Thursday, July 7

Daily WHUFC News - 7th July 2011

Aldershot prices slashed
WHUFC.com
The club can confirm reduced prices for the Carling Cup fixture against
Aldershot Town
06.07.2011

West Ham United have slashed ticket prices for the Carling Cup first-round
tie with Aldershot Town on Tuesday 9 August. Season ticket holders can get
their seats for just £5 for under-16s and £10 for adults. Academy members
will be able to purchase from 9am on Monday 25 July, with general sale
following that.

The Hammers, who reached the semi-finals of the same competition last
season, will have high hopes of another good run under new manager Sam
Allardyce.
Aldershot, who are managed by former Wimbledon and Bolton Wanderers striker
Dean Holdsworth, finished 14th in League Two last season. The Shots have
never got past the third-round stage of the League Cup and were beaten 3-0
at home by Watford in last season's first round.

Holdsworth played under Allardyce for four seasons at the Reebok Stadium
before embarking on a successful coaching career with Newport County
following his retirement. He has been in charge at the Recreation Ground
since January 2011. West Ham have reached the League Cup final on two
previous occasions, finishing as runners-up to West Bromwich Albion in 1966
and Liverpool in 1981. Outside of wartime football and minor cup
competitions, West Ham have met Aldershot just twice previously. The Hammers
were held to a goalless FA Cup third-round draw at the Boleyn Ground on 5
January 1991 before completing a 6-1 replay victory at the same venue eleven
days later.

Among the players who have represented both clubs are Dale Banton, Bobby
Barnes, Alan Dickie, Neil Finn, George Matthews, Reg Wade and Alan Wooler.

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Zaragoza lead busy pre-season
WHUFC.com
The club can confirm the ticket prices and selling dates for the pre-season
fixture with Real Zaragoza
06.07.2011

West Ham United are delighted to confirm reduced ticket prices for this
summer's annual pre-season showpiece match against Real Zaragoza. Tickets
are on sale now to season ticket holders with prices starting at £5 for
Under-16s and £10 for adults. For a full list of the prices for Academy
members and general sale, as well as selling dates, click here.

The Saturday 30 July fixture will be the first home outing in a Hammers
shirt for the club's new recruits including Abdoulaye Faye and Kevin Nolan,
and give supporters the chance to have a glimpse at Sam Allardyce's new-look
side in action. The six-times Spanish Cup winners enjoyed an encouraging
2010/11 campaign, finishing 13th in just their second season back in the top
flight, and are historically the ninth most successful Spanish club of
all-time.

The La Liga side's visit will evoking memories of West Ham United's dramatic
victory over the Aragonese in the 1964/65 European Cup Winners' Cup
semi-finals.
Taking on a potent Zaragoza attack nicknamed 'Los Cinquos Magnificos' - 'The
Magnificent Five' - West Ham raced into a two-goal lead in the first leg at
the Boleyn Ground through goals from Brian Dear and Johnny Byrne. Zaragoza
hit back, meaning the Hammers had a slender 2-1 lead to take to Spain.The
second leg started badly as Zaragoza went ahead on the night and ahead in
the tie on away goals, only for Johnny Sissons to score an all-important
equaliser and send West Ham through to the final, 3-2 on aggregate. At
Wembley, of course, West Ham defeated TSV 1860 Munich 2-0 to lift the
trophy.

Pre-season friendly schedule

Monday 11 July, 6pm (local time) - BSC Young Boys v West Ham United (Uhren
Cup, Bruhl Stadium, Grenchen, Switzerland)

Wednesday 13 July, 7.30pm (local time) - FC Basel v West Ham United (Uhren
Cup, Bruhl Stadium, Grenchen, Switzerland)

Saturday 16 July, 3pm - Bishops Stortford v West Ham United XI (Woodside
Park)

Wednesday 20 July, 8pm (local time - FC Copenhagen v West Ham United (Parken
Stadium, Copenhagen, Denmark)

Saturday 23 July, 3pm - Wycombe Wanderers v West Ham United (Adams Park)

Tuesday 26 July, 7.45pm - Dagenham & Redbridge v West Ham United (Victoria
Road)

Saturday 30 July, 3pm - West Ham United v Real Zaragoza

Tuesday 2 August, 7.45pm - Sutton United v West Ham United XI (Borough
Sports Ground, Ganders Green Lane)

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Season ticket deadline extended
WHUFC.com
The club has been inundated with season ticket requests so has decided to
extend the renewal period
05.07.2011

West Ham United are pleased to confirm that the renewal period for season
tickets has been extended until 5pm on Tuesday 19 July. High demand coupled
with fan feedback has meant the Ticket Office will give supporters the
chance to make sure of their seat for a further 14 days. Not only can fans
make sure of their place at the Boleyn for every single game in our
promotion push, you can still save up to £20 and have the chance to win your
ticket. To make it easier, fans can choose to pay in easy monthly
instalments if they wish thanks to the club's 0% finance payment plan with
ZEBRA finance. All you need to do is fill in the form found here. Season
ticket holders can get extra benefits, including ten per cent off the new
West Ham United Macron replica kits for the 2011/12 season with the discount
applying to all retail purchases.

Brisk trade has been reported by the club's new Online Store, launched in
response to supporter feedback. Supporters have been flocking to pre-order
the stylish strips before the official launch on Thursday 28 July 2011.
Renew now! You get a 10 per cent reduction on the 09/10 price freeze plus
four extra games.
Renewing is easy. Call 0871 222 2700 or see whufcboxoffice.com to renew
online.
This offer will not be extended. Renew by 5pm Tuesday 19 July*.

The club can also confirm that the general sale for season tickets will
begin on Saturday 23 July. The selling dates for the first three league and
cup fixtures are as follows:

* West Ham United v Cardiff City - 7 August, on sale to Academy Members from
Monday 25 July
* West Ham United v Aldershot - 9 August, on sale to season ticket holders
now, Academy Members from Monday 25 July
* West Ham United v Leeds United - 21 August, on sale to Academy Members
from Monday 25 July

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Hammers move to reduce risk
WHUFC.com
West Ham United's medical team has introduced a unique new injury-prevention
system
06.07.2011

West Ham United's Sport Medicine and Sport Science department hope a unique
new system will keep players out of the treatment room. In partnership with
the University of Ghent (UGent) and Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) in
Belgium, the Hammers have introduced individual risk profiles for every
professional. The profiles will cover two specific areas - injury prevention
and performance progression - and allow head of sports medicine Andy Rolls
and first-team physiotherapist Stijn Vandenbroucke to constantly monitor
player's individual performances, risk areas and injury histories.

With the help of the two universities, each profile will be updated on a
daily basis throughout the season and will be accessible via a password-safe
website to enable players and staff to keep tabs on their condition from
anywhere on the planet. To kick-off the project Rolls, Vandenbroucke and the
Hammers' medical staff have started screening squad members using a range of
balance, flexibility and strength tests. The test results will help them to
identify areas of individual strength and weakness and tailor each player's
training schedule to minimise their chances of being injured.

Following next week's pre-season trip to Switzerland, the players will
undergo performance progression screening at Chadwell Heath later this
month, adding to the data available. Regular tests will be held throughout
the season.

Vandenbroucke explained the purpose of the screening in detail on West Ham
TV. "We are testing for injury prevention because we want to create an
up-to-date risk profile for every player for throughout the season," he
said. "Therefore we need to know what their weaknesses and their strong
points are, so we're testing their flexibility, strength, stability, core
stability and balance, jumping and a few other things. "From there on,
together with the universities, we can work out what they need to do during
the pre-season and the season."

Vandenbroucke said the pre-season tests would stand the players in good
stead ahead of what will be a busy and demanding season in the npower
Championship.
"I think it's going to be a very tough season with a lot of games and
physical demands on the players, so I think in the pre-season we have to
grab the chance to make everybody as strong as possible so we can go as far
as possible in the competition."

Belgian-born himself, Vandenbroucke said the roles played by his fellow
countrymen at UGent and VUB would be of huge benefit. "We have worked
together with these universities because they have created an algorithm
[list of instructions] which will help us on a daily basis with injury
prevention and performance progression.
"After each training session, they will help us to create an injury-risk
profile for the following day so we know if players have trained well, if
they are fatigued or if they are at risk of suffering a certain injury.
"We're trying to use evidence-based data and use Sport Science at a high
level."

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Downes on the up
WHUFC.com
Wally Downes has told West Ham TV a strong squad will be the key to gaining
promotion this term
06.07.2011

Wally Downes has told West Ham TV a strong squad will be key to getting West
Ham United promoted this season and expects the club to hit the ground
running in the npower Championship. The first-team coach emphasised the need
for a collective desire to get the job done, and expects the story of the
season to be about the team and not the individual. Speaking to the club's
exclusive online TV service, Downes said: "This season it is going to be
about how strong and how supportive the squad is. "It is not about the
eleven players or the 18 players, it is about 20 or even 30 players because
of the amount of games we are going to play, it will be about 50-60 games a
season on a regular basis. "Players have to be ready to come into a
successful side and perform to the level of whoever they are replacing."

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Wearen ready for EUROs
WHUFC.com
Eoin Wearen is in Republic of Ireland's squad for the UEFA European U19
Championship finals
06.07.2011

West Ham United's Eoin Wearen has been selected in Republic of Ireland's
squad for the UEFA European U19 Championship finals in Romania. The talented
Dublin-born central midfielder has been named in his country's squad by head
coach Paul Doolin after playing an important role in helping the Irish to
qualify for the tournament for the first time since 2002. Ireland have been
drawn in Group A alongside Greece, Czech Republic and the host nation, while
Group B contains Serbia, Turkey, Spain and Belgium. Eighteen-year-old Wearen
and his compatriots kick-off their challenge by facing Greece in Buftea on
20 July before tackling the Czechs in Mogosoaia on 23 July and and Romania
in Beroeni on 26 July. Doolin's squad successfully qualified for the
eight-team finals by coming through two tough group stages, seeing off the
challenge of Italy, Poland, Ukraine, Bulgaria and Luxembourg along the way.

Wearen himself will be available to play in Ireland's opening match after
serving a one-match suspension in the 3-0 victory over Italy in their final
Elite Round qualifying fixture. The Hammers youngster had been sent-off for
two bookable offences in the goalless draw with Ukraine. Republic of Ireland
have never won the European U19 Championship. However, the Irish did lift
the trophy in its former guise as an U18 tournament in 1998.

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Ch-ch-changes
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 6th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

A host of West Ham United's 2011/12 Championship fixtures have been
re-arranged. If you're still working on the original fixture list as
published last month, here's a summary of the changes to have been announced
thus far:

Birmingham City (a)
New date: Monday, 26th December (Boxing Day) - 1:00pm k/o

Cardiff City (a)
New date: Saturday, 3rd March - 12:30pm k/o

Leeds United (h)
New date: Sunday, 21st August - 1:15pm k/o

Millwall (a)
New date: Saturday, 17th September - 12:30pm k/o

Nottingham Forest (a)
New date: Sunday, 28th August - 1:15pm k/o

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The cost of short-termism
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 6th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United have extended the season ticket deadline by a fortnight -
due to 'high demand'. The original deadline passed at 5pm last night with
reports of ticket sales being well down on last season. And this morning
the club have confirmed that the deadline for renewals is being extended by
a fortnight - as a result of 'high demand coupled with fan feedback',
according to whufc.com.

However it is rather more likely that many thousands of existing season
ticket holders have refused to renew due to the club's short-term decision
to sell match day tickets last season for less than the equivalent cost of a
season ticket - a policy that has clearly hit the club hard this summer.
Supporters were able to purchase match day tickets last season from agencies
such as Viagogo from just £15 - a policy that caused furious reactions from
season ticket holders who felt that any concessions should be passed their
way, not to fairweather fans.

Despite the season ticket price freeze and extra four games, many thousands
of existing ST holders have instead decided to 'pay on the day' next season,
due to the considerable decrease in demand for Championship tickets. Tickets
for West Ham's opening three games of the 2011/12 season - against Cardiff,
Aldershot (Carling Cup) and Leeds - go on general sale from Saturday, 23rd
July.

Cheapest match day tickets last season

Bolton: £36 (available from WHUFC)
Chelsea: £46 (WHUFC)
Tottenham: £25 (Viagogo)
Fulham: £36 (WHUFC)
Newcastle: £15 (WHUFC)
WBA: £15 (WHUFC)
Blackpool: £36 (WHUFC)
Wigan: £20 (WHUFC)
Man CIty: £25 (Viagogo)
Everton: £16 (WHUFC)
Wolves: £20 (WHUFC)
Arsenal: £46 (WHUFC)
Birmingham: £20 (Viagogo)
Liverpool: £46 (WHUFC)
Stoke: £20 (Viagogo)
Man Utd: £46 (WHUFC)
Aston Villa: £20 (Viagogo)
Blackburn: £14 (Viagogo)
Sunderland: £20 (Viagogo)

Total: £522

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Cole rumour resurfaces
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 6th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

Joe Cole is once again being linked with a return to the Boleyn Ground. The
out-of-favour Liverpool midfielder, who left West Ham in 2003 having refused
to sign a new contract is thought to have been made an offer to join United
on loan for the forthcoming Championship season. As unlikely a deal as it
may seem, KUMB.com understands that enquiries have indeed been made by West
Ham with regards to making the move a possibility.

