Monday, September 19

Daily WHUFC News - 19th September 2011

Happy birthday, William Arthur Bonds MBE
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 17th September 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham United legend Billy Bonds celebrates his 65th birthday today. The
Woolwich-born defender, who also played in midfield for a while played
almost 800 first team games for the Hammers between 1967 and 1988, when he
was forced to retire from professional football at the tender age of 42.
Considered by many Hammers to be the finest home-grown defender never to
receive a full cap for England, Bonds was called up for the national side by
former Hammers boss Ron Greenwood in 1977 but only made the bench. A tough
tackling, no-nonsense defender, it was Bonds' never-say-die attitude that
endeared him to the Boleyn Ground faithful from the moment he made his first
tam debut at the beginning of the 1967/68 season.

In 1974, upon the departure of Bobby Moore to Fulham, Bonds was granted the
captaincy by John Lyall - a position he was to hold for the remainder of his
career at the club. As a result, it was Bonds who lifted the FA Cup at the
1975 and 1980 finals and he who captained United in the 1976 Cup Winners Cup
final and the 1981 League Cup Final.

Born in Woolwich in 1946 shortly after the cessation of war, the young Bonds
started his career with local club Charlton for whom he made 95 appearances
between 1964 and 1967, before Ron Greenwood paid just £50,000 to take the
young hopeful across the Thames. Between 1967 and 1971 he was a regular
feature at right back, but was then promoted to a midfield role alongside
the mercurial Trevor Brooking. In the 1973/74 season he finished as the
club's top scorer with 13 goals to his name.

Billy Bonds: a proper legend

1967/68: Pld 42, Gls 1
1968/69: Pld 47, Gls 1
1969/70: Pld 45, Gls 3
1970/71: Pld 40, Gls 0
1971/72: Pld 56, Gls 5 (League Cup semi-finalist)
1972/73: Pld 43, Gls 3
1973/74: Pld 43, Gls 13 (leading goalscorer)
1974/75: Pld 42, Gls 9 (FA Cup winner)
1975/76: Pld 32, Gls 4 (FA Cup Winners Cup finalist)
1976/77: Pld 46, Gls 3 (Selected for England squad)
1977/78: Pld 32, Gls 2
1978/79: Pld 41, Gls 4
1979/80: Pld 48, Gls 1 (FA Cup winner)
1980/81: Pld 58, Gls 2 (League Cup finalist, Second Division champion)
1981/82: Pld 35, Gls 2
1982/83: Pld 39, Gls 3
1983/84: Pld 30, Gls 0
1984/85: Pld 26, Gls 3
1985/86: Pld 0, Gls 0
1986/87: Pld 24, Gls 0
1987/88: Pld 24, Gls 0

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Sam rules out Bridge move
West Ham boss is 'full up' and has no room for new signings
Last Updated: September 18, 2011 1:28pm
SSN

Sam Allardyce has confirmed he will not be making a bid to bring defender
Wayne Bridge back to West Ham on loan. The 31-year-old Manchester City
player was not named in Roberto Mancini's 25-man squad and the Italian has
intimated he would be happy for Bridge to join a Championship club for the
rest of the season. The former England defender has been strongly linked
with a move back to East London after spending time on loan at Upton Park in
the Premier League last season.
He was also been linked with moves to Newcastle and Celtic before the
transfer window closed. But Allardyce admits he's been delighted with the
four players he has managed to sign during the summer and has now confirmed
he won't be bringing Bridge back to the club. He told The People: "We are
full up now. We have filled our squad with all the players we need for the
time being and we have a squad that is good and has strength in depth."

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West Ham boss rues missed chances in Millwall draw
10:20am Sunday 18th September 2011
Guardian Series
By Simon Mail »

West Ham manager Sam Allardyce was left to rue missed chances after his side
drew 0-0 at Millwall. The Hammers hit the bar in the first half through
Henri Lansbury and came close after the break with David Bentley missing an
easy chance. Allardyce said: "We are just disappointed that having scored so
freely before I expected us to score and we should have on the chances we
created. "We got what we expected. They had a very high-tempo start and you
expect that in a local derby. Territorially they got the advantage in the
first half. "Henri had the best chance for us and he has hit the bar when we
would have expected him to score there.
"Then when the game dipped away from them, which we knew it would
physically, we started to open them up more. "We got the subs on and Kevin
Nolan has got a chance we would expect him to score with and instead of
chesting it down and slotting it in he has decided to head it. "David
Bentley then got an unbelievable chance to put the ball in the back of the
net and put it wide."

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http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Sunday, September 18

Daily WHUFC News - 18th September 2011

Baldock wants Boleyn bow
WHUFC.com
The newest Hammers debutant is eager for another taste of first-team action
after a run-out at Millwall
18.09.2011

Sam Baldock was thrilled to get his first taste of West Ham United action
and is already looking to next Saturday's match against Peterborough United.
Another bumper Boleyn crowd is expected, with the club slashing ticket
prices for kids to just a fiver while it is also a free match for all Youth
Academy members. "I want to get in front of the home crowd and really show
them what I can do against Peterborough, if selected. "It didn't fall for me
at Millwall but hopefully I can get a chance in a big home game next
Saturday."

The striker came off the bench at The Den on Saturday in the hope of
snatching a winning goal but found the home team in resilient mood. Although
Baldock could not cap his debut with a goal and the competitive contest
finished goalless, he was thrilled to wear the claret and blue at last. "It
was good to finally run out in a West Ham shirt. I have been waiting a
while. It was a quite good game to get involved in. There was a great
atmosphere and I was pleased to get on the pitch. "We are not too
disappointed with the result. We thought maybe we might have had the better
of the play but under the circumstances we will take a point and build from
here."

Baldock was a lively presence, and did his best to team up with Carlton Cole
and fellow substitute David Bentley in the hope of forcing an opening. "They
have got the ability to create chances for you so I was just trying to be
lively and in and around them. I was also trying to make something happen
for them. " A nice sight on the sidelines just before Baldock's introduction
was John Carew's handshake for the No7 when it was he and not the Norway
striker who got the call to be Sam Allardyce's third change. "We all back
the manager's decision and although we all want to do well, the main thing
for all of us is the team does well. John has been really good for me and
has been talking to me constantly. He has obviously experience of the
highest level and it is nice for someone like him to show me support."

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Sam settles for derby draw
WHUFC.com
The manager was left to rue missed chances but was happy to see the unbeaten
run continue at Millwall
17.09.2011

Sam Allardyce settled for a point from a competitive London derby at
Millwall but knew his team had made enough chances to have taken all three.
The Hammers headed to The Den in great away form and could have had a
tremendous start inside the first minute when Henri Lansbury caught home
keeper David Forde napping. Lansbury shot towards an empty net from fully 40
yards only to see it just flash wide. He also hit the bar and Julien Faubert
went close in the first half before Kevin Nolan and David Bentley spurned
golden opportunities in the second 45. Although it is six games unbeaten, a
first win at Millwall since 1991 still eludes the Hammers.
"We are disappointed we didn't win it but we respect the point we have got
and a clean sheet based on the pressure Millwall put us under in the first
half," said Allardyce. "I thought it was a fantastic piece of vision from
Henri [in the first minute]. I was thinking 'why the hell are you shooting
from there?'He must have seen the keeper in the position he was and had the
ball been on target it would have gone in the back of the net. "It would
have been nice to been talking about that goal but unfortunately it didn't
go in."

Millwall recovered well from that early scare and gave as good as they got
before half-time. Robert Green had to be alert for occasional forays forward
but the Hammers looked more dangerous, even if they did have less of the
ball than their hosts. After the interval, it was more about whether West
Ham would find the finish their enterprising play deserved - with David
Bentley impressing off the bench as a replacement for Matt Taylor. Sam
Baldock came on for the closing stages for his Hammers bow but never got the
chance in front of goal he craved. "We got what we expected," summed up
Allardyce. "They had a very high-tempo start and you expect that in a local
derby. Territorially they got the advantage in the first half. Henri had the
best chance for us and he has hit the bar when we would have expected him to
score there. "Then when the game dipped away from them, which we knew it
would physically, we started to open them up more. We got the subs on and
Kevin Nolan has got a chance we would expect him to score with and instead
of chesting it down and slotting it in he has decided to head it. "David
Bentley then got an unbelievable chance to put the ball in the back of the
net and put it wide."

If it was a frustrating story in the final third, Abdoulaye Faye rightly
earned praise on his first league start as the star man in a dogged
defensive unit. Alongside Faye, James Tomkins limped off midway through the
first half with a groin strain that will keep him out for ten days, meaning
the rested Winston Reid had to come into the fray. He was to more than play
his part but the manager was concerned to lose Tomkins. "James has a groin
strain. We have got a big week coming up with three games and he could miss
all three so it was great to see Abdoulaye Faye start and complete his first
game. "He was a very experienced calming influence for us. He is one of the
reasons we got a clean sheet. Nothing fazes Abdoulaye. He showed a calm
composed performance for us defensively. "We are just disappointed that
having scored so freely before I expected us to score today and we should
have on the chances we created."

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Loanee round-up: Nouble on target
WHUFC.com
Debut goalscorer Frank Nouble was one of seven loanees in action on Saturday
afternoon
17.09.2011

West Ham United's loanees enjoyed a busy Saturday afternoon in the npower
Football League. There was a debut goal for Frank Nouble, victories to
celebrate for Cristian Montano, Robert Hall, Callum McNaughton and Jordan
Brown but defeats for Jordan Spence, Olly Lee and Ahmed Abdulla. Making his
bow for League Two club Gillingham, Nouble set Andy Hessenthaler's men on
the way to a thumping 6-1 victory at Hereford United. The forward, who
turned 20 on 24 August, netted the third senior goal of his career, having
previously hit the target for Swansea City and Charlton Athletic during
previous loan spells.

Elsewhere, Cristian Montano helped Martin Allen's Notts County to climb to
seventh in the League One table courtesy of a 2-0 win at Stevenage.

In League Two, Hall played the full 90 minutes for Oxford United in a 2-0
success at Barnet that lifted the U's into the Play-Off places.

McNaughton also completed the whole game as AFC Wimbledon beat Cheltenham
Town 4-1 at Kingsmeadow, while Brown was an unused substitute as Aldershot
Town continued their recent renaissance with a 1-0 win at Bristol Rovers.

On the down side, Spence started in Bristol City's 2-1 Championship defeat
at Leeds United, while Lee's Dagenham & Redbridge and Abdulla's Swindon Town
went down to League Two defeats by Morecambe and at Burton Albion
respectively.

Further afield, Pablo Barrera's Real Zaragoza face RCD Espanyol in Spain's
Primera Division on Sunday.

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Larkins stars for unbeaten U18s
WHUFC.com
Nick Haycock was full of praise for his keeper as the Academy excelled again
away to Coventry
17.09.2011

Coventry City U18s 1-3 West Ham United U18s

The Hammers made it five wins out of five with another tremendous awayday
display at Coventry City on Saturday morning. Nick Haycock's unbeaten young
side took command against their in-form hosts in the first half, with Elliot
Lee and Jack Powell finding the net. After the interval, Coventry went for
broke to try and force their way back into the contest and won a hotly
disputed penalty to give themselves hope in the closing stages. However,
Jake Larkins was in heroic form in goal and Lamar Hurley bagged a third on
the break to ensure the visitors headed back down the motorway in high
spirits. Although the "commanding" Larkins was inspirational, the coach was
keen to stress that his team had always held the upper hand on their hosts.
Haycock said: "It was a really good performance. We are waiting to trip up
but we just keep getting the results. It will happen but we have to enjoy
our form while we are where we are. We got three good goals and a good team
performance. It is a recipe for success."

