Sunday, December 6

Daily WHUFC News - 6th December 2009

West Ham United 0-4 Man United
05.12.2009

West Ham United v Manchester United
Barclays Premier League
Saturday 5 December
Kick-off: 3pm
Referee: Peter Walton

Final score - West Ham United 0-4 Manchester United

94 mins - Diamanti ends the game with a curler that bounces into Kuszczak's
stomach. The Pole clears and referee Walton blows for full-time.

93 mins - United are finishing on top, knocking the ball around the pitch
with a bit of a swagger. Let's hope West Ham can get this result out of
their systems on the training pitch this week ahead of the trip to
Birmingham City.

91 mins - West Ham start the first of three added minutes by winning a
corner. Diamanti can't beat the first defender, though. The Italian rolls
Parker in down the right channel seconds later, but the captain's cross
loops harmlessly into the hands of Kuszczak.

90 mins - Giggs is now playing at left-back!

89 mins - This has been a strange game. United haven't actually played well.
You wouldn't say they have dominated possession or territory, but they have
a four-goal lead. They also only have ten men, as Brown walks off with an
injury.

87 mins - Collison clips a pass over the top for Franco, but the Mexican's
volley slides off the side of his boot into the advertising board behind the
goal.

85 mins - Diamanti tries to find Franco, but his pass is overhit. It's just
West Ham's day here.

83 mins - Good tackle there from Gabbidon to halt Valencia just when it
looked like the Ecuadorean might latch on to Berbatov's through pass.

81 mins - No. Diamanti's shot hits the ball and bounces back to him. The
Italian finds Franco, but his cross is too close to Kuszczak, who claims
high above his head.

80 mins - Giggs threatens again, but this time his cross is headed clear by
Tomkins. Diamanti breaks and is fouled by Scholes 25 yards out. The former
England midfielder reacts angrily and is booked for dissent. Can the Italian
find a bit of magic to get the Hammers on the scoresheet?

77 mins - So close to a consolation for the home side. Diamanti slid a neat
pass through to Ilunga, whose cut-back found Franco. The Mexican laid the
ball out to Stanislas, but the winger's first-time shot rolled just past the
far post.

73 mins - Rooney is replaced by Michael Owen. Green is heading off, with
Peter Kurucz on to replace him. It is the young Hungarian's debut.

72 mins - GOAL! Oh dear, oh dear. Valencia lays the ball across and Rooney
slots in from six yards out.

71 mins - GOAL! That is probably that. Anderson ends a superb move by firing
the ball across the face of goal, where Valencia ghosts in to side-foot into
the net.

68 mins - Evra comes within a whisker of making it 3-0 to the visitors,
playing a one-two with Rooney before dragging his shot inches wide of the
far post.

67 mins - Changes for both teams. Kovac is replaced by Dyer, while United
send on Dimitar Berbatov for Gibson.

66 mins - Two bits of news. The first is the crowd, which is 34,980. The
second is that Kieron Dyer is going to enter the fray shortly.

65 mins - Good football again from the visitors, who threaten through
Scholes. Valencia's cross is poor though, and Green catches with ease.

63 mins - Diamanti comes close to getting a goal back for the hosts, curling
a free-kick that Kuszczak can only divert over the crossbar for a corner.
United clear the set piece easily enough.

61 mins - GOAL! Fantastic goal from the visitors. Giggs swaps passes with
Rooney before powering towards the West Ham penalty area. He lays the ball
into the path of Gibson, and the Irishman lets fly with an unstoppable
first-time shot.

60 mins - Green has the physio on. I'm not sure what's wrong with him, but
it might be his finger. He has a quick drink and seems to be ok.

59 mins - West Ham win a free-kick 40 yards from goal. Diamanti goes for
goal and it flies an absolute mile over the crossbar.

57 mins - Fletcher fouls Stanislas wide on the left. Diamanti slams a superb
free-kick 45 yards to the far post, where it is met by Tomkins, but his
header is too close to Kuszczak.

56 mins - United have a long spell of possession inside the West Ham half,
but Anderson wastes all the good work by passing the ball out for a goal
kick.

54 mins - All of a sudden the game springs into life with chances at both
ends. First, Franco's attempted through ball to Stanislas is blocked, then
Gibson breaks and finds Giggs, whose poked shot is held by Green at the
second attempt.

53 mins - Ilunga slides in to win the ball from Valencia, but only at the
expense of a corner.

52 mins - More good work from Kovac nearly forces a mistake from Fletcher,
but his back-pass is just strong enough to elude Franco and reach Kuszczak,
who hacks the ball upfield.

50 mins - Fine football from United. Gibson latched on to Giggs' pass and
crossed to Rooney, who cut in front of his marker, but could only screw his
shot wide of the near post.

48 mins - Green gets a bit fortunate there. His clearance to Ilunga was
under-hit and fell to Valencia, who turned and ran into the box, only for
his cross to hit Gabbidon and fall into the goalkeeper's hands.

46 mins - Collison and Franco get us underway again... 30 seconds into the
second half, Franco turns and rolls a pass in between the central defenders
for Stanislas, but it is inches too strong and rolls through to Kuszczak.

The two sides are back on the pitch for the second half. Diamanti is on for
Hines. The Italian is sporting a goatee beard,

Diamanti is obviously keen to be involved as he already has his tracksuit
top off and is warming up in his No32 shirt with Frank Nouble and Josh
Payne. Meanwhile, on the sidelines, Stephanie Moore is presented with two
cheques totalling nearly £50,000 for the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer
Research UK. The first is the money raised at the pre-season Bobby Moore Cup
tie against SSC Napoli, while the second is from the club's principal
sponsors, SBOBET.

Alessandro Diamanti is being put through his paces by fitness coach Antonio
Pintus, so it appears almost certain that he will be on at the start of the
second half, presumably in place of Hines.

Half-time score - West Ham United 0-1 Manchester United

46 mins - GOAL! 20 seconds before the whistle, and West Ham concede.
Gabbidon heads Giggs' cross straight to Scholes, who skips around Kovac and
rifles a left-foot shot into the top corner via Green's right hand.

45 mins - Diamanti is out to warm up on the touchline. The reason could be
Hines, who appears to be struggling with a knee injury. We're going to have
at least one added minute.

43 mins - Fletcher appears to haul down Stanislas, but Walton is unmoved.
Valencia works the ball to Gibson 25 yards out, but he can only drag his
shot well wide.

42 mins - Tomkins gives himself a 'touch test' by hoofing a clearance miles
up into the air. While every other player stands watching, he runs over,
brings the ball down perfectly and completes his clearance. Very impressive.

41 mins - It's all gone a bit quiet at the Boleyn Ground. Giggs attempts to
liven things up, but his header from 15 yards floats harmlessly over the
top.

37 mins - Green signals to Franco to go wide-left to receive a long
clearance. The Mexican does just that and forces Gibson into conceding a
throw-in. Good teamwork, that.

36 mins - Alert goalkeeping there from Green, who rushed to the edge of his
penalty area to dive at the feet of Rooney before completing the clearance
with his feet.

33 mins - Neville is going to have to come off. He signals to Kuszczak to
throw the ball straight out. The defender, who appears to have hurt his
right groin, is not at all happy as he leaves the pitch. Michael Carrick is
on in his place. It looks like Carrick is going to play at centre-back.
Interesting.

32 mins - Parker's attempted through ball to Hines is too strong, but
Neville appears to injure himself shepherding the ball back to the
goalkeeper.

31 mins - Brilliant defending from Tomkins to head Evra's cross out for a
corner. The ball drops to Scholes, whose powerful shot is blocked behind by
Kovac. The next corner is headed clear by Spector to Gibson, whose
first-time shot hits the corner flag!

28 mins - Brown brings down Hines wide on the right, handing Stanislas the
chance to curl a free-kick into the area. He does just that, and the ball
somehow eludes everyone and bounces out for a throw-in.

26 mins - Good play from Franco to hold off Scholes and launch a cross into
the area. The ball falls to Stanislas, who cuts inside but sees his shot
half-blocked and the ball rolls through to Kuszczak.

25 mins - Kovac wins a round of applause for forcing Gibson to launch a long
ball back to his own goalkeeper, who then hacks the ball into the stand.
Fine work from the Czech, who looks really fired up this afternoon.

24 mins - Audacious effort from Rooney, who takes a touch 35-plus yards from
goal before launching a volley at goal. Green watches the ball sail a few
yards over his crossbar.

23 mins - Interesting defending from Gabbidon, who heads the ball high into
the air inside his own area. Green comes and claims above the leaping
Rooney.

20 mins - Giggs' corner is cleared by Kovac, only for the Red Devils to
regain possession and win yet another corner. Giggs crosses and Kovac heads
clear. Scholes' volley is blocked and, when Giggs is flagged offside, West
Ham finally have a chance to clear their lines.

19 mins - United are turning up the heat here. Evra gets free down the left
and wins another corner off Spector. West Ham need a spell of possession to
relieve the pressure that is building up.

18 mins - United work it short before Giggs finds Anderson, whose shot is
blocked by Tomkins before Collison completes the clearance.

17 mins - Good defending there from Spector, who stayed on his feet long
enough to block a low Giggs cross. The ball hits Collison and goes out for a
corner. Giggs curls the ball in and Brown heads down to Gibson, whose shot
is deflected wide for another flag-kick.

14 mins - Alert goalkeeping from Kuszczak sees him run out of his box to
head clear as Hines attempted to latch on to a long through-ball.

13 mins - Fine challenge from Kovac to rob Gibson in midfield. The Czech
tries to find Hines, who appears to be fouled by Neville, but Walton gives
nothing.

12 mins - A superb run from Giggs takes him into the penalty area before
Kovac's tackle diverts the ball out for a corner. Giggs takes and Valencia
flicks the ball on to the roof of the net with his head.

10 mins - So close to an opening goal for Collison. Hines picks up a loose
ball inside the penalty area and rolls the ball across the face of the
six-yard box. Collison appears odds-on to finish, only for fellow Welshman
Giggs to get the merest of touches and divert the ball out for a goal kick
off the youngster.

9 mins - There is an air of expectation here. Both sides are feeling each
other out, as they say, with no clear-cut chances created as yet. West Ham
are probing in the shape of a succession of throw-ins in United's half.

7 mins - Ilunga wins the ball in a sliding challenge on Valencia. The
referee gives nothing, but the assistant referee flags and United have a
free-kick in a dangerous position. Giggs curls the set piece into the area,
but Franco heads clear.

5 mins - Gabbidon miscontrols a clearance, allowing Rooney to gain
possession inside the penalty area. The England man's cross is headed back
to Robert Green by James Tomkins.

3 mins - Ryan Giggs springs the West Ham offside trap, but his cross is
blocked by former team-mate Jonathan Spector before Radoslav Kovac launches
a counter-attack. Junior Stanislas runs at the United defence, but is
crowded out by Neville.

2 mins - The Hammers have made a bright start, with Guille Franco showing a
couple of neat early touches.

1 mins - Manchester United get us underway. The champions are shooting
towards the Bobby Moore Stand end of the stadium.

2.59pm - There is a decent atmosphere inside the Boleyn Ground this
afternoon, with not a spare seat to be had anywhere in the stadium.
Gianfranco Zola takes his seat in the home dugout following a friendly
handshake and a hug from Sir Alex Ferguson. The visiting manager also has a
few words with fellow Scot Steve Clarke.

2.57pm - 'Bubbles' is blaring out over the PA system as the two sides emerge
from the tunnel. It's a grey afternoon in east London, but the Hammers could
certainly brighten the mood with a victory. Manchester United have injury
problems at the back, with Scotland midfielder Darren Fletcher filling in at
right-back and Gary Neville playing as an emergency centre-back. The hosts
will surely be looking to exploit those areas.

2.55pm - Both teams are back in their dressing rooms making their final
preparations for today's game. We've got a few big names in attendance, as
you might expect for the visit of the champions. 1966 FIFA World Cup winner
Martin Peters is here, as are Hammers legend Paolo Di Canio and Russell
Brand.

Gianfranco Zola has made two changes to the side that beat Burnley 5-3 last
Saturday, replacing the injured Carlton Cole with Zavon Hines, while Manuel
da Costa's place is taken by James Tomkins.

Kieron Dyer could make his first Barclays Premier League appearance since
the visit of Liverpool on 19 September after recovering from hamstring
problems to take his place on the bench. Alessandro Diamanti, back following
a hip injury, is also among the substitutes.

Former Red Devils defender Jonathan Spector lines up against his former
club.

For the champions, ex-Hammer Michael Carrick is on Sir Alex Ferguson's
bench. The starting lineup shows two changes from the 4-1 league victory at
Portsmouth a week ago. Darron Gibson keeps his place after scoring twice in
the Carling Cup quarter-final victory over Tottenham Hotspur in midweek,
replacing Carrick. Nemanja Vidic is absent, with Gary Neville expected to
move to the centre of defence and Darren Fletcher filling in at right-back.