However any move would hinge on Liverpool paying the majority of the former
England international's £90,000 per week wages - assuming, of course, Cole
would opt to play in the second division instead of choosing from a whole
host of Premier League options, as would surely be revealed should it be
known that he is available for loan.

West Ham announced today that they are delaying the season ticket holder
deadline by a fortnight. It is thought that the club are keen to announce a
marquee signing - or, cynics may suggest, be strongly linked with one -
before that deadline is reached.

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Plug pulled on season review DVD
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 6th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United have cancelled production of the 2010/11 season review DVD.
The annual season review DVD, produced in recent years by ILC Media has been
abolished due to a perceived lack of demand. With West Ham United relegated
from the Premier League last term having won only seven league games all
season, it was felt that supporters simply wouldn't buy the DVD which
retailed last year at £15.99. As a result, Hammers fans keen to add to their
collection will have no option but to wait until the end of next season -
assuming, that is, West Ham perform rather better under Sam Allardyce than
they did under Avram Grant.

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That good ol' West Ham way
KUMB,com
Filed: Wednesday, 6th July 2011
By: Kit Robinson

So what is it, the West Ham way? Were West Ham ever this slick, great
passing side that many of our fans believe we are? Is it a myth? Or are we
living in a parallel footballing universe?

Will the introduction of Sam Allardyce see an end to it or just a massive
improvement by getting back to basics? The media has West Ham as the bookies
favourite to be promoted which is massively at odds with the performances of
Avram Grant's team of last season. So where are we going stylistically as a
football team?

There are two major factors which arrived with the signing of Sam Allardyce
as manager of West Ham. Fear and organisation. Two elements that could
hardly have been applied to facing the Hammers last season or to be expected
had Avram Grant been retained as manager this season.

If the West Ham way is supposedly quality football and skill, then it was
sorely missing last season. In fact it has been missing for a few seasons.
Or is it the case that it was simply not a regular occurrence and only
something we aspired to but rarely actually achieved over the last 30 years
or more?

The media commentators often refer to West Ham as a great 'footballing'
side. Yet I have so rarely seen this in action. Last season West Ham were
barely capable of completing any passes, let alone assists which made
opportunities on goal. Those goalscoring opportunities were largely wasted
and meanwhile at the back, the defence seemed inept and disorganised.

The team as a whole were prone to only being fit for 70 minutes of a match
and often relented to any kind of pressure and often gave away their lead in
matches where they should have finished the opposition off. Whether West Ham
fans like it or not, the club needs a big shake up in the team, management
and back room staff.

So what has changed so far apart from releasing a number of players with the
squad currently down to 26 players and with some top players possibly still
to leave? Where are the bookies and the media getting this renewed optimism
for West Ham from? The back room staff is being drastically changed with few
not being replaced. And then there is the manager. Whether you like him or
not, the likelihood is that he is the right man for the job.

West Ham fans only needed to watch the Champions League final to realise
what great football is when seeing Barcelona. If that is what West Ham
aspire to then great, but is it achievable on our budget? No. It could also
be argued whether West Ham ever consistently played that way. In my own
lifetime I have only ever seen West Ham play that brand of football for
around six seasons and the rest of the time they have been pretty dire and
have deservedly yo-yo'd between leagues.

The fact is that football has moved on. Even in the '60s under Ron Greenwood
and with three World Cup winners in the side, West Ham still struggled. They
had brief periods in the last 30 years when some classy football was played
but often, ironically, in a lower league.

Barcelona, Manchester United and all the top clubs don't play great football
purely because of a great manager. They can afford great players, we can't.
This simple fact means that other clubs have gotten better than us at
playing decent football and funds dictate that we can no longer compete in
obtaining skillful players.

As much as we would like to think that we can get hold of a manager who can
miraculously gel Academy players into a slick unit who can compete at the
top level, it simply isn't going to happen. It's also been the situation for
many years that if West Ham produce anyone of any quality that they are soon
snapped up.

The most valuable man at West Ham for the last nearly 40 years is Tony Carr
who has helped develop players who we can sell, many times in order to keep
the club afloat. If we don't, or will never consistently, have these
skillful players then West Ham need to accept the fact that they are going
to have to change their style of play, get back to basics and get simpler
and tougher. But that doesn't necessarily mean that fans will be devoid of
watching any stylish play.

It really is a fallacy that Sam Allardyce's teams only play route one and
aerial football. They do a lot of the time but not always. West Ham fans
need to change their perspective of what they require. If they still solely
want 'the West Ham way' then the future of the club could seriously be in
jeopardy because the team simply cannot compete playing that way any more.

It's a choice between trying to play nice football but losing and having
fewer and fewer seasons of being able to compete playing that style. Or for
now, playing a simpler game, achieving the basics and winning a larger
number of matches but having the occasional match of great attractive
football.

Teams like Bolton under Allardyce used to stuff us home and away. Yes they
were rougher and tougher but we couldn't handle it, but they also did play
some really decent football at times but we don't like to admit it through
our claret and blue specs. It wasn't all route one and they often scored
some great goals. Let's face it, we feared them, as did many other sides.
They were also always very organised.

If this shake-up is successful, West Ham gain promotion, maintain a Premier
League status for around five years and the Olympic Stadium repays the club
the dividends it potentially could do, THEN, West Ham fans can start talking
about the West Ham way again, once the club has enough funds to compete at
the highest level.

Until then, it's time to win matches, as Allardyce has said, by whatever
style is necessary. It's time to win ugly not lose prettily. Then when some
cosmetic surgery is required, we'll get it done when we can afford to do it.

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Hammers eye Baraclough move
Former Iron boss could joins Irons
By Pete O'Rourke - Follow me: @skysportspeteo. Last Updated: July
6, 2011 2:08pm
SSN

Skysports.com understands West Ham are set to appoint former Scunthorpe boss
Ian Baraclough to their coaching staff. West Ham boss Sam Allardyce is keen
to bolster his backroom team after seeing Kevin Keen leave for Liverpool
earlier this week. Allardyce has lined up a move for highly-rated coach
Baraclough as he begins his plans for next season. Baraclough took his first
steps into coaching when he was named first-team coach under Nigel Adkins at
Scunthorpe in 2006. The 40-year-old replaced Adkins as manager last
September following his departure to Southampton,but he was dismissed by
Scunthorpe in March with the club rooted to the bottom of the table.
Baraclough has gained the reputation as one the best young coaches around
and Allardyce believes he will be a valuable addition to the Hammers set-up.

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Warnock keen to bring Cole to QPR but Taarabt could be on his way out
By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 12:08 PM on 6th July 2011
Daily Mail

Queens Park Rangers manager Neil Warnock is keen hand Carlton Cole a Premier
League lifeline by offering him a contract with the Premier League new boys.
Relegated West Ham are keen to get the England striker off the wage bill as
they prepare for life in The Championship and will listen to bids of around
£6 million.
Stoke had a £3m bid for Cole rejected by West Ham earlier in the summer, and
have not returned with an improved bid. The 27-year-old striker has two
years remaining on his contract at Upton Park and his departure could pave
the way for Blackpool striker DJ Campbell to join the Hammers. Sam Allardyce
has been chasing Campbell for the last month and triggered the £1.25m
release clause in his contract, but the striker is keen to move to a Premier
League club. If QPR are successful with a move for Cole, Warnock admitted
that it is unlikely that the striker will partner Adel Taarabt, as the
Moroccan international looks set to leave the Premier League new boys.
Warnock said: 'PSG [Paris St-Germain] have made an inquiry and they
obviously offer him the chance to be nearer to home, although there is a
Spanish club being mentioned as well. 'As far as his talk of wanting to go
to Chelsea or Arsenal, I know he has a lot of friends at Arsenal. He is
missing his family in Marseille. 'If we get a big offer from a club in
France that obviously gives him a chance to be closer to them. That would be
a big pull. 'Flavio Briatore [the QPR co-owner] is dealing with the
negotiations. He is keeping me informed of the situation and at this precise
moment [Adel] won't be leaving because no one has met the asking price.'

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Should We Sell Carlton Cole
July 7th, 2011 - 8:23 am by Iain Dale
West Ham Till I Die

Two summers ago we sold Bobby Zamora to Fulham. Many of us couldn't
understand why we would sell Zamora when Cole was the one who couldn't hit a
barn door. But then Gianfranco Zola worked his magic and Cole had a stormer
of a season. But since Zola's departure he has failed to recapture that
goalscoring form. Cole is not the sort of player who will ever get 20 goals
season, but in more games than some of us care to admit, he has done a
brilliant job occupying the time of a couple of defenders.

Yes, he can look incredibly awkward and gangly. Yes, his first touch can let
him down. Yes, his head can go down when things are not going his way. But
he is a talent who, given the right leadership, can still do a job for us.
But will he get the opportunity?

The jury's out. Stoke and QPR are rumoured to be interested in his services.
Stoke, however, insulted him and the club by tabling a bit of a pathetic £3
million. I hope West Ham told Stoke where to go in no uncertain terms. They
already got one bargain off us, in the form of Matthew Etherington, and it
would be adding insult to injury to let them have another. QPR haven't
tabled a formal bid, but rumours continue to swirl.

I've heard on the grapevine that Cole has asked his agent to find him a new
club, but that club has to be in London. Effectively that means Fulham or
QPR.

So the question for today is should we sell Carlton Cole, and if so what's
the lowest bid we should entertain. If I was pushed to make a decision I
would say yes, but not for less than £7 million.

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The fight for Cole hots up
By DEAN SCOGGINS
Published: Today
The Sun

STOKE are ready to raise their bid for Carlton Cole to £6million as they try
to beat QPR to the striker's signature. Potters chief Tony Pulis wants to
boost his attacking options and had an initial £3m offer for the West Ham
hitman snubbed. Stoke's first bid for Cole, 27, did include extensive
add-ons that would have seen the deal rise to £8m. But the relegated Hammers
want £6m up front and Premier League new-boys QPR are ready to pounce - and
can offer Croydon-born Cole the advantage of staying in London. Pulis also
wants to land the Birmingham duo of defender Scott Dann and frontman Cameron
Jerome. Britannia Stadium chairman Peter Coates claimed his club were close
to agreeing a deal but Birmingham will not be forced into a cut-price sale
and want £14m for the 24-year-olds. Coates said: "We have made an offer and
are hoping to do a deal that will satisfy both clubs. "We were very close to
a deal but then you still have to sort things out with the players. These
things can take forever. "You have to have other irons in the fire because
things can go wrong. "As one agent once said 'The truth today may not be the
truth tomorrow'."

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Hammer Parker's future could be decided today
Published 23:00 06/07/11 By Mike McGrath
The Mirror

Scott Parker is set for crunch talks with Sam Allardyce today over his West
Ham future. England midfielder Parker is back for pre-season training and
will have his first face-to-face meeting with Big Sam. The new Hammers boss
has insisted he wants to sit down to talk with his England internationals,
rather than speak on the phone.
Robert Green and Carlton Cole are also due to return to the club's Chadwell
Heath HQ, along with Under-21 defender James Tomkins and Wales youngster
Jack Collison. Allardyce will speak to players who have concerns about their
futures, then decide on a squad to take to Switzerland at the weekend for
the club's pre-season tour. In the case of Parker, who won the Football
Writers' Association player-of-the-year award last season, it has appeared
likely a transfer would suit both player and the club. Tottenham boss Harry
Redknapp is interested in the 30-year-old former Chelsea and Newcastle man.
Only scandal-hit Turkish giants Fenerbahce have tabled a bid though, and
Parker is reluctant to move abroad.

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Big Sam targets a 20-goals-a-season striker
London24.com
Nathaniel John
Thursday, July 7, 2011
9:00 AM

West Ham boss Sam Allardyce has revealed that signing a striker is his top
priority as he looks to build a squad capable of securing promotion back to
the Premier League at the first time of asking. Having missed out on
Peterborough United forward Craig Mackail-Smith this week, who signed for
Brighton & Hove Albion, the 56-year-old has turned his attention elsewhere,
with a shortlist having already been drawn up. "We will run the rule over a
few players, but I think we do need another striker in the squad," he
stressed. "It is difficult to work with just three strikers, especially in a
46-game season and ideally we will be looking for two strikers to grab
between 15 and 20 goals each."

Despite being in the market for new players, Allardyce has not ruled out the
possibility of keeping some of his international stars – most notably Robert
Green, Scott Parker, Carlton Cole and Pablo Barrera, who return to
pre-season training today (Thursday). "They return this week and then I will
sit down with them and they can tell me what their plans are," he said.
"Obviously if they want to go and we get a satisfactory bid in then I
wouldn't want to stand in their way, but let us see what they say first – we
have not received bids for any of the players."

