Wednesday, December 31

Daily WHUFC News - 31st December 2008

Happy New Year!!

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Upson plays captain's part
WHUFC.com
England defender Matthew Upson led by example in the hard-fought success against Stoke City
29.12.2008

Matthew Upson was delighted to be able to skipper the team to a 2-1 success against Stoke City on Sunday and is looking forward to a bright new year.

The England defender - arguably the form player in his position in the country - was resolute again against a physical Stoke side who pushed West Ham United all the way on Sunday. He was wearing the captain's armband in the absence of injured Lucas Neill. "It is a great honour. I am happy to captain the team. Whenever needed, I will be there to support the team. It is nice to do the job."

Second-half goals from Carlton Cole and Diego Tristan turned things around after Abdoulaye Faye's early opener but Upson admitted a turning point was the sending off of Ricardo Fuller for violent conduct against team-mate Andy Griffin. "I think Stoke City probably did us a favour amongst themselves but the win has been coming and again I feel we deserved it."

It was the second time in two games that West Ham United had come from behind to win, something they had not managed at all this season until Boxing Day's 4-1 triumph at Portsmouth. "It was a welcome win," added the 29-year-old. "We battled away and got the three points in the end. Without a doubt it has shown the character in the team. We had to have belief that we were going to be successful after the first goal went in.

"We kept doing what we believed in, passed the ball, got a run of luck in the game which you need sometimes and took the points which is what we desperately needed. Now we can look forward. We have got some good fixtures ahead and hopefully more wins like we got against Stoke."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Behrami a happy Hammer
WHUFC.com
Valon Behrami is relishing his time at the Boleyn Ground and looking to the future
30.12.2008

Valon Behrami has spoken again about his happiness in England as a proud West Ham United player as he looks forward to a successful 2009.

Still only 23, the Switzerland midfielder has achieved much in the game - having played at the highest level in Italy and England as well as the Champions League, appeared at the 2006 World Cup and then represented the host nation at last summer's European Championship. For the coming year, Behrami is focused only on keeping the enjoyment factor.

"I am comfortable in England," said the energetic former Lazio favourite, who was unsurprisingly a former cross-country champion in his youth, said. "When I first arrived here I was very happy and this is the important thing for me. This is the goal in my job and what I want every time.

"[The success against Stoke] was a good win for us and I am happy with the result. We have to carry on doing this and collecting points to push us up the table." The whufc.com users' man of the match in the 2-1 win on Sunday added that the squad could achieve even more, especially if they can start to take the initiative in matches.

"The character is good but we don't want to fall behind every time. We can't just switch on when we go behind, we need to switch on from the start because it's not always easy to come back."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Goal glee for Tristan
WHUFC.com
Diego Tristan wants more of the same after being the match-winner for West Ham United against Stoke City
30.12.2008

He has scored goals at Camp Nou, Old Trafford and, most famously, Deportivo La Coruna's Riazor, but few will have meant more to Spanish international Diego Tristan than his dramatic 88th-minute winner in West Ham United's 2-1 win over Stoke City on Sunday.

The 32-year-old was on hand to divert Carlton Cole's goalbound shot past Thomas Sorensen to break the ten-man Potters' hearts. Tristan celebrated his first goal since netting for Livorno against Roma in Italy's Serie A on 9 December 2007 by sliding on his knees in front of the Boleyn Ground's Dr Martens Stand. The outpouring of emotion showed just how much the goal - the first of the striker's Hammers' career - meant to Tristan.

"I feel really good. It was fantastic for me. I feel really happy to be playing and I felt really good before I went on to the pitch. Now I have scored a goal I hope that it will give confidence both to myself and to the manager ahead of the next match.

Tristan has made three Barclays Premier Reserve League South starts for United since winning a contract in October following a successful trial. After four substitute appearances for the first team, however, the Spaniard is desperate to show manager Gianfranco Zola, his team-mates and the club's supporters what he can do on the Premier League stage.

"There was a fantastic atmosphere inside the Boleyn Ground during the game [against Stoke]. I was really impressed with the first time I heard it and I am impressed again every time I come to the stadium. It is great for me to play in front of such unbelievable fans. I really hope to help them by helping the team to win some more matches with my goals. I hope to make them happy with my play."

Manager Zola admitted Tristan may not be quite ready to start a Premier League match fitness-wise, but the former Real Mallorca hit-man believes he will be ready if called upon - perhaps against Barnsley in the FA Cup this Saturday.. Now he is off the mark, Zola knows he has a ready-made alternative for first-choice forwards Carlton Cole and Craig Bellamy. Tristan, for one, is keen to prove that theory.

"I don't know if I will start a game soon because it is the manager's decision but I feel really good. I hope with this goal I can give more confidence to the manager in me. Bellamy and Cole are doing fantastically well but I hope that when the manager calls on me I can come in and score some goals."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Momentum key for manager
WHUFC.com
Gianfranco Zola has high hopes but knows more results will only come if his team keep their focus
30.12.2008

Gianfranco Zola's players reported back to Chadwell Heath today with the manager urging his in-form players to keep their momentum.

The squad were given a rare day off on Monday after a hectic Christmas period but Zola knows this weekend's FA Cup visit of Barnsley is an important occasion for all at the club. Not just in terms of trying to reach the fourth round but in order to keep that winning feeling for the second half of the Premier League season.

"Now we have the momentum on our side we have to keep working and playing the way we have been. Things are good for us right now but we have to keep our feet on the ground - especially because some of the other teams can do the same."

Morale will certainly be high with the manager delighted to be in tenth place - a jump of seven places in just three days . He is already aware of the significance of Saturday week's trip to Newcastle United and the chance to go six unbeaten on the road.

"It is unbelievable. Five days ago we were talking about a different story. It is a strange championship...everybody here at West Ham wants to take this team to a better level. Hopefully we are going to be able to do that."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Colchester want to retain Walker
BBC.co.uk

Colchester United manager Paul Lambert has said he wants to sign goalkeeper Jimmy Walker on a permanent basis. The 35-year-old West Ham shot-stopper has one game left of his spell with the U's, during which he has helped the side rise to 11th in League One. Boss Lambert told BBC Essex: "He is a brilliant goalkeeper and he has been a massive help to us since he's been at the club. "His last game is on Saturday and we'll do our best to keep him." Walker's latest contribution to the U's resurgence came against Leyton Orient on Sunday, when he saved Adam Boyd's second-half penalty in their 1-0 win at the Community Stadium. "He is a top, top goalkeeper," Lambert said. "I've told him he reminds me of Andy Goram, who was an unbelievable keeper up in Scotland and Jimmy is the same."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Taking the Michael
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 30th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United's FA Cup third round clash with Barnsley will be officiated by one of the Football League's youngest referees.

Michael Oliver - who is only 23 - has been announced as the referee for Barnsley's visit to the Boleyn Ground this weekend. It will be the first occasion on which Oliver has refereed a game involving a Premier League side.

Newcastle-born Oliver has been a regular in the Football League this season, having been promoted to the Championship referee's list last term. Thus far he has shown only one red card - to Burnley's on loan striker Chris Eagles for a second bookable offence during the Clarets 0-0 home draw with Plymouth back in August - although he made 48 bookings and showed four red cards in his 21 games last season, only one of which ended without a single caution.

Oliver - who was described by Stoke supportes as 'clueless' and 'totally out of his depth' following their visit to Preston last season - follows his father Clive into the game. The pair became the first father and son duo to officiate in a Football League match when Michael ran the line for his dad in a 2005 Rotherham v Port Vale League Cup tie.

Buckinghamshire's Mark Scholes and Suffolk's Simon Long have been appointed as referee's assistants/linesmen. James Linington, from the Isle of White, will be the fourth official. The game kicks off at 3pm this Saturday (3rd January).

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Do the Bart man
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 30th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

West Ham are understood to be in talks with Polish youngster Salomon Bartosz over a permanent transfer. 17-year-old Bartosz, who currently plys his trade with Italian Serie B outfit Brescia Calcio met Hammers chiefs over Christmas in order to discuss a move to England. The 6'3" midfielder made his first team club debut againt Modena at the end of the 2007/08 season, and has made one appearance - against Grosseto - for the Rondinelle thus far this season. He began his career with local junior side Concord Murowana Goslina before joining pro outfit Lech Poznan at the start of the 2005/06 season. Bartosz - then only 15 - made his first team debut for Poznan during the 2006/07 season but was snapped up by Brescia less than a year later, where he was spotted by United's Gianluca Nani. He has also represented his country at junior levels.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Probably a Robbery
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 30th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

Robert Green has insisted that he remains fully committed to West Ham United - despite speculation linking him with a January exit. Rumours have been rife that Green - along with the likes of Matthew Upson and Craig Bellamy - would be on their way in the transfer window as the board seek to address the financial difficulties imposed on the club by the collapse of Chairman Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson's business empire. However Green insists that the board have promised that there will be no 'fire sale' in the January transfer wondow - despite a string of rumours to the contrary. "We've been assured as senior players that there won't be a fire sale from the chief executive," he said. "But it's something which is completely out of our control at the moment. "There's not much I can do about it; all I can do is keep playing well for West Ham. I want to play for West Ham and all the lads want to play for West Ham. There are things that are beyond our control and there are things that go on that are not down to us as players. "But I'm happy playing for West Ham in the most exciting league in the world. What more motivation do you need? You look at the team and everyone wants to play well for West Ham.There aren't many unhappy faces, if any, in the camp."
Green - who played his part in the two Christmas wins that catapulted United up to tenth in the Premier League table - also revealed that confidence in the camp was high following the successes over Portsmouth and Stoke. "The two wins have been massive and really changed the face of our season," he added. "People were dreading what Christmas might bring but we're now just two points off Hull, who have supposedly had a magnificent start to the season. "We're starting the New Year on a high and can now look forward to a cup game following two big wins."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fortunes always hiding?
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 30th December 2008
By: John Philpott

Reference has been made on various threads on the KUMB.com forums recently to the expected appearance during December of the latest West Ham accounts. This is when the accounts have normally been published in the past: to the credit of the club there is a section of the official site from which financial reports can be downloaded.

Indeed, given the May year end, this is when the accounts of West Ham United Football Club plc (the club that plays in the Premier League) and West Ham United plc (its immediate holding company) should have come into the public domain, as plcs (public limited companies) are allowed seven months by law to lodge their accounts at Companies House.

WH Holding Ltd, the UK acquisition vehicle used by the Icelandic consortium, is a private company and therefore allowed ten months to file its accounts, although in practice it lodged its 2007 accounts in December 2007 at the same time as the accounts of the two plcs.

I had been keeping an eye on the Companies House website as there seemed likely to be a number of items of considerable interest in the accounts when they appeared, and had been wondering why the filing of the accounts was apparently being left to the last minute. Today there has been a significant development, but not the one that I was expecting: instead of the accounts showing up as having been lodged, the due date for the next accounts of the two plcs shown on the Companies House web check service has changed from the 31st December 2008, that appeared yesterday, to 29th March 2009.

I could intitially only think of three possible explanations for this:

1. The plcs had been re-registered as private companies, thereby extending the filing deadline by three months;

2. The accounting period had been extended by three months (with accounts to be prepared for a fifteen month period) with a similar effect;

3. The directors had given a notice claiming a 3 months extension on the grounds that the companies carried on business or had interests outside the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man.

However, Companies House still classifies the entities as public companies, ruling out 1. Although there are Icelandic interests in West Ham, the converse does not seem to apply, so I disregard 3. There had indeed been a change in accounting reference date yesterday, but far from extending the period the change that was notified to Companies House was to shorten the financial year of the plcs by one day so that it ended on 30 May rather than 30 May, which itself seemed mysterious. What could be going on?

Then it suddenly struck me. Section 244(4) of the Companies Act 1985 states:

"If the relevant accounting period is treated as shortened by virtue of a notice given by the company under section 225 (alteration of accounting reference date), the period allowed for laying and delivering acounts is that applicable in accordance with the above provisions or three months from the date of the notice under that section whichever last expires."

By the completely artificial device of giving notice on 29th December to shorten the financial year by one day, the club has succeeded in putting back the filing date by two months and 29 days. It is now the other side not only of the transfer window but of the expiry of the Hansa moratorium on 6 March.

What can it be that the Board is so desperate to hide?

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Where do we go from here?
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 30th December 2008
By: Paul Turner

Supporting West Ham at times is like being on the bridge of the Starship Enterprise. When under attack everyone goes one way and the captain goes the other way as you get thrown. You feel under siege and that danger lurks around most corners.

The past year will go down in our history as a strange one that has thrown us loyal supporters at times. The history books will show a time when a home win was booed, a manager who achieved 10th place for a side where 10th should be the aim walking/getting the sack and a Billionaire losing a fair chunk of his money.

Add to that the announcement of transfer deadline deals hours after the window closed, a shirt sponsor going bust leaving us with a horrible number patch, Sheffield United 'winning' their case against West Ham for their own relegation and some spankings (most notably the three 4-0s in a row) its fair to say its been eventful. So as 2008 closes out, where does West Ham go from here?

If the ITK's are correct then a potential buyer is waiting for Sheffield United matters to be resolved and also for BG to suffer further financial complications to make the club as a package more desirable. However the gloss of the club will not look as shiny if players that are essential to us keeping our heads above water are sold.

Green, Upson, Collins, Behrami, Noble, Collison (the 'new Michael Carrick' – copyrighted by me, even though I should follow my own advice about not getting ahead of myself), Parker and Bellamy. That's a good spine for your squad. We must not break this up unless replacements of a similar or better quality is waiting and I find that hard to believe that we could do that kind of business in January.

Zola has said he does not want to sell his best players so that should be that. Right? The recent noises have been about a squad too big and how some fringe players to go. I envisage the likes of Quashie and Stokes finding new homes but as everyone else fears it might be first teamers who are going to relocate to pastures new. Selling the likes of Upson (unless they come out and say they want to go) would be a grave betrayal of all the supporters of this club.

Modern football has bought about new situations and consequences for failure that are so far removed from the ideals and game that our forebears knew. Relegation saw our squad broken up due to imminent financial peril in the 2002/03 season. In 1977/78 pretty much the same group of players were retained after relegation as the effect was not so great as felt now.