The Academy coach paid tribute to Sam Allardyce for letting the U18s prepare
this week with a session matching up against the first team - an ideal
opportunity for all to see what the youngsters are all about at first hand.
"That really set us up well," Haycock added. "It helped us to cope with what
we had to deal with from Coventry."

West Ham United: Larkins, Young, Chambers, Lee, Potts, Turgott, Powell,
Hurley, Sadlier, Vose (Fanimo 70), E Lee

Subs unused: Cowler, Miles, Shaw

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Millwall 0 - 0 West Ham
BBC.co.uk
Page last updated at 14:58 GMT, Saturday, 17 September 2011 15:58 UK

David Bentley missed a sitter as West Ham United dropped their first away
points of the season in a bruising derby at Millwall. Sam Allardyce's side
were left to rue their wasteful finishing after Bentley somehow dragged his
shot wide late on when it looked easier to score. Henri Lansbury, who almost
scored from the kick-off, also had a shot cleared off the line. Millwall had
chances too, with Liam Trotter at fault. The Hammers made the short trip
across the Thames to face their bitter rivals on the back of three straight
away wins and looking to go top of the Championship. Off the pitch there was
no repeat of the crowd trouble which marred the Carling Cup meeting between
the sides at Upton Park two years ago. On the field, there were plenty of
casualties with James Tomkins limping off, Julien Faubert spitting out blood
after catching a stray elbow and Tamika Mkandawire bandaged up with a head
injury - all in the first 20 minutes. Straight from kick-off, Lansbury
looked up and saw home goalkeeper David Forde adjusting the net behind his
goal, apparently unaware the game had begun. Fortunately for Forde, the
40-yard shot flew just wide of the empty goal. Millwall recovered from that
shaky opening and went close to scoring three times in the first half. By
then West Ham had also been denied after Lansbury's shot in the area was
bravely headed off the line by Paul Robinson. Bentley's big moment arrived
in the 75th minute when Faubert's low shot was palmed across goal by Forde.
But the former England winger, in only his second appearance for West Ham,
somehow dragged his effort wide.

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Millwall 0 West Ham Utd 0
KUMB.com
Filed: Saturday, 17th September 2011
By: Staff Writer

West Ham blew the chance to go top of the Championship after being
frustrated by neighbours Millwall at the Den this lunchtime. This
much-heralded fixture failed to live up to expectations as neither side
managed to take the game by the scruff of the neck. With chances few and far
between, it was a disappointing outcome for a fixture that had promised so
much. Despite the lack of opportunities, both sides wasted a great chance to
take all three points. For Millwall, Liam Trotter's failure to beat Rob
Green when sent through on goal after 19 minutes cost the home side dear.
However the best chance of the game surely fell to West Ham substitute David
Bentley, who will be left to rue the open goal he missed as the game entered
its closing stages.

Sam Allardyce went into the game having made just one change from the team
that beat Portsmouth 4-3 last weekend; Abdoulaye Faye being given his first
start of the Championship campaign at the expense of Winston Reid. However
Reid's temporary demotion to the bench was to last for just half-an-hour as
he was called upon to replace the injured James Tomkins, who was worryingly
withdrawn after several minutes treatment with what appeared to be a groin
strain. With only three recognised central defenders on the books, that
could prove to be a major problem for Allardyce in the coming weeks.

In front of a partisan crowd, it was always going to be the case that West
Ham would start in a defensive frame of mind. That proved to be so as
Millwall - who racked up six corners to West Ham's one in the first half -
threatened on several occasions to make the breakthrough, although a
combination of poor delivery and woeful finishing - none more so than when
Trotter made a pig's ear of his 19th minute effort - ensured the match
reamined goalless.

However Sam Allardyce's side could have been ahead in the opening seconds of
the game thanks to an effort that, had it gone in, would have been one of
the most controversial ever scored. Referee Lee Mason allowed West Ham to
kick off having failed to check that both goalkeepers were ready; Henri
Lansbury's long-range shot missed its target by a matter of feet whilst
'Wall 'keeper David Forde was still busy re-arranging his goal net. The
protests that followed were swiftly dealt with by an embarrassed Mason and
the game continued. It was the classic game of two halves for as weak and
ineffectual as West Ham looked in the opening period, the tables were turned
after the break and, in the end, it was the home side who were probably
happiest to take the point.

As the game wore on United's experience began to make a difference and Kevin
Nolan - who was mostly anonymous throughout the game - should have put West
Ham ahead on 68 minutes when he met a great cross by Lansbury with a timid
header that was easy for Forde to claim.
click here for audio: David Bentley misses a sitter

But with only 15 minutes of the game remaining Bentley, who had replaced the
disappointing Matt Taylor on the hour mark missed an absolute sitter.
Carlton Cole's ball inside to Julien Faubert saw the Frenchman hit a
tremendous effort that Forde managed to palm away - only in to the path of
Bentley who looked odds-on to score.

Whether or not the late intervention of Alan Dunne was enough to put Bentley
off we'll never know, but for whatever reason the on-loan winger screwed his
effort wide of the target when it seemed easier to score. West Ham did
eventually find the back of the net when Faubert converted a Sam Baldock
through-ball in injury-time, but the whistle had been blown long before the
Frenchman hit the target. All in all it was, for the most part, a drab,
disappointing affair and one that ensures West Ham's failure to beat their
bitter rivals in a league fixture since February 1991 continues.

Millwall 0 West Ham Utd 0: match facts

West Ham Utd: Green, O'Brien, McCartney, Tomkins (Reid 30), Faye, Noble,
Lansbury (Baldock 73), Nolan, Faubert, Taylor (Bentley 59), Cole.
Subs not used: Boffin, Carew.
Booked: Cole (39).

Millwall: Forde, Dunne, Ward, Robinson, Stewart, Abdou, Trotter, Mkindawire
(N'Guessan 87), Bouazza (Simpson 63), Feeney (Henry 63), Marquis.
Subs not used: tbc.
Booked: Dunn (19).

Referee: Lee Mason.
Assistants: Ceri Richards and Simon Bennett.
Fourth Official: Gavin Ward.

Attendance: 16,078.

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Lions and Irons share spoils
Last updated: 17th September 2011
SSN

David Bentley missed a sitter as West Ham dropped points on their travels
for the first time this season after a bruising 0-0 draw at Millwall. The
Hammers made the short trip across the Thames to face their bitter rivals on
the back of three straight away wins and looking to go top of the
Championship, at least temporarily, following their noon showdown. But they
could not find a way past the Lionswith on-loan Tottenham winger
Bentleyblowing the best chance of the afternoon on only his second
appearance. Henri Lansbury also had an effort cleared off the line but
Millwall missed plenty of chances too, with Liam Trotter the main culprit,
as a fixture traditionally not for the faint-hearted ended all-square.
Millwall have been eagerly awaiting the renewal of hostilities, so much so
that some fans chartered a plane to fly over Wigan's ground trailing a
banner with the words 'Avram Grant, Millwall Legend' as the Hammers'
relegation was confirmed last season.

And while the atmosphere crackled, there was thankfully no repeat of the
crowd trouble which marred the Carling Cup meeting between the sides at
Upton Park two years ago. There were plenty of casualties on the pitch,
though, with James Tomkins limping off, Julien Faubert spitting out blood
after a whack from a stray elbow and Tamika Mkandawire bandaged up with a
head injury - all in the first 20 minutes. But Grant's replacement, Sam
Allardyce, has added the steel the Hammers were evidently missing last term
as the teams went toe-to-toe in a fiercely contested encounter.

The match got off to a comical start, although Lions manager Kenny Jackett
was not laughing. Straight from kick-off, Lansbury looked up and saw home
goalkeeper David Forde adjusting the net behind his goal, apparently unaware
the game had begun. Fortunately for Forde, Lansbury's 40-yard shot flew just
wide of the empty goal as the keeper sheepishly jogged back into position.
But Millwall recovered from that shaky opening and came close to scoring
three times in the first half.

Mkandawire put a header narrowly wide and Trotter shot too close to Robert
Greenbefore hooking a volley over from six yards just before the break. By
then West Ham had also been denied, in spectacular fashion, after Forde
initially made a meal of coming for a corner. He got up in time to keep out
Lansbury's shot and when the ball fell back to the midfielder his second,
fierce effort was bravely headed off the line by Paul Robinson. In the
second half Lansbury floated in a dangerous cross but Kevin Nolan's diving
header was held by Forde. Bentley's big moment arrived in the 75th minute
when Faubert's low shot was palmed across goal by Forde. But the former
England winger, looking to become the first West Ham player to hit a winner
at Millwall since Paul Ince some 23 years ago, somehow dragged his effort
wide.

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Big Sam frustrated
Hammers chief wanted derby win
Last Updated: September 17, 2011 7:00pm
SSN

West Ham boss Sam Allardyce insisted that his side should have beaten
Millwall in their early kick-off. The Hammers travelled to South London for
a win which would have taken them top of the table. But instead Allardyce
and his side had to make do with a goalless draw. "Henri Lansbury had the
best chance in the first half, Kevin Nolanhad a chance we'd expect him to
score, if he'd chested it down and slotted it in instead, and David Bentley
had an unbelievable chance but he put it wide," said Allardyce. "In the end
we are disappointed we didn't win it but we are happy and respect the point
that we've got."

There was almost a goal in the opening seconds as Millwall keeper David
Forde was still behind his goal, adjusting his net when West Ham kicked off.
Henri Lansbury noticed Forde was not paying attention and sent a 40-yard
shot bouncing narrowly wide as the keeper sheepishly jogged back into
position having avoided an embarrassing gaffe. "He wasn't happy with the
referee and I'm looking forward to seeing it again. "It looked exactly like
he hadn't seen the game had kicked off, but I haven't spoken to him yet."

Vision

Allardyce added: "I thought it was a fantastic piece of vision by Lansbury -
I hadn't got a clue and was thinking 'why the hell are you shooting there?'
"But he'd obviously seen the keeper and the position he was in, and if the
ball had been on target it would have gone in the back of the net. "It would
be nice to be talking about it for a long time if it had gone in, but
unfortunately it didn't." Millwall chief Jackett was not too disappointed
with the draw, adding: "I'm not disappointed with a draw.
"West Ham are very strong, they have a very good side so I'm pleased. "We
defended well and we are competitive but now we have to find our way going
forward and get some goals."

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Millwall 0 West Ham United 0: match report
By Jonathan Liew, at the New Den1:25PM BST 17 Sep 2011 1 Comment
Telegraph.co.uk

Out on the Ilderton Road, all along the Surrey Canal Road, at London Bridge
and South Bermondsey station and everywhere in between, the police in yellow
coats were out in force, truncheons hanging menacingly by their sides. The
last time these two teams met, there were 80 arrests, three pitch invasions
and one stabbing of a Millwall fan. That was two years ago, in a Carling Cup
tie at Upton Park that brought shame on the English game. Thanks to the
heavy police presence and the lunchtime kick-off, this fixture was free of
major incident - off the field, mercifully - but alas, on the field as well.
Nevertheless, it was a febrile, tempestuous affair, seething with ferocious
challenges and gleefully obscene songs. Neither, however, proved
particularly conducive to a fluid football match. Urged and whipped into a
frenzy by their supporters, both teams flew into the tackle and fought for
every scrap. James Tomkins limped off, Tamika Mkandawire required lengthy
triage on a bloody head injury and Julien Faubert got a painful whack in the
face from a stray arm. Joey O'Brien and John Marquis angrily squared up to
each other. And that was just the first half. As so often in fierce local
derbies, heart ruled head, but studs ruled both. For every heroic tackle to
win possession back, there was an insipid misplaced pass to squander it
again.