This week is the first time that Allardyce has had a chance to really look
at the majority of the squad that he has inherited, and he admits that he
has been impressed with what he has seen so far. "It has been lovely weather
and the boys are looking very enthusiastic," he said. "Everyone looks like
they are glad to be back."
"Last season was a miserable one, but we have to put that behind us and
start to work on the task ahead and that is getting straight back into the
Premier League."

Tomorrow (Friday) the Hammers will leave for their pre-season tour of
Switzerland where they will play two games. On Monday, West Ham face BSC
Young Boys, before playing against former Hammers midfielder Radoslav
Kovac's new side FC Basel on Wednesday. "I have always gone on pre-season
tours in the past and they are an invaluable way of getting to know everyone
and improving the team spirit," said Allarydce. "We have lots of new faces
among the players and the staff and this will be the perfect chance for
everyone to get to know each other."

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West Ham hope to throw Joe Cole a lifeline by sealing loan deal from
Liverpool
By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 11:26 PM on 6th July 2011
Daily Mail

West Ham are exploring an ambitious deal to bring Joe Cole back to Upton
Park. Manager Sam Allardyce is keen to recruit more Premier League quality
players in a bid to make a swift return to the top flight. However, West
Ham would only be able to afford a loan deal and would need Liverpool to
heavily subsidise the former England man's £100,000-a-week wages. Cole, 29,
wants to fight for his place at Liverpool but had a poor first season
blighted by niggling injuries and is struggling to impose himself on Kenny
Dalglish's first-team plans. His situation has been compounded by the
signings of Jordan Henderson and Charlie Adam while Stewart Downing is
expected to follow from Aston Villa. Cole, who has also been mentioned as a
potential makeweight in the Downing deal, may prefer to wait until later in
the summer before talking to West Ham but they are keen to lift the fans
ahead of the new season. A return to the club he left in 2003 would give
the team impetus for their promotion drive.

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Backroom Business
Just Like My Dreams

We've had Fletcher and Mackay and now West Ham are looking to add Baraclough
to their growing list of Slade Prison namesakes. The club are reportedly
close to appointing former Scunthorpe boss Ian Baraclough to their coaching
staff, according to several sources. Sam Allardyce is keen to bolster his
backroom team after seeing Kevin Keen leave for Liverpool earlier this week
and has lined up a move for the highly-rated coach as he begins his plans
for next season. Baraclough took his first steps into coaching when he was
named first-team coach under Nigel Adkins at Scunthorpe in 2006. The
40-year-old replaced Adkins as manager last September following his
departure to Southampton, but he was dismissed by Scunthorpe in March with
the club rooted to the bottom of the table. Sky Sports state Baraclough has
gained the reputation as one the best young coaches around and Allardyce
believes he will be a valuable addition to the Hammers set-up.

It is likely Baraclough would become the coach to link the Academy and
developing players to the first-team squad; the only position Allardyce said
he had left to fill in the restructuring of his immediate backroom staff.
The new Hammers boss had initially been tipped to team up again with his
former coach Sammy Lee at Upton Park. The former Liverpool coach left
Anfield last week, and had previously worked alongside Allardyce at Bolton
Wanderers. "We are looking to bring in one more coach, but it will not be
Sammy," confirmed Allardyce yesterday. "Sammy is a first-team coach, but I
have Neil McDonald and Wally Downes here already. We are looking at people
at the moment though, and hopefully we will have someone in place in time
for the trip to Switzerland at the end of the week."

The news comes just days after West Ham appointed Martyn Margetson as their
new goalkeeping coach and extended the contract of Tony Carr. Margetson, 39,
held the same position at Cardiff, but has left the Welsh club to join Sam
Allardyce's backroom team at Upton Park. Meanwhile Carr signed a new
five-year deal with the club. The world-renowned Youth Academy director,
whose existing deal was up this summer, put pen to paper on a contract that
will keep him tied to West Ham United until 2016. The 60-year-old has been
employed by the club in a coaching capacity since 1973, and only last year
he was awarded the MBE for services to football.

Speaking to KUMB.com last year Carr admitted that despite the lure of offers
from elsewhere, he always intended to see his career out at Chadwell Heath.
"If the club want me to stay I'd like to stay," he said. "I'd like to go on
for another three or four years, if I'm honest. I'm quite healthy, I still
enjoy it, I still think there's work to be done. We've got good kids in the
system and I want to see them develop. I hope there's going to be some good
players coming through in the next three or four years and I want to be part
of that. Obviously there comes a time when you go 'look Tone, as much as we
love you you've got to pack it in'. And I understand that. But whilst I'm
still quite fit and healthy... the day I stop enjoying it is the day I go
'thanks, but I've done my bit'."

If Baraclough does arrives it will be as direct replacement for the departed
Keen. The Hammers stalwart left his role as first-team coach only last week
to take up a similar position at Anfield, but is anticipating a return to
the Boleyn Ground with his new club sooner rather than later. "I am
extremely confident with the squad that is there, that even if West Ham lose
a couple of top players, this time next year Liverpool will be playing West
Ham in the Premier League and I can't wait to be back," he said. Having
served the club for nearly 20 years as player and coach, Keen admitted he
would miss the close connection with the passionate Hammers faithful and
said they would always be close to his heart. "The supporters have always
been fantastic. I thank them for their support. I have been at the club for
nine years as a player and nine years as a coach and I have learned so much
from good managers, the likes of Paul Heffer and Tony Carr and also from
those people who don't always get the credit. A part of me will always be
claret and blue. It is the right time for me to move on but you never know
what will happen in the future."

Wally Downes is equally confident of the Hammers chances and told West Ham
TV a strong squad will be key to getting the club promoted this season.
Downes expects the club to hit the ground running in the npower
Championship, with the first-team coach emphasising the need for a
collective desire to get the job done. In short, he expects the story of the
season to be about the team and not the individual. "This season it is going
to be about how strong and how supportive the squad is," he said. "It is not
about the eleven players or the 18 players, it is about 20 or even 30
players because of the amount of games we are going to play, it will be
about 50-60 games a season on a regular basis. Players have to be ready to
come into a successful side and perform to the level of whoever they are
replacing."

With such an arduous challenge ahead, the work of United's Sport Medicine
and Sport Science department will be of paramount importance. It is their
hope that a unique new system will keep players out of the treatment room.
In partnership with the University of Ghent (UGent) and Vrije Universiteit
Brussel (VUB) in Belgium, the Hammers have introduced individual risk
profiles for every professional. The profiles will cover two specific areas
- injury prevention and performance progression - and allow head of sports
medicine Andy Rolls and first-team physiotherapist Stijn Vandenbroucke to
constantly monitor player's individual performances, risk areas and injury
histories.

With the help of the two universities, each profile will be updated on a
daily basis throughout the season and will be accessible via a password-safe
website to enable players and staff to keep tabs on their condition from
anywhere on the planet. To kick-off the project Rolls, Vandenbroucke and the
Hammers' medical staff have started screening squad members using a range of
balance, flexibility and strength tests. The test results will help them to
identify areas of individual strength and weakness and tailor each player's
training schedule to minimise their chances of being injured.

Following next week's pre-season trip to Switzerland, the players will
undergo performance progression screening at Chadwell Heath later this
month, adding to the data available. Regular tests will be held throughout
the season. Vandenbroucke explained the purpose of the screening in detail .
"We are testing for injury prevention because we want to create an
up-to-date risk profile for every player for throughout the season," he
said. "Therefore we need to know what their weaknesses and their strong
points are, so we're testing their flexibility, strength, stability, core
stability and balance, jumping and a few other things. From there on,
together with the universities, we can work out what they need to do during
the pre-season and the season."

Vandenbroucke said the pre-season tests would stand the players in good
stead ahead of what will be a busy and demanding season in the npower
Championship. "I think it's going to be a very tough season with a lot of
games and physical demands on the players, so I think in the pre-season we
have to grab the chance to make everybody as strong as possible so we can go
as far as possible in the competition." Belgian-born himself, Vandenbroucke
said the roles played by his fellow countrymen at UGent and VUB would be of
huge benefit. "We have worked together with these universities because they
have created an algorithm [list of instructions] which will help us on a
daily basis with injury prevention and performance progression. "After each
training session, they will help us to create an injury-risk profile for the
following day so we know if players have trained well, if they are fatigued
or if they are at risk of suffering a certain injury. We're trying to use
evidence-based data and use Sport Science at a high level."

Having blogged two weeks ago about how Allardyce has been in the vanguard of
football's scientific revolution, it is the clearest indication yet of the
direction the club is now moving. While Rolls and Vandenbroucke collate
their data, the manager has been busy running the rule over his squad this
week in training before they jet off on Friday. He has declared himself
happy with what he has seen. "It has been lovely weather and the boys are
looking very enthusiastic. Everyone looks like they are glad to be back," he
said. "Last season was a miserable one, but we have to put that behind us
and start to work on the task ahead and that is getting straight back into
the Premier League." The trip to Switzerland, where they will play two
games, is one Allardyce is looking forward to. "I have always gone on
pre-season tours in the past and they are an invaluable way of getting to
know everyone and improving the team spirit," he said. "We have lots of new
faces among the players and the staff and this will be the perfect chance
for everyone to get to know each other."

West Ham start their pre-season campaign with a match against Young Boys of
Berne on Monday, with a 6pm kick-off, before playing FC Basel on Wednesday.
POSTED BY TRILBY AT 14:17

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Wednesday, July 6

Daily WHUFC News - 6th July 2011

Turgott heading home
WHUFC.com
Blair Turgott's England are heading home from the FIFA U-17 World Cup in Mexico
04.07.2011

Blair Turgott's England are out of the FIFA U-17 World Cup following a dramatic 3-2 quarter-final defeat by Germany. Having helped the Young Lions to get past Argentina in a penalty shootout in the previous round, West Ham United attacking midfielder Turgott had a watching brief for the last-eight tie. Germany have swept into the quarter-finals courtesy of emphatic wins over Ecuador, Burkina Faso, Panama and the United States, and raced into a three-goal lead before Charlie Magri and Hallam Hope made for an exciting finish with goals in the 67th and 83rd minutes. However, the equaliser was not forthcoming and it means Turgott will be heading back to England from Mexico.

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Kevin keen on Hammers
WHUFC.com
West Ham United will be back in the Premier League this time next year, says Kevin Keen
05.07.2011

Kevin Keen has tipped West Ham United to secure automatic promotion at the first attempt having left the club to join Liverpool. Keen left his role as first-team coach last week to take up a similar position at Anfield, but is expecting to return to the Boleyn Ground with his new club sooner rather than later. He is tipping Sam Allardyce and his new coaching staff to have the fans celebrating again next May. "I am extremely confident with the squad that is there, that even if West Ham lose a couple of top players, this time next year Liverpool will be playing West Ham in the Premier League and I can't wait to be back."

Having served the club for nearly 20 years as player and coach, Keen admitted he would miss the close connection with the passionate Hammers faithful and said they would always be close to his heart. "The supporters have always been fantastic. I thank them for their support. "I have been at the club for nine years as a player and nine years as a coach and I have learned so much from good managers, the likes of Paul Heffer and Tony Carr and also from those people who don't always get the credit. A part of me will always be claret and blue. "It is the right time for me to move on but you never know what will happen in the future."

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Two changes to fixtures
WHUFC.com
The matches in August against Leeds United and Nottingham Forest have been moved
05.07.2011

West Ham United can confirm two more fixture changes to the 2011/12 npower Championship schedule.

The home match against Leeds United will now kick off at 1.15pm on Sunday 21 August, with the following week's fixture away to Nottingham Forest also starting at 1.15pm on Sunday 28 August.

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Millwall away match update
WHUFC.com
The club can confirm the Championship fixture away to Millwall on 17 September will kick-off at 12.30pm
05.07.2011

Following discussions between Millwall and West Ham United, it has been agreed that the Championship fixture between the two clubs at The Den on Saturday 17 September will kick-off at 12.30pm.

The match will be all-ticket with no sales on the day of the game.

West Ham will receive an allocation of 2,000 tickets in the upper tier of the North Stand at The Den. Millwall will sell tickets to their own fans only to Supporters Club members (in addition to Season Ticket holders).

Further ticket information related to the West Ham allocation will be confirmed in due course via whufc.com.

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Allardyce on England trio
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 5th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

Sam Allardyce has revealed that he is to sit down with West Ham's English internationals before making a decision on their future. Scott Parker, Carlton Cole and Robert Green had all been expected the leave the club this summer. However the new West Ham manager revealed in an interview with Talksport this morning that no final decisions had yet been taken. "One or two players have ambitions to continue to play in the Premier League and I'm not so sure I can persuade them to stay with us because the lure of the PL is so great," said Allardyce. "So I need to deal with that as early as possible, in the next week or two. "Certainly when the international players are back by the end of this week I will ask them what their ambitions are. Is there a possibility they can stay at West Ham, or do you really want to leave?
"So it's a possibility. I don't think it's inevitable - I haven't spoken to those players yet. But I don't think speaking on the phone or communicating by email or text is the right forward in this situation. "I need to sit down with them face to face and discuss - outside of their agents - what their feelings are. If I can persuade them to stay that'll be fantastic - but I'm not sure about that at this moment."