At the moment we have won two games in a row against Portsmouth away and Stoke at home. These six points have pushed us a little bit away from trouble but the haunting ghost of 2002/03, when 42 points wasn't enough is still there. We need to combine these good results and carry on at Newcastle on the 10th of January. We must not get ahead of ourselves and think we are safe and look upwards until we are further away from the bottom.

One of the more frustrating things about our recent run has been the stop/start nature of it. A good result away followed by poor home results (up until Stoke). My personal belief is that for a mid-table club like ours, the home form keeps you out of trouble and the away games are there for opportunities to keep the points total ticking over. Teams with title ambitions obviously aim to win all their games but we are not even in that stratosphere.

I do not believe in targeting particular games like West Brom at home and putting all your eggs in one basket when it comes to potential points. There are plenty of games out there for us to do well in and keep ourselves in this division and our recent away form has shown that we are more then capable away from the Boleyn.

The same applies to everyone else looking nervously over their shoulders so Mr Zola and Mr Clarke, it's down to you to ensure we do enough. Happy New Year, make sure you continue the good work and the rewards will come.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola determined to hold onto key players after late win
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 29th December 2008
By: Thomas Rooney

You get the feeling that Gianfranco Zola is starting to enjoy being manager of West Ham. Not only that, he is starting to grow in confidence. Both of these aspects are important if he is going to be a success, so the longer this continues the better!

As we all know, the scenario that could end Zola's new found feel good factor is if the West Ham boss is forced to sell his best players during next month's January transfer window. Several players, including Craig Bellamy, Robert Green and Matthew Upson, have been linked with moves away from Upton Park in recent weeks.

However, speaking after the 2-1 victory over Stoke City (of which I will discuss in a minute), Zola said that he would do everything he can to 'keep all our players'. He then went on to say that each player at the club is determined to 'take this team to a better level'.

It is all well and good Zola wanting to avoid selling his best players though, what else is he going to say? The problem is the financial situation at the club. As much as Zola may want to keep his players, his hand may be forced by the relevant men upstairs. For example, should Manchester City come in with a £10m bid for Bellamy – would the board be able to refuse it?

Well, Zola believes that the 'financial thing' as he so aptly calls it, is 'not a problem'. He says that the West Ham board have informed him that no player have to be sold next month and that he will not be undermined if a big offer comes in. This is encouraging, but to be honest, I will believe it when I see it.

Anyway, enough of speculation, let's look at the victory over Stoke. By no means was it the best performance from West Ham, but nobody minds about that at this stage. It was three points and suddenly the Hammers find themselves 10th in the Premier League.


To be fair, Stoke were masters of their own downfall. They were reduced to ten men when Ricardo Fuller threw a punch at his team-mate Andy Griffin and from this moment onwards, their concentration levels were gone.

I personally wasn't surprised when the home side got the winner, it just seemed inevitable. Zola also admitted that he thought it was a 'matter of time' before his team found the winner. There was also some luck involved, which is something the Hammers have been short on in recent weeks.

So, overall, things are looking a little better on the pitch. Back to back wins have meant that any relegation worries have been put to bed for a week or so. The football odds are no longer viewing West Ham as one of the favourites for the drop. Amazing what two wins can do in this league isn't it?

Next up for Zola is the FA Cup tie with Barnsley on the 3rd January. The Championship side made the semi-final's of the competition last year, but no football bets will be placed on them doing as well this time around. In fact, West Ham should win comfortably.

Then, during the rest of January, it will hopefully be West Ham's excellent form that dominates the headlines rather than West Ham's need to sell players.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Nantes eyeing Faubert
Coach Baup hints at signings in the New Year
By Patrick Haond Last updated: 30th December 2008
SSN

Nantes manager Elie Baup has revealed his interest in West Ham United midfielder Julien Faubert. France international Faubert recently admitted that he is open to a return to his homeland in the January transfer window, after stressing his need to play regularly. And Baup has confirmed Faubert is among a number of targets, as he looks to rework his squad for the second half of the Ligue 1 campaign. He told L'Equipe: "We can improve in attack. There are names rumoured and clubs like Bordeaux and Nancy want to sell or loan players. "Bordeaux's Gabriel Obertan, why not? There are Nancy's Marc-Antoine Fortune and Issiar Dia too. And why not Julien Faubert? "At first, we have to work to reduce the group, otherwise I will be forced to work a different way. I will ask to find solutions."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Di Michele dashes return talk
Italian striker happy with the Hammers
By Chris Burton Last updated: 30th December 2008
SSN

West Ham striker David Di Michele has refuted suggestions that he could be set for a quick-fire return to Torino. The Hammers ace is currently on loan at Upton Park from the Turin giants, with that agreement scheduled to run until the end of the season. The 32-year-old had first sought to leave Italy after suffering a fall-out with then Torino manager Gigi De Biasi. With Walter Novellino having now taken the Stadio Olimpico hot-seat there have been suggestions that Di Michele may welcome the opportunity to head back home. However, despite struggling to hold down a regular role in England, the experienced front-man insists he is happy to fight for his place with the Hammers. "I have heard news regarding my return to Turin, but I am only thinking about doing well for West Ham," he said. "Anyway, it does not depend on me since I am on loan. "Here in England I settled well and although I haven't been playing much recently I want to prove myself." Di Michele has scored just two goals in 12 appearances for Gianfranco Zola's side, but the West Ham boss insists he has no intention of allowing his countryman to leave. "We have several quality players and it is understandable that big clubs are after them," said the Italian coach. "However, we are not planning to sell."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Lambert eyes Walker stay
United boss eager to secure goalkeeper on a permanent basis
Last updated: 30th December 2008
SSN

Colchester manager Paul Lambert wants to agree a permanent deal for goalkeeper Jimmy Walker. The 35-year-old has helped Colchester to four wins from seven games, but his initial spell on loan from West Ham expires after Saturday's home game against Tranmere. Lambert, though, is keen to reach an agreement with the Premier League side which will allow Walker to stay. "Jimmy Walker is an excellent goalkeeper and he's been a massive help to us since he has been here," said Lambert. "He reminds me of Andy Goram who was a remarkable goalkeeper in Scotland and I'd like to bring him here permanently."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers look at Pole
Zola to cast eye over Salamon
Last updated: 30th December 2008
SSN

Skysports.com understands West Ham have handed a trial to Brescia midfielder Bartosz Salamon. Salamon is well know to Hammers technical director Gianluca Nani who is aware of him from his time at Brescia. The 17-year-old has already broken into the Brescia first team after joining the club from Lech Poznan in 2007. Salamon is highly regarded and the likes of Chelsea and Real Madrid have been credited with an interest in his services in the past. Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola is keen to bolster his squad and he will cast an eye over Salamon in training before deciding whether or not to pursue his interest in the midfielder. Nani will be hoping to use his contacts at Brescia to help West Ham seal a deal for Salamon if Zola does opt to try and bring the Pole to Upton Park.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Green - No Hammers fire sale
Hammers keeper receives assurances from chief executive
Last updated: 30th December 2008
SSN

West Ham United goalkeeper Robert Green is confident there will be no fire sale at Upton Park in January. The financial uncertainty at the club has prompted suggestions that manager Gianfranco Zola may be forced to part with his best players next month. Craig Bellamy has been the subject of a bid from Tottenham Hotspur and has also been linked with a move to Manchester City. Hammers team-mate Scott Parker is also a rumoured target for City, while Matthew Upson has been tipped for a New Year transfer. However, Green has been assured by chief executive Scott Duxbury there will be no mass exodus from the club. "It's something which is completely out of our control," said Green in the Daily Star. "These things happen in life, but we've been assured as senior players that there won't be a fire sale from the chief executive and we'll just have to wait and see. "I'm happy playing for West Ham in the most exciting league in the world. What more motivation do you need? "You don't want to go out and have a bad game, and I love playing for West Ham. "You look at the team and everyone who gets out there wants to play well for West Ham. There's not many unhappy faces, if any, in the camp. "But there's not much I can do about it. All I can do is keep playing well. I want to play for West Ham, all the lads do. "There are things that are beyond our control and there are things that go on that's not down to us as players."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Behrami - We must be alert
Midfielder wants to stop conceding early goals
Last updated: 29th December 2008
SSN

Valon Behrami does not believe West Ham can afford to keep conceding early goals. The Hammers fell behind against Portsmouth on Boxing Day but stormed back to secure an emphatic 4-1 victory. West Ham then beat Stoke 2-1 on Sunday, but only after the Potters had opened the scoring through Abdoulaye Faye. Behrami impressed in both games and was delighted to help West Ham claim the maximum three points. However, he feels West Ham must make sure they are alert from the first whistle in future. Behrami said: "I'm happy with the result. We have to carry on doing this and collecting points to push us up the table. "The character is good but we can't fall behind every time. We can't just switch on when we go behind. We need to switch on from the start because it's not always easy to come back. "But it's always nice to win these kinds of games."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Collins makes Bellamy plea
Sport.co.uk
Author: Nigel Brown
Posted on: 30 December 2008 - 8:59 PM

West Ham's stars are pleading with the club's board not to sell Craig Bellamy in the January transfer window. Chief executive Scott Duxbury has already ruled out a fire sale at the club - despite club owner Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson suffering huge losses in Iceland's banking crisis. But boss Gianfranco Zola is desperate for funds and could be forced to sell at least one key player if he is to bolster his squad in the New Year sales. Robert Green, Scott Parker and Matthew Upson have all been linked with moves away from Upton Park with the vultures circling the east London club. The Hammers have already turned down two offers from Tottenham for Bellamy, while Manchester City have also failed in a bid to land the striker. While Spurs are now likely to turn their attention to signing Jermain Defoe from Portsmouth, West Ham are bracing themselves for another mega-bid for Bellamy from City boss Mark Hughes. And defender James Collins, a close friend of Bellamy's from their time together with Wales, says the club must do all they can to resist City's millions and keep hold of their chief goal threat. "We've got to hang onto Craig," said Collins.
"Any player like Craig you want to hang onto if you're going to progress as a football club. "I'm sure everyone at the club will say the same because he's a great lad to have around the place. "He goes out there every game trying to score goals and although it wasn't happening for him for a while, hopefully now he can kick on and add to the goals he scored against Portsmouth. "Let's hope he'll be firing on all cylinders for us for the rest of the season."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Nantes target West Ham's Faubert as priority signing
Zola willing to sell £6m signing from Bordeaux
Dominic Fifield guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 30 December 2008 22.11 GMT

The Nantes coach Elie Baup has earmarked the signing of West Ham's Julien Faubert as "a priority" as the club attempt to pull away from the relegation zone in the French First Division. The France international, a £6m signing from Bordeaux 18 months ago, is available for transfer as Gianfranco Zola moves to trim his squad in response to the effects of the credit crunch.

Faubert suffered a ruptured achilles tendon in pre-season last term which denied him a debut for six months and he has been used as a utility player over the current campaign, filling in at full-back as well as in his favoured attacking midfield role. Yet, after only 19 Premier League starts, he expressed a desire to return to France, with Nantes prepared to fight Lyon and Bordeaux for his signature. "In my mind, if I could sign anyone, the priority would be Julien Faubert," said Baup.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Bolton boss eyes Morrison and Davenport double transfer raid
By Sportsmail Reporter Last updated at 12:45 AM on 31st December 2008

Bolton boss Gary Megson has launched a £3m raid on former club West Bromwich Albion for midfielder James Morrison. Megson tabled an offer for the Scotland international on Tuesday morning in his first move of the January transfer window and is also set to make a £1.5m bid for out-of-favour West Ham defender Calum Davenport in the next 48 hours. Megson has also recalled defender Nicky Hunt from his loan spell at Birmingham.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers tell Parker he must stay put
By Jason Burt
Wednesday, 31 December 2008
Independent.co.uk Web

West Ham United have told Scott Parker that he will not be allowed to leave and join Manchester City, even though the midfielder has indicated that he would like the opportunity to speak to the club.

A combined bid of £15m was lodged by City over the weekend for Parker and his West Ham team-mate Craig Bellamy, who is also wanted by Tottenham Hotspur, but was immediately rejected by West Ham, who are determined to hold on to their best players in the January transfer window.

Parker and Bellamy have been targeted by the City manager, Mark Hughes, who is also keen to sign Chelsea's Wayne Bridge and the Arsenal defender Kolo Touré, who appears the most likely of the quartet to make a move next month after falling out of favour at the Emirates. He could command a fee of around £10m.

No further offer has been made by City for Parker or Bellamy, although there have been indications that they will lodge another within the next few days. Spurs, also, are weighing up whether to offer more for Bellamy after having an initial £6m rejected by West Ham on Christmas Eve. But they yesterday denied they have bid £12m for the Welsh international.

West Ham have also told Matthew Upson that he is staying next month and it is understood the central defender has said he is happy to, despite interest from a host of clubs, including Newcastle United.

West Ham's chief executive, Scott Duxbury, is taking a tough stance and refusing to sell any of the club's top players. The club have told their manager, Gianfranco Zola, that he will have the final say on sales and are determined not to break up what they believe is a strong spine to the first team, including goalkeeper Robert Green, Valon Behrami and Mark Noble as well as Bellamy, Parker and Upson. If an offer of £15m was made for any of their prize assets, then it would be put to Zola.

West Ham believe this will prove that the club are not in financial meltdown, as has been claimed, and that despite the problems faced by the owner, Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson, they do not need to sell.