West Ham United: Green (Kurucz 73), Spector, Tomkins, Gabbidon, Ilunga,
Kovac (Dyer 67), Parker, Collison, Stanislas, Hines (Diamanti 46), Franco
Subs: Faubert, Da Costa, Payne, Nouble

Manchester United: Kuszczak, Fletcher, Neville (Carrick 33), Brown, Evra,
Anderson, Gibson (Berbatov 67), Valencia, Scholes, Giggs, Rooney (Owen 73)
Subs: Foster, De Laet, Park, Nani

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Champions too good
WHUFC.com
Manchester United secured a convincing victory over West Ham United at the
Boleyn Ground on Saturday
05.12.2009

Champions Manchester United proved too good for West Ham United, scoring
three second-half goals to run out 4-0 winners at the Boleyn Ground.
Paul Scholes had given the visitors the lead with seconds remaining of an
opening period in which neither side had really been on top. After the
break, however, Sir Alex Ferguson's side took control and added further
goals through Darron Gibson, Antonio Valencia and Wayne Rooney. The match
began in an intriguing, if not action-packed, manner, broken only by a
chance for the hosts after Giggs had given the ball away carelessly to Zavon
Hines on the edge of the area. The England Under-21 international, recalled
for the injured Carlton Cole, rolled a teasing ball across the goal which
Ryan Giggs just managed to divert away from the onrushing Jack Collison.
The visitors suffered a blow when captain Gary Neville was forced off with a
groin injury, allowing Academy graduate Michael Carrick to return to the
Boleyn Ground pitch in the unfamiliar position of centre-back. The Red
Devils were struggling to assert themselves but had Robert Green not been so
quick off his line to beat Rooney to a through ball they might have taken
the lead even earlier. They were to go ahead just before the half was out,
however. Danny Gabbidon headed away Ryan Giggs' cross as far as Scholes,
whose touch took him away from Kovac and into the space to beat Green with a
powerful left-footed drive.
Hines had been struggling with a knock towards the end of the half and the
break allowed Gianfranco Zola to introduce Alessandro Diamanti, back from a
hip injury, to the action. The Italian was warmly welcomed by the claret and
blue contingent among the 34,980 inside the Boleyn Ground. In the driving
rain in east London, the Italian was straight into the action and his superb
45-yard free-kick was headed straight at Tomasz Kuszczak by James Tomkins,
who was preferred to Manuel Da Costa at centre back. The champions doubled
their advantage when Giggs and Rooney exchanged passes on the left. The
Welsh winger then fed Gibson, who beat Green with a fine drive from the edge
of the area.
Despite the two-goal deficit, the Hammers did not give up and Diamanti
forced Kuszczak to tip over his free-kick from 25 yards a minute later.
Further attacking impetus was attempted with the introduction of Kieron Dyer
for Radoslav Kovac. If the Red Devils' second goal was all about the sublime
finish, the third was about the delivery, as Anderson's teasing cross was
swept home by Valencia. The Ecuadorian then turned provider a minute later
as his ball across the six-yard box was tapped home by Rooney. It was to be
the England striker's last contribution as he was taken off for Michael
Owen. Peter Kurucz was handed his West Ham United debut with 17 minutes to
go as Green was taken off with a knock.
West Ham continued to press for a consolation and good work from Guille
Franco gave Junior Stanislas a good opening but he dragged his shot wide of
the far post. After two consecutive home games, the Hammers hit the road
with a trip to Birmingham City next weekend.

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Zola on difficult day
WHUFC.com
The champions turned on the style in the second half, dashing any hopes the
manager had after a positive first 45 on Saturday
05.12.2009

Gianfranco Zola conceded West Ham United had lost to the better side
following Saturday's 4-0 Barclays Premier League defeat at the hands of
Manchester United at the Boleyn Ground.

The Hammers restricted the champions to pot shots until Paul Scholes broke
the deadlock with a goal just 20 seconds before the half-time whistle. The
strike, the former England midfielder's 99th Barclays Premier League goal of
a glittering career, paved the way for an improved second-half display from
the visitors. Further goals from Darron Gibson, Antonio Valencia and Wayne
Rooney gave the scoreline a harsh, one-sided appearance, but Zola said his
team had given their all.

"Their finishing was excellent, especially their first two goals. Their
first goal was the one that changed the story of the game, really, because
we were defending quite well. We worked all week to defend against them and
it was working. We just needed one more minute.

"After that, the second goal was a fantastic strike. After that we tried to
chase the game and they took advantage of that. We knew the game was going
to be like that. We just needed to stay solid until the end and maybe take a
counter-attacking opportunity but it didn't happen and that's it.

"I can't be too hard on the players. They gave everything again so there is
nothing to say, nothing to complain about."

West Ham gave as good as they got before Scholes' opener, with Jack Collison
and Junior Stanislas both going close to giving the home side the lead.
Defensively, James Tomkins and Danny Gabbidon stood firm, while captain
Scott Parker and Radoslav Kovac worked hard to stifle the combined threat of
Scholes, Gibson and Anderson.

"We tried [to get at Manchester United] but the gameplan was just to wait
for them. They were playing with five midfielders so they were playing three
midfielders and two wingers. I know they were expecting us to go there and
play counterattack so we wanted them to come and do the same to them. It was
working quite well but their goal changed everything.

"The only thing I can say is that we didn't pose too much threat to them.
That's fair enough, but don't forget that they are the champions and we had
a lot of young players in our team, and so it wasn't easy." Already without
the injured Matthew Upson, Valon Behrami, Carlton Cole and Luis Jimenez, as
well as the ill Mark Noble, Zola was forced to reshuffle his pack again when
Zavon Hines was forced off with a knee problem at half-time.

Things got even more difficult when goalkeeper Robert Green was withdrawn
after falling unwell, handing Hungarian youngster Peter Kurucz a first-team
debut in difficult circumstances. "Robert came off because he was feeling
sick. He felt sick at the beginning of the second half and just before the
goal and that's it, really. We didn't take him off straight away because we
thought he could carry on but I don't think it affected the goals we
conceded afterwards.

"Zavon gave everything and we felt sorry for him because he gave everything
and he was excellent in the first half. He felt the knee again and he had to
come off. I don't know what it's going to be but it's not looking good."

With a number of important players sidelined, Zola was keeping his cards
close to his chest regarding possible activity in January. "I have to give
credit to the players because they are giving everything but we'll see. We
need to consider that."

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Montano fires U18s
WHUFC.com
Cristian Montano scored a memorable individual goal as West Ham United U18s
beat Norwich City
05.12.2009

West Ham United Under-18s returned to winning ways with a fine 3-1 FA
Premier Academy League victory over Norwich City. Cristian Montano netted a
brace, including a mesmerising individual effort, and Nicky Barrett his
second goal of the season to close the gap on the Group A leaders. Academy
Director Tony Carr said the result would also serve as a morale-booster
ahead of Wednesday evening's FA Youth Cup third-round tie at Plymouth
Argyle. "It was a good win in very heavy conditions," Carr said. "The rain
this week hadn't helped the pitches, but in the first half we played as well
as we've played all season. "We scored early on when Nick Barrett finished
after Robert Hall had squared the ball. Cristian Montano then doubled our
lead with a header from a corner to put us in a commanding position. "We had
chances to score more goals before half-time, which unfortunately Nick and
Cristian could not convert. We went in 2-0 up so I was quite pleased with
the first-half performance. "In the second half they came out and had a
little go at us and pulled a goal back to make it 2-1, but Cristian then
scored a solo goal straight from our kick-off. The ball was touched to him
and he literally ran through their whole team to score. It was unbelievable,
like Diego Maradona. It was really a terrific goal. "They had a player
sent-off with 20 minutes remaining when he brought down Robert with only the
goalkeeper to beat, so they finished with only ten men. "I'm really pleased
with the result, really pleased with the first-half performance and it puts
us in a good frame of mind ahead of Tuesday's game."

West Ham United U18: Loveday, Modelski (Smith), Craig, Sanchez, Brown
(Driver), Barrett (Subuola), Moncur, Wearen, Purdy, Montano, Hall

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Hammers paired in draw
WHUFC.com
England will face Jonathan Spector's United States in their opening game at
the 2010 FIFA World Cup
04.12.2009

West Ham United's England contingent will hope to be involved when Fabio
Capello's side open their 2010 FIFA World Cup campaign against Jonathan
Spector's United States.

The two teams, who will compete in Group C alongside Algeria and Slovenia,
will meet on Saturday 12 June. Robert Green, Matthew Upson and Carlton Cole
all helped Capello's men to qualify, meaning there could be four Hammers
involved in what promises to be a mouth-watering tie. Spector is a regular
for his country, usually at right-back.

The fixture comes a day after the finals get under way with Guille Franco's
Mexico having the honour of taking on the hosts straight after the opening
ceremony. Group A is completed with Uruguay and France. The draw was held in
South Africa on Friday night, with David Beckham among those conducting
proceedings.

Valon Behrami and Switzerland will need to get past Spain, Honduras and
Chile in Group H if they are to progress to the second stage. Luis Boa
Morte's Portugal could face a challenge to qualify from Group G after being
put together with Brazil, Ivory Coast and North Korea, with Manuel da Costa
hopeful his form could yet take him into national-team consideration.

England's group fixtures

Saturday 12 June v United States, Rustenberg
Friday 18 June v Algeria, Cape Town
Wednesday 23 June v Slovenia, Nelson Mandela Bay, Port Elizabeth

Draw in full

Group A: South Africa, MEXICO, Uruguay, France
Group B: Argentina, Nigeria, South Korea, Greece
Group C: ENGLAND, UNITED STATES, Algeria, Slovenia
Group D: Germany, Australia, Serbia, Ghana
Group E: Netherlands, Denmark, Japan, Cameroon
Group F: Italy, Paraguay, New Zealand, Slovakia
Group G: Brazil, North Korea, Ivory Coast, PORTUGAL
Group H: Spain, SWITZERLAND, Honduras, Chile

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West Ham 0 - 4 Man Utd
BBC.co.uk
By Mark Ashenden

Injury-hit Manchester United ran riot in the second half to see off West Ham
and keep the pressure on Chelsea. A sloppy Ryan Giggs backpass almost let in
Jack Collison before Paul Scholes hammered in the first on half-time. Giggs
set up Darron Gibson to smash home a thunderous second goal before
Alessandro Diamanti went close. Wayne Rooney and Anderson linked up well for
Antonio Valencia to score a third, and Valencia then crossed in for Rooney
to add to the Hammers misery. Despite collecting three points Sir Alex
Ferguson will be concerned with an injury list now totalling eight
first-team defenders after Wes Brown and Gary Neville both picked up knocks.
After a lacklustre opening from both teams with Darren Fletcher starting at
right-back, the Red Devils were grateful for their eventual lead as Giggs
and Michael Carrick were forced to finish the match at the back. Both
Fletcher and Carrick are likely to continue their makeshift defensive roles
in the final Champions League qualifier at Wolfsburg on Tuesday from which
United need a top point to win Group B. Considering there had been more
goals at Upton Park than at any other Premier League ground this season, the
first half was a relatively subdued affair between two sides desperate for
three points at opposite ends of the table. It was Giggs, so outstanding in
recent games, who surprisingly created the first chance for the opposition.
A poor backpass from the Welsh veteran opened the door for Zavon Hines to
cross from the left for Collison at the back post, but Giggs made amends by
battling back to make a last-ditch tackle. Hines, in for the injured Carlton
Cole, spent much of the first half menacing the unfamiliar defence which
included Fletcher because of Nemanja Vidic's illness. Injuries and players
in unusual positions were all set to dominate the talk at the interval until
Scholes picked up the ball on the edge of the box with the last kick of the
half. The 35-year-old, who revealed this week his Old Trafford career may be
in its final phase, chested down a cleared Danny Gabbidon header around
Radoslav Kovac and blasted in brilliantly with his left foot from the edge
of the box. The former England midfielder's 99th Premier League goal was a
dazzling and unexpected way to conclude what was largely a disappointing 45
minutes of football.

West Ham were forced to bring on Diamanti for the injured Hines up front,
but it was not long before his defence was undone for the second time. Giggs
combined with Rooney and burst forward with a typical counter-attack and set
up Gibson on the edge of the box to score his third belter of the week after
his brace in the Carling Cup against Tottenham. Diamanti almost pulled one
back with a curling free-kick but the alert Tomasz Kuszczak palmed the ball
to safety. West Ham were being overpowered by this stage and Rooney and
Anderson worked brilliantly together on the left to leave Valencia to tap in
United's third. Valencia then turned provider and crossed in from the right
for Rooney to make no mistake from six yards moments later. It was a
clinical showing from United and the result means West Ham remain too close
to the bottom three for comfort.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson:"It's always a hard place to come
to. Scholes's strike was a great goal to get at an important time. He's
capable of scoring outside the box. It was a wonderful hit."

West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola:"The first goal changed the story of the
game. We were defending well and they didn't create much. "We have no
complaints - our players gave everything. When you play the Champions it's
always difficult and if you give them something they will exploit it. The
second goal killed us."

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West Ham Utd 0 Man Utd 4
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 5th December 2009
By: Staff Writer

West Ham went down by four to the reigning champions at the Boleyn this
afternoon - just seven days after scoring five.

Alan Curbishley, the predecessor to current boss Gianfranco Zola who is set
to be awarded vast sums of cash as a result of his 'constructive dismissal'
case could never quite fathom why supporters complained about his team's
performances given that the results were, on the whole, positive (including
no less than three wins against today's opponents).

Those complainees registered their disapproval mainly on the basis that the
football was dour, unexciting and not befitting a West Ham team. They got
their wish when Curbishley departed in a fit of pique and the club appointed
Zola, a manager more entrenched in the club's traditions of open, attacking
football.

Yet here we are 15 months on and West Ham are, quite frankly, in a shambolic
state both on and off the field. Zola's attacking philosophy is fine in
principle - but when he is reduced to filling his team with naive
youngsters, bargain-bin finds and cast-offs it is rendered utterly
ineffective, as was the case today when the Irons were embarrassed by a
Manchester side missing a number of key players themselves.

Unfortunately Zola, whose patched-up team had come through 45 minutes
anything but second best was master of his own downfall when he opted to
keep the injured Zavon Hines on the pitch as the opening period drew to a
close.

Hines - who unconfirmed reports claim requires a knee op that would entail a
lenthy post-Xmas lay-off - could barely move, let alone run as the first
half entered added-on time but was instructed to remain on the pitch by
Zola, who was presumably hoping to keep Hines' half-time replacement under
wraps.

Whatever the reason, the decision backfired as West Ham had no outlet and
the visitors were allowed to keep possession deep in United's half. After a
couple of scares as the ball fizzed across the Irons' box, Paul Scholes
finally broke the deadlock with a 20-yard drive that beat Rob Green at his
right post - much to the displeasure of Zola, who was clearly furious on the
sideline (possibly at his team, himself, or both).

The goal was a massive blow to West Ham, who had given a good account of
themselves in a reasonably even first half. Confidence visibly drained,
their second half performance was a shadow of the first - not for the first
time this season. It's not often that a West Ham team can be accused of
lacking fight when playing the current Premier League champions, but today
was, rather worryingly, one of those occasions.

At the break those not lured to the various in-house bars were treated to a
rare sighting of formerly camera-shy chairman Andrew Bernhardt handing over
a cheque to Stephanie Moore for the Bobby Moore Cancer Fund. Whether the
shock of seeing our current Chairman hand over a cheque was greater than the
appearance itself will forever remain unknown, but following recent
interviews it is clear that the man charged with selling the club to someone
who actually wants to own it is keen to take on a more public persona.
(Rumours that CEO Scott Duxbury had been locked in a cupboard along with
Terry Brown's model boat are thought to be wide of the mark...)