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OPLC open internal investigation
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 5th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

The Olympic Park Legacy Company have announced that they are launching a private investigation into the cash-for-stadium row. Last weekend's edition of the Sunday Times ran with a story claiming that West ham had paid OPLC employee Dionne Knight some £20,000 in consultancy fees. West Ham hit back immediately by announcing they will be taking legal action against the newspaper and Tottenham Hotspur, who the club accuse of contravening data protection laws. Today the OPLC responded to the newspaper's claims by confirming that they will be staging their own enquiry. A statement on their website read: "Auditors Moore Stephens have been appointed to carry out this investigation into our procedures. They have put together a team led by their specialist forensic unit. "We are also investigating the nature of the consultancy work that Dionne Knight undertook without our knowledge or permission. An independent barrister will be instructed to conduct the employment elements of this investigation. "We will communicate the outcome of both investigations when the work is complete. We remain confident that the integrity of our processes has not been compromised."

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Guest Post by Charles Myers: It's Up To Us To Set The Olympic Stadium On Fire
July 5th, 2011 - 4:02 pm by Iain Dale
By Charles Myers
West Ham Till I Die

Having been an avid reader of West Ham Till I Die for many years, I often read about the Golden Era of our once lauded and decorated club. Being too young (at 22) to remember any of this, I persevere through the hard times, knowing that my love for the club isn't based on the trophies we were promised from the Icelandic owners, or even our current owners, but my support is based on the traditions held by our beloved club.

Recently, with our impending move to the Olympic Stadium I read many comments from our West Ham community and the debate regarding the impact it will have on the support on the future generations of West Ham supporters. Ignoring the repeated arguments we read from animated bloggers on this site, I wanted to provide an insight from a young Hammer's point of view.

Undoubtedly the atmosphere at the Boleyn Ground is the best in the country, and if there is to be any legacy left at the OS, it will be up to the younger generations to make this so. Many younger Hammers who I speak to are as equally divided regarding the move. As a club we are guiltier than most looking back to the "Golden Era", I even own a Bobby Moore replica shirt myself having been too young to see him play for our club. But we run a great risk of becoming the next Sheffield Wednesday, Leeds or Nottingham Forrest, holding onto a history and forgetting the ever present risk which our club now faces of bankruptcy and a diminishing fan base. It is now when our club needs to find the 'working class spirit' which football has lost and I firmly believe that the move to the OS could bring football back to the common fan. Ask any Liverpool fan who attended the CL final in Rome, a ground with a running track, if the atmosphere was dead. I'm sure if you could understand their reply they'd tell you it was anything but dead. Whilst that may be an extreme example, the fact remains that despite obvious problems with a running track, lower ticket prices would give the club back to the fans who have been priced out of following their beloved club, taking nothing away from the dedicated followers who attend games today.

West Ham has had a great tradition, and if we are to replicate the passion which has become synonymous with our club, it will be the improved transport and cheaper ticket prices we have been promised which will allow a new generation of fans to continue the legacy and reject the commercialisation of sporting institutions which Tony McNulty highlighted so well in a previous post. Ever since I've supported our club we have failed to achieve our obvious potential, but we have never failed to instill a passion into our sport which most fans envy. The Arsenals of this world play envious football, but a Saturday afternoon in the Emirates is as lifeless as an Avram Grant half time team talk. Our club has the tools in place with the OS move to continue the legacy of our club, ensuring we will have many young fans to proudly help keep our club what it is, a family club, one which gives dreams to younger fans and joys to generations of Londoners, ones which my children will helpfully follow. By then Upton Park would only be a distant memory, one which we should never let our fans forget, but ensure that the ideas which made this club as great as it once was, continue on into modern times, whether we like it or not.

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Hines poised to pen new West Ham contract
By talkSPORT
Tuesday, July 5

West Ham striker Zavon Hines is set to agree a new contract with the club this week. Hines, 22, is currently a free agent after he turned down the club's first offer of a new deal at the end of last season. West Ham boss Sam Allardyce is keen to keep the talented forward at Upton Park and hopes he can play a major role as they look to gain promotion straight back into the top flight. With Demba Ba having left the club and Carlton Cole set to leave during the summer, Allardyce could be left with a shortage of strikers. Hines was forced to miss a large part of last season after recovering from knee surgery, but he has now made a full recovery and is desperate to get his career back on track. West Ham are hoping that a new contract can be finalised in the near future and Hines can put pen to paper on a new deal before the squad jet away on their pre-season tour of Switzerland

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London 2012: OPLC reviews Olympic Stadium bid process
The decision to award the stadium to West Ham after the Games is being challenged in court
BBC.co.uk

An independent review will be held into the process of awarding the Olympic Stadium to West Ham, the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) has said. An OPLC employee, Dionne Knight, was suspended after it emerged she carried out consultancy work on behalf of the club without her managers' knowledge. The OPLC said she took no part in the process and it was confident its integrity had "not been compromised". Tottenham Hotspur have demanded a judicial review after failing to win.
They have applied to the High Court, asking for permission to force the OPLC, Newham Council, London's mayor and government ministers to explain their decision to select West Ham. They have made a fresh approach to the court after an initial attempt to secure a judicial review was rejected. The OPLC board voted 14-0 in February to back the Hammers over Spurs as first choice to move into the £486m venue once next year's Games are over. It emerged last week that Ms Knight had declared "a personal relationship" with a West Ham employee when she started at the OPLC. It was not until Thursday evening, however, that she told the OPLC of her work at the club.

The OPLC said she was being suspended while any possible conflict of interest was investigated. The company has appointed auditors Moore Stephens to investigate its own internal stadium procedures. It has also asked an independent barrister to consider the nature of the consultancy work which Ms Knight did "without our knowledge or permission". On Sunday West Ham said they were taking legal action against Tottenham and The Sunday Times over allegations about the Olympic Stadium bidding process.

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Big Sam rules out Lee move
Tuesday 5th July 2011 11:48
TeamTalk

West Ham boss Sam Allardyce has ruled out bringing his former Bolton assistant Sammy Lee to Upton Park. Allardyce has a hole to fill in his backroom staff after Kevin Keen's recent departure for Liverpool, who parted company with Lee last week. But he admitted the role he was looking to fill would be lower down the pecking order, not the first-team coach role Lee would be most suited to. "We are looking to bring in one more coach, but it will not be Sammy," Allardyce said. "Sammy is a first-team coach, but I have Neil McDonald and Wally Downes here already. "The only place I need to fill is that of someone to link the Academy and developing players to the first-team squad. "We are looking at people at the moment and hopefully we will have someone in place in time for the trip to Switzerland at the end of the week."

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Exclusive - Allardyce admits Cole and Parker could leave this summer
TalkSport
By Nick Rostron-Pike
Tuesday, July 5

Sam Allardyce has admitted he might have to let Carlton Cole, Scott Parker and Robert Green leave West Ham this summer. All three England internationals have been linked with moves to Premier League clubs following the Hammers demotion to the Championship and 'Big Sam' told the Sports Breakfast he is not hopeful of keeping any of them at Upton Park. When asked whether he expected the trio to leave before the start of this upcoming season, Allardyce said: "Yes, that's a possibility. If I can convince them to stay then fantastic but I'm not sure about that. "When you fall out of the Premier League there is a financial shortfall of about £45million in revenue even though you get your parachute payments. We have to address that. "One or two players have ambitions to play in the Premier League and I'm not so sure I can convince them to stay with us. The lure of the Premier League is so great that we might not be able to keep hold of them."

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Exclusive - Allardyce: Money motivated Mackail-Smith's Brighton move
TalkSport
By Nick Rostron-Pike
Tuesday, July 5

Sam Allardyce has claimed Craig Mackail-Smith's move to Brighton has been motivated by money. The Hammers had a bid accepted for the Peterborough striker only for the Scot to sign a four-year-deal with Gus Poyet's men. And 'Big Sam' has admitted his shock that the 27-year-old chose the Championship newcomers over his Hammers side. He told the Alan Brazil Sports Breakfast: "We did table a bid for him and strangely enough he chose Brighton so I'm not quite sure what went on there.
"No disrespect to Brighton but it seems more of a financial move than a football move."

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Kevin Nolan sold because he wasn't long-term prospect
5 Jul 2011
Evening Standard

Alan Pardew has admitted Newcastle decided to sell captain Kevin Nolan because they did not believe he had another five years in him at the top level. The 29-year-old left for relegated West Ham in a £4million move last month after failing to win the long-term contract he was looking for, much to the horror of Magpies fans who saw their team's inspirational captain contribute 12 goals to the cause last campaign. Pardew was disappointed to lose Nolan, who had two years remaining on his existing deal, but insisted there would have been little point in keeping a disgruntled player. "Kevin didn't want to stay, that's the end of the debate," said Pardew. "Kevin couldn't get a contract for four or five years. "My opinion is that we couldn't give Kevin a five-year contract because if Kevin isn't playing first-team football, he isn't going to be the leader that we want, I am convinced of that. "Kevin is so full-on as the captain of a football club and at the level he has gone to now, he will easily cope with that and he will come back to the Premier League. "But in four or five years' time, Kevin needs to be doing the business in the first team, and we couldn't and I couldn't see that possibly happening here at Newcastle, and we had to make a decision on that."

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It's Hines 'n dandy here
Published: Today
The Sun

WEST HAM striker Zavon Hines, 22, is set to agree a new Hammers deal.

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BIG SAM'S CHEEKY £2M BID
Transfer Tavern
Date: 5th July 2011 at 4:14 pm
Author: Chris Smith

New West Ham boss Sam Allardyce will place a £2m bid in the hope of securing former Hammers favourite Joe Cole. Considerably down the pecking order at Anfield, and with manager Kenny Dalglish scanning the market for further reinforcements, it is likely the bid will succeed.

Cole started his career at Upton Park where he caught the eye of fans as an exciting, direct attacker. After being made captain at the age of 21, Cole moved on to bigger and better things with a high profile move to Chelsea, winning several titles during his time there.

A free transfer to Liverpool last summer gave Cole the chance to rejuvenate his career after failing to hold down a starting place at Stamford Bridge. But a culmination of injury and lack of confidence have dictated a poor showing from the former England man so far.

Allardyce is keen to bolster his ranks in order to give West Ham a good go at promotion this year, and is shrewd enough to know that Premier League experience will be key to that, as evidenced by the laudable signing of Newcastle's Kevin Nolan.

Still aged only 29, Cole has a fair few years left in him, and may view a move to Upton Park as just what he needs to get back playing regularly and performing to his true ability. It is difficult to see Dalglish fighting too hard to keep a player who contributed so little last year.

The Liverpool boss is seeking wide players to provide ammunition to star signing Andy Carroll, frequently being linked with Aston Villa's Stewart Downing and recently to Valencia's Juan Mata. With fan favourite Dirk Kuyt occupying the other wing, it is again difficult to see where Cole fits in to the starting line-up, and so a move to West Ham, despite connoting a drop down to the Championship, could be best for all concerned.

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Hammers always in my heart! United ace Rio hopes Big Sam will lead promotion charge
By MATT LAWLESS
Last updated at 6:37 PM on 5th July 2011
Daily Mail

Rio Ferdinand will be looking for West ham to climb out of the Championship at the first attempt - after the Manchester United star revealed he will always look out for them. The England defender, 32, rose through the ranks at the Hammers famous Academy and into the first team as a teenager under Harry Redknapp in 1996.
Ferdinand spent seven years in total at Upton Park before completing a then record £18million move to Leeds - another club he hopes will return to the top flight in 2012. 'West Ham was the team I grew up in as a kid and to see them relegated out of the Premier League was disappointing,' he told MUTV. 'It was always nice to go back and play against them and see old faces and old friends but this is football and things change, things happen. 'My other old team Leeds are in the Championship now as well so times change. I just hope they come back up again next season.'

Earlier this summer Ferdinand's younger cousin Kane was linked with a move to Sam Allardyce's side from Southend, while his brother Anton was part of the club's 2006 FA Cup final team. But whether there is a Ferdinand family claret and blue influence in east London or not, Rio insists he will always hold the Hammers dear to his heart. 'I'll always look out for West Ham's results,' he added. 'When I was young they gave me my chance to become a professional footballer and I'll always keep the club close to me. 'More importantly now, I'm a Manchester United player so this is my club. I look out first for us and the secondly for the other teams.'

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Queens Park Rangers to make move for Carlton Cole
Hammers would want £6m for striker
DJ Campbell may replace Cole at Upton Park
Jamie Jackson
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 5 July 2011 18.53 BST

Queens Park Rangers have inquired about Carlton Cole, with the newly promoted Premier League club set to make an offer for the West Ham United striker. West Ham would listen to a bid of around £6m plus add-ons, or even consider a further payment should Neil Warnock's side avoid relegation next season. Cole, 27, has two years remaining on his contract at Upton Park and has already attracted the interest of Stoke City, who recently had a £3m offer rejected by the Hammers. Tony Pulis has yet to return with an improved bid.