However there is a list of potential departures drawn up by Zola, Duxbury and the technical director, Gianluca Nani, as the club aim to reduce the size of the squad. It includes Julien Faubert, who is attracting interest from Nantes, Calum Davenport, who is believed to be wanted by Bolton Wanderers and fringe players such as Luis Boa Morte.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham fail in Jimenez bid
by Robin Hackett , 30 December 2008
Setanta

West Ham have failed in a bid to sign Inter midfielder Luis Jimenez, according to the player's agent. The 24-year-old Chile international has apparently been approached by West Ham as well as Sampdoria and Lecce, but his agent, Rocco Dozzini, says the Serie A champions have decided not to sell. "Everybody is asking about Jimenez," he told El Mercurio. "That is quite normal because we are talking about an excellent player, but he will stay at Inter because they have decided he will not be transferred. "Luis belongs to Inter and there is absolutely no chance he will leave." He added: "West Ham, Sampdoria, Lecce call me every day. "Inter are one of the five best teams in the world, alongside Barcelona, Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool, so he will stay here."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Exclusive: Boa Morte linked with Ninian Park move
By Chris O'Brien - 31/12/2008 01:35
CCFCSleepingGiant.com

CCFCSleepingGiant that the club will announce the capture of versatile forward Louis Boa-Morte in January. Speculation reaching us suggests that the unsettled West Ham frontman will join the Bluebirds in a two-year deal. A source claiming to have links with the football agent industry, told us: "Louis is making a career move as he enjoys playing ninety minutes of football each Saturday. He will join Cardiff City in Jan. "Whilst he has not had the best time at West Ham United he wishes to prove his worth and assist Cardiff City to the Premier."
If this speculation turns out to be true, then it will prove to be very quick work from Dave Jones and Peter Ridsdale following the news that Michael Chopra will not be allowed to extend his stay in the Welsh capital. The Portuguese international, capped 25 times for his country, does not boast the most impressive goalscoring record but certainly has the tools to succeed in the Championship. He's bagged 60 goals in 391 senior appearances - with his most prolific spell coming at Fulham where the Lisbon-frontman netted 54 times. The rumour becomes a little more realistic when you consider the fact that Boa Morte has already worked under Dave Jones during his time at Southampton. However, he scored only one goal in hugely disappointing two-years with the Hampshire club. Boa Morte would join Ross McCormack, Jay Bothroyd and on-loan USA international Eddie Johnson in the club's attacking ranks. Time will tell if this proves to be more hearsay or the truth!

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jimenez agent reveals "daily" West Ham contact
31.12.08 | tribalfootball.com

The agent of Inter Milan midfielder Luis Jimenez has revealed the interest of West Ham. "Everybody is asking about Jimenez," Rocco Dozzini told El Mercurio. "That is quite normal because we are talking about an excellent player, but he will stay at Inter because they have decided he will not be transferred. Luis belongs to Inter and there is absolutely no chance he will leave." He added: "West Ham, Sampdoria, Lecce call me every day. "Inter are one of the five best teams in the world, alongside Barcelona, Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool, so he will stay here."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham To Sell Entire First Team Squad To Spurs
By Sam H ⋅ December 30, 2008 ⋅
The West Ham Process

Perhaps it's just me, or is every single newspaper in the country writing a story about how we are selling all of our best players and keeping all of our fringe players in the January transfer window? Harry Redknapp at Spurs is more than likely to be after most of them at some point or another, we've now rejected a £12m bid for Bellamy from a team whose front line cost approximately £30m. It is true, that Spurs are desperately in need for a bit of class in their strikeforce, but as far as I care if they value Pavlyuchenko at £14m, then Bellamy must be worth at least £50m.

It's good to see that the Harry turnaround is really in full swing now - all the best down there Harry, you fit right in. Enough about Harry 'the money-grabber' Redknapp and Spurs wanting all our players, it's giving me back-ache.

Like I said earlier, all the talk is about how our entire team needs to be sold just to remain a football club, so in an attempt to clarify a few things here and there, here are a couple of quotes I've picked up over the week:

Zola: "The commitment is to improve this team so we'll try to keep all our players, everybody at West Ham wants to take this team to a better level. It's not easy because we have very good players in our team and big clubs are looking for good players. There's also the financial thing but the club tells me it's not a problem"

Good, next…

Rob Green : "These things happen in life, but we've been assured as senior players that there won't be a fire sale from the chief executive and we'll just have to wait and see. I'm happy playing for West Ham in the most exciting league in the world. What more motivation do you need?You don't want to go out and have a bad game, and I love playing for West Ham You look at the team and everyone who gets out there wants to play well for West Ham. There's not many unhappy faces, if any, in the camp. But there's not much I can do about it. All I can do is keep playing well. I want to play for West Ham, all the lads do

Spurs and Bellamy : "Spurs manager Harry Redknapp underlined his determination to sign Bellamy by doubling his original £6m bid but the Hammers are determined to hang on to him" - Mail

Zola Again : "As far as I'm concerned the club is on the same line we want to keep our best players. Yes we will try everything we can to keep them obviously we have a project, an ambitious project and we need good players to achieve that."

They are all quotes that I have picked up from the last 7 days and from what I can work out it is a very different message to actually what the media are trying to stir up. It will be in the best interest of BG to try and hang onto these players because when it comes to selling a club, a team with these players (Upson, Parker, Bellamy, Green) in it is far rosier than a team without.

To clarify to the media, the players in question when we say we will be offloading fringe players are Louis Boa Morte, Faubert, Gabbiddon, Davenport (unfortunately), Quashie, Spector and preferably Carlton Cole. What you have there is a lot of players, a lot of wages and I would think at about £12m in transfer fees…that should at least pay-off Sheffield United with a bit of change I would have thought.

So either we are being completely lied to once again, and if that is the case there could be trouble because we won't take to kindly to that. Or Zola and the other senior players are speaking the truth and we can look forward to us holding onto these players in the new year and actually pressing forward.

COYI!

Sam

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers flop Faubert tipped for a return to France as Nantes coach declares his interest
By Christopher Davies
Last updated at 4:03 PM on 30th December 2008
Daily Mail

Nantes want to sign Julien Faubert, who has struggled to establish himself at West Ham following his £6million transfer from Bordeaux in 2007. The French midfielder struggled with an Achilles tendon injury last season which ruled him out of action until January when he made his belated debut against Fulham, featuring in eight games over the remainder of the campaign. Faubert has struggled to claim a regular place in Gianfranco Zola's side but returned to action at the weekend as a replacement for the injured Lucas Neill - at right-back rather than his usual midfield role. Nantes coach Elie Baup said: 'If I had to sign anyone in January, the priority would be Julien Faubert.'

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Faubert Set for Nantes?
West Ham Till I Die

The Mail report that French premier Legaue outfit Nantes have expressed an interest in Julien Faubert. Their manager Elie Baup said: 'If I had to sign anyone in January, the priority would be Julien Faubert.'

Now that Jonathan Spector and Kieron Dyer are returning to fitness, we're OK on the right. Talking of Spector, I have never understood the antipathy towards him which people have expressed in the comments on this blog. He's certainly not a flamboyant player, but he is solid and rarely let us down. I'd far rather see him at right back than Lucas Neill or Julien Faubert. He can also cover at left back, in the centre of defence and, if necessary in midfield. Every team needs a player like him.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Some Say No, Some Say Yes
Just Like My Dreams

Less or more or more or less
Leave me alone right now...
Several reports in this morning's papers suggest West Ham United have rejected a second Tottenham approach for Craig Bellamy. According to The Sun, the offer was somewhere in the region of an eye-popping £12 million, double the initial bid tabled on Christmas Eve. Andrew Dillon reports that Harry Redknapp is determined to boost his options in attack, particularly after lowly Spurs failed to score a goal over Christmas against Fulham and West Brom. Bellamy, 29, scored twice in United's 4-1 win at Portsmouth on Boxing Day and the club remain insistent they do not need to sell their best players. This latest move represents a bold attempt by Tottenham to beat competition from Manchester City, also known keen admirers of the Wales striker.

The Telegraph reiterates that City manager Mark Hughes has placed Bellamy on his list of potential January targets. And should City and Spurs become locked in a bidding war, the London club know they cannot hope to win. For their part, City are rumoured to have made an earlier £15 million approach for Bellamy and midfielder Scott Parker, which was rejected by West Ham. However, a fresh approach is likely, with City almost certain to be the Premier League's biggest spenders next month.

If Bellamy is no longer a viable option for Tottenham manager Redknapp, he may turn his attentions to Jermain Defoe. According to the Mail, Defoe has told Portsmouth manager Tony Adams he wants to be allowed to leave Portsmouth to return to White Hart Lane. Defoe, who Redknapp signed for Portsmouth from Tottenham in 2006, was frustrated to be left out of Adams' side to face Arsenal on Sunday. And the Mail says Defoe has since met with Adams to request a transfer back to White Hart Lane. Martin O'Neill, the Aston Villa manager, is also understood to be monitoring the developments with both strikers ahead of the January transfer window.

According to the Mail, Nantes are showing an interest in Julien Faubert, who has struggled to establish himself at West Ham following his £6million transfer from Bordeaux in 2007. The French midfielder struggled with an Achilles tendon injury last season which ruled him out of action until January when he made his belated debut against Fulham, featuring in eight games over the remainder of the campaign. Faubert has struggled to claim a regular place in Gianfranco Zola's side but returned to action at the weekend as a replacement for the injured Lucas Neill - at right-back rather than his usual midfield role. Nantes coach Elie Baup is quoted as saying: "If I had to sign anyone in January, the priority would be Julien Faubert."

Meanwhile, David Di Michele has refuted suggestions that he could be set for a quick-fire return to parent club Torino. The Hammers striker is currently on loan at Upton Park from the Turin club, with that agreement scheduled to run until the end of the season. The 32-year-old had first sought to leave Italy after suffering a fall-out with then Torino manager Gigi De Biasi. But with Walter Novellino having now taken the Stadio Olimpico hot-seat there have been suggestions that Di Michele may welcome the opportunity to head back home.

However, despite struggling to hold down a regular role in England, the experienced front-man insists he is happy to fight for his place with the Hammers. "I have heard news regarding my return to Turin, but I am only thinking about doing well for West Ham," he said. "Anyway, it does not depend on me since I am on loan. Here in England I settled well and although I haven't been playing much recently I want to prove myself."

Elsewhere, Fiorentina striker Giampaolo Pazzini has again been nominated as a possible transfer target for United, this time with the added complication of interest from Everton. The Mirror claims David Moyes is in desperate need of a striker following injuries to Yakubu, Louis Saha, Leon Osman and James Vaughan, while Gianfranco Zola previously knows the 24-year-old in the Italian U-21 set-up.

Pazzini has scored 24 goals in 96 league starts for Fiorentina, but is perhaps most famous for scoring the fastest goal, first official goal and also the first hat-trick at the new Wembley Stadium – all in the same U-21 international against England. You can see all the action from that game as well as other goals from the striker in the following fan compilation video; curiously sound-tracked by Hooverphonic's Human Interest.

Another Italian on Zola's watch list could be Juventus midfielder Sebastian Giovinco. Media speculation has it that any move would likely be a loan deal, with Arsenal also reported to be watching the situation closely.

In separate news, the agent of Inter player Luis Jimenez has sought to end talk the Chile international will leave the San Siro in the upcoming transfer window by discussing all those clubs who have reportedly targeted the player. Rocco Dozzini confirmed he has fielded inquiries about the player from West Ham as well as Italian duo Sampdoria and Lecce. Despite that interest, Dozzini has denied the 24-year-old attacking midfielder is seeking a move away from Inter.

"Everybody is asking about Jimenez. That is quite normal because we are talking about an excellent player," he told El Mercurio newspaper. "But he will stay at Inter because they have decided he will not be transferred. Luis belongs to Inter and there is absolutely no chance he will leave. West Ham, Sampdoria, Lecce call me every day. Regarding Lecce, I like (Mario) Baretta, I am a friend of the sporting director of the club, but there is nothing to talk about."

Finally, the three most reassuring words in the English language "Sky Sports understands"... that United have handed a trial to Brescia midfielder Bartosz Salamon. The 17-year-old Salamon arrived in the country on Boxing Day and is said to be well known to Hammers technical director Gianluca Nani who is aware of him from his time at the Italian club.

The 6 ft 3 in Pole has already broken into the Brescia first team after joining the club from Lech Poznan in 2007. Salamon is highly regarded and the likes of Chelsea and Real Madrid have been credited with an interest in his services in the past. He would not be the first young Pole to be courted by the club in recent times. Promising young defender Filip Modelski was procured back in July.

Gianfranco Zola is keen to bolster his squad and he will cast an eye over Salamon in training before deciding whether or not to pursue his interest in the midfielder. Nani will be hoping to use his contacts at Brescia to help West Ham seal a deal for Salamon if Zola does opt to try and bring the Pole to Upton Park.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Stoke City Chairman Claims Refs Favour Big Clubs
Goal.com

As the controversy over Ricardo Fuller's red card against West Ham continues, Peter Coates believes that his side have suffered this season as a result of referees favouring the bigger clubs...
Stoke City chairman Peter Coates is not very happy with Ricardo Fuller, after the Jamaican striker was sent off against West Ham United on Sunday for slapping his own skipper, Andy Griffin. Coates feels that the incident was out of order, but he insists that the striker is a good player who will not be sold in January as a result of his actions, even though he undoubtedly cost the Potters an invaluable three points. Many Stoke fans feel that the player should be sacked and never allowed to wear the red and white shirt again, but Coates is more conciliatory. "I'm very disappointed in Ricardo indeed," said Coates to Stoke's official website. "The incident shouldn't have happened, it was unprofessional. "He's an emotional guy but needs to control himself. But in the heat of the moment, these things can happen. "We all do things that we regret and I'm sure he is regretting it now. We are going to deal with this within the club as that's the way it should be dealt with. Tony Pulis will come in on Wednesday to do whatever is necessary. "It hasn't entered our heads to sell him. We're absolutely sure we want to keep him. Ric's a good player and you don't sell your good players. He's a big player and important player, he helped to get us here [the Premier League], and he'll stay at the club."
Coates also feels however that referee Michael Jones could have handled the situation with more tact and discretion. "I'm not condoning it, but can't referees use discretion?" Coates continued. "I thought the referee could have handled it better. You see things far worse on the pitch all the time go unpunished. "Let's not get it out of proportion - it was hardly a punch like Muhammad Ali. Little incidents and spats happen all the time, on the pitch and on the training ground, we mustn't forget that."
The chairman doesn't feel that the incident will affect Stoke's togetherness and team spirit, something that has helped them stay competitive this season. "I'm sure they can play together again, the guys get on well with each other as I understand it. We have a good team spirit and I'm sure that'll continue," he continued, before highlighting the bias he believes many referees show in favour of big teams. Fuller's red card followed the one shown to Stoke's Andy Wilkinson on Boxing Day against Manchester United, and Coates feels that United players are treated differently by officials to players at more lowly clubs. Wilkinson's dismissal came after Cristiano Ronaldo had flicked a boot at him in provocation. "I'm not excusing Wilkinson, but he was aggravated by Ronaldo just before and I think everyone saw that but the referee did nothing," the Stoke chairman went on. "Then Rooney puts in a strong elbow right in front of the linesman, and again, nothing. "Big clubs get favoured treatment from referees but it's happened for a number of years. We complain through the official channels and we'll continue to complain."

