Wednesday, May 16

Web Item - Premier League Letter

West Ham 'not in rule breach' - The Sun
By JIM MUNRO
May 16, 2007

PREMIER LEAGUE officials have sent a six-page letter to all 20 club chairmen
outlining why West Ham were not docked points over the Carlos Tevez affair.

It also states that the Hammers have satisfactorily terminated the
"offending third party agreement" surrounding Tevez's move and are therefore
"not continuing to be in breach" of Premier League rules.

Chief executive Richard Scudamore and chairman Sir Dave Richards have put
their name to the document which states that the punishment meted out to
West Ham, in the form of a £5.5m fine, was "in accordance with our Rules".

The key extracts from that letter are as follows:

"At no point were West Ham United charged with playing an ineligible player
- both (Carlos) Tevez and (Javier) Mascherano were registered on August 31.
All the required documentation was received by the Premier League and the
usual confirmations received and sent. Registration is definitive as to the
status of the player. At no time has Mr Tevez's registration been revoked or
terminated and at all times he has been eligible to play for West Ham."

______________________________________________

"The Independent Commission was...convened strictly in accordance with the
rules as agreed by all member clubs. Its chair, Simon Bourne-Arton QC, acted
very promptly and properly, laying out directions for the hearing in the
shortest possible timescale."

_______________________________________________

"The Independent Commission carried its work out fully in accordance with
our rules, having adopted practices entirely consistent with formal judicial
proceedings. In reaching their decision the Independent Commission clearly
considered the matter very carefully and did not deliver an irrational or
extreme judgement and delivered the sanction that only they (having
considered the matter fully and in light of copious evidence) deemed to be
proportionate and appropriate."

_________________________________________________

"The media, and of course those aggrieved by the decision, have analysed the
seven reasons given by the Independent Commission for not deducting points
and concentrated on those that to them seem the least convincing. However,
there are others that have a less convenient truth, particularly the one
that says, 'had the club in time made disclosure of the third party
contracts to the FAPL, then, in all probability, contracts could have been
entered into which would not
have offended the rules'."

__________________________________________________

"The League could not function if other clubs could effectively intervene in
an attempt to overturn decisions not to their liking."

__________________________________________________

"Given the complexities around this, we would ask you to step back from the
detail and consider the matter in more general terms:

1. Tevez has been properly registered to play for West Ham United since 31
August 2006. The Board, under our Rules, is charged with the authority to
determine this.

2. He continues to be registered with West Ham United.

3. This is a case without precedent and certainly cannot be compared with
Clubs who have played unregistered players or players ineligible through
suspension.

4. On 26 April West Ham United admitted to breaches of Rules B13 and U18 -
for which they have been fined in accordance with our Rules.

5. The offending third party agreement has been terminated by West Ham
United and therefore they are not continuing to be in breach."

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Are you listening McCabe? - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 16th May 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

The Premier League have released details of a letter sent to all 20 member
clubs expaining why West Ham United were not docked points. The letter -
sent from Richard Scudamore and Dave Richards to all existing Premier League
clubs today - confirmed that Carlos Tevez's registration was eligible from
the date he signed. It also confirmed that the league were satisfied with
the amendments to Tevez's contract made at the end of last month.

"At no point were West Ham United charged with playing an ineligible
player," stated the missive. "Both Tevez and Mascherano were registered on
31 st August 2006. All the required documentation was received.

"At no time has Mr Tevez's registration been revoked or terminated and at
all times he has been eligible to play for West Ham.

"Tevez has been properly registered to play for West Ham United since 31
August 2006. He continues to be registered with West Ham United."

And with regard to a string of stories appearing in the medie over the past
few days, the letter added:

"The media, and of course those aggrieved by the decision, have analysed the
seven reasons given by the Independent Commission for not deducting points
and concentrated on those that to them seem the least convincing.

"However, there are others that have a less convenient truth, particularly
the one that says 'had the club in time made disclosure of the third party
contracts to the FAPL, then, in all probability, contracts could have been
entered into which would not have offended the rules'."

"This is a case without precedent and certainly cannot be compared with
Clubs who have played unregistered players or players ineligible through
suspension.

"On 26 April, West Ham United admitted to breaches of Rules B13 and U18 -
for which they have been fined in accordance with our Rules.

"The offending third party agreement has been terminated by West Ham United
and therefore they are not continuing to be in breach."

Sheffied United Chairman Kevin McCabe - who bizarrely blamed the Tevez
situation for Neil Warnock's sacking yesterday - today pushed for the case
to go to arbitration. That request is almost certain to be rejected by the
Premier League.

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Straw clutching - KUMB
Filed: Wednesday, 16th May 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

Sheffield United have begun arbitration proceedings against the Premier
League. The Blades decided to take the dramatic step having been told by
legal eagles that they have no chance of reversing the league's decision to
fine West Ham United £5.5m in order to preserve their Premiership status.
Sheffield United Chairman Kevin McCabe served a notice of procedure to the
Premier League this lunchtime, before making the following statement via the
Blades website: "We are still working towards debating matters with the
Premier League as we want to undo the wrong and the injustice of the
decision," he said.
"The events off the field of play have culminated in our arbitration
procedures. "We have written to every MP, explaining the background of the
injustice and that it needs to be satisfied for the good of the sport.
"First and foremost we're doing everything to protect the interests of
United. "Will the Premier League accept our arbitration letters? Litigation
can be pursued and, if it has to be pursued, we'll do it."
McCabe - who continues to claim that Tevez was 'ineligible' to play for the
Hammers despite that never having been the case - also insisted that he
would be continuing his crusade to have the league extended to 21 clubs next
season in order to incorporate the Blades, despite them being relegated by
virtue of losing at home to Wigan last weekend. "It is up to the FA Premier
League to find a way round this exceptional circumstance where a club which
has played by the rules has been relegated at the expense of one club who
have fielded ineligible players," he added. "The simple answer is why not
have 21 clubs in the Premiership next season and relegate four of them at
the end? It is not my decision to make but it seems like a very simple
solution."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - II 16th May 2007

Woody overwhelmed by support - WHUFC
16/05/2007 09:00

Andy Woodman admitted he was overwhelmed by the support he received from
Alan Curbishley, the players and the West Ham United fans at his benefit
match last night. Hammers' Youth Academy goalkeeping coach teamed up with
his former Northampton Town team-mates from their 1997 Play-Off final
triumph - plus good friend Gareth Southgate, for an entertaining evening of
football against a strong West Ham United side in front of a crowd of more
than 5,000 at the Sixfields Stadium. "It was a fabulous night," said Woody.
"All I can say is thank you to Alan Curbishley, the staff and the players
for their support on the night, and a thank you isn't really enough to be
honest. "After such a long and hard season, I'm sure the last thing they
wanted to do was come down here on a Tuesday night, and I am extremely
grateful for everything they have done. "The West Ham supporters were of
course fantastic, we knew they would turn up because they follow the club
everywhere, and all in all it was a top night. I was overwhelmed by the
support of everyone who attended."
Although the evening ended in a 4-1 defeat for the veteran Northampton
favourites, Woody rounded off his own personal occasion with an
expertly-taken penalty five minutes into the second half - awarded after Lee
Bowyer had 'accidentally' handled in the area…just as Northampton's
substitute goalkeeper was waiting to come on. After sprinting forward to
slam the spot-kick past a stranded Jimmy Walker, Woody immediately left the
field to a standing ovation. "To be honest, it was a case of either me or
Gareth Southgate taking the penalty, and we needed a goal, so I took it!"
joked Woody. "And I tell you, Jimmy Walker was absolutely desperate to save
it, but I gave him no chance!

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Noble looks back on best day of his life! - WHUFC
16/05/2007 11:52

Looking back on the momentous occasion at Old Trafford at the weekend, where
the Hammers clinched their Premiership status with a 1-0 win, Mark Noble
said: "It was the best day of my life." "It was unbelievable to come to Old
Trafford and win to stay up," he added. "It's never been better than this.
The boys have dug in and we've played as a team for the last three months.
"We're over the moon and we're going to enjoy a nice break. I can't wait for
next season now! We showed we can dig in and defend against Arsenal and when
we've played other teams we've showed our flair. "Against Man United you
have to fall back and defend. We did that after Tevez scored a wonderful
goal and we're still in the Premier League. "All I wanted to do was go out
there and keep it simple. I just played the holding role and let Yossi and
Boa Morte do the things that they do best. It's not about me; it's about the
team and the Club. Everyone's buzzing."

With Curbs pinpointing the 4-3 defeat to Tottenham at Upton Park as the
turning point for the Hammers' resurgence, Mark reflected on that game. "It
was a day of mixed emotions for me, I was crying afterwards but that's how I
showed my emotion," he said. "I wanted to win so badly and it never
happened. Obviously I scored early on and it was a rollercoaster game. But
it was all worth it and we can look back on it now and say it was the
catalyst for what we've done."

Premiership status secured, Mark admitted he could breathe a sigh of relief.
"We're not worrying about anyone else now and next season we can prove
ourselves," he said. "We've got out of the sticky patch of the difficult
second season in the Premiership and we can push on a do well and hopefully
do as well as we did in the first season - or better. "I was looking up to
the fans, we had a bit of eye contact, me and my friends. It was a fantastic
day, they were as happy as me. But everyone knows how important it is to
this Club, being in the Premiership, and the East End is a happy place to be
now."

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Green: Seige mentality spurred us on - WHUFC
16/05/2007 15:12

As a key figure in the Hammers' revival to remain in the Premiership,
goalkeeper Rob Green, who kept five clean sheets in the final eight games of
the season, admitted that battling the odds worked in the team's favour. "No
one gave us a chance outside of our own squad and outside the football
club," he said. "We'd been written off everywhere. It was an amazing
experience to go to Old Trafford and win. "We needed the points as well,
with the way the results went. To win seven out of the last nine games is a
fantastic achievement and it kind of shows everyone what we should have done
at the start of the season."
Having taken twelve points and kept four clean sheets in four games against
Manchester United and Arsenal, Rob reflected on a magnificent achievement.
"I'd like to know who the last team where to do the double over Manchester
United and Arsenal in a season," he said. "The lads put their bodies on the
line and did everything they could. "To beat Man U on the final day was
fantastic. We scored a special goal at a really good time and it just gave
everyone that little push going into the second half and something to
defend. We needed that. "They celebrated winning the League there on Sunday
but the feeling we had is equivalent to winning the League, winning the Cup,
everything rolled into one. It's the greatest feeling that I've ever had in
football. "It's up there with winning the League with Norwich. To pull it
off with nine games to go - when no one gave us a chance - is amazing. The
attitude amongst the players has been fantastic to turn it around."
And the 27-year-old keeper is already looking ahead to the next Premiership
campaign. "We've shown what we can do in the last nine games," he said. "The
lads showed what they could do last season too. "We've put everything on the
line and if we do that for 38 games next season then we've got a chance of
doing something good."

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League to help Fifa's Tevez probe - BBC

The Premier League has agreed to provide Fifa with any "assurances and
explanations" it needs into how West Ham's breach of rules was handled. The
Hammers were fined £5.5m for irregularities over the signing of Carlos Tevez
and Javier Mascherano but they escaped a points deduction. Fifa president
Sepp Blatter said he is "monitoring the situation carefully".
But Fifa has told BBC Five Live that it is not re-examining the evidence
with the aim of testing the ruling. West Ham broke two Premier League rules
by entering into a private agreement with a third-party company when they
signed Argentine pair Tevez and Mascherano in August last year.
Mascherano has since moved to Liverpool, while Tevez stayed in London and
played an influential role in West Ham's successful battle against
relegation - scoring seven goals in the club's last 10 games. Sheffield
United, who went down on the final day of the season, are leading the fight
against an independent commission's decision not to punish the Hammers with
a points deduction. The Blades, who are being supported by the likes of
Wigan, Fulham, Charlton and Middlesbrough, are also concerned that West Ham
may still have been breaking Premier League rules after the ruling on 27
April.
The Premier League has argued that it has no case to answer in regards to
West Ham's punishment because all 20 Premiership clubs agreed to the
disciplinary system in place. However, that has not stopped Sheffield United
pursuing their case and Blatter's intervention may encourage them. A Premier
League statement later read: "We have implemented our rulebook and processes
to the letter in this matter and we are more than happy to give Fifa any
assurances or explanations they need."

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MASCH: WE DID NOTHING WRONG - Sky
By Peter ORourke - Created on 16 May 2007

Javier Mascherano insists himself and Carlos Tevez have done nothing wrong
as the controversy over their transfers to West Ham continues to rumble on.
The Hammers were handed the massive fine after West Ham admitted they broke
Premiership transfer regulations when they signed Tevez and Javier
Mascherano from Corinthians last August. The Upton Park side escaped a
points deduction for acting improperly regarding the transfers of the
Argentine duo, but the likes of Wigan, Sheffield United, Fulham and Charlton
are all considering legal action against the Premier League for not docking
West Ham points. Fifa have now stepped in to investigate the row that has
rocked the Premiership.
However, Mascherano has protested his and Tevez's innocence and says he was
delighted to see West Ham stay up despite his unhappy spell at Upton Park.
"I don't know about the politics, and I don't want to get into the rights
and wrongs of whether they should be docked points, but I do know that we
didn't do anything wrong," Mascherano told The Mirror. "We just went there
to play football, and even though I didn't play much, they still gave me the
opportunity, they helped me - everyone, the staff the players and the fans.
"For that I am grateful, and I believe they are a great club. "They are too
big and too good to be playing at a level out of the top flight, and so I am
happy they survived."
Mascherano escaped his West Ham hell to sign for Liverpool in the January
transfer window, but the holding midfielder says he bears no grudge against
the Hammers. "No matter what happened to me at West Ham, I am very pleased,
very content and very happy that they survived, because if it wasn't for
them, I wouldn't have the chance to play in a Champions League Final,"
continued Mascherano. "By bringing me to England they gave me this
opportunity. Everyone helped me there, and of course Carlos Tevez is my
great friend, so I am so very happy for him. "They have wonderful fans who
always backed me, and the staff and the players were always supportive of
me, so I am happy that they have survived, and can look forward to the
Premiership next season."