While West Ham are also yet to receive any offers for Scott Parker after the 30-year-old midfielder rejected a £10m move to Fenerbahce, the east London club are still attempting to sign DJ Campbell from Blackpool after a month-long pursuit of the striker. Having agreed to trigger his £1.25m release clause the stumbling block is whether Campbell, who scored 14 goals last season, is prepared to drop to the Championship. The striker favours a move to a Premier League club.

Warnock, meanwhile, has admitted that Adel Taraabt, his captain and the Championship player of last season, may leave QPR. The manager stated that a move back to France could be on the cards thought he also hinted Arsenal may be interested. Warnock said: "PSG [Paris St-Germain] have made an inquiry and they obviously offer him the chance to be nearer to home, although there is a Spanish club being mentioned as well. As far as his talk of wanting to go to Chelsea or Arsenal, I know he has a lot of friends at Arsenal. He is missing his family in Marseille. If we get a big offer from a club in France that obviously gives him a chance to be closer to them. That would be a big pull. "Flavio Briatore [the QPR co-owner] is dealing with the negotiations. He is keeping me informed of the situation and at this precise moment [Adel] won't be leaving because no one has met the asking price."

Taraabt joined QPR from Tottenham Hotspur last summer, following a loan spell at Loftus Road, and Warnock claimed he has worked hard to bring the best out of the midfielder, who can be temperamental. "I don't think I have ever spent so much time trying to get the best out of one individual and I think he will regret leaving. My advice to him is to stay until Christmas, get some experience and show people what he can do. That may fall on deaf ears unfortunately. It's sad."

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Olympic Stadium bidding process to be scrutinised as row escalates
OPLC launches two independent investigations
Director worked for West Ham during bidding process
Owen Gibson
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 5 July 2011 22.06 BST

The Olympic Park Legacy Company has launched two independent reviews into how one of its directors ended up working for West Ham United during the bidding process for the Olympic Stadium. The quango, which awarded the 250‑year lease on the Olympic Stadium to West Ham over Tottenham Hotspur, last week suspended its director of corporate services, Dionne Knight, on full pay after it emerged she had been paid by the east London club to carry out consultancy work during the bidding phase.

"The Olympic Park Legacy Company has launched an independent investigation into its internal stadium procedures as a result of the allegations made concerning employee Dionne Knight," the OPLC said in a statement.

"The auditors Moore Stephens have been appointed to carry out this investigation into our procedures. They have put together a team led by their specialist forensic unit."

An independent barrister will also be appointed to conduct the "employment elements" of a separate investigation into how Knight came to be working for West Ham on the procurement process for the conversion work the club needed to do on the stadium.

The OPLC has said that it had no knowledge that she was working for West Ham. The club were told by the West Ham Olympic Stadium project director, Ian Tompkins, with whom Knight was in a long‑standing relationship of which all parties were aware, that she had obtained permission from the OPLC. Tompkins has also been suspended pending an investigation.

"We will communicate the outcome of both investigations when the work is complete," said the OPLC. "We remain confident that the integrity of our processes has not been compromised."

The OPLC is believed to be confident that Knight was isolated from the Olympic Stadium decision-making process once she declared her relationship with Tompkins. The process was handled by a separate team based at its law firm Eversheds.

Spurs will return to the high court this month in an attempt to force a judicial review of the decision-making process. The OPLC board voted 14-0 in favour of the joint bid from West Ham and Newham Council, with the decision rubber-stamped by the government and the mayor of London, Boris Johnson.

West Ham have said they will sue the Sunday Times for claiming the payments to Knight were "secret" and have claimed they will also take legal action against Spurs, who have used a security firm to investigate the bidding process.

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Tuesday, July 5

Daily WHUFC News - 5th July 2011

Season ticket deadline on Tuesday
WHUFC.com
The countdown is on for supporters to renew with the club offering a special
finance option
03.07.2011

The season ticket renewal period has been stepping up ahead of an exciting
new campaign at West Ham United with Sam Allardyce hard at work and the
players looking the part. Fans have until 5pm on Tuesday 5 July to renew
their season ticket and make sure of their usual seat at the Boleyn, before
new applications are accepted. To make it easier for supporters to renew,
the club has partnered with Zebra Finance for those wanting to help make
payments more manageable via a monthly instalment option for all of our
loyal supporters.

With optimism high, fuelled by the manager's arrival and a busy summer of
transfers headed by Kevin Nolan, the ticket office expects another busy rush
until the close of play on Tuesday. Season ticket holders can get extra
benefits, including ten per cent off the new West Ham United Macron replica
kits for the 2011/12 season with the discount applying to all retail
purchases.

Brisk trade has been reported by the club's new Online Store, launched in
response to supporter feedback. Supporters have been flocking to pre-order
the stylish strips before the official launch on Thursday 28 July 2011. For
Allardyce, the priority is getting his players ready for the big kick-off,
with the prestigious pre-season date at home to Real Zaragoza of Spain
standing out on Saturday 30 July 2011 before the visit of Cardiff City in
the npower Championship opener on Sunday 7 August 2011.
"It is not a long time to gel a new team together," Allardyce said. "We are
going to have the legacy of players from last season and we have already
bought Kevin Nolan and added Abdoulaye Faye to the squad in terms of ability
and experience. "Both have been playing in the Premier League for many years
and are willing to step down and play in the Championship to help West Ham
get up at the first time of asking. "Hopefully the players that were here
last season will discard the disappointment they had of getting the club
relegated and get back to playing in a positive mental attitude. They will
show the ability and skills that they have got and help the club to get back
up."

Allardyce, who is meeting his staff at Chadwell Heath this week, was clear
once again a line should be drawn under last season and that everyone should
unite behind the promotion push. He is certain that his players will lead
the way and make the supporters proud to follow the team home and away.
"Hopefully they have had a good look at themselves in the summer and
realised the disappointment it has brought to everybody as well as
themselves and they come back fighting. They need to come back and show
everyone they are Premier League players by coming in and winning on a
regular basis in the Championship."

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Fanimo looking forward
WHUFC.com
Exciting winger Matthias Fanimo is fit again and ready to make up for time
lost to injury
01.07.2011

Matthias Fanimo is eager to make up for lost time and the disappointment of
missing out on appearing at two major international tournaments. Having
enjoyed a superb opening half of 2010/11, during which the winger netted
five goals in 16 youth team appearances and forced his way into the
reserves, Fanimo was sidelined with a leg injury in March. The setback
forced the 17-year-old out of action during the final two months of the
season, causing him to be omitted from England's Under-17 squad for the UEFA
European Championship and FIFA World Cup finals at that age level. While
Fanimo was understandably downhearted at being absent from the competitions,
he is ready to return to action in pre-season and enjoy a successful 2011/12
campaign. "It was a disappointment that I wasn't there with England at the
World Cup, but I've got to look forward from now because maybe other
opportunities will come," said Fanimo, who captained England U16s to Victory
Shield success 18 months ago and has been capped nine times at U17 level.
"Hopefully I can get through the new season without being injured so that
people can see a bit more of me, which I'm looking forward to. "It has been
difficult to deal with that disappointment. Because I'm at a young age, I
was looking forward to the European Championship and the World Cup, so when
I couldn't go the disappointment hit me pretty hard. "It was quite hard for
me, but now that it's gone I can look forward to different opportunities. I
have been watching the games and watching Blair Turgott, who's doing well.
Hopefully, they can go all the way! "Hopefully I can get myself back into
the England set-up, which won't be the easiest thing to do. I'm just going
to have to work on my game and improve on it and hopefully I can get a
recall."

While he may still be relatively young and inexperienced, Fanimo has faith
in his ability and is even eyeing the possibility of making his first-team
debut during the upcoming campaign. With a number of senior players having
departed and a fixture list packed with npower Championship and cup matches,
the teenager knows new manager Sam Allardyce will find a time to call upon
the club's Academy products. "It does open up a lot of opportunities for the
young lads coming through, so hopefully if I get the opportunity then I can
take it and get myself into the first team," he added. "I think it would be
a bit too soon for a loan move. I still have to get myself in and around the
first team here and I think that would be good for me. "It would be safe to
say that I won't be going anywhere."

Fanimo has another reason to celebrate - the signing of his first
professional contract with the club this summer. "It's a very proud moment.
All the hard work has paid off. It's been a long road, so I think this
professional contract will help me with my development and take me on to the
next level."

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'I'm really over the moon'
WHUFC.com
Callum McNaughton has big plans after signing a new professional contract
with West Ham United
05.07.2011

Eighteen months ago, Callum McNaughton was nursing a leg injury and facing
up to the very real prospect that he may be released by West Ham United.
This week, the tall centre-back sat down at the Boleyn Ground to sign his
second professional contract with the Hammers following an outstanding
2010/11 season. McNaughton, who joined the club at the age of 14, saw his
fitness and form improve markedly last season, enjoying a productive loan
spell at Blue Square South side Bishop's Stortford before being appointed as
West Ham's reserve-team captain. Showing leadership qualities, determination
and composure in equal measure, the 19-year-old has come on in leaps and
bounds and is now eyeing a first-team debut in the near future. "This is my
second contract now and I'm really happy to have signed it," said the
flame-haired defender. "It's what I really wanted so I'm really over the
moon and am excited about it and what I can do next season. "I felt like I
progressed throughout last year and did well, improved a lot and I really
enjoyed my football as well. It was positive and I hope to build on it this
year. "I think it was a learning curve and I learned more and more. The loan
spell at Stortford did me a lot of good because I got a lot of football -
eight games in a month - so that helped me a lot.
"My confidence and my play improved and it's really nice that I can enjoy my
football more and more."

Looking back at the dark days of the 2009/10 season, McNaughton could have
been forgiven for giving up on his dream of becoming a professional
footballer. He did not choose the easy way out, though, and has shown a huge
amount of desire to bounce back and establish himself in West Ham's reserve
team. Now, McNaughton naturally wants to take the final step. "I always knew
what I wanted and believed I could achieve it. It was just a case of proving
it and I've just come through this 18 months and felt like I've progressed
and I'm really happy. "I've got loads of small goals to meet to make it to
my big goal of making my first-team debut this season.
"I believe in myself and it's what I really want. It's what I have worked
hard for and it is my main goal to play for this club. "I'll keep working
hard and I'll keep progressing and I definitely hope to achieve that."

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Carr signs
KUMB.com
Filed: Monday, 4th July 2011
By: Staff Writer

Tony Carr has signed a new five-year deal with West Ham United. The Youth
Academy director, whose existing deal was up this summer has put pen to
paper on a contract that will keep him tied to West Ham United until 2016.
Carr, 60 - who was overlooked in favour of Sam Allardyce for the recent
managerial vacancy - has been employed by the club in a coaching capacity
since 1973. Only last year he was awarded the MBE for services to football
whilst a testimonial match saw a whole host of current and former
international stars turn up at the Boleyn. Speaking to KUMB.com last year
Carr admitted that despite the lure of offers from elsewhere, he intended to
see his career out at Chadwell Heath. "If the club want me to stay I'd like
to stay," he said. "I'd like to go on for another three or four years, if
I'm honest. I'm quite healthy, I still enjoy it, I still think there's work
to be done. "We've got good kids in the system and I want to see them
develop. I hope there's going to be some good players coming through in the
next three or four years and I want to be part of that. "Obviously there
comes a time when you go 'look Tone, as much as we love you you've got to
pack it in'. And I understand that. But whilst I'm still quite fit and
healthy... the day I stop enjoying it is the day I go 'thanks, but I've done
my bit'."

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Kurucz eyes regular action
Hammers goalkeeper linked with Baggies switch in homeland
By Juha Pal. Last Updated: July 4, 2011 11:38am
SSN

West Ham goalkeeper Peter Kurucz is keen to secure regular action after
missing all of last season with a serious knee injury. The Hungary Under-21
international, who moved to Upton Park from Ujpest FC on an initial loan
deal in January 2009, injured his anterior cruciate ligament in a reserve
outing last August. Reports in Kurucz's homeland claim that West Brom are
considering a summer swoop as they look to bolster their options following
the departure of Scott Carson to Bursaspor.
Boaz Myhill is expected to be Baggies boss Roy Hodgson's first choice in the
coming season and it remains to be seen if Kurucz would be prepared to move
on.

Optimistic

The goalkeeping situation at West Ham remains unclear, with England
international Rob Green tipped to depart and Marek Stech, Ruud Boffin and
youngster Jake Larkins also on the club's books. Kurucz, who has been
training with Ujpest recently but has ruled out a return to his former club,
is focused on getting back out on the pitch after his spell on the
sidelines. The 23-year-old told Nemzeti Sport: "The club signed the Belgian
Ruud Boffin when it became clear that I can't play for a while.
"I'm optimistic, but at the moment there is only one thing that I want to do
- I want to play."