Zack Wilson, Goal.com

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
If One Player Has to be Sold, Then it Should be…
West Ham Till I Die

You've got to feel sorry for James Collins, who is now fit again. Calum Davenport is in storming form so he can't get back in. This is why I reckon if we do have to lose one of our star players, Matthew Upson should be the one to go. We have four excellent central defenders (Davenport, Collins, Tomkins & Gabbidon) plus Lucas Neill, who is better there than at right back.

We do not have the same cover for Bellamy or Green, and Upson is the only one who would raise real money.

Don't get me wrong. but if we really do need the money Upson, is the one to go… Just sayin', like…

[battens down the hatches]

UPDATE: Yes, I did write this before the Stoke game. My point was that any business can go through tough times and have to capitalise on its assets. Of course I don't want Upson to go, any more than you do, but if we do have to sell one our three star assets, all I am arguing is that it should be Upson rather than Green or Bellamy, purely because we have cover in his position.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Dav on his way?
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 30th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

Calum Davenport is being linked with a move to Bolton Wanderers after being told he has no future at West Ham. The former Coventry and Tottenham centre-half is understood to have been told at the weekend that his services were no longer required by Gianfranco Zola after the two clashed ahead of West Ham's 2-1 win over Stoke at the weekend. Davenport is thought to have been unhappy at Zola's decision to drop him in favour of the returning James Collins. The lanky defender has made eight appearances for the Hammers so far this season. Meanwhile someone slightly happier with life in London is loan striker David Di Michele. Di Michele, who starred in Saturday's win over Stoke was reported to be unhappy with life in England having spent so much time on the bench. Not so, according to the diminutive striker who told reporters: "I've heard people talk about my return to Turin. However, I'm only thinking about West Ham, and anyway, it does not depend entirely on me. "I am good here, although I am not playing much at the moment I want to show more."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham won't sell big players in January, says chief exec By John Cross 30/12/2008
The Mirror

West Ham chief executive Scott Duxbury has held crisis talks with senior players over the club's mounting debts. Duxbury said there would be no January fire sale - but West Ham will find it hard to resist big money for Craig Bellamy, Robert Green and Matthew Upson. Owner Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson suffered huge losses in Iceland's banking crisis and they may have to sell to balance the books. Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola has threatened to quit if the club do sell their stars and that led to Duxbury holding showdown talks. Keeper Green, a target for Tottenham, said: "We've been assured as senior players that there won't be a fire sale. "But it's something completely out of our control at the moment. There's not much I can do about it. All I can do is keep playing well for West Ham. I want to play for West Ham and all the lads do. "There are things beyond our control and there are things that go on that are not down to us as players."
West Ham have rejected a £6million offer from Spurs for Bellamy and Newcastle and Manchester City want Upson. But West Ham are ready to sell fringe players Jon Spector, Calum Davenport, Luis Boa Morte and Julien Faubert. Zola claims he is looking to strengthen his squad in January rather than sell. The summit has not convinced everyone but the club has now made big promises about the future and if they break their word it could leave Zola's position in doubt. Green insists he is happy at West Ham despite the deepening financial problems. He said: "I'm happy playing for West Ham in the most exciting league in the world. There aren't many unhappy faces, if any, in the camp. "The last two wins have been massive and changed our season. People were dreading Christmas but we're now just two points off Hull, who have supposedly had a magnificent start to the season."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tottenham Fail In £12 Million Bid For Craig Bellamy
West Ham have turned down yet another offer for their Welsh international striker...
Goal.com

According to a report in the British tabloid the Sun, Tottenham Hotspur have had an offer of £12million for West Ham United striker Craig Bellamy rejected. It is thought that Spurs had made an initial offer of £6 million for the Welsh international, who has scored 16 goals from 54 caps, on Christmas Eve but it was rebuffed by the Hammers. While it is reported that the Irons are desperate to sell some of their playing staff due to financial difficulties, it now seems that they are not prepared to lose their star players on the cheap. Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp could return with yet another improved bid as he is believed to have sounded out a striker as his number one transfer priority in the new year. The North-London based outfit are only out of the relegation zone thanks to goal difference, but only four Premier League clubs have scored less than Spurs in the league this season.

Ricky Brooks, Goal.com

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tottenham may have to look elsewhere after West Ham reject £12m Bellamy bid
By TOM COLLOMOSSE
Last updated at 10:46 AM on 30th December 2008
Daily Mail

Tottenham may be forced to abandon their interest in Craig Bellamy after West Ham rejected a £12millon offer for the Wales striker. Spurs manager Harry Redknapp underlined his determination to sign Bellamy by doubling his original £6m bid but the Hammers are determined to hang on to him according to reports in the London Evening Standard. Despite their financial problems, West Ham are desperate to keep their best players, with Bellamy and midfielder Scott Parker also targets for Manchester City. Redknapp is keen to improve a forward line that has produced just one goal in Spurs' last four League games and his chances of bringing Jermain Defoe back to White Hart Lane have been boosted by the news that the England striker wants to return. Defoe, also valued at £12m, is virtually certain to leave Portsmouth next month, and has also attracted interest from Aston Villa. Pompey signed him from Spurs one year ago in a £9m deal, although that fee is still
to be paid in full, meaning the Fratton Park club would prefer to sell the 26-year-old to Villa. But Defoe is understood to prefer to go back to Spurs, where he would again link up with Redknapp, who was manager at West Ham when Defoe progressed from the youth team to develop into one of the most dangerous strikers in the country. Spurs midfielder Jermaine Jenas, meanwhile, is a reported target for Real Madrid, who are managed by ex-Spurs boss Juande Ramos, although Spurs would be reluctant to sell one of their key players.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tottenham concentrate on Jermain Defoe after West Ham reject Craig Bellamy bid
West Ham have reportedly turned down a £12 million bid from Tottenham for striker Craig Bellamy.
By Telegraph staff
Last Updated: 10:01AM GMT 30 Dec 2008

A report in the Sun claims Tottenham were unsuccessful with an initial offer of £6 million for the Wales captain before returning with an increased offer. Manchester City manager Mark Hughes is also understood to have placed Bellamy on his list of potential January targets. And should City and Spurs become locked in a bidding war, the London club know they cannot hope to win. City are understood to have made a £15 million approach for Bellamy and midfielder Scott Parker, which was rejected by West Ham. However, a fresh approach is likely, with City almost certain to be the Premier League's biggest spenders next month. West Ham's senior players have been told there will be no fire sale in January despite the club's financial situation. And goalkeeper Robert Green hopes the inevitable uncertainty will not spill over onto the pitch. "It's something which is completely out of our control," said Green. "These things happen in life, but we've been assured as senior players that there won't be a fire sale from the chief executive and we'll just have to wait and see. If Bellamy is no longer a viable option for Tottenham manager Redknapp, he may turn his attentions to Jermain Defoe. According to the Mail, Defoe has told Portsmouth manager Tony Adams he wants to be allowed to leave Portsmouth to return to White Hart Lane. Defoe, who Redknapp signed for Portsmouth from Tottenham in 2006, was frustrated to be left out of Adams' side to face Arsenal on Sunday. And the Mail says Defoe has since met with Adams to request a transfer back to White Hart Lane. Martin O'Neill, the Aston Villa manager, is also understood to be interested in Defoe.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
TOMKINS LOAN AT AN END
Posted on: Wed 31 Dec 2008
Dcfc.premiumtv.com

Defender James Tomkins is back at West Ham United after the end of his loan spell with the Rams. The 19-year-old featured eight times in all competitions including the Carling Cup quarter-final win at Stoke City, only his second game at the club. He impressed with his performances and attitude at the heart of defence and Derby had hoped to extend his stay. But the Hammers have called him back to the Boleyn Ground where he will rejoin boss Gianfranco Zola's squad

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Monday, December 29

Daily WHUFC News - 29th December 2008

West Ham United 2-1 Stoke City
WHUFC.com
28.12.2008

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United v Stoke City
Sunday 28 December
2pm
Referee: Michael Jones

West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Collins, Upson, Ilunga, Boa Morte, Parker,
Collison, Behrami, Di Michele, Cole
Subs: Lastuvka, Spector, N'Gala, Mullins, Bowyer, Tristan, Sears

Stoke City: Sorensen, Griffin, Abdoulaye Faye, Olofinjana, Shawcross,
Higginbotham, Delap, Whelan, Pugh, Cresswell, Fuller
Subs: Simonsen, Lawrence, Soares, Davies, Tonge, Sonko, Pericard

West Ham United 2-1 Stoke City

Diego Tristan's dramatic 88th-minute winner handed West Ham United a second
valuable Premier League win in the space of three days.

The Spaniard's goal clinched a 2-1 win over a Stoke City side reduced to ten
men following the sending off of striker Ricardo Fuller for appearing to
strike Potters' captain Andy Griffin.

The visitors had taken a fifth-minute lead through Abdoulaye Faye's bullet
header, only for Carlton Cole's 51st-minute equaliser and Fuller's red card
- which occurred as Stoke prepared to kick-off after conceding - to hand the
initiative to Gianfranco Zola's men. When Tristan deflected Cole's shot past
Thomas Sorensen, the Hammers were guaranteed a happy Christmas that has seen
them bag six points and rise into the top ten of the Premier League table.

Zola had made four changes to the side that won so impressively 4-1 at
Portsmouth on Boxing Day. Craig Bellamy, scorer of two goals in that game,
was suspended so David Di Michele came into attack. Julien Faubert started
in place of skipper Lucas Neill, who was ruled out through the twisted ankle
he sustained on the south coast. Luis Boa Morte replaced virus victim Mark
Noble and James Collins was named in the starting XI in place of Calum
Davenport.

Stoke nearly took the lead when Fuller's deflected shot went narrowly wide.
However, they did not have to wait long to get it right as from the
resulting corner they took an early lead. Danny Pugh floated it in and Faye
lost his marker to power a low header past Robert Green.

United had a chance to restore parity almost instantly as Jack Collison's
cross with the outside of the boot was prodded wide by Cole. The home side
continued to press and after several promising attacks won a corner when
Valon Behrami's cross was headed behind by Andy Griffin. Boa Morte took the
kick and his inswinging ball was headed agonisingly wide by the stand-in
captain Matthew Upson

Faubert then became the first of four Hammers players booked in the opening
period for a late tackle and was soon followed by Cole after a collision
with Seyi Olofinjana.

Boa Morte had begun the game as he had left off at Portsmouth, showing some
neat touches from centre midfield. The one small blot on his copy book was a
booking picked up for a tackle on Glenn Whelan just after the half-hour
mark.

Di Michele's trickery then set up Cole for a header that went just over,
before the Italian joined his team-mates in referee Michael Jones' notebook.
The home pressure was relentless and eight minutes before the break Boa
Morte fed Herita Ilunga. His fine cut back somehow eluded everyone in the
crowded area before Scott Parker's effort moments later was cleared off the
line by Danny Higginbotham. Olonfinjana then became the fifth player to be
carded for a foul on Boa Morte as the visitors went in a goal up at the
break.

West Ham equalised six minutes after the restart. Cole, who had led the line
tirelessly in the first half, collected the ball with his back to goal just
inside the Stoke penalty area. After holding off Andy Griffin, his quick
turn and shot flew into the far corner of the net to the audible relief of
the vociferous home crowd.

Stoke manager Tony Pulis responded by bringing on Vincent Pericard for Danny
Pugh, but unfortunately for him, one of his players reacted in an entirely
different fashion as Fuller was shown a straight red card for appearing to
strike Griffin. The Stoke captain was then taken off a short while later for
Andrew Davies, while Higginbotham was booked for time-wasting.

The Hammers thought they had taken the lead midway through the half. Cole
was tackled but the ball fell kindly to Boa Morte, whose goalbound effort
was thwarted only by a combination of a Thomas Sorensen save and a
Higginbotham goal-line clearance.

Zola sent on Tristan and Hayden Mullins for Parker and Collison in search of
the winner but it was his goalkeeper that had to be alert next to hold Rory
Delap's stinging 30-yard drive.

The substitution did pay off, though, and with just two minutes left on the
clock Di Michele fed Cole and his shot deflected in off Tristan for the
striker's first goal for the club. Jonathan Spector was then introduced for
the last few minutes as Zola shored up his defence, and the Hammers duly
held on to secure another vital victory and send the vast majority of the
34,477 crowd - the largest home attendance for a game against Stoke since
the 1971/72 League Cup semi-final second leg.

West Ham will now enter the New Year in confident mood ahead of Saturday's
FA Cup third-round visit of Barnsley.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola thrilled with victory
WHUFC.com
Gianfranco Zola was delighted to see his players win at home against Stoke
City and move into tenth position
28.12.2008

Gianfranco Zola has hailed the last-gasp 2-1 win against Stoke City as a
"big turning point" for West Ham United with the club looking upwards from
tenth position.

Two victories in three days has moved the club up from 17th to the halfway
point in the Barclays Premier League - five points away from the relegation
zone and just three points off seventh spot. Zola was particularly delighted
that his men came from behind after conceding to Abdoulaye Faye's
fourth-minute header - as they did in the 4-1 triumph at Portsmouth on
Boxing Day.

"It tells you a lot about the attitude of the players and the willingness to
succeed," he said. "It is very important. It is a well-deserved victory."
The manager spoke before the game in his programme notes about the need to
start picking up points at home to match the five games unbeaten on the
road, so was delighted to see that happen.

"It has been difficult. Confidence here at home was low and we fell behind
after a few minutes against a team that especially when they are winning are
very difficult to break down. [To come back and win] is a big, big turning
point for us. I am pleased for the players, for everybody. We are very
committed to the cause of West Ham."

Without the injured Lucas Neill - who should be fit to face Barnsley if
selected on Saturday - the ill Mark Noble and the suspended Craig Bellamy,
Zola had to look to his squad but was not let down. Julien Faubert was
industrious at right-back, Luis Boa Morte had perhaps his best game in a
claret and blue shirt and David Di Michele was a menace - not least with his
part in Diego Tristan's late winner.

Zola said his team had done well to cope with the pressure imposed by a run
of six games without a win at home. "Even if you are a strong player when a
situation like this happens, it affects everybody. So I know that the crowd
was a little bit nervous and the players wanted to change that.