Amidst the baring of teeth and rattling of sabres, the game was crying out
for someone to get the ball down and play it. Consummate, cultured passers
like Kevin Nolan, Mark Noble and Jimmy Abdou were drawn into the affray,
unable to keep the ball for more than a few seconds. Chances were few, the
finishing rushed and poor. The scoreline was ultimately a fair one. And yet
it could all have been so different, within just 20 seconds of the start of
the game. From kick-off, West Ham's Henri Lansbury took the ball into the
opposition half and spotted Millwall goalkeeper David Forde off the pitch
checking the goal-net, evidently unaware the game had started. Lansbury shot
from 40 yards, the ball fizzing just wide of the post with a startled Forde
still out of position.

You can well imagine the volcano that would have erupted had the ball gone
in. Referee Lee Mason would have had to award the goal - he eventually, with
some relief, pointed for a goal-kick - but the recriminations would have
been severe and far-reaching. Millwall manager Kenny Jackett described it as
"a bizarre incident". "I thought it was a fantastic piece of vision," West
Ham manager Sam Allardyce said, with a rye smile. "We'd have been talking
about that one for a long time."

But out of the initial chaos emerged a hesitant order. Millwall had the
better of the opening period, West Ham the better of the second. Liam
Trotter had two good opportunities to score, Hamer Bouazza's effort was
fumbled by Robert Green, and Lansbury hit the bar with a fierce shot from
close range. The game became stretched in the second period, and West Ham
had two golden chances to win it. First Nolan headed Lansbury's cross
straight at Forde when he had time to bring the ball down and swing a boot
through it, and then after Faubert's shot had been parried by Forde, on-loan
substitute David Bentley inexplicably blasted wide from six yards. "We're
still not at our best yet," Allardyce said. "We're still very new as a unit,
and when we get to know each other better, we'll improve as the season goes
on."

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Forde focus keeps Hammers at bay
Millwall 0 West Ham United 0
By Nick Callow at The Den
Sunday, 18 September 2011
The Independent

"Welcome To Bandit Country" proclaimed the Millwall banner aimed at the West
Ham fans, but like any chance of drama here yesterday, it had gone before
the final whistle blew.

As an industrious Millwall side made it six-and-a-half hours without scoring
and ambitious West Ham extended their unbeaten run to six games, maybe the
banners' owners had plans for fun of their own; for this was the first
meeting between these fierce London rivals since it all went horribly wrong
in a League Cup tie two years ago at Upton Park.

That night featured a stabbing amid running battles inside and outside the
ground; the three pitch invasions by West Ham fans resulted in a £115,000
fine and ensured a massive police presence just over the river yesterday.

No official figures were released but it looked as though the police had the
2,000-strong visiting West Ham fans marked man for man, with a handsome few
left over to deal with any potential Millwall miscreants.

Local business owners were warned to beware, the club shop was closed and
the visiting supporters were penned in to the top deck of a two-tier stand
behind a goal; the lower tier populated solely by a large Millwall Lion
flag.

The West Ham fans probably did not have as good a view of that as they did
the Millwall fans' banner celebrating their rivals' relegation from the
Premier League last season; with a group flying a plane over Wigan's ground
proclaiming "Avram Grant – Millwall Legend" as that fixture sealed their
rivals' fate.

And about 100 Millwall fans went to greet the West Ham team coach an
hour-and-a-half before kick-off. The bus was escorted by three police "meat
wagons" and a human shield of police officers but the only things thrown at
the West Ham players this time were verbal insults and a deep rumble of the
drawn-out "Millwall" chant.

On the picth it could have been so different had we witnessed one of
football's funniest goals barely 10 seconds in with the Millwall goalkeeper
David Forde off the pitch, unaware the game had started when Henri Lansbury
spotted this only to shoot wide from the centre circle.

Forde and Lansbury met again in the 35th minute when the goalkeeper fumbled
a cross but made up for it with a stunning point-blank save from the on-loan
Arsenal man, who then blasted the rebound against the crossbar.

Millwall had a few first half chances of their own with the impressive Liam
Trotter forcing a good save from Robert Green.

As this nervy encounter headed for stalemate, West Ham sent on David Bentley
while attack-minded Jay Simpson and James Henry were introduced by Millwall.

The former Arsenal man Simpson's poor touch denied him the chance to make an
instant impact as the ball ran away from him as he broke clear form the half
way line.

With 15 minutes to go, Forde palmed away a Julien Faubert shot low to his
left but Bentley dragged his close-range shot wide with the goal at his
mercy.

There was still time for late Millwall substitute Danny N'Guessan to make an
impact but his powerful low drive was well saved by Robert Green at the foot
of a post.

The West Ham manager, Sam Allardyce, correctly identified his side had the
better chances and his new-look team is likely to improve as the season
progresses.

Millwall (4-2-3-1): Forde; Dunne, Robinson, Mkandawire (N'Guessan, 87),
Ward; Stewart, Trotter; Bouazza (Simpson, 64), Feeney (64 Henry), Abdou;
Marquis.

West Ham (4-5-1): Green; O'Brien, Tomkins (30 Reid), Faye, McCartney;
Faubert, Nolan, Taylor (59 Bentley), Noble, Lansbury (73 Baldock); Cole.

Referee: Lee Mason

Man of the match: Trotter (Millwall)
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Saturday, September 17

Daily WHUFC News - 17th September 2011

Big Sam on Friday
WHUFC.com
The manager cannot wait to take his West Ham United on the short trip to
south London on Saturday
16.09.2011

Sam Allardyce is gearing up for his first derby experience as West Ham
United manager. Victory at The Den on Saturday lunchtime would take the
Hammers top of the npower Championship, at least for a few hours, and the
manager believed his men were up for the occasion in the right way. With
Carlton Cole on a roll scoring goals and a virtually fully fit squad to
choose from - only Gary O'Neil remains on the long-term casualty list -
there was increased optimism around Chadwell Heath this week.

You have a first home win and are unbeaten in five matches. What's your
report on the season so far?

SA: I am pleased with how things have gone. We have finally won our first
game at home and that really shows we are on the right track. The fact the
club hadn't won a home match since March was a big burden on quite a few of
the players that had survived last season's relegation and were still here.
The fans were a bit nervous as well. With the away form, it now makes for a
very good start to the season. Having lost the first game, we haven't lost
in five - winning four and drawing one.

What's the team news for Saturday?

SA: We have got a good fit squad at the moment. We had a development squad
game against Tottenham on Monday and unfortunately Guy Demel, who is a
little short of match practice, felt his hamstring a little bit. That is
perhaps going to be a slight problem but after that everyone is OK. We are
the most entertaining team in the league. We have scored more goals than
anyone and long may it continue.

Are you worried about conceding goals still?

SA: We want to tighten that up next time we play at home. It certainly
hasn't been a problem away. Away from home has been very good. The balance
of the side has been fantastic which has resulted in three very good
victories. Of course, the last two victories have been 4-0 and 4-1. If we
can recreate that again on Saturday against Millwall then we keep up a
fantastic record of three away wins on the trot to try and make it four.
That is the motivation for the players as well as being a big local derby,

What are you thoughts on goals coming from all over the pitch?

SA: It is much better if you share the goals. Sharing the goals out is a big
responsibility but everyone has their target of getting what should be their
best goal record for the season to add to what they have done before.
If everyone does better we know we will have enough goals certainly to win
enough points and get automatic promotion - as long as we do the defensive
side right.

How has Carlton Cole been since the transfer speculation?

SA: His performances have told you that it has not affected him. It wasn't
about Carlton not liking being here, it was the money factor. What we had to
do was resist it and we eventually did. Carlton is committed to West Ham,
enjoying his football and enjoying scoring in every game he has played in.

You could go top on Saturday against a club you played for nearly 30 years
ago. What are your memories of the old Den?

SA: I had a really good time at Millwall. They gave me an opportunity to go
and play first-team football where it wasn't happening at Sunderland where I
was at the time. I chose for the first time in my career to drop down a
couple of divisions to play football. For me it was a big move as a family
but we settled brilliantly and I enjoyed my football. It was a good
experience, I really enjoyed it and it was a different type of stadium to
what is there now. It was the old stadium, the old Den on Cold Blow Lane. It
was a daunting task for away teams to try and get a result. I am sure being
the West Ham manager they are not too keen on me now. I am here to do a job
for West Ham and to prepare my team in the best possible way I can. For me
it is about focusing on the game and my team on getting ready to perform at
their best possible level to try and win what is going to be a difficult
game.

Have you had to tell your players not to get carried away with the
atmosphere?

SA: At some stage or even just before the game I will remind them that we
want it to be a football spectacle. We want to be playing our best football
and we don't want anything to distract us from that. The atmosphere can
change a players' mood but we want him to play to his best and use the
atmosphere to bring the best out of him as an individual and then the team
as a whole. Don't let the emotions overspill into something where we may
give something to the opposition that we don't want to. We want to stay
motivated, aggressive but calm as well. Controlled aggression in terms of
bringing the best out of each other and let the atmosphere bring the best
out of you.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
U18s go for five straight
WHUFC.com
The in-form youth team will seek to continue their perfect start at Coventry
City on Saturday
16.09.2011

While all the attention will be on West Ham United's npower Championship
fixture at Millwall on Saturday, Academy Director Tony Carr will be
fully-focused on ensuring the club's Under-18s extend their perfect start to
the season. The young Hammers have won all four FA Premier Academy League
matches they have contested so far ahead of this weekend's trip to Coventry
City, scoring 14 goals in the process. However, the Sky Blues have also
opened 2011/12 in fine fashion, winning three of their four games -
including a 3-2 home victory over Chelsea last Saturday. Carr and Academy
coach Nick Haycock have left nothing to chance in their preparations for the
trip to the Alan Higgs Centre. "Myself and Nick have been working very hard
with the boys this week to make sure after the very good start we have had
that no complacency sets in," said Carr. "We have played another unbeaten
team in Coventry who have won three and drawn one. "They are defending an
unbeaten run. They beat Chelsea last week so we go to the Midlands hoping we
can continue this great start we have had."

The coaching staff has been boosted by the squad reporting a clean bill of
health, with England U17 winger Mathias Fanimo making a welcome return from
injury.
"Matthias is back in the squad. He has had two weeks off with a hip and
hamstring problem. He will be on the bench and may feature. All fit and
raring to go.
"We have good competition for places. We are scoring goals and we hope we
can continue that for as long as possible."

With the likes of Elliot Lee, Kieran Sadlier and Leo Chambers excelling in
their first few weeks as full-time scholars, Carr and Haycock have had to
make sure his young charges keep their feet on the ground. "Nick has worked
very hard to make sure there isn't complacency. They can't just walk out and
expect to win. It is a good learning period for them because we are not
having to pick them up after defeats - we are having to keep their feet on
the ground with the buzz of winning.
"We are travelling up on the day hopefully we can make it a good day all
round with the first team at Millwall as lunchtime."

To complete a busy Saturday, a number of the club's Academy products will be
in action for their respective loan clubs. In the Championship, Jordan
Spence's Bristol City head to Leeds United, while Cristian Montano's Notts
County head for Stevenage in League One. In League Two, Callum McNaughton's
AFC Wimbledon host Cheltenham Town, Jordan Brown's Aldershot Town travel to
Bristol Rovers, Ahmed Abdulla's Swindon Town go to Burton Albion, Olly
Lee's Dagenham & Redbridge host leaders Morecambe and Robert Hall's Oxford
United head for Barnet. Carr is hoping to watch Hall - a second-year scholar
- in action at Underhill, with the 17-year-old having marked his U's debut
with a match-winning goal at Dagenham in midweek. "We have got a number of
players out on loan at the moment but the youngest one is Robert, who has
people may know is a young and upcoming striker. "He is an England
international and has been in great form in pre-season with the development
squad. He hasn't featured with the youth team this year because he has made
great strides forward. "The opportunity came up to go to Oxford and he has
made a dream start at Dagenham - the staff were watching him play and he
scored on his debut. "After the Coventry game I am going to dash down the
motorway to get to Barnet to watch him play and hopefully he can continue in
the vein. His family aren't too far away so they can watch him easily and it
is good for us to keep tabs on him."