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Stadium row causes concern
Newham mayor says controversy must not delay plans
Last Updated: July 4, 2011 5:28pm
SSN

Newham mayor Sir Robin Wales has stressed the importance of putting plans in
motion for the Olympic Stadium despite the protracted row over its
ownership. Wales does not believe the controversy triggered by the
suspension of an Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) director who also worked
for West Ham during their bid for the ground should be allowed to delay
plans for the venue. The east London Olympic borough won a joint bid with
West Ham to use the stadium after the Games. The OPLC board voted 14-0 in
February to back this bid, ahead of Tottenham, as first choice to move into
the stadium. The OPLC and West Ham said the woman had no involvement in that
decision. "The sooner we can get on with it the better for our country.
Anything that delays it is not good for our country," Sir Robin said. "It is
a seriously hugely popular bid. Everybody thought it was the best - let's
just get on with it. We are very keen to get started. "Our bid is way the
best. It works in every possible way. We will retain the stadium so we can
use it nationally and regionally. Our community will benefit enormously from
it. "Any rational person will say 'it is a no-brainer, this is by far the
best bid - let's get on with it'. "Things will happen as they happen. It is
the right bid for the stadium and we will work as quickly as we can to open
it."

The OPLC director was suspended on full pay on Friday after it was
discovered she had been doing paid consultancy work for West Ham. She was
later named as Dionne Knight. She had declared "a personal relationship"
with a Hammers employee when she started at the OPLC, but told the legacy
company of her work at the club only last week, they said. She was
immediately suspended while any possible conflict of interest was
investigated, the OPLC said. Both the OPLC and West Ham said the woman had
no involvement in that decision.

Johnson staying calm

The Hammers have said they are taking legal action against Tottenham and The
Sunday Times over allegations about the Olympic Stadium bidding process.
London mayor Boris Johnson believes the controversy should not allow the
plans for the stadium to be delayed or thrown off course. He said: "There is
no reason why there should be any deviation. The woman concerned made her
relationship known to the OPLC and was immediately excluded from having
anything to do with the bid process. "Obviously they took steps, quite
rightly, to exclude her of any involvement with the bid process and it now
transpires there was a financial relationship - that is a matter that is
currently under investigation. "I have no reason to believe that this in any
way will blow the decision off course. The OPLC have pondered the decision.
"Let's face it, two years ago no-one would have said we would have two top
London clubs fighting it out for the right to use the Olympic stadium. It is
a great tribute to everybody involved in the marketing of the Olympic Park
that we have got a situation where we have so much interest in the stadium.
Before then people were talking about mothballed white elephants."

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Fernandes 'no' to Hammers bid
Published: Today
The Sun

TONY FERNANDES has ruled out buying relegated West Ham after a row between
him and the current owners. Fernandes, the boss of AirAsia, made public his
offer to buy 51 per cent of the club on Twitter. That prompted an angry
response from David Gold and David Sullivan, who bought the Hammers 18
months ago. And Fernandes admits the reaction from the pair has put him off
in his attempts to form a takeover for the Championship side. He said: "The
relationship between the owners and myself ... I don't think we are meant to
be. "The Hammers possibility has probably gone."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
AirAsia's Fernandes says no longer in market for West Ham
KUALA LUMPUR | Mon Jul 4, 2011 1:34pm BST

(Reuters) - Tony Fernandes, the owner of Malaysia-based budget airline
AirAsia, said on Monday he was no longer in the market to buy into West Ham
United football club, with which he has long been linked. "The relationship
between the owners and myself ... I don't think we are meant to be,"
Fernandes told Reuters in a telephone interview from London. "The Hammers
(West Ham) possibility has probably gone." The 47-year-old Malaysian
millionaire, who was educated in Britain and owns the Team Lotus Formula One
squad, has long been a fan of the London football club, which was relegated
from the English Premier League at the end of last season.
Media reported last month Fernandes had put in an offer for West Ham and
that he wanted a 51 percent stake. However, the current owners were not
inclined to give him more than 35 percent, the reports said.

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West Ham move to tie down Collison amid Premier League interest
By talkSPORT
Monday, July 4

West Ham are confident of extending Jack Collison's stay at the club despite
a flurry of interest from a host of Premier League sides. West Brom are the
latest club to be linked with the fit-again midfielder following claims the
22-year-old was being tracked by Tottenham and Liverpool. Dan Ashworth, West
Brom's sporting and technical director, worked with Collison when he was a
schoolboy at Peterborough and is thought to be the driving force behind the
interest from the Hawthorns But Sam Allardyce's side are ready to offer the
Watford-born star a new and improved deal after he returned from a 14-month
lay-off with a knee injury. With Scott Parker and Thomas Hitzlsperger set to
leave the club following relegation to the Championship, Allardyce is keen
to keep Collison and combine him in the Hammers' midfield with Mark Noble
and new signing Kevin Nolan. Negotiations are ongoing but the east London
club hope to tie up a new deal for the youth-team graduate as early as this
week.

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Margetson quits Cardiff for West Ham role
By talkSPORT
Monday, July 4

West Ham have appointed Martyn Margetson as their new goalkeeping coach.
Margetson, 39, held the same position at Cardiff, but has left the Welsh
club to join Sam Allardyce's backroom team at Upton Park. Although Robert
Green is expected to leave the club during the summer, Margetson has been
handed the role of working with the new number one at the east London club.

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Brighton fend off competition from West Ham and Leicester to land £3.25m
Mackail-Smith
By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 5:06 PM on 4th July 2011
Daily Mail

Brighton have won the race to sign Peterborough's Craig Mackail-Smith for a
fee which could rise to £3.25million. Leicester appeared favourites to
capture the sought-after striker, who has signed a four-year deal, while
West Ham also had a bid accepted by Peterborough for the 27-year-old. But
the Seagulls have underlined their intentions for the forthcoming npower
Championship campaign by beating the duo to Mackail-Smith's signature.
Mackail-Smith started out at Dagenham & Redbridge and moved to Peterborough
for an undisclosed fee in January 2007. He scored 99 goals for Posh during
his four-and-a-half-year stay, including one in the 3-0 play-off final win
over Huddersfield at Old Trafford in May. Poyet believes the capture of
Mackail-Smith 'shows we want to go places'. He told the club's official
website: 'Some thought it was a done deal that he would be heading
elsewhere, but we got the player which is good, as it shows that we want to
go places, to do better. 'A signing like that can only help us as we try to
bring more players in. 'He's a player that we can build our team around,
which is why I was so keen to bring him here, and one of the most pleasing
aspects for me is that we have signed him despite interest from some other
big, big teams. 'When I first sat down with the chairman, Craig was at the
top of my list, our number one target, so I'm absolutely delighted to have
signed him.'

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Boris Johnson says Olympic Stadium row will not delay West Ham move
'There is no reason why there should be any deviation'
OPLC carrying out investigation into consultancy work
Owen Gibson
guardian.co.uk, Monday 4 July 2011 20.03 BST

The mayor of London, Boris Johnson, has insisted the revelation that West
Ham United paid an Olympic Park Legacy Company director for consultancy work
will not derail the club's move into the Olympic Stadium. West Ham's Olympic
project director, Ian Tompkins, and the OPLC's director of corporate
services, Dionne Knight, have been suspended while both carry out internal
investigations. "There is no reason why there should be any deviation. The
woman concerned made her relationship known to the OPLC and was immediately
excluded from having anything to do with the bid process," said Johnson, who
rubber-stamped the OPLC's decision to choose West Ham's joint bid with
Newham council over a rival one from Tottenham Hotspur.

"Obviously they took steps, quite rightly, to exclude her of any involvement
with the bid process and it now transpires there was a financial
relationship – that is a matter that is currently under investigation," said
the London mayor. "I have no reason to believe that this in any way will
blow the decision off course."

The OPLC is expected to announce on Tuesday which firm will conduct the
independent audit. The legacy company suspended Knight on Friday. It said
she had not revealed she was also undertaking consultancy work for West Ham
on its procurement process. The club, due to move into the stadium in
2014-15, said that it believed Knight had authorisation from the OPLC to
carry out the project work on its behalf. The mayor of Newham, Sir Robin
Wales, whose board authorised a £40m loan to the joint venture company that
will operate the stadium, said the controversy should not derail its plans.
"The sooner we can get on with it the better for our country. Anything that
delays it is not good for our country," said Wales. "It is a seriously
hugely popular bid. Everybody thought it was the best – let's just get on
with it. We are very keen to get started."

Spurs will attend a high court hearing this month in a bid to force a
judicial review of the decision.

West Ham said on Sunday it would sue the Sunday Times over the claim that
the payments were made in secret and take legal action against Spurs over
its use of a firm of private detectives.

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Hammers add Margetson to backroom team as Allardyce continues rebuilding job
By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 11:08 PM on 4th July 2011
Daily Mail

West Ham have appointed Martyn Margetson as their new goalkeeping coach.
Margetson, 39, held the same position at Cardiff, but has left the Welsh
club to join Sam Allardyce's backroom team at Upton Park.

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Pardew reveals Nolan disagreement
5 Jul 2011
Evenign Standard

Alan Pardew has admitted Newcastle decided to sell skipper Kevin Nolan
because they did not believe he had another five years in him at the top
level. The 29-year-old left for relegated West Ham in a £4million move last
month after failing to win the long-term contract he was looking for, much
to the horror of Magpies fans who saw their team's inspirational captain
contribute 12 goals to the cause last season. Pardew was disappointed to
lose Nolan, who had two years remaining on his existing deal, but insisted
there would have been little point in keeping a disgruntled player, and told
BBC Radio Newcastle: "Kevin didn't want to stay, that's the end of the
debate. Kevin couldn't get a contract for four or five years." He added:
"My opinion is that we couldn't give Kevin a five-year contract because if
Kevin isn't playing first-team football, he isn't going to be the leader
that we want, I am convinced of that. "Kevin is so full-on as the captain of
a football club and at the level he has gone to now, he will easily cope
with that and he will come back to the Premier League. "But in four or five
years' time, Kevin needs to be doing the business in the first team, and we
couldn't and I couldn't see that possibly happening here at Newcastle, and
we had to make a decision on that."

Pardew also has a decision to make with his goalkeepers with veteran Steve
Harper, Holland international Tim Krul and Fraser Forster, who enjoyed a
successful spell on loan at Celtic last season, all vying for the number one
spot. Indeed, one of the three is likely to be playing his football
elsewhere during the next campaign rather than operating as number three at
St James' Park. Asked if he would keep all three, the manager said:
"Probably not, actually, and that's a situation we have to be very careful
of. "They have all got a genuine, genuine chance to be number one, so when
you suddenly become number three, that's a major issue and that will be a
major issue for one of them."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Monday, July 4

Daily WHUFC News - 4th July 2011

West Ham legal action over 2012 stadium claims
BBC.co.uk

West Ham United are taking legal action against Tottenham Hotspur and The
Sunday Times over allegations about the Olympic Stadium bidding process.
West Ham said they were treating the claims "with the utmost seriousness".
It comes after an Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) employee was suspended
when it emerged she worked for West Ham during their bid to use the stadium
in London after the 2012 Games. West Ham said they were "certain of the
robustness" of their successful bid. A West Ham spokesman said: "West Ham
United can confirm the club are taking legal action in relation to
allegations made in today's Sunday Times. "We are certain of the robustness
of our successful bid for the Olympic Stadium."

Consultancy work
On Friday it was revealed that an OPLC director had been suspended on full
pay after it emerged she had been undertaking paid consultancy work for West
Ham.
The director, later named by West Ham as Dionne Knight, had declared "a
personal relationship" with a Hammers employee when she started at the OPLC,
but on Thursday she told the legacy company of her work at the club. The
OPLC said she was being suspended while any possible conflict of interest
was investigated. The OPLC board voted 14-0 in February to back the Hammers
as first choice to move into the £486m stadium after the Games. The OPLC and
West Ham said Ms Knight had no involvement in that decision. West Ham said
they had already carried out an investigation into the woman's role with the
club. West Ham plan to retain the running track after moving into the
stadium and create a 60,000-capacity arena for football, athletics, concerts
and community use.

Last month, attempts by Tottenham and Leyton Orient to get a judicial review
of the OPLC's decision in favour of West Ham were rejected. Spurs' plan had
involved knocking down most of the structure and rebuilding it without the
running track, instead rebuilding the National Sports Centre at Crystal
Palace.

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Keen joins Liverpool
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 3rd July 2011
By: Staff Writer

Kevin Keen has been appointed first team coach at Liverpool. KUMB.com
exclusively revealed yesterday how Keen, along with reserve team boss Steve
Lomas, had left West Ham - with view to securing a move to Liverpool. That
move has now been completed with Liverpool releasing a statement tonight
confirming that Keen - who had been working at West Ham in a coaching
capacity since 2002 - will be teaming up with another former Hammers
employee, Steve Clarke, on Merseyside.
"Keen has signed a three year deal and will join up with his new colleagues
on Monday when the Liverpool squad report back to Melwood for the start of
pre-season training," reported liverpoolfc.tv tonight. Meanwhile current
reds boss Kenny Dalglish welcomed the appointment, stating: "I'm delighted
that Kevin is joining us to work alongside Steve Clarke coaching the first
team squad. "He has previously worked with Steve at West Ham and has a good
reputation and a good manner about him. He is highly respected in the game
and will be a great addition to our technical staff."

KUMB.com wish Kevin the very best of luck in his new post.