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Premiership backs Fifa inquiry - Sky
By Robin Hackett and Patricio Figueroa - Created on 16 May 2007

Premier League officials will offer Fifa full assistance in their
investigations into the Carlos Tevez transfer. West Ham were controversially
given a fine rather than a points deduction following a disciplinary hearing
regarding the signings of Tevez and compatriot Javier Macherano. Several
top-flight clubs have since lodged objections to the decision, with Wigan
chairman Dave Whelan calling for a fresh investigation. As a result, Sepp
Blatter has vowed Fifa will undertake an independent inquiry to discover
whether the club should have been docked points. But a Premier League
spokesman claims all processes were carried out immaculately and they will
fully support Fifa where necessary. "The Premier League has implemented its
rulebook and processes to the letter in this matter and we are more than
happy to give Fifa any assurances or explanations they need," he said.
Meanwhile, Tevez claims he is simply enjoying the moment after helping West
Ham escape relegation on the last day of the season. There have been
numerous press reports discussing a possible move away from Upton Park, but
the Argentina international says he is not thinking about next season yet.
"For now, I am enjoying the fact that we gave our supporters satisfaction in
not getting relegated," he told the South American press. "Together with us,
they were the only people who trusted in the team and had faith that West
Ham would not be relegated. "Many parts of the press and even other teams
thought that we were already a second-tier team a long time ago, but we
showed them that each match has to be played before you can say what will
happen."
Having arrived home in Buenos Aires, Tevez has set his sights on a place in
his country's Copa America squad this summer. "I would like to be included
in the team that will play the Copa America in Venezuela. "I am going to
wait a few days to see what happens and, if I don't hear any news, I will go
on holiday with my family. "But if I am included in the team, I will not
have any doubts about accepting."
Argentina coach Alfio Basile is expected to name Tevez in the squad for the
friendly against Switzerland on 2nd June.

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McCabe explains Warnock exit - Sky
By Lewis Rutledge - Created on 16 May 2007

Sheffield United plc chairman Kevin McCabe has stressed that the decision to
part with Neil Warnock was based on the effect the 'injustice' of their
relegation had on the club. Warnock confirmed on Wednesday that he had left
Bramall Lane by mutual consent, just three days after defeat to Wigan
condemned The Blades to life in the Championship. McCabe claims it was
impossible for Warnock to remain at the helm, as the club had to move on
after the Carlos Tevez affair. He told Sky Sports News: "What is sad is that
the catalyst to the decision from both parties was probably the event off
the field, that made it clear that to reinvigorate United and get us out of
the Championship we need a fresh face. "It has affected everyone. There is
no question that the team manager and indeed the players feel that the club
has been cheated out of their Premiership position, because a club has
broken the rules and we haven't. "It's left an air of despair around that
has not finally disappeared. "We've got to bounce back and move those clouds
to get on with it, but it is sad that the events off the field have really
affected the morale of the players and the team manager and really made the
final decision that we should part now."
Sheffield United are seeking arbitration with the Premier League following
their decision not to deduct any points from West Ham despite finding them
guilty of breaking regulations over the transfers of Tevez and Carlos
Mascherano. "The board of the Premier League need to properly address this
and right the wrong, the injustice, that Sheffield United have got," McCabe
said.
Sheffield United must now appoint a new manager ahead off next season but
McCabe insists there have been no applications as yet. He admits assistant
Stuart McCall will come under consideration but is adamant the decision on
Warnock's successor will not be rushed. "We've had a meeting to discuss the
sort of manager we need to take us back to where we have just left, i.e. the
Premiership," he explained. "We are getting up a shortlist and we'll not be
idle, but we'll not be panicked either. "Stuart will certainly be
interviewed. He has been with us for a good few years as player and as
assistant manager, and he is a good guy, and we will see what he has to say
at interview."

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BLADES BEGIN ARBITRATION PROCESS - Sky
By Tom Adams - Created on 16 May 2007

Sheffield United have begun arbitration proceedings against the Premier
League as a result of the Carlos Tevez transfer controversy, with chairman
Kevin McCabe now proposing that England's top flight comprises 21 teams next
season. Following relegation, The Blades are bitterly angry at the failure
to penalise West Ham with a points deduction despite being found guilty of
irregularities in the August signings of Tevez and former Hammer Javier
Mascherano. A so-called 'Gang of Four' - comprising The Blades, Charlton,
Wigan and Fulham - have been canvassing support from their fellow clubs and
The Blades have also written to MPs in a bid to generate support for their
cause. McCabe served arbitration procedure notice on the Premier League on
Wednesday to continue the crusade against the perceived injustice, and has
again threatened legal action if the league fails to accept his letter.
However, the Blades chairman has also proposed a scenario whereby Sheffield
United would be reinstated to the league without West Ham being demoted,
resulting in the Premiership housing 21 teams next season. "We are still
working towards debating matters with the Premier League, we want to undo
the wrong and the injustice of the decision," McCabe told the club's
official website. "The events off the field of play have culminated in our
arbitration procedures. "We have written to every MP, explaining the
background of the injustice and that it needs to be satisfied for the good
of the sport. "First and foremost we're doing everything to protect the
interests of United. "Will the Premier League accept our arbitration
letters? Litigation can be pursued and, if it has to be pursued, we'll do
it.
"It is up to the FA Premier League to find a way round this exceptional
circumstance where a club which has played by the rules has been relegated
at the expense of one club who have fielded ineligible players. "The simple
answer is why not have 21 clubs in the Premiership next season and relegate
four of them at the end. It is not my decision to make but it seems like a
very simple solution."
Wigan chairman Dave Whelan has indicated that the disaffected clubs will
seek to prove that West Ham's re-registration of Tevez outside the transfer
window - and following the independent commission's findings - was illegal.
However, the Premier League looks unlikely to bow to McCabe's attempts to
establish an arbitration panel, with a spokesman underlining the league's
belief that no laws have been broken in the controversial row. "We followed
our processes to the letter and we ensured to our satisfaction that the
third party arrangements in relation to Carlos Tevez's contract have been
terminated," said a Premier League spokesman. We are more than happy to meet
with officials of Sheffield United or any other aggrieved club to offer
clarification and explanation of this and we have written to all 20 clubs
with a forensic explanation of the ruling."

Fifa has already pledged to investigate the row which is threatening to drag
the relegation issue out over the summer.

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Carlos Tevez: What's it all about? - Soccernet

WHAT DID WEST HAM DO WRONG?

Javier Mascherano and Carlos Tevez were signed on terms which broke two
Premier League rules. First, the contracts allowed the companies which owned
the players' economic rights to move them to another club during any
transfer window. West Ham would receive a nominal fee but had 'no right of
objection'. This broke rule U18, which prohibits a club from entering into
an agreement which gives a third party influence on the performance of the
team. To make matters worse, West Ham were found to have told a 'direct lie'
to the Premier League in order to cover up the fact the contracts contained
third party agreements. West Ham pleaded guilty to both breaches of Premier
League rules. The Premier League's independent commission fined them
£5.5million after deciding 'this was not only an obvious and deliberate
breach of the rules, but a grave breach of trust as to the Premier League
and its constituent members. 'In our finding the club has been responsible
for dishonesty and deceit.'

WHY DO OTHER CLUBS BELIEVE WEST HAM SHOULD HAVE BEEN DOCKED POINTS?

Because the Premier League's commission said so. They admitted a points
deduction 'would normally follow from such a breach of rules' - but then
provided seven reasons for not doing so.
Chief among them was the fact that a loss of points would 'certainly have
relegated' West Ham and cost them up to five times the £5.5million they were
fined. The commission also took into account the fact West Ham is under new
ownership, and that the club's players and fans were not to blame for the
situation. The so-called 'Gang of Four' object to the panel's reasoning for
not docking points. However, the commission was free under Premier League
regulations to impose whatever punishment they deemed 'proportionate and
appropriate'.

WHY WAS TEVEZ ALLOWED TO PLAY FOR WEST HAM AFTER THE RULING?

West Ham were instructed by the commission to remove the third party
agreement in Tevez's contract before he could play again. The club say they
did as soon as they received the judgment - and their actions satisfied the
Premier League, who cleared Tevez to play. Wigan chairman Dave Whelan, among
others, has has demanded to see written proof.

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Premier League ready to face Tevez probe - Soccernet

The Premier League have promised to provide FIFA with a full explanation of
their handling of the Carlos Tevez affair. FIFA are to investigate whether
there was anything wrong with an independent commission's decision not to
dock West Ham points for breaching rules over third-party agreements. A
Premier League spokesman said: 'The Premier League has implemented its
rulebook and processes to the letter in this matter and we are more than
happy to give FIFA any assurances or explanations they need.' FIFA president
Sepp Blatter insisted the organisation had the power to pass a final verdict
on the independent commission's decision to fine West Ham £5.5million.
Several clubs are considering legal action against the Premier League over
the commission's sanction, claiming the Hammers should have been deducted
points. Blatter said FIFA would look into the case as a matter of urgency -
whether or not they are invited to do so.
He told a media briefing in Zurich: 'We will look at this - and not only if
we are asked, we will do it anyway. 'We will ask for the file once it has
been decided how and why the decision was made. 'If we feel something was
wrong in this decision then we have to open our file.' Blatter said in terms
of time-scale a 'decision would have to be taken immediately.' He added that
according to FIFA's files the transfer of Tevez and Javier Mascherano from
Brazilian side Corinthians to West Ham had complied with international
transfer regulations. Blatter added: 'We will monitor this situation very
carefully and once this situation is dealt with by the league and the FA we
will ask for the files and have a look because we have the right and the
responsibility to see how such cases are dealt with. 'The matter is linked
with a club in Brazil - Corinthians - and with the ownership of this club
and the ownership of the two players. 'According to our files the transfer
of Tevez was done correctly according to the international transfer of
players.'
If FIFA were to attempt to overrule the independent commission it would
cause a huge storm in the world of football. It seems more likely that FIFA
will check carefully to ensure that the league's disciplinary process had
been followed correctly, and if it is satisfied that it has then will ratify
the decision. Any such ratification move would strengthen the Premier
League's hand in any legal battle. Blatter said a recent ruling by the Swiss
federal court against Spanish third division side Rayo Vallecano meant FIFA
did have jurisdiction over individual clubs. In the Rayo Vallecano case, the
Spanish club had been threatened with relegation if it did not pay transfer
fees owed to a Brazilian club. It claimed, unsuccessfully, that FIFA did not
have the power to do so.

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Inter linked with £25m Tevez move - TeamTalk

Italian champions Inter Milan have reportedly opened talks over a £25million
deal for West Ham striker Carlos Tevez. The Argentine superstar scored six
goals in nine games in the Premiership run-in and almost single-handedly
kept the Hammers in the top-flight, much to the anger of the 'Gang of Four'
- Wigan, Fulham, Sheffield United and Charlton - who claim his signing
breached Premier League rules. His superb recent form has made him one of
the most sought after forwards in Europe and subsequently he's been linked
with a whole host of clubs, including Spanish sides Real Madrid and Sevilla.
However, according to The Daily Express Inter are now the front-runners with
their president Massimo Moratti having opened talks with Kia Joorabchian,
the man who represents Tevez. The 23-year-old Argentina star insists he
wants to remain a Hammers player, but Sunday's 1-0 win over Manchester
United, in which he scored the crucial winning goal, looks to have been his
last game for the club.

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West Ham to offer £8M for Newcastle's Parker
tribalfooball.com - May 16, 2007

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley is planning to bring Newcastle United
captain Scott Parker back to London. The Daily Star says money-bags West Ham
will bid £8 million for the England international, who has endured a
difficult relationship with Toon fans this season. Newcastle boss Sam
Allardyce will seek to replace Parker with his former Bolton captain, Kevin
Nolan.

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Summer Sales - The Times
A twice-daily round-up of the biggest moves in the transfer window
Neil Johnston
Noon bulletin

West Ham United's Carlos Tevez could be heading for Inter Milan after the
Italian champions contacted Kia Joorabchian, the man who represents the
Argentine superstar. Tevez scored six goals in nine games to help keep Alan
Curbishley's side in the Premiership, much to the anger of the 'Gang of
Four' - Wigan Athletic, Fulham, Sheffield United and Charlton Athletic - who
claim his signing breached Premier League rules. His superb recent form has
made him one of the most sought-after forwards in Europe and subsequently
he's been linked with a whole host of clubs, including Spanish sides Real
Madrid and Sevilla. However, Inter appear the front-runners with reports
from Italy suggesting they are lining up a £25 million move for Tevez.

