Saturday, September 24

Daily WHUFC News - 24th September 2011

Peterborough United match preview
WHUFC.com
All the early team news and background for Saturday's bid to make it seven
games unbeaten
24.09.2011

WEST HAM UNITED v PETERBOROUGH UNITED
npower CHAMPIONSHIP
SATURDAY 24 SEPTEMBER 2011
KICK-OFF: 3PM
FULL AUDIO AND TEXT COMMENTARY - WEST HAM TV

Introduction
• West Ham United go into the weekend's big Kids for a Fiver contest in
fifth place, having collected 14 points from their opening seven league
matches. That form makes it the Hammers' best start in eight seasons.
Peterborough are eleventh, with ten points from their first seven fixtures.
• The Hammers have been the most watched team at home in the Championship
and the 33,465 attendance last time out for the 4-3 win at the Boleyn
against Portsmouth a fortnight ago was the fourth biggest gate of the day in
the country. In fact, it would have been the biggest had it been played last
Saturday.
• The Posh have the lowest average gate in the division in contrast, and
have not won in six away fixtures in the league.
• That defeat of Portsmouth was the Hammers first home win since a 3-0 home
win against Stoke City on 5 March 2011.
• Peterborough are looking to make it two straight wins in the Championship
for the first time since March 2010.
• Sam Allardyce's men are seeking a seventh match unbeaten in the npower
Championship this season, and know a win would lift them at least above
third-placed Brighton & Hove Albion after they drew 3-3 with Leeds United on
Friday night.
• West Ham United and Peterborough United have met just twice in competitive
fixtures - facing each other in Division One during the 1992/93 season. The
Hammers were victorious in both fixtures, winning 3-1 at London Road on 12
September 1992 and 2-1 at the Boleyn Ground on 9 February 1993.
• The Posh were a League Two club as recently as the 2007/08 season when
they finished second in the same season that the Hammers finished tenth in
the Premier League.
• Former world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson was a spectator when
West Ham United travelled to London Road for a pre-season friendly on 14
July 2010. Carlton Cole and Anthony Edgar were on target for the Hammers in
a 2-1 victory, with striker Dave Hibbert scoring The Posh's consolation.
• Sam Baldock scored MK Dons' second goal in their 3-2 League One Play-Off
semi-final first leg victory over Peterborough United on 15 May 2011, only
for The Posh to win the second leg 2-0 at London Road and go on to secure
promotion to the Championship.
• Sam Allardyce has squared up against Darren Ferguson, the son of Big Sam's
good friend Sir Alex, once before as manager. As Blackburn Rovers supremo,
he earned a quarter-final tie with a 5-2 home defeat of Peterborough United
on 28 October 2009. Joe Lewis was sent off for The Posh.
• Peterborough United's on-loan Manchester United midfielder Ryan
Tunnicliffe appeared for the Red Devils in their 1-0 FA Youth Cup
fourth-round victory over West Ham United at the Boleyn Ground in January
2011.
• Peterborough director of football Barry Fry was manager of Birmingham City
under David Sullivan and David Gold between 1993 and 1996. Fry and
Joint-Chairman Gold are set to meet Legends Lounge guests before the game.
• West Ham United midfielder Henri Lansbury, a debutant goalscorer against
Portsmouth two weeks ago, is set to be watched by England U21 coach Stuart
Pearce.

Charity collection
• Caudwell Children's Charity will be holding a collection at the Boleyn
Ground around the match.
• The charity is committed to changing the lives of disabled children across
the UK and provides specialist equipment, treatment, therapy and family
support. As well as these much needed services, an annual Destination Dreams
holiday is arranged to provide children who have life-threatening illnesses
a dream trip, with this year's destination Walt Disney World Resort in
Florida.
• For more information about the charity and how to get involved with their
work, visit their website www.cauldwellchildren.com

Team news
West Ham United
• James Tomkins trained on Thursday and Friday and could make a surprise
return after limping out of the 0-0 draw at Millwall last Saturday with a
groin problem. Sam Allardyce had initially thought he could be out for ten
days.
• The manager could hand a home start to David Bentley after the England
midfielder appeared as a second-half substitute against Portsmouth and
Millwall in the last two weekends. Fellow new recruit Sam Baldock made his
debut against The Lions in the last fixture and is also pushing for a first
start, and Boleyn bow.
• Papa Bouba Diop is also set to be involved at some stage over the next
week, with the squad facing three games in eight days. Freddie Sears
impressed in a development squad game at Charlton Athletic in midweek and is
also eager to stake a claim, as is Jack Collison after being rested in the
last two matches.
• Guy Demel is making good progress from a hamstring injury that has delayed
his debut and could join in full training sometime next week.
• Frederic Piquionne serves the second game of a three-match suspension
after being sent-off in the 4-3 npower Championship victory over Portsmouth
a fortnight ago.
• Gary O'Neil (ankle) is out with long-term ankle injury.
• Pablo Barrera and Jordan Spence are on season-long loans at Real Zaragoza
and Bristol City respectively. Ahmed Abdulla (Swindon Town), Jordan Brown
(Aldershot Town), Robert Hall (Oxford United), Olly Lee (Dagenham &
Redbridge), Cristian Montano (Notts County) and Callum McNaughton (AFC
Wimbledon) are all out on temporary loans.
Peterborough United
• Darren Ferguson is sweating over the fitness of Gabriel Zakauni, with the
Congolese player having a toe injury.
• Striker Lee Tomlin has been unwell this week but should be fit to be
involved.
• The Posh have loaned Nicky Ajose to Scunthorpe United.

Last time out
Saturday 17 September 2011
npower Championship
Millwall 0-0 West Ham United
West Ham United: Green, O'Brien, McCartney, Faye, Tomkins (Reid 30),
Lansbury (Baldock 74), Noble, Nolan, Faubert, Taylor (Bentley 59), Cole
Subs not used: Boffin, Carew
Goals: None
Saturday 17 September 2011
npower Championship
Peterborough United 2-1 Burnley
Peterborough United: Jones, Little, Bennett, Zakauni, Alcock, Boyd (Taylor
77), McCann, Sinclair, Tunnicliffe, Frecklington (Wootton 85), Tomlin (Rowe
59)
Goals: Sinclair 3, 38

Previous meetings
• West Ham United and Peterborough United have met just twice in competitive
fixtures - facing each other in Division One during the 1992/93 season. The
Hammers were victorious in both fixtures, winning 3-1 at London Road on 12
September 1992 and 2-1 at the Boleyn Ground on 9 February 1993.


Ten-year records
West Ham United
2010/11 Premier League 20th (33 points)
2009/10 Premier League 17th (35 points)
2008/09 Premier League 9th (51 points)
2007/08 Premier League 10th (49 points)
2006/07 Premier League 15th (41 points)
2005/06 Premier League 9th (55 points)
2004/05 Championship 6th (73 points - promoted to Premier League via
play-offs)
2003/04 Championship 4th (74 points)
2002/03 Premier League 18th (42 points - relegated to Championship)
2001/02 Premier League 7th (53 points)
Peterborough United
2010/11 League One 4th (79 points - promoted to Championship via Play-Offs)
2009/10 Championship 24th (34 points - relegated to League One)
2008/09 League One 2nd (89 points - promoted to Championship)
2007/08 League Two 2nd (92 points - promoted to League One)
2006/07 League Two 10th (65 points)
2005/06 League Two 9th (62 points)
2004/05 League One 23rd (39 points - relegated to League Two)
2003/04 Second Division 18th (52 points)
2002/03 Second Division 11th (58 points)
2001/02 Second Division 17th (55 points)

Referee
• Saturday's referee will be Tony Bates, who has never officated a West Ham
match before. His last Peterborough United outing was their 2-2 draw at
Barnsley on 5 April 2010, having also done their 2-0 defeat at Blackpool on
26 September 2009 in the same season.

Old boys
• West Ham United midfielder Jack Collison spent two years with Peterborough
United as a schoolboy, playing for the club between the ages of ten and 12.
The Wales international was also close to re-joining the club for a
pre-agreed fee of £300,000 in January 2009, only to make his Hammers debut
at Arsenal on New Year's Day and remain at the Boleyn Ground.
• Peterborough United midfielder Grant McCann came through the Academy ranks
at West Ham United, turning professional in 1998 and going on to make four
substitute appearances for the club before joining Cheltenham Town for
£50,000 in January 2003.
• The Posh's Belfast-born Republic of Ireland U23 international winger
Daniel Kearns spent three years with West Ham United between 2007 and 2010
before being released and joining League of Ireland Premier Division club
Dundalk.
• The following players are among those to have worn the colours of both
West Ham United and Peterborough United during their careers - Bobby Barnes,
Matthew Etherington, Bill Green, Steven Laurie, Dave Llewellyn, Grant
McCann, Adam Newton, John Woodburn and Terry Woodgate.
• The late great Noel Cantwell played for West Ham United before going on to
manage Peterborough United on two occasions. The Cork-born Republic of
Ireland full-back spent eight seasons with the Hammers, making 274
appearances, scoring eleven goals and winning the Division Two title in
1957/58. Cantwell later took charge at London Road in 1972, winning the
Division Four title in his first season with The Posh. After leaving for a
spell in the United States with the Jacksonville Tea Men, the Irishman
returned to Peterborough between 1986 and 1988.

Up next
• West Ham United play host to Ipswich Town on Tuesday night for a 7.45pm
kick-off, with Peterborough travelling to the south coast to take on
Portsmouth at the same time.

General information
• Cash turnstiles will be in operation, with the club operating a Kids for a
Fiver scheme. A large walk-up is expected so fans should get to the ground
in good time.
• The weather forecast is for an overcast afternoon with temperatures
peaking around the 20C mark.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fanimo eyes win No6
WHUFC.com
Matthias Fanimo and his U18 team-makes will look to extend their perfect
start on Saturday
23.09.2011

A fit-again Matthias Fanimo is eager to emulate Owen Hargreaves by making a
goalscoring impact for West Ham United's Under-18s on Saturday. The England
U17 winger has recently returned from a much less-serious version of the
knee tendonitis injury that affected England midfielder Hargreaves. Having
impressed for the Hammers' development squad in midweek, Fanimo is now
eyeing a maiden goal of the 2011/12 season when the youth team take on
Southampton in the FA Premier Academy League at Little Heath on Saturday.
"There is still a lot to be done fitness-wise, but I do feel myself getting
there. In a few more weeks, I should be there.
"I had tendonitis in my right knee, which I couldn't play without
aggravating. Owen Hargreaves had the same kind of injury, but his was far
worse. I am recovered now and the pain in my knee has gone."

Like Hargreaves, who made a goalscoring return for Manchester City last
week, Fanimo is eager to make up for lost time this season by hitting the
back of the net against the Saints. "We have started the season really well
and if we can keep it up, we can do good things. I'm hoping we can do really
well in the FA Youth Cup.
"We have scored a lot of goals and have created a lot of chances as a team -
it's just a shame I haven't managed to get my name on the scoresheet yet!"
Kick-off at Little Heath on Saturday is at 11am, with parking and admission
both free.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Peterborough
BBC.co.uk
Page last updated at 12:53 GMT, Friday, 23 September 2011 13:53 UK
Npower Championship
Venue: Upton Park Date: Saturday, 24 September Kick-off: 1500 BST Coverage:
Watch highlights on The Football League Show; listen on BBC Radio 5 live and
BBC local radio; text commentary on the BBC Sport website

TEAM NEWS
West Ham centre-back James Tomkins had been expected to miss out after
suffering a groin injury, but boss Sam Allardyce has not ruled him out yet.
Abdoulaye Faye is standing by for his home debut in case Tomkins is not able
to play.

Peterborough United defender Gabriel Zakuani has been nursing a toe injury
in recent weeks. But the player is receiving injections in an effort to
ensure that he plays at Upton Park.