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£1,868: the price of corruption?
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 3rd July 2011
By: Staff Writer

The secret payments allegedly paid by West Ham to an officer of the OPLC
prior to United being granted preferred bidder status for the Olympic
Stadium totalled just £1,868. As you're almost certainly aware by now, this
morning's Sunday Times led with a story entitled 'Olympic Boss Paid Secret
Cash' in which it is suggested West Ham paid a member of the OPLC to
influence the decision concerning would be granted use of the site
post-2012. However the story also reveals that the sum paid to Ms Dionne
Knight - the OPLC's director of corporate services - prior to the decision
being made totalled just £1,868; the sum constituting two seperate payments
of £566 and £1,302.

Ms Knight - who purportedly earns a salary of £84,000, making the £1,868
payments roughly the equivalent of a weeks' wages - is said to have received
further payments of £3,400, £4,646 and £4,800 - but only AFTER West Ham had
been granted preferred bidder status. The total sum paid to Ms Knight, who
was employed in a consultancy role by West Ham - is said to stand at less
than £20,000 - less than a quarter of her OPLC salary.

Meanwhile the veracity of the story had also been called into question due
to the transparent nature of the payments made by West Ham to Ms Knight. It
has been suggested that had West Ham genuinely wanted to keep the payments
secret, it is extremely unlikely that they would have paid money into Ms
Knight's personal bank account directly from the club's bank account - a
transaction naturally evident on Ms Knight's personal bank statement
procured by corporate investigators acting at the behest of Tottenham
Hotspur, whose underhand tactics have been slammed since the story was
published.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham call in Police
KUMB.com
Filed: Sunday, 3rd July 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham have called in Police to investigate claims that personal
information was illegally obtained by agents acting on behalf of Tottenham
Hotspur FC. It was revealed last night that Tottenham recently hired a
corporate intelligence agency to obtain private information - including bank
statements, utility bills and other personal information - belonging to
employees of West Ham United FC and the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC).
West Ham responded immediately by stating that the revelations were being '
treating with the utmost seriousness', adding that 'we will take the
strongest action possible as well as involve the police and the data
protection registrar'. And less that 12 hours after the story first broke,
that is exactly what the club has done with Police called in to investigate
the Sunday Times' claims, according to Paul Smith of the Mirror who spoke to
David Sullivan earlier today. Meanwhile Tottenham, who instigated the entire
murky process have thus far failed to comment.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ilunga eyes top-flight stay
Hammers stopper keen to keep playing at the highest level
By Giscard Gourizro. Last Updated: July 3, 2011 4:04pm
SSN

West Ham defender Herita Ilunga has confirmed he would like to play
top-flight football following the club's relegation. The DR Congo
international still has two years left on the four-year contract he signed
after joining from Toulouse in 2009. Ilunga is now being linked with a move
out of Upton Park following relegation with a number of Ligue 1 clubs also
interested. Newly-promoted QPR are reportedly keen on the 29-year-old, but
Rennes and former club Toulouse are ready to join the hunt. Ilunga is aware
of the speculation and while he has no problems with West Ham, he would like
to continue playing top-flight football "I'm aware of the speculation," he
told skysports.com. "Nothing's done at the moment. I want to play in the top
division. "West Ham's a friendly club and I'm very happy to play for them,
but you never know in football."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Guest Post from Tony McNulty: Let Tottenham Be Tottenham in Tottenham
July 3rd, 2011 - 11:06 pm by Iain Dale
By Tony McNulty
West Ham Till I Die

I wonder how parents in New York felt in 1958 when it was announced that the
Dodgers were leaving for Los Angeles. The Dodgers had been playing baseball
in Brooklyn, under a range of different names, since 1883. Up until then,
New York had three baseball teams. The borough of Queens had the Mets, and
still does; the Yankees were based in the Bronx, and still are – but the
Dodgers left and relocated thousands of miles away in Los Angeles. How did
parents tell their children that their local team was being ripped out of
the local community and would no longer exist – no doubt for sound
commercial reasons, but without any regard for the feelings of the local
community in Brooklyn.

We have come to accept that the mighty dollar is king in American sports and
that teams aren't community entities rich in culture, heritage and history –
but franchises that rely totally on their success as economic entities. The
local market fails, the entire franchise simply moves to another local
market – regardless of community or history. I know that English football is
becoming much more commercial and that money matters more and more – but I
hope that we haven't reached the US position quiet yet, and that community
and history still matters.

Tottenham Hotspur FC has played at White Hart Lane since it was built in
1899 and this should matter to all Londoners. London history and sporting
legacy is part of what makes London tick. No-one wants to support Stratford
Hotspur; they want to support Tottenham Hotspur – based in Tottenham. I
don't support Tottenham, I don't even like it much, but I fully support
those that want the team to stay at White Hart Lane and I hope that they do.

Tottenham doesn't belong at the Olympic stadium in Stratford, West Ham does.
It is to the credit of the Olympic authorities that they recognise this and
see it as a key part of a lasting sporting legacy for the East End. The club
needs to make sure that it returns to the Premiership as quickly as possible
to grace the new Stadium with the football that it and the East End
deserves.

Thames Ironworks FC played at Hermit Road in Canning Town in 1895-96, moved
to Browning Road in East Ham for a brief while and then played at the
Memorial Grounds (roughly where West Ham tube station is now) from 1896
until 1900. Thames Ironworks became West Ham United in 1900 and continued to
play at the Memorial Grounds until moving to its current home at the Boleyn
Ground at Upton Park in 1904. So throughout its history West Ham has played
within close proximity to the new Olympic Stadium at Stratford. This will be
the real legacy of the Olympics for the East End.

I confess to being a West Londoner, but one who has supported West Ham since
the mid-60s. I am a season ticket holder too, but this is bigger than one
club. We should let Tottenham be Tottenham in Tottenham and let the East End
have the sporting legacy that its communities deserve – West Ham in the
Olympic Stadium. London should be very proud of its football clubs – but
unless they are rooted in the communities they have sprung from and serve,
then they will become as nomadic as the franchises in American sport – and
what sort of legacy will that be for anyone?

Tony McNulty was a minister in the last Labour government.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Face Corruption Investigation (And Police Raid?)
July 3rd, 2011 - 10:46 am by Iain Dale
West Ham Till I Die

If you read the Sunday Times this morning you'd think West Ham had committed
an act of corruption up there with Nick Leeson. But then you read the West
Ham official statement and you get the impression that the Sunday Times had
rather hyped things up a bit – not unknown in the world of journalism. The
Sunday Times is behind a paywall, but under 'fair use' rules I will quote
400 words of the front page story.

A shadow was cast over the Olympic Games last night after it emerged West
Ham United made payments totalling £20,000 into [an OPLC] executive's bank
account before and after it was selected as the owner of the stadium in east
London.

The money was paid to Dionne Knight, the Porsche-driving director of
corporate services at the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC)…The arrangement
was put in place by Ian Tompkins, a director of West Ham who masterminded
its Olympic stadium bid. Knight and Tompkins are in a relationship together.
Both executives were suspended on Friday after The Sunday Times confronted
them with evidence of the payments. They told reporters that Karren Brady,
West Ham's vice-chairwoman, had known about the payments. They said it was
for "consultancy work".

However, Knight also admitted that she had not told her employers about the
payments. The disclosures could force the government to reopen the bid for
the Olympic stadium if West Ham is found to have acted improperly. Knight,
34, who earns £84,000 a year, is one of a small number of directors on the
OPLC, a government body set up to manage the handover of the stadium and the
surrounding Olympic park.

The investigators were hired by Spurs two days before West Ham was voted the
preferred bidder on February 11. Investigators obtained bank statements,
credit reports, utility bills and telephone records for Knight and Tompkins.
Knight was placed under surveillance. They established that four payments
had gone into Knight's bank account between December and April from a West
Ham United account at the Bank of Scotland, for £566, £1,302, £3,400 and
£4,600. They say there was a further sum of £4,800 in June.

This weekend Knight admitted receiving a total of £20,400 from West Ham and
said it was for consultancy work. The arrangement was made two months before
West Ham won the bid. She had initially refused to say what the work was.
Yesterday her lawyer said it was "a procurement contract in relation to the
stadium".
Knight had informed the OPLC about her relationship with Tompkins but
admitted she had not told it about the cash from West Ham. She accepts this
was wrong but denies leaking confidential information.

In a statement, the OPLC said Knight had told it about her relationship with
West Ham's bid director and measures were taken to ensure she had no access
to sensitive information.

Those last few words may be important if this goes to court. West Ham
responded at 3.30am by posting this statement on the club website. I quote
it in full.

West Ham United can confirm the club are taking legal action in relation to
allegations made in today's Sunday Times.

We are certain of the robustness of our successful bid for the Olympic
Stadium.

The newspaper's statement that Tottenham Hotspur employed the investigators
who obtained private information illegally is one we are treating with the
utmost seriousness and no doubt data protection and prosecution agencies may
also do so.

The only wrongdoing here is by those who have broken the law and obtained
private information. It would appear that no stone has gone unturned trying
to find a way to undermine our bid including apparently targeting the 14
Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) Board members who had voted unanimously
on the bid in our favour.

The suggestion of 'secret cash' in the Sunday Times article is absolutely
and categorically denied. As such, legal action is being taken against the
Sunday Times, as well as Tottenham Hotspur.

Dionne Knight's work for the Legacy Stadium Partnership (LSP) owned 50% by
London Borough of Newham and 50% by West Ham United was in relation to the
procurement of a construction partner after the Olympic Games.

A number of companies applied for the procurement contract. It was awarded
to Ms Knight as she was able to provide expertise at a significantly
competitive price. The work that she subsequently undertook for the LSP was
of a very high standard.

The OPLC has confirmed that Ms Knight had absolutely no involvement in the
bidding process and we repeat that secret cash was not paid to her.

Her work was very transparent and the bidding process was never compromised.
The work was never hidden, for example she personally attended meetings.
There is considerable documentation to confirm the existence and quality of
her work. Two firms of solicitors are able to confirm those facts. The price
we paid for the work was extremely competitive.

The LSP, including Karren Brady who is named in the offending article, has
not paid any member of the OPLC for any information in relation to the bid
process, and has not received any unauthorised information from the OPLC or
any other source in relation to its bid.

The OPLC has further confirmed that she and other employees of the OPLC did
not have access to confidential information as it was held at the OPLC's
external solicitors' offices.

The LSP believed Ms Knight had authority to do the work as that was what it
was informed. The fact that the work was undertaken is wholly irrelevant to
the Olympic Stadium bid process and only raises issues of employment law.

To reiterate, the allegations are the subject of legal action. If there is
any further publication of the allegations, further action will be taken.

We are so confident in the probity of our actions that we will take the
strongest action possible against any suggestion of wrongdoing on the part
of West Ham United or its officers, as well as involve the police and the
data protection registrar in regard to the accessing of private information
by illegal means.

Fighting talk. Whatever our allegiances, both clubs clearly have questions
to answer. What on earth did West Ham think they were doing, hiring someone
from the OPLC in the first place? Let alone someone who was in a
relationship with Ian Tompkins. If that isn't at the very least unethical, I
don't know what is. Karren Brady may protest that she thought it had been
cleared by the OPLC, but did she get that in writing? I certainly would
have.

But West Ham are clearly right to point out that Tottenham have broken
various laws in the way they went about procuring this information. It is
very worrying, not least from a civil liberties viewpoint, that it is
possible to obtain so much private information about one person within a few
hours. Perhaps the Sunday Times Insight team might want to investigate that!

It's not easy to predict the outcome of this. It's embarrassing for West
Ham, but at the moment, that's the limit of it. If it emerges that Donna
Knight had indeed passed information to West Ham without the OPLC knowing,
God alone knows where this may lead. If Police can raid Chris Huhne's wife's
house and seize her teenage son's mobile phone, it is not beyond the realms
of possibility that Inspector Knacker of the Yard might be raiding the
Boleyn Ground within the next 24 hours and seizing computer records.

Haven't we Hammers fans suffered enough humiliation this year?