Back to on-pitch affairs, and once the reds doubled their lead on the hour
mark through a thumping drive from Darron Gibson there was only going to be
one outcome - the only question being how bad would it be? Perhaps mindful
of Arsenal's mini-collapse here earlier in the season Man Utd continued to
push on and found little resistance as they went on to score through
Valencia (70 minutes) and Rooney (72) with goals that were reminiscent of
training ground drills, such was the ease at which they cut through West
Ham's hopeless rearguard.

West Ham, spurred on by a dimished Boleyn crowd rallied as the game drew to
its inevitable conclusion and went close to grabbing a consolation first
through James Tomkins' header and an Alessandro Diamanti free kick. Bar
those efforts there had been very little for stand-in 'keeper Tomasz
Kuszczak to do - but West Ham will not be the last team to be outclassed by
their opponents this season.

There will be few crumbs of comfort for Zola on this showing; that's seven
goals now that the Hammers have conceded at the Boleyn without reply - and
all within 90 minutes. Following such a hapless display it would perhaps be
pointless to dwell on the negative aspects, of which we're all painfully
aware, and reflect instead on Peter Kurucz's debut appearance.

Kurucz, who came to England from Hungary earlier this year entered the fray
when number one Rob Green was forced to retire after 73 minutes (the England
goalkeeper had been sick in his goalmouth earlier in the game). The
21-year-old, who has worked closely with coach Ludo Miklosko since moving to
London had little to do but looked reasonably assured between the sticks.

Kurucz was one of no less than five academy products to play against the
current world champions today, with a further two on the bench. With Matthew
Upson, Luis Jimenez, Mark Noble and Carlton Cole (not to mention Dean
Ashton) all absent, Zola's squad is being stretched to its absolute limit -
something that should be considered when the inevitable questions regarding
the manager's ability to do his job arise.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Injury latest
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 2nd December 2009
By: Staff Writer

Carlton Cole is likely to be out of action until early February, it has been
confirmed.

A scan on the knee injury sustained during Saturday's 5-3 win over Burnley
revealed that the England striker had suffered ligament damage - an injury
that is likely to keep him sidelined for around six to eight weeks.

* Swiss midfielder Valon Behrami has undergone surgery this week and is
expected to be out of action until Christmas as a result. There is better
news regarding Matthew Upson however, with the club captain expected to
return in time for the trip to former club Birmingham on December 12th, if
not sooner.

* Also on the road to recovery are Kieron Dyer and Alessandro Diamanti, both
of whom are back training with the first team. Dyer, who featured for the
reserves at Birmingham earlier this week could feature against Manchester
United at the Boleyn this weekend although Diamanti may have to wait a week
later until the trip to St Andrews.

* Mark Noble, who was benched for last weekend's win over Burnley is also
back in contention. The young midfielder was sidelined with a calf injury
before contracting a virus. The 22-year-old former England under-21 could
replace Radoslav Kovac for this weekend's visit of the reigning league
champions.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Zola identifies turning point
West Ham manager rues United opener
Last updated: 5th December 2009
SSn

Gianfranco Zola felt conceding on the stroke of half-time was pivotal to
West Ham's 4-0 defeat at home to Manchester United. The Hammers had battled
hard to contain the Premier League champions in the first 45 minutes but
they were unable to quite make it to half-time on level terms. Paul Scholes
lashed home a stunning strike from outside the area and there was a much
wider gulf between the sides after the interval as United turned on the
style. Zola was proud of the efforts of his players but left to rue what
might have been had Scholes not scored when he did. "I think the first goal
completely changed the story of the game," he told Sky Sports. "We were
defending very well and they were not creating very much. That goal at the
end of the first half made the game go in a different way.
"No complaints because the players gave everything and when you play the
champions it is always difficult. If you give them something they will
exploit it.
"I think 4-0 was too much but that is the way it is. I think the second goal
killed us a little bit as well. Goalkeeper Robert Green was taken off after
the fourth goal went in because he had felt unwell all day. West Ham have
struggled with injuries all season and Zola admits something needs to be
done to keep all the players fit, although he did not feel Green's condition
contributed to the defeat. "The fact he was ill obviously did not help,"
said Zola. "We have a lot of problems fitness wise at this moment and we
need to find a solution."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
United stroll past Hammers
Second-half performance secures easy win
Last updated: 5th December 2009
SSN

Man of the match: Ryan Giggs. The Welshman carried United's greatest threat
and was involved in all their best moments.
Goal of the match: All four were good but DarronGibson's was a little bit
special. He curved the ball into the corner of the net with the outside of
his boot after a flowing move involving Giggs and Wayne Rooney.
Save of the match: Tomasz Kuszczak had little to do but did produce an
acrobatic stop high to his right to keep out an Alessandro Diamanti
free-kick.
Moment of the match: United enjoyed a purple patch when they made the game
look beautifully simple and Rooney added a fourth from close range to
complete the scoring.
Talking point: Are West Ham too good to be relegated? Can Manchester United
overhaul Chelsea at the top of the table?

Manchester United kept the pressure on at the top of the table with an
emphatic 4-0 victory away to West Ham. An uninspiring contest exploded into
life on the stroke of half-time when Paul Scholes crashed a powerful volley
past Robert Green from the edge of the area, and United then produced a
superb second-half performance. Darron Gibson then put the Red Devils in
total control with a magnificent goal just after the hour mark and there was
no way back for the Hammers in the closing stages. Antonio Valencia and
Wayne Rooney also struck in quick succession, although Sir Alex Ferguson
will have been concerned to see both Gary Neville and Wes Brown pick up
injuries.

Ferguson had sent out a makeshift defence to start with, after seeing Rio
Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidic and Jonny Evans all sidelined through injury.
Midfielder Darren Fletcher filled in at right-back with Neville and Brown in
the middle. Yet after half an hour Neville pulled up, clutching the right
side of his groin. It brought the biggest cheer of the afternoon from an
unsympathetic home crowd, saw an angry remonstration between Neville and his
dugout as they pondered a substitution, and led to a reshuffle which saw
midfielder Michael Carrick come on to shore up the centre of midfield. But
Carrick and Fletcher played as if they had defended all their lives in a
match which was long on midfield industry and short on goalmouth thrills
until the visitors took total control in the second half. Of course,
Ferguson, back on the touchline after his two-match ban for criticising
referee Alan Wiley, never fields a side not prepared to shed every last drop
of sweat in the team cause. And with Chelsea threatening to open an
unbridgeable gap at the top of the Premier League before Christmas, this was
a must-win match. But if Scholes caught the eye with that screamer which
goalkeeper Robert Green got his hand to but could only divert into the net,
then United owed this victory as much to Ryan Giggs.

It seems as he nears the end of his career his performances are better than
ever. His surge deep at the heart of the West Ham defence on the hour mark
was a perfect example, skipping past defenders and releasing his pass
perfectly into the stride of Gibson who powered a brilliant strike past
goalkeeper Green to extend United's lead. The strike was as true as that of
Scholes. It might even have been better. True, Tomasz Kuszczak had to make a
superb save a few minutes later when Alessandro Diamanti curled a free-kick
which appeared bound for the top corner. But after that it was all United. A
bright run from Anderson produced a cross which gave Valencia an easy tap-in
after 71 minutes. And more good work from Scholes a minute later sent
Valencia away and his pinpoint cross was steered home by Rooney for the
fourth. It was a trifle harsh on West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola, whose
philosophy apparently remains attack at all cost. But it was also an example
of what being champions really means. Ferguson even saw Brown limp off at
the end, with Giggs finishing the game at left-back and Carrick and Evra in
the centre of defence. Some sides might have buckled with so many defensive
problems. Adversity, as always, seems to bring out the best in United. The
bottom line is that the victory kept them in touch with Chelsea. For West
Ham the relegation fight goes on.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Harry's bid to capture crock Cole
Redknapp homes in on Carlton
Tom Hopkinson
The People

Harry Redknapp will ignore Carlton Cole's knee injury and try to sign the
West Ham striker in the New Year. Cole, 26, is out until the end of January
after sustaining knee ligament damage, but that will not put off the Spurs
boss, who has asked chairman Daniel Levy to seal a deal. The Hammers do not
want to lose their star man and have slapped an £11million price-tag on his
shoulders. But they remain in financial turmoil and Tottenham hope to take
advantage by striking an agreement closer to £9m. Former Chelsea striker
Cole has resurrected a career which threatened to veer off track at Stamford
Bridge since moving to West Ham three years ago. And such has been his
coming of age in the last couple of seasons that he has now established
himself as an England squad member and is in contention to be named as Fabio
Capello's fourth striker at next summer's World Cup finals. Injury has
jinxed Cole's season, but a rest between now and the end of January will
leave him fresh for the business end of the campaign.
Attentions Spurs will try to use defender Alan Hutton as a makeweight in any
deal for the player, who would form a fearsome foursome with international
teammates Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch, and Robbie Keane. If a deal cannot
be done to take Cole -dubbed 'My Lion' by ex-Chelsea boss Claudio Ranieri
-to White Hart Lane, then Redknapp will turn his attentions to 24-year-old
Wigan striker Hugo Rodallega. Either scenario spells the end for Russian
hitman Roman Pavlyuchenko, who will be off-loaded at the first attempt.
Rodallega has bagged six league goals for Wigan this year and would follow
Wilson Palacios's trail from the DW Stadium.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Arsenal set to make January move for West Ham striker Carlton Cole -
Exclusive
Published 23:00 05/12/09 By Steve Stammers
The Mirror

Carlton Cle is the number one target for Arsenal as manager Arsene Wenger
looks to bolster his strike force in next month's transfer window. West Ham
striker Cole is seen as the ideal man to add strength and physical presence
to a forward line that has been left lightweight by the absence through
injury of Robin van Persie and Nicklas Bendtner. And while Danish
international Bendtner will be back within weeks, Van Persie will be lucky
to play any part in Arsenal's season after a severe ankle injury he suffered
while playing for Holland against Italy in an international friendly. Wenger
has conceded he needs to find another front man in January – and Cole fits
the bill. He has improved immensely under Gianfranco Zola's management and
has emerged as a strong contender for the England World Cup squad that goes
to the finals in South Africa next summer. The 26-year-old is out of action
at the moment with a knee injury but should be fit in four weeks. Zola will
not want to sell Cole but cash-strapped West Ham will find an offer of
£15million difficult to resist. The added attraction for Arsenal is that
Cole will be available for the Champions League – and his presence will
allow Wenger to ensure that Bendtner is not over-used in the taxing months
to come. Cole has now developed into one of the most formidable front men in
the Premier League. His career began at Chelsea but stalled on the launchpad
and he had loan spells at the likes of Wolves, Aston Villa and Charlton. But
since Zola took over at Upton Park, Cole has found consistency and is rated
highly by England manager Fabio Capello. Wenger, meanwhile, has hailed
veteran defender Mikael Silvestre for being a huge influence on the club's
young players. "Mikael is a quiet leader," he said. "He is highly respected
in the dressing room. "He's a positive guy who helps the young players. The
best help, of course, is if we can keep winning. For me, he doesn't get
enough praise for both his attitude and his quality. "But he has a job of
marshalling the team. He has an important role to play. He was absolutely
fantastic in our match against Manchester City. His commitment to the cause
in that game was absolutely fantastic."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Stroll in the park as Manchester United cruise past West Ham
David Hytner at Upton Park
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 5 December 2009 17.29 GMT

Paul Scholes has been scoring goals like this for the best part of two
decades and the midfielder's 99th in the Premier League, a trademark shot
from the edge of the penalty area, ensured that Manchester United would not
come unstuck at a ground that had held a few horrors for them over the
years.
The manner, however, of United's pressing home of their advantage served as
a statement of intent that would have been read with most interest at
Stamford Bridge. If Sir Alex Ferguson's team have been erratic, at times,
this season, flattering to deceive with some of their performances, this was
a return to the slickness of old. West Ham, booed off at half-time and
full-time and, on this evidence, contenders for relegation, had no answer.
Robert Green, the goalkeeper, admitted defeat in his personal battle against
illness and went off after the fourth goal, having earlier vomited in his
six-yard box. He was not the only queasy figure in claret and blue. While
Scholes' goal stirred memories of the past, United's clinching second hinted
at what could lie ahead. The impressive Darron Gibson followed his two-goal
performance in the Carling Cup victory over Tottenham Hotspur last Wednesday
with an even more irresistible strike from distance. Lessons have clearly
been learned from the master. Gibson's right-footed first-time blast
climaxed a swift United counter and dumped West Ham on to the canvas.
Ferguson's team showed no mercy and two goals inside a minute added the
gloss to the scoreline. First, Anderson's driven centre from the left
presented Antonio Valencia with a tap-in and then a wonderful move involving
Scholes, Wayne Rooney, the substitute Dimitar Berbatov and Valencia,
finished with Rooney rolling home his 11th club goal of the season. The only
disappointment for Ferguson was a deepening of his defensive injury worries.
Nemanja Vidic was his latest pre-match casualty, with a virus, and so he had
been forced to play the midfielder Darren Fletcher at right-back and Gary
Neville in the middle. Neville, however, lasted only 34 minutes after he
felt his groin tighten. On came Michael Carrick, the former West Ham
midfielder, to fill in at centre-half. United would finish the game with 10
men when, with all three substitutes on, Wes Brown was forced off. Ferguson
said he hoped to have Vidic back for Tuesday night's Champions League tie
against Wolfsburg and added that he was likely to ask Carrick to reprise his
defensive role alongside him. It was incumbent on West Ham that they
examined United's makeshift backline. Their failure grated with their fans.
by Guardian Chalkboards Manchester United were forced to field a makeshift
back four, with Gary Neville at centre-back and Darren Fletcher at
right-back. After Neville's injury, Michael Carrick covered in the centre of
defence. Yet West Ham failed to capitalise, mustering just two shots on
target. An opportunity missed.
West Ham have made strides of sorts since they came back to draw 2-2 here
with Arsenal in October and they might have opened the scoring following a
rare error from Ryan Giggs. His misplaced pass invited Zavon Hines to cross
but Giggs atoned with a saving challenge on Jack Collison. West Ham's
afternoon did not get any better. The United goalkeeper Tomasz Kuszczak was
required to make only one serious save, from the substitute Alessandro
Diamanti's free-kick in the 62nd minute.
"It was a great performance from us, especially in the second half," said
Ferguson. "Scholes was incredible, he has been doing that for so many years.
West Ham are a very young team and when they went 2-0 down, it was difficult
for them."
The reaction of the Upton Park crowd to the half-time whistle reflected the
manner in which United had gradually taken control. United got the goal that
their probing hinted at in first-half injury-time. Giggs weaved on the left,
he crossed and Danny Gabbidon headed clear only as far as the edge of the
penalty area. Radoslav Kovac seemed to have Scholes covered, yet he somehow
allowed the veteran to bring the ball under control and, in one movement,
squeeze past him. Scholes' shot proved too powerful for Green to keep out.
West Ham flickered at the beginning of the second half yet their hopes were
extinguished by Gibson's rocket. Thereafter, it became a question of how
many United would score. The answer brought misery to West Ham's supporters.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 0 - 4 Manchester United
ESPN

Match Information
Stadium: Upton Park, England
Attendance: 34,980
Match Time: 15:00 UK
Official(s):
Peter Walton (Referee)
Updated: December 5, 2009, 8:14 AM UK

Paul Scholes came up with the sort of strike which has been his signature
throughout a fabulous career as Manchester United gave notice that they are
in no mood to give up the chase for their title with a 4-0 win over West
Ham.
And the way his team-mates slapped his back and ruffled his hair after the
20-yard left-footed thunderbolt had rippled the West Ham net must have gone
some way to end his own doubts.