MATCH FACTS
Head-to-head

• These clubs have only met twice and West Ham have won both matches.
• They competed in the old Second Division together 19 seasons ago.
After winning 3-1 at London Road in September 1992, the Hammers edged a 2-1
victory at Upton Park in February 1993.

West Ham United

• West Ham are unbeaten in six Championship games, and have 14 points
(W4, D2, L1), making it their best start to a league season in eight years.
• They have picked up six more points on their travels than at home;
10 on the road, four at Upton Park. Only Middlesbrough exceed that, with
seven.
• The Hammers boast the biggest average gate in the Championship.

Peterborough United

• Peterborough are seeking their first back-to-back wins in the
Championship, since March 2010.
• They are without victory in six away league games having alternated
between draw and defeat since a 2-0 win at Dagenham on 5 April. A draw is
due, if that sequence is to continue.
• Darren Ferguson's side are surviving on the lowest average
attendances in the Championship.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham Utd v Peterborough
KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 22nd September 2011
By: Preview Percy

Sadly, Preview Percy is away once again this week - something to do with an
all-expenses-paid weekend of outrageous decadence in Bridlington. On the
bright side, the office has lost that lingering 'damp' smell that curiously
manifested itself during the old boy's presence - and the tea lady is
delighted at the hour's overtime she's getting for writing this week's match
preview...

Having teased us with a return to 3pm Saturday football for the Portsmouth
encounter a fortnight ago, the Football League are positively tickling our
bellies with a second consecutive home game at what is considered by most
rational football fans to be the correct and proper time at which domestic
league football should be played.

We'll conveniently pass over the abomination that was the intervening
12:30pm start at the Den last weekend, an hour conducive to neither
high-quality football or atmosphere. Was anyone surprised it finished
nil-nil - both on and off the pitch?

On the travel side, there appears to be no planned disruption to your
underground services - which makes a pleasant change. Perhaps those serial
football-disrupting scallywags at TfL are under the impression that we're
playing host to Manchester United again this weekend. Whatever.

Not that that will make much difference to our visitors Peterborough United,
who will no doubt arrive fresh from the Fens - and the third flight of
English football from which they were promoted last season - in swanky, new,
fresh-for-the-Championship coaches.

Transport possibly provided by local Yellow Page march-stealers Aardvark
Coaches of Fengate, who can comfortable seat 53 passengers and provide 'a
kneeling facility' (answers to the usual address please) according to their
website - whose Aardvark logo bears little resemblance, in truth, to a
medium-sized, burrowing, nocturnal mammal native to the African continent.

What it actually depicts is some kind of jug-eared, pug-faced, arse-nosed
cutesy-horror beast - which brings us neatly on to 'celebrity' Posh fan
Adrian Durham, whose controversial, opinionated outbursts on radio station
Talksport - many at the expense of West Ham, his on-air nemesis - have led
to him being given a genre all of his own. Forget 'Shock Jock' - meet 'Twat
Jock'.

Fuelled by his own self-importance, like that other post-'96 dilettante
broadcaster Tim Lovejoy, Durham thrives on the sound of his own voice at the
expense of his listeners who are regularly cut off in their prime if they
dare pose a challenging question, or one that fails to adhere to Durham's
blinkered view of the world of football.

He disgracefully bombarded West Ham's 75-year-old Chairman David Gold with
disrespectful 'Tweets' recently regarding West Ham's pricing for this
weekend's fixture - an argument that, as usual, failed to stand up to even
basic scrutiny. Mr Gold, for his part, handled the situation perfectly - and
left Durham looking very much the boorish half-wit he is.

On to more important matters and individuals who are actually expected to
turn up at the Boleyn Ground this weekend. The Posh, as they are known -
more on that later - arrive at this fixture tenth in the Championship having
taken a respectable ten points from their first seven fixtures. Not bad for
a side who were promoted via the League One play-offs last season and sold
their star striker in the summer (Craig Mackail-Smith) to Championship
rivals Brighton.

The boss is the son of red-nosed, BBC-hating Scot Sir Alec/Alex of
Manchester: Darren Ferguson - who is back at London Road for a second spell.
The first ended after two years in 2009 when he officially left the club 'by
mutual consent', although rumours of his sacking had been circulating for at
least 24 hours prior to an announcement.

All of which appeared odd, to outsiders, as Ferguson had achieved two
straight promotions since joining the club in 2007 - service that the club
itself acknowledged as 'magnificent' in a statement confirming his
departure. But success is short-lived in football and being bottom of the
Championship by November was the catalyst for his removal.

He suffered the ignominy of the axe again just 13 months later after a
miserable spell as manager of Preston before being given the chance to
return to London Road in January 2011. He did, Peterborough scored more
goals than any other club in the country (106) and they returned to the
Championship via the play-offs (beating Huddersfield 3-0 in the final).

This season they have been little short of magnificent at home, winning
three (Palace 2-1, Ipswich 7-1 and Burnley 2-1) and losing just one ('Boro
0-2) of their four fixtures. However they have been a different proposition
on their travels, having managed to gain a solitary point (Millwall 2-2)
from their triumvirate of away games (they also lost 2-1 at Blackpool and
2-0 at Brighton).

With West Ham's home form being in stark contrast to their away form - only
four of United's 14 points have been won at the BG - something has to give.
Current odds for the game can be found here; with Peterborough having failed
to keep a clean sheet this season and West Ham as generous defensively in
recent weeks, goals are likely to feature.

Firing on all cylinders for Posh have been Lee Tomlin with four goals whilst
Paul Taylor, David Ball and former Hammer Grant McCann - best remembered for
an horrendous own goal in a 7-1 drubbing at Blackburn in October 2001 - with
three.

Meanwhile, West Ham have Carlton Cole in red-hot form with the striker
scoring in four consecutive games prior to the stalemate at Millwall.
Captain Kevin Nolan has claimed three whilst the elusive 'Own Goals' lies
third in the list with a brace. Seven others have one apiece.

Another player currently at the Cambridgeshire club and familiar to Irons
fans is Christian Dailly, who is training there having been bizarrely
released by Portsmouth at the beginning of September.

The acceptable face of adultery - who memorably lost two front teeth in
front of the Bobby Moore Stand before later scoring with his bollocks - was
axed after just two competitive games for Pompey, who he joined in the
summer following his release by Charlton in May.

Also on the books at London Road is Daniel Kearns, a former member of Tony
Carr's Academy who was released by West Ham at the end of the 2009/10
season. The 20-year-old Irishman returned to Ireland for a brief spell with
Dundalk before being snapped up by Posh last month, although he is yet to
feature for the first team.

With Joe Lewis playing again having recovered from recent injury - he
featured in a 5-0 friendly defeat against Ipswich on Tuesday - reserve
goalkeeper Paul Jones, an ever-present this season, could find his place
under threat again soon.

Likewise, West Ham also have their own injury concerns to contend with;
James Tomkins, who was forced out of the Millwall clash with a thigh problem
could be out for a while, meaning Abdoulaye Faye is poised to make his home
debut having replaced his young team mate at the Den.

With no further established central defenders currently at his disposal, Sam
Allardyce is finding his resources stretched just three weeks after the
transfer window closed - an issue of little concern, or so it would seem,
for the boss who only last week stated that he was satisfied with his squad
whilst insisting that he had no immediate plans to strengthen it.

That aside he will likely go for an unchanged side for the most part, with
Green, O'Brien, McCartney and Reid likely to join Faye in defence. In the
middle of the park, Noble should hold on to his place although Diop is an
option. Kevin Nolan, the club's most inspirational leader since Lucas Neill
should sit behind target man Carlton Cole with Lansbury betwixt the two
midfielders.

Forming the wings of Allardyce's front three should be Taylor and either
Faubert or new boy Bentley. As far as the bench goes, pick any five from
Boffin, Demel, Collison, Diop, Faubert or Bentley, Baldock, and Carew.
Please note that should Allardyce take note of recent calls for a more
attacking 4-4-2 formation at home, disregard everything I've just said.

At this point Percy usually gazes into his crystal (eye)ball and offers you,
his stoical band of followers, a prediction for the match.

Although I must insist on swerving the ocular exercise (even though it's
potentially do-able as there's a drawer-full of colourful spares in his
bedside cabinet; I'm not sure who this 'Ben Wa' fella is but he must be
popular in the fashionable wing of the replacement eye industry) in honour
of this particular custom I will go for a narrow West Ham win, in much the
same fashion at the Portsmouth game.

So 3-2 to the Irons, with David Bentley adopting Roeder-esque tactics circa
April 2002, keeping the ball by the opposition corner flag and delighting
the home faithful with a series of spectacular step-overs - designed to draw
a foul from frustrated opponents - from the 83rd minute onwards.

Finally, back to 'The Posh'. The nickname derives from an incident in 1921
when the manager of Fletton United - former residents of Peterborough's
London Road site - was reported to have requested 'posh players for a posh
team' in a recruitment drive. The resulting recruits may well have been
'posh' but they still couldn't prevent (the by then re-named) Peterborough
and Fletton United from folding in 1932.

In 1934 Peterborough United were formed and from their first game at London
Road they were greeted with shouts of 'Up the Posh!' by fans who had
presumably followed United's predecessors prior to their demise. West Ham
fans have previously sung their own take on 'Up the Posh', most notably to
David Beckham upon Goldenballs' return from the 1998 World Cup Finals.

NB. Percy should be back next week: something for which I'm sure we're all
grateful...

Danger man: George Boyd. The midfielder is considered to be one of the best
in the business at Championship level by manager Darren Ferguson and was
linked with a transfer window deadline day move to the Premier League that
eventually failed to materialise. He's wieghed in with two goals this season
and is considered by many Posh fans to be the reason Craig Mickail-Smith
scored so many goals for the club prior to his move to Brighton.

Referee: Tony Bates. The 50-year-old Speedway fanatic from Staffordshire is
a new name to West Ham despite having officiated in the Football League
since 1996. A joiner by trade, he is best known for being a linesman at the
Germany v Czech Republic Euro '96 clash and, more recently, for sustaining
an injury during a Coventry v Nottingham Forest fixture in February 2011
that allowed his assistant Amy Fearn to replace him, making Ms Fearn the
first woman to referee in the Championship.

Referee's Assistants: Andrew Laver, Mark Scholes (linesman); Warren Atkin
(fourth official).

Last outings: West Ham Utd: 0-0 Millwall (a); Peterborough Utd: 2-1 Burnley
(h).

Current form: West Ham Utd: XWWLX; Peterborough Utd: WLLLW.

Daft fact of the week: Victoria Beckham once tried to take legal action over
Peterborough United's use of the word 'Posh' as a nickname used on
merchandising. The action failed when the club threatened to change its
official nickname to 'Talentless, Thin, Publicity Whore' instead.

Stat man John: Northcutt's corner

Previous meetings

West Ham and Peterborough have only previously met twice in a competitive
fixture. Both encounters took place in the 1992-93 season with the Hammers
winning both matches; 3-1 away and 2-1 at home.

There have however been eight friendly games between the clubs, all played
at London Road, as follows:

August 1967: Peterborough Utd 2-4 West Ham Utd (Hurst, Peters, Sissons 2)
August 1973: Peterborough Utd 1-2 West Ham Utd (Brooking, Robson)
August 1995: Peterborough Utd 1-1 West Ham Utd (Cottee)
July 2001:Peterborough Utd 0-2 West Ham Utd (Kanoute, Defoe)
July 2004: Peterborough Utd 1-1 West Ham Utd (Dailly)
July 2008: Peterborough Utd 0-2 West Ham Utd (Bellamy 2)
July 2010: Peterborough Utd 1-2 West Ham Utd (Cole, Edgar)

They Played for Both

Bobby Barnes: West Ham Utd - Pld 43 Gls 5; Peterborough Utd - Pld 15, 5.
Mick Beesley: West Ham Utd - Pld 2 Gls 1; Peterborough Utd - Pld 23 Gls 3.
Ian Crawford: West Ham Utd - Pld 24 Gls 5; Peterborough Utd - Pld 172 Gls 6.
Mattie Etherington: West Ham Utd - Pld 165 Gls 16; Peterborough Utd - Pld 51
Gls 6.
Grant McCann: West Ham Utd - Pld 4 Gls 0; Peterborough Utd - Pld 38 Gls 9.
Everald la Ronde: West Ham Utd - Pld 7 Gls 0; Peterborough Utd - Pld 8 Gls
0.
Dave Swindlehurst: West Ham Utd - Pld 61 Gls 16; Peterborough Utd - Pld 4
Gls 1.