*Supporters who would like to attend Saturday's game at Coventry City should
note that kick-off at the Alan Higgs Centre is at 11.30am.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fans Forum a success
WHUFC.com
Supporters headed to the Boleyn Ground to get the chance to speak to
Joint-Chairman David Gold
16.09.2011

Joint-Chairman David Gold staged a successful first fans forum of the new
season at the Boleyn Ground on Thursday night. More than 150 supporters
gathered in the Legends Lounge for the evening event which followed on from
Joint-Chairman David Sullivan addressing supporters earlier in the summer.
It lasted for three hours and saw questions fielded on a range of subjects.
The topics discussed included the Olympic Stadium and the new manager and 12
summer signings, as well as his feelings of being back to full health and
relishing the season ahead. "I feel fantastic," the Joint-Chairman said with
a smile when quizzed about his recovery from an illness that meant he missed
several matches last season. He revealed he was running every day,
exercising and eating healthily. So much so that he has "not had a decent
meal in months!".

The evening's tone ranged from such light-hearted chat to serious
reflection, with the Joint-Chairman talking passionately about the events of
last season and reflecting on the Board-wide desire to get the club back to
the top flight as soon as possible. He was emphatic in stating that "Sam
Allardyce is one of the best signings we have ever made ... I promise you he
is going to be an exceptional manager."

There was a warm round of applause for the Board's success in the transfer
window and one supporter spoke up to urge all fans that from now on they had
a responsibility to get behind every single player. The Joint-Chairman spoke
about his dealings with the new recruits like Henri Lansbury, Sam Baldock
and in particular Kevin Nolan - the "best leader of men he's seen in 20
years".

A constant theme of the night was the subject of the Olympic Stadium with
the Joint-Chairman updating on the ongoing process while affirming the
Board's commitment to only doing what's best for West Ham United. He touched
on the club's long-stated proposals for the future transformation of the
"world iconic stadium" - and how it would be West Ham in look, feel and
stature. "The heart and soul of this club is owned by the fans. David
Sullivan and I are merely holding the keys. I can sit out there with you as
a fan and stand up here as a chairman but I am just a custodian hopefully
doing a good job for you guys. The heart and soul of our football club will
be going to the Olympic Stadium and we are going to take as much history
there as we can. "We won't leave anything of importance behind. Are we going
to take the character from here to there? Of course we are. We are going to
take everything, even these chairs! I can't be 100 per cent specific but
Bobby Moore will be represented there ... we have got to be courageous. We
have got to say we can do this and take this fantastic opportunity."

Also touched upon was the progress of the Academy and the commitment to
young talent coming through, the departure of Scott Parker and his thoughts
on the matches so far this season. The Joint-Chairman had begun the evening
by claiming "the idea is for us to engage in a conversation" and pretty much
everyone in the room had the opportunity to speak on that basis as the night
progressed. Once the session was over, he then signed autographs and spoke
to anyone left who still had a query or two to answer before being the last
to leave the Legends Lounge.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Sam eyes 'hero status'
WHUFC.com
Sam Baldock would love to make a match-winning Hammers debut at Millwall
16.09.2011

The last time West Ham United won at Millwall, in December 1988, Sam Baldock
was four months away from being born. That afternoon, Paul Ince was the
Hammers' match-winner - the same Paul Ince who helped to shape Baldock's
career during two spells in charge at MK Dons. Nearly 23 years later and
West Ham's new No7 is itching to follow in the footsteps of his former boss
by netting the winning goal at The Den on Saturday. "Hero status is up for
grabs," the 22-year-old told whufc.com. "If there is a chance of me getting
on the pitch, then I'd love to get on and show them what I can do. "It would
be a great stage on which to make my mark."

After joining West Ham from MK Dons on 26 August, Baldock was an unused
substitute for last Saturday's 4-3 npower Championship victory over
Portsmouth.
Having watched his team-mates collect three points from that fixture, the
forward wants to play his part in scoring what would be the club's fourth
consecutive away league victory. Success at the home of the Lions would be
nothing new to Baldock, who banged in two goals in MK Dons' 4-0 League One
victory over Millwall in October 2008. Then just 19, the Aylesbury-born
player gave a huge sign of the promise that tempted Sam Allardyce to move
for his services last month, scoring twice from close-range past former West
Ham trainee David Forde. Baldock is confident that his new club can achieve
a similar result this weekend. "I have won at Millwall before. I won there
and it is one of my fondest memories because it was in one of my first games
away from home. We turned them over 4-0 and I scored twice on the day. "They
are a very strong, quite physical side and I have no doubt that the crowd
will get them up for it, but with the natural ability we have got in our
squad, if we play our natural game we should come out on top."

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Captain's Blog - Support reaps rewards
WHUFC.com
Kevin Nolan was delighted to get to meet many of the club's supporters over
a busy week
16.09.2011

It was great to get our first home win of the season under our belts against
Portsmouth. There was certainly lots going on in the game but at the end of
the match when we came off the pitch, we had the three points in the bag.
Again the goals came from all over the team. Coley scored his fourth goal in
four matches, Nobes got one from the penalty spot, Matty clipped in a
free-kick and Henri nabbed a debut goal and a well deserved man of the match
award. It was another team performance from everyone. That is two wins on
the bounce and we want to make it three, by also keeping our great away
record going and getting a good result at Millwall on Saturday. That is what
we are focusing on and hopefully come Saturday night, after the match at The
Den, that is all we are talking about.

This week, I and some of the lads have been meeting many of you off the
pitch. After the game with Portsmouth, I went up to the Legends Lounge and I
received a great response when I got up with Phil Parkes to speak about the
game and our start to the season. So thanks to all who were there and I was
glad we gave you the result your support deserved. Then the gaffer, Jack,
Coley and myself all went to help launch the new club store at Westfield
Stratford City. Again, it was great to see all who turned up to the store,
it was nice to chat to you all and we were more than happy to spend time
signing autographs. One autograph we had to sign was someone's tattoo! I
hope it won't be too painful getting that done! The shop is really nice and
I know everyone at the club has been working hard to get it open and ready.
Pay a visit if you haven't already and I am sure you will all enjoy it. Back
to the football, we are as ever grateful for your support both home and away
and all we can do to repay that is getting the results on the pitch - that
is our aim.
Come on you Irons!

Kevin Nolan
Captain

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Millwall v West Ham
BBC.co.uk
Page last updated at 14:33 GMT, Friday, 16 September 2011 15:33 UK

Npower Championship
Venue: The Den Date: Saturday, 17 September Kick-off: 1230 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
Millwall striker John Marquis will be available for the derby despite
requiring a hernia operation. Therry Racon and Shaun Batt are the Lions'
only injury absentees and both could be cleared to return to training next
week.
West Ham will be without striker Frederic Piquionne, who begins a
three-match ban. Recent signing Guy Demel limped out of a reserve match in
midweek with a tight hamstring and is a doubt.

MATCH FACTS
Head-to-head

• West Ham have won nine, lost six and drawn 10 of the 25 competitive
matches against Millwall.
• West Ham's second and most recent league victory on Millwall turf
was 1-0 in December 1988 (top-flight).
• The Lions have kept one clean sheet in the last 14 league matches
with West Ham.

Millwall

• Millwall are the lowest placed of six clubs still holding an
unbeaten home record in the Championship.
• They have failed to score in their last three league games,
completing 305 minutes (five hours five minutes) of scoreless football,
since Hameur Bouazza netted in the 2-2 home draw with Peterborough on 13
August.
• Kenny Jackett is the second longest serving of the current
Championship managers.

West Ham United

• West Ham are unbeaten in five league games (13 points out of 15).
• They are looking to match the four successive away league wins
attained between April and September 2007. They last achieved such a feat in
the same season in December 1985, when a club record five straight away
top-flight wins were registered.
• Sam Allardyce, the second oldest manager in the division, made over
60 league appearances as a central defender for Millwall, between 1981 and
1982.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jeremy Nicholas
Filed: Friday, 16th September 2011
By: Staff Writer
KUMB.com

Jeremy Nicholas has recently released his latest book, Mr Moon Has Left The
Stadium, which recounts his first decade as West Ham United's public
announcer. We managed to get Jem to take a few moments out of his busy
promotional schedule in order to answer a few questions...

KUMB: Jem - thanks for taking the time out to talk to us. This is the age of
social-networking; please describe MMHLTS in a Twitter-friendly 140
characters or less?

JN: It's a funny football book with lots of stories from behind the scenes
during my first eleven seasons as West Ham announcer.

KUMB: In your book, you refer to your (brief) time as a stand-up comic; do
you think you will ever give it another try?

JN: Yes, in the book there's a chapter about my six months as a stand up on
the London circuit. I love telling funny stories and prefer doing the after
dinner speaking nowadays. However I have done some stand up in the last
couple of years and I've plans to do some more in the future.

KUMB: You refer to the play-off semi-final against Ipswich as 'the best
atmosphere I've ever experienced' in MMHLTS; has there ever been a time when
it's been so bad you've wondered why you bothered?

JN: I loved the Ipswich play-off, but I think the atmosphere is still pretty
good. Not as good as in the old days of standing, but compared to other
grounds we're still noisy.

KUMB: The book is scathing of one or two individuals; was there anything you
wanted to publish but weren't allowed to? Either for fear of legal reprisals
or being admonished by your employers?

JN: I didn't want to say anything that would reflect badly on the club as
I'm not only a supporter, but an employee. However there's a few people who
do get a bit of stick in the book for obvious reasons; Scott Duxbury for
sacking me, Glenn Roeder for relegating such a brilliant squad and Nigel Reo
Coker for sulking.

KUMB: You describe your relationship with our former CEO [Duxbury] as
strained, at best; do you ever afford yourself a little smile at the fact
that you are still here whilst he got the boot?

JN: When Scott brought me back after five months in the wilderness he told
me I had a job for life. So in that sense it was a shame that he's now gone.
I wouldn't ever smile at someone losing their job but I'm much happier under
the current owners.

KUMB: We were both present the night Brian Glanville branded Alan Curbishley
'pathetic', which you recount in the book - what's the most unprofessional
act you've witnessed since becoming the club's announcer?

JN: Curbs is one of my favourite managers but it was a bit daft to take on
the press like that. I think Benni Big Mac not being able to get down to his
fighting weight was ridiculous. How lacking in motivation do you have to be
not to be able to slim down for a World Cup the one time it's held in your
own country?

When Benni described Karren Brady as 'the devil with tits', I loved her
reply that she was meant to have them and he wasn't!

KUMB: You talk about how you used to take a fair bit of stick from the
Boleyn crowd. Do you think that supporters' attitudes towards you have
changed or mellowed over the years?

JN: I got a lot of stick in early on in my career, but after I was sacked
they tried three different announcers with mixed success. After years of
dreading reading the message boards, I was suddenly getting positive
comments and I'll always be grateful to posters on KUMB who called for my
return. I think people have realised I'm not that bad as announcers go.

KUMB: You've state how you finally got a full-time place in the dugout upon
your return to the club in 2009. What's the funniest thing you've heard
whilst sitting 'on the bench'?

JN: Yes, I've sat in the dugout since the days of Alan Pardew. It's the one
thing I'll always be grateful to him for. Oh and promotion! Thanks Pards. As
for the funniest thing, I remember someone behind me shouting 'hit him Alan'
during Pards' squaring-up with Arsene Wenger incident. It made me laugh for
ages, especially as Pards looked scared stiff of Arsene, who's quite an
intimidating presence close-up.