Only 24 hours before, 35-year-old Scholes had been bemoaning his lot. He
even hinted he might not seek to renew his contract when it runs out at the
end of the season.

Typically honest, he said: "I wouldn't say I was playing some of my best
football. I don't always feel I am making as much of a contribution as I'd
like to.''

Well, there are few Premier League midfielders who could have bettered the
strike which came in the dying seconds of stoppage-time in the first half of
a contest which was beginning to fray around the edges for Manchester United
boss Sir Alex Ferguson.

Further goals from Darron Gibson, Antonio Valencia and Wayne Rooney made it
comfortable for the visitors after the break.

Ferguson had sent out a makeshift defence to start with, after seeing Rio
Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidic and Jonny Evans all sidelined through injury.
Midfielder Darren Fletcher filled in at right-back with Gary Neville and Wes
Brown in the middle.

Yet after half an hour Neville pulled up, clutching the right side of his
groin.

It brought the biggest cheer of the afternoon from an unsympathetic home
crowd, saw an angry remonstration between Neville and his dugout as they
pondered a substitution, and led to a reshuffle which saw midfielder Michael
Carrick come on to shore up the centre of midfield.

Let's give United credit, Carrick and Fletcher played as if they had
defended all their lives in a match which was long on midfield industry and
short on goalmouth thrills until Manchester took total control in the second
half.

Of course, Ferguson, back on the touchline after his two-match ban for
criticising referee Alan Wiley, never fields a side not prepared to shed
every last drop of sweat in the team cause.

And with Chelsea threatening to open an unbridgeable gap at the top of the
Premier League before Christmas, this was a must-win match.

But if Scholes caught the eye with that screamer which goalkeeper Robert
Green got his hand to but could only divert into the net, then United owed
this victory as much to Ryan Giggs.

At 36, Giggs is a contender for the BBC Sports Personality of the Year
award, as much for the longevity of his career at Old Trafford as what he
has done in 2009.

Yet it seems as he nears the end of his career his performances are better
than ever.

His surge deep at the heart of the West Ham defence on the hour mark was a
perfect example, skipping past defenders and releasing his pass perfectly
into the stride of Gibson who powered a brilliant strike past goalkeeper
Green to extend United's lead.

The strike was as true as that of Scholes. It might even have been better.
True, Tomasz Kuszczak had to make a superb save a few minutes later when
Alessandro Diamanti curled a free-kick which appeared bound for the top
corner.

But after that it was all United. A bright run from Anderson produced a
cross which gave Valencia an easy tap-in after 71 minutes.

And more good work from Scholes a minute later sent Valencia away and his
pinpoint cross was steered home by Rooney for the fourth.

It was a trifle harsh on West Ham manager Gianfranco Zola, whose philosophy
apparently remains attack at all cost. But it was also an example of what
being champions really means.

Ferguson even saw Brown limp off at the end, with Giggs finishing the game
at left-back and Carrick and Evra in the centre of defence. Some sides might
have buckled with so many defensive problems. Adversity, as always, seems to
bring out the best in United. The bottom line is that the victory kept them
in touch with Chelsea.

For West Ham the relegation fight goes on.

Sir Alex Ferguson joked that he had to play the "smallest centre half in the
world'' after Manchester United had shrugged aside an injury crisis to beat
West Ham 4-0 at Upton Park.
Ferguson said: "Evra must be the smallest centre half in the world. but he's
a good reader of the game. He's quick and determined. I don't know where I'm
going to get a back four for Wednesday. Probably Nemanja Vidic will be back
from flu and I'll probably play Carrick alongside him.''

It is tribute to the tenacity of the champions that they were able to
overcome an injury list of such debilitating proportions. The casualty list
now includes Rio Ferdinand, Jonny Evans, Vidic, Neville, Edwin van der Sar,
Brown and long-term casualty Owen Hargreaves.

Ferguson added: "The injuries in defence are becoming a bit of a headache to
us. Carrick stepped in and did very, very well. He's got the composure and
the pace and it was a good performance in the second half. We used out
experience.''

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola saluted United's quality and revealed that
England goalkeeper Robert Green had been substituted in the 72nd minute
after vomiting in the goalmouth. Zola said: "Their finishing was excellent,
especially the first two goals.

"The first goal changed the game and the second was a fantastic strike. We
tried to chase the game but I cannot be too hard on my players. They gave
everything. Robert Green was feeling sick in the second half and he came off
just before the third goal but I don't think it affected the goals
afterwards.''

Zola also revealed that Zavon Hines was substituted at half-time with a knee
problem which "doesn't look good''. The former Chelsea star, who has lost
leading striker Carlton Cole until the New Year, even quipped: "I might have
to put my boots on again. Right now we are short. We didn't pose enough
threat to them. But remember they are the champions and we had young players
in our team.''

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham United 0 Manchester United 4: match report
Read a full match report of the Premier League game between West Ham United
and Manchester United at Upton Park on Saturday Dec 5 2009.
Telegraph.co.uk
By Gerry Cox at Upton Park
Published: 4:45PM GMT 05 Dec 2009

It was men against boys at Upton Park as Wayne Rooney and Ryan Giggs
inspired Manchester United to a thumping victory over a West Ham side now
fighting for Premiership survival. Even though Manchester United had injury
problems of their own, which led to midfielder Michael Carrick playing as an
emergency central defender against the club where he started his career,
they were too strong for Gianfranco Zola's young side. Having thumped
Portsmouth 4-1 at Fratton Park last week, United continued their demolition
of the relegation candidates without ever having to get into top gear.
Rooney played as a lone striker for the first hour or so, and the only
surprise was it took 44 minutes to break down an injury-hit West Ham United.

Paul Scholes made the breakthrough in first-half stoppage time, hitting a
half-volley from the edge of the penalty area with his left-foot after the
home side failed to clear the ball repeatedly.
Robert Green got a hand to the ball but could not stop it, and the England
goalkeeper had to be replaced in the 73rd minute, by which time his side
were dead and buried. Darron Gibson, keeping his place in midfield after
scoring the two goals that beat Tottenham in the Carling Cup on Tuesday,
smashed home another spectacular strike from 25 yards to make it 2-0 on the
hour, Antonio Valencia made it three when he tapped in Anderson's cross from
close range ten minutes later. Within a minute, the Ecuador winger crossed
for Rooney to sidefoot home from six yards, prompting West Ham supporters to
register their protest at their team's plight by leaving in droves. The
result moved United to within two points of Chelsea, before their match at
Manchester City, but leaves West Ham only a point above the relegation zone.


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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Friday, December 4

Daily WHUFC News - 4th December 2009

Scarf giveaway on Saturday
WHUFC.com
Principal partner SBOBET are marking their first year with the club with a
special gift to fans
04.12.2009

SBOBET are marking the first anniversary of their partnership with West Ham
United by giving a commemorative scarf to every supporter who attends
Saturday's game with Manchester United.

The scarves will help raise awareness of the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer
Research UK - so make sure you get yours and wear it with pride. It was on 3
December 2008 that the club's principal partner first joined forces with the
club and the Bobby Moore Fund.

SBOBET executive director Bill Mummery said: "SBOBET has a strong commitment
to social responsibility and the communities in which we work. From our
first meeting with West Ham, it was clear just how strong the bond was
between the club, community and the Bobby Moore Fund and we were delighted
to be given the opportunity to get involved.

"This is our second year and of course we have renewed our sponsorship deal
for a further four years which gives us the opportunity to build on the
relationship. We are celebrating our first anniversary by offering the fans
a gift at the Manchester United fixture, which will also help raise
awareness for the Bobby Moore Fund."

Stephanie Moore MBE, the Bobby Moore Fund founder, added: "I am delighted
that SBOBET are supporting the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer Research UK at
Saturday's match. Through the partnership with West Ham United, SBOBET has
kindly supported the Fund by complementing our aims."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Collison confident
WHUFC.com
Jack Collison says West Ham United will head into Saturday's match with
Manchester United on a high
04.12.2009

Jack Collison said the West Ham United players will go into Saturday's big
match with champions Manchester United full of confidence after just one
defeat in six. The Wales midfielder has been key to the improvement in
fortune for Gianfranco Zola's men following his return to the side, having
registered on the scoresheet in each of the last two games. "As a
footballer, playing in the big games is something you really look forward
to," Collison said. "Especially for me, I'm a young player playing in the
Premier League and the home games against Manchester United and Chelsea are
massive for someone like me. "We don't go into any game thinking we're going
to lose, we go out there trying to get a result and do the best we can."
Collison is adamant he and his team-mates have learnt their lessons
following the last two, dramatic games. After a 3-3 draw at Hull City, the
Hammers beat Burnley 5-3 last time out, enduring a slightly nervier ending
than they would have liked in the latter contest. "It wasn't the prettiest
at times but it was three massive points for us but that is what we needed.
It would have been nice to score ten but we're disappointed at letting the
game slip away from them at the end. "It's something we're trying to work on
and the manager came in afterwards, still disappointed even though we won
the game as there's things we need to work on. We appreciated that, we know
we can do that and we have to take the positives and it's three points at a
time when we need them."

After a week of intense training in sometimes extremely wet weather,
Collison feels the squad are focused on ensuring there will be no repeats
against the champions. "It's been disappointing over the last few weeks when
we've got leads and we've let leads slip but it's something we're working on
in training and we're trying hard to improve every week. We're not going to
be down, we're going to take the positives and we scored five good goals."
The visit of the Red Devils to the Boleyn Ground marks the start of the run
up to the busy festive period, when Collison knows some positive results are
integral to the Hammers celebrating a happy New Year. "We're scoring a lot
of goals at the moment and that's one of the positives we can take. We've
got some massive games coming up between now and Christmas and maybe we can
re-assess then. "But hopefully we can get a few points so we're looking
forward rather than behind us. We're aware of the situation we're in and
we're trying hard to improve the situation."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Manchester United preview
WHUFC.com
All the early background and team news for the visit of the champions to the
Boleyn Ground on Saturday
04.12.2009

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United v Manchester United
Boleyn Ground
Saturday 5 December
3pm
Referee: Peter Walton

WHUTV - Full match commentary

• West Ham United welcome Sir Alex Ferguson's Manchester United looking to
build on a run of just one defeat in their last six matches of the 2009/10
Barclays Premier League season.

• The club have only lost once at home since 19 September, drawing with
Fulham and Arsenal and earning victories against Aston Villa and Burnley.
The latter result last week saw the club take a five-goal lead before being
pegged back to a 5-3 success. It was only the second time the squad had
scored more than two goals in a league game this season.

• Robert Green has not kept a clean sheet since the 0-0 draw at Blackburn
Rovers on 29 August but at the other end, the Hammers have scored in each of
the last ten league fixtures.

• Gianfranco Zola said: "It is a big opportunity for us all. I am sure the
fans will all be buzzing. We will be buzzing as well. We will give
everything and let's see if it will be enough. It is certainly great to be
playing at 3pm on a Saturday once more. I can tell the crowd react better to
this. Everything is set up and it will be a fantastic occasion."

• West Ham United will hope to make it three home wins out four in Premier
League meetings with Manchester United at the Boleyn Ground. Nigel
Reo-Coker's strike secured a 1-0 victory three seasons ago, while headers
from Anton Ferdinand and Matthew Upson saw the Hammers recover from a goal
down to win 2-1 in the 2007/08 campaign. Last season, Ryan Giggs struck the
only goal of the game to end the home side's good run.

• Zola's side go into the match in 17th place in the Premier League table. A
win could lift the Hammers into 12th place while the visitors will hope to
close the five-point gap to leaders Chelsea.

• This is the 109th league meeting between the two sides. Manchester United
have won 48, West Ham United have won 37 and there have been 23 draws.

Referee

• Sunday's referee is Peter Walton.

• Walton, 49, began his refereeing career in 1986, before being appointed to
the Football League List as an assistant referee in 1993. He joined the
Premier League List of assistant referees in 1994

• Walton was an assistant referee at the 1996 FA Cup final between
Manchester United and Liverpool at Wembley. That same year, he also joined
the FIFA list of assistant referees and ran the line during the Euro 96
group-stage fixture between Germany and Czech Republic at Old Trafford.

• Walton joined the Football League List of referees in 1998 and joined the
Premier League Select List in 2003. That same year, he was the man in
control of the LDV Vans Trophy final between Bristol City and Carlisle
United at the Millennium Stadium.

• Walton's first Premier League fixture as a referee was Wolverhampton
Wanderers' 4-3 win over Leicester City at Molineux on 25 October 2003.

• In January 2007, Walton travelled to Ecuador to help to run an Advanced
Course for Referees' Instructors.

• Walton took charge of the 2008 FA Community Shield between Manchester
United and Portsmouth at Wembley.

• Walton has taken charge of five West Ham matches this season - the 1-0
League Cup third-round defeat at Watford, the 2-0 Premier League defeat at
Manchester United, the 0-0 Premier League draw at Liverpool and the 1-1 FA
Cup fifth-round draw with Middlesbrough at the Boleyn Ground. The most
recent was the 1-0 defeat at Stoke City on 17 October.