Scott Parker could also find himself caught up in Allardyce's busy summer of
change with West Ham eyeing an £8m move for the England international. It
also promises to be a hectic summer at Upton Park with new Wigan manager
Chris Hutchings keen to make forward Marlon Harewood his first signing.
Harewood scored in West Ham's 3-0 win at Wigan last month and Hutchings
wants to boost his forward options with doubts over the future of Senegal
striker Henri Camara.

Teddy Sheringham, who has been released by West Ham, is wanted by Major
League Soccer side New York Red Bulls. However, relegated Charlton have
earmarked the 41-year-old forward as they attempt to make a quick return to
the Premiership.

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Charlton, Millwall move for West Ham's Sheringham
tribalfooball.com - May 16, 2007

Departing West Ham United striker Teddy Sheringham is mulling over offers
from Charlton Athletic and Millwall. New York Red Bulls wants the former
Tottenham, Manchester United and England star to team up with ex-Aston Villa
marksman Juan Pablo Angel, says the Daily Mail. But Alan Pardew wants
Sheringham's vast experience at The Valley to help the Addicks bounce
straight back into the Premiership after their relegation to the
Championship. Pardew took the skilful striker to Upton Park when he was West
Ham boss but Sheringham fell out of favour when Alan Curbishley took control
and has been released by the Hammers. Millwall would love to take Sheringham
full circle and take him back to The Den, where he started his illustrious
career but manager Willie Donachie would have to offer him a coaching role
on his staff to enjoy any success.

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Inter Milan in Kia talks for West Ham's Tevez
tribalfooball.com - May 16, 2007

Inter Milan are favourites to land West Ham United striker Carlos Tevez. His
superb recent form has made him one of the most sought-after forwards in
Europe and subsequently he's been linked with a whole host of clubs,
including Spanish sides Real Madrid and Sevilla. However, according to The
Daily Express Inter are now the front-runners with their president Massimo
Moratti having opened talks with Kia Joorabchian, the man who represents
Tevez. The 23-year-old Argentine insists he wants to remain a Hammers
player, but Sunday's 1-0 win over Manchester United, in which he scored the
crucial winning goal, looks to have been his last game for the club.

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Mc Babe Sinks To The Lowest In Assault On West Ham - West Ham Fans.org
Submitted by Neville Nixon on 16 May, 2007 - 10:38.

In one of the most pathetic snivelling outbursts of all time Sheffield
United Chairman 'cry baby McCabe' soiled his nappy live on Sky. Blades
supporters hang your heads in shame that the man (loose terminology) charged
with taking your club forward is the main man who should have resigned
instead of your manager Neil Warnock. No genuine fan can support the actions
of a coward who needed to firstly try to hide the club's failings behind an
FA ruling but worst of all has tried to hide his incompetency and his
inability to keep hold of a valued and trusted manager behind his gripping
about Hammers surviving the drop 'on the field'.
What a sad and pathetic image Mc Babe has sent out regarding a once proud
club, all West Ham supporters wish Sheffield Utd's supporters the best in
their forthcoming campaign and attempt at bouncing back next season, but
your chairman needs to go back to nursery, what a shower.
Incidentally, word has reached us that Sepp Blatter has absolutely no
intention of trying to deduct points from West Ham, his niece is a jolly
good pal of West Ham's chief backer björgólfur gudmundsson's son, who is not
short of a bob or two, perhaps this warrants an investigation?
Get a life! - Ed..

PS: Full credit to Neil Warnock for not claiming that Hammers were the sole
reason for the Blades demise, especially his comment that 'Rafa Benitez'
should take over as the new Sheffield Utd manager, a clear indication of
what he thought about Liverpool fielding their reserves against Fulham in
the match that ensured the Cottagers Premiership survival, without that
victory Fulham would have been relegated instead of Sheffield Utd.

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INTER LINE UP TEVEZ SWOOP - REPORT - Sporting Life

Italian champions Inter Milan have reportedly opened talks over a £25
million deal for West Ham's Carlos Tevez. The Argentine superstar scored six
goals in nine games in the Premiership run-in and almost single-handedly
kept the Hammers in the top-flight, much to the anger of the 'Gang of Four'
- Wigan, Fulham, Sheffield United and Charlton - who claim his signing
breached Premier League rules. His superb recent form has made him one of
the most sought-after forwards in Europe and subsequently he's been linked
with a whole host of clubs, including Spanish sides Real Madrid and Sevilla.
However, according to The Daily Express Inter are now the front-runners with
their president Massimo Moratti having opened talks with Kia Joorabchian,
the man who represents Tevez. The 23-year-old Argentine insists he wants to
remain a Hammers player, but Sunday's 1-0 win over Manchester United, in
which he scored the crucial winning goal, looks to have been his last game
for the club.

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Hammers in for England striker - Clubcall
20070516 09:59

West Ham are targeting Everton's Andy Johnson as a replacement for Carlos
Tevez - who has said goodbye to the club. Hammers boss Alan Curbishley
believes he can prise Johnson away from Goodison Park after rumours on the
grapevine that the England striker would welcome a move back to the south.
Reports in March claimed Johnson is homesick for London and, despite denials
by the Toffees at the time, a move to the ambitious Hammers would appeal to
the former Crystal Palace striker. And, armed with significant funds from
the sale of Argentinian superstar Tevez, it could be the biggest domestic
transfer of the summer. Despite his instrumental role in keeping the
Hammers in the Premiership this past season, Tevez looks set to move on this
summer after reportedly bidding farewell to his team-mates following their
crucial 1-0 win at Manchester United on Sunday.

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Toffee targeted as Tevez replacement Wed, May 16 2007 09:59 -
EatSleepSport

West Ham are targeting Everton's Andy Johnson as a replacement for Carlos
Tevez - who has said goodbye to the club. Hammers boss Alan Curbishley
believes he can prise Johnson away from Goodison Park after rumours on the
grapevine that the England striker would welcome a move back to the south.
Reports in March claimed Johnson is homesick for London and, despite denials
by the Toffees at the time, a move to the ambitious Hammers would appeal to
the former Crystal Palace striker. And, armed with significant funds from
the sale of Argentinian superstar Tevez, it could be the biggest domestic
transfer of the summer. Despite his instrumental role in keeping the Hammers
in the Premiership this past season, Tevez looks set to move on this summer
after reportedly bidding farewell to his team-mates following their crucial
1-0 win at Manchester United on Sunday. Real Madrid have already been linked
with a £30million swoop for Tevez and it has now been revealed that West Ham
will scoop most of the proceeds from any sale. That is because only the
player's contract from the complicated paperwork that dictated the terms of
Tevez's arrival at Upton Park last August remains legally enforceable. That
will upset West Ham's rivals, who are already unhappy with the fact they
were only hit with a £5.5million fine and not docked points after an
independent commission found the club guilty of having a third-party
agreement in the signings of Tevez and Javier Mascherano. Fifa have vowed to
investigate the matter, but Hammers chairman and former Uefa executive
committee member Eggert Magnusson is not thought to be worried.

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Harewood tracked by Hutchings - Clubcall
20070516 10:04

Chris Hutchings hopes to make out-of-favour West Ham striker Marlon Harewood
his first signing as Wigan manager. The news come after chairman Dave Whelan
confirmed there will be "comings and goings" at the JJB Stadium during the
close-season as Latics plan for life after Paul Jewell. Harewood has been
told by manager Alan Curbishley he has little or no future at Upton Park
after being edged out of the first-team picture by Carlos Tevez and Bobby
Zamora. The 27-year-old has scored just four goals this season but could be
sold for £2.5million. Hutchings is keen to stamp his own authority at Wigan
and will begin his summer clear-out imminently, with Harewood a top target.


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LATICS CHASING HAREWOOD - yeoldetreeandcrown.com

Wigan Athletic manager Chris Hutchings is believed to be ready to pay West
Ham United's asking price of £2.500.000 for striker Marlon Harewood.

Marlon, who was born in Hampstead on 25th August 1979 started his career at
Nottingham Forest for whom he made 181 league appearances scoring 51 league
goals. Whilst at the City Ground he had a loan spell with Finnish outfit FC
Haka in 1998 for whom he played 12 times, scoring 3 goals as they won the
Finnish Veikkauslliga (the League) and the Finnish League Cup. The
following year saw him loaned out to Ipswich Town where he scored once in 6
league appearances for the Tractor Boys.

He joined the Hammers in November 2003 for a fee of £500.000 and he helped
the Boleyn Ground team to promotion to the Premiership via the play-offs at
the end of season 2004/05. He has recently fallen down the pecking order at
the club and manager Alan Curbishley is prepared to sell him now.

He has been a long term Latics target with outgoing manager Paul Jewell
having tried to sign him during the last transfer windows. Maybe it will be
third time lucky for Latics?

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Gang of 4 lifted by Prem letter - The Sun
May 16, 2007

THE Premier League last night acted to defuse the Tevez row by sending a
letter to all 20 Premiership clubs. But it does not dismiss the idea that
the Gang of Four — Wigan, Sheffield United, Fulham and Charlton — might
still have a case. The letter from chief executive Richard Scudamore and
chairman David Richards insists the Premier League have done everything by
the rules.
It also says they are convinced the Independent Commission who imposed a
£5.5m fine, rather than points deduction, acted correctly. And there is no
case for appeal. The lengthy letter points out that any club that has "had
its day in court" cannot be "re-tried" by aggrieved clubs. That would
indicate there is no course of action for the Gang Of Four. However there is
then a glimmer of hope.
Scudamore's letter points out that if it is proved West Ham did not properly
terminate their deal with the third party in the affair — MSI and Just Sport
Inc who owned Tevez — then further action, including a points deduction,
could yet be taken. Key to the issue is a clause in the deal which would
have allowed MSI and JSI to sell the player at any time. The Premier League
says Tevez was properly registered throughout. But it is West Ham's
termination of the clause in that deal last month that could give the Gang
of Four hope. Prior to the April 28 deadline the Premier League received a
letter from West Ham sent to Tevez, MSI and JSI terminating the private
agreement between them dated 30 August 2006. It also received a letter from
MSI and JSI acknowledging receipt of the letter and that the letter had been
served on Carlos Tevez personally.
In addition the PL board sought additional undertakings from West Ham.
However there appears to be no confirmation from the MSI or Tevez side that
the deal had actually been ended. This could be seen as a vital flaw.
Scudamore's letter says "if the Board has evidence these undertakings are
false or been breached, it will take all necessary steps to enforce Premier
League Rules. "In making these undertakings it could be that West Ham has
exposed itself to further legal challenge from third parties who may contest
the legality of that termination."

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Atletico Madrid keen on West Ham's Zamora
tribalfooball.com - May 16, 2007

Atletico Madrid are interested in West Ham United striker Bobby Zamora.AS
says Atletico chiefs see Zamora as the perfect foil for their pacy attackers
Fernando Torres and Sergio Aguero.

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West Ham to go for Parker - Daily Mail
Last updated at 12:27pm on 16th May 2007

West Ham are set to make a £6million move for Newcastle's Scott Parker. Alan
Curbishley is being given significant funds to overhaul the squad this
summer after his side escaped relegation on the final day of the season. The
West Ham boss sees midfielder Parker, who he brought through the ranks at
Charlton, as the man to lead a revival at Upton Park. And his wages of
£50,000 a week would not pose a problem for the new regime. Curbishley
enquired about the 26-year-old in January, when his interest was rejected,
but it is thought Parker would be tempted by a move back to London. The
England player would be the first star to leave Newcastle following the
arrival of Sam Allardyce but the new boss is reported to be lining up Joey
Barton as a replacement. West Ham are not short of players in Parker's
position but doubts remain about the future of Nigel Reo-Coker.

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Bent Fee £15m - TWTD.com
By Philip Ham
Date: 16/5/2007

Charlton are reported to have slapped a £15 million price tag on former Town
striker Darren Bent. The Blues' summer transfer fund would be boosted by
£2.48 million if the Addicks manage to secure a fee at that level for Bent,
who is being linked with West Ham, Tottenham, Everton and Arsenal. Town are
due 20% of anything Charlton receive above the £2.6 million they have so far
paid for the frontman. The Blues could also receive another £400,000 with
£200,000 due after each of Bent's first two competitive appearances for
England. Earlier in the week, Spurs and West Ham were reported to be ready
to lodge bids of £10 million and £12 million respectively, with Martin Jol's
club understood to be heading the chase for the 23-year-old, along with
Everton. Arsenal are also believed to have watched Bent in action during the
final few games of the season

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FIFA may investigate - Newham Recorder
16 May 2007

THE CELEBRATIONS had hardly begun before the whinging and bleating began at
Sheffield United and Wigan Athletic, but it seems that it may have had some
effect as FIFA have begun to show an interest in the ongoing row over West
Ham. The Blades were relegated after losing at home to woeful Wigan, while
West Ham won at Old Trafford, but Sheffield United chairman Kevin McCabe was
quick to go on the offensive. He said: "I feel cheated because Sunday's
result was not the root cause of our relegation." He obviously hadn't
considered that it was also the previous 37 games that they had played, but
now FIFA President Sepp Blatter has stepped into the limelight where he
feels so at home. "We will look at this - and not only if we are asked, we
will do it anyway," he told a media briefing in Zurich on Tuesday morning.
"We will ask for the file once it has been decided how and why the decision
was made." This latest twist in the disciplinary saga takes yet more gloss
off West Ham's magnificent effort in winning seven of their last nine games
to stay up as well as their triumph at Old Trafford on Sunday. They will be
heartened by the fact that the Argentinian pair's signings were, according
to world football's governing body, "done correctly according to the
international transfer of players." However, FIFA have the power to deduct
points as well as impose other penalties on West Ham and though it would
seem very unlikely, while the uproar continues from certain clubs in and now
out of the Premiership, FIFA are bound to keep an interest in what is going
on. As to the legal action from Sheffield United and Wigan, that too looks
doomed to fail with each member of the Premiership having agreed to the
members on the independent panel that decided West Ham's punishment.