Noel Cantwell

Between 1952 and 1960, the West Ham skipper played in 248 league games
scoring 11 goals. He was the Peterborough manager between 1972 and 1977 and
also had a second spell as manager between 1986 and 1988.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Man crush
KUMB.com
Filed: Friday, 23rd September 2011
By: Adam R

It's time to get this out in the open. My mate since I was four years old, a
fellow season ticket holder and general all-round good egg has a man-crush
dilemma.

Over the years, whilst riding the West Ham United rollercoaster, a series of
our more questionable characters have fulfilled this important role for him.
The man-crush player is rarely the obvious choice. He is not a common idol
or legend in the mould of Moore, Dicks, Di Canio or dare I say it, Parker,
whose commitment and talent are there for all to see.

No, it's the fella who brings something different to the team that only the
more diligent fan notices. Something unusual or endearing. This is not the
guy who will dribble past two players and nutmeg the keeper, nor the player
with the Rolls Royce touch and vision without whom the team fails to
function.

Previous man crush candidates have included the likes of Moncur, Repka and
most recently Franco, the latter being a fine example; a player who brought
a tiny dash of guile (although admittedly not much, we wouldn't want him to
be over popular) to the most wooden and one dimensional team seen at the
Boleyn for years.

This season he's been scratching his head a bit as to where his Man Crush
affection should be directed, but at the home game against Portsmouth he had
that glint in his eye again...

On two or three occasions their keeper punted it long only for Varney to
drift in from the left wing and clatter Tomkins. Kevin Nolan picked up on
this pattern and 'politely' informed the referee that this should not be
allowed to occur again. Well, surprise surprise it did, with the result
being Tomkins floored and seemingly quite fortunate not to crack a rib or
two in the resulting fall.

We winced as their keeper punted the next one upfield only to see Nolan
accidently clothes line Varney just as he gained momentum en-route to
Tomkins. I put it to you that in the last few years this behaviour would
have gone on unchecked and to the benefit of the opposing team for the
remainder of the game.

Next up, the linesman awarded Portsmouth a throw-in near our corner flag
which the West Stand and Bobby Moore Lower suggested should have been given
to us. Fortunately we were awarded a free kick in the phase that followed,
but it was pleasing to see Nolan make a point of berating the lineman and
referees for the award of the original throw in.

Decisions like this have a nasty habit of costing us. I put it to you that
in the last few years this would have not been questioned with any real
venom and that decisions by the officials would have continued in this
manner to the benefit of the opposition.

Five minutes into the second half Varney had started to look more settled
and the threat on the left side was evidently growing again. In steps Mr
Nolan with a clattering challenge near the half way lane which flattens
Varney and says 'I'm still watching you sonny'. Nolan approaches Varney
whilst on the floor – maybe to apologise but from where we were standing 70
yards away it was clearly a case of letting him know that what goes around
comes around.

Varney subsequently switches between flanks for the remainder of the game
which seems to reduce his effectiveness. I put it to you that in the last
few years the threat would have gone unchecked and would have ultimately
punished us, probably in the usual 90th minute fashion.

Much has been written by West Ham fans about Kevin Nolan since his move.
Perhaps we had anticipated someone who would dictate play in a more obvious
manner, but his approach seems to be about subtle influence of the game in
our favour (and the odd goal or two). I'm not sure what game Steve Cottrill
was watching but Portsmouth had evidently come to us with a relatively
physical game plan.

Last season I'm sure we would have crumpled, even with Parker who just
didn't have that side to his game. This is no longer the case.. We have a
side that can compete when, and if games turn nasty and a captain that looks
like he will pull the strings in the background.

And so, my mate's 'Man Crush' player for season 2011/12 is Mr Nolan. For
now, at least...

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sky condemned by supporters - again
KUMB.com
Filed: Friday, 23rd September 2011
By: Staff Writer

Fans of both West Ham United and Brighton & Hove Albion have slammed Sky for
insisting that the forthcoming Championship clash between the two clubs be
moved from a Saturday to Monday. It was revealed yesterday that the game -
originally planned for a 3pm kick off on Saturday, 22nd October has been
moved to the following Monday (24th) at the request of Sky Sports. However
supporters of both United and Hove Albion are up in arms at the decision
that will cost travelling fans thousands of pounds - with no opportunity for
compensation.

"Disgusting," wrote one KUMB member last night. "Most people would already
have booked travel, those who didn't probably would have today. Hotels are
(mostly) refundable so [that's] not a problem, but don't think we'll get
much back for the trains."

Meanwhile over on Brighton site northstandchat.com, the natives were equally
enraged by the decision to postpone the match by 48 hours.

"I'm sure a lot of other season ticket holders who live at a distance are
going to be totally annoyed at this," wrote withdeanwombat. "It has ruined a
whole family weekend for us,and is a total bloody disgrace."

Supporters have also criticised the timing of the announcement, which came
hours after it was been revealed that West Ham's 2,200 allocation has been
sold out.

Complaints regarding Sky's late amendments to their TV schedule are nothing
new to West Ham United followers. Travelling fans first hit out at the TV
company back in 2002 after the opening game of the 2002/03 season at
Newcastle was moved from a Saturday to Monday night at late notice.

Sky's 'Viewing Relations Officer', Helen Forbes, told KUMB.com at the time:
"Sky have no plans to compensate for financial loss which may have arisen
due to this fixture being changed.

"All decisions concerning what teams will be featured in our live football
coverage are made in conjunction with the Football Association and the
individual club concerned.

"Whilst it is worth pointing out that the football fixtures listings are
always subject to change, we make every effort to provide fans and viewers
with as much advance notification as possible."

Those wishing to register a complaint to West Ham United FC regarding this
issue may do so here: http://www.whufc.com/page/ContactUs/0,,12562,00.html.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sky put mockers on weekender
KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 22nd September 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United's trip to the seaside is off - after the match with Brighton
was moved to a Monday night. Hammers fans hoping to take in a weekend on the
South Coast have had their plans scuppered at the behest of Sky TV, who, in
their infinite wisdom, have requested that the game between Albion and West
Ham be moved from Saturday to Monday night. As has been the case since Sky
were given carte blance to manipulate the fixture list, there is no system
of recompense for those supporters who have already paid for travel and
accomodation. The meeting will be the first between the two sides since
United beat Brighton 3-0 at the Boleyn Ground in the third round of the
2006/07 FA Cup competition. The last time West Ham played away at Brighton
was in April 2005 at the Withdean Stadium, when Dean Hammond's 90th minute
qualiser was enough to earn the Seagulls a point.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
West Ham v Peterborough preview
Last updated: 23rd September 2011
SSN

Team news ahead of Saturday's Championship clash between West Ham and
Peterborough at Upton Park. James Tomkins was expected to miss the game
after suffering a groin injury during last weekend's goalless draw at
Millwall but Sam Allardyce is hopeful the Hammers centre-half could yet be
fit. Winston Reid came on as a substitute at The Den and will start
alongside Abdoulaye Faye,who will be making his full home debut, if Tomkins
does miss out. Allardyce is otherwise expected to name an unchanged side,
with Carlton Cole as the lone frontman and recent signing Sam Baldock on the
bench. Fellow striker Frederic Piquionne is still suspended, midfielder Papa
Bouba Diop is building up his fitness, right-back Guy Demel is recovering
from a hamstring problem and winger Gary O'Neil (ankle) is still out.

Gabriel Zakuani should retain his place in the Posh side. The Congolese
defender has been nursing a toe injury in recent weeks and is receiving
injections in a bid to keep him available for the trip to east London.
Long-term absentee David Hibbert (knee) aside, manager Darren Ferguson has a
full complement of players to choose from. Striker Emile Sinclair will hope
to keep his place in the starting line up after marking his full debut with
a goal in the 2-1 home win over Burnley last weekend.
Ferguson has defenders Scott Wootton and Ben Gordon, midfielders Tommy Rowe
and Daniel Kearns and striker Paul Taylor available should he wish to make
changes. Striker Nicky Ajose has joined Scunthorpe on loan until the start
of January in order to build up his match fitness after recovering from the
hamstring injury he sustained on the opening day of the season.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Karren Brady's football diary
The Sun
KARREN BRADY - First lady of football
Published: Today

Saturday, September 17
IF ever there was a case of "no news is good news" it is at the New Den
where peace breaks out between Millwall and West Ham fans. No English
fixture surely carries a worse history of violence and ill will and, as soon
as we were aware of today's Dockland Derby, plans were being made for
anti-hooligan strategies.
No one bar those with psychopathic tendencies wanted a repeat of those
dreadful scenes in and around Upton Park in 2009 — and we were delighted
with the way things turned out. I would like to thank the Millwall staff,
the police, both teams and the fans for keeping the afternoon clean.

Sunday, September 18
FERNANDO TORRES is reverting to his old hair colouring and, it seems this
afternoon, to his finest goalscoring mode when, like a man who slips on wet
paint, he has a picturesque tumble. My old man wouldn't have missed the
chance Chelsea's £50million star did at Old Trafford. I'm not even sure I
would. I'm a little sorry for him and I'm certain a lot of centre-backs are
going to eat their guffaws for his humiliation because even I could see
Torres is on his way back to form. But £200,000 a week for this striker
seems a heck of a lot of money even for an owner with a Boeing 767 and two
luxury yachts.

Monday, Septmber 19
ONLY a good sense of humour can be behind reports today that West Ham United
may sell the Olympic Stadium endorsement to Ann Summers. If you don't have
one, I can categorically deny this will not happen. But one director of a PL
club thinks the idea has potential and emails me the following message: 'I
can see it now: Ra-ra girls in see-through lingerie, the players in sexy
policemen outfits, a crowd of Rodger More blow-up dolls and, naturally, a
new crest featuring crossed whips instead of hammers. But I'd better shut up
now or Spurs will be using it in evidence against you'.

Tuesday, September 20
AN unexpected outburst from Paul Scholes seems to suggest that England
players are like a nursery of new-born babies — "mollycoddled and pampered"
as he puts it — only just short of having their botties talced. I don't know
about that but Scholes has always been exceptionally grounded, a
working-class lad without airs and graces, so I think he is probably about
right. He also comments that England managers just do the job for money, as
strong a reason why we should appoint the home-grown variety as you can
imagine. Sam Allardyce, for one, would walk across burning coals for it.

Wednesday, September 21
A TEXT message arrives. It's from a sexist radio football presenter who
mentions the words 'arse' and 'love' in an interesting sort of way in the
message. Clearly, it is meant for a different Karen, one — unlike me — with
a single 'r'. I won't name him, because I'm not that sort of person. But,
really, just how bad is your luck to send this message to me and not to the
right Karen? In the news, I hear about Fenerbahce's answer to crowd trouble.
They give seats only to women and children — 40,000 of them. An interesting
idea.

Thursday, September 22
LORD SUGAR emails. He saw the headline 'Youngest Woman football Chief Exec
was an escort' and his heart skipped a beat when he thought it might be me.
My husband, recently deceased, says I ought to be flattered. As a
23-year-old newly-appointed managing director at St Andrew's I was asked
what my vital statistics were. I realised there and then women in football
could expect to be treated as freaks of nature. How will people react if,
say, the new head of Man City is asked about his private parts?