KUMB: You say you're a stickler for certain things. What's the most annoying
term - 'Hammers', 'they reach the sky' or 'Upton Park'?

JN: I prefer 'Irons' and the 'Boleyn Ground' because I think that marks you
out as a West Ham fan, while the other terms are more generally used by
other football fans. but I certainly don't mind 'The Hammers' or 'Upton
Park' as they are perfectly acceptable alternatives.

However 'they reach the sky' drives me mad. It completely takes away the
sense of the song. It's 'nearly reach the sky'. I don't suppose anyone will
listen as it's been wrong for years. It doesn't even scan if you say 'they'.
I will always sing 'nearly' along with my fellow pedants, but as long as
it's sung loud and proud I don't really mind.


Hands-on: Greeting the Boleyn faithful

KUMB: You've had to announce a series of minutes' silences/applause over the
years for departed footballing legends - but what is the most difficult
announcement you've had to make?

JN: Reading the news of Bobby Moore's death on BBC Greater London Radio was
tricky. The script was a bit wetter than usual by the end. My voice almost
went when I called for a round of applause for Jack Collison after he played
against Millwall in the cup just after the death of his dad.

KUMB: A reference to KUMB.com was one of ten surprise/hidden messages that
could be heard in your commentary for FIFA 10. Any clues as to who we can
expect to hear about in the new version, FIFA 12, which goes on sale
shortly?

JN: It's great to be the voice of the announcer on the FIFA games. I always
smuggle in announcements of my own for each new version when it comes out. I
can't reveal what's on FIFA 12, but my favourite ever announcement was on an
earlier game, it was a wedding announcement for my friends Dave Cheeseman
and Nicola Underdown. I'm sure people thought I'd made the names up, but I
didn't. You can check, they're in the acknowledgements in the front of the
Mr Moon book, because they both read and commented on early drafts of the
book, when I was still finding my writing style.

KUMB: You bemoan the fact that your hair has virtually disappeared since
becoming West Ham's announcer - have you never considered 'doing a Rooney'?

JN: No I'm proud of being bald. I think Rooney is betraying his roots. If he
has any roots left!

KUMB: Why do you think the atmosphere at top-flight football grounds had
disappeared - and what do you think can be done to improve it?

JN: Because people have to sit down now. I don't think it will ever be as
good as it was unless terracing comes back. Having said that as someone who
was at Hillsborough commentating on the game that turned into the disaster,
I would never want to stand at a game again. However I think it's worth
looking at safe standing systems like they have in Germany. I'd support that
at the Olympic stadium. But personally I'll be sitting down.

KUMB: Worst Cockney accent - Dick Van Dyke (Mary Poppins) or Charlie Hunnam
(Green Street)?

JN: Dick Van Dyke. My views on Green Street are robustly expressed in my
book and I have no wish to give it the oxygen of publicity.

KUMB: Who are your three favourite stadium announcers - and why?

JN: David Hamilton at Fulham because he's the Daddy of us all. Or should
that be the Diddy. He was sacked once too and when he came back Al Fayed
gave him a bottle of whisky and some Viagra as a welcome back gift.

Mark Dennison at Nottingham Forest is very good, although I wish he didn't
play music after goals and I've told him that (we will never play music
after goals at West Ham - You have my word on that). Alan Keegan at
Manchester United and England games is always very good, I think.

KUMB: West Ham United's failure to win at Anfield since the early '60s is a
running theme throughout the book. Do you think you'll ever see West Ham win
there?

JN: Yes. I'm sure we'll be back at Anfield very soon and surely a win can't
be far away. The last time we won I was only a few months old, back in 1963.

KUMB: If you were a regular supporter once again, what area of the Boleyn
Ground would you sit in - and why?

JN: Middle of the West Stand Lower about halfway up. I've always sat in the
West Stand and I like to be able to walk down to the front before the game
to watch the players warming up.

KUMB: Apart from writing books and being West Ham's announcer, what are you
up to these days?

JN: I've just made the shortlist to be the stadium announcer at the London
2012 Olympics, so that's very exciting. David Sullivan gave me a lovely
testimonial in my initial application last year.

I do a lot of after dinner speaking now, mainly sports stories and funny
stuff from my life in broadcasting. You can see videos etc on my website.
Discounts available for KUMB posters, if anyone is planning an event, just
send me a personal message. My KUMB login is 'Jeremy Nicholas', funnily
enough! The stories that go down best are 'The Day Brian Clough punched me',
'The Day I was held up on air by a man claiming to be Jesus' and 'The Day I
met the other Jeremy Nicholas'.

The rest of the time I work as a freelance TV reporter for BBC news, mainly
covering sports features and funny And Finally type stories. I'd love to be
back on the radio again. My best times were presenting on BBC London, 5Live
and TalkSport. I've done lots of radio interviews promoting the book and
it's reminded me why I love radio much more than TV, especially now I'm
losing my looks! Radio controllers give me a call please!

KUMB: When we last interviewed you for KUMB, you had just set up Talking
Toolbox. How's that going, and do you have any funny stories associated with
it?

JN: I run workshops teaching business people how to be more confident
speakers at conferences and in media appearances. One man was struggling
with nerves and wandered outside to have a cigarette and ring his wife. He
moaned about what a hard time the teacher of the course was giving him.
Unbeknown to him he'd left his microphone attached to his lapel and everyone
left in the room heard it all.

KUMB: Tell us about the 2010 trouser-splitting incident in Johannesburg that
your Amazon bio refers to?

JN: I was speaking to an audience at an event before the World Cup Finals.
My talk was about how to use humour. All of the audience were professional
speakers from across the globe. As the only European speaker, the pressure
was on.

I bent down to plug in my laptop in the wings, as I had some funny pictures
to show. My trousers split on the seat, a rip about six inches long, just as
the compere was saying my name. I walked on and did the first few minutes
like a space invader, only moving from side to side.

Eventually I decided to confess what had happened and turned round to show
them. Because it was a talk about humour, they thought the funny guy from
the UK was wearing comedy trousers and it was all part of the act. It
wasn't. They were the trousers I was married in at the Boleyn. I gave them
to a maid back at the hotel who thought she could repair them for her
husband to wear.

KUMB: For how long do you envisage continuing in your current role at the
Boleyn Ground?

JN: For as long as the club are happy with me.

KUMB: Has a decision been made with regards to who will be the announcer for
the Olympic Stadium - or is it a case of 'wait and see'?

JN: I'm hoping it will be me.

KUMB: Have you thought about what you might say after the final game at the
Boleyn Ground?

JN: So Long and Thanks for All the Fish...

KUMB: Predict your 'season in a nutshell' summary for the current 2011/12
season?

JN: I wouldn't want to tempt fate by making an actual prediction, but
there's a song by Queen that I've never played at the Boleyn in fourteen
seasons as announcer. I would love to play it at the last home game in May,
and it's not Bohemian Rhapsody.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Fans' forum: 15th September
KUMB.com
Filed: Friday, 16th September 2011
By: Brian Evans

I popped along to this last night. I didn't ask any questions as I was
trying to focus on David Gold's answers, but it's inevitable that in such a
forum (I reckon about 120 were in attendance) there would be some
repetition.

Firstly, credit to the Chairman for attending and taking questions on a
range of topics. Disappointment was expressed at Sam Allardyce's absence,
but DG described him as a 'real fans' man'. The questions were broadly
split/ variations on the following areas:

1. The proposed stadium move
2. Raking over the Avram coals
4. The club's ownership
5. The club's debt
6. The recent transfer window
7. Players - Cole and Upson
8. Karren Brady's column in a national newspaper

The proposed stadium move

DG repeated a few times that he did not want to leave the Boleyn but deemed
it essential for the club's revenue-earning potential. He expressed a view
that a fan is a fan forever, but a coporate sale is essentially a floating
voter. Namely, if we didn't move to Stratford then Tottenham would - and
they would grab all the corporate revenue from the City.

He was asked how much greater the potential was for developing that side of
the club compared with the Boleyn and expressed it as 'several fold'.

The issue of the track was the real bone of contention from several
questioners, and his comments included looking at 'retractable seating' and
a 'Lego style' option where the seats are moved into place by a giant fork
lift truck for eight months of the year and removed for cricket and
athletics in the summer.

Quite how much knowledge he really had on either option I would have doubts
over, but to my ears the in-and-out (Lego) seating sounded the more viable.
In terms of timeline regarding when we would know if the club have been
awarded the Olympic Stadium, he replied "in a couple of months".

Naming rights were discussed and Gold stated that "50 big companies" would
be interested in the naming rights and as an example - and I stress this
point - for illustrative purposes he mentioned Sony as a global brand,
unlike "Reebok which isn't". I'm sure the executives at Reebok will be
delighted their marketing is deemed to be crap.

It's clear though the stadium rights will be up for grabs. He said they
would like the word Olympic in there somewhere - and that that was subject
to negotiation (you have no chance DG). The club name would not 'under any
circumstances' change, nor would the crest.

I think it's fair to say he is keen on the stadium and said we are "99.99
per cent sure to get it". In terms of views, he said very clearly there will
be seats that are not very good and they would be the ones sold cheaply, but
"if you have a good seat now, you would have a good seat at Stratford".

Avram , we had an Avram, we had an Avram Grant

DG said in his career he had hired, in his various businesses, about 120
managers - and on this ocassion he simply got it wrong. He said the list of
potential candidates was relatively few (nobody asked the obvious question
"well who's fault was that then?" - David Sullivan's comments about Zola
coming home to roost) that but Grant was easily the best and he interviewed
exceptionally well.

He made the point that had any of us been in the room we too would have
hired Grant on the basis of his answers.

He admitted that during January they were being nice to AG whilst trying to
get another man in place - Martin O'Neill, but he"vacillated and vacillated"
and in the end never actually quite said yes, he would come. The club was
then in the position of needing to have Grant continue as "once the transfer
window had shut, no other Manager would take the job".

The club's ownership

DG gave a broad outline of his and DS's ownership - two thirds, the rest
being owned by the banks. They would welcome a third partner who was willing
to buy the final third of the business for around £30million (he was talking
fast and loose at this point and said it wasn't the actual number they had
each paid for their third) and that any such investor, in addition to buying
the shares for that amount, would also need to put in matching equity into
the club as he and DS have.

The debt

He described the debt as around £75million (down from £110million). He made
no mention of any recent equity injections by either himself or DS or any
injection of £2.5-£3million per month, as per KB's programme notes last
week. I don't think he was telling fibs or misleading people by any such
omission, I just don't think it worries him that much other than the lack of
control in terms of having to talk to the banks.

He was asked if the sale of the Boleyn would help pay off the debt and he
candidly said it would make a difference , but as "negotiations were
ongoing" he couldn't quote any numbers. In fairness, he and his partner
effectively underwrite the whole club - a point he made when asked about if
there was a kitty for players in January to which he said "me and David
Sullivan, we're the kitty".

He then commented that the potential third partner was in fact the Premier
League - promotion! Making the point they are quite happy to trade the
business out of debt by the revenue boost.

In terms of succession planning in the event of his death, he stressed his
personal affairs are in good order and that the club's interests would be
taken care of appropriately - there is no chance of people wanting their
money back if he passes away (he spoke about his two daughters for sometime,
for so long in fact I thought he was about to ask for any eligible bachelors
to step forward).

The transfer window

Gold received a big round of applause from the audience for the club's
dealings, with a few questions on Parker and why we dealt with Spurs when
the phone hacking scandle was still going on and with them being awkward
over Startford.

He was very clear in stating the board would always act in the best
interests of the club and that business was business: in the absence of the
player wanting to move to any other bidding clubs, what choice did we have?