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Bent is a wanted man - Newham Recorder
16 May 2007

WEST HAM will make Charlton striker Darren Bent their top priority for next
season as the career of Carlos Tevez at Upton Park is set to come to an end.
The brilliant South American, fresh from his match-winning strike at Old
Trafford last Sunday, flew back to Argentina this week to consider his
future, but that is likely to be away from West Ham. Only last week,
chairman Eggert Magnusson hinted that he would be interested in keeping
Tevez at the club, but that means dealing with Iranian businessman Kia
Joorabchian, something that has proved disastrous for the club in the past.
If Tevez does decide to move - with Inter Milan and Real Madrid, said to be
interested in a bid of around £30million, then the Hammers are unlikely to
get a penny of it. Their only compensation in one of the notorious side
agreements in the player's contract, was a £100,000 pay-off, but now those
agreements have been ripped up, they will not even be entitled to that.
However, that will not deter them from making a £12million bid for
23-year-old Bent, who grabbed 15 goals in a relegation campaign for the
Addicks. West Ham made an enquiry about Bent in the January transfer window,
but were told they would not be selling him to a relegation rival, however,
now the way is clear for the Hammers to team him up with Dean Ashton next
season. Marlon Harewood and Teddy Sheringham are both set to leave and so
the signing of Bent will become a vital cog in West Ham's rebuilding with
only strikers Bobby Zamora and Carlton Cole as well as Ashton still at the
club.

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Curbs does it the hard way - Newham Recorder
16 May 2007

ALAN CURBISHLEY walked around the Old Trafford pitch with his jubilant team
like a gatecrasher at a wedding celebration, writes DAVE EVANS. By the time
he reached the confines of the press room, the smile had gone and a
shellshocked, almost drained expression had appeared on his face - it was as
if he couldn't quite believe what had just happened - he wasn't the only
one. "To win seven out of nine is amazing," he said. "And if you consider
who we have played, to win it against the top teams has been absolutely
fantastic." It was the stuff of comic strips. Curbishley had turned from
saviour on his arrival to villain when relegation seemed inevitable, and
then to hero as The Great Escape was finally achieved at the home of the
Premiership champions and via their most controversial signing. "At one
stage the fans were shouting at the players, saying 'you're not fit to wear
the shirt', and to me telling me to four letter word back to Charlton
because they couldn't quite understand what was going on at their club,"
recalled the manager, who certainly had some dark times during his early
weeks at Upton Park. "I can't quite put my finger on what turned things
round," he confessed. "I've never come into a club mid-stream and I found it
very difficult. "There were lots of injuries, lots of things to contend
with, but since the Spurs game, I think that galvanised us, even though we
got done in the last minute."
One thing that did change around that time was West Ham's luck. Some say you
make your own luck, others that it evens out, but in the case of the Hammers
this season all their good luck seemed to be squeezed into the final 10
games of the season.
So what was the lowest point for the manager? "I came away from the Charlton
game very despondent," he admitted. "We didn't put up much of a show at my
old club, there were lots of injuries among the players I had signed and at
the time you couldn't see where another result was going to come from." The
manager continued: "But people close to the club said to me that if we pick
up a couple of results then you will see the difference in the players and
that is exactly what happened."
If Tottenham was the moment West Ham found their form, then it was Blackburn
where it started to bear fruit. Few could say that West Ham deserved to win
that day, but a controversial penalty and a shot that never crossed the line
gave them the points and began that season-saving run of seven wins from
nine games. The manager was quick to suggest who should take most of the
plaudits. "I give great credit to the players," he insisted. "Perhaps all
I've done is kept it low key, kept the training simple and the results have
picked up." He continued: "Lucas Neill and more recently Luis Boa Morte have
come into the side, but it has been the players that were here before I came
to the club that have done the business and it shows you what ability was
there."
It certainly does, but it also shows just how much these players were
underperforming earlier in the season. In the case of Carlos Tevez it is
perhaps understandable. A new country, a new language and much of the time
he was played out of position on the right wing. He didn't look 100 per cent
fit, didn't seem to know quite what his role was and previous manager Alan
Pardew had a similar problem with where to fit him into the line-up to the
point where he often didn't bother. Curbishley can certainly take some
credit for the Argentinian's resurgence, he simply moved him further up the
field and allowed the South American to hurt the opposition in their penalty
box - seven goals in 11 games followed. Taking a gamble on the likes of Mark
Noble, James Collins and George McCartney has certainly paid dividends too,
while a settled side has also enabled the players to find vital team spirit.
"We need a rest, so we will have a break and hopefully it will all hold us
in good stead for next season," said Curbishley. "I am already thinking
about next year and the pre-season preparations. I am big one for
pre-season. This campaign has been a big learning curve, I have certainly
learned an awful amount and hopefully so have the players."
Curbishley can breathe a huge sigh of relief. He doesn't have to worry about
the prospect of star names like Neill, Matty Upson, Rob Green and Dean
Ashton jumping ship as West Ham sunk into the Championship. He will now look
at his squad, see who is surplus to requirements, who might be a disruptive
influence as he tries to build his own team, and then decide who he might
need to sign. For two seasons running West Ham have played the last game of
the season and then watched as the opposition picked up a trophy, maybe next
year the tables can be turned.

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Blades blasts are just sour grapes - Newham Recorder
16 May 2007

UPTON PARKES EXCLUSIVE COLUMN

WELL, I said that West Ham were safe and I proved to be right, although I
don't think anyone expected Sunday to go quite the way it did. Certainly
Sheffield United didn't. Perhaps the fact that they only needed a draw
against Wigan unsettled the way they played because for me, they just
bottled it on the day. Wigan had to win and that probably helped them, but
Sheffield weren't quite sure how to play it and suffered because of it. I
think all the threats of legal action and slurs on Sir Alex at Manchester
United are really just a case of sour grapes. 'Fergie' doesn't owe anything
to Sheffield United, nor to West Ham for that matter. What he has to think
about is winning the FA Cup Final and that can be his only priority. I don't
agree that the team he picked was a weak one either and when I saw Scholes,
Ronaldo and Giggs coming on with half an hour still to go, I was getting
very nervous. Man United had something like 30 shots on the day so to say
that they weren't trying is ridiculous, but I think the players will always
be conscious of something like a Cup Final coming up.

Fulham

I remember after we made it into the 1980 FA Cup Final. We played at home to
Fulham shortly afterwards, who were absolute rubbish at the time (though
they usually were!). Obviously we were trying to win the game, but I don't
think you can help yourself from not going into a tackle quite as hard as
you normally would. Everyone wanted to play in the final and they didn't
want to jeopardize that - I think Fulham did us 3-2 that day! Sunday's
performance at Old Trafford was a magnificent one by the Hammers especially
considering what sort of pressure they were under. I won a couple of games
there myself in the mid-eighties and getting a victory at a fortress like
Old Trafford is always a great result. I remember the FA Cup replay there
where we were under a similar sort of pressure and I had to make quite a few
decent saves. Rob Green was doing that again on Sunday. I continue to be
impressed by him and what I like is the fact that he looks so comfortable in
making most of his saves. Some keepers fly all around the goal and that is
often because they are out of position, but for me, Green is always in
command of what he is doing.

Positioning

He made a great save from Ronaldo's header, which was down to positioning
more than anything, while he also stood up well to save from Ronaldo with
his body again. The player who really impressed me on Sunday though was
Yossi Benayoun. He was everywhere for me, getting back to head off the line,
block, make tackles, but more than that he was holding the ball up so well
at the other end. Ten weeks ago West Ham would have crumbled under pressure
like that but when you have players like Yossi passing it about, making runs
and giving the defence time to have a breather than it gives you more of a
chance to hold out. I think that is the best I have seen Yossi play in his
time at West Ham! The defence were also magnificent and I think that James
Collins has had a magnificent end to the season and thoroughly deserves his
place in the line-up.

Relegation

I don't think relegation would have been a disaster for West Ham. When you
look at the teams who went down last season, two of them have bounced back
automatically and I can't help thinking that West Ham would have done the
same, but staying up gives them a chance to push onwards and upwards. The
players would have hated what happened to them this season. They would not
have liked going into the last game not knowing what their future was and
hopefully that will be enough to ensure that they will not go through that
sort of agony again.
Looking at the nucleus of the team, it is one that should be pushing for a
European place rather than trying to avoid relegation and I think they will
certainly be in the top half next season.
That doesn't mean that there won't be an exodus of players from the club
because I still think there is a few that need to be shown the door. I think
Nigel Reo-Coker has already hinted that he may want to go, while Anton
Ferdinand, despite being a good player, I think may be someone who may be a
little disruptive in the dressing room. I would expect Paul Konchesky to go
as he seems to have a problem with the manager, while personally I would get
rid of Marlon Harewood, while I am not sure that Carlton Cole has the hunger
to succeed.

Ashton

On the plus side, Lucas Neill has proved himself to be an excellent player
and I would make him captain next season, while the return of Dean Ashton
has got to be a good thing, although it must be a worry that he has missed
the whole season. Lastly, a word for Alan Curbishley. He has had to take a
lot of criticism this season, but he has turned things round at the club and
given the players the confidence to go on a winning run. He doesn't let his
emotions run away with him, but he must have been so nervous on Sunday. What
Curbs has done is restore the team spirit in the ranks and that is so
important. Now he must get rid of the players that are going to hamper the
club's future, bring in players for the left back, left midfield and perhaps
centre midfield position and I think there is a rosy future ahead for our
beloved Hammers.

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Noble: We must prove ourselves - TeamTalk

West Ham midfielder Mark Noble has challenged the Upton Park players to
"prove ourselves" next season. The Hammers avoided relegation from the
Barclays Premiership with a dramatic 1-0 win at champions Manchester United
on the final day. Noble told the club's official website: "It was
unbelievable to go to Old Trafford and win to stay up. It's never been
better than this. The boys have dug in and we've played as a team for the
last three months. "Next season we can prove ourselves. We've got out of the
sticky patch of the difficult second season in the Premiership and we can
push on a do well and hopefully do as well as we did in the first season -
or better. "Everyone knows how important it is to this club, being in the
Premiership, and the East End is a happy place to be now."

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Fergie: Words were overplayed - Sky
By Steve Bramley - Created on 16 May 2007

Sir Alex Ferguson says he is still on speaking terms with Neil Warnock
despite their row over his team selection against West Ham. The Manchester
United boss upset Warnock when he left Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs and
Cristiano Ronaldo on the bench for his side's final Premiership game of the
season against The Hammers at Old Trafford. Alan Curbishley's side took full
advantage with Carlos Tevez scoring the winner which kept the Londoners in
the Premiership and effectively sent Warnock's Sheffield United down.
Warnock, who confirmed his resignation from the South Yorkshire club on
Wednesday, launched a bitter blast at Ferguson for his team selection. But
Ferguson said he has since spoken to Warnock to iron things out. "I have
spoken to Neil and he said his words were overplayed," said Ferguson. "He
was hoping I would play my strongest team but that was impossible. "I don't
think anyone could criticise us on Sunday. We did our best and we should
have won."

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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The Times
May 16, 2007
Martin Samuels

It wasTévez's third party so cry if you want to, but a solution would be
better
The reason a yellow card cannot be changed to a red after the final whistle,
even if television evidence shows what appeared to be a careless elbow was
in fact a full-blown punch up the hooter, is that a match cannot be
rerefereed after the fact. The Premiership rebel clubs, it seems, would like
to rereferee the 2006-07 season. So how many points should West Ham United
have deducted for breaching rule U18? One? They stay up. Two? They stay up.
Or is the punishment that is sought the precise amount of points necessary
for Sheffield United to move above them on goal difference, allowing West
Ham to drop into the bottom three, now we know the outcome of all 380
matches?

In which case, the problem is not that the Independent Premier League
Commission sat too late, but too early. What an interesting precedent this
would set. Wait for the season to be over and then adjust the league table
on moral grounds. I don't know about you, but I've got Milton Keynes Dons
kicking off in Midland Football Alliance next year and AFC Wimbledon in the
Champions League.

West Ham got off lightly, we all know that. Privately, those at the helm of
the FA Premier League probably admit it, too. A points deduction would have
been a more fitting punishment, yet all 20 Premiership clubs signed up to
this disciplinary system and none added the rider "unless the decision does
not go our way".

Sheffield United deserve our sympathy. Yet the righteous anger that was so
appealing a few weeks ago has metamorphosed into the sort of wrongheaded
feeding frenzy that keeps Chris Morris, the media satirist, in pay cheques.
Latest to join the mob is Clive Betts, Labour MP for Sheffield Attercliffe,
who tabled an early day motion yesterday calling for West Ham to be docked
points.