Friday, September 23
FROM Los Angeles come stories that Arthur star Russell Brand would like to
be hammered by joining our board. He's love-sick about West Ham — and why
shouldn't he be? If it's Carlton Cole or Katy Perry, there can be only one
winner. I'm sure he'd be an asset to us but there would be plenty to discuss
by all parties, not least wife Katy who thinks his love (of his club, not of
her) is a bit of a joke. It would make a strange board though: One
joint-chairman who published Sunday Sport, the other a sexy lingerie
entrepreneur; Brand who has admitted he's a sex addict and me. Just my luck
to be called vice-chairman!

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Friday, September 23

Daily WHUFC News - 23rd September 2011

Brighton trip moved
WHUFC.com
The Hammers' away fixture at Brighton and Hove Albion has been selected for
live television coverage
22.09.2011

West Ham United's away npower Championship fixture at Brighton & Hove Albion
has been selected for live television coverage on Sky Sports and will now be
played on Monday 24 October at 7.45pm. The match will represent the fourth
time a Hammers' match has been broadcast live this season - the 1-0 home
defeat by Cardiff City was on BBC2, while the 2-2 home draw with Leeds
United and the 4-1 win at Nottingham Forest were both screened by Sky
Sports.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Big Sam on Peterborough
WHUFC.com
The manager revealed some positive team news as he looked forward to
Saturday's home match
22.09.2011

Sam Allardyce has said James Tomkins could be in with a chance of playing
against Peterborough United after returning to training following a groin
problem.
The news that the SBOBET player of the month was back in action at Chadwell
Heath after limping off in last Saturday's goalless draw at Millwall was the
most striking of the manager's pre-match news conference at the Boleyn
Ground on Thursday. Big Sam also talked about on his opposite number this
Saturday, with Darren Ferguson's famous father such a close friend of the
Hammers manager, as he looked forward to trying for a seventh game unbeaten.

What is the team news?

SA: James Tomkins trained this morning and we will have to see what the
reaction is between now and Friday. He could well be available for Saturday.
We have got a three-game week coming up so we first thought we possibly
might have missed him for certainly two games and maybe he would be fit for
the Crystal Palace game away [on Saturday week].
It looks like he will be available for selection for all three. We will
assess the situation on Friday. We are just waiting for Guy Demel who got a
bit of a hamstring in a behind closed doors game so is behind schedule. Papa
[Bouba Diop] is improving and will come into the squad sometime next week.
He has got his international clearance so we look forward to bringing him
into the squad.

David Bentley impressed off the bench at Millwall. Does he give you a major
selection dilemma for Saturday?

SA: Yes. He gives me a nice selection scenario. You are constantly looking
at the squad and the players available and you are looking at the opposition
and then you look forward on what is coming next and what's in front of you.
I know generally we say we take it game by game but personally as a manager,
I would say you think more like a chess player. You think what's ahead of
you as well as that particular match. Next week is a three game week and it
will be a squad scenario rather than the same eleven for every single game.
Using the squad is imperative in terms of the long haul you've got in trying
to achieve what you want to achieve.

Do you feel you can get the best out of David?

SA: He has a point to prove to himself before he proves it to anyone else.
If he can recapture the person and the player he was before at Blackburn
Rovers, we all know that is huge quality at the Premier League level on a
sustained basis. With his ability and at his age, if we can reinvigorate his
confidence, you will get the player back.

We live or die as footballers on our mental strength, not so much on our
ability. That is the key issue. When that takes a knock continuously,
irrespectively of how tough you think you are, you lose your confidence
because of it. You know you won't be involved and basically you lose your
way. You almost forget about how good it used to be because you never get an
opportunity to express yourself and show that ability.

He is a player that needs to play games?

SA: He played so many games for Blackburn when he arrived and was a massive
part of Mark Hughes' success story at Blackburn Rovers. Mark and the team he
built managed to deliver a real good success story . David was a part of
that and got in the England side. He was mooted as the new replacement for
David Beckham because he is a similar type of player and then unfortunately
the backward step has happened [at Tottenham] and that happens in
everybody's career at some stage or another.

Are you tempted by 4-4-2 this weekend with Sam Baldock pushing for a place?

SA: I don't know yet. Somewhere along the line we will get to a 4-4-2, no
doubt about that but at the moment we are ticking along very nicely and
undefeated with a 4-3-3. It depends how Peterborough play. They are a very
attacking-minded and I think actually pack the midfield more with a diamond
than a 4-4-2 so I would have to be cautious if I went with that system. We
will select the team and what system on Friday.

You are up against a Ferguson in the dug-out. Will it be strange to come up
against Sir Alex's son?
SA: I did come up against Darren in the League Cup with Blackburn Rovers. We
won that game comfortably because they had a man sent off ... he has
experienced a change of football club [with his spell at Preston North End]
and I think he will be a much better manager now than when I first met him
because he has had the down side for the first time.
He has had the criticism thrown his way about the lack of results - whether
it was his fault or not- we all suffer it at some stage and he ended up
unfortunately losing his job. He immediately jumped back into the firing
line and took Peterborough to promotion via the play-offs with a record
number of goals scored. I think they scored 100 goals, so he has good
management qualities like his dad and has learned from the bitter experience
he had at Preston.

Do you see similarities?

SA: Yes, they are father and son. There are bound to be similarities. It is
a very difficult scenario to live with such a famous father in the same
trade and I am sure it drives him on to aspire to be as good as he can and
as good as his dad would be. I certainly strive to be as good as Sir Alex
Ferguson. You should set your standards high and try your best to achieve
it. You might not get there but you have to keep driving yourself forward
and doing the best you can and keep improving.

It is a big week for the club. You could be top going into the international
break?

SA: That is the goal of course. Two home games is going to be a measure of
whether we can continue to move forward with home victories. Having beaten
Portsmouth in the end and got rid of that little nervous twitch at home, we
can move forward in terms of getting positive results against Peterborough
and Ipswich. They are two big home games coming up.

It is Kids for a Fiver on Saturday and it will be a big crowd. You are
getting bigger crowds than a lot of Premier League teams, has that support
surprised you?

SA: No not really. Steve Bruce told me that when he played the last game
here for Sunderland last season. Even though West Ham were relegated, 30,000
turned up. That is the measure of the commitment and the loyalty that the
West Ham fans have for this football club and all I want to do is try and
win as many victories for them that I can possibly can - particularly at
Upton Park - so they can go home happy.

What is the latest on Robert Green's contract news?

SA: The contract situation is tentative at the moment ... it is in the
background and probably better kicked off again in January rather than cause
any disruption in the middle of such a critical time.

What about trialists David Carney and Juca?

SA: They have been released. The squad I have at the moment is good enough
and big enough to cope with the demand we have. I am looking forward to
continuing to develop those players and settle the new players in so they
consistently perform to their best.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Taylor up for Peterborough
WHUFC.com
In-form midfielder Matt Taylor said the team would be ready for the battle
this weekend
22.09.2011

Matt Taylor said West Ham United are learning all the time about the demands
of the npower Championship. As was the case at Millwall last weekend, Taylor
said teams would face up against the Hammers as much focused on stopping the
opponents than pushing forward their own aims. "People are going to try to
stop us playing," Taylor said. "It is disappointing that we didn't win at
Millwall but all credit to them."

Peterborough United are up next for Sam Allardyce's men at the Boleyn Ground
on Saturday before Ipswich Town arrive on Tuesday, and Taylor was confident
his team could impose themselves on both contests. "If you look at us as a
team as a whole, we are a very good team. "We go into every game wanting to
win, the mentality of the football club has changed. We want to win every
match, that will breed confidence and the two home games coming up should be
a chance to pick up some results."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Robert Green talks on hold at West Ham
By ANDREW DILLON
Published: Today
The Sun

WEST HAM are playing a waiting game with Robert Green over a new deal. All
contract talks at Upton Park have been put on hold until January as the
Hammers adjust to life in the cash-strapped Championship. England keeper
Green is out of contract this summer and free to speak to foreign clubs from
January 1. Striker Carlton Cole is also believed to be in line to
renegotiate his terms but has also been told to wait until the New Year.
West Ham are fifth in the table and if current form continues and instant
promotion back to the Premier League looks likely, owners David Sullivan and
David Gold will be ready to reward the players who are getting the team back
on their feet. Green, 31, is enjoying a new lease of life under new boss Sam
Allardyce and is happy at West Ham. But despite playing for the team which
finished bottom of the Premier League last season, he is still much
sought-after and was heavily linked with a move to Aston Villa in the
summer. Allardyce is desperate to keep Green but much depends on the outlook
for West Ham's finances. Owners Sullivan and Gold have been forced to shell
out around £40million extra just to keep the wages and bills paid this
season following the drop.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Allardyce ponders new formation to bring in Baldock
London24
Dave Evans, West Ham Correspondent
Thursday, September 22, 2011
12:47 PM

After Saturday's stalemate at The Den, West Ham boss Sam Allardyce is
considering changing his formation for Saturday's home clash with
Peterborough United. The Hammers manager has opted to play a lone striker in
every league game this season, but he may well revert to a 4-4-2 formation
at Upton Park this weekend as he looks to incorporate Sam Baldock into his
starting line-up. The former MK Dons striker made his debut as a late
substitute at Millwall and looked lively and with the Hammers expected to
beat Posh handsomely on Saturday, Allardyce may well opt for a more
attacking approach. Baldock played 16 minutes of the goalless draw and he
was pleased to finally get his chance. "It was good to finally run out in a
West Ham shirt, I've been waiting a while," said the 22-year-old striker.
"It was quite a good game to get involved in, there was a great atmosphere
and I was pleased to get on to the pitch."

Baldock never carved out a chance during his time on the pitch, but he is
hoping for better things soon. "The players around me have got the ability
to create chances for you so I was just trying to be lively and make
something happen. "It didn't fall for me at Millwall, but hopefully I can
get a chance in a big home game next Saturday."

Winger David Bentley is also expected to start the match in place of
Frenchman Julien Faubert after a useful cameo display at The Den, while
Allardyce will then decide between Mark Noble and Henri Lansbury for the
final midfield place. Papa Bouba Diop has received his international
clearance and is now in full training. He is also likely to make the bench
with James Tomkins set to miss the game with a groin strain.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Talent scout: can loan star Henri Lansbury fulfil his potential at the
Hammers?
By Kevin Coulson
Daily Mail

This week our search for young talent in the Football League takes us to
Upton Park where we find a midfielder who is becoming a bit of a loan star.

Henri Lansbury? Didn't he play for Arsenal when they lost 8-2 to Manchester
United?

Yes, that's him. He came on with a few minutes left. Tough to make an
impression in that situation though!

He's been around for a while already hasn't he? Hardly an unknown talent.

True, but he's still only 20 and the start he has made with West Ham on loan
this season indicates he could finally fulfil his potential four years after
making his debut for Arsenal.

Young Gunner: Lansbury made his debut for Arsenal in 2007 PA

Why do you say that?

Well, despite only playing two games since the move, he scored on debut and
set up another by winning a penalty in a man-of-the-match performance
against Portsmouth.

He was also at the heart of the Hammers' attacks against Millwall last week.
He hit the bar and nearly caught goalkeeper David Forde napping after just a
few seconds of the game when he shot from 40 yards. The ball went just wide.
His manager Sam Allardyce called it a 'fantastic piece of vision'.

So what has he been doing in those four years before West Ham?

He's been busy learning his trade on loan at Scunthorpe United, Watford and
Norwich. He also represented England at Under 19 and Under 21 levels.

And how did he get on?

He picked up four goals in 16 games for Scunthorpe in 2009 and and scored on
his full debut for them as well. That year he reached the final of the
European Under 19 Championship.

At Watford he played 39 times with five goals, but his time at Norwich will
have caught the eye the most. In the second half of last season he played 23
times, helping them get promoted to the Premier League.

So he knows what he's doing in the Championship then?

Definitely. And Allardyce will be hoping for a repeat performance this year.

What's his style?

A strong and talented midfield playmaker, who is not afraid to put in tough
tackles. He has a good eye for a pass and scores some important goals as
well.