"After the goal, they reacted perfectly. We had at least seven chances to
score in the first half and I said to the players if we carry on playing
like this we are going to win. That is how it has been and no one can take
that away from us."

Carlton Cole hauled the Hammers level in the 51st minute and the odds swung
firmly in the home side's favour as Stoke's Ricardo Fuller was then sent off
for violent conduct after an altercation with his captain Andy Griffin. Zola
said his team knew that they still had to work hard to finally take the
points, which they managed when Tristan converted from Cole's chance late
on.

"It is difficult to play against ten men sometimes - it is more difficult
because it makes the other team more defensively aware. And so it has been.
Fair to them they defended very well. Today, I had the feeling that we were
going to win this game."

Of Cole's run of two goals in two games, to make it six for the season from
18 games, Zola refused to take the credit for the extra coaching at Chadwell
Heath. "This is not down to me. He has done well. I am not presumptious to
say it is down to me or anyone. It is down to him. He kept working. He kept
having faith in himself and is getting the rewards that he deserves.

"I hadn't thought about leaving him out. He is a player that I know even if
he doesn't score he gives something to the team. He has always been like
that. I just wanted him to keep working and scoring. I am pleased for him."

The manager was also pleased for Tristan, who got the 88th-minute winner
eleven minutes after coming on for his fourth substitute's appearance. "I
wouldn't say he is 100 per cent fit but he is better. Obviously we are going
to try and give him a little bit more time on the pitch to make him sharper.
He has got goals in his bag. Today he has produced one and hopefully he is
going to keep on producing them."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 2-1 Stoke
By Julian Shea
BBC.co.uk

West Ham snatched a late win over a Stoke side that was reduced to 10 men
after striker Ricardo Fuller was sent off for fighting with a team-mate.
Abdoulaye Faye's free header which put Stoke ahead was the highlight of a
scrappy first half. Carlton Cole turned Andy Griffin to level for West Ham
and some fiery Stoke recriminations saw Fuller dismissed. Stoke looked to be
heading for a draw until Cole's shot was deflected off Diego Tristan into
the net late on. The first half was a disjointed affair, characterised by
Stoke defending in numbers, West Ham piling forward to little clear purpose
and over-officious refereeing. Stoke's hopes of a first away win of the
season received an early boost when they went ahead from the first corner of
the match with Faye left totally unmarked at the far post to head in Danny
Pugh's corner from the right-hand side. Most of West Ham's threats were
inspired by Julien Faubert on the right, with Cole usually his intended
target. But for all the problems Cole's physical presence caused the Stoke
defence, he rarely managed to create any serious chances. Having taken an
early lead, Stoke seemed happy to soak up the West Ham punches and they were
lucky to get away with it when Herita Ilunga found a way through on the left
wing and laid the ball back into a crowded box, somehow missing all his
team-mates. Stoke's main attacking threats came from Pugh, Fuller's
counter-attacks and inevitably Rory Delap's long throws, but neither keeper
was overly tested in the first half. Just after the restart, the game was
turned on its head in memorable fashion. Cole finally found a way through
the defence, controlling Scott Parker's long pass and turning an
unfit-looking Griffin to curl in an equaliser. And before Stoke could even
restart, they were reduced to 10 men as Fuller was shown a straight red card
for slapping his captain Griffin in the face.
West Ham made the most of their one-man advantage as they piled on the
pressure, and only a superbly timed goal-line clearance by Danny
Higginbotham prevented Luis Boa Morte putting the home side ahead with a
mishit shot. Delap's long-range shot tested Robert Green but it was a rare
second half attack for the visitors.
Their stout defensive display looked to have earned them a draw until Cole's
shot took a touch off substitute Tristan and was deflected past the helpless
Thomas Sorensen for the winner.

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola: "We played very well and deserved to win. But
it's difficult because they got an early goal and they're a team who are
very difficult to break. "We created six or seven chances in the first half
and I told them if they carry on like this, they will win - and they did. "I
was very confident, I had good feeling - they looked comfortable on the
pitch and I knew it was a matter of time. "I think we were in control of the
game when it was 11 v 11 so in my opinion it didn't change very much."

Stoke boss Tony Pulis: "Andy Griffin had hurt his knee, I played him because
Andy Wilkinson suspended but he was happy to play. Before half-time he felt
his calf but he wanted to give it five minutes to see how it was. "We're
desperately disappointed to lose as we were against Manchester United,
what's important is how we pick ourselves up. "We've got a good group of
players who care about things and Ricardo Fuller cared too much - we'll deal
with it in house, not through the media."

West Ham: Green, Faubert, Collins, Upson, Ilunga, Behrami, Parker (Mullins
77), Collison (Tristan 77), Boa Morte, Di Michele (Spector 89), Cole.
Subs Not Used: Lastuvka, Bowyer, Sears, Ngala.
Booked: Cole, Boa Morte, Di Michele.
Goals: Cole 51, Tristan 88.

Stoke: Sorensen, Griffin (Davies 58), Abdoulaye Faye, Shawcross,
Higginbotham, Delap, Olofinjana, Whelan, Pugh (Pericard 53), Cresswell,
Fuller.
Subs Not Used: Simonsen, Lawrence, Soares, Tonge, Sonko.
Sent Off: Fuller (54).
Booked: Olofinjana, Higginbotham, Abdoulaye Faye.
Goals: Abdoulaye Faye 4.

Att: 34,477
Ref: M Jones (Mansfield).

BBC Sport Player Rater man of the match: Stoke's Abdoulaye Faye 7.29 (on 90
minutes).

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Utd 2 Stoke City 1
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 28th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

A late winner from substitute Diego Tristan ensured a maximum return of six
points out of six from the Christmas programme for Gianfranco Zola's West
Ham.

In what proved to be an extraordinary afternoon at the Boleyn, the Hammers
found themselves a goal down early on before playing almost the entire
second half against ten men after Stoke striker Ricardo Fuller was comically
sent off for slapping team mate Andy Griffin in the face following United's
equaliser.

The game was finally won just three minutes from time by Tristan who
wrong-footed Stoke keeper Thomas Sorensen by deflecting Carlton Cole's shot
into the bottom corner, giving the Hammers their first six-point haul at
Christmas since back to back wins against Leicester and Derby in December
2000.

The visitors - who remain without a win away from home this season, and
whose last away win in the top flight was back in 1984 - threatened to break
their duck when they took an early lead through Abdoulaye Faye, who stunned
the home crowd after just five minutes.

James Collins - recalled to the side after a fortnight out with a calf
problem - lost his marker at what was Stoke's first corner of the game
allowing the unmarked Faye to nod home from close range. The goal marked the
first time that newly-promoted Stoke had led away from home this season.

Despite United's best efforts in a pulsating first half they were unable to
cancel out City's early lead - despite creating a number of chances to do
so.

Carlton Cole - back on the scoresheet at Portsmouth two days previously -
failed to capitalise on two good chances, whilst Scott Parker went close in
the closing stages of the half when his 15-yard shot took a deflection
before being well saved by City goalkeeper Thomas Sorensen.

Meanwhile Matthew Upson should have done better with a free header from a
Luis Boa Morte corner that he could only nod wide. Plenty of chances at the
break for Zola's men, but nothing to show for it.

As in the first half, Stoke began the second the stronger and both
Olefinjana and Delap tested Rob Green early on. But just six minutes into
the half United were level thanks to a second goal in two games for Carlton
Cole.

Gianfranco Zola had told reporters recently that he was taking Cole under
his wing in order to practice his shooting. The big striker certainly looked
as if he had been working on his finishing when he turned on a sixpence
before curling a beauty into the far corner of Sorensen's net to level the
game.

As unusual as the sight of Carlton Cole scoring a pearler may be that was
nothing compared to what was to follow moments later. Stoke striker Ricardo
Fuller - obviously livid at the slack defending which allowed Cole to turn
and score - took his frustrations out on team mate Andy Griffin in the shape
of what can only be described as a 'bitch slap' across the surprised
centre-half's cheek.

As the stunned West Ham players looked on, referee M.Jones - who had an
absolutely shocking game - pulled Fuller to one side before raising his red
card to the surprise of all present. The errant Fuller was virtually chased
off the field by his apoplectic team mates, who had seen themselves go from
one up to parity in goals but one down in numbers in the space of just
sixty, crazy seconds.

The goal - and sending off - predictably perhaps hailed Stoke's retreat and
they set up camp inside their own half, playing at times without a single
forward. The question was, did the Hammers have the guile and vision to
break them down?

The answer, in the end, was yes - but it was a close call. Di Michele, Boa
Morte, Parker (twice) and Ilunga all recorded efforts on goal but it was to
be a lucky deflection that finally saw the Hammers take all three points.

Carlton Cole found himself with the ball at his feet in the box - although
facing away from goal - after some good approach play by the Irons. Once
again he turned and fired at Sorensen's net but the ball was deflected off
the ankle of second half substitute Diego Tristan - who TV replays proved
was onside, just - into the bottom left hand corner to put United ahead for
the first time in the game.

We were then treated to a few minutes of Stoke - who had been timewasting
since they had taken the lead some 82 minutes earlier - frantically
searching for an equaliser, much to the amusement of the home crowd who
ironically cheered every rushed goal kick or throw in. The closest the
Potters came to to finding one was in the third of four added minutes but
Rob Green was on hand to tip a close header over the bar.

Six points in the bag over Christmas sees Zola's side rise to tenth spot in
the Premier League - a home from home for the Hammers given that they spent
the entire second half of last season in the very same position. Just as
importantly however the team had, for the second time in two days, came from
behind to win a game - something that, until Boxing Day, they had failed to
do all season.

Next up for Zola's men is the welcome diversion of the FA Cup third round
tie with Barnsley before the league campaign recovenes a week later with
another clash against a relegation-threatened side - Newcastle Utd, who were
thrashed at home 5-1 by current league leaders Liverpool today.

West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Collins, Upson, Ilunga, Behrami, Parker
(Mullins 77), Collison (Tristan 77), Boa Morte, Di Michele (Spector 89),
Cole.

Subs not used: Lastuvka, N'Gala, Bowyer, Sears.

Booked: Cole (23), Boa Morte (32), Di Michele (36).

Goals: Cole (51), Tristan (88).

Stoke: Sorensen, Griffin (Davies 58), Abdoulaye Faye, Shawcross,
Higginbotham, Delap, Olofinjana, Whelan, Pugh (Pericard 53), Cresswell,
Fuller.

Subs not used: Simonsen, Lawrence, Soares, Tonge, Sonko.

Booked: Olofinjana (45), Higginbotham (65), Faye (73).

Sent Off: Fuller (54).

Goals: Faye (5).

Attendance: 34,477.

Referee: M Jones (3).

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Pul(is) the other one ...
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 28th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

Stoke boss Tony Pulis has refused to criticise Ricardo Fuller after the City
striker was sent off for slapping team mate Andy Griffin in this afternoon's
2-1 defeat by West Ham. Pulis, talking to the BBC after the game admitted
that he was 'disappointed' by Fuller's reaction - but insisted that the
matter would be dealt with behind closed doors. "They've had an altercation
as soon as West Ham scored their first goal," said Pulis. "They've got
involved and Ric has raised his hand and given Griff a little clip round the
ear. "I don't know [why he did it]; Ric came in, he's on the bus now so he
wasn't there when the players came back in the dressing room. But looking at
that, we'll have to deal with it in house. We won't be dealing with it
through the media. "We've shot ourselves in the foot today, without a
question of a doubt. We've a good group of players that care about things -
but Ric's cared too much today."
Pulis also claimed that West Ham too should have been reduced to ten men,
but blamed the referee - who made six bookings during the game - for
refusing to book Luis Boa Morte for a late challenge early on in the second
half. "I was disappointed with the two challenges by Boa Morte," he moaned.
"The first challenge, he tackles from behind, he's over the ball. I thought
that was a booking on the basis of what the referee has done previous. Then
the challenge later on when he gets booked. He should have been booked twice
in the space of 18 minutes and I think he should have been off the pitch.
"We just ask for parity. We're not asking for no more, we don't want anyone
to do us any favours but we want them to react and be fair. That's all we're
asking for."
A clearly upset Pulis then went on to claim Diego Tristan's winning goal
shouldn't have stood - despite TV replays confirming that he was onside when
deflecting Carlton Cole's shot. "He's offside, you know, you've seen it," he
raged. "It's just not going for us again. We've got another decision that's
gone against us."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola on ... Stoke
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 28th December 2008
By: Staff Writer

Gianfranco Zola shares his thoughts on a second successful comeback inside
48 hours ...

On the game ...

I think we got what we deserved. I'm pleased; it makes a big, big difference
for us.

I think we played very well and deserved to win the game. It's been very
difficult because they got the early goal and it is a thing, especially when
they go in front, that is difficult to break.

But we played quite well in the first half, we created six or seven chances
but didn't score. I said to the players 'if you carry on playing like this i
think we're going to win the game'. So they did, and so we won, so I'm
pleased for that.

I was very confident, I had a good feeling. The team was playing well and it
looked comfortable on the pitch. I know they were defending very well but we
were there, close all the time. I knew it was just a matter of time.

On Tristan's winning goal - and Stoke claims of 'offside' ...

We saw it on the TV and it was just onside. It was very close, difficult to
call but he was just onside.

On Ricardo Fuller's dismissal ...

It's very difficult to comment. It was a bad thing obviously; I'm sorry for
them but it's something that doesn't concern me much. I'm sure my colleague
[Tony Pulis] knows what to do and he will do what is necessary.

I think we were playing quite well, we were in control of the game even when
it was 11 versus 11 so in my opinion it didn't change much because they were
defending very well anyway.

On transfer window sales ...

I know that in our team we have very good players so obviously there may be
teams interested in them but as far as I'm concerned - and as far as the
club is concerned - we want to improve this team, take this team to a
different level - so we are trying to keep our best players. It's as simple
as that.

I'm confident that we can keep them. The board, like me, want to improve
this team so we are are on the same wavelength. Hopefully it will be like
that.