Last time out

Saturday 28 November 2009

Barclays Premier League
West Ham United 5-3 Burnley
West Ham United: Green, Gabbidon, Spector, Ilunga, Da Costa, Parker, Kovac,
Collison (Faubert 78), Stanislas, Cole (Hines 45 ), Franco (Jimenez 59)
Subs not used: Noble, Tomkins, Kurucz, Nouble
Goals: Collison 18, Stanislas 33, Cole 43 pen, Franco 51, Jimenez 64 pen

Tuesday 2 December 2009

Carling Cup quarter-final
Manchester United 2-0 Tottenham Hotspur
Manchester United: Kuszczak, Neville, Brown, Vidic, De Laet, Park, Gibson,
Anderson (Tosic 82), Obertan (Carrick 62), Welbeck, Berbatov (Macheda 62)
Subs not used: Amos, Owen, Giggs, Fletcher
Goals: Gibson 16, 38

West Ham United

• West Ham United will be hoping to continue the run of form that has seen
them lose just once in their last six games.

• The Hammers' minus two goal difference tells its own story when compared
to the teams around them in the league table. The east Londoners have lost
by more than one goal just once in the league this season - the 3-1 defeat
at Manchester City in September.

• Hanging on to leads is crucial if the club are to pick up a third home win
in four games. Three times they have failed to convert a two-goal lead into
a win so far this season.

• The Hammers have scored eight headed goals this season - more than any
other team in the top flight. The club have won more penalties (five) than
any other team this campaign.

• West Ham have scored 24 goals this season with ten different scorers
registering. Carlton Cole leads the way (seven), with Guille Franco (three)
next in line. Jack Collison (two), Matthew Upson (two), Alessandro Diamanti
(two), Junior Stanislas (two), Manuel da Costa, Mark Noble, Luis Jimenez and
Zavon Hines have also registered.

• Cole is West Ham's top scorer this season with seven goals in 13 league
games. The England striker had scored 13 goals in 24 Premier League games
since Boxing Day 2008, all from open play, before last week's penalty on his
100th league start.

• Diamanti has more assists (three) than any other West Ham player.

• Noble has put in more crosses (15) than anyone else for the Hammers.

• Noble is in line to play his 100th game for the club, if selected.

• Only Robert Green has played in every league game for the club this
season. He is on a run of 102 successive league appearances.

• Julien Faubert and Carlton Cole are each on four yellow cards this season.

• Guille Franco played against Manchester United when his former club
Villarreal went to Old Trafford for a UEFA Champions League encounter in
September 2008 and earned a fine goalless draw.

• West Ham's record home win against Manchester United was a 5-1 success in
the old First Division on 11 October 1930.

Manchester United

• Manchester United go into Saturday's game buoyed by their midweek Carling
Cup win against Tottenham Hotspur with two-goal midfielder Darron Gibson and
Belgian full-back Ritchie De Laet particularly impressive. Forwards Danny
Welbeck and Federico Macheda also did well.

• The club are through to the Carling Cup semi-finals and will meet rivals
Manchester City over two legs on 6 and 19 January.

• Wayne Rooney's hat-trick last weekend in a 4-1 win at Portsmouth took him
to ten goals for the season in the league. Dimitar Berbatov and Michael Owen
both have four goals to their name.

• Only Patrice Evra has started every one of the club's 14 top-flight
matches this campaign.

• Ryan Giggs has eight assists this season, more than any other United
player and leads the club with 47 crosses.

• At the back, Nemanja Vidic has made 16 defensive clearances and eight
defensive blocks. In contrast, Matthew Upson has 16 defensive clearances and
ten defensive blocks.

• Wayne Rooney has the most yellow cards of any United player with three
this season in all competitions. The only other Reds player with more than
one is Darren Fletcher on two.

• Manchester United's biggest triumph in east London was a 6-1 victory on 6
May 1967.

Team news

• Full team news to follow later on Friday.

Last meeting

• The teams met at the Boleyn Ground on Sunday 8 February 2009, with a
62nd-minute goal from Ryan Giggs the only difference between the two sides
in a 1-0 away win.

• The lineups were:

West Ham United: Green, Neill, Collins, Upson, Ilunga, Behrami (Tristan 87),
Parker, Noble (Savio 77), Collison, Cole, Di Michele
Subs not used: Lastuvka, Boa Morte, Kovac, Spector, Sears

Manchester United: Van der Sar, Rafael, Ferdinand, Vidic, O'Shea, Ronaldo,
Scholes, Carrick, Giggs, Tevez (Park 87), Berbatov
Subs not used: Foster, Nani, Welbeck, Fabio, Fletcher, Eckersley

Old boys

• West Ham United defender Jonathan Spector joined Manchester United as a
17-year-old in 2003. The United States international, who has a German
passport, spent two seasons at Old Trafford - making eight appearances for
the first team - before moving to Charlton Athletic on a season-long loan in
the summer of 2005. Spector left Manchester United for West Ham United in
June 2006 for an initial fee of £500,000.

• Manchester United have two former West Ham United players in their squad.
England defender Rio Ferdinand made 158 appearances for the club between May
1996 and November 2000, scoring two goals. Midfielder Michael Carrick scored
six goals in 159 appearances between July 1999 and May 2004.

• Among the other players who have represented both clubs are Roy Carroll,
Noel Cantwell, Luke Chadwick, Billy Grassam, Paul Ince, Ralph Milne,
Frederick Milnes, Frank O'Farrell, Stuart Pearson, Dave Sexton, Teddy
Sheringham and Raimond van der Gouw.

Head to head

Last six meetings (Premier League unless stated)

8 February 2009 - West Ham United 0-1 Manchester United
29 October 2008 - Manchester United 2-0 West Ham United
3 May 2008 - Manchester United 4-1 West Ham United
29 December 2007 - West Ham United 2-1 Manchester United
13 May 2007 - Manchester United 0-1 West Ham United
17 December 2006 - West Ham United 1-0 Manchester United

Overall record v Manchester United (all competitions) W 41 D 24 L 52

Next up

• West Ham United will travel to Birmingham City in the Barclays Premier
League on Saturday 12 December, kick-off at 3pm. Manchester United welcome
Aston Villa on the same day but will not get under way until 5.30pm.
However, before that they travel to VfB Wolfsburg on Tuesday for a UEFA
Champions League group-stage fixture.

General information

• Tickets for this fixture are now sold out. For details on getting to the
Boleyn Ground click here.

• Saturday's weather forecast is for a bright and sunny day with
temperatures peaking at 11C.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Captain Scott upbeat
WHUFC.com
Skipper Scott Parker is eager to lead West Ham United to victory over
Manchester United on Saturday
04.12.2009

Captain Scott Parker is absolutely determined to lead West Ham United to
victory over Manchester United this weekend. In a revealing interview with
Saturday's official matchday programme, Parker said everyone within the
Hammers camp was eager to build on the 5-3 win over Burnley last time out.
The England midfielder produced a man-of-the-match display against the
Clarets and, with Matthew Upson again absent with a hamstring problem, the
29-year-old will again wear the armband against the Red Devils. "I always
want to lead by example when I've got the armband on. I wouldn't say it
makes me try harder, but I am conscious of my role as captain and we all
knew it was a game we had to win," Parker said. "There were a lot of
positives to take out of the Burnley game and I think, at this present
moment, being positive is what we need to concentrate on. Whenever you play
Manchester United, you have to go into the game believing you can win,
otherwise they can outplay you."
In a wide-ranging interview, Parker talked about United's Michael Owen, who
he played alongside at Newcastle United. He also discussed his formative
years at south London club Valley Valiants, his short-lived television
advertising career, getting over his injury problems and the plight of his
former clubs Newcastle and Charlton Athletic.
Saturday's 84-page programme will also give fans an update on the work of
the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer Research UK, the charity founded by
Stephanie Moore MBE in 1993 to fight bowel cancer. A special feature
highlighting a fund-raising football tournament held at Bobby Moore's old
school, Tom Hood Community Science College, is also included.
Elsewhere in Saturday's packed edition, supporters can also catch up with
Academy graduates Michael Carrick and Rio Ferdinand, discover Luis Jimenez's
Dream Team and find out who Julien Faubert would invite to dinner as well as
hear from England manager Fabio Capello.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Poppy shirt thanks
WHUFC.com
The Royal British Legion are set for a big donation after supporters snapped
up the club's special poppy shirts
04.12.2009

West Ham United are pleased to announce that more than £16,000 has been
raised by fans for the Royal British Legion. The club auctioned off the 57
shirts produced for the first team for the match against Everton on 8
November as part of the commemoration of Remembrance Sunday. The
best-selling shirts belonged to the club's three England internationals.

Carlton Cole - £680
Rob Green - £670
Matthew Upson - £640

All proved popular though with each and every shirt going for a three-figure
sum. With payment coming through this week, the club will ship all shirts as
soon as possible and would once again like to thank all of those who took
part in the auction via eBay, including those who were unsuccessful.

West Ham United manager Gianfranco Zola said: "Thanks to everyone who took
part in this auction. It is fantastic that we have raised so much money. It
is important to always remember the past and the sacrifices made by others.
As a club, we are very proud to show our support."

Russell Thompson, The Royal British Legion's director of national events and
fundraising said: "I would like to thank West Ham for their kind support for
this year's Poppy Appeal.

"The theme of this year's Appeal has been about helping the Afghan
generation of the Armed Forces, their families - now and for the rest of
their lives. The money raised from these shirts will go to directly benefit
those who have fought and continue to fight for our country."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
All eyes on South Africa
WHUFC.com
A strong West Ham United contingent will be keeping a close eye on Friday
night's FIFA World Cup draw
03.12.2009

Several West Ham United players will be paying close attention when the FIFA
World Cup draw is held in South Africa on Friday night. The news that
England are one of eight seeds will have delighted Robert Green, Matthew
Upson and Carlton Cole. Fabio Capello's men cannot play against Spain or
Brazil in the group stage. A total of 32 nations are taking part and will be
drawn into eight groups of four during the Cape Town proceedings. The top
two from each group at the finals will progress to the knockout stage.
England could get the unseeded Portugal or France, however, depending on the
draw.

The eight seeds will all be in pot one, with the remaining three pots drawn
on regional boundaries. Pot two will have particular interest to Hammers
fans with Jonathan Spector's United States and Guille Franco's Mexico
involved. Pot three has the African and South American contingent while Pot
four features Valon Behrami's Switzerland. Franco and Behrami appeared at
the 2006 finals.

FIFA said: "Hosts South Africa will be automatically positioned as A1, the
other seeded teams will be drawn into the other groups B-H but will always
be in position '1' of their group. Groups will be drawn from A to H and the
positions in the group will be drawn for pots two to four.

"Geographical criteria will also be respected, meaning that no two teams
from the same confederation will be drawn in the same group (except European
teams, where a maximum of two will be in a group).

"For example, South Africa cannot play the African teams from pot three and
Argentina and Brazil cannot be drawn against the three remaining South
American teams."

The 2010 FIFA World Cup will be staged between 11 June and 11 July.

Pot 1 (seeds): South Africa, Brazil, Spain, Netherlands, Italy, Germany,
Argentina, England
Pot 2 (Asia, Oceania and North/Central America): Japan, South Korea, North
Korea, Australia, New Zealand, United States, Mexico, Honduras
Pot 3 (Africa and South America): Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria,
Algeria, Paraguay, Chile, Uruguay
Pot 4 (Europe): France, Portugal, Slovenia, Switzerland, Greece, Serbia,
Denmark, Slovakia

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Man Utd
BBC.co.uk

Barclays Premier League
Venue: Upton Park Date: Saturday, 5 December 2009 Kick-off: 1500 GMT
Coverage: BBC Sport website, BBC Radio 5 Live, local radio, Final Score &
highlights on Match of the Day

TEAM NEWS
West Ham are hoping England defender Matthew Upson can recover from a
hamstring injury. Carlton Cole and Valon Behrami (both knee) are definitely
out, but Kieron Dyer may feature after playing 75 minutes for the reserves
on Monday.

Manchester United could welcome back Edwin van der Sar after three games out
with a knee injury. But defenders Jonny Evans (calf) and John O'Shea (thigh)
look set to remain on the sidelines.

________________________________________
West Ham
Doubtful: Diamanti (thigh), Upson (hamstring)
Injured: Ashton (ankle), Behrami (knee), Boa Morte (knee), Cole (knee),
Davenport (leg)

Man Utd
Doubtful: Evans (calf), Fabio (groin), O'Shea (thigh), Van Der Sar (knee)
Injured: Ferdinand (calf), Hargreaves (knee)

MATCH PREVIEW
There have been more goals scored at Upton Park this season than at any
other Premier League ground. Gianfranco Zola's commitment to attacking
football has seen his side score in 11 consecutive matches, culminating in
putting five past Burnley last weekend. The concern for Hammers fans is at
the other end of the pitch - they have shipped eight goals in their last
three games and haven't kept a clean sheet since August. The Hammers'
brittle backline is sure to be closely examined by visitors Manchester
United, who head to Upton Park in confident mood and desperate to keep the
pressure on leaders Chelsea, who face a tricky away trip to Manchester City
later in the day.
United have struggled at West Ham in recent seasons, with two defeats in
their last three trips to east London. But the champions did the double over
Zola's men last season without conceding a goal. Sir Alex Ferguson has been
busy concentrating on the next generation of United first-teamers this week,
with a youthful side impressing against Tottenham in the Carling Cup
quarter-finals. Eighteen-year-old striker Federico Macheda has been tied to
a long-term deal, but the Old Trafford club have ended their interest in
Partizan Belgrade teenager Adem Ljajic.

MATCH FACTS
Head-to-head
• These sides have met on 117 previous occasions. Man Utd have won 52 to
West Ham's 41.

West Ham
• Gianfranco Zola's side started the season with clean sheets in two of
their opening three games. They have since conceded 24 goals in 11 league
matches.
• They have conceded at least two goals in nine of their last 10 Premier
League games.
• There have been more goals (30) at Upton Park than at any other Premier
League ground this season.
• If he plays, Mark Noble is set make his 100th league appearance for the
club.
Man Utd
• Manchester United are the only team in the Premier League who have not
dropped any points from a winning position in the league this season.
• United have won 12 Premier League away games in 2009, more than any other
side.
• Edwin van der Sar has saved 83% of all shots on target, a league high.
• The game is Sir Alex Ferguson's 1,300th in charge of the Red Devils.
LEADING GOALSCORERS

West Ham
Cole: 7 goals (7 league); Stanislas: 4 goals (2 league)

Man Utd
Rooney: 11 goals (10 league); Berbatov: 4 goals (4 league); Owen: 4 (2
league)

MATCH OFFICIALS
Referee: Peter Walton
Assistant referees: Stuart Burt & Shaun Procter-Green
Fourth official: Paul Taylor

LAST LEAGUE MATCH LINE-UPS
West Ham (W5-3 v Burnley, h): Green, Spector, Da Costa, Gabbidon, Ilunga,
Collison (Faubert 77), Kovac, Parker, Stanislas, Cole (Hines 46), Franco
(Jimenez 59). Subs Not Used: Kurucz, Noble, Nouble, Tomkins.
Man Utd (W4-1 v Portsmouth, a): Kuszczak, Neville, Brown, Vidic, Evra,
Fletcher, Carrick (Anderson 76), Scholes, Giggs, Valencia, Rooney. Subs Not
Used: Foster, Owen, Berbatov, Park, Nani, De Laet.