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Kop are so Keen
By MATT PARKER
The Sun

LIVERPOOL have appointed Kevin Keen as a first-team coach. He has signed a
three-year deal and starts work today alongside Steve Clarke, with whom he
worked at West Ham. Keen spent nine years as a West Ham coach and was named
caretaker manager on three occasions. Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish said:
"I'm delighted that Kevin is joining us to work alongside Steve Clarke
coaching the first-team squad. "He has previously worked with Steve at West
Ham and has a good reputation and a good manner about him. "He is highly
respected in the game and will be a great addition to our technical staff."
Keen, 44, made over 600 appearances in spells with West Ham, Wolves, Stoke,
Macclesfield and Wycombe.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Thomas wants to be big Hit at Villa
Published: Today
The Sun

GERMAN Thomas Hitzlsperger is eyeing a return to old club Aston Villa. But
Stoke, Fulham and Blackburn are also keen on landing the midfielder.
Hitzlsperger, 29, is available on a free from West Ham.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham target ex-Bolton defender
Published 23:00 03/07/11 By Alan Nixon
The Mirror

West Ham manager Sam Allardyce is ready to snap up rejected left-back Jlloyd
Samuel from old club Bolton to bolster his ­promotion bid. Allardyce wants
to agree a deal for 30-year-old Samuel – who is a free agent after being
released by Wanderers boss Owen Coyle – and he could join the ex-Reebok
colony at Upton Park.
Trinidad and Tobago international Samuel signed for Bolton under Gary
Megson's management. But Allardyce knows him from his time at his former
club and also when the ­ defender started at Aston Villa.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Liverpool welcome Kevin Keen to coaching staff
Published 23:00 03/07/11 By Alan Nixon
The Mirror

Kenny Dalglish welcomed Kevin Keen onto his Liverpool backroom team - and
confirmed Steve Clarke's growing influence at the Kop. Keen quit West Ham to
become first team coach at Anfield in a move exclusively revealed by Mirror
Sport on Saturday, with Clarke now cemented in his role as Dalglish's number
two. Dalglish paid tribute to Keen as he appointed him in a hurry and also
singled out Clarke for his influence in the new-look Merseyside Boot Room.
The Liverpool chief said: "I'm delighted that Kevin is joining us to work
alongside Steve coaching the first team squad. "He has previously worked
with Steve at West Ham and has a good reputation and a good manner about
him. He is highly respected in the game and will be a great addition to our
technical staff." Hammers hero Keen turned down a new contract to stay on
Sam Allardyce's staff and may be immediately whisked to Anfield where
Dalglish wants to fill a vacancy. Keen was caretaker manager for the final
game in the Premier League and made no secret of his desire to get the post
after being a coach at Upton Park - and previously a player. But while Keen
was told that he would get a post by the Hammers heirarchy he was then
offered a lesser role and reduced terms which sparked his decision to go.
Keen worked with Clarke at West Ham when the Liverpool coach was number two
to Gianfranco Zola and Dalglish will not have to go far for a
recommendation. Ironically Keen's exit from West Ham will get Allardyce out
of an awkward spot. He knew of his interest in the manager's job but his
bosses were happy to see the 'club man' still around at West Ham.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Kevin Keen leaves West Ham to become Liverpool's first-team coach
Kevin Keen will renew his Upton Park work with Steve Clarke
Kenny Dalglish welcomes 'great addition to our technical staff'
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 3 July 2011 21.12 BST

Liverpool have appointed Kevin Keen as first-team coach following the
departure of Sammy Lee. Keen spent nine years on the coaching staff at West
Ham United and was named caretaker manager on three occasions, most recently
for the final game of last season, a 3-0 defeat at home to Sunderland. He
will work alongside Steve Clarke at Anfield having signed a three-year deal,
and will report with his new colleagues for the first day of pre-season
training on Monday. "I'm delighted that Kevin is joining us to work
alongside Steve Clarke coaching the first team," Kenny Dalglish, the
Liverpool manager, said. "He has previously worked with Steve at West Ham
and has a good reputation and a good manner about him. He is highly
respected in the game and will be a great addition to our staff."

Keen made more than 600 appearances in spells with West Ham, Wolverhampton
Wanderers, Stoke City, Macclesfield and Wycombe.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham defender Herita Ilunga happy at relegated club but would welcome a
move back to the Premier League
3 Jul 2011 22:30:00
Goal.com

West Ham defender Herita Ilunga has hinted at a move away from Upton Park,
despite claiming he is happy at the relegated club. The Hammers ended their
six-year stay in the top flight this season, finishing bottom of the Premier
League, and have already seen a host of first-teamers leave. Ilunga stopped
short of fully committing himself to the east London side, and admitted he
would like another crack at the top flight. "I'm aware of the speculation,"
he told skysports.com. "Nothing's done at the moment. I want to play in the
top division. "West Ham's a friendly club and I'm very happy to play for
them, but you never know in football."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Celtic hoping to beat Sunderland and West Ham to out-of-favour striker
Bellamy
By STEPHEN MCGOWAN
Last updated at 11:15 PM on 3rd July 2011
Daily Mail

Celtic will this week ask Manchester City to name their price for Welsh
firebrand striker Craig Bellamy. Parkhead chief executive Peter Lawwell is
awaiting the return from holiday of key management figures at the FA Cup
holders, while Bellamy himself is due to return from a charity trip to
Sierra Leone. The Scottish Cup winners want a 12-month loan deal similar to
that struck with Newcastle for Bellamy in 2005. The striker has a year
remaining on his existing deal and Sunderland, West Ham and Cardiff City are
also in the running for his signature. Speaking after Saturday's 1-0 defeat
to Central Coast Mariners in Sydney's Olympic Stadium, Neil Lennon laughed
off talk of a new Bellamy move, branding it 'speculation.' Sportsmail
understands, however,Bellamy has been top of his wanted list from the start,
alongside Reading's Shane Long. A £7million price tag has wrecked any chance
of signing Long. And while Manchester City are desperate to offload Bellamy,
they want a permanent deal and a £4m fee.

Celtic's preference for a loan also faces obstacles in City's insistence
they will no longer subsidise the player's £80,000-a week wage. Last season,
Cardiff paid just £20,000 towards a quarter of the striker's salary — a deal
the Abu Dhabi-based owners of the Manchester club will not repeat. 'We're
looking at goalkeepers and centre-forwards but there's nothing to report at
the moment until I speak to Peter about developments,' said Lennon. Former
strike target Omer Damari yesterday joined Hapoel Tel-Aviv in a £1.5m deal.
Norwegian Erik Huseklepp is also reported to be back on the radar following
his doomed move to relegated and financially-troubled Bari.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Barton uses Twitter to deride relegated Parker
By Jack Pitt-Brooke
Monday, 4 July 2011
The Independent

Joey Barton yesterday ridiculed suggestions that Scott Parker was a better
player than him. Barton was writing on Twitter and defending his recent
claim that he was the best English midfielder.

The Newcastle United player had told French magazine So Foot in April that
he was the best of his compatriots. Yesterday a Twitter user suggested that
Parker and Jack Wilshere were better than Barton, and while Barton admitted
the class of Arsenal's 19-year-old, he dismissed claims that Parker was his
superior. "Wilshere is class and is goin [sic] to be an infinitely better
player than me, no doubt about it," Barton conceded, "but Parker come on."

Despite West Ham's relegation, Parker was lauded for his performances last
season, leading the Football Writers' Association to make him their player
of the season and Fabio Capello to select him in three England
internationals this year. Barton, though, insisted that he was better,
pointing to the fact that Parker's club finished bottom of the Premier
League. "He's not in my league", Barton wrote, "...FACT he s [sic] actually
in the championship." Barton also pointed to the games between Newcastle and
West Ham last season: "Did I not dismantle him twice, think it was 2-1 at
their place, 5-0 at ours!! And they were easily relegated #justsaying."

When asked to explain his absence from the England squad, Barton explained
that "we all know that's political and not professional".

Barton's comments were not wholly negative, though. He praised Spurs' Luka
Modric and Arsenal's Samir Nasri as the two best players in England last
season. "Modric and Nasri were the best two players I played against in the
league," he wrote. "I put Modric out in front as the best by quite some
distance... miles ahead of me in my opinion."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham to sue over allegations of corruption
By Tom Lawrence
Monday, 4 July 2011
The Independent

West Ham United are taking legal action against Tottenham Hotspur and the
Sunday Times over allegations surrounding the validity of the Olympic
Stadium bidding process. The club said it was treating claims made by the
newspaper "with the utmost seriousness" and insisted it was "certain of the
robustness" of its successful bid to take over the east London stadium
following the 2012 games. It comes days after the Olympic Park Legacy
Company (OPLC) confirmed an employee had been suspended after it was
discovered she was working as a consultant for West Ham during the bidding
process.

The woman has been suspended with immediate effect while the potential clash
of interests is investigated. A West Ham spokesman said: "West Ham United
can confirm the club are taking legal action in relation to allegations made
in today's Sunday Times." The OPLC board, in charge of securing the future
of the Olympic Park site, voted 14-0 in February to make the Hammers the
first choice to move into the £486m stadium.

They were in a head-to-head contest with Tottenham. On Friday the OPLC
revealed it had suspended one of it's employees following revelations about
her work status. The OPLC released a statement saying: "It has come to our
attention that an employee of the Olympic Park Legacy Company has been
undertaking paid consultancy work for West Ham United FC. The company had no
knowledge of this work and no permission was given to undertake it. This
individual had no involvement whatsoever in our stadium process."

West Ham said it undertook an initial internal investigation which
established that the work carried out by the individual was "not connected
in any way to the bidding process for the Olympic Stadium but procurement
project management thereafter".

The club added: "We are of the firm view that the integrity of the bidding
process has not been compromised."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Apprentice's Karren Brady facing questions over £500m Olympic stadium
corruption scandal
By ARTHUR MARTIN
Last updated at 11:47 PM on 3rd July 2011
Daily Mail

Karren Brady was last night dragged into corruption allegations threatening
to tarnish the legacy of the 2012 Olympics. Miss Brady, a sidekick of Lord
Sugar on BBC series The Apprentice and vice-chairman of West Ham United
Football Club, allegedly knew about secret payments between two lovers
deeply involved in the future of the £500million Olympic stadium. Dionne
Knight, a director at the quango which awarded West Ham Football Club the
use of the stadium after the Games, earned £20,400 from the club in payments
authorised by her boyfriend Ian Tompkins, who helped mastermind the club's
bid. Miss Knight was allegedly paid in five instalments both before and
after West Ham was selected as the owner of the East London stadium by her
employers, the Olympic Park Legacy Committee. When confronted by an
investigator, West Ham said Miss Brady was aware of the payments but had
been assured that it was merely for 'consultancy work' and that the OPLC
knew about the payments. Miss Knight earns £84,000 a year as director of
corporate services. Miss Brady and other bosses at the club face questions
about why the work was commissioned before the bid had been won and why
payments were sanctioned.

If West Ham is found to have acted improperly, the Government could reopen
the bid for the stadium at great expense to the taxpayer. The information
was obtained by investigators hired by Tottenham Hotspur, the club that lost
out in the bidding for the stadium. Spurs, who are seeking a judicial review
of the decision, refused to comment, but a senior source said: 'If West Ham
had someone on the payroll from the OPLC and it can be proved that she had
access to confidential information relating to the bids, there is no way it
can't go back and be reopened.' Investigators were hired by Tottenham two
days before West Ham won the bid on February 11.
They obtained bank statements, credit reports, utility bills and telephone
records for Miss Knight, 34, and Mr Tompkins, 53. Miss Knight was placed
under surveillance.

Investigators established that payments of £566, £1,302, £3,400 and £4,600
had gone into Miss Knight's account between December and April from a West
Ham bank account. They say there was a further sum of £4,800 for June. Miss
Knight said she received a total of £20,400 from West Ham and said it was
for consultancy work. She had initially refused to say what the work was.
However her lawyer later told the Sunday Times it was 'a procurement
contract in relation to the stadium'. Miss Knight has been suspended from
OPLC and Mr Tompkins is believed to have been suspended by West Ham. A
spokesman for West Ham said the club was taking legal action against
Tottenham Hotspur and The Sunday Times over the allegations.

THE KEY PLAYERS IN THE SCANDAL

DIONNE KNIGHT
The 34-year-old mother of one has been suspended from her £84,000 role as an
executive on the OPLC, a government body set up to manage the handover of
the stadium and the surrounding Olympic park. Porsche-driving Miss Knight
admitted being paid £20,400 by West Ham, but says it was for 'consultancy
work'.

KARREN BRADY
Familiar to millions as Alan Sugar's sidekick on The Apprentice, Miss Brady
is the vice-chairman of West Ham. She was appointed in January 2010, and was
influential in the club's successful bid to take over the Olympic stadium
after the 2012 Games. Miss Brady owns a £2.5million mansion near Birmingham,
and is married to football manager Paul Peschisolido. They have two
children.

IAN TOMPKINS
West Ham's Olympic project director joined the club in September 2008 – four
months after he started a relationship with Dionne Knight when they both
worked at Newham Council in East London. Mr Tompkins, 53, has been suspended
by West Ham.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Parker's not in my league insists Barton
Irish Independent
Monday July 04 2011

joey barton yesterday ridiculed suggestions that Scott Parker was a better
player than him. Barton was writing on Twitter and defending his recent
claim that he was the best English midfielder around. The Newcastle United
player had told French magazine 'So Foot' in April that he was the best of
his compatriots. Yesterday a Twitter user suggested that Parker and Jack
Wilshere were better than Barton. While Barton admitted the class of
Arsenal's 19-year-old, he dismissed claims that Parker was his superior.
"Wilshere is class and is goin (sic) to be an infinitely better player than
me," Barton conceded, "but Parker -- come on. "He's not in my league",
Barton wrote, "...FACT he s (sic) actually in the championship." Barton also
pointed to the games between Newcastle and West Ham last season: "Did I not
dismantle him twice, think it was 2-1 at their place, 5-0 at ours!!" When
asked to explain his absence from the England squad, Barton explained: "...
that's political and not professional."

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