. I've just had five or six looks at it before I've come out and I
think the lad has took the chance to go down on the tackle, but you see Mark
Noble plays the ball first and then the lad goes down. "I know it looks like
a free-kick but, from where the referee is, he has got to be absolutely
certain in that area and the fact that it's Mark Noble, because he's going
to get sent off. "I think he made a huge mistake there. Mind you, other
people might see it different. "If you look at the other free-kicks today
that he didn't even give as fouls, in terms of consistency, I thought he was
very inconsistent today - in particular that decision for us. "Because of
Bainesy hitting the first one, he's hit the second one even better and it's
very costly for us today because not only have they scored but he's also got
sent off in a 2-1 position. So, very frustrated for the players, very
disappointed on that decision and we have to pick ourselves up.
West Ham manager Sam Allardyce says he can't blame goalkeeper Jussi
Jääskeläinen for the three goals they conceded at the hands of Everton. "We
kept Everton to the minimum today - as good a side as they are and the money
they have spent over the years, where they finish - we kept them to the bare
minimum of chances and if it wasn't for Bainesy today with two outstanding
free-kicks, I think we might have won the game."
Allardyce added on what his side could have done differently: "What we
should have done is not get a man sent off, but I'm not too sure that's Mark
Noble's fault more than the referee's. "I could say to Mark Noble don't make
the tackle, but it's difficult for me to say that when the lad is out there
playing and thinks he's going to get it and play the ball. "It's a cruel
blow for us today but one we have to take on the chin and bounce back from."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Everton edge five-goal thriller with West Ham 3-2 at Upton Park
Last Updated: September 21, 2013 7:26pm
SSN
Two brilliant free-kicks from Leighton Baines and a debut goal from Romelu
Lukaku saw Everton to a thrilling 3-2 win at West Ham United. Sam
Allardyce's side, who ended the game with 10 men, thought they had done
enough to secure at least a point as Ravel Morrison and Mark Noble netted
their first Premier League goals since the opening day of the season.
Best of the match
Man of the match: Leighton Baines. Showed his class with two moments of
brilliance which kept Everton in the hunt for three points.
Goal of the match: Both of Baines' efforts are contenders, but his second
just edges it as he bent the ball brilliantly over the wall and in off the
post - with Jussi Jaaskelainen rooted to the spot.
Moment of the match: Mark Noble's dismissal turned the game, with Baines
levelling from the resulting free-kick and Romelu Lukaku grabbing a late
winner.
Talking points: Can West Ham consider themselves unfortunate to have ended
the game empty-handed? Everton are still unbeaten, what can they achieve
this season?
The Hammers had gone more than five hours of top-flight football without
finding the target before edging ahead against the Toffees. They survived an
early scare when Kevin Mirallas forced Jussi Jaaskelainen into a fine
sprawling stop, but broke the deadlock on 31 minutes when Matt Jarvis teed
up Morrison on the edge of the box and his drilled effort took a wicked
deflection off Phil Jagielka to leave Tim Howard wrong-footed. Lukaku came
on for his Everton bow as part of a double change at the interval, and
Roberto Martinez was forced to play his final card within seven minutes of
the re-start as Leon Osman hobbled from the field.
Fresh faces appeared to breathe new life into the visitors and they had been
knocking on the door for some time before hauling themselves level in
spectacular fashion just past the hour mark, with Baines crashing a
trademark 25-yard free-kick into the top corner. It was, however, to be the
hosts who got their noses back in front, with Noble stepping up on 76
minutes to calmly convert from the penalty spot after Kevin Nolan had been
tripped inside the box by James McCarthy. The West Ham midfielder went from
hero to villain in the space of five minutes, though, as he collected a
second yellow card for a foul on Ross Barkley and saw Baines bend another
fabulous free-kick into the back of the net off the inside of the post.