MOST RECENT MEETING
West Ham 0-1 Man Utd (8 February 2009)
West Ham scorer: Giggs 62

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Injury latest
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 2nd December 2009
By: Staff Writer

Carlton Cole is likely to be out of action until early February, it has been
confirmed.

A scan on the knee injury sustained during Saturday's 5-3 win over Burnley
revealed that the England striker had suffered ligament damage - an injury
that is likely to keep him sidelined for around six to eight weeks.

* Swiss midfielder Valon Behrami has undergone surgery this week and is
expected to be out of action until Christmas as a result. There is better
news regarding Matthew Upson however, with the club captain expected to
return in time for the trip to former club Birmingham on December 12th, if
not sooner.

* Also on the road to recovery are Kieron Dyer and Alessandro Diamanti, both
of whom are back training with the first team. Dyer, who featured for the
reserves at Birmingham earlier this week could feature against Manchester
United at the Boleyn this weekend although Diamanti may have to wait a week
later until the trip to St Andrews.

* Mark Noble, who was benched for last weekend's win over Burnley is also
back in contention. The young midfielder was sidelined with a calf injury
before contracting a virus. The 22-year-old former England under-21 could
replace Radoslav Kovac for this weekend's visit of the reigning league
champions.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Man Utd
Cole and Upson out for hosts while visitors set to make changes
By Richard Bailey Last updated: 4th December 2009
SSN

PREDICTIONS
skysports.com prediction: West Ham 1 Man Utd 3
Sky Bet odds: West Ham 6/1 Draw 3/1 Man Utd 1/2
One to watch: Zavon Hines

Manchester United are set to make a host of changes for their trip to West
Ham on Saturday after beating Tottenham 2-0 in the Carling Cup. The
Champions decided to turn to youth for their cup clash with the likes of
Ritchie de Laet, Darron Gibson, Gabriel Obertan, Danny Welbeck and Federico
Macheda all featuring. However all are expected to make way at Upton Park
this weekend with Gibson, who netted both goals against Spurs, entitled to
feel most aggrieved. Sir Alex Ferguson has a decision to make in the middle
of the park with all his players in that position fit and raring to go. Paul
Scholes and Darren Fletcher sat out of the match on Tuesday while Michael
Carrick was only introduced as a second-half substitute, making them all
available for the trip to the capital. Anderson could also come into
contention after a strong display against Harry Redknapp's men while the
impending return of Owen Hargreaves will only heighten Ferguson's options.
United will know that nothing less than a win will do at Upton Park as they
continue to try and cut Chelsea's five-point lead at the top. The Blues face
another tricky away-day, this time at Manchester City on Saturday, but the
champions will be all too aware of the ease with which Chelsea dispatched of
Arsenal at Emirates Stadium last week, meaning dropped points in East London
is not an option.
Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola will be looking to help out his former club
Chelsea by taking points off United and denting their title aspirations.
Zola's side have struggled for most of the season and sit just two points
off the relegation places. However a run of just one defeat in their last
six games has lifted spirits at the club. The hosts have also been boosted
by their recent home form with the club taking eight points from a possible
15 in their last five games at Upton Park, including a 2-2 draw with Arsenal
in October.

Team news

The Hammers' fire-power has been dealt a severe blow with the news that top
scorer Carlton Cole will be out for a number of weeks after injuring his
knee last week in the 5-3 win over Burnley. Midfielder Valon Behrami is also
out after it was revealed he will be missing for three weeks after minor
knee surgery. Key defender Matthew Upson also looks likely to sit out with
a hamstring problem while forward Alessandro Diamanti (hip) is a doubt.
Long-term absentees Calum Davenport (thigh), Dean Ashton (ankle) and Luis
Boa Morte (knee) are all still sidelined.

Tomasz Kuszczak will stand down in goal with Edwin Van der Sar now fully fit
following a collision with Tim Cahill in the 3-0 win over Everton a
fortnight ago.
However John O'Shea (thigh), Jonny Evans (ankle) and Fabio (groin) will all
sit out once more having failed to recover from their respective knocks.
Rio Ferdinand (back) is not expected back until Christmas while Hargreaves
(knees) has only recently returned to full training so the pair will not be
on show this weekend.

Possible starting XIs:

West Ham: Green, Spector, Gabbidon, Da Costa, Ilunga, Parker, Kovac,
Collison, Stanislas, Hines, Franco.

Man Utd: Van der Sar, Neville, Vidic, Brown, Evra, Giggs, Carrick, Fletcher,
Valencia, Rooney, Berbatov.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Is Kieron Dyer Finally Ready to Make a Major Contribution?
West Ham Till I Die

I remember reading that Kieron Dyer might have joined West Ham from Ipswich
Town in the 1990s! Apparently Redknapp had agreed personal terms with Dyer
and all that remained was to negotiate a transfer fee with Ipswich. That's
where the deal got de-railed, we in effect lost the player for the sake of
£500,000. Allegedly we bid £5m and Newcastle Utd came in with a counter bid
of £5.5m, which we failed to match. The rest, as they say, is history!

When he finally joined us in 2007-08, I viewed the move with some mixed
feelings. Yes, Dyer was a very talented England international midfielder,
blessed with lighting pace, excellent technique and the ability to play in a
variety of positions. However, he was also a player with a chequered injury
record during his time with Newcastle Utd.

There was no denying his ability and the valuable attributes that he could
bring to our first team squad. In addition, he appeared fit and in good
form, so there was no reason why he could not make a positive impact. In
cautiously welcoming the signing, I had assumed that Curbishley would pick &
choose his games and prioritise the PL match programme. I well remember
arguing before the fateful Bristol Rovers Carling Cup Tie that it was not
the type of match he should have played in. I was to be proven right, as he
sustained a double break of the leg playing against lower league opponents!

The injury although serious, was a clean break. With the right treatment
and rehabilitation there was no reason why he should not made a full
recovery within a reasonable time-scale. However, medical complications and
a variety of collateral pulls and strains delayed his return and then
continually kept him out of the first team frame. This must have been
extremely frustrating for the player. It certainly was for the fans, some
of whom become increasingly cynical about the player's prolonged
non-availability.

Personally, I never lost sight of the players ability and the attributes
that he could bring to the team. It was just frustrating that the best
efforts of the player and the medical team could not seem to secure the
necessary fitness to challenge for a regular first team place.

Dyer remains an outstanding talent, who can improve our first XI and
significantly strengthen the quality of our bench. His comeback game
against Stoke City Reserves was certainly very impressive, as he scored a
brace and provided a number of assists. In that match Dyer played in the
hole, but has the versatility to play right across midfield or even as an
auxiliary striker. Although now 30 years of age, the injuries do not seem
to have undermined Dyer's pace and, in addition, he has added greater
experience to his many other fine qualities as a player.

Dyer now appears fit and in good form. And there is a suggestion that he
could be in the selection mix for the forthcoming home fixture with Man Utd.
Maybe, just maybe, now is the time for him to start bringing his undoubted
ability to bare and make a major positive contribution to turning our season
around?

SJ Chandos.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
JACK COLLISON: IT'S MAKE OR BREAK
Daily Star
4th December 2009
By Daily Star Reporter

JACK COLLISON admits December's games will make or break West Ham's Premier
League survival hopes. The Hammers are one place above the drop zone and
could be without injured England pair Matt Upson and Carlton Cole for the
rest of 2009. They entertain Chelsea and Manchester United before
Christmas, with trips to Birmingham and Bolton. And midfielder Collison, 21,
said: "We've got some massive games coming up. But hopefully we can get a
few points and start looking forward, rather than behind us."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Thursday, December 3

Daily WHUFC News - 3rd December 2009

Jack helps Kick It Out
WHUFC.com
Jack Collison met three local youngsters to show the continued support for the Kick It Out campaign
02.12.2009

This year's Kick It Out campaign was a huge success and West Ham United showed their support by proudly wearing the campaign t-shirts in training and in the warm-up before the game with Arsenal.

In an effort to spread the message further among the community, club Kick It Out ambassador Jack Collison met three boys from the Canon Palmer Catholic school at Chadwell Heath to present them with the t-shirts as a gift to the school. The three boys, Duncan Whitfield, Nick Hopkins and Eden Afum, are all year ten students and proud members of the school's successful football team.

"Meeting the boys was great we've supplied them with the t-shirts and information about the campaign, hoping that they will take the awareness away with them to others of their age in the community," Collison said. "Anything we can do to raise awareness of racism and educate people positively can only be a good thing."

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Christmas cracker coaching days
WHUFC.com
Treat your kids to a Christmas coaching course with the West Ham United Community Sports Trust
02.12.2009

Bookings are now being taken for the 'Christmas Cracker' football coaching days that will be held at four venues across east London on Monday 21 and Tuesday 22 December.

The coaching days - open to children and young people of all abilities aged 5-14 - will be delivered by FA qualified coaches and will include technical skills sessions, fun games and competitions in the mornings, and structured games and match play in the afternoons. In addition to the coaching, children and young people attending the coaching days will receive a free Christmas gift from the West Ham United club shop (worth £7) along with the chance to win four tickets to West Ham United v Portsmouth on Boxing Day.

The courses will be held at the following venues and will run from 10am-3pm each day.

Monday 21 December 2009
1. Chigwell Chigwell Metropolitan Police Ground £15
2. Upminster Gaynes School £15

Tuesday 22 December 2009
1. Newham Beckton £15
2. South Hornchurch Brittons School £15

For full course and venue details and booking information please click to download a course flyer and an application form

Alternatively please contact the West Ham United Community Sports Trust office on 0207 473 7720 to complete your booking by telephone.

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Hines hopeful, Cole update
WHUFC.com
Zavon Hines could feature on Saturday with Carlton Cole's injury confirmed although surgery is not required
02.12.2009

Zavon Hines is ready to step into Carlton Cole's boots should he be called upon for the weekend visit of Manchester United Cole is sidelined for Saturday's game at the Boleyn Ground with the knee ligament injury he picked up in the 5-3 win against Burnley last weekend. Hines could deputise alongside the in-form Guille Franco, with Cole set to be out for a number of weeks. Cole will not need surgery on his right knee though and, having being closely assessed in recent days, will start his rehab with the aim of being back as soon as possible. His absence will mean a chance for others to shine, not least Hines who has made great strides this season and showed no fear against Liverpool earlier this season. "I would love to score against Manchester United," he said. "It's a big game, when Arsenal came here we were all up for it."
The 2009/10 season has been something of a breakthrough for Hines, including his first Premier League goal - a 93rd-minute winner against Aston Villa - and some lively displays. He has amassed a dozen first-team appearances to date. The striker, who also scored a brace on his England Under-21 debut on 9 October, said he can feel himself getting better with every game. "Every time I come on I feel happy to be honest because not a lot of people are in my position. Obviously I work hard and work on being more confident and trying to play my best for the team."
The 20-year-old lays much of the success of his development to playing alongside Cole and the other more experienced players every day in training.
"It's good learning from Carlton and Mark Noble, obviously they're different in a lot of ways but they're both good at what they do. Learning more from them obviously helps my game and helps me get better."
West Ham United are going through something of a purple patch in front of goal at present, averaging 2.25 goals per game over the past two months, while also finding the back of the net for in every one of their last eleven matches. It is at the other end of the pitch, however, that Hines knows they must sharpen up. "Obviously as a team we'd like to keep a clean sheet, but its just one of those things and we'll have to keep working hard on it and keep scoring goals."

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Injured Carlton Cole to miss crucial West Ham matches
BBC.co.uk

West Ham and England striker Carlton Cole will be sidelined for "a number of weeks" with a knee ligament injury. The 26-year-old looks set to miss several matches, including the visit of Manchester United on Saturday. But a scan has revealed he will not require surgery after being injured in the 5-3 home win over Burnley. "Having been closely assessed in recent days, he will start his rehab with the aim of being back as soon as possible," said a West Ham spokesman. Cole is a reported £20m target for several Premier League clubs in the January transfer window. He was involved in a collision with Burnley goalkeeper Brian Jensen in Saturday's match. The England striker scored his seventh league goal of the season from the penalty spot, despite receiving earlier treatment for the knock. West Ham have declined to give exact details of Cole's injury, or the likely lay-off period for centre-back Matthew Upson, who injured his hamstring in training a week ago. Upson had a scan before the Burnley defeat, but the result has not been made public. It is a particular blow for West Ham to lose Cole, who was signed from Chelsea in July 2006, after he had just returned from a hamstring strain against Aston Villa on 4 November. After Cole, West Ham's highest league scorer this season is Mexican Guillermo Franco, who has netted three times. West Ham, who lie in 17th position, have some tough matches in the remainder of 2009 as they attempt to move clear of the relegation zone. The home match against Manchester United is followed by trips to Birmingham and Bolton, home games against Chelsea and Portsmouth, and an away fixture at Tottenham.

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No surgery for injured Cole
Striker still facing spell on sidelines
Last updated: 2nd December 2009
SSN

West Ham have revealed that Carlton Cole will not require a knee operation but is still set to be sidelined for a 'number of weeks'. The striker suffered an injury in the 5-3 victory over Burnley and had to be substituted at half-time. He damaged ligaments but the problem is not serious enough for him to need to go under the knife and the Hammers are hopeful he will return quickly. "Cole will not need surgery on his right knee and, having been closely assessed in recent days, will start his rehab with the aim of being back as soon as possible," read a statement on the club's official website. This weekend's match against United precedes crucial games at Birmingham and Bolton, and home fixtures against Chelsea and Portsmouth. It will come as a major blow to lose Cole for a significant period, with the England international already having netted seven goals this season. Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola is also set to be without Switzerland midfielder Valon Behrami for around three weeks after undergoing minor surgery on a knee injury, while defender Matthew Upson is struggling with a hamstring problem.