* Gianfranco was talking to the BBC.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola repeats no sale stance
Hammers boss keen to cling onto sought-after assests
By Elliot Ball Last updated: 28th December 2008
SSN

West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola has played down speculation linking a trio
of his players with moves away from Upton Park. Speculation has been rife
over the future of Craig Bellamy this week, with Spurs failing in a bid to
land the Welsh striker. Manchester City have been mooted as potential
suitors for Bellamy too, while Matthew Upson has also been linked with a
move away from the Hammers. The latest player to be linked with a move away
is Julien Faubert, who had reportedly spoken of his desire to go back to
France. But Zola has played down the transfer rumours citing his has
ambitious plans for the London club and he aims to keep his star players.
"We have good players in our side, we have good players and obviously there
are teams that want good players," Zola said after his side's win over Stoke
on Sunday. "I'm not concerned (with the recent speculation), I think what we
want to do here to improve the team to do well. "As far as I'm concerned the
club is on the same line we want to keep our best players."
When quizzed on whether his side will hold onto their main assests in
January Zola added: "Yes we will try everything we can to keep them
obviously we have a project, an ambitious project and we need good players
to achieve that."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammers edge past Stoke
Late Tristan winner esures West Ham end year on high
By Elliot Ball Last updated: 28th December 2008
SSN

Man of the match - Carlton Cole, Scored excellent equaliser and deflected
shot snatched three points.
Moment of the match - Undoubtedly the moment of madness from Stoke's Ricardo
Fuller, which saw him sent-off for slapping team-mate Andy Griffin.
Attempt of the match - Cole's determination was rewarded as they scored a
super curling effort when it looked as though the chance had gone.
Save of the match - Both keepers rarely tested but Robert Green gets the
gong for stopping Creswell's delfected shot from crossing the line.
Talking point - Has to be Fuller's rush of blood to the head, what on earth
was he thinking by slapping his team-mate? At a crucial moment the srtiker
cost his team dear.
Goal of the game - Cole's swivel shot curled beautifully into the
right-corner, a peach of a goal from the big centre-forward.

Stoke's Christmas blues continued with a late defeat at West Ham which saw
Ricardo Fuller sent off for fighting with team-mate Andy Griffin. Abdoulaye
Faye scored an early header to put the visitors ahead at Upton Park after
some slack West Ham defending. But Carlton Cole levelled the scores by
grabbing his second goal in three days in the 51st minute, before playing a
part in the winner, when his shot found the back of the net courtesy of a
deflection off substitute Diego Tristan.
It gave manager Gianfranco Zola his second win in three days and propels
West Ham into the top half, but in contrast Stoke have not won in six games
and have slipped worryingly close to the relegation zone just three points
from bottom. Shorn of the suspended Craig Bellamy, who scored twice in the
4-1 Boxing Day win at Portsmouth, West Ham's attack initially lacked
sharpness. Zola also had to make three other changes because of injury, with
Julien Faubert, David Di Michele and James Collins replacing Calum
Davenport, Mark Noble and Lucas Neill. Stoke made two changes to the team
which lost to Manchester United, with Griffin back after an ankle injury to
replace the suspended Andy Wilkinson and Seyi Olofinjana brought in for Amdy
Faye. West Ham have taken just one point from their last six home games, and
their poor run at the Upton Park looked set to continue when Stoke scored
after four minutes.
Fuller tested goalkeeper Robert Green after capitalising on a sloppy pass
from Luis Boa Morte, and from the resulting corner an unmarked Faye headed
home at the far post. Cole had a glorious chance to equalise immediately
after the restart but sidefooted Jack Collison's left-wing cross wide, and
Matthew Upson also headed wide in the opening exchanges. Green had to
stretch to catch Richard Cresswell's lobbed shot and at the other end Thomas
Sorensen made his first save when he got down to comfortably stop Collison's
low effort. West Ham spent long spells camped in and around Stoke's penalty
area but a combination of inaccuracy and Sorensen's athleticism kept them at
bay. He did well to claw Herita Ilunga's teasing left-wing cross away from
the lurking Cole, who minutes earlier had volleyed way over the bar from
just inside the box.
The striker then wasted the Hammers' best chance of the half when he headed
over following excellent work on the right from the diminutive Di Michele.
As half-time approached, Boa Morte and Ilunga combined brilliantly on the
left but the latter's cross blazed across goal, somehow evading a number of
team-mates. Olofinjana had the first chance of the second half when he
dragged a shot wide from distance, but West Ham resumed their domination
soon after and scored a deserved equaliser in the 51st minute. There was an
element of fortune as Cole controlled Scott Parker's chip into the box, the
ball bouncing off a defender, but there was nothing lucky about the finish.
Too often criticised for his profligacy in front of goal, Cole swivelled on
the loose ball to curl a shot past Sorensen into the far corner. A moment of
madness then followed as Stoke went back for the restart. Fuller and Griffin
became embroiled in a heated exchange which descended into pushing and
shoving and resulted in Fuller being sent off by referee Michael Jones for
throwing a punch at his team-mate. Galvanised by their goal and unexpected
numerical advantage, West Ham poured forward and could have gone ahead but
Cole volleyed wide and Parker and Di Michele both fired over. West Ham
continued to pressurise with Boa Morte's scuffed shot cleared off the line
by Danny Higginbotham and Parker screwing a shot wide from outside the box.
In a rare foray forward, Delap tested Green with a low shot, but a minute
later West Ham finally breached the defence-minded Stoke when substitute
Diego Tristan deflected in Cole's shot for the winner.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Unhappy slapping
Fuller unlucky to see red for Griffin clash, says Walsh
Last updated: 28th December 2008
SSN

West Ham 2-1 Stoke City
Soccer Saturday analysis - Paul Walsh

It was only a slap...

Paul Walsh felt that Ricardo Fuller's red card for clashing with team-mate
Andy Griffin was harsh to say the least. The Stoke City striker was given
his marching orders by referee Mike Jones for raising his hand to the
right-back as the pair clashed immediately after West Ham had cancelled out
Abdoulaye Faye's early goal.
Technically Fuller was sent off for violent conduct, but the watching Walsh
felt he was more than unfortunate to end his day after only 54 minutes. "It
must have come from the Carlton Cole goal, because Andy Griffin was the
player concerned," Walsh told Soccer Saturday. "Cole got the ball into his
feet and he blocked the first one, I thought he did as much as he could - he
was just a little bit unlucky the way the ball fell. "I can only assume it
came from that but as the ball went back upfield, the two came together. But
it was only a slap! "Obviously they were annoyed with each other and things
have been said. He was getting heated about it Fuller, no doubt about that.
He had his angry face on but looking at it I thought the ref didn't have to
send him off."
Fuller's fury was in complete contrast to the mood of his opposite number
Cole. The Hammers striker has come in for some stick in recent weeks, but
silenced his critics with a battling display and the all-important equaliser
that led to the red card. Sub Diego Tristan poked home the winner two
minutes from time, but for Walsh, Cole was the stand-out performer as
Gianfranco Zola's men made it back-to-back wins over the festive period. "It
was a great finish from Cole, he turned and curled the ball in beautifully,"
he said. "He's such a frustrating player at times because he's got so many
assets. He's got power and pace, I just think he's a little weak in the head
at times. He lacks a little bit of mental strength in certain situations,
but he's got his goal and let's hope he can take that on to the next level.
"Every now and then he goes missing, but today he was there. West Ham were
the better side and for me, deserved the points."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola feels the good vibes
West Ham boss hails performance
By Elliot Ball Last updated: 28th December 2008
SSN

Gianfranco Zola was delighted with his West Ham side after they beat Stoke
2-1 on Sunday. The Hammers sealed their second successive win in a fruitful
festive period thanks to a second-half comeback through goals by Carlton
Cole and Diego Tristan. And Zola was delighted that his side are coupling
the points with the performances. "It's just what we needed - finally the
points are coming," Zola said after the game. "I had a good feeling about
today, even when they scored, I had the feeling we would win the game. "In
the first half I think we played really well and created so many chances and
I said if we keep playing like this we are going to win the game." The
result moves the Hammers to 10th in the league but Zola issued a word of
caution to his players despite the rise up the table. "I said this even when
we were struggling - it is a very strange championship where you win two
games in a row and you find yourself in 10th position," the diminutive
Italian said.
"So that obviously makes us very happy, but at the same time you have to be
focussed all the time because it can happen to other people so you can be
dragged in again. "We need to keep this momentum going and keep performing
the way we are doing."
The match was a fiery encounter with each team picking up three yellow cards
apiece, but the major talking point was the dismissal of Stoke striker
Ricardo Fuller for slapping team-mate Andy Griffin. West Ham's boss admitted
he felt sorry for Stoke but added: "It's not my concern." "Maybe there has
been an advantage to be fair they defended really well and it was going to
be difficult anyway." Stoke boss Tony Pulis thought Tristan's winner was
offside but Zola on the other hand felt the assistant referee made the right
decision. "I think the linesman was spot on, I think he was just not offside
so I think it was right," Zola added. "It was difficult anyway because the
action was so quick and the linesman was on the other side, but I think it
wasn't offside. Sunday's home win is only Zola's second as manager and the
Italian believes the result can be the perfect platform for more future
success on home soil. "I think its going to be a big boost for us," he said.
"It wasn't just about how we were playing or whatever it was just a bit of
confidence missing and today a victory will help us a lot."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Faubert open to France return
Hammers midfielder wants to be playing
Last updated: 28th December 2008
SSN

West Ham United midfielder Julien Faubert admits he is open to a return to
France during the January transfer window. Faubert endured an injury-plagued
first season at Upton Park after joining the Hammers from Bordeaux in the
summer of 2007. He started this season as a regular in the team, but he has
not appeared in Gianfranco Zola's starting line-up for the club's last three
Premier League games. The 25-year-old has been linked with a move back to
French football, with champions Lyon and Paris St Germain both reportedly
interested. Though Faubert acknowledged he is happy at West Ham, he would
not rule out a transfer in the New Year. "I need to play, I am 25 years
old," Faubert told Le Parisien. "Even if I feel very well here, I would not
exclude the possibility of returning to France.
"Clubs like Lyon and PSG are very attractive. We'll see in January."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Vinny's Stoke Report
Vinny - Sun Dec 28 2008
West Ham Online
West Ham United 2 Stoke City 1

West Ham again came from behind to take all three points as goals from
Carlton Cole & Diego Tristan were enough to gain victory in a hard fought
game which was helped by the visitors self destructing in the second half.
We have played better at home this season and lost so this was a very
satisfying result and one we needed following the great result we had on
Boxing Day at Fratton Park. This win has now seen us move to 10th place
which is incredible considering the talk of relegation and complete West Ham
meltdown in the near future. There was a lot of pressure on the players
during this game. To go a goal down so early and come back considering the
volatile nature of our crowd showed a lot of character. With Stoke going
down to ten men also put the pressure on us as we simply had to attack and
as we have seen so far this season attacking has been a big problem. Stoke
were a predictably ugly team who may were all blood and guts but no quality.
I hate football teams like Stoke and most West Ham supporters would probably
feel the same. In a way football did come out the winner as we kept the ball
on the ground and worked our way forward. We did struggle when we got in and
around the area but a bit of persistence paid off and we got the win we
deserved.
Gianfranco Zola made a few changes to the side which destroyed Portsmouth
only two days ago. In defence Lucas Neill had not recovered from the injury
which forced him to come off at Pompey so he was replaced at right back by
Julien Faubert. At centre half Callum Davenport was missing and was replaced
by James Collins. In midfield, Mark Noble was out with a virus and replaced
by Luis Boa Morte. For some reason Boa Morte went into centre midfield with
Jack Collison remaining on the left wing. From start to finish this never
made any sense and Boa Morte did all his best work in the wide areas. Up
front Craig Bellamy was suspended and his replacement was David Di Michele
who was alongside Carlton Cole.
We could not have asked for a worse possible start as there were not even
five minutes on the clock before we found ourselves a goal down. Ricardo
Fuller had seen his shot deflected wide for a corner and from that corner
Stoke took the lead. The corner was taken by Danny Pugh and Abdoulaye Faye
pulled away from his mark James Collins (who missed his header) and it was a
easy header. The Stoke Fans understandably went wild and the West Ham fans
shuffled nervously in their seats.
We should have replied instantly but Carlton Cole inexplicably managed to
hit his shot wide. The move started down the left and it was Jack Collison
who put an excellent cross for Cole to meet it with an awful shot.
Frustrations were beginning to set in to the Upton Park faithful who were
looking at their team who had at least three players who were despised by
many sections of the support. Good work by Behrami saw his cross into the
area just headed away for a corner by Andy Griffin when it looked as though
Di Michele may pounce.
There could be no accusation that since the goal we had not looked to push
forward. It was simply a case of us not having the quality of player to
really break them down. Another chance came our way when a corner kick was
swung in to be met by Matthew Upson but the header went well wide when you
would have thought that he would have buried it.
The rest of the half descended into the referees playground as Stoke began
to play games and the ref continued to entertain them. Faubert found himself
in the book and not long after that Carlton Cole was also yellow carded as
he went up for a header. Boa Morte was also shown the yellow card for a foul
on Glenn Whelan as Stoke continued to break up the flow of the game. We
still were having the odd attack and some good play from Di Michele on the
right hand side set up Cole who should have done better with his header. Boa
Morte worked well with Ilunga for the left back to hit a cross across the
area which somehow missed everyone with Collison just unable to get to the
ball. Stoke continued to waste time and every long throw taken by Rory Delap
seemed to take at least a minute to produce. The West Ham fans would boo
every time he would take one of these throws. Boo's rang out at the half
time whistle for a few reasons no doubt.

The ref was subject to frustration from the crowd as well as the current
scoreline because despite us having the majority of the play we had not
really looked like scoring. It only took six minutes after the restart for
us to equalise as the game turned on its head completely. We had started
the half well and looking as though we had real intent on getting back into
the game. A long pass into the area by Parker was controlled by Cole with
his back to goal and the striker turned and curled a wonderful shot into the
corner of the net. If getting back into the game was good what happened next
only furthered our cause. As the ball was being brought back to the centre
circle for kick off the Stoke players seemed to be having an argument which
led to Ricardo Fuller raising his hand to fellow team mate Andy Griffin.
The Ref then proceeded to send off Fuller in a very embarrassing moment for
Stoke City football club. If that happened at West Ham I would never want
these players to play for the club again. Having just scored the equaliser
and with a man advantage the impetus was firmly with the home side and we
set about breaking Stoke down and looking to find that goal. It was no easy
task as many of our attacks broke down as the final ball was often lacking.
Some of our passing was also questionable with Scott Parker at fault
countless number of times. We seemed to have an inability to get the ball
out wide, especially to the left and went it did eventually come out to the
left hand side the pass was greeted by ironic cheers from the West Ham fans.
Midway through the second half we almost took the lead in a good move
involving Cole and Boa Morte. The latter pick up on a loose ball and knocked
the ball past the goal keeper only for it to be cleared off the line. With
just over ten minutes remaining the changes were made by Zola as he took off
Jack Collison and replaced him with Diego Tristan. Hayden Mullins was also
introduced in place of Scott Parker. Apart from a decent long range effort
from Rory Delap the last ten minutes were ours as we piled forward. It
seemed as though it was going to be a very frustrating afternoon. Di Michele
gave the ball to Cole who turned again and hit a shot which cannoned off
Tristan and past the Stoke keeper Sorenson to give us the win. It was a very
fortunate goal but we could do with some good luck. Today was all about the
result and the correct one is what we got.