Betts would, of course, know much about false paperwork, having been
suspended from the House of Commons for seven days in September 2003 for
copying a doctored document so that his Brazilian rent-boy escort, José
Gasparo, could stay in Britain. Betts also provided Gasparo with a Commons
pass, as his "researcher". Gasparo had worked out of a gay brothel in Earls
Court called Villa Gianni and stated that Betts had met him there and paid
him £70 for full sex. Johann Hari, writing in the Independent on Sunday,
described Villa Gianni as a "sleazy, dangerous environment". Still, it is
good that someone is willing to pull up his trousers and take a stand for
morality.

Now, back to the grubby world of football. Far from striking a chord with
every club, the truth is that, until the Carlos Tévez and Javier Mascherano
controversy blew up, many Premiership chairmen did not appreciate that rule
U18 even concerned players' contracts. The clause governing third-party
influence on policy and performance was considered to deal with club
ownership and be in place to prevent an investor having an interest in
multiple clubs. With reference to players, there is no equivalent of it in
many of the leagues around Europe.

Dave Whe*an, the Wigan Athletic chairman, has accused the Premier League of
creating a new transfer window to allow Tévez to be reregistered, but that
is wrong, too. Tévez was a West Ham player from August 31. He did not need
special dispensation. (Actually, once a player is at a club, his status can
be changed at any time. Tim Howard was on loan from Everton to Manchester
United and the deal became permanent on February 14, 2007, legally and
outside the window.)

The issue of Tévez's future transfer fee is also a red herring. Whe*an has
said that the deal cannot be legal unless West Ham receive the money, but
that is incorrect. West Ham own Tévez's registration and always have; the
matter of his transfer fee is a separate issue. Rio Ferdinand, Mark Viduka,
Dominic Matteo, Michael Duberry, Eirik Bakke, Danny Mills, Michael Bridges
and Olivier Dacourt, for instance, were bought by Leeds United on sale and
lease-back deals of the type that allows the club to continue playing at
Elland Road without owning it.

When Peter Ridsdale, the Leeds chairman at the time, broke the British
transfer record for Ferdinand in 2000, someone else paid. This third party
was reimbursed by Leeds over the period of the player's contract, plus
interest. In the event of falling short on payments, Ferdinand could be sold
to give the lender his money back. The defender's sale to Manchester United
in 2002 paid the debt for his purchase, and then some. Others did not. After
settling the loan, Leeds would not have received a transfer fee for the sale
of many players. This does not mean, however, that they did not own the
legal registrations. There are, in fact, similar agreements with banks and
lenders throughout football. The situation with Tévez is not unusual.

The suggestion that Tévez and Mascherano would not have been able to play
for West Ham this season is also false. Even had West Ham disclosed every
financial arrangement on the day of the transfer, the players would still
have been registered, even with unworkable contracts. The Premier League
lawyers would then have spent several days with club lawyers knocking out
each contractual arrangement that was not permitted, which is what happened
when Mascherano signed for Liverpool.

Richard Scudamore, the Premier League chief executive, states that the large
majority of contracts with foreign players need work before being ratified.
There was one clause that brought the signing of Tévez and Mascherano into
dispute, which stated a third party could move the players on at any time.
Premier League policy is to register the player and then iron out such
wrinkles. Some may feel that this is too lenient, but it is safe to presume
that 20 clubs wish it to be this way, rather than work with a governing body
that prevents transfer activity rather than facilitates it.

This does not alter the fact that West Ham's officials lied. But would Tévez
and Mascherano still have played this season? Yes. Were they correctly
registered as West Ham players? Yes. Is the final destination of the
transfer fee an issue? No. And why are the rebel clubs not so vexed about
Everton leaving out the first-team goalkeeper against Manchester United
because of a gentleman's agreement between the clubs that was waved through
on the QT by the Premier League and would therefore appear equally baleful?
The cynic might suggest because it does not affect them.

So we can continue down the path of recrimination or we can act like
grown-ups and do something to ensure that this chaos does not happen again.
And that begins with abolishing the loan system. Loans from third parties,
loans from Europe, loans from Premiership or other English clubs. You buy a
player, he is yours. No half-measures and no possibility of third-party
interference.

Could West Ham have afforded to pay full price for Tévez and Mascherano in
August? No? Then there would have been no controversy. Would Manchester
United have sold Howard to Everton last summer, knowing they had Edwin van
der Sar and Ben Foster in reserve? Yes? Then he could have played against
them on April 28.

Now do you see the root of the problem? You cannot let something go and keep
it. You cannot run your shop with another man's stock. There is a meeting of
Premier League chairmen on May 31 and June 1, with the loan system on the
agenda. If the clubs do the right thing, it should be gone by next season.
Buy the players you can afford, sell the players you don't want. And if you
run short, that's your fault. Next season the club who finish bottom of the
Premiership will earn more from central distribution than the winners of the
Bundesliga in Germany. There is no excuse for not paying your way any more.

The contrary argument is that the loan system benefits the small clubs,
giving them access to players they could otherwise not afford. Hardly. Take
the trio of goalkeepers at Manchester United. It would have been impossible
for Sir Alex Ferguson to have kept Van der Sar, Foster and Howard happy, so
one would have left. And that goalkeeper would have been signed by a smaller
Premiership club, permanently, with no piece of elastic or gentleman's
agreement keeping him tied to Old Trafford.

As it stands, the richest clubs win both ways. Foster accrues experience at
Watford and returns to Old Trafford an England goalkeeper; but if he had
been allowed to tire of his lack of opportunity with United, perhaps he
would have moved and then another club would have ended up with the best
young goalkeeper in the country, increasing competition.

Similarly, if clubs had needed to buy Tévez and Mascherano outright, the
agents would have had to set a more realistic asking price than £30 million.
The loan system creates an unhealthy paternalistic system; the smaller clubs
creeping around their bigger rivals in the hope of receiving a crumb from
the plate. Will Arsène Wenger find it in his heart to toss Birmingham City
another trio of reserves (no wonder Karren Brady, the City managing
director, is one of the system's biggest champions)? Will Sir Alex Ferguson
bestow the honour of a raw, teenage full back on a managerial protégé?

Get rid of it. Get rid of it all. You want a player? You buy him. Your
money. Your contract. We can scream and squawk, but it shows what a mess
football has become that something so simple is considered a radical idea.
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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Web Digest [ West Ham United ] - 16th May 2007

Curbs: I'm really looking forward to next season! - WHUFC
15/05/2007 16:38

For so long, it looked all set to end in a relegation nightmare. But by the
time the curtain fell down on a rollercoaster season at the Theatre of
Dreams, Alan Curbishley had masterminded the greatest of great escapes. And
that means the relieved Hammers' boss can now positively set his sights
firmly on next term.
"I hadn't spoken to the chairman about the scenario of what would happen if
we stayed up or if we went down," says Curbs, who now plans to start drawing
up his summer battle plan with Eggert Magnusson, safe in the knowledge that,
come August, his side will still be kicking-off in the Barclays Premier
League."We all need a break and a bit of a rest but we'll have a meeting on
Wednesday so that we can start looking forward to next season. "Hopefully,
the events of this year will hold us in good stead because it's been a real
learning curve for everyone. "And to have got seven wins out of our final
nine games is unbelievable, especially when you consider the opposition that
we've faced recently. "We've also had a barrage of negative press, which
wasn't helped by some of our earlier performances and a few other things
that crept into the newspapers, while the Tevez-Mascherano affair has become
the bandwagon for everyone to jump upon, too. "When I came here in December,
things had already gone on but then they held the inquiry and gave their
verdict. We've become public enemy number one but the Premier League have
said that it's over and that's it. I don't think that their decision will be
overturned and it's all out of my hands, just like it's always been. "The
win at Manchester United wasn't just a one-off, though," insists the Hammers
boss, having seen Carlos Tevez secure safety with a priceless first-half
winner at Old Trafford."We've had some magnificent performances lately from
players such as Tevez, Robert Green, James Collins, Lucas Neill, Mark Noble,
Anton Ferdinand and Bobby Zamora. They've all played their part and it's
been a great effort. "I've certainly learned a lot and I hope that the
players have, too, because it'll hold us all in good stead for next season.
"All week, people were saying that Manchester United would beat us and
everything would be decided by events at Sheffield United, where it would've
been all over if we'd lost and Wigan had won. "But we also knew that if
everyone approached their matches correctly then it could've all come back
and bitten us. After all, Sheffield United were looking at their situation
thinking that they only had to win their game and that just goes to show how
difficult it actually is down at the bottom. "We knew all the permutations
and realised that we had to get at least a point," continues Curbs after
steering Hammers to an incredible double over the Premiership champions,
while Neil Warnock's Blades saw their Premiership lifeline cruelly cut by
Wigan's win. "We were hearing conflicting stories from Bramall Lane but when
I heard that Wigan were down to 10 men and winning 2-1 it was still all in
the balance because Manchester United could have scored and turned it all on
its head again. "To come away from Old Trafford with the win was the bonus
ball but whenever United tried to create anything we got there, we blocked
it and put our bodies on the line. It was a great effort and we've pulled
off an amazing escape!"
Certainly, when he trudged away from his old stamping ground at The Valley
in late February, Curbs could hardly have contemplated such a spectacular
late reprieve after a 0-4 defeat left Hammers nine points adrift of safety.
"I came home from Charlton feeling very despondent," he reveals. "It had
been difficult coming into the club in mid-season and I'd already had lots
of injuries and other things to contend with. "We didn't put up much of a
show against my old club, while some of the players that I'd signed had
picked up injuries, too. It wasn't happening and you just couldn't see where
another result was coming from. "Some of the West Ham fans were even
telling me to go back to Charlton because no-one could work out what was
happening to this club! Remember, this time last year West Ham were
contesting an FA Cup final and they'd had a great season. "But the problems
started with all the injuries and the operations after the players came home
from the Millennium Stadium. "All along, though, people at the club were
telling me that if we could only pick up a couple of results, then I'd see
the difference in the players and that's exactly what happened. "Although we
ended losing it in the end, our next match against Tottenham Hotspur really
galvanised us," recalls Curbs, after a 3-4 defeat against Martin Jol's men
left Hammers rock-bottom in the Premiership table, 10 points adrift of
safety with just those nine games to play. "But apart from Lucas Neill and,
more recently Luis Boa Morte, it really has been the players who were
already in the side before I got here, who have got us out of trouble. That
just goes to show that, somehow, the ability that was here all along had
escaped us in the early part of the season. "I've got to give great credit
to the team for going on to produce those seven wins out of our final nine
matches. "Although I can't put my finger on it, it just goes to show what
can be achieved. All I've done is kept things low key and the training
simple and the results have picked up alongside the confidence. "All along,
I said that I hoped to bring in some senior players alongside the young
talent that we again saw against Manchester United and it's been up to me to
get the best out of them. "We've also had a settled side in recent weeks
and we can now look forward to welcoming back some big-hitters such as Dean
Ashton, Danny Gabbidon and Matthew Upson, too. "But just like any other
club, players will also come and go during the summer," predicts Curbs.
"We'll just have to wait and see what happens but, in the meantime, I'm big
on pre-season preparation and I'm really looking forward to next year."

by Steve Blowers

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Northampton Town v Hammers - WHUFC

Friendly Match 15th May 2007 Kick-off: 19:00
Venue: Sixfields Stadium
West Ham 4 Northampton 1

Andy Woodman scored from the penalty spot in the second half of his
testimonial at Sixfields but it was only a consolation as the Hammers earned
a resounding 4-1 victory. A brace from Kepa Blanco and goals from Marlon
Harewood and Carlton Cole gave Hammers the victory as Woody was given a
hero's welcome back to his old stomping gound at Northampton Town. The
Hammers were 3-0 up inside the first 20 minutes as Kepa, Harewood and Cole
struck the ball past Woody - but the former Northampton favourite made up
for it with a neat penalty take past Jimmy Walker.

1 min Crunching challenge from Jason White on Lee Bowyer

4 mins GOAL Harewood fires Hammers into the lead with a snap shot from Matty
Etherington's cross. Woody's first touch is to pick the ball out of the net.

7 mins Carlton Cole makes a darting run into the box and cuts the ball back
to Harewood, but his fierce shot bounce off Cole and out of play

8 mins Woody's first save! A calm catch from Etherington's cross

9 mins Woody's second save! A low stop as Etherington struck the ball
towards the near post

10 mins GOAL Kepa fires Hammers into a 2-0 lead after latching onto an
excellent cross from Harewood

13 mins Woody's third save! A diving stop from Harewood's low drive

16 mins Corner to the Hammers. The ball falls to Bowyer on the edge of the
box but his curling shot lands on the roof of the net

19 mins Benayoun dispossessed by Neil Grayson, whose run up the pitch was
halted as Bowyer trapped the ball and won it back

20 mins GOAL! Cole scores with a neat back-flick to put the Hammers 3-0 up -
then offers Woody a conciliatory hug

23 mins Woodys fourth save! An excellent stop from Johh Pantsil's powerful
shot

27 mins Grayson makes a run down the left for Northampton but Collins makes
a well-timed challenge

30 mins Collins' volley travels wide from the edge of the area

32 mins Woody's fifth save - a good stop from Bowyer's shot

38 mins Northampton corner turned wide by Warburton

42 mins Green saves a powerful shot from Grayson

43 mins Hammers corner swung in by Etherington, played back in by Collins to
Harewood but just too long for Cole

44 mins White makes a run through the middle but is tackled by Davenport as
Hammers break. The move ends with a Harewood shot which flies past the
outside of Woody's post

45 mins SUB Clakson for Gibb

HALF TIME

48 mins SUBS Walker for Green, Widdowson for Collins and Boa Morte for
Benayoun

52 mins Penalty to Northampton after a handball by Bowyer.