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LEAGUE OF INJUSTICE - ARTICLE THIRTEEN: WEST HAM v BURNLEY
West Ham v Burnley
SportingPreview.com

I suppose at 5-0 down, the officials and perhaps the commentators took pity on Burnley. But for correctness - and as goal difference could be vital at the end of the season - was I the only one who thought that Steven Fletcher's first goal was offside? I ran it back on a few occasions to see if my initial thoughts were right and, unlike his second goal where he times his run to perfection, Fletcher was ahead of the defender when the ball was played in. So it's 5-2 to the Hammers. Verdict: 5-2 to West Ham instead of 5-3

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West Ham United in talks to sign World Cup winner Luca Toni
Carlton Cole injury leaves Hammers short of strikers
Toni has fallen out with Bayern's manager, Louis van Gaal
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 2 December 2009 20.33 GMT

Luca Toni has fallen out with the Bayern Munich manager Louis van Gaal and has said he wants to leave. West Ham United are in advanced talks with the Bayern Munich striker Luca Toni about bringing the Italian World Cup winner to Upton Park in next month's transfer window. Any move may be dependent on how soon Carlton Cole returns from injury. The England striker limped out of West Ham's 5-3 win over Burnley at Upton Park on the weekend at half-time after suffering knee ligament damage, having earlier scored a seventh goal of the season.
Initial reports suggested he may be ruled out for four months. Yet after these were scaled down to around six weeks, the club's website confirmed tonight that, though Cole will miss Manchester United's visit on Saturday, the 25-year-old, "having being closely assessed in recent days, will start his rehab soon".
Yet even if Cole does return over the coming month, Gianfranco Zola, the West Ham manager, may still move for Toni, with the club having engaged in talks with the player and his representatives for the past two weeks. As reported in the Guardian, the 32-year-old was a summer target for Zola, who is a friend of the former Fiorentina centre-forward.
Two years ago Toni finished his debut season at Bayern as the Bundesliga's top scorer with 24 goals. Yet, despite collecting 14 more in 25 league appearances last year – which allowed him to lead Munich's scoring charts for consecutive seasons – in a campaign disrupted by an achilles tendon injury, Toni fell out of favour with Louis van Gaal, once the Dutchman became head coach in July.
Toni has since featured only occasionally and his rift with Van Gaal became public last week when he criticised him. He said of their relationship that it "was good as over", having had "problems" with him for months.
After Toni was subsequently fined €25,000 (£22,600) for the outburst he closed the door on any possible future at Munich when he said: "I have no problems with the club and fans but the coach prefers other players. Fortunately soon the market will re-open. I will talk with the club because I don't like this situation."
In January Toni will have around 18 months remaining of his four-year deal, which may make any potential fee nominal, should West Ham decide to firm up their interest with Bayern.

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Carlton Cole still in World Cup limbo as West Ham face anxious wait over striker's injury verdict
By Sportsmail Reporter
Last updated at 10:23 AM on 02nd December 2009
Daily Mail

West Ham face an anxious wait to discover whether Carlton Cole will be out for the rest of the season with the England striker left to sweat over his World Cup dream. The Hammers have sent Cole to see a specialist after the in-form star suffered knee ligament damage following a nasty collision with Clarets goalkeeper Brian Jensen and was replaced at half-time in last weekend's 5-3 victory over Burnley. Despite initial fears that the 26-year-old could miss the next four months, the club are said to be hopeful that they will receive a positive verdict and that Cole may only be sidelined between five and six weeks.
However doubt remains over whether the former Chelsea academy product may require surgery on his injured knee and, if so, his chances of making Fabio Capello's England World Cup squad for South Africa would almost definitely be over. Meanwhile, Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola knows he has a difficult task on his hands to restructure his fragile defence after captain Matthew Upson was ruled out ahead of Saturday's showdown with champions Manchester United. The England defender is left nursing a troublesome hamstring problem and the Italian looks set to stick with the pairing of Manuel Da Costa and Danny Gabbidon. 'We are looking fragile at the back. I know we have to defend better,' he said. 'We know we are leaking goals but it is not only a defensive problem but also the midfield are not covering the defence. 'We know the problem and have been working all week to sort it out. We will see some improvements.'

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Tevez reveals Arsenal move discussion
Sport.co.uk
Author: Andrew Allen
Posted on:02 December 2009 - 09:28

Carlos Tevez has revealed that Thierry Henry told him to join Arsenal while he was struggling for form at West Ham United during his initial loan period in the Premier League. The Argentine international eventually helped drag the Hammers from the relegation zone before spending two years on loan with Manchester United. Having won two league titles and a Champions League medal in Moscow, the diminutive frontman opted to leave Old Trafford to join the Manchester City revolution under Mark Hughes. "When I was left on the bench at West Ham and we were playing Arsenal, Thierry Henry bumped into me in the car park afterwards," Tevez revealed to the Daily Mirror. "He said, 'Hey, what are you doing here? Come and play with us - it's incredible that you can't get a game in this team.'"
Speaking about his current lack of first team minutes at Eastlands, Tevez maintained that he had overcome similar situations at past clubs and that competition was not something of which he was afraid. "Having got this far in my career, fighting for my place doesn't bother me. I'm used to it. I've had it at all the big clubs I've played for," he said. "At Boca, Corinthians, West Ham, United and City, it's normal for there to be lots of good strikers. I never let my head drop. The harder the challenge, the more effort I put in to win a place. That's what I am doing here."

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Scott Parker wants West Ham to take responsibility
West Ham face an uncertain future both on and off the field but Scott Parker, outstanding in Saturday's 5-3 win over Burnley, is taking responsibility for the club's safety.
Telegraph.co.uk
By John Ley
Published: 10:39PM GMT 02 Dec 2009

"The senior players take it upon ourselves as we have young players in the squad that are new to it," said Parker. "We are all trying to do our best, chip in, and we just need to keep going and be positive. After a 5-3 victory we need to do that. "I think that at the moment we are a little bit nervy, you can see that at times in our play. Last week was the same, we were 2-0 up at Hull and let them back into the game and then they were 3-2 within 20 minutes. "So there is something there with us at the moment and we need to be strong, concentrate on the positive things. Obviously there is a little underlying problem which we need to sort."
"We have lost some key players like Lucas Neill and James Collins, senior players who know what the Premier League is about. Lucas was good in the dressing room and there are players in the dressing room who have to step up. Sometimes you need a player to deliver a rollicking. But players are different, they react in different ways, some need an arm around and some need a rollicking. That is where the manager gets it bang on - that is what a good manager is - he knows what to do with certain players and how not to."
West Ham face a difficult test on Saturday with Manchester United the visitors ahead of games in which they are expected to pick up points. "We have Man United and then Bolton and Birmingham which are big games for us, we have to try and pick up points."

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WEST HAM BOSS GIANFRANCO ZOLA WANTS TO BRING ANTON FERDINAND BACK FROM SUNDERLAND
Daily Express
Thursday December 3,2009
By Niall Hickman Have your say(0)

WEST Ham manager Gianfranco Zola wants to bring back central defender Anton Ferdinand, who has lost his first-team place at Sunderland. Spurs have also shown an interest in Ferdinand while other Premier League clubs – Fulham, Wolves and Birmingham City – are also on the look-out for a centre-half in January. Ferdinand, above, is out of favour at the Stadium of Light after the arrivals of John Mensah and Paulo Da Silva and although manager Steve Bruce insists he can win back his place, he would listen to offers of £7 million. Ferdinand, 24, only left West Ham 16 months ago in an £8m deal but he has lost his place after being first-choice for the first three months of the season. Bruce said: "He has every right not to be happy because he is not in the team due to the form of Mensah and Da Silva, who have played exceptionally well and Michael Turner too, but that competition for places has got to be there when you play at a big club like this. "I wouldn't expect him to be happy, it's normal. He has just got to get on with it and wait for his chance to come again and then make it very, very difficult for me to leave him out."
Ferdinand was linked with a deadline-day move to White Hart Lane last summer with Alan Hutton moving in the opposite direction. Ferdinand's possible departure is unlikely to be the only change at the Stadium of Light, where Sunderland have enjoyed a promising start despite mediocre form away from home. Bruce is keen to land Aston Villa striker Emile Heskey and Ipswich Town's highly-rated youngster Connor Wickham. Striker Kenwyne Jones has recovered from a dead leg and should be fit to face Fulham on Sunday.

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West Ham confident keeping hold of Upson
03.12.09 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham United are confident of keeping hold of skipper Matthew Upson. The England international has been linked with Manchester City and Tottenham ahead of the January market. However, the Daily Star says West Ham's owners have insisted they do not have to sell £10m-rated Upson in January despite the club's financial problems.

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Dyer to make West Ham comeback against Man Utd
02.12.09 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham United midfielder Kieron Dyer could make his comeback this weekend against Manchester United. The injury-prone midfielder came through 75 minutes of a 2-1 reserve loss against Birmingham on Monday. And the growing sick list at Upton Park means Dyer is set to be called up on Saturday to play in his first game since September - a daunting task against the Premier League champions, says The Sun. The former England star, 30, has started just FOUR league games since former manager Alan Curbishley paid Newcastle £6million for him in 2007. Monday's game was his second outing in the stiffs in a week.

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West Ham striker Cole sweats on surgery decision
02.12.09 | tribalfootball.com

West Ham United striker Carlton Cole is yet to learn if he will face surgery on his injured knee. Surgery would rule Cole, 26, out for the rest of the season, ending his chances of going to South Africa, says The Sun. The Hammers top scorer with seven goals this season, was taken off at half-time in the 5-3 thumping of Burnley at Upton Park on Saturday.

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Stanislas delighted scoring in West Ham victory
02.12.09 | tribalfootball.com

Junior Stanislas was delighted to get on the scoresheet in West Ham United's 5-3 win over Burnley. Stanislas, who turned 20 on Thursday, told WHUTV that he and his team-mates were disappointed at conceding three late goals to the Clarets, having earlier romped into a 5-0 lead. "I'd never played in a game like that before," he said. "There were a lot of goals. There were a lot of goals last week [in the 3-3 draw at Hull City], but this time we've obviously won the game so it's good for us. "I wasn't even thinking about my birthday when I was out there, because that's gone a couple of days ago. Obviously the boys just dug in and wanted to win. "Scoring five goals and going five-nil up and then conceding three goals is obviously disappointing, but we haven't won in a while or won that often and we picked up the three points, so that was the main thing. "At the same time, everybody in the dressing room was disappointed that we conceded the three late goals, as well, because we were hoping for a clean sheet."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Wednesday, December 2

Daily WHUFC News - 2nd December 2009

Franco prepared for United
WHUFC.com
With the fans singing his name after another West Ham United goal, Guillermo
Franco is more than content
02.12.2009

Guille Franco has said he is living a dream at West Ham United and cannot
wait to run out in front of the fans again next weekend against Manchester
United.

The striker has already won the hearts of the Boleyn Ground faithful with
his all-action displays in the Hammers attack. He scored his third goal in
six starts for the club in last Saturday's 5-3 defeat of Burnley and left
the field on the hour to a huge ovation. With the fans singing his name, the
departing Franco returned the acclaim by turning to clap all four corners of
the stadium.

"The truth is I am very happy," he said. "West Ham have fantastic supporters
and of course I am happy to be playing and doing a good job so soon after
arriving here. The fact they are singing my name is really great and I am
glad I could give them a goal. They have been fantastic to me. I say to them
thank you very much. That is all I can say as I think they know what it
means to me to be here."

Franco played against Manchester United when Villarreal went to Old Trafford
for a UEFA Champions League encounter in September last year and earned a
fine goalless draw. A lone striker who hit the post in a close contest, he
was not overawed then - he regularly plays in front of 100,000 fans when
FIFA World Cup finalists Mexico play at the Azteca Stadium - and will not be
this weekend.

"Manchester United is a big game, a good test for us. I have played at Old
Trafford and I know what to expect. They are a strong team, but I think it
is a good match for us to play. We will have no fear and will approach it
with the right attitude. They are a strong team but we have to believe we
can win. I know Wayne Rooney scored a hat-trick last weekend and we will
have to watch him."

The 33-year-old added: "I love life my here in London. It is a dream for me,
it is very special for me to be here. I am enjoying it so much and want to
bring the team and the fans more points. We want to continue in this way and
get more wins."

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Sunday service in stores
WHUFC.com
Christmas shoppers will be able to head to the Stadium store over the next
two Sundays
02.12.2009

The West Ham United club store at the Boleyn Ground will be opening on the
next two Sundays to allow shoppers to stock up on their favourite festive
gifts.

With the Lakeside store normally open all over the weekend, the Stadium
store will follow suit on Sunday 6 and Sunday 13 December. Opening hours
will be between 1pm and 5pm, with many great present ideas to be found.
There is something for everyone, young and old, so why not head along next
Sunday to make sure it is a claret and blue Christmas.

Also, anyone interested in ordering one of the special Katy Perry-inspired
basques - as seen on the MTV Europe Music Awards earlier this month - should
contact the store. The unique underwear has proved very popular and is
likely to prove a popular Christmas or Valentine's Day gift.

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Dyer pleased with improvement
WHUFC.com
A positive second half showing from the reserves left manager Alex Dyer
happy
01.12.2009

Alex Dyer was pleased with his reserve side's much-improved performance in
the second half of Monday night's 2-1 defeat at Birmingham City.

The vastly more experienced home side dominated much of the play in the
opening 45 minutes and went in at the interval two goals to the good thanks
to strikes from Jake Jervis and Damien Johnson. West Ham were a far greater
threat in the second period, however, and got back into the match through a
penalty that Frank Nouble won and converted. However, the visitors could not
quite find an equaliser as they tasted defeat for the first time in three
matches.

"In the second half they played more as a team and played more for one
another," Dyer said. "Frank got a goal back from a penalty that he won
himself. I thought that once we got the goal we could have had a result but
it wasn't to be.

"I was pleased with the second half performance as we worked hard and showed
that we learnt a little bit from the first half."

Dyer, whose side had gone into the game on a the back of a 5-2 victory over
Stoke City last week, attributes the turnaround to some open discussions in
the dressing room at half-time.

"We went in and ironed over a few things and they responded, which was
pleasing. They listened to what we had to say and took it on board.

"The performance second half was a lot better but they had given themselves
a mountain to climb as Birmingham are an experienced side. They had a few
senior boys who knew what they were doing and had played the game a long
time.

"But for us it was a good learning curve as we played well against Stoke and
if they want to go on to that next level that we always talk about,
consistency is the key."