Player Reviews

Robert Green
Apart from picking the ball out of the next early on he had nothing else to
do for the remainder of the game in a very quiet afternoon for Greeno.

Julien Faubert
Poor for the majority of the game because his role involved a lot more
attacking. Against Pompey he was simply there to defend which he did well
but with the man advantage and that fact he was troubled little by the Stoke
winger, Faubert had to do what he does worse and that was attack and cross
the ball.

Matthew Upson
It was a comfortable day for Upson as he saw little of the ball in his zone
especially in the second half where he was merely there to distribute the
ball out.

James Collins
Struggled in the first half and I felt he was at fault for the goal as he
lost his man and missed the header which gifted Faye the goal. Like Upson he
was there to mop up in the second period as he had a easy half. If OLAS is
anything to go by he will be joining Fulham soon.

Herita Ilunga
With the lack of a left winger for the majority of the game he needed to
push forward and he did this well. For a left back he is quite skilful and
not afraid to take on his man.

Valon Behrami
This boy does not stop working and this is one of his best attributes. In
both halves he was working hard and trying to push the ball forward. Some of
his passing choices were off but his effort is worth praising him for.

Scott Parker
His passing was very poor and for a central midfielder this is quite
important. Taken off in the second half and replaced with a player who
showed him how to do it.

Luis Boa Morte
A good display from Boa Morte and one which even the haters cannot fail to
recognize his efforts. He looked dangerous when on the ball and was unlucky
not to score in the second period. He looked better on the left wing and the
decision to play him in the centre was a little perplexing.

Jack Collison
It had been noted that he is a little wasted on the left wing but we have
needed to play him there to accommodate other players in the centre. With
Noble injured it seemed natural that he would go back to his favoured
position but Zola decided to keep him on the left. He drifted in and out of
the game looked good at times but in the centre is where he will cause his
real damage.

David Di Michele
I still think he is an appalling footballer.

Carlton Cole
Like I commented against Pompey his purpose is to score goals and once again
he did this. He missed a couple of excellent chances in the first half and
didn't look confident until he scored a good goal. He had a massive part to
play in the winner as it was his shot which hit Tristan. Cole is not a great
player and lacks quality but if he can score goals then he will do.

Subs Used

Diego Tristan (on for Collison 77 mins)
Came on, did nothing on the ball but Cole's shot hit him and went in and he
now has his first goal for the club.

Hayden Mullins (on for Parker 77 mins)
On for the ailing Parker and got stuck in and sprayed some nice passes
across field.

Jonathan Spector (on for Di Michele 89 mins)
On to waste some time.

Subs Not Used: Lastuvka, Bowyer, Sears, Ngala.

Overall

We simply had to follow up the win at Portsmouth with a victory today and
despite struggling at times we dug in and won a game we deserved to win.
There is a lot of talk about players being sold and by the time we play our
next league game against Newcastle at St James Park things may look very
different.

To sell our best players and not replace them will be asking for trouble and
whilst I accept West Ham are and always have been a selling club I do not
accept that the owners want the club to be relegated which will happen if
they strip the club of its better assets.

Next up is Barnsley at Upton Park in the FA Cup. They had a great cup run
last year and will want it once again this time around. They must not be
underestimated.

Att: 34,477


Franco's Feelings

"We played very well and deserved to win. But it's difficult because they
got an early goal and they're a team who are very difficult to break.

"We created six or seven chances in the first half and I told them if they
carry on like this, they will win - and they did.

"I was very confident, I had good feeling - they looked comfortable on the
pitch and I knew it was a matter of time.

"I think we were in control of the game when it was 11 v 11 so in my opinion
it didn't change very much."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Pulis: No excuses for Fuller
TeamTalk

Tony Pulis described Ricardo Fuller as "volatile" after the striker was sent
off for fighting with a Stoke team-mate in the defeat at West Ham. Fuller
became embroiled in a heated exchange with Andy Griffin seconds after West
Ham equalised early in the second half, and was red-carded for throwing a
punch at the defender. Carlton Cole had just cancelled out Abdoulaye Faye's
early header and the Hammers capitalised on the numerical advantage by
scoring a late winner through substitute Diego Tristan. "There's no
condoning what (Fuller's) done," said Pulis. "He's walked up to Griff and
clipped him on the chin and it's disappointing. I'll talk to them both and
deal with it on Monday. "Ric is a volatile player and a volatile person and
what he's done will be dealt with. The pair get on well together but I've
said to the lads we'll have a meeting on Monday to sort it out. "There are
always incidents on the pitch and in training. The game is passionate and
it's nothing I haven't seen before. "Ric was already on the bus when we came
in and he's very disappointed with what he did and his reaction."
Pulis criticised the fact West Ham's 86th-minute was allowed to stand,
claiming Diego Tristan was offside as he deflected in Cole's shot. "I've
seen it on TV and the lad's offside for the second goal so it's
disappointing," he added. "I don't think (Thomas) Sorensen had a save to
make in the second half. "We are also disappointed with the two challenges
from Luis Boa Morte in the first half. The second one particularly was very
poor and he didn't get booked. "There were challenges today that our players
have got booked for and their players haven't. I'm just asking for fairness,
nothing more."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fuller sees red for hitting team-mate
West Ham United 2 Stoke City 1
By Roy Collins
Monday, 29 December 2008
Independent.co.uk Web

Diego Tristan's first goal for West Ham, which gave manager Gianfranco Zola
only his second home victory since he began his reign against Newcastle in
September, should have been the subject of all the post-match conversations.
But even Hammers' fans went away laughing not at a fortunate three points
but at the most bizarre sending-off of the season.

Stoke striker Ricardo Fuller was preparing to kick off after Carlton Cole's
51st-minute equaliser when he suddenly turned and started berating full-back
Andy Griffin, whom he blamed for the goal. Despite the efforts of Glenn
Whelan to keep the pair apart, Fuller managed to land a lefthanded slap on
Griffin, more Audley Harrison than Lennox Lewis, but enough to see him sent
off.

Referee Michael Jones, 38, in charge of only his fifth Premier League game,
did not appear to see the incident but still showed Fuller a red card after
words with Griffin, presumably asking him if his team-mate had landed a
blow. Stoke manager Tony Pulis said: "I can't condone what Ricky's done but
I've seen it before between team-mates. He's a volatile player and a
volatile person but he was so disappointed with himself that when we came
off at the end, he was already on the bus. I'll deal with it on Monday."

Pulis, who described Fuller and Griffin as good friends, seemed more
concerned about some of the other incidents missed by the referee, including
two early tackles from Luis Boa Morte, either of which could have drawn a
yellow card. Pulis said: "The same thing happened against Manchester United.
The referee saw all our offences but none of United's. I'm not asking for
any favours. I just want us to be treated like every other team and it's
important for us that that happens in the second half of the season."

The win lifted West Ham to the giddy heights of 10th in the table, although
only five points clear of the relegation zone, leaving their fans wondering,
like many others, whether they are still in a fight to avoid the drop or
should start dreaming about a place in Europe. Certainly Zola can do with
the breathing space as the transfer window seems likely to see more
household names departing than coming in, given the club's financial plight.

Zola, who was without the suspended Craig Bellamy, his main goal threat,
described victory as "a big, big turning point for us because the players'
confidence here has been low." But even he could not resist giggling at the
Fuller sending-off, adding: "I have never seen anything like that before,
except on television. I felt sorry for my colleague [Pulis] because you
never want to see things like that." Stoke, who have not won away all
season, started to believe when Abdoulaye Faye stepped away from his marker
and headed the easiest of goals from Danny Pugh's corner.

Faye then settled back into the day job of marshalling his defence against a
West Ham onslaught, which produced half a dozen chances.

After going down to 10 men, however, Stoke looked safer than they had all
afternoon, except when Danny Higginbotham hacked one off the line after Boa
Morte had beaten Thomas Sorensen. Then three minutes from time, a shot from
Cole brushed off Spanish substitute Tristan, 32, who joined West Ham on a
free in October after his contract with Livorno expired. Pulis claimed he
was offside but replays suggested otherwise.

Goals: Faye (4) 0-1; Cole (51) 1-1; Tristan (88) 2-1. West Ham (4-1-3-2):
Green; Faubert, Collins, Upson, Ilunga; Parker (Mullins, 77); Behrami, Boa
Morte, Collison (Tristan, 77); Cole, Di Michele (Spector, 89). Substitutes
not used: Lastuvka (gk), Bowyer, Sears, NGala. Stoke (4-4-2): Sorensen;
Griffin (Davies, 58), Shawcross, Ab Faye, Higginbotham; Delap, Olofinjana,
Whelan, Pugh (Pericard, 52); Cresswell, Fuller. Substitutes not used:
Simonsen (gk), Lawrence, Soares, Tonge, Sonko. Referee: M Jones (Mansfield).
Booked: West Ham Cole, Boa Morte, Di Michele; Stoke Higginbotham,
Olofinjana, Ab Faye. Sent off: Fuller (54). Man of the match: Faye.
Attendance: 34,477.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham reject City's bold bid to sign Bellamy and Parker for £15m
Hammers determined to hold on to prize assets but their hand may still be
forced
By Jason Burt
Monday, 29 December 2008
Independent.co.uk Web

West Ham United have rejected a £15m bid from Manchester City to sign both
Craig Bellamy and Scott Parker. The Premier League club insist that neither
player is for sale and have also moved to hold talks with Matthew Upson's
representatives to spell out their intention to hold on to the England
international who is also attracting intense interest with the transfer
window set to open.

Clubs assume that West Ham are in a position where they need to sell their
most valuable assets but although a list of potential departures has been
drawn up, from one of the bigger squads in the league, it does not include
the likes of Parker, Bellamy, Upson, Robert Green, Valon Behrami or any
other first-team regular.

West Ham rejected a bid of £6m on Christmas Eve from Tottenham Hotspur for
Bellamy with the club's chief executive, Scott Duxbury, telling The
Independent that the Welsh international was not for sale. If, however, an
offer of £15m was made for the 29-year-old, who has scored three times in
his last three matches after a barren spell, then it would be put to the
manager, Gianfranco Zola.

The same would apply to Upson and Parker with the club, despite the
financial crisis facing its owner, Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson, adamant that they
are self-sustaining, and can cover their costs, and that they do not need to
sell even if they could raise significant funds by cashing in now. However,
they admit that money will only be made available to Zola in January through
the departure of fringe players or those who have disappointed such as Luis
Boa Morte, Julien Faubert or Jonathan Spector.

City, who tried to sign Bellamy last summer and had an offer of £6m
rejected, have now tested West Ham's resolve again with the joint bid that
also includes an unexpected offer for Parker. The 28-year-old, like his
team-mate, was signed in the spending spree conducted by the club's former
chairman Eggert Magnusson. The bid from City has been dismissed by West Ham,
who signed Bellamy for £7.5m from Liverpoool last year, although it will be
interesting to see how the player himself reacts to attempts to sign him
being rejected. Bellamy has suggested it may be time to move on. A further
£7m was spent by West Ham to acquire Parker from Newcastle United.

The City manager, Mark Hughes, is a long-time admirer of Bellamy, having
managed him for Wales and Blackburn Rovers, while he is also keen to stiffen
a midfield with a more aggressive, ball-winning player such as Parker. The
bids also suggest that City, at least at present, are taking a more
realistic approach to the transfer market with targets that Hughes has
earmarked rather than those demanded by the wealthy owners from Abu Dhabi.
They had indicated they preferred a more ambitious, stellar wish-list of
players such as Kaka, Gianluigi Buffon and David Villa although offers for
that trio cannot be ruled out given the money available at Eastlands.

Upson, who was bought from Birmingham City in January 2007 for an initial
£6m, is also in demand having impressed for club as well as country after
cementing his place in Fabio Capello's England squad and overcoming his own
history of injury problems. Newcastle United are believed to have made an
initial inquiry of around £8m. While City are monitoring the situation Spurs
have denied interest in the former Arsenal player although his old club
might just be in the hunt, but not at the price likely to convince West Ham
to sell.