53 mins GOAL Woody scores from the penalty spot to pull a goal back for
Northampton

SUB Woody comes off to be replaced by Mann

58 mins SUBS Norton, Maddison on for Grayson and Southgate


59 mins Tony Stokes and Kyel Reid on for Cole and Harewood

64 mins Shot from Maddison 3o yards out saved by Walker

71 mins GOAL Kepa scores his second after some neat link up play saw
Etherington play the ball across the box to the Hammers' striker's feet

73 mins Dailly makes a darting run into the box and cuts the ball back to
Boa Morte but he slices his shot and it travels wide

75 mins Mann makes a diving save as Bowyer plays in a curling shot

77 mins SUB Mann replaced by Turley

79 mins Turley tips Reid's shot around the outside of the post

84 mins Corner to Northampton but they lose possession and Hammers move
forward

86 mins Northampton push forward again and earn another corner but Dailly
heads it clear

89 mins Pantsil fires in a shot but Turley stops it on the line - the
Hammers fans cheer, thinking it's gone over - but no goal is awarded

FULL TIME

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Fifa chief wades into Tevez saga - BBC

Fifa president Sepp Blatter says he will look into how the Premier League
handled West Ham's breach of rules. West Ham were fined £5.5m for
irregularities over the signing of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano but
they escaped a points deduction. Blatter said he is "monitoring the
situation very carefully". But Fifa has told BBC Five Live Sport that it is
not re-examining the evidence with the aim of testing the Premier League's
ruling. West Ham broke two Premier League rules by entering into a private
agreement with a third-party company when they signed Argentine pair Tevez
and Mascherano in August last year. Mascherano has since moved to Liverpool,
while Tevez stayed in London and played an influential role in West Ham's
successful battle against relegation - scoring seven goals in the club's
last 10 games. Sheffield United, who went down on the final day of the
season, are leading the fight against an independent commission's decision
not to punish the Hammers with a points deduction. The Blades, who are being
supported by the likes of Wigan, Fulham, Charlton and Middlesbrough, are
also concerned that West Ham may still have been breaking Premier League
rules after the ruling on 27 April. The Premier League has argued that it
has no case to answer in regards to West Ham's punishment because all 20
Premiership clubs agreed to the disciplinary system in place. However, that
has not stopped Sheffield United pursuing their case and Blatter's
intervention may encourage them. A Premier League statement later read: "We
have implemented our rulebook and processes to the letter in this matter and
we are more than happy to give Fifa any assurances or explanations they
need."

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Ripped off by Whelan? Get your own back here! - KUMB
Filed: Tuesday, 15th May 2007
By: Gordon Thrower

Fed up with the endless stream of half truths and wilful misrepresentations
coming from the mouth of Wigan chairman Dave Whelan? Fancy getting your own
back and making a few bob at the same time? Read on....

Many Hammers are already boycotting Whelan's chain of tacky sports shops as
a response to his continued insistence that Carlos Tevez was ineligible for
selection during the successful fight against the drop. Despite the Premier
League maintaining that the player has been correctly registered at all
times, Whelan has continued to perpetuate the myth that the player
registration was somehow invalid.

Whelan, of course, is no stranger to being "economical with the truth". In
2003 clothing manufactured by child slave labour in Burma was found on sale
in his JJB shops some months after Whelan had given his personal, but false,
assurance that no such stock was carried. After a brief campaign Whelan
agreed not to do further business with Burma.

However, it was in the murky world of illegal price-fixing that JJB came
into its own. The company was found guilty of being part of an illegal
price-fixing cartel which operated in 2000-01 and the Office of Fair Trading
levied a fine of over £8m for JJB's role in the scam. This fine was reduced
to £6.3m on appeal.

JJB was the only solvent company to appeal against the fine and, ironically,
it is this action that has left them open to compensation claims. Legal
powers enabling the well-known consumer action organisation Which? had not
been granted in time for claims to be launched against the other members of
the cartel, which included Manchester United FC, Umbro and the FA. However,
by the time JJB's avenues of appeal had been exhausted in February 2007,
when leave to take the case to the House Of Lords was refused, Which? had
been given the requisite powers to enable them to take action.

Which? has now launched a compensation claim on behalf of football
supporters ripped-off by the dodgy antics of Whelan's company. Negotiations
are currently taking place but it's not too late to join in with the fun.
All you need is to have bought an England home or away kit between April and
June 2000 and you could be well on your way to getting your hands on some of
JJB's illegally gained profits.

It may not even be necessary for you to have bought the shirt at JJB -
Which? are looking at claiming compensation from JJB irrespective of which
of the illegal cartel shops are involved. For full details of how to make a
claim please visit the Which? website at www.which.co.uk.


You should find a link to the specific campaign in the Campaign A-Z box
under "Football Shirts"

We at kumb.com would be interested to know how anyone gets on with this -
and ours is a pint if you're successful!

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Northampton Town 1 West Ham United 4 - KUMB
Filed: Tuesday, 15th May 2007
By: Matthew O'Greel

A brace from on-loan striker Kepa Blanco helped the Hammers breeze to
victory in tonight's friendly at Sixfields. In what was almost certainly his
final appearance for the Hammers, the Spanish striker struck either side of
the break to give United a comfortable 4-1 win in Andy Woodman's
testimonial. Marlon Harewood opened the scoring after just four minutes
when he converted man of the match Matthew Etherington's cross from wide on
the left. The lead was doubled just six minutes later when Kepa added his
name to the scoresheet with a well taken drive from close range. United led
3-0 after just 20 minutes when Carlton Cole scored with a crafty back-heel.
With no mre goals in the half, The Hammers went into the break with a
healthy advanatage. The Cobblers - featuring Middlesbrough manager Gareth
Southgate at centre-half - pulled one back eight minutes into the second
period from the penalty spot before the Hammers clinched a comfortable win
when Kepa noched his second of the night 19 minutes from time.

West Ham United: Green; Pantsil, Collins, Dailly, Davenport; Benayoun,
Bowyer; Etherington; Harewood, Cole, Blanco.
Substitutes: Walker, Boa Morte, Stokes, Reid, Widdowson.
Goals: Harewood (4), Kepa (10, 71), Cole (20).

Northampton Town: Woodman, Clarkson, Frain, Southgate, Warburton. Sampson,
Parrish, White, Grayson, Lee, Peer.
Substitutes: Gibb, Turley, Maddison, Warner, O'Shea, Savage, Hendon, Norton,
Wilson, Thompson, Mann, Heggs.
Goals: Woodman (53, pen)

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What A Load Of Sour Grapes - West Ham Online
Seventeen year old - Tue May 15 2007

Sheffield United chairman Kevin McCabe reckons that his club weren't
relegated on Sunday because they lost at home to Wigan- that's Wigan, by the
way, who had not won a game since 3rd March. He has suggested that Sheffield
United went down because West Ham cheated.

How odd. As I understood it on a nervous Sunday, Sheffield United only had
to avoid defeat against their relegation rivals to secure their Premiership
status for another year. They failed. Yet apparently that's Carlos Tevez's
fault. Mr. McCabe, forgive me for being obtuse, but Carlos Tevez was in
Manchester on Sunday afternoon. I may not know much about legal ins and
outs, although it all sounds fascinating, but I do know that Tevez was in
Manchester on Sunday.

It's not too far from Sheffield, but even SuperTev would have been
stretching the realms of reality if he'd managed to score West Ham's winner
at Old Trafford and then zoom across the Pennines to Sheffield to gift Wigan
a penalty which turned out to be the decisive goal.

So maybe, just maybe, it's not West Ham's fault that Sheffield United will
be playing Championship football next season. One gets the feeling that
Sheffield United would be happy to play the blame game for a long time. Sir
Alex Ferguson, Rafa Benitez, linesman, treacherous cloud formations- they
all got it in the neck from a furiously disbelieving Neil Warnock.

Everyone was to blame. Except for Sheffield United. After all, where is it
possible to spot mistakes in their approach?

They were ten points clear of West Ham at one stage- yet after Christmas,
they won just four games. It is somehow doubtful that their losses were down
to an irregular contract- especially as one of those wins came against West
Ham.

Sheffield United and Wigan continue to preach justice. They are adamant that
West Ham should have been deducted points for the Tevez fiasco.

However would they have been so indignant if West Ham had been challenging
for Europe and were far away from a relegation battle? I suspect not- there
could be no excuses then, nothing to cloud the blunders at their own clubs,
just a simple admission that they were far from good enough to remain in the
Premiership.

For what they are demanding as punishment for West Ham is not a points
deduction. They are demanding relegation- and nowhere in the rule book does
it state that this is the proper sanction to be imposed on a club who were
found- and pleaded- guilty of an irregularity in a contract of a correctly
registered footballer.

Dave Whelan has said that West Ham should have been deducted ten points. He
also said that justice would be served if West Ham were relegated. What
exactly were these claims based on? Any hard facts or precedents? Or was it
simply an opportunistic grab at his 'Get out of jail free' card? We all know
the answer to that. Perhaps if West Ham had happily procured 60 points by
the time of the disciplinary hearing Whelan would have been demanding a 40
point deduction.

An Independent Commission, which the infamous 'Gang of Four' agreed to
comply by at the beginning of the season, fined West Ham 5.5m pounds- the
biggest amount any club has ever been fined, much more than Chelsea were
fined for tapping up Ashley Cole, for which one of the possible sanctions is
a points deduction.

But the Premier League should perform the honourable act once and for all. A
points deduction is, of course, in order. Two should suffice. It's what
Sheffield United would have wanted.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fifa set to look into Tevez row - Telegraph
By David Bond
Last Updated: 1:54am BST 16/05/2007

The Premier League were last night forced to issue a new defence of their
handling of the Carlos Tevez case as Fifa president Sepp Blatter vowed to
review their decision not to dock West Ham points for breaking rules on
third-party ownership. Although Fifa later tried to play down any suggestion
that they had already launched a formal investigation into the case, Blatter
said the game's world governing body reserved the right to open an inquiry
if they felt the Premier League had mishandled the case. With the Premier
League under growing pressure from the 'gang of four', who have threatened
to seek a judicial review over the verdict, Blatter's intervention could not
have come at a more sensitive time for chief executive Richard Scudamore.
But, in a brief statement, the Premier League insisted, once again, that
their handling of the Tevez case had followed the letter of the law. The
statement said: "We have implemented our rulebook and processes to the
letter in this matter and we are more than happy to give Fifa any assurances
or explanations they need."
Earlier in the day Blatter had signalled his concern over the decision by a
Premier League commission to fine West Ham £5.5 million for failing to
disclose agreements which breached their rules on third-party ownership. He
said: "We will look at this - and not only if we are asked, we will do it
anyway. We will ask for the file once it has been decided how and why the
decision was made. If we feel something was wrong in this decision then we
have to open our file."
Indicating the urgency of the situation, he added that any decision on
whether Fifa would intervene "would have to be taken immediately". Fifa
signed off the deal which took Tevez and his fellow Argentina international
Javier Mascherano from Corinthians in Brazil to West Ham last August. But
both players had been released by Corinthians and it is not clear who held
their registrations at the time of the dramatic transfer-deadline-day deal.
Blatter said, however, that according to Fifa's files, the transfer of Tevez
and Mascherano from Brazilian side Corinthians to West Ham had complied with
international transfer regulations. Blatter added: "We will monitor this
situation very carefully and once this situation is dealt with by the League
and the FA we will ask for the files and have a look because we have the
right and the responsibility to see how such cases are dealt with. The
matter is linked with a club in Brazil - Corinthians - and with the
ownership of this club and the ownership of the two players. "According to
our files the transfer of Tevez was done correctly according to the
international transfer of players."
Both West Ham and the Premier League questioned Fifa's right to get involved
in the dispute but Blatter said a recent ruling by the Swiss federal court
against Spanish third-division side Rayo Vallecano meant Fifa did have
jurisdiction over individual clubs. The Spanish club had been threatened
with relegation if they did not pay transfer fees owed to a Brazilian club.
They claimed, unsuccessfully, that Fifa did not have the power to do so.
Last night the Premier League attempted to quell the growing rebellion over
the Tevez controversy as they sent a six-page letter to all 20 clubs setting
out the full details of the case and why they allowed the striker to carry
on playing following the judgment on April 27. Fulham, Charlton, Wigan and
Sheffield United have questioned whether Tevez should have been permitted to
play such a central role in West Ham's escape from relegation when there
were doubts over his registration.But the Premier League say he had been
freed to play after West Ham ripped up their third-party agreement with his
offshore owners.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
League to explain Tevez decision - TeamTalk