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Double joy for Junior
WHUFC.com
Junior Stanislas told WHUTV he was happy to mark his birthday with a goal in
the 5-3 victory over Burnley
01.12.2009

Junior Stanislas insisted there was still a lot of work to be done after
celebrating his 20th birthday with a goal in the 5-3 Barclays Premier League
victory over Burnley. The winger netted the Hammers' second in a
thrill-a-minute contest at the Boleyn Ground, taking his tally to an
impressive nine in 29 appearances for the club. However, Stanislas, who
turned 20 on Thursday, told WHUTV that he and his team-mates were
disappointed at conceding three late goals to the Clarets, having earlier
romped into a 5-0 lead. "I'd never played in a game like that before," he
said. "There were a lot of goals. There were a lot of goals last week [in
the 3-3 draw at Hull City], but this time we've obviously won the game so
it's good for us. "I wasn't even thinking about my birthday when I was out
there, because that's gone a couple of days ago. Obviously the boys just dug
in and wanted to win."Scoring five goals and going five-nil up and then
conceding three goals is obviously disappointing, but we haven't won in a
while or won that often and we picked up the three points, so that was the
main thing. "At the same time, everybody in the dressing room was
disappointed that we conceded the three late goals, as well, because we were
hoping for a clean sheet."
Having starred in two FA Cup third-round ties against Chelsea during a loan
spell at Southend United last season, Stanislas is now taking aim at another
'Big Four' club in the shape of Manchester United, who visit east London
next Saturday.

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Birmingham date change
WHUFC.com
The visit of Birmingham City to the Boleyn Ground in February will now take
place a day later
01.12.2009

The Barclays Premier League game with Birmingham City at the Boleyn Ground
has been put back a day to Wednesday 10 February 2010. The match has been
moved as Birmingham's previous game has been chosen for live television
coverage and will now be played on Sunday 7 February. Kick-off will be at
7.45pm

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Five of the best
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 1st December 2009
By: Staff Writer

So it's our old friends Arsenal once again in the FA Cup.

To get into the spirit of things, we decided to pick our favourite five FA
Cup goals against the Gunners. Given the lack of recorded material relating
to our earlier meetings - which include a memorable 6-0 thrashing of the
north Londoners back in 1946 - our choice was limited to the more recent
encounters. Still, some very memorable moments to mull over.

Where are they now?

Alan Dickens
Plaistow born Dickens made 231 appearances for United between 1982 and 1989.
Having failed to strike a rapport with the Boleyn faithful - mostly for not
being as good as Trevor Brooking, who he succeeded - he swapped east for
west, joining Chelsea. Spells in the lower leagues followed as Dickens'
career petered out and he left the game to become a black cab driver, a job
he now combines with his role as first team Coach for Barking FC.

Leroy Rosenior
Leroy spent four years at the Boleyn making over 50 appearances - but none
more memorable than when he became the unlikeliest of heroes in that FA Cup
tie in 1989. Having worked his way round several London clubs Rosenior moved
to the south west where he ended his playing days, before embarking upon a
career in management. He managed four clubs - Gloucester City, Merthyr
Tydil, Torquay (twice) and Brentford before calling a hiatus on a blossoming
career.

Alan Taylor
A real rags to riches story, Taylor left his mark on football in the 1974/75
season when he scored in every round - including a brace in the final
against Fulham - as the Irons won the Cup for the first time since 1964. His
career peaked the following season when he scored 13 goals and made a brief
appearance in the Cup Winners Cup Final before a series of injuries saw him
lose his place in the squad. Taylor moved to Norwich in 1979 and now owns a
newsagents in the City.

John Hartson
Signed by Harry Redknapp from Arsenal for £3.2million in what was one of the
former manager's shrewdest piece of business, the fiery Welshman became West
Ham's most prolific hitman since Geoff Hurst in 1997. Hartson scored 33
goals in 73 appearances before moving to Wimbledon - remember them? - for a
then-record £7.5million. A successful career at both domestic and
international level ended in 2007 before he was diagnosed with cancer
earlier this year. Having undergone emergency surgery Hartson is said to be
recovering well.

Sir Trevor Brooking MBE CBE
A one-club man, Brooking is one of the most celebrated players in the club's
history and rightfully takes his place alongside legendary names such as
Watson, Moore, Hurst and Bonds. A successful playing career - he won two FA
Cups and played in both Cup Winners Cup and League Cup finals whilst
featuring (albeit briefly) for England in the 1982 World Cup Finals -
preceeded an even more successful career once Brooking had hung up his
boots. He has been both manager and a director of West Ham United, a
director of a binding company (Colbrook), head of Sport England, Director of
Football Development at the FA and a TV pundit.

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West Ham United avoid hammer blow over accounts
Delay means rivals will not know situation before January
Matt Scott
The Guardian, Tuesday 1 December 2009

West Ham United have delayed filing their accounts again by taking advantage
of a loophole that has given them three months' grace. The club's accounts
to May 2009 had been due at Companies House last week but they instead
submitted a form that gives them extra time. It is the third time the
Hammers have used the device since the collapse of the business empire
belonging to their former owner, Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson. The club's
financial position remains opaque and were it not for the injection of a
seven-figure sum in working capital from their Icelandic owner, Straumur,
the latest development would have set alarm bells ringing over West Ham's
cash flow.
In January, amid uncertainty about what compensation would be due to
Sheffield United over the Carlos Tevez saga, the club's auditors refused to
sign off their 2008 accounts, leading to them being 15 months out of date by
the time they emerged in September. Since then there has been added pressure
from other difficult-to-quantify liabilities. The club is taking legal
advice over an appeal against Alan Curbishley's successful claim for unfair
dismissal, which could amount to more than £3m. The uncertainty over Dean
Ashton's injured ankle, which could lead to him retiring from the game, is
also likely to have contributed to the situation.
West Ham will hope that by the time their 2009 accounts are published, in
February, any off-pitch surprises will be behind them. At least, come
January, they will not have demonstrated to circling Premier League vultures
just how bad things have become.

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Carlton Cole to see specialist as West Ham hope for swift return
Striker may be on the sidelines for only five or six weeks
Hammers will also be without Matthew Upton for United game
David Hytner
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 1 December 2009 21.26 GMT

West Ham United have sent Carlton Cole to see a specialist in order to
discover how long he will be out with knee ligament damage. The club is
hopeful that the injury is not as serious as was first feared and is likely
to mean five or six weeks on the sidelines rather than four months. Cole
suffered the problem during the first half of Saturday's 5-3 home win over
Burnley. He played on and scored a 43rd- minute penalty, his seventh goal of
an encouraging season, but he was unable to reappear for the second half. He
has undergone scans but the club needs the specialist's opinion before they
will be able to confirm how long Cole is to be out. West Ham play Manchester
United at Upton Park on Saturday, and they will also be without Matthew
Upson, who has not yet recovered from hamstring trouble, and Valon Behrami,
who has had keyhole surgery to his knee cartilage and will be unavailable
for three weeks. Kieron Dyer, though, came through 75 minutes for the
reserves against Birmingham City last night and is expected to be named
among the substitutes, while Mark Noble, James Tomkins and Alessandro
Diamanti believe that they are fit enough to feature.

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WEST HAM: Dyer comes through unscathed against Birmingham
11:05am Tuesday 1st December 2009
Guardian Series

KIERON DYER enjoyed a another successful outing for West Ham's reserves
during their 2-1 defeat at the hands of Birmingham City on Monday. The
midfielder came through the game unscathed, prompting suggestions that he
may be included in Gianfranco Zola's squad for the visit of Manchester
United on Saturday. A largely inexperienced Hammers side lined up against
the Blues, with Terry Dixon resuming his partnership with Frank Nouble up
front, after the pair impressed during last week's 5-2 demolition of Stoke
City. However, first half goals from Jake Jervis and a deflected Damien
Johnson effort put Birmingham 2-0 up at the break. Nouble hauled West Ham
back into the game when he went over in the area under a challenge from
Johnson before dusting himself off to convert the spot-kick. However, Alex
Dyer's side were not able to find the all-important second goal.

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West Ham hopeful Carlton Cole's knee injury is not as bad as first feared
West Ham United are hopeful that Carlton Cole will be out for only four to
five weeks after the striker underwent a scan on his injured knee on Monday.

Telegraph.co.uk
By Jason Burt
Published: 7:30AM GMT 01 Dec 2009

The club played down claims that the 26 year-old would be ruled out for up
to four months after he damaged ligaments in the 5-3 victory over Burnley on
Saturday. Although the initial prognosis is hopeful, the scan results are
being analysed, which has led to an anxious wait for manager Gianfranco
Zola. Cole is an important player to his plans, having scored seven goals
this season. West Ham have also made it clear that they have no intention of
selling Cole.
The striker recovered quickly from a hamstring strain which had ruled him
out of England's recent friendly against Brazil. He will hope for another
reasonably swift return to ensure he does not jeopardise his World Cup hopes
or West Ham's prospects of remaining in the Premier League. However, even in
the best-case scenario he will not play until the new year, which rules him
out of at least six league matches and the third round of the FA Cup, at
home to Arsenal. "It's his right knee. He hit his knee and twisted it a
little bit," Zola said after Saturday's game. "If it's ligaments then, yes,
it could be a while. Everybody knows how important Carlton is for us." West
Ham are also likely to be without midfielder Valon Behrami for three weeks
with the Swiss international due to undergo surgery on a knee injury to
rectify a cartilage problem. Matthew Upson, who missed the Burnley game with
a hamstring strain, should return this weekend. The problem for Zola is that
although he does not have to sell in the January transfer window, neither is
he expected to have funds available to recruit. Kieron Dyer was scheduled to
play for the reserves last night as he attempts to regain fitness.
Meanwhile, West Ham announced on Monday that they have submitted planning
permission for a new training ground based at Rush Green. The club already
own the 29-acre site, which is two miles from their current facility at
Chadwell Heath, Essex. The proposals were submitted to Havering Council and
a decision is expected early next year.

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West Ham to build new training complex at Rush Green
Published 23:00 30/11/09 By Mirror Football
The Mirror

West Ham want to build a new training ground at Rush Green. They have
applied to Havering Council for planning permission after buying the 29-acre
site two miles from their current Chadwell Heath complex. A decision is
expected early next year and if they get the go-ahead, boss Gianfranco Zola
and his squad will get state-of-the-art training facilities. Club chief
executive Scott Duxbury called it "a major step forward."

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More Ruthless in Front of Goal, But ….
West Ham Till I Die

Conceding those three dodgy second half goals was hardly the professionalism
that I was looking for prior to the match. Some might say that we switched
off after our fifth goal, but personally I think that we suffered from both
Cole and then Franco going off. With their exit we lost our ability to hold
up the ball and retain possession in Burnley's half. Consequently, the ball
kept going right back down our end, putting increased pressure on our make
shift defence.

We also started defending too deep and the midfield did not provide the back
four with sufficient cover. Burnley's three goals were almost identical,
with two from wide left and the other one coming from wide right positions.
For the first, Eagles was given far too much time and space on the ball by
Spector and Gabbidon. Why did they not push him wide or, better still, one
make the challenge while the other doubled up on him? The truth is that
Eagles should never have got the cross into the box in the first place and
once he did either Da Costa or Illunga should have cleared it.

For the second, Spector again failed to stop the cross and Da Costa should
probably have intercepted the subsequent ball in to the box. For the third,
they clinically carved open our defence on the right side and there was a
total failure to pick up Eagles on the edge of the box. Zola is quite
right to state that we must defend higher up the pitch and the midfield must
provide better cover for the back four. For example, it would be an
interesting exercise to plot Kovac's covering position for all three goals?
I think that itis fair to state that, at the moment, we are falling down on
the basic abc of defending, rather than the the xyz!

But enough of the down side of life at planet Upton Park! What about the
positives from the Burnley match?

For a start, I was far more impressed with the quality of our finishing.
The first goal was superb, Parker's quick free kick reminded one of Bobby
Moore's quick thinking to find Geoff Hurst for the equaliser in the 1966
World Cup Final. Equally impressive was Collison's well timed run and
finish. Stanislas buried his chance with skill from an acute angle. And if
Parker bought Moore to mind in creating the first, then there was shades of
Hurst about Franco's near post run and header. That was a classic West Ham
move in the Greenwood era and Hurst was its greatest exponent. I have often
wondered why the near post run is not used more often in the contemporary
game. Because when it is done right it is very difficult to defend! With
his recent near post goals against Sunderland and Burnley, we obvious have
a brand new exponent of this particular attacking move in the form of
Guillermo Franco.

Apart from his goal, Franco's all-round play was excellent, particulary his
retention of the ball, vision and passing. Parker's performance in midfield
was Herculean in its magnitude. High praise indeed, but no over-estimation.
He was everywhere during the game, breaking up attacks one minute and
surging forward the next. He must surely be playing the best football of
his career at the moment.

Stanislas' development is also worthy of note. Whilst admittedly, he could
improve on the defensive side of his game, offensively he is shaping up very
well. That was Junior's fourth league and cup goal of the season and that
ability to finish, as well as his pace and skill on the ball, promise much
for the future.

In fact, the West Ham goal scoring statistics for the season, as a whole,
illustrate that goals are starting to come from a variety of positions
across the pitch. So far this season, the following players have scored the
specified number of league and cup goals:

Cole (7), Stanislas (4), Franco (3), Diamanti (2), Collison (2), Upson (2),
Noble (2), Hines (2), Illunga (1) Jimenez (1) Da Costa (1)

That's 11 different scorers, with three strikers, five midfielders and three
defenders adding to our tally. That's 27 goals in total for the season
and in, terms of the league, we have a very respectable goal difference
considering that we are currently 17th in the PL and leaking goals at a
worrying rate. Imagine how much better it would have been if we had we
managed to retain last season's superior defensive standards!

These are all positives, even if there are injury related, dark clouds
threatening to rain on our parade . Lets hope that the news on Upson, Cole,
Behrami and Diamanti is positive and they are back sooner rather than later.
The absence of an experienced target man to lead the line is a particular
worry if Cole is out for any length of time. Lets also hope that the recent
stories on the sale of Green and Upson prove to be the same empty
speculation as the similar stories that circulated during last year's winter
transfer window.

Next up, a real test! Man Utd at Upton Park, one of our favourite fixtures
of the season. Zola and Clarke will need to sort out the defensive lapses
in order for us to get a result on the day . . . . but history tells us not
to bet against it!

SJ Chandos.

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