Really, any examples?

For Norwich he scored the winner in stoppage time against Millwall and
against Bristol City he came on as a substitute with 10 minutes left when it
was 1-1. He scored one goal and set up another.

Oh and he scored in his first start for Arsenal during a Carling Cup match
against bitter rivals Tottenham last season. The Gunners went on to win 4-1
but needed extra time.

Superb start: Lansbury celebrates scoring for West Ham GETTY IMAGES

And wasn't there a funky celebration to go with one of his goals?

You could say that. After scoring against Leeds last season he did the
'Dougie' inspired by the Cali Swag District song Teach me how to Dougie.

So Arsene Wenger might be regretting let him move to the Hammers after
Arsenal's start to the season?

Possibly, though Wenger has insisted Lansbury has what it takes to make it
at Arsenal and just wants him to pick up more experience. So this season
could be huge in determining the midfielder's long-term future.

Follow us on Twitter: @JoeRidge87, @KevinCoulson16, @Martin_Domin

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Peterborough: no problems anticipated
KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 22nd September 2011
By: Guest Writer

After two wins in a row and eight goals scored in those games, it was
perhaps a surprise to see the Hammers play out a goalless draw against
Millwall at the weekend. Had David Bentley not missed a sitter it would have
been yet another three points in the bag - and the bookies are certainly
expecting a big win this weekend. Peterborough are West Ham's next opponents
at the Boleyn Ground and the odds available on a home win aren't that big or
generous. At the time of writing, West Ham are available at 8/13 and that
could prove a decent bet - even if it won't make anyone rich. The draw is
priced up at 14/5 and the away win is 5/1, which makes that outcome very
unlikely.

Less than half of West Ham's points so far have come from home games which
is a little bit of a worry. Upton Park should really prove a fortress in the
Championship but just four points from three games shows it is proving
anything but. This looks like a great opportunity to provide West Ham with
their second home win of the season. Peterborough have been shocking on the
road this season so far, with just one point gained from their three away
matches. Anyone backing West Ham at 8/13 will certainly be pleased with that
stat. Peterborough's away matches haven't produced a huge amount of goals
though; they have scored three goals on the road and have conceded six. West
Ham have scored and conceded six goals at home this season. Those respective
records suggest that 2-1 might be the best bet in the correct score market
at 7/1, that means over 2.5 goals is probably a fair bet at 1/2 currently.

Carlton Cole looks more than capable of adding to his goals tally this
weekend; he has four league goals so far this season which makes him one of
the top scorers in the Championship. He should be backed to score both the
first goal and to score at anytime at 4/1 and 11/10 respectively.

It could also be worth backing Kevin Nolan to register a goal at anytime;
the captain can be backed at 7/4 to score his third league goal of the
season. What are your best bets for this match? Will West Ham get back to
winning ways and does 8/13 represent a value bet on Saturday? Let us know
your thoughts. A full list of free tips on the various markets on this
match, can be found on the West Ham v Peterborough tips page of OLBG.com.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
James Tomkins could feature in West Ham's game with Peterborough United
1:08am Friday 23rd September 2011
Guardian Series
By Simon Mail »

James Tomkins could be fit enough to play for West Ham against Peterborough
United this weekend. The centre-back went off with groin injury against
Millwall last weekend and was considered a doubt to face the Posh. But he
has improved quickly and may be able to start for the Irons. West Ham boss
Sam Allardyce told the club website: "James Tomkins trained this morning and
we will have to see what the reaction is between now and Friday. He could
well be available for Saturday.
"We have got a three-game week coming up so we first thought we possibly
might have missed him for certainly two games and maybe he would be fit for
the Crystal Palace game away [on Saturday week]. It looks like he will be
available for selection for all three."

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Thursday, September 22

Daily WHUFC News - 22nd September 2011

'He comes alive around the box'
WHUFC.com
Sam Baldock has the potential to do well at West Ham United, according to
Martin Allen
21.09.2011

Martin Allen is looking forward to seeing Sam Baldock make a name for
himself at West Ham United. The former Hammers midfielder had the young
striker at MK Dons and believed then that he had the ability to go far in
the game. Allen, now managing at Notts County, told West Ham TV that
Baldock, 22, was reminiscent of a former West Ham United favourite. "He is
cool, calm and a finisher. He is Cottee-like. He is not always involved at
the other end of the field but he is razor sharp. He comes alive around the
box and he can finish."

Baldock made his Hammers bow off the bench at Millwall last Saturday, and
like David Bentley and Papa Bouba Diop is pushing hard for his first home
start at the Boleyn Ground in the claret and blue - perhaps with Saturday's
Kids for a Fiver visit of Peterborough United. Allen said the No7 was
someone who was devoted to becoming the best he can be. "I put him in the
team when he was young. He has tremendous pace and is a down to earth,
steady character. He has worked hard on his game off the field."

Meanwhile, Allen continues to work closely with another of West Ham's young
guns, Cristian Montano. The 19-year-old Colombian-born attacker has been a
revelation in his extended loan at the County Ground, which now runs until 9
October. "Cristian is quick, has a good left foot and is very positive,"
added Allen. "He has played up front a little bit and out wide on the left.
He is a great lad, trains hard and wants to do well. He is down to earth and
a steady decent bloke."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Should West Ham honour Billy Bonds?
KUMB.com
Filed: Wednesday, 21st September 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham fans are calling for former FA Cup winning captain Billy Bonds to
be officially honoured by the club. Whilst Trevor Brooking and Bobby Moore
have stands named after them and John Lyall the gates to the Boleyn Ground,
Bonds - who made 793 first team appearances for the club, more than any
other player in the history of West Ham United - is not recognised or
honoured by the club in any way at present.

Last weekend the legendary Hammer, who received the MBE for his services to
football from the Queen in 1988, celebrated his 65th birthday. In a forum
thread on KUMB.com to pay tribute to Bonds, whose playing career at the
Boleyn Ground spanned an incredible 21 years, a number of readers expressed
their surprise that the club had failed to extend their recent policy of
honouring club legends to the Woolwich-born defender. "The word 'legend'
doesn't come close to doing Bill justice. Come on West Ham, honour him like
you should have done years ago."
- Libero (KUMB.com forum)

This has led to calls for the situation to be rectified, with suggestions
ranging from renaming a stand after Bonds (presumably the east Stand as that
was the only part of the current stadium present during his playing days) to
erecting a statue in his honour. So what do you think? Should the club
grant Bonds the same status as fellow legends Lyall, Moore and Brooking by
honouring him in such a fashion? Or do you think it's a bad idea? KUMB.com
forum members can post their ideas on the forum thread, whilst non-members
can offer suggestions in the comments box below this story.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Together, not a loan
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 20th September 2011
By: Daniel Nussbaum

The hot topic up for debate seems to be the loan system, for all of its
advantages and disadvantages. Some love it, others hate it but the truth
lays, as usual, somewhere in the middle. You need not look any further than
our beloved West Ham United, when searching for a proper example of the
conflict.

On August 31st, Sam Allardyce confirmed the accquisition of Henri Lansbury
and David Bentley, both of whom are currently on loan at the Boleyn. The two
are very different players at different stages of their careers, but share
something meaningful - they are currently keeping Academy graduate Jack
Collison out of the match day squad.

Lansbury, who is a dynamic box-to-box central midfielder, is currently on
loan from Arsenal. Having spent last season helping Norwich achieve
promotion to the Premier League, it is quite clear that Allardyce believes
him to be a very useful addition. His two starts in two games since joining
the Hammers are proof of that.

However, hopes of luring young Henri on a permenant deal at the end of the
season took a massive blow last week as the player agreed a new long term
deal with his parent club, Arsenal. Questions were naturally raised as to
the purpose of the rest of his loan spell with us?

Another loanee, David Bentley, left rivals Tottenham behind for the season
to try and get his career back on track. The £15million tricky winger has
gone stale at White Hart Lane, playing second fiddle to Aaron Lennon.

Bentley brings experience, a great delivery from both open play and set
pieces as well as very good technique on the ball. He also offers geniune
width, something we have been lacking for a long time. However, his price
tag currently stands at £8million pounds, according to David Gold. Unless
Bentley recaptures his old form, while guiding West Ham to promotion, it's
pretty safe to say he won't be joining the club next season.

The main casualty, as mentioned earlier, has been Jack Collison. The young
Welshman, who first broke to the scene under Gianfranco Zola, suffered a
nasty knee injury in the 2008/09 season. A year later he was operated on,
only to be out for around nine months. Since then, Jack's progression seems
to have declined.

Once an extremely fit and technically gifted player, he now looks out of
shape and low on confidence. It's quite clear that in order to regain his
fitness and sharpness, Collison needs to play regular football. However, he
isn't deemed good enough at the moment to hold down a place in Allardyce's
team, mostly due to the aforementioned players.

A small counter point must surely be raised with regards to Collison's
situation, which is player responsibility. Is it not the player's job to get
himself match fit and impress his gaffer in training?

The modern day footballer earns a very decent wage, partly funded by his
team's supporters. They deserve to see effort, commitment and a competetive
team. For that to happen, competition for places is essential, and plenty of
lower league clubs have to rely on the loan system to fill in the blanks and
improve their quality, sometimes at the price of preventing home grown
talent from developing.

All of the above begs the obvious question: Are we, as a club, being short
sighted when focusing on promotion at all costs? Aren't we just harming the
development of young, home grown talent when using loanees, especially those
who will not be here next season, regardless of what division we are in?

Well, not for my money. Relegation proved a massive financial hit, one which
our owners have taken on the chin. Gold and Sullivan have had to pump money
into the club this season, knowing full well that another Championship
season could prove to be a financial disaster.

The money from TV rights, season tickets and merchandising is vital for this
club to compete at a high level, and that will only come when we regain our
Premier League status. I myself am as excited as the next fan when one of
Tony Carr's graduates makes the grade and gets the call up to the first
team.

In conclusion, the loan system does have a place in modern football. The
thought process is simple: if a player is good enough to break into the
first team, they will. Doing so while facing the competition of David
Bentley and Henry Lansbury will do wonders for their confidence.

Too much credit based on home grown status rather than effort and ability
could prove deadly for a player's career, allowing them to get complacent. A
mixture of decent loan players with commited home grown talent is what we
should be looking for as a Championship club looking to gain promotion.

It's early days, but we seem to have done just that. Let's hope we're alone
in doing so.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Decision denies Hammers
WHUFC.com
A disallowed goal saw the development squad edged out at Charlton Athletic
on Tuesday
21.09.2011

Ian Hendon was left to lament his luck following West Ham United's 1-0
development squad defeat at Charlton Athletic. With the game still goalless
after 28 minutes, Freddie Sears' rasping shot flicked off the head of
defender Gary Doherty and hit the underside of the crossbar. The ball
appeared to bounce over the line before being claimed by goalkeeper John
Sullivan, but nothing was given by the officials. The decision meant
Charlton were able to snatch victory on Tuesday through substitute Morgan
Fox with ten minutes remaining. Hendon was disappointed that his players had
been denied a deserved point, but praised their performance against a home
side that also included ex-Hull City centre-back Leon Cort, former Reading
midfielder Andy Hughes and former Bolton Wanderers midfielder Mikel Alonso.
"We were most definitely hard done-by because, from what we're told,
Freddie's strike hit the crossbar and went over the line and came back out,"
he told whufc.com "If we'd gone in 1-0 up at half-time I think we'd have
been deservedly in the lead, but it wasn't to be. "We have come away and
lost 1-0 but we have acquitted ourselves very well against what was a very
experienced Charlton team. "I watched Charlton play earlier in the season in
the Carling Cup and the majority of the lads we faced played in that game
and beat a strong Reading team, so when you put the two sides into
perspective, I was really pleased with the lads and their performance.
"On another day we might have had two or three goals ourselves."