Later on, when discussing the outstanding Diamanti debt (Brescia still owe
us), he expressed a view that it would be much better if all deals were done
on a 100 per cent 'cash on delivery' basis - which would reduce fees and
ensure payment. He said we had recently sold a player where such a clause
was included as part of the deal, but he declined to name the player - most
would assume it to be Parker to Tottenham.

On Henri Lansbury, Arsenal wouldn't agree an 'option to buy' clause but he
said the player just wanted to play football and would have more chance at
West Ham than the Emirates.

Carlton Cole and Matthew Upson

DG expressed disappointment at MU's comments since leaving us, but didn't
slate him - he handled it well. As for Carlton, he said he did want PL
football "but not at any price" - and I didn't take that to mean wages, more
about the whole package (where he lives etc). He spoke glowingly about
Carlton and said he was the player who impressed him most when they came to
the Boleyn. He stated they were happy Cole has stayed.

Karren Brady's tabloid column

Gold took a couple of questions from fans who expressed the view she had
criticised the club in her column (prior to joining us), but DG made the
point that whilst he knows she's not perfect, Brady is dynamic and we are
lucky to have her. In fairness, one fan spoke up in favour of her column. DG
knows it isn't the most popular thing in the world - but Karren likes doing
it and we should all "lighten up".

One question was asked about whether the club would entertain the prospect
of any shares being sold to the fans, making the point that he had been
forced to sell his shares when the Icelandics took over. DG expressed to
have no knowledge of that but could, in a heartbeat, remember the 92 per
cent threshold at which it becomes obligatory (DG - if you are reading this
you are a sharp cookie, but you dropped your guard at that point). He said
he would mention it at a board meeting.

In summary, nothing earth-shattering (or even new) but the Chairman answered
what was asked of him and did so for three hours. Oh - and the sarnies were
ok, but the coffee a bit weak.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Millwall v West Ham preview
Last updated: 16th September 2011
SSN

Team news ahead of Saturday's Championship clash between Millwall and West
Ham United at The Den (kick-off 12.30pm).
Millwall striker John Marquis will be available. The teenager has been
playing on in recent weeks despite a hernia and has been pencilled in for an
operation next month. But the problem is not in danger of getting worse so
Marquis is in line to face the Hammers. Therry Racon and Shaun Batt are the
Lions' only injury absentees and both could be back in training next week.
Former Charlton midfielder Racon has been out since suffering ankle ligament
damage on his debut last month. Striker Batt, who missed all of last season
due to a cruciate injury, has been sidelined this term with a calf strain
but is close to a long-awaited comeback.

West Ham will be without Frederic Piquionne. The striker came on as a late
substitute in last weekend's 4-3 win over Portsmouth but lasted only five
minutes before he was sent off and begins a three-match ban. Carlton Cole
will once again lead the attack having scored in each of his last four
appearances. David Bentley could start after his first appearance as a
substitute against Pompey while Sam Baldock, Papa Bouba Diop and Brian
Montenegro are all pushing to make their debuts.
But a fifth recent signing, right-back Guy Demel, limped out of a reserve
match in midweek with a tight hamstring and is a doubt. Winger Gary O'Neil
(ankle) is a long-term absentee.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Jacobsen set for Copenhagen
Leeds miss out on Danish ace
By Pete O'Rourke - Follow me: @skysportspeteo. Last Updated:
September 16, 2011 12:30pm
SSN

Skysports.com understands former West Ham defender Lars Jacobsen is poised
to rejoin old club FC Copenhagen on a free transfer. Jacobsen is a free
agent after leaving West Ham at the end of last season having made 26
appearances for the Hammers last term. A number of clubs are believed to
have expressed an interest in signing the full-back this summer, but FC
Copenhagen have moved to lure him back to his homeland. Danish giants FC
Copenhagen are understood to have fended off late interest from Leeds to
land the former Everton and Blackburn man.Jacobsen, who spent three seasons
with FC Copenhagen between 2004-07, is set to sign a short-term deal until
January with the Danish champions.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Millwall captain calls for calm ahead of West Ham showdown
TalksPort
By Julian Bennetts
Friday, September 16

Millwall captain Paul Robinson has pleaded for calm when his side face
bitter rivals West Ham at the Den. West Ham were fined £115,000 by the FA
after the club's last meeting in the Carling Cup two years ago, which saw a
fan stabbed as trouble raged on the streets of East London before and after
the match, as well as three separate pitch invasions during the game. And
Robinson believes Millwall's fans can prove they have cleaned up their act
ahead of the sold-out Championship clash.
"This is a big game on and off the pitch for the club and it will be under
the spotlight," said Robinson. "As players we can only stress we don't want
anything to distract from what happens on the pitch. What matters is the
result and what happens after the first whistle. "We want to put on a good
performance and show what a fantastic club this is and how much we have
improved both on and off the pitch. "The club has worked incredibly hard
from the chairman down to improve the image of the club. "The fans have
respected that, and we have had games against the likes of Leeds that have
gone well recently. Now we want to show how far we have moved forward."

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

http://vyperz.blogspot.com

Friday, September 16

Daily WHUFC News - 16th September 2011

Millwall match preview
WHUFC.com
All the background and early team news ahead of Saturday's London derby at
The Den
14.09.2011

MILLWALL v WEST HAM UNITED
npower CHAMPIONSHIP
SATURDAY 17 SEPTEMBER 2011
KICK-OFF: 12.30PM
FULL AUDIO AND TEXT COMMENTARY - WEST HAM TV

Messsage to supporters

West Ham United would like to remind all those travelling to the Millwall
match next Saturday of their responsibility as Hammers supporters. The club
have had a tremendous start to the season - in no small part because of the
terrific and passionate following we have had at Doncaster Rovers, Watford
and Nottingham Forest. At all three matches, the travelling Irons have won
wide praise.

Our away support is second to none and this has rightly been flagged up in
the media and throughout the football world. We are calling on all fans
heading to The Den for the next fixture to show their support in the right
way once again and back Big Sam's team from start to finish. There will be a
high-profile police presence at this game, which gets under way at 12.30pm,
and supporters are requested to abide by the rules imposed by Millwall FC in
respect of fan behaviour.

Any football-related incidences reported before, during or after the game
will be thoroughly investigated. There will be serious implications for
anyone found responsible for wrongdoing in terms of their ability to follow
West Ham United at home or away in future. Remember - whether following the
team home or away - we are we are all ambassadors for West Ham United and
how we act has a direct consequence on the club we love.

Thanks for your continued support.

* Supporters are advised that parking in the area around The Den is
extremely limited with restrictions being enforced on matchday. The easiest
and most direct route is for fans to take the train from London Bridge to
South Bermondsey, with the ground a short walk direct from the station.

Introduction
• West Ham United will go top of the npower Championship table for the first
time in 2011/12 if they can achieve victory over Millwall at The Den. The
Hammers go into the weekend in fourth place, having collected 13 points from
their opening six league matches. Millwall are 15th, having picked up six
points from six matches played. A draw would lift the Hammers above
Middlesbrough into third.
• Sam Allardyce's men are seeking a fourth straight away npower Championship
victory at The Den, having defeated Doncaster Rovers (1-0), Watford (4-0)
and Nottingham Forest (4-1) on their own turf already this season. Should
they win, West Ham will record four consecutive away league victories for
the first time since April-September 2007, when they overcame Wigan
Athletic, Manchester United, Birmingham City and Reading.
• Carlton Cole has scored in each of his previous four league matches.
Should he score on Saturday, he would match the five-straight league matches
he scored in between December 2008-January 2009, when he netted against
Portsmouth, Stoke City, Newcastle United, Fulham and Hull City.
• Millwall have not tasted victory in the league since defeating Nottingham
Forest 2-0 at The Den on 13 August. Since then, the Lions have drawn at home
with Peterborough United (2-2) and Barnsley (0-0) and lost at Southampton
(0-1) and Birmingham City (0-3).
• West Ham United have not won any of the previous six league meetings
between the clubs, all of which have come in the Championship. However, the
Hammers did taste victory the most-recent fixture between the
near-neighbours, scoring a 3-1 League Cup second-round victory at the Boleyn
Ground on 25 August 2009.
• The Hammers' most-recent league victory over Millwall took place on 24
February 1991 with a 3-1 win at home in the old Division Two. Frank
McAvennie scored twice.
• Millwall are unbeaten in four home matches against West Ham United - a run
stretching back to the Hammers' 1-0 Division One victory at The Den on 3
December 1988, when Paul Ince was the match-winner. The match also marked
West Ham's only success at Millwall since the Second World War.
• Mark Noble is the only survivor from the West Ham United side that drew
1-1 with Millwall in the clubs' most-recent league meeting at the Boleyn
Ground on 16 April 2005. Marlon Harewood was on target for the Hammers that
day.
• Carlton Cole is seeking to score in his fifth consecutive league match,
having netted against Watford, Leeds United, Nottingham Forest and
Portsmouth in recent weeks.
• Millwall's Irish goalkeeper David Forde spent two years at West Ham
between 2002 and 2004 but never featured in the first team. He moved to
Millwall in 2008.
• Millwall manager Kenny Jackett was busy during the summer transfer window,
bringing in Hull City striker Jay Simpson on loan and Bournemouth winger
Liam Feeney, Leicester City forward Dany N'Guessan, West Bromwich Albion's
Ryan Allsop, Sheffield United striker Darius Henderson, Charlton Athletic's
French midfielder Therry Racon and the unattached Jordan Stewart. Jackett
also allowed Wales striker Steve Morison to join Premier League new boys
Norwich City and veteran forward and club-record goalscorer Neil Harris to
move to Southend United.
• Sam Baldock scored twice in a 4-0 League One victory for MK Dons at
Millwall on 4 October 2008.
• Henri Lansbury scored a 90th-minute winner for Norwich City in their 2-1
Championship victory over Millwall at Carrow Road on 1 February 2011.

Team news
West Ham United
• Sam Allardyce could hand a full debut to David Bentley after the England
midfielder appeared as a second-half substitute against Portsmouth last
weekend.
• Summer signings Sam Baldock, Papa Bouba Diop and Brian Montenegro will all
hope to be involved. Diop and Montenegro both featured for the development
squad in a 2-2 draw at Tottenham Hotspur on Monday. Guy Demel was also
involved but substituted early with a tight hamstring.
• Frederic Piquionne begins a three-match suspension after being sent-off in
the 4-3 npower Championship victory over Portsmouth on Saturday.
• Gary O'Neil (ankle) is out with long-term ankle injury. However, Peter
Kurucz has returned to training after a lengthy absence with a knee 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), Olly Lee (Dagenham & Redbridge), Cristian Montano (Notts
County) and Callum McNaughton (AFC Wimbledon) are all out on temporary
loans.
Millwall
• Millwall are likely to be without summer capture Therry Racon (ankle).
• Striker Shaun Batt has a calf strain.
• Winger Chris Hackett has missed the club's last two league games with back
problems.

Last time out
Saturday 10 September 2011
npower Championship

West Ham United 4-3 Portsmouth
West Ham United: Green, O'Brien, McCartney, Reid, Tomkins, Lansbury, Noble,
Nolan, Faubert (Bentley 57), Taylor, Cole (Piquionne 85)
Subs not used: Boffin, Faye, Baldock
Goals: Taylor 9, Lansbury 53, Noble 72 (pen), Cole 76
Sunday 11 September 2011

Birmingham City 3-0 Millwall
Millwall: Forde, Robinson, Mkandawire, Craig, Ward, Dunne, Bouazza (Henry
61), Trotter, Feeney (N'Guessan 61), Simpson (Marquis 72), Henderson
Subs not used: Mildenhall, Abdou
Goals: None

Previous meetings
• The most-recent meeting between the two clubs was for a Carling Cup
second-round tie at the Boleyn Ground on 25 August 2009. Millwall took the
lead through Neil Harris on 26 minutes and looked set to complete an upset
victory until Junior Stanislas equalised with three minutes of normal time
remaining. Stanislas then netted a penalty eight minutes into extra time
before Zavon Hines completed the scoring after 100 minutes.
West Ham United: Green, Faubert, Gabbidon, Tomkins, Spector, Collison,
Parker, Kovac (Nouble 62), Payne (Hines 46), Cole (Upson 109), Stanislas
Subs not used: Kurucz, Daprela, Collins, O.Lee
Millwall: Forde, Dunne, Smith, Frampton , Barron , Hackett, Fuseini, Laird,
Martin (Price 91), Alexander (Bolder 99), Harris (Grimes 99)
Subs not used: Sullivan
• The teams last meeting at the Den took place in the Championship on 21
November 2004, when Daniele Dichio scored the only goal of the game to
secure a 1-0 victory for Millwall.
• This will be the 25th meeting between the two clubs. West Ham United have
nine wins, with ten draws and five victories for Milwall.