With the Hammers rocking, Everton rammed home their numerical advantage five
minutes from time when Mirallas floated over a cross and Lukaku bravely
powered a header past Jaaskelainen - with a nasty clash of heads suggesting
he may not remember too much about his dramatic clincher. Leighton Baines
scored two goals from free kicks and praised Romelu Lukaku's winning goal in
Everton's 3-2 victory over West Ham.
Options
West Ham - missing attacking options Andy Carroll, Joe Cole and Stewart
Downing to injury - can take comfort from the end of their scoring drought
which had lasted 314 minutes until Morrison fired them ahead after half an
hour. Everton went close after six minutes when Mirallas tested Jaaskelainen
and Steven Naismith was inches away from a second attempt when the ball
sailed past. It was West Ham, though, who showed precision in the 31st
minute as they surged ahead, although a large deflection off Jagielka helped
them to take the lead.
Jarvis, once again proving a handful down the left wing, skillfully threaded
his way infield and teed up Morrison and the former Manchester United
midfielder drilled the ball home. West Ham manager Sam Allardyce says he
can't blame goalkeeper Jussi Jääskeläinen for the three goals they conceded
at the hands of Everton. Lukaku came on for the second half and his delicate
early touch was taken on by compatriot Mirallas, who raced to the byline and
crossed only for West Ham to recover by getting numbers back.
Naismith had also made way for McCarthy as Martinez attempted to invigorate
his side, but the Hammers were more creative with Jarvis galloping free and
just failing to find Modibo Maiga. Showing vision once more, Lukaku played
Barkley into the area only for the England midfielder to run down a blind
alley.
The initiative had been seized and in the 62nd minute the equaliser arrived,
Baines steering a terrific 20-yard free-kick beyond Jaaskelainen into the
top left corner.
Noble flashed a corner wide of the left post and Baines forced a save from
close range as the match opened up. Noble powered home from the spot after
Nolan had been hacked down by McCarthy, but then he trudged off after
receiving a second yellow from referee Lee Mason and Baines delivered the
equaliser.
The outstanding Lukaku deserved a goal and it duly arrived as he nodded
Everton to victory.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
MATCH REPORT: WEST HAM 2 THE REFEREE 3
By Iain Dale 21 Sep 2013 at 19:24
West Ham Till I Die
If I see a worse referee at Upton Park this season, we'll be in real
trouble. Mr Lee Mason gives his profession a bad name. He had an absolute
stinker today. The only thing he got right was our penalty, but that was so
blatant he couldn't really have done anything else. He gave corners when
they were goal kicks and vice versa. He gave fouls when they weren't and
didn't when they were. And he lost us the game. From my vantage point Mark
Noble's tackle on Ross Barklay was a brilliantly timed one. It wasn't a
foul, and it certainly wasn't a yellow card. Sadly Sun Goals haven't shown
the incident, only the goal, so I will have to wait for MOTD to see if I am
right. *UPDATE: OK, having seen MOTD, I admit it, I was wrong!
The first half was scrappy. Everton had a lot of the possession for the
first ten minutes but we gradually made our mark and began to slot some
passes together. There was no lumping it forward and defensively we were
very sound. Everton played a lot of pretty stuff around the penalty area but
I don't remember them really having a shot in the first half. Morrison took
his goal well, and even though it got a deflection which wrongfooted Tim
Howard, it was well deserved. Ravel Morrison improved with every minute of
the game. In the second half he felt confident enough to do some Joe
Cole-esque flicks. To accommodate Morrison in his favourite position Mo
Diame played out on the right and did really well. I thought Mark Noble had
a great game. At times he orchestrated the midfield like a conductor. He won
the ball tenaciously and drove forward at every opportunity. It was just a
pity that his midfield partner Kevin Nolan contributed very little to the
game. His balls forward were invariably hit too hard.
Defensively we were magnificent. The scoreline will never reflect that, but
Reid and Collins were outstanding. And I thought Joey O'Brien was brilliant,
back in his customary position of right back. The timing of his tackle on an
Everton player when he was through on goal was superlative and is probably
the incident I shall remember most from this game. Razvan Rat didn't do
badly in his first premier league game, although I thought the pace got to
him at times. I felt he hadn't really got much of an understanding with Matt
Jarvis, but did better when Vaz Te switched wings.