Hendon was impressed with the performance of Republic of Ireland U19
international Eoin Wearen, who has recently switched position from central
midfield to centre-back, as well as that of the ever-willing Sears up front.
"I thought Eoin put in a sterling performance and is really enjoying his
role at the moment. He is really attacking the ball well and organised
things well. "Freddie has put in a shift and he did score one but it was
disallowed and he came close on a couple of other occasions as well."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Faye adds muscle and experience to West Ham cause
London24
Dave Evans, West Ham Correspondent
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
8:05 AM

When you go to places like The Den, you have to expect a daunting physical
scrap and a frantic London derby showdown. You need players that are up to
that sort of pressure and so it was no surprise when West Ham boss Sam
Allardyce opted to bring in centre half Abdoulaye Faye for his first start
in claret and blue on Saturday.
He is no shrinking violet that's for sure. He is not the tallest player in
the league, but the 33-year-old Senegal international defender is built like
a brick wall and is never likely to shirk a challenge. "I enjoyed the game
because I like the physical side of the game," said Faye after coming
through the full 90 minutes and helping the Hammers to a clean sheet. "I
like this and I have the experience from when I was at Newcastle, it was
similar there. "I enjoyed the game and I think we played very well in the
second half."

It was Faye's first competitive start since playing for Stoke City at
Liverpool way back in February and understandably he took a little time to
get into the swing of things. It was his error that allowed Liam Trotter a
free run on goal which forced a fine save from Robert Green, but as the game
wore on Faye got stronger and stronger playing alongside first James Tomkins
and then Winston Reid. "I really enjoyed the experience today because I had
the groin injury in pre-season," he explained. "Afterwards the team was
playing very well and I had to wait for my chance. "Now that I have got it,
I need to play well and help the club go up this season and I am confident
that we will."

The dropping of Reid for Faye was harsh in some people's eyes as the New
Zealander and Tomkins have formed a reliable partnership at the heart of the
West Ham defence, but sometimes you need someone with Faye's experience when
you come to places like The Den. "I think everybody played well because it's
a tough game when you play here," said Faye. "It's the first time that I've
come here and people told me that it's a difficult place to come to with the
crowd and the atmosphere."

Faye and his team-mates had to cope with some Millwall pressure, especially
in the first half, but he still felt that the Hammers should have taken the
points. "We really should have won this game because we had so many chances,
but that's football. We created a lot of chances so we should be winning
this game, but in football you have to look forward to the next game."

That next game is Saturday's home game with Peterborough and with Tomkins
set to miss it through injury, Faye is likely to start once again. "I will
be looking to start next week and our home form is very important," insisted
Faye. "We've had a little difficulty there, but you have to concentrate for
the whole game because you cannot win every match two or 3-0. "Sometimes you
have to win 1-0 and keep everything tight, but I have confidence we will
win. You need to concentrate for 95 minutes, but we should be okay for next
week."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Ferguson: Not just a day out for Posh at Upton Park
Bournelocal.co.uk
West Ham United's Upton Park ground. Picture supplied
By Mark Plummer
Published on Wednesday 21 September 2011 09:52

Peterborough United manager Darren Ferguson insists his players are not just
going to West Ham for a day out on Saturday. Ferguson is after a performance
to match a mouth-watering occasion at Upton Park - where an attendance in
the region of 30,000 is expected - as Posh go in search of their first away
win since returning to the Championship. And Ferguson feels he has the
players to ask some serious questions of a Hammers team tipped as hot
promotion favourites in the first of two tough upcoming away tests. Posh
then go to Portsmouth on Tuesday. Ferguson said: "It's the match everyone
looked out for when the fixtures were released - and it is one we are all
looking forward to now. "Upton Park is a terrific stadium and a great stage
to play football on, but we are not just going there for a day out. "I feel
sure we are capable of causing West Ham problems provided we can keep the
ball well, but we know we are going to have to be at the top of our game
defensively - especially from wide areas because they will put plenty of
balls into the box. "That's something we did superbly against Burnley on
Saturday when our two centre-backs in particular were outstanding. "West Ham
are certain to be up there at the end of the season. They have a good,
experienced manager in Sam Allardyce, a fair bit of money by Championship
standards and they have brought quite a few players in. "It's the sort of
match where the pressure is on the home team because West Ham's fans will
expect them to beat us. "We have two tough away games in quick succession
against West Ham and then Portsmouth and it is important to get something
from the two games. "I am conscious of the fact we do need to pick up points
on the road to complement our home form. I don't want us to put ourselves
under too much pressure at home."

Striker Lee Tomlin was laid low by illness yesterday but it is not expected
to affect his participation on Saturday. Ferguson is unsure whether defender
Gaby Zakuani will be able to manage both away games due to his broken toe.
Zakuani has played through the pain barrier in the club's last three
matches.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Former Newcastle United and Bolton defender looking for extended run with
West Ham
10:15am Wednesday 21st September 2011
Guardian Series
By Simon Mail »

West Ham defender Abdoulaye Faye is targeting an extended run in the side
after making his full debut in the draw at Millwall. Allardyce handed a
first start to centre-back Faye and the Senegal international did not
disappoint with a commanding performance in defence. The 33-year-old has
been patient waiting for his opportunity and is now looking forward to
keeping his place in the side, especially after the injury to James Tomkins,
for their home game against Peterborough United on Saturday. Faye said: "I
really enjoyed it because I had the groin injury in the pre-season.
Afterwards the team was playing very well and I had to wait for my chance.
Now that I have got it I need to play well and help the club go up this
season and I am confident that we well. "I will be looking to start next
week and our home form is important. We've had a little difficulty there but
you have to concentrate for the whole game because you cannot win every
match 2 or 3-0. "Sometimes you have to win 1-0 and keep everything tight but
I have confidence we will win. You need to concentrate for 95 minutes but we
should be ok for next week."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Barrera not planning to make West Ham return
By talkSPORT
Wednesday, September 21

West Ham winger Pablo Barrera does not want to return to the Championship
club once his season-long loan spell at Real Zaragoza ends. The Mexican
midfielder joined the La Liga side in August after the Hammers were
relegated into the Championship. The forward helped Mexico to victory in the
Gold Cup in the summer, with a brace in the 2-0 final victory over USA, but
did not want to continue his new-found form back in England. "I am calmer
and happier now and I have finally have a home where I feel comfortable,"
Barrera told Marca. "As soon as I knew that Zaragoza were interested in me,
I wanted to come here. I'm very happy and want to show that on the pitch.
The 24-year-old suffered a 6-0 drubbing against Real Madrid on his debut but
his most recent run-out, his third for the club, ended in a 2-1 win over
Espanyol on Sunday. And now Barerra wants to prolong his stay in Spain,
beyond the end of the season, despite having a contract at Upton Park until
2014. "I pressed for this move," he said. "From the first moment I heard
that Zaragoza were asking about me I wanted to go. "I know people have high
hopes for me and support me, so I am responding on the field starting with
that win against Espanyol on Sunday. Now I'd like to do the right thing and
stay here in Zaragoza."

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Wednesday, September 21

Daily WHUFC News - 21st September 2011

Faye proves a force
WHUFC.com
Abdoulaye Faye is keen to make his full home debut after impressing at
Millwall
20.09.2011

Abdoulaye Faye is eyeing a first Boleyn Ground start after making an
outstanding full West Ham United debut at Millwall on Saturday. The Senegal
centre-back showed all his experience and power to keep the Lions at bay at
The Den, winning countless headers and tackles for his side. While Faye was
naturally pleased with his own performance, the 33-year-old admitted he and
his team-mates were slightly disappointed not to bring all three points back
to the Boleyn Ground. We were disappointed not to win the game because we
created a lot of chances and we should be winning this game," he told West
Ham TV. "Sometimes you don't know what is going to happen and you create a
lot of chances but you can't take them, so we have got to look forward to
the next game. "It's very important to win the game next week at home. We
didn't win at home for six months [before beating Portsmouth] so we need to
win two or three games on the spin and then everyone will have confidence
for the future."

Faye relished the opportunity to make his full Hammers debut in such a
unique atmosphere, comparing the noise at The Den to that he experienced
while playing for Newcastle United at Sunderland earlier in his career.
"Everybody played well on Saturday, but it was a tough game as everybody
expected it to be. It was my first time playing at Millwall and it was a
tough game. "We should have been winning the game because we had so many
chances, but that's football. A draw is OK because I have confidence we can
win every game at home. "I enjoyed it because it has been a long time in
coming. I was here in pre-season then I got an injury and after that Tonks
(James Tomkins) and Winston [Reid] have been playing really well and I've
had to wait. "I got my chance and I wanted to take it by helping the club to
do well and to help us go up this season. I have confidence we can do that.
"I like it when it is physical. I have experience of an atmosphere like that
from when I played for Newcastle against Sunderland, where there were even
more people. "We played well in the second half and we can look forward to
next weekend."

Faye was brought on as a second-half substitute in the 4-3 win over
Portsmouth on 10 September - a fixture which marked West Ham's first home
victory in more than six months - and is now targeting his first Boleyn
Ground start when Peterborough United come to visit on Saturday afternoon.
While he is keen to start, however, the No15 knows it is at the end of the
game that Sam Allardyce's side need to keep their heads, having conceded
last-minute goals in all four of their home matches so far this term. "I
will be looking to start. We have had a little bit of trouble at home
because we have not concentrated through every game. You can't win every
game two or three-nil. "Sometimes you have to win one-nil and concentrate
for the whole 90 minutes, but I have confidence we can do this and I think
we'll be OK next weekend."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Brown a cup winner
WHUFC.com
West Ham United were represented by Jordan Brown in Carling Cup action on
Tuesday evening
20.09.2011

Jordan Brown had a night to remember as he helped Aldershot Town to reach
the Carling Cup fourth round on Tuesday night. The on-loan Hammers left-back
was given special dispensation to play for The Shots as they welcomed
Rochdale to the Recreation Ground. He played a key role in the 2-1 victory
that means they are contemplating a potential tie against one of the Premier
League big guns in the next round. Brown was making only his second
appearance for Aldershot, who eliminated West Ham United in the first round
and are managed by Hammers fan Dean Holdsworth. The 19-year-old played the
full 90 minutes and will hope to keep his place for Saturday's visit of
Crawley Town.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Charlton 1-0 Development Squad
WHUFC.com
A Morgan Fox goal sees Ian Hendon's side edged out by the Addicks at
Sparrows Lane
20.09.2011