Head to head
(Last six meetings)
25 August 2009 - West Ham United 3-1 Millwall AET (Carling Cup second round)
16 April 2005 - West Ham United 1-1 Millwall
21 November 2004 - Millwall 1-0 West Ham United
21 March 2004 - Millwall 4-1 West Ham United
28 September 2003 - West Ham United 1-1 Millwall
28 March 1993 - West Ham United 2-2 Millwall
Overall record v Millwall (all competitions): W 9, D 10, L 5

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)

Millwall
2010/11 Championship 9th (67 points)
2009/10 League One 3rd (85 points - promoted to Championship via Play-Offs)
2008/09 League One 5th (82 points)
2007/08 League One 17th (52 points)
2006/07 League One 10th (66 points)
2005/06 Championship 23rd (40 points - relegated to League One)
2004/05 Championship 10th (66 points)
2003/04 Division One 10th (69 points)
2002/03 Division One 9th (66 points)
2001/02 Division One 4th (77 points)

Referee
• Saturday's referee will be Lee Mason.
• Mason started refereeing in 1988 and in 1992 he was added to the North
West Counties Football League assistant referees' list, and progressed to
full referee for that competition four years later.
• He was included on the Football League list of assistant referees in 1998,
and was then added to the Premier League list in 2000.
• In 2002, he was promoted to referee for the Football League and in 2003
became a 'Development Group' referee, before finally reaching the Premier
League list of Select Group referees in 2006.
• His first ever match in the top tier was on 4 February 2006, when
Middlesbrough lost 4-0 at home to Aston Villa.
• Mason was chosen to control the League One Play-Off final between Barnsley
and Swansea on 27 May 2006.
• The 39-year-old took charge of three West Ham United Premier League
fixtures last season - the 1-1 draw at Stoke City, the 3-3 draw at West
Bromwich Albion and the 4-2 home defeat by Manchester United.

Old boys
• West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce spent two seasons with Millwall as a
player between 1981 and 1983, scoring twice in 63 league appearances.
• Billy Bonds and Pat Holland have both formed part of the Lions' management
in recent years.
• Among the players to have represented both clubs are Harry Cripps, Lawrie
Leslie, Jim Standen, Brian Dear, Paul Allen, Paul Goddard, Tony Cottee,
Teddy Sheringham, Neil Ruddock and Lucas Neill.

Up next
• West Ham United host Peterborough United in the npower Championship on
Saturday 24 September, with kick-off at 3pm. The club is running the Kids
for a Fiver scheme for this match.
• Millwall travel to Premier League Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Carling
Cup third round on Tuesday 20 September for a 7.45pm kick-off.

General information
• All standard tickets for Saturday's match have SOLD OUT.
• Supporters travelling to The Den are encouraged to use public transport.
The easiest route is by train to South Bermondsey, which is just a
five-minute ride from London Bridge. From the railway station, there is a
specially-built walkway for away supporters to take them directly to the
away turnstiles and back to the station after the match.
• The weather forecast is for a cloudy day with a daytime high temperature
of 16C (61F).

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Nouble loaned to Gills
WHUFC.com
Striker Frank Nouble will join Gillingham on an Emergency loan until 15
October
15.09.2011

West Ham United can confirm that Frank Nouble will join League Two club
Gillingham on Emergency Loan on Friday. The forward, who has also been given
permission to appear for the Gills in the Johnstone's Paint Trophy, will
remain at the MEMS Priestfield Stadium until Saturday 15 October. Nouble,
who scored in the Hammers' pre-season match against Swiss side BSC Young
Boys in July and turns 20 on 24 September, could make his debut at Hereford
United on Saturday.
The south London-based striker could play up to six matches for the Kent
club over the coming month, including a potential meeting with fellow loanee
Callum McNaughton when Gillingham travel to AFC Wimbledon on 1 October. The
England Under-19 international, who has previously been loaned to West
Bromwich Albion, Swindon Town, Swansea City, Barnsley and Charlton, becomes
the eighth player to be allowed to leave the Boleyn Ground on a temporary
basis. Pablo Barrera (Real Zaragoza) and Jordan Spence (Bristol City) are on
season-long loans, while Olly Lee (Dagenham & Redbridge), Cristian Montano
(Notts County), Ahmed Abdulla (Swindon Town), Jordan Brown and Robert Hall
(Oxford United) are all away gaining valuable experience for shorter
periods.

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Noble determined for derby
WHUFC.com
Mark Noble imagined playing football with his friends to net a vital penalty
against Portsmouth
15.09.2011

Lifelong West Ham United fan Mark Noble is desperate to earn victory at
Millwall on Saturday lunchtime. While he knows it will not be easy, the
Canning Town-born player is adamant that Big Sam's side can bring three
points back through the Blackwall Tunnel from The Den. "With the players
that we've got, we can go to any place and win," he told West Ham TV. "There
is no other aim. We aren't going anywhere thinking a point is good enough,
because a point isn't good enough for us. We want to win every game and
that's what we're hoping to do. "When you win games, everyone is happy,
training is happier and the ground is happier and everything is a little bit
better. "We need to keep on winning to get to the place where we want to be
- the Premier League - and carry on our form there."

Noble goes into the Millwall game on a high having imagined playing football
with his friends to help him score his first goal of the season in the
thrilling 4-3 npower Championship victory over Portsmouth last weekend. The
club's longest-serving player showed nerves of steel to convert from the
spot after Pompey captain Jason Pearce had been penalised for handball, and
revealed that his calmness was drawn from visualising himself playing
football in the park with his friends. Carlton Cole added a fourth a short
time later to render Greg Halford's late spot-kick meaningless. "The only
think going through my head was where to hit it," the No16 said. "You just
have to block everything out and imagine you're playing over the park with
your mates. "Luckily enough the keeper went the wrong way and I managed to
score.
"The most important thing was Coley's goal which gave us a little bit of a
cushion and we won the game, which is all that matters."

Noble was delighted not just to break his own seasonal duck but also to help
his team record their first home win since overcoming Stoke City on 5 March
2011. "We needed to get the voodoo off our backs. In the last couple of
games, we've put in good performances but let in two late goals - one
against Cardiff and one against Leeds. We needed to put them behind us and
we did that. "We got the three points and that's what we wanted."

Noble knows he will have to keep up the good work if he is to retain his
place in the manager's starting XI. With Henri Lansbury scoring and earning
Man of the Match honours on debut, David Bentley catching the eye as a
substitute, Kevin Nolan and Matt Taylor on form and Jack Collison left out
after his midweek exertions with Wales, the 24-year-old is one of a host of
midfielders battling for a staring berth. "Of course we know we've got to
play well to get picked. Jack played in midweek and we know his situation
[coming back from injury] so he was rested. Henri came in and impressed and
obviously Bents came on and showed little glimpses of what he's about. "We
just need to keep winning. If we can get on a roll and win, win, win then
everything gets a bit easier."

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Leo learning fast
WHUFC.com
Leo Chambers is eager to enjoy success with club and country this season
15.09.2011

Leo Chambers is eyeing success with club and country this season. The
defender recently led England's Under-17s to victory at a four-team FA
International Tournament and is now eyeing further glory in the Young Lions'
UEFA European U17 Championship qualifiers against Latvia, Bosnia &
Herzegovina and Netherlands in October. At club level, the first-year
scholar is already an important member of the Under-18 side that has won
four matches in a row and sits top of the FA Premier Academy League.
Chambers, who should play away to Coventry City on Saturday morning, is
looking to push on at international level as well, despite only turning 16
on 5 August. "We have got the European Championship qualifiers in October,
so I'm looking to make the squad for then. I think I've done myself justice
in the tournament we just played. "I captained the team in the two games we
won against Italy and Portugal and we won the tournament, so I think I did
well. "We've got quite a strong side at Under-17 level. We've got some
really talented individuals and now we just have to get together as a group
and working as a team."

"Here at West Ham, it's been a very good start for us and it's just a
question of continuing it into our next game. "We're looking to win the
league and go a long way in the FA Youth Cup. It's just about putting things
together and we can have a good season. "It's been hard moving away from
home, but that's a sacrifice you have to make and hopefully it'll pay off. I
am enjoying living with the lads in the Academy House, so it couldn't be
going any better."

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The joy of six
KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 15th September 2011
By: Staff Writer

Frank Nouble has joined Gillingham on a short-term loan. The 19-year-old
development team striker has joined the Kent side on an emergency loan. His
stay at the Priestfied stadium is set to last until mid-October (15th).
Incredibly, Gillingham will become the SIXTH club for whom Nouble has played
on a temporary basis since moving to West Ham from Chelsea in the summer of
2009. His first spell out on loan came just six months after he moved to
east London, when he joined then-Championship outfit West Bromwich Albion
for a month. Less than a fortnight after returning from the Midlands, Nouble
was sent to Swindon for the remainder of the 2009/10 campaign. Just a month
into last season the Lewisham-born striker joined former-Championship club
Swansea for six weeks, before moving north to join fellow second flight
outfit Barnsley on transfer deadline day last January. Six weeks with the
Tykes was immediately followed by three weeks with League One side Charlton
during March of this year; his move to Gillingham making the Gills his
eighth club. Gills boss Andy Hessenthaler, speaking on Gillingham FC's
website tonight said: "I've seen Frank a few times, in fact I saw him play
for Chelsea as a youngster. He was 13 years old then and he was already a
big lad. "He is quick as well, so he will bring something different to the
side. He has good experience and has been around a few clubs already on
loan. I think he should slot in nicely and hopefully bring a few goals to
the club. "Frank has an excellent pedigree and comes to us from a proper
club and I would like to thank West Ham and Ian Hendon for helping us out on
this one. Frank needs games and hopefully we can help him, like we helped
Cody McDonald last season. "He will train with us tomorrow and he has every
chance of being in the side on Saturday."

Currently on loan

Abroad: Pablo Barrera (Real Zaragoza); Championship: Jordan Spence (Bristol
City); League One: Cristian Montano (Notts County); League Two: Olly Lee
(Dagenham & Redbridge), Ahmed Abdulla (Swindon Town), Jordan Brown
(Aldershot), Robert Hall (Oxford United), Frank Nouble (Gillingham).

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Millwall v West Ham United
KUMB.com
Filed: Thursday, 15th September 2011
By: Preview Percy

Preview Percy is actually away on a Saga Cruise on the SS Marco Boogers
which is currently touring somewhere where he'll complain about the food,
water, tea, heat and anything else he can think of while he's not chasing
after rich widows. Which is exactly what he's like when he's at home really.

In his absence, we got an old Millwall preview of his, dusted it down and
added a few bits and pieces in the hope none of you would notice. We're not
going to give him any more Werthers Originals though...

Since the date of this weekend's derby was announced every teenage keyboard
warrior on both sides of the divide has been chipping in about 'standing
your ground' and 'making sure that they don't take liberties', seemingly
oblivious to the fact that Green Street was fiction rather than a
documentary. It was a bloody awful film as well for what it's worth.