The Premier League have promised to provide FIFA with a full explanation of
their handling of the Carlos Tevez affair. FIFA are to investigate whether
there was anything wrong with an independent commission's decision not to
dock West Ham points for breaching rules over third-party agreements. A
Premier League spokesman said: "The Premier League has implemented its
rulebook and processes to the letter in this matter and we are more than
happy to give FIFA any assurances or explanations they need." FIFA
president Sepp Blatter insisted the organisation had the power to pass a
final verdict on the independent commission's decision to fine West Ham
£5.5million. Several clubs are considering legal action against the Premier
League over the commission's sanction, claiming the Hammers should have been
deducted points. Blatter said FIFA would look into the case as a matter of
urgency - whether or not they are invited to do so. He told a media
briefing in Zurich: "We will look at this - and not only if we are asked, we
will do it anyway. "We will ask for the file once it has been decided how
and why the decision was made. "If we feel something was wrong in this
decision then we have to open our file." Blatter said in terms of
time-scale a "decision would have to be taken immediately."
He added that according to FIFA's files the transfer of Tevez and Javier
Mascherano from Brazilian side Corinthians to West Ham had complied with
international transfer regulations.
Blatter added: "We will monitor this situation very carefully and once this
situation is dealt with by the league and the FA we will ask for the files
and have a look because we have the right and the responsibility to see how
such cases are dealt with. "The matter is linked with a club in Brazil -
Corinthians - and with the ownership of this club and the ownership of the
two players.
"According to our files the transfer of Tevez was done correctly according
to the international transfer of players." If FIFA were to attempt to
overrule the independent commission it would cause a huge storm in the world
of football. It seems more likely that FIFA will check carefully to ensure
that the league's disciplinary process had been followed correctly, and if
it is satisfied that it has then will ratify the decision. Any such
ratification move would strengthen the Premier League's hand in any legal
battle. Blatter said a recent ruling by the Swiss federal court against
Spanish third division side Rayo Vallecano meant FIFA did have jurisdiction
over individual clubs. In the Rayo Vallecano case, the Spanish club had
been threatened with relegation if it did not pay transfer fees owed to a
Brazilian club. It claimed, unsuccessfully, that FIFA did not have the power
to do so.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Blatter threat to Hammers - The Sun
May 16, 2007

FIFA chief Sepp Blatter says West Ham could still face relegation over the
Carlos Tevez row. Football's world governing body will investigate the
transfer and Blatter insists FIFA can fine, deduct points or even expel the
club.He said: "We have the power. We will look at this — and not only if we
are asked, we will do it anyway." Hammers were fined £5.5million for
breaching transfer rules. But Sheffield United and Wigan have led calls for
the club to be docked points. Blatter says FIFA can intervene after a Swiss
court ruled it had the power to threaten Spanish club Rayo Vallecano with
relegation in another transfer row. FIFA president Blatter added: "The court
made a ruling stating FIFA has the right to use all 14 sanctions of the
disciplinary code.
"That code starts with a warning and ends with exclusion via relegation and
deduction of points."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Curbs facing Blatt splatt - The Sun
By PAT SHEEHAN
May 16, 2007

SEPP BLATTER promises to waste no time in deciding if West Ham should be
relegated and Sheffield United reinstated in the Premiership. FIFA president
Blatter insists football's world governing body will investigate the Carlos
Tevez transfer — to the fury of the Hammers. And Blatter is adamant FIFA
have the clout to send West Ham down if they discover any irregularities
with his move from Brazilian club Corinthians to Upton Park. That would mean
Sheffield United regaining their Premiership status. The Premier League's
independent commission have already hit Hammers with a £5.5million fine for
breaking rules over player ownership. They will not welcome FIFA's
involvement but know ratification would strengthen their hand in any legal
battle.
They have agreed to help the FIFA investigation in any way. A Premier League
statement read: "We have implemented our rulebook and processes to the
letter in this matter and we are more than happy to give FIFA any assurances
or explanations they need."
But West Ham are furious with Blatter for stepping in to the row. The
decision by the FIFA chief comes just as the Premier League were about to
write to every club explaining there was never a problem with Tevez's
registration but just a contract clause over selling him. A source close to
the West Ham board said: "At one time, West Ham understood that the letter
being sent out to Premier League clubs would be made available publicly.
"I'm sure it is what the West Ham board would have wanted as it would have
cleared up once and for all this argument over Tevez.
"West Ham pleaded guilty to certain irregularities in the initial contract
with Tevez but in hindsight I'm sure they wished they hadn't as there's a
good case that they had interpreted the rules correctly. "The Premier
League's mistake was not making it totally clear there wasn't a problem with
Tevez's registration and he has never had to be re-registered."
Blatter insisted a recent ruling by a Swiss court against Spanish club Rayo
Vallecano meant FIFA did have jurisdiction over individual clubs. He added:
"We have the power. The Swiss court has made a ruling by saying FIFA and
their associations have the power to use all 14 sanctions of the
disciplinary code, starting with a warning and ending with exclusion of a
member via relegation and deduction of points."
Rayo Vallecano had been threatened with relegation if they did not pay
transfer fees owed to a Brazilian club. Rayo claimed FIFA did not have the
power to issue such threats but lost the case.
Blatter stoked up the Tevez row even though he admitted FIFA were sure the
transfers of Tevez and Javier Mascherano to West Ham had complied with
regulations. He added: "Our files show the transfer of Tevez was done
correctly."

Meanwhile UEFA president Michel Platini has called for a universal worldwide
system of player registration and contracts.

p.sheehan@the-sun.co.uk

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Masch joy at Hammers escape - The Sun
BY PHIL THOMAS
May 16, 2007

JAVIER MASCHERANO has revealed he was delighted at West Ham's dramatic
last-day survival. The Argentine midfielder, 22, suffered six months of
hell at Upton Park before joining Liverpool. He started just three
Premiership games for the Hammers and spent most of his time on the bench.
Now he is preparing for a Champions League final next month after Rafa
Benitez rescued him in January. Yet Mascherano was still hoping West Ham
would beat the drop — and was delighted when Sunday's 1-0 win at champions
Manchester United ensured they did.
He said: "No matter what happened there, I'm pleased, content and happy they
survived, because if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't have had the chance to
play in a Champions League final.
"They helped me. By bringing me to England they gave me this opportunity
and, of course, Carlos Tevez is my great friend so I am happy for him. "I
don't know about the politics and I don't want to talk about the rights and
wrongs of whether they should be docked points but I do know we didn't do
anything wrong. We just went to play and, though I didn't play much, they
still gave me my chance. "They all helped — staff, players, fans, everyone.
For that I am grateful. They are a great club — too good to be out of the
top flight — so I am happy."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
We deserved to stay up - The Sun
May 16, 2007

CARLOS TEVEZ insists West Ham beat the drop on the pitch and not off it.
FIFA are probing the Argy striker's transfer last summer. But Tevez said:
"We avoided relegation on the pitch and not in offices. "We achieved it
thanks to the players and fans. It was a miraculous salvation — one of the
most emotional moments of my career." Hammers' hero Tevez, 23, arrived back
in Buenos Aires yesterday after his goal at Manchester United made sure West
Ham stayed up. He added: "I found it difficult to adapt to England but the
fans were magnificent. "They gave me strength and, luckily, I was able to
pay back their affection with goals."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The best since Maradona: The footballing warrior from Fort Apache - The
Independent
Carlos Tevez's status as one of football's emerging superstars is no
surprise to those who watched him grow up
By Neil Clack, in Buenos Aires
Published: 16 May 2007

"Redondo, Riquelme, Cambiasso, Colocinni, Sorin, Gago..." Ramon Madonni
proudly reels off the names of some of the 70 professional players he has
discovered. It reads like a Who's Who of Argentine football, but the
legendary youth coach is under no doubt as to whom he considers the best of
the lot. "Tevez is the biggest explosion in Argentine football since
Maradona," is his description of the kid from Fort Apache who has captured
the hearts of West Ham fans.

Madonni, 62, works for Boca Juniors and first saw Tevez play when he was
eight years old. "He was just different," he says, "but when I say
different, I suppose I mean he was just better than everyone else. He was
playing for Santa Clara, the team from Fort Apache, against my team, El
Parque, who were the best in the area, but he ran us a merry dance that day.

"He played just as he does today, running all over the opposition's area,
beating everyone. He had lots of aggression and chased everything. So we
invited him to join El Parque. Maradona is something unique, something
apart, so we never compare anyone with him, but, after Maradona, Tevez is
the best Argentina has produced."

Fort Apache is not actually the real name of the isolated ghetto that lies
four miles to the north of the centre of Buenos Aires. A journalist first
coined the phrase after a shoot-out in front of the local police station in
the early 1980s and it has stuck ever since. Most of the 30,000 inhabitants
of the 22-block labyrinth are descendants of indigenous Indians from the
interior of Argentina and bordering countries. It is a self-contained
community, with its own set of codes, and a shocking crime rate

Built in two stages, the project was originally part of the Ongania
dictatorship's plan for the eradication of shanty towns in the 1960s but,
later, during preparations for the 1978 World Cup, the military government,
worried about security and the image Argentina would portray to the rest of
the world, rounded up delinquents, placing them, out of sight, in the
Ejercito de los Andes estate, a name that has long been forgotten.

"The biggest problem is juvenile crime," says the captain of the local
gendarmes. "Of every 10 arrests, seven are minors carrying arms." Since
2003, the neighbourhood has been patrolled by armed soldiers wearing
bulletproof jackets.

Rusting iron corridors run between the irregular buildings, giving the
complex the feel of an abandoned military base, or prison, taken over by
squatters but, "Fort Apache is the most beautiful place in the world,"
according to Tevez.

"I had an unforgettable childhood there and I will never forget my roots,"
Tevez has said. "If I wasn't a footballer, I'd be one of the rubbish
collectors, I'm sure of that. There is real poverty but I'd like to live
there again one day."

At the centre of the community is the Santa Clara football and social club.
Every evening they run classes of "Baby Football". All over Argentina and
Uruguay, children are taught by qualified coaches, on seven-a-side dust
pitches, with an emphasis on ball control in reduced spaces. After an
hour-long series of repeated trapping, dribbling and passing exercises, the
six-year-olds play a 10-minute match. The little lad up front, wearing the
Boca Juniors shirt looks quite useful - his name is Christian Tevez. It was
here, on this very dust pitch, that his uncle first started learning his
tricks before Madonni spotted him.

"Carlitos was a great kid, always well behaved," says Madonni. "All he
wanted to do was play football. He never missed a training session once. We
loved him and so did all his team-mates because he gave his all in every
single match and inspired everyone around him."

Madonni becomes animated when asked to explain his methods. "We always look
for technique, that's the overriding principle in everything at El Parque.
Then we teach the kids aggression, jumping, heading, chesting, shooting, but
when I say aggression, I don't mean kicking or hitting opponents, but
channelled aggression - shielding the ball, using your weight and balance.
The truth is you can't teach anyone how to play football, but you can
perfectionise [sic] it. And most important of all, it must be fun, they must
enjoy it!"

All this would, of course, be music to the ears of the FA's director of
football development, Sir Trevor Brooking. It is a virtual blueprint of
everything he wants English grass roots and children's football to adopt.

"We never played in a competitive league at El Parque," says Madonni, "just
friendlies. We were like a sort of Harlem Globetrotters team and the players
knew that they were there to learn."

Only at the age of 12 do children in Argentina move on to bigger pitches and
11-a-side. So, aged 12, Tevez left El Parque to join his first senior club,
lower league All Boys, a 15-minute bus ride away from Fort Apache. However,
when Madonni invited him to join First Division Argentinos Juniors, the club
where players like Maradona and Redondo had begun their professional
careers, the 14-year-old Tevez's response was surprisingly negative.

"'No, Argentinos, no, Papa', he said," recalls Madonni, mimicking Tevez's
voice. "He was a fanatical Boca Juniors supporter and was not interested in
Argentinos."

But, in 1996, when Madonni himself was handed the job of academy director at
Boca, one of the first things he did was go back for young Carlitos.

It proved a very astute move. A debut for Boca at 17, two Argentine league
championships, two Copa de Libertadores (the South American Champions
League) and the 2003 World Club championship, in which Boca beat Milan in
Japan. Tevez then won a Brazilian championship with Corinthians and has been
voted South American player of the year three times.

It is not unusual to see West Ham replica tops with Tevez's name on the back
in Argentina, especially at Boca Juniors matches, and since he signed for
the Hammers nearly all their matches have been transmitted live in his home
country. Tevez's goals against Bolton and the presentation of the Hammer Of
The Year award filled the middle page spread of Ole, Argentina's sports
daily.

But how does Madonni feel his protégé is doing at West Ham? "If I'm honest
with you, I'm not quite sure how he ended up there," he says. "He should be
at a better team, in my opinion. They say he went there to adapt but Tevez
can adapt to any football. At one point, they were playing him in midfield.
That's ridiculous! Tevez has all the natural characteristics of a striker, a
brilliant striker in fact."

It does seem strange that it took two-thirds of the season before Tevez was
able to nail down a regular place in the West Ham attack, although there has
always been some debate over his best position. The former Boca Juniors
manager Carlos Bianchi, with whom Tevez won everything, once said: "Not even
Carlos Tevez knows what his best position is so, in the end, we just put him
on the pitch and let him get on with it."

Back in Fort Apache, everybody has a story. "I saw him here on Christmas Day
a couple of years ago," says one teenage girl. "He was playing football at
10pm with all the other lads. He's never really left the area."