CHARLTON ATHLETIC XI v WEST HAM UNITED XI
DEVELOPMENT SQUAD MATCH
TUESDAY 20 SEPTEMBER 2011
KICK-OFF: 1PM

Final score - Charlton Athletic XI 1-0 West Ham United XI

91 mins - That's it. The Hammers are edged out, but they certainly gave
their all this afternoon and were unfortunate to lose out to a strong
Charlton side.
90 mins - Charlton have the ball as we go into the final few seconds. The
referee has already looked at his watches...
88 mins - Vose does well again to lose his man and find Moncur, but his shot
is blocked. West Ham finishing strongly. Can they find an equaliser?
87 mins - Hendon brings on Taylor Miles for Fanimo for the final few
moments.
87 mins - Another chance! Vose does well to spin away in central midfield
after Hurley wins a crunching tackle. Hurley continues his run and is onside
and in, but his touch just lets him down and the ball squirts away to
goalkeeper Sullivan.
86 mins - Time might be running out for the Hammers to fashion an equaliser,
but they haven't given up the search. Wearen goes in hard and has hurt
himself. The physio comes on to treat the centre-back.
83 mins - That might be the chance. Sears gets in behind Doherty and shoots.
Sullivan parries and Sears gets there at the same time as the centre-back.
The ball squirms agonisingly behind for a goal kick.
82 mins - West Ham need a quick response and they win a free-kick 30 yards
out. Moncur takes, but it;s charged down. The ball rebounds to Moncur, whose
second effort is also blocked.
80 mins - GOAL! Charlton might have stolen it. The Hammers don't clear their
lines and when Hughes sends the ball forward, substitute Fox is there to
slot the ball between Stech and his left-hand post.
78 mins - A really superb spell of possession there for the Hammers prompted
by Vose. Moncur, Ilunga, Hurley and Shaw are also involved before Sears cuts
inside from the left and shoots. It is blocked. Charlton break and Stech
flaps at a cross, but thankfully the home side can't take advantage.
76 mins - Vose loses out and Charlton have some pressure. Moncur then pokes
the ball behind for a corner. Jordan gets his head to it, but the ball loops
high into the hands of Stech.
75 mins - Sears gets in behind left-back Ajayi and wins a corner of Doherty.
Francis volleys clear.
74 mins - A little glimpse of the ability possessed by Fanimo as the England
U17 winger spins away with a drag-back before powering a 25-yard shot a yard
or two over the tpo.
71 mins - Sears nicks the ball off centre-back Jordan but when he tries to
pull a pass back for Shaw, it is cut out.
69 mins - Doherty picks out Francis' run with a fine diagonal ball. The
right-back takes a touch and slams a low cross into the six-yard box. Driver
does just enough to put off Fox and the ball squirms wide of the target.
68 mins - The game is getting increasingly stretched, with a lot less
patient build-up play in the midfield area from either team.
67 mins - Smith has another go, this time from distance. Again he cannot
find the target as the ball catches on the wind and flies past the post.
65 mins - West Ham break through Hurley. Vose picks up possession and works
a shooting chance, but it's blocked. Charlton break and Popo crosses deep,
where Jordan's volley flies high and wide.
64 mins - Nearly three-quarters of the way through the game and the raft of
substitutions has affected the flow of the game a bit. There are a lot of
young players out there who will want to prove something, so we could still
be in for an entertaining final 25 minutes.
63 mins - Hurley releases Fanimo down the inside-right channel. The No11
retrieves and tries to pick out Shaw with his cross. Francis rises with the
first-year scholar and the ball clears both before bouncing behind for a
goal kick.
61 mins - Evina, Cort and Bover are replaced by the home side, with Jordan,
Ajayi and Fox coming on to replace them.
58 mins - A couple more changes as Vose and Shaw come on for Turgott and
Lee. Fanimo goes up front with Sears. Immediately, West Ham keep the ball
well and attack, with all three subs involved.
56 mins - A loose header from Sears falls to Warren. He runs into the West
Ham half before trying to chip Stech from 45 yards. I think the goalkeeper
would have had it covered, but it matters not as the ball slides over the
top.
54 mins - Another great chance for Smith, but again he can't take it. A
cross from the right is cushioned down by Popo into the No15's path. He is
about 12 yards out, but screws his shot high over the crossbar.
53 mins - Hendon replaces Powell with Hurley in central midfield.
52 mins - Great chance for Smith from Francis's cross. He volleys, but the
ball thuds into the turf before sitting up nicely for Stech to collect.
51 mins - We're going to see a West Ham substitute soon. It's Lamarr Hurley
who is being readied.
50 mins - The substitutes have livened things up for the Addicks. Davisson's
cross finds Smith, who wins a corner off Ilunga. Wearen heads clear from
inside his own six-yard box.
48 mins - Fanimo breaks on to a loose ball and makes 30 yards inside the
Charlton half. He tries to pick out Lee to his right, but Doherty cuts it
out.
46 mins - We are back underway here. Charlton have made three changes -
Davisson, Smith and Warren are on for Alonso, Kermorgant and Green. Warren
has a shot a minute into the second period, but it's too high.

Half-time score - Charlton Athletic XI 0-0 West Ham United XI

46 mins - Just seconds over the 45 minutes and the whistle blows for
half-time.
44 mins - Hendon has three subs out warming up. Will he make some changes at
the break? Charlton have a four-on-four but Wearen is there again to block
Green's well-struck shot.
43 mins - Turgott and Sears combine down the right before the former wins a
corner off Evina. Powell takes, but his delivery is too deep. Fanimo gets
there first, but his cross is easily headed clear.
42 mins - Sears picks the ball up 40 yards out and drives forward with Lee
to his left. He instead chooses to shoot and Doherty makes a very
painful-sounding block.
41 mins - Cort picks out Kermorgant with a long ball. The Frenchman controls
on his chest before volleying first-time from 25 yards. Stech is in the
right place to make the save. Seconds later, Bover has a chance at the far
post, but his shot is too high.

39 mins - Good stuff again from the Irishman to hack Green's low cross away.
Fanimo tries to get past Francis to the byline, but the former England U21
right-back has too much strength for the youngster.
37 mins - Outstanding defending from Wearen. Francis curls over a cross and
Stech cannot get there. Two Charlton players look set to strike until Wearen
dives to head behind from a yard in front of his far post. The corner comes
over and Fanimo clears.
36 mins - Bover again, this time from the left. He controls and beats
Driver, but is slightly off-balance as he hits a left-foot shot. It flies
well over.
34 mins - Charlton attack down their right through Francis. Wearen clears
initially but the Addicks come again through Bover. He crosses dangerously
from the right, but the ball bounces through the six-yard box and out for a
throw on the far side. For a 0-0, this has been a very watchable game so
far.
29 mins - A chance at the other end! Green's cross bounces over Driver to
Bover, whose shot is parried by Stech. Wearen gets there first, just, and is
fouled by Popo inside the six-yard box. West Ham escape.
28 mins - Controversy?! Sears runs forward again and cuts across in front of
Green before shooting from 25 yards. The ball flicks off the head of Doherty
and loops over Sullivan. It hits the underside of the bar and looks as if it
might have gone over the line before bouncing out. Sullivan recovers to make
the catch. The assistant referee was at least 20 yards from the goal line.
27 mins - A chance for Lee, but a difficult one. Sears finds Turgott, whose
head-high cross is behind Lee. He twists, but his header is straight up into
the air and Charlton clear. Good football in the build-up, though.
26 mins - Lee is penalised for blocking off Cort. The centre-back is about a
foot taller than the striker!
24 mins - Charlton are being forced to play in front of West Ham and
shooting from distance. Alonso has a go from at least 25 yards, but it is
well over the top. The Addicks come again down the right, but Scott is there
to clear for a throw.
22 mins - Wearen again, sliding in hard but fair on Kermorgant. Alongside
him, trialist Scott has also done well so far. When you consider they have
never played together before, the young pair have forged a decent
partnership.
20 mins - Wearen has been solid as a rock so far, while his voice has been
heard regularly as he organises the back four. The Irish U19 man is there
again to block Green's shot with his head. The ball loops high into the air
and Stech collects.
17 mins - Good stuff. Ilunga bursts down the left and feeds Fanimo. He beats
one man and then squares for Lee. The striker shoots first-time, but drags
it low and wide of the far post. He shouts in frustration - Lee has been
used to scoring goals this season!
16 mins - Sullivan's long clearance catches on the wind, forcing Ilunga to
challenge Francis and concede a corner. Kermorgant takes it short to Green
before crossing first-time. Stech gets a hand to the ball before Ilunga
completes the clearance.
12 mins - Alonso picks out a pass his brother Xabi would be proud of to find
Evina in space down the left. He pulls the ball back for Kermorgant, whose
first-time shot flies well off-target.
10 mins - Driver does well there against Kermorgant - the player whose
missed chipped penalty cost Leicester City dear in the 2009/10 Championship
Play-Offs - but the throw is worked to Bover, who works Stech with a
well-struck shot. Wearen completes the clearance.
8 mins - This has been a really good start by Hendon's men. Sears does well
again to hold up play and find Ilunga. Lee drops into space and picks up
possession before finding Powell. Sears tries to release Turgott down the
right, but the ball is just too strong.
6 mins - West Ham are set up in a 4-4-2 formation, with Driver and Ilunga in
the full-back positions and Wearen and Scott in the centre. In midfielder,
Turgott and Fanimo are in the wide areas, with Powell and Moncur in the
middle. On the pitch, Sears releases Turgott, whose cross is headed clear by
Cort to Moncur. He shoots from 25 yards, but it's too high.
4 mins - Sears has another chance to run at the Charlton defence but this
time he tries to release Lee, but Cort is there. Charlton break, but Olumide
Scott is there to tidy up with a pass back to Stech. Lively start.
3 mins - The Hammers are lined up in a 4-4-2 formation. Sears is up front
with Lee and he should have just put West Ham in front, skipping past one
defender and then the goalkeeper with his trademark direct and lightning
pace. Unfortunately, his final touch takes him towards the byline and the
angle is so narrow that his shot is into the side-netting.
2 mins - Not much pattern to the game so far, but plenty of famous faces in
the small crowd. Julian Dicks, Pat Holland and Micky Adams are all here, as
is former Charlton boss Steve Gritt, who is now scouting for Bournemouth.

1pm - We're off and running at a chilly and windy Sparrows Lane, with
Charlton kicking-off...

Good afternoon and welcome to Sparrows Lane here in south east London for
today's development squad fixture between Charlton Athletic and West Ham
United.
Today's match will see Ian Hendon name a young side, with only Herita
Ilunga, Freddie Sears and goalkeeper Marek Stech possessing first-team
experience among his squad.

Alongside the experienced trio will be a host of young professionals -
George Moncur, Eoin Wearen and Callum Driver - and scholars, including
in-form Elliot Lee, Blair Turgott, Jack Powell amd Lamarr Hurley.

Charlton, of course, are going great guns in League One under two former
Hammers in manager Chris Powell and assistant and former West Ham
reserve-team
manager Alex Dyer.

The Addicks have named a very strong lineup, with no fewer than nine senior
players alongside teenagers Tosan Popo and Ruben Bover. Among the Charlton
starting XI are former Tottenham defender Gary Doherty, ex-Hull City
centre-back Leon Cort, former Reading and Norwich City midfielder Andy
Hughes and former Bolton Wanderers midfielder Mikel Alonso.

Charlton Athletic XI: Sullivan, Francis, Evina (Ajayi 61), Cort (Jordan 61),
Doherty, Hughes, Green (Smith 46), Alonso (Davisson 46), Bover (Fox 61),
Kermorgant (Warren 46), Popo
Subs not used: Pope, Azeez

West Ham United XI: Stech, Driver, Ilunga, Wearen, Scott, Turgott (Shaw 58),
Powell (Hurley 53), Fanimo (Miles 87), Sears, E.Lee (Vose 58)
Sub not used: Cowler

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Hendon laments late winner
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 20th September 2011
By: Staff Writer

Ian Hendon's development squad suffered defeat at the hands of a strong
Charlton side this lunchtime. Hendon's side went down 1-0 at Athletic's
Sparrows Lane training ground, with the only goal of a hard-fought game
scored by Morgan Fox with just ten minutes of play remaining. Hendon fielded
a mostly inexperienced squad for the game, with only Herita Ilunga - cast
aside since rejecting a transfer window loan move, as revealed here on
KUMB.com last week - and Freddie Sears having first team experience under
their belt. Conversely, the League One leaders' starting eleven consisted of
NINE players who have represented the Addicks' first team already this
season - the only two yet to feature being recent signings Yann Kermorgant
and Mikel Alonso, who were both seeking match fitness. Despite creating a
number of chances throughout the game - the best of which fell to Freddie
Sears in the closing minutes, the young striker unable to beat the 'keeper
despite being offered a second bite of the cherry - the Hammers were finally
beaten when a long ball found former Southend High School pupil Fox deep in
enemy territory. The young defender, a member of Charlton's current under
18 squad turned before finishing coolly, beating Marek Stech at his near
post.

West Ham Utd XI: Stech, Driver, Ilunga, Wearen, Scott, Turgott (Shaw 58),
Powell (Hurley 53), Fanimo (Miles 87), Sears, E.Lee (Vose 58).
Sub not used: Cowler.