Of course it's fair to say that they have more than their fair share of
unpleasant characters amongst their numbers. Years ago your correspondent
lived not a million miles away from their ground. Unsurprisingly, most of my
then local pub was actually Chelsea. One of the funniest things I've ever
heard a Chelsea supporter say came up in a debate he was having with a
Millwall fan who was spouting forth very loudly that only Millwall fans had
any true passion for their team.

The Chelsea fan calmly pointed out that: a) the side for whom the fans
showed 'so much passion' were playing at home in a vital promotion match as
they spoke; b) the ground was literally half empty; c) the ground was only
two miles away from the pub; and d) neither the Millwall supporter nor any
of his replica kit-wearing mates had managed to muster up enough 'passion'
to either make the two-mile trip to the ground or to bother to watch the
match on any of the five big screens that the pub possessed.

Of course whenever Millwall are mentioned there is usually someone on hand
to point out the strides the club have made in recent times to disassociate
themselves from the more Neanderthal elements of society, though employing
Dennis Wise as manager a while back was probably a bit of a publicity own
goal in that respect.

In researching this piece I did happen across one unofficial attempt to give
the club a slightly different image in the form of a website aimed at gay
supporters called The Pink Lions. The home page calls upon the London gay
community to adopt the club in order to 'reclaim the club from the thuggish
element' and asks us to imagine a 'sell-out at the New Den every week with a
carnival atmosphere'.

Sadly for those of us who love cheap jokes, since the site was set up some
years ago that appears to have been it, with little activity taking place
since. You have to give them ten out of ten for trying mind, though I'd say
that the home page slogan 'You ain't a real man 'til you've had a 'Wall fan'
is probably a few years ahead of its time in New Cross.

Last time the two clubs met in the 2009 Carling Cup (a game won 3-1 by West
Ham after extra time), Millwall had just missed out on promotion after a
hilarious play-off final that saw them go down 3-2 to Scunthorpe, a team
that play in in claret and blue and are known as 'The Iron'. Which made a
few of us smile at the time.

Goalscorer for the Lions that day was Gary Alexander, another player who
started life out at the Boleyn and eventually ending up the wrong side of
the river via spells at Exeter, Swindon, Hull and the Os. Alexander missed
an absolute sitter at Wembley and, if one were in mischievous mood, one
might almost think that he was simply doing his job as a former Hammer. An
amusing thought but for the fact that he was reputedly a Millwall supporter
as a boy.

On the pitch it's been an unbeaten start at home thus far for 'Wall. They've
beaten Forest (2-0), Morecombe in the Carling Cup (2-0) whilst drawing with
Peterborough (2-2) and Barnsley (0-0). These results, combined with just one
win and a draw from their four away games leaves them in 15th place in the
Championship going into the game.

Leading goalscorers in the league this season are Darius Henderson -
Millwall's summer signing from Sheffield United - and Liam Trotter (no,
really) with two apiece. Hameur Bouazza, who moved to the Den on a free
transfer in the summer having been released by French Ligue 2 club
Arles-Avignon also has two to his name, although one of those came in the
Carling Cup.

In between the sticks should be regular stopper David Forde, one of a number
of players to have featured for both clubs. The 31-year-old Irishman spent
two years at West Ham from 2002-2004 but failed to make a single first-team
appearance; subsequent spells at Derry City, Cardiff, Luton and Bournemouth
led Forde to Milwall in 2008, for whom this weekend will mark his 150th
league appearance.

West Ham manager Sam Allardyce - who made 65 apperances for George Graham's
Millwall during a two-year spell in the early '80s as part of a side that
featured a young Teddy Sheringham - has a plethora of options to choose from
this weekend but will almost certainly stick to his favoured 4-3-3
formation. That should leave Carlton 'Goals' Cole as as shoo-in for the
target man role with John Carew likely to take the suspended Freddy
Piquionne's place on the bench.

Julien Faubert and Matt Taylor started out wide against Portsmouth last
weekend and with both likely to pose unique problems for the opposition -
Taylor from his free kicks and corners, Faubert with his pace and crossing
ability - the likes of David Bentley and Sam Baldock will almost certainly
have to settle for the bench, at best. Mark Noble has his best game of the
season against Pompey which should guarantee him the nod ahead of Papa Bouba
Diop, whilst Kevin Nolan and Henri Lansbury did little to suggest they
deserve to be dropped.

However the defence represents Sam Allardyce's biggest problem, with West
Ham having conceded eight goals in their last four outings. Joey O'Brien and
George McCartney will probably start given the lack of competition -
although Guy Demel could be an option for Allardyce due to his size - but
the boss faces a real conundrum at centre half where he will decide whether
to stick with youngsters James Tomkins and Winston Reid, or introduce
Abdoulaye Faye for a little added steel and experience.

Enjoy the game - and stay safe.

Danger man: Darius Henderson. Signed on a free during the summer, the
30-year-old striker maintained a 'one in three' goalscoring record for some
six years in the Championship whilst with Watford and Sheffield United. With
two from six games so far this season, he looks set to continue that
respectable record.

Referee: Lee Mason. His first appointment with West Ham this season although
he officiated on three occasions last term; the 1-1 draw at Stoke, the 4-2
home defeat against Man Utd and, most notably, the 3-3 Scott Parker-inspired
draw at West Brom. The other officials on duty are Ceri Richards and Simon
Bennett (linos) and fourth official Gavin Ward.

Look out for: People trying to tell your fortune or sell you heather. If you
must buy the heather make sure it comes from a sustainable source and on no
account agree to have your drive tarmaced.

Last meeting: West Ham Utd 3 Millwall 1 AET (Stanislas 2, Hines) - 25th
August 2009.

Head to Head: (Football League only) West Ham 9; Millwall 5; Draws 10.

Leading goalscorers: Cole (West Ham) 4; Nolan (West Ham) 2, Henderson
(Millwall) 2, Trotter (Millwall) 2, Bouazza (Millwall) 2.

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Noble - Draw won't cut it
Midfielder sets sights on three points from every game
Last Updated: September 15, 2011 5:22pm
SSN

West Ham midfielder Mark Noble says his side must go into every game looking
to win, insisting a point is not a good enough result. The 24-year-old
scored his first goal of the season in the Hammers' 4-3 victory over
Portsmouth last weekend, recording their first home win since beating Stoke
in March. And ahead of the trip to local rivals Milwall on Saturday, Noble
believes the Hammers have what is needed to take three points. Noble told
the club's official website: "With the players that we've got, we can go to
any place and win. There is no other aim. "We aren't going anywhere thinking
a point is good enough, because a point isn't good enough for us. We want to
win every game and that's what we're hoping to do. "When you win games,
everyone is happy, training is happier and the ground is happier and
everything is a little bit better. "If we can get on a roll and win, win,
win then everything gets a bit easier."

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Gills delight as Nouble signs
Last Updated: September 15, 2011 6:28pm
SSN

Gillingham boss Andy Hessenthaler is delighted at completing the signing of
Frank Nouble from West Ham on a one-month loan deal. The 19-year-old - who
has enjoyed loan stints at West Brom,Swindon, Swansea, Barnsley and Charlton
- arrives at Priestfield to bolster Gillingham's attacking options.
Hessenthaler told Gillingham's official website: "Frank has an excellent
pedigree and comes to us from a proper club and I would like to thank West
Ham and Ian Hendon (former Gills assistant manager and now development coach
at Upton Park) for helping us out on this one." Gills have been short in the
final third since losing Adam Birchall over the summer to a long-term knee
injury, with Hessenthaler earlier this week missing out on the services of
Jon-Paul Pittman after he decided to complete a loan switch to Crawley
instead. Nouble, an England Under-19 international, started his career at
Chelsea before completing a switch to West Ham in the summer of 2009. He has
made a total of 10 Premier League appearances for the Hammers. He is
available to make his debut in Saturday's clash at Hereford.

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Sam Allardyce in 'cool it' plea to Hammers fans
By ANDREW DILLON
Published: Today
The Sun

SAM ALLARDYCE has told West Ham fans and players to keep cool in tomorrow's
clash at Millwall. The Hammers boss knows all about the rivalry between the
two clubs having played for Lions for two years back in the 1980s. Allardyce
said: "It seems to be more about my era than today's. "From what I hear it's
about the old boys coming out of retirement just for this game. "I can't
understand that because I'm 57 so they must be in their 50s. "It's just
about a good game and hoping everyone behaves themselves."

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Interpol join search for missing ex-West Ham striker
Published 10:36 15/09/11 By Neil McLeman
The Mirror

Former West Ham forward Savio is being sought by Interpol after disappearing
in Italy. The Ugandan-born German citizen signed for the Hammers in a £9m
deal in January 2009 but only started one match and failed to score. He is
now on loan to Juve Stabia from Fiorentina but the 22-year-old has not been
seen since texting his coach he would not make training for "personal
reasons" last Thursday. Juve Stabia sporting director Salvatore Di Somma
said: 'The player's mother lodged a complaint with Interpol and the police
have released a photo of him to try to find him soon. Currently there is
still no trace of the player and his family, close friends or police know
where he is or what has happen. "I am sorry above all for the human impact
of this affair and naturally hope he can be found as quickly as possible."
Serie B side Juve Stabia are from Castellammare di Stabia, a town on the Bay
of Naples.

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Police vow to prevent more Millwall-West Ham trouble
Published 21:00 15/09/11 By Neil McLeman
The Mirror

Police are determined to prevent a repeat of crowd trouble between West Ham
and Millwall fans at their London derby on Saturday. The last meeting
between them, two years ago, saw a supporter stabbed, 64 arrests and both
clubs charged by the FA. West Ham were fined £115,000 for failing to control
their fans. Superintendent Suzanne Wallace said: "Our message to fans is
simple - we will police matchday fairly but firmly. "If you're coming to
enjoy the game, we will help you do that. However, if you intend to cause
trouble you will find your efforts thwarted."

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Allardyce wants fight but no fighting in Millwall showdown
Published 22:30 14/09/11 By Ann Gripper
The Mirror

Sam Allardyce has urged his West Ham players to use the red-hot derby
atmosphere at Millwall as inspiration. The bitter London rivals meet at the
New Den at Saturday lunchtime with Hammers fourth and the Lions a lowly 15th
in the Championship. Allardyce has called on both sets of fans to behave
themselves, after a Carling Cup clash between the clubs two years ago was
marred by large-scale trouble, but does hope the passion on show inside the
stadium will help his team maintain their 100 per cent away record. "Our job
is to control ourselves and produce the quality of football we have within
our abilities, to make it a thoroughly entertaining game against our local
rivals in the right way," he said.

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Tony Cottee column: West Ham have better players than Millwall
London 24
Tony Cottee, West Ham columnist
Thursday, September 15, 2011
12:23 PM

"There is no doubting that we have the better players, it is all down to
effort, application and determination" This weekend, West Ham travel to
Millwall and I am just hoping that the football makes the headlines and not
any trouble. We all remember what happened two years ago and I hope that
there is no repeat of that and the that both sets of fans can get to and
from the game safely. The Hammers will receive a hostile reception from the
home crowd on Saturday and if they deal with that, then I expect that West
Ham will have too much for the home side. There is no doubting that we have
the better players, it is all down to effort, application and determination.
Having said that, The New Den is a tough place to go to and Millwall are
unbeaten at home this season and it hasn't been a happy hunting ground for
the Hammers of late. Despite West Ham's great away record this season, at a
local derby, recent form tends to go out of the window. However, if we show
the same level of desire, passion and effort that we did last weekend
against Portsmouth, I expect the Hammers to get the win and continue their
push up the Championship table. Tony Cottee was talking to Nathaniel John

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