And as for Maiga… well, the best that can be said is that he had a shot.
Admittedly it flew over the crossbar, but at least he tried. Maybe I just
can't see what he does, but my Everton supporting friend thought he did well
in the first half. Well, he would, wouldn't he? Mladen Petric didn't set the
pitch on fire, but he did play a major part in winning the penalty, so
that's more than Maiga has achieved in five games.
Jussi Jaaskelainen has now conceded three consecutive goals from free kicks
outside the area. Simply not good enough. He was man of the match last week,
but those statistics will give cause for concern. However, would any
goalkeeper have saved any of those free kicks? I'm not sure.
I think we just have the chalk this one down. For most of the game we played
well. We played some good football. The sending off changed everything.
Onwards.
Afterthought: What did we all think of the new stadium announcer? I thought
he did OK initially, but no one could hear the half-times because he wasn't
close enough to the microphone, and he mispronounced Petric's name, which
was pretty poor. He kept saying Petrick.
Jaaskelainen 5
Reid 8
Collins 8
O'Brien 8
Rat 6
Diame 7
Nolan 5
Noble 8
Morrison 7
Jarvis 7
Maiga 4
Petric 6
Taylor 5
Vaz Te 6
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tottenham set to sign Ciprian Marica on a free as striker rejects Arsenal
and West Ham interest
21 Sep 2013 23:00
The Mirror
Big-spending Spurs are set to land another striker this week – after
splashing £107million in the transfer window, writes Alan Nixon of the
Sunday People.
Romanian hitman Ciprian Marica is set to snub Arsenal and West Ham advances
to join Andre Villas-Boas's new-look Tottenham side. Marica, capped 60 times
by Romania, is looking for a £60,000-a-week three-year deal at White Hart
Lane. After blowing the £86m Gareth Bale cash on stars like Brazilian
Paulinho and Spain's Roberto Soldado, Villas-Boas can net the 28-year-old
for free because Marica had his contract with German outfit Schalke
terminated a year early at the end of last season. His club CV is
impressive, playing for Shakhtar Donetsk and Stuttgart in a wandering career
around Europe over the past decade. Spurs boss Villas-Boas, who takes his
club to Cardiff today, wants to move flop Emmanuel Adebayor and young Harry
Kane out of north London, freeing up a slot for Marica. If the deal cannot
be done, Villas-Boas will be under pressure from Daniel Levy to bring
£100,000-a-week outcast Adebayor in from the cold. The £9.3m striker has
been banished to training with the kids at White Hart Lane. Marica, who has
previously captained Romania, has netted 22 goals for his country.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Mixed feelings for Mladen
WHUFC.com
Hammers debutant disappointed to see lead slip away in dying moments against
Everton
22.09.2013
It was an afternoon of mixed emotions for West Ham United debutant Mladen
Petric on Saturday. The Croatian striker was introduced from the bench with
the score at 1-1, then played his part in the Hammers' second goal before
watching on as Everton turned the game around late on to take the points.
The defeat was tough to take for the ex-Fulham man, although he was happy to
get his first run-out in claret and blue. "It was a really tough loss," he
said. "When you go in front twice you shouldn't give it away."We were a bit
unlucky in the end with the red card and the two goals in the last ten
minutes, so it was disappointing.
"They did pressurise us in the second half and played a lot better than they
did in the first, but I think we did enough to keep them to one goal. "The
positive was that we scored two goals in the game. The first half was very
good from our side, we had a lot of ball possession and scored the goal, so
we will try to move on with that. "I'm very happy to be playing again. It's
been a long break for me, so every day I'm feeling better and better. "I'm
doing intensive training, it's hard but you get used to it - and I want to
get really fit and help the team. "For Tuesday [against Cardiff]. we'll see,
I don't know what the manager has in his mind, but I hope to be involved and
get some time on the pitch. "I hope to score as soon as possible, and the
most important thing is that the team wins."
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