Charlton Athletic XI: Sullivan, Francis, Evina (Ajayi 61), Cort (Jordan 61),
Doherty, Hughes, Green (Smith 46), Alonso (Davisson 46), Bover (Fox 61),
Kermorgant (Warren 46), Popo.
Subs not used: Pope, Azeez.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fernandes: twice smitten
KUMB.com
Filed: Tuesday, 20th September 2011
By: Staff Writer

Tony Fernandes has revealed that he tried to buy West Ham United twice -
before settling for Queens Park Rangers. The 47-year-old, a lifelong Hammers
fan told Mihir Bose that along with his much-publicised challenge to Davids
Gold & Sullivan in January 2010, he also attempted to purchase the football
club four years earlier.
"I tried before the Icelandic guys [Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson and Eggert
Magnuson] bought it," he said. "Then, when they had all their problems, I
was in a bidding war with David Sullivan and David Gold - but the Icelandic
banks went for them."

Fernandes also spoke about his recent falling out with David Sullivan, after
the two clashed at the end of the 2010/11 campaign prior to the Malaysian's
interest in Charlton - "very cheap, a great business deal but I didn't have
any heart for it. It was too close to West Ham" - and QPR. "We approached
them [West Ham's board] again when they got relegated in May - and I upset
Sullivan," he continued. "I was getting hundreds of messages [from fans]
asking, 'Have you put in an offer?'
"So I tweeted, 'Yep, I've put in an offer.' World War exploded. It was then
that Bernie Ecclestone called and said, 'Hey, why don't you look at QPR?'"

Since purchasing the west London club during the summer, Fernandes - who is
the club's largest shareholder, although a percentage is still owned by the
vastly wealthy Mittal family - has bankrolled the signings of former Hammer
Anton Ferdinand and West Ham transfer target Joey Barton. His club currently
lie ninth in the Premier League. "Maybe what Sullivan and Gold were hoping
for is a real billionaire," he concluded. "That's a blessing at QPR."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Faye targets starting berth
Defender determined to hold down a regular role
Last Updated: September 20, 2011 4:05pm
SSN

Abdoulaye Faye is hoping to hang on to his starting berth when West Ham play
host to Peterborough on Saturday. The Senegalese defender was handed his
full debut for the Hammers in their 0-0 draw with Millwall last time out.
Prior to that derby date, the experienced centre-half had been restricted to
two substitute appearances.
The 33-year-old, who joined the Hammers from Stoke over the summer, put in
an eye-catching display against the Lions and is hoping he has done enough
to convince Sam Allardyce that he is deserving of a regular role. "I enjoyed
it because it has been a long time in coming," Faye told the club's official
website.

Confidence

"I was here in pre-season then I got an injury and after that James Tomkins
and Winston Reid have been playing really well and I've had to wait. "I got
my chance and I wanted to take it by helping the club to do well and to help
us go up this season. I have confidence we can do that. "We played well in
the second half (against Millwall) and we can look forward to next weekend.
I will be looking to start. "We have had a little bit of trouble at home
because we have not concentrated through every game. You can't win every
game two or three-nil. "Sometimes you have to win one-nil and concentrate
for the whole 90 minutes, but I have confidence we can do this and I think
we will be okay next weekend."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Kurucz makes rapid recovery
Cryotherapy to thank for speedy comeback
By Juha Pal. Last Updated: September 20, 2011 4:42pm
SSN

West Ham United goalkeeper Peter Kurucz has made a miraculous recovery from
a serious knee injury that the club thought would rule him out for the rest
of the season. The Hungarian suffered an anterior cruciate ligament injury
during a reserve game in August during what was a promising pre-season for
the youngster. Following a course of cryotherapy the keeper is now fully fit
and ready to return to the Hammers' squad. Cryotherapy utilises freezing
temperatures to decrease inflammation and pain and accelerate the healing
process. The shot-stopper told Nemzeti Sport: "Cryotherapy is a special cure
method which is commonly used at knee injuries. It was tough, I was freezing
but I didn't regret to attend this if this speeded up my rehabilitation.
"Now I'm fully fit and 100 per cent healthy so my aim is the same as before
my injury - getting to the bench at West Ham." Kurucz played for the first
team in pre-season friendly wins over Peterborough United, Borussia
Monchengladbach and Panathinaikos.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Promotion Bid on Target, With a Lot More in the Tank!
September 20th, 2011 - 1:17 pm by S J Chandos
West Ham Till I Die

Last Saturday's match was one that we should have won. There is little
comparison between the respective squads at the disposal of Sam Allardyce
and Kenny Jackett, West Ham having far superior talent at their disposal.
Yet, sometimes circumstances can be a leveller and one of these are the hype
and expectation around a fiercely fought derby. Indeed, this is a fixture
where previous visiting Hammers teams have wilted and capitulated in the
face of the hostiity of the atmosphere at the Den and the intensity of the
match.

That did not happen this time. This West Ham team did not wilt, we stood up
and battled our way to a result. In the final analysis, we dropped two
points because of poor finishing. On the plus side, West Ham defended
solidly and were never really troubled by Millwall, having restricted them
to a couple of half chances. And lets remind ourselves of the basic stats
this season in the league: played 7, won 4, drew 2 and lost 1. And we have
now gone 6 matches unbeaten, since that unlucky first day defeat by Cardif
City. We have 14 points from 7 matches, a record that complies to the
general rule that 2 points per match usually guarantees automatic promotion.

Yes, we could very easily have had a record of played 7, won 7, but we need
to remember that this is a squad that has gone through a major structure and
the players introduced need to settle in, get their fitnesses levels up and
gel as a team unit. I still maintain that our squad has far more 'in the
tank' than any of our rivals at the top of the Championship and, when we
fire on all cylinders, we will blow them away! I envisage that there will be
a pivotal result, at some point soon, when it all comes together and we do
not look back. You certainly would not want to be our opponents when it
does happen, perhaps Peterborough Utd might be the unlucky club?

It was good to see Sam Baldock get on against Millwall. Unfortunately
nothing fell his way on that occasion, but his technical ability, running
off the ball and positional sense was there for all to see. Hopefully, he
will get another chance on Saturday, against Peterborough Utd, to show us
what he can do. David Bentley missed the best chance of the match.
However, lets not cruxify him for it. Bentley lacks both match practice and
confidence at the moment, but it was not so long ago that he was transferred
to Spurs for £15m. If we can get him back online, we will have an excellent
player who can make a massive contribution this season. Interestingly,
against Milwall, Bentley substituted for Taylor on the left side,
illustrating his ablity to operate on both flanks.

Personally, I would probably have either retained Jordan Spence or brought
in an extra central defender to cover for Tomkins, Reid and Faye. Sam
Allardyce has indicated that there were to be no further additions to the
squad. Presumably, he is working on the basis that either Demel or Diop can
also play centre back if necessary? The potential problem is that Faye had
a poor injury record in his final season at Stoke City and, one would
imagine, that would been a factor in assessing our need for cover at centre
back. Unfortunately, James Tomkins went off injured against Millwall and he
could be out for up to three weeks. So, we will now probably be relying on a
Reid-Faye central defensive partnership, which should be good enough to see
us through. However, lets just hope that both players stay fit during
Tomkins' absence!

Guy Demel has suffered from a tight hamstring and that has restricted his
appearances for the Developmental Squad. He is a player that I am really
looking forward to see in a claret and blue shirt. His experience, strength
and power should be a great asset. Indeed, it is nice to have two such
powerful players as Demel and Diop in the squad and I can see both being
selected for some of our tougher away fixtures this season. We will
certainly not be intimidated and out muscled with players like that in our
team.

There is a Developmental Squad fixture this afternoon versus a Charlton XI.
From the team sheet, it would appear that we have selected a young team and
substitutes bench, with only Stech, Illunga and Sears having first team
experience. That obviously means that that neither trialists, Carney nor
Juca, have been included. Does that indicate that neither have won
contracts with the club? Similarly, both Diop and Demel are also absent and
that raises the question whether (a) they are injured; or (b) in the frame
for selection for the first team on Saturday?

SJ. Chandos

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ABDOULAYE FAYE CAN FIRE WEST HAM
Daily Express
Wednesday September 21,2011
By Daily Express reporter

NEW boy Abdoulaye Faye says he can fire West Ham to promotion this season
after making his first start for them. Centre-back Faye, who played against
Millwall last Saturday, said: "I got my chance in that match, and I really
wanted to take the opportunity by helping the team to do well and help us
get up this season. I have real confidence that we can achieve that by the
end of the season."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tony Cottee column: West Ham fans should lay off Bentley after his miss at
Millwall
London 24
Tony Cottee, London24 West Ham columnist
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
2:04 PM

"I know after the previous away games when we were scoring for fun that the
fans expected another game with plenty of goals, but it just wasn't to be
against Millwall" I think that a point away to Millwall is not a bad result
for West Ham really, when you think about it. Most teams in the Championship
will view The Den as somewhere where you can target three points, but in a
London derby form goes out of the window, so the Hammers should be happy
with the draw. We had quite a few chances and probably should have taken at
least two. But Robert Green had some saves to make too. I know after the
previous away games when we were scoring for fun that the fans expected
another game with plenty of goals, but it just wasn't to be against
Millwall. Some people have jumped on David Bentley's back for his miss
towards the end of the game, but I don't think you can be too harsh on him.
It is a lot harder to put those chances away than you think, and we only
have to look at Fernando Torres' miss on Sunday against Manchester United
for evidence of that. I know first hand that as easy as these chances may
look, they can be hard to put away, but I'm hoping that last weekend was
just a little blip in our goalscoring. On top of a well-earned point from
The Den, there was also no trouble between the two sets of fans which I
think is great news. I know that there was a huge police presence at the
game, but if that is what it takes to keep the peace then so be it. Nobody
wanted to see a repeat of what happened two years ago, and I hope that those
days are behind both clubs. Of course, credit must go to the police, the
Millwall fans and the Hammers fans for their behaviour at the weekend and I
hope it is as good when the two teams meet again later in the season at
Upton Park.
One sour note from the Millwall game was the injury to James Tomkins. He has
injured his groin and I will be delighted if he is only out for three games.
I know from when I used to play that groin injuries can take up to six weeks
to heal and it is a real shame to lose a player like Tomkins for that length
of time. He has been in outstanding form so far this season and he will be a
big loss.

However, West Ham have a more-than able replacement in Abdoulaye Faye. He
looked really strong at the back on Saturday and he brings a real physical
presence to the team. You know what you are going to get with Faye and the
fans will take to him because of the no-nonsense nature in which he plays.
We also have Winston Reid, who has really impressed me this season. When we
brought Faye in, I thought he would be starting alongside Tomkins, but it
shows just how well Reid has done as he has kept Faye out of the side.

Tony Cottee was talking to Nathaniel John

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
White Hart Lane revamp moves step closer after Spurs reach agreement with
council
By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 9:11 PM on 20th September 2011
Daily Mail

Tottenham's plans to redevelop White Hart Lane took another small step
forward when they signed a planning agreement with Haringey Council. The
Section 106 agreement, which Spurs signed on Tuesday afternoon, means they
have agreed to pay some money towards local facilities in the area around
the stadium if they decide to go ahead with plans to stay in the north
London borough. Tottenham want to redevelop White Hart Lane in a site
adjacent to the ground in a plan known as the Northumberland Development
Project (NDP) but they are also fighting the decision to give West Ham the
keys to the Olympic Stadium in Stratford.

Spurs were given planning permission to undertake the NDP in October last
year but they also want local and central government to contribute towards
revamping transport and other facilities around the area - which is one of
the most deprived in the capital. They will now sit down with the council,
London Mayor Boris Johnson, and central government figures to see if they
can come to an agreement. A Tottenham statement read: 'The club can confirm
that the S106 agreement in respect of the Northumberland Development Project
has now been completed and planning permissions have been issued. 'This
enables discussions with the London borough of Haringey, the Mayor of London
and central government to continue as we seek to make the development viable
and deliverable. 'As always, we shall keep all our supporters updated as
these progress.'

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com