The bid for Bellamy and Parker suggests that some clubs may be keen to do
their transfer business earlier than expected in January, especially a club
such as City which has such great ambition. It will be interesting to see
whether they make an improved offer to test West Ham's determination to hold
on to the duo.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Money-bags Manchester City launch £15m double raid on cash-strapped Hammers
By Simon Jones
Last updated at 1:19 AM on 29th December 2008
Daily Mail

Manchester City have made West Ham a combined offer of £15million to try to
prise Craig Bellamy and Scott Parker from Upton Park. The bids were rejected
out of hand on Sunday night as the Hammers moved to 10th in the Barclays
Premier League table with a 2-1 home win against Stoke. Although City, who
drew 2-2 at Blackburn, will be back with an improved offer, the West Ham
board hope the decision shows the supporters there is an ambition to
withstand pressure to sell.
They have not encouraged City to improve on the offers of £7.5m each for
Bellamy and Parker. City's interest in Bellamy, who was suspended for
Sunday's win, is widely known and while Parker is a surprise name on City's
wish list, he is considered better value for money than Villarreal's Marcos
Senna, who is 32. West Ham have rejected a £6m bid from Tottenham for
Bellamy, whom they value at around £12m, but insist they do not want to sell
despite their much-reported financial problems. City, backed by the vast
wealth of the Abu Dhabi royal family, will be back with an increased bid,
however. Another leading City transfer target, Kolo Toure, is believed to
have expressed his desire to leave Arsenal, although the Gunners last night
denied any knowledge of this. These are the first signs of City flexing
their financial muscle and West Ham are certain to come under more pressure
as manager Mark Hughes builds a team to climb the table when the transfer
window opens on Thursday.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hammer blow for Calum as Davenport is ditched by Zola
By Simon Jones Last updated at 1:40 AM on 29th December 2008
Daily Mail

Calum Davenport has played his last game for West Ham after reacting badly
to being relegated to the substitutes' bench against Stoke. Manager
Gianfranco Zola said he would not tolerate such petulance and will look to
offload the former Tottenham and Coventry central defender in the January
transfer window. Davenport, who will be 26 on New Year's Day, had been told
he was being dropped and replaced by James Collins despite having played his
part in the 4-1 win at Portsmouth on Boxing Day. The player thought he
deserved to keep his place but the manager thought otherwise. Davenport
joined West Ham for around £3million two years ago but his career has been
plagued by injuries. It shows another side to Zola, who has often been
considered too nice a personality to be a manager. Back-to-back Christmas
wins and his strong-arm tactics towards Davenport showed the rookie Italian
manager is no pushover as West Ham climbed from a perilous position to 10th
in the table.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fuming Fuller slaps his captain
Pulis to hold team meeting before punishing his striker
Fuller's red card is Stoke's second of the festive period
Paul Doyle at Upton Park guardian.co.uk, Sunday 28 December 2008 21.44 GMT

Stoke City's manager, Tony Pulis, will hold a team meeting tomorrow before
deciding how to punish Ricardo Fuller after the striker was sent off for
slapping his own captain during today's defeat by West Ham.

The bizarre attack occurred in the 53rd minute of the game, immediately
after Carlton Cole had held off Stoke's Andy Griffin en route to scoring an
equaliser for the home side. Fuller was initially poised to take the
re-start but then walked back 30 yards to berate Griffin. Despite attempts
by team-mates to keep the players apart, the pair stomped towards each other
and the Jamaican striker struck his captain in the face.

The referee Michael Jones, who at first seemed unsure as to what had
happened, had words with Griffin before showing Fuller a red card. West Ham
went on to win the match thanks to an 88th minute goal by Diego Tristan.
"The funny thing is Rick and Griff get on very well," said Pulis. "They even
had a party over Christmas at which they exchanged shirts. But Rick is a
very volatile person and I can't condone what he did. I've watch the
incident on TV and he walks up and clips him on the chin. I'll have a team
meeting on Monday and I'll deal with him then." Stoke eventually lost 2-1.

Fuller's dismissal was Stoke's second of the festive period following Andy
Wilkinson's red card against Manchester United on Boxing Day. Though he did
not suggest the referees were wrong on either occasion, Pulis did complain
that today's opponents, like United, should have suffered similar
depletions.

"Luis Boa Morte committed two very bad fouls in the first 15 minutes but was
only booked for one of them," said Pulis.

"There were incidents involving Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo the other
day that the referee didn't seem to see. But they always seem to see things
when it's us. I'm not asking for favours, just for parity. We have to be
treated the same as everyone else otherwise the Respect campaign goes out
the window."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham grab late winner against Stoke City
West Ham United (0) 2 Stoke City (1) 1
Telegraph
By Trevor Haylett at Upton Park
Last Updated: 6:15PM GMT 28 Dec 2008

West Ham scraped their way to three precious points with a winner three
minutes from time but only after they were given a shove in the right
direction by Stoke striker Ricardo Fuller who was shown the red card for
lashing out at team-mate Andy Griffin.

The extraordinary flashpoint followed West Ham's equaliser five minutes into
the second half which came after Griffin had failed to prevent Carlton Cole
getting his shot away. The pair clashed as the game waited to restart and
Fuller caught the Stoke captain with a slap around the head. He was pulled
away by colleagues but referee Michael Jones raced over to order him off.

"Ricky is very volatile both as a person and as a player but I can't condone
what he has done," said Stoke manager Tony Pulis. "He has clipped Griff on
the chin and I'll deal with it on Monday. We'll have a meeting and sort it
out. Nothing was said in the dressing room, when we got back Ricky was
already sitting on the bus. I think he was so disappointed with his
reaction.

"Believe it or not, Andy and Ricky get on very well. At the Christmas party
they swapped silly shirts together but we've shot ourselves in the foot
again. Having said that I was disappointed with one or two decisions,
particularly an early tackle by Luis Boa Morte that went unpunished."
Fuller's folly was a gift for the home team and further punishment arrived
for him and the ten he had shamefully left behind as the ball flew in off
Diego Tristan to give Gianfranco Zola's team their second win in three days
and their first at home since September.

They had to work mighty hard for it though and faced an uphill task from the
fifth minute when they were caught napping as Danny Pugh's corner floated
over, Abdoulaye Faye left unmarked at the back post as he headed home.

From that moment on the game settled into a pattern of Hammers' attacking
and Stoke defiance. Cole hardly endeared himself to the Upton Park faithful
by missing two acceptable chances but all was forgiven soon after the
restart as he turned to direct the ball into the far corner after Griffin
had been unable to clear.

The pressure intensified and Boa Morte saw a shot cleared off the line. It
seemed the ten men would hold out for an unlikely point. But at the death
came the slap in the face that really hurt as Cole controlled, turned, shot
and saw the ball deflect in off Tristan. "A big, big turning point for us,"
said a relieved Zola.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham's Faubert chasing Lyon, PSG move
29.12.08 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham midfielder Julien Faubert has made a 'come and get me' plea to PSG
and Olympique Lyon. "I need to play, I am 25 years old," Faubert told Le
Parisien. "Even if I feel very well here, I would not exclude the
possibility of returning to France. "Clubs like Lyon and PSG are very
attractive. We'll see in January."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tony Pulis left to fume after Ricardo Fuller's folly gifts West Ham United
victory
West Ham United 2 Stoke City 1
The Times
Nick Szczepanik

Someone at Stoke City needs to remind Ricardo Fuller that strikers are
supposed to strike the ball past goalkeepers, not strike their own players.
The Jamaica forward was sent off yesterday for slapping his own captain,
Andy Griffin, in an astonishing example of a self-inflicted wound.

Clearly distraught after Stoke had lost an early lead to Carlton Cole's
51st-minute equaliser for West Ham, Fuller remonstrated with Griffin, who
had been unable to clear the ball, then walked over to him and smacked him
in the face. Michael Jones, refereeing only his fifth Premier League match,
was looking directly at the incident and showed the Jamaica forward a red
card.

Stoke, without an away win all season, had dropped into the bottom three on
Boxing Day, and although their chances of escaping it yesterday did not
entirely disappear down the tunnel with Fuller - West Ham's freak winner
from Diego Tristán did not arrive until two minutes from time - Tony Pulis,
the Stoke manager, was understandably displeased with his top scorer.

"I'll deal with it in-house," Pulis said. "Andy and Ric actually get on very
well. They were exchanging shirts at a Christmas party. It's disappointing,
and we've shot ourselves in the foot again, but you can't condone what Ric
has done. The game is very passionate, and Ricardo is a very volatile
person, but he wasn't in the dressing-room when we came in. He was on the
bus, he was so disappointed with what he had done."

It had certainly helped West Ham's cause. They had won 4-1 away to
Portsmouth on Boxing Day but were finding life harder against the side with
the worst away record in the division. Gianfranco Zola, the manager, was
delighted to have taken six points from the two games, but this was,
perhaps, a warning of what life might be like at Upton Park if Craig Bellamy
is sold during the transfer window. Bellamy, who had made Portsmouth's life
such a misery on Friday, was suspended yesterday after receiving five yellow
cards and West Ham sorely missed his pace and inventiveness.

Zola, though, refuses to accept that Bellamy's departure is a foregone
conclusion. "The target is to improve the team, so we're going to try to
keep our best players," he said. "The club has told me that the financial
situation is not a problem."

Basic defending is, however, as was shown after only four minutes when
Abdoulaye Faye escaped James Collins at the far post to head home from Danny
Pugh's corner.

West Ham were exerting pressure on the Stoke defence and were at their most
incisive when they avoided playing to Faye's strength by hitting high balls
into the box. It took a pass of more cunning to work a breakthrough. It came
after 51 minutes when Scott Parker played the ball towards the left where
Cole was up against Griffin. The West Ham forward charged down Griffin's
attempted clearance, turned on the loose ball and curled it home.

That provoked Fuller's rush of blood, but if the incident suggested that
Stoke's morale was low, it was hardly evident as they mounted breakaways of
their own as well as continuing to repel West Ham's surges. Only two minutes
remained when David Di Michele, receiving the ball from Tristán, waited for
his moment before finding Cole 15 yards out with his back to goal. Cole
turned and shot and the ball hit Tristán, who had continued his run, and was
deflected past Thomas Sorensen to give the former Spain forward his first
goal in English football.

Zola was delighted that his players had come back from behind for the second
time in three days. "It tells you a lot about the willingness to succeed,"
he said. "It's a strange league - six points have put us up in tenth. But
other teams can do the same."

West Ham (4-1-3-2): R Green 6 J Faubert 4 M Upson 5 J Collins 5 H Ilunga 5 S
Parker 8 V Behrami 5 L Boa Morte 6 J Collison 5 D Di Michele 4 C Cole 5
Substitutes: H Mullins (for Parker, 77min), D Tristán (for Collison, 77), J
Spector (for Di Michele, 88). Not used: J Lastuvka, L Bowyer, F Sears, B
N'Gala. Next: Newcastle (a).

Stoke (4-4-2): T Sorensen 7 A Griffin 6 R Shawcross 6 Abdoulaye Faye 8 D
Higginbotham 5 R Delap 6 G Whelan 6 S Olofinjana 6 D Pugh 5 R Fuller 4 R
Cresswell 5 Substitutes: V Péricard 5 (for Pugh, 52min), A Davies 6 (for
Griffin, 58).

Not used: S Simonsen, L Lawrence, T Soares, M Tonge, I Sonko. Next:
Liverpool (h).

Referee M Jones Attendance 34,477

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham 2 Stoke 1
The Sun
By ANTONY KASTRINAKIS at Upton Park
Published: Today

POTTY Ricardo Fuller's idea of a Christmas cracker may end up costing Stoke
£40million. Rarely does madness show itself in such a crass manner on the
football pitch — never mind change the face of a game or even a season. When
fiery Fuller slapped team-mate Andy Griffin and was sent off after 54
minutes, Stoke's chances of getting anything from this game went up in
flames. Worse, their Premier League survival — and with it millions of TV
money — may also have vanished in similar fashion. West Ham sub Diego
Tristan came up with a last-ditch winner that left Stoke cursing their luck
as they slipped deeper into relegation trouble. And Fuller's stupidity could
end up haunting Potters fans forever. One thinks of the Lee Bowyer-Kieron
Dyer punch-up in the middle of St James' Park in a game against Aston Villa
in April 2005. Another infamous row came in November 1995 when Greame Le
Saux and David Batty traded blows in a Champions League game for Blackburn.
Footballers are not robots and God knows there are enough punch-ups that go
unreported. But this was not behind closed doors, it happened in full view
of almost 35,000 souls and millions watched it on telly last night. How
stupid. Up to that point Stoke had frustrated wasteful West Ham. This was a
real chance for them to get their first ever Premier League away win. They
came to Upton Park with the worst away record in the whole League with six
losses and three draws. In contrast, Gianfranco Zola's men had not won at
home since beating Newcastle on September 20. So the question was, if they
could not beat the worst away side, when could they expect to end their
rotten run? It weighed heavily on their shoulders. Hammers chief Zola
admitted: "Even if you're a strong player, when a situation like this
happens it affects everybody. "But after the goal they reacted perfectly,
they went out and tried to score. In the first half we had at least seven
chances to score.
"I said to the players if we carry on playing like this we're going to win.
So it was and nobody can say anything."
The Hammers were rocked after just four minutes when Abdoulaye Faye rose
unmarked at the far post to head home Danny Pugh's corner. From then on it
was a story of wasted chances for the Hammers, with Carlton Cole the main
culprit. But Cole got the better of Griffin on 51 minutes and curled a
beautiful strike past Thomas Sorensen. As Stoke returned to the halfway
line, Fuller had a heated argument with Griffin and lashed out at his
teammate. Referee Michael Jones had a quick worth with Griffin and flashed a
red card at Fuller. Down to 10 men and with Zola's team pressing hard, it
seemed only a matter of time before Stoke capitulated. Yet Tony Pulis' side
stood strong. It was 68 minutes before West Ham had a sniff at goal again
but Danny Higginbotham cleared Luis Boa Morte's shot off the line. When
David Di Michele's tame effort went straight at Sorensen one wondered why
Zola was making no changes. Tristan made a belated entry on 77 minutes. And
two minutes from time the largely forgotten Spanish striker diverted Cole's
shot into the net to give the Hammers a priceless win. Zola added: "I think
it's a big turning point for us.
"Tristan is not 100 per cent fit but he's better. We'll try and give him
more time on the pitch to make him sharper. "But he's got the goal in his
bag so hopefully he's going to keep producing."
Upset Pulis claimed Tristan was offside. He said: "The TV replay shows that
the lad is offside for the goal which is desperately disappointing. "I don't
think Sorensen had a shot to save in the second half, apart from picking the
ball out of the net and the second one was offside." West Ham fans baited
Stoke with chants of "down with the Tottenham". If that turns out to be the
case, Fuller will rightly be fingered forever as one of the villains.

STAR MAN - DANNY HIGGINBOTHAM (Stoke)

WEST HAM: Green 6, Faubert 5, Collins 5, Upson 7, Ilunga 6, Behrami 6,
Parker 6 (Mullins 6), Collison 7 (Tristan 7), Boa Morte 5, Di Michele 5
(Spector 6), Cole 6. Subs not used: Lastuvka, Bowyer, Sears, Ngala. Booked:
Cole, Boa Morte, Di Michele.

STOKE: Sorensen 6, Griffin 6 (Davies 5), Abdoulaye Faye 7, Shawcross 6,
Higginbotham 8, Delap 6, Olofinjana 6, Whelan 6, Pugh 6 (Pericard 5),
Cresswell 6, Fuller 0. Subs not used: Simonsen, Lawrence, Soares, Tonge,
Sonko. Sent off: Fuller. Booked: Olofinjana, Higginbotham, Abdoulaye Faye.

REF: M Jones 6

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com