"He signed a football for us last time he came here, which we raffled," says
his old kindergarten teacher.

El Piola Vago (which roughly translates as "the lazy urchin" or "lazy chav")
are a Cumbia dance band, made up of some of Tevez's old childhood mates and
he sings and dances with them on stage, Latin American style, whenever he is
back in Argentina.

The group made a television appearance recently, two of the band wearing
West Ham tops that Tevez had given them. "He'll be back, playing with them
again in June and July," says Tevez's cousin.

Ramon Madonni recounts one more anecdote. "I remember that when I first took
over at Boca, we had a match against All Boys and Tevez started on the bench
for them. We were winning 1-0 but then he came on in the second half and
scored two. When he got the winner he ran over to the bench and started
doing that Cumbia dance thing in front of me, grinning away. I said: 'What,
you want to dance with me?' and he took my arm and started swinging me
around... that's Tevez for you."

What they say about Tevez

"Tevez can play in any position in the attacking line, but not as a
left-winger like he is currently playing. I think they're [Tevez and
Mascherano] half-hearted and I'm really worried. They play as if they're
unenthusiastic. I hope both of them leave that club as soon as possible" -
Argentina's coach Alfio Basile urges Tevez and Mascherano to quit West Ham

"Carlos has set up all of my goals so far - he headed it back for me against
Brighton, chested it down against Tottenham and then picked me out on
Saturday - so I certainly don't want him to leave!" - Mark Noble, West Ham
team-mate

"Tevez is the one who has lifted their game a bit. He has scored a couple of
really good free-kicks and seems to have a lot of enthusiasm" - Sir Alex
Ferguson, Manchester United

"Every time I see Tevez in a West Ham shirt the first thing that crosses my
mind is that he's wasting his time there" - Jorge Valdano, Real Madrid's
former director of football

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fifa probe offers little comfort for Blades - The Independent
By Glenn Moore
Published: 16 May 2007

The news that Fifa, football's global governing body, is to investigate the
transfers of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano will at first sight have
heartened Sheffield United and the other clubs arguing that the Hammers were
treated leniently. However, Fifa's record in such cases suggests the
intervention is nothing but window dressing, and that any investigation will
quietly fade away. Fifa's president, Sepp Blatter, not a man to stand aside
when some posturing is possible, said: "We are monitoring this situation
very carefully and we will look at the files once it has been dealt with by
the English [Premier] League and the Football Association. We will look at
this, and not only if we are asked. We will do it anyway."
Fifa has, though, already looked into the transfers when it sanctioned
Mascherano's January switch to Liverpool, a move which, in theory, breached
rules barring footballers from playing for three clubs in one season. The
Argentine had previously played for Corinthians, of Brazil. Blatter added:
"According to our files the transfer of Tevez and Mascherano [from
Corinthians to West Ham] was done correctly according to the international
transfer of players."
Blatter, incidentally, was responding to a question at Fifa's regular media
briefing in Switzerland, rather than raising the issue of his own accord. An
independent commission fined West Ham £5.5m after the club were found guilty
of breaking Premier League rules. West Ham had entered into a private
agreement with a third-party company when they signed Tevez and Mascherano
in August, then lied about doing so to the League's chief executive, Richard
Scudamore. They did, however, cancel the third-party agreement, to the
Premier League's satisfaction.
Sheffield United, who were relegated on Sunday after West Ham won at Old
Trafford, head a group of clubs who argue that the Hammers should have been
deducted points, and who continue to question the eligibility of Tevez.
However, while the Premier League's handling of the issue has been
ham-fisted and tardy it seems unlikely that the commission's decision can be
overturned. The League yesterday wrote to all 20 member clubs explaining why
the decision is binding, pointing out that it had accepted the commission's
validity and independence before the verdict was issued. While this, and
greater transparency regarding the paperwork on Tevez, may deter Sheffield
United and others, the relegated club could yet sue West Ham for damages on
the grounds that they had breached the duty, under Premier League rules, for
clubs to "behave with the utmost good faith and honesty to each other".

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham in line for huge Tevez windfall
Matt Scott
Wednesday May 16, 2007
The Guardian

West Ham United are set to pick up a multi-million-pound windfall if they
sell Carlos Tevez this summer, a situation which is bound to infuriate the
"gang of four" clubs who continue to contest the striker's right to play in
the Premiership. On a day when the Tevez affair took on an international
angle with the presidents of both Fifa and Uefa stepping into the dispute,
it emerged that, under the terms of his four-year playing contract, only
West Ham will benefit from the forward's sale. Sepp Blatter and Michel
Platini would doubtless be dismayed that the prospect of yet another legal
wrangle has now been raised, this time between the club and the offshore
companies that brought Tevez to Upton Park.

This is because the only document relating to West Ham that remains legally
enforceable from the complicated sheaf of paperwork that dictated the terms
of Tevez's arrival in London last August is his playing contract. That means
he is West Ham's player and that the club alone would be due any fee from
his sale. The offshore companies are understood to retain commercial
contracts with the Argentinian player. These would permit the companies to
sue for damages in a commercial court if West Ham refused to pay them a
consideration for any transfer fee they received - and with Real Madrid
linked with a £30m bid for Tevez, that could be considerable.

Such contracts between the player and third-party companies are perfectly
legal under the Premier League rule U18 that led to £3m of the £5.5m fines
imposed on West Ham last month. This is because the rule governs the conduct
of clubs, not of players.

In any case, third-party contracts governing players' image rights and
so-called "escape clauses" allowing certain bids to trigger a player's
release are commonplace in the Premiership. Beyond national borders, the
involvement of third-party companies in player ownership is widespread.

Blatter yesterday announced Fifa's intention to scrutinise the verdict of
the independent commission that found the Hammers guilty of having breached
Premier League rules over their signing of Tevez. The Fifa president
appeared willing to listen to the complaints of the "gang of four" clubs -
Sheffield United, Charlton Athletic, Fulham and Wigan Athletic - who are
aggrieved that West Ham were not docked points, which might have condemned
them to relegation.

"We will look at this - and not only if we are asked, we will do it anyway,"
said Blatter. "We will ask for the file once it has been decided how and why
the decision was made. If we feel something was wrong in this decision then
we have to open our file. The matter is linked with a club in Brazil -
Corinthians - and with the ownership of this club and the ownership of the
two players [Tevez and Javier Mascherano]. According to our files the
transfer of Tevez was done correctly according to the international transfer
of players. We have the right and the responsibility to see how such cases
are dealt with."

The Premier League responded in a statement: "We have implemented our
rulebook and processes to the letter in this matter and we are more than
happy to give Fifa any assurances or explanations they need."

Blatter's Uefa counterpart, Platini, said that although Fifa is the
international arbiter of player transfers, there are no regulations
governing third-party ownership of players. "When you go to pick players
from South America, they are not from the same system, mentality or
morality," said Platini. "In many countries all over the world, players
belong to companies or agents rather than clubs.

"The Fifa congress has to put laws in place so that when a club is buying a
player they have to buy that player from one club and not from companies or
individuals."

The Premier League took the lead on the issue with its introduction of rule
U18, which was the result of "months" of debate according to one Premiership
chief executive, and the football world has only latterly woken up to what
the league considers a "disturbing development". The Football Association
and the Football League will also introduce a similar rule before their
international counterparts at their close-season AGMs.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
DON'T BLAME ME - The Mirror
David Maddock 16/05/2007

JAVIER MASCHERANO has urged the Premiership to forget the politics - and
instead celebrate the fact that a big club like West Ham has retained top
flight status. The Argentine endured a miserable time at Upton Park, where
he started just three games for the Hammers, despite arriving with a massive
reputation. The midfielder finally escaped his own personal hell by fleeing
to Liverpool in the January transfer window, and immediately restored his
glittering name by helping them reach the Champions League Final. But
Mascherano is just glad that West Ham have produced an incredible escape act
with their miraculous late revival, and he insisted that he is overjoyed for
the club and for his close friend Carlos Tevez. "I don't know about the
politics, and I don't want to get into the rights and wrongs of whether they
should be docked points, but I do know that we didn't do anything wrong,"
said Mascherano. "We just went there to play football, and even though I
didn't play much, they still gave me the opportunity, they helped me -
everyone, the staff the players and the fans. "For that I am grateful, and I
believe they are a great club. "They are too big and too good to be playing
at a level out of the top flight, and so I am happy they survived."
Mascherano arrived in England with the reputation of being one of the most
exciting young players in world football, but everything went wrong for him
as he struggled to adapt to the life of the Premiership. He barely played
during his six months in London, and reached the lowest point of his
professional career. Yet he still believes the experience was good for him,
and he doesn't want to see West Ham punished for signing him and Tevez. "No
matter what happened to me at West Ham, I am very pleased, very content and
very happy that they survived, because if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't
have the chance to play in a Champions League Final," he added. "By bringing
me to England they gave me this opportunity. Everyone helped me there, and
of course Carlos Tevez is my great friend, so I am so very happy for him.
"They have wonderful fans who always backed me, and the staff and the
players were always supportive of me, so I am happy that they have survived,
and can look forward to the Premiership next season."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
New York Red Bulls move for West Ham's Sheringham
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

New York Red Bulls are chasing West Ham United striker Teddy Sheringham. He
would be their second overseas player after Juan Pablo Angel signed from
Aston Villa. Charlton are also chasing Sheringham. Boss Alan Pardew signed
him when at West Ham and tried to swoop again in January. But Alan
Curbishley blocked the move in case he shot Charlton to safety

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool's Mascherano delighted for West Ham
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

Liverpool midfielder Javier Mascherano is delighted former club West Ham
have beaten relegation. He said: "No matter what happened there, I'm
pleased, content and happy they survived, because if it wasn't for them, I
wouldn't have had the chance to play in a Champions League final. "They
helped me. By bringing me to England they gave me this opportunity and, of
course, Carlos Tevez is my great friend so I am happy for him. "I don't know
about the politics and I don't want to talk about the rights and wrongs of
whether they should be docked points but I do know we didn't do anything
wrong. We just went to play and, though I didn't play much, they still gave
me my chance. "They all helped - staff, players, fans, everyone. For that I
am grateful. They are a great club - too good to be out of the top flight -
so I am happy."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tevez: West Ham deserved to stay up
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

Carlos Tevez insists West Ham's Great Escape was all above-board. FIFA are
probing the Argy striker's transfer last summer. But Tevez said: "We avoided
relegation on the pitch and not in offices. "We achieved it thanks to the
players and fans. It was a miraculous salvation - one of the most emotional
moments of my career." Hammers' hero Tevez, 23, arrived back in Buenos Aires
yesterday after his goal at Manchester United made sure West Ham stayed up.
He added: "I found it difficult to adapt to England but the fans were
magnificent. "They gave me strength and, luckily, I was able to pay back
their affection with goals."

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Wigan boss Hutchings targets West Ham's Harewood
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

New Wigan Athletic Chris Hutchings wants to make West Ham striker Marlon
Harewood his first signing. The Sun says Harewood has been made available
for around £2.5million as part of manager Alan Curbishley's summer clearout.
Wigan have had their eyes on the pacy Harewood for ages. And the resignation
of boss Paul Jewell on Monday has made little difference to club transfer
policy. Hutchings is keen to pick up from where his old boss left off.
Harewood, 27, has been relegated to the subs bench in recent weeks with
Curbishley opting for Carlos Tevez and Bobby Zamora up front. With £7m Dean
Ashton back after a season-long ankle injury, Harewood's chances will be
limited.

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Kia: Future of West Ham's Tevez known next week
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

Kia Joorabchian says Carlos Tevez will decide his future next week.
Joorabchian still holds Tevez's transfer rights, despite the Argie's ties to
West Ham, and declared: "I went out to dinner with Carlos last night
[Sunday]. He was ecstatic. There was not one word about his future. "Three
clubs had made it clear they wanted to sign him but I told them to wait
until the season had finished. Carlos did not want to discuss his future, he
was so wrapped up in wanting to keep West Ham up." Tevez has now flown back
to Argentina to consider his future and it is almost certain that he will
leave Upton Park, with West Ham unlikely to see any of the transfer fee.
"I'll go to the Champions League Final, then talk to the clubs who want to
buy him," Joorabchian added. "I'll sit down with West Ham, too, if they want
to talk to me about keeping him because you never know. But there are two of
the biggest clubs in the world who want him."

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Tevez plays down dinner meeting with Liverpool's Benitez
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

The agent of West Ham striker Carlos Tevez has played down a dinner meeting
with Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez. Joorabchian had dinner with Benitez
before his team played at Fulham earlier this month at Craven Cottage. "I
often do that," he told the Daily Express. "After all, I do have a player
[Javier Mascherano] with Liverpool. "But we haven't discussed Carlos. The
clubs that are interested will have their chance once Carlos has come down
from his high and has time to think about his future."

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West Ham go for unsettled Middlesbrough striker Yakubu
tribalfooball.com - May 15, 2007

West Ham United boss Alan Curbishley is chasing Middlesbrough striker Yakubu
Aiyegbeni. Amid reports that the Nigeria international is unsettled on
Teesside, The Times says Curbishley has Yakubu on his shopping list, which
also includes Charlton's Darren Bent and Barcelona forward Eidur Gudjohnsen.


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