
Monday 16th March 2009, Barclays Premiership,
Upton Park, Kick-Off 8.00pm
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West Ham United |
0 - 0 |
Albion |
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|
30,842 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
0 |
Half-Time Score |
0 |
|
52% |
Possession |
48% |
|
4 |
Shots On Target |
4 |
|
5 |
Shots Off Target |
4 |
|
3 |
Corners |
4 |
|
10 |
Fouls Against |
10 |
|
6 |
Offsides |
0 |
|
1 |
Yellow Cards |
1 |
|
0 |
Red Cards |
0 |

West Ham United:
Green, Neill, Tomkins, Upson (Spector 29), Ilunga, Noble (Boa Morte 82), Kovac,
Parker, Nsereko (Stanislas 68), Di Michele, Sears. Subs not used:
Lastuvka, Lopez, Tristan, Payne.
Nsereko 67 (foul)
Albion:
Carson,
Zuiverloon, Martis, Olsson, Robinson, Morrison (Teixeira 88), Koren, Dorrans,
Greening, Brunt (Simpson 80), Fortune (Moore 80). Subs not used: Kiely,
Hoefkens, Cech, Bednar.
Olsson
83 (foul)
Referee: Mark
Halsey (Lancashire)
Assistant Referees: Trevor Massey (Cheshire), Phil Sharp (Hertfordshire)
Fourth Official: Lee Probert (Wiltshire)

ALBION
TEAM NEWS: Jonas Olsson returns to the starting line-up after two months out
with a knee injury whilst Shelton Martis makes his first Premier League
appearance for the Baggies. Abdoulaye Meite and Ryan Donk are the men to make
way. Graham Dorrans makes his first league start with Borja Valero left out of
the squad altogether. Albion start with five in midfield which leaves
Marc-Antoine Fortune up front on his own. Roman Bednar returns on the bench
after missing the last two games with a back problem.
WEST HAM UNITED
TEAM NEWS: The absence of Carlton Cole, suspended after a red card against
Wigan, allows Freddie Sears to start. Jack Collison and Valon Behrami (both
knee) are out however Luis Boa-Morte and Deigo Tristan do return from injury.
The match comes too early for Kieron Dyer who has just returned to training
whilst Dean Ashton, James Collins and former Baggie Danny Gabbidon are all also
missing.
FIRST CLEAN SHEET IN
NINE FAILS TO REAP THREE POINTS FOR THE BAGGIES
Albion travelled to Upton
Park with hopes of not only picking up their second win on the road this season
but also reigniting the ‘Great Escape’ part 2. However, a game of plenty chances
ended goalless with Albion perhaps having the best of play, James Morrison,
Jonathan Greening and Shelton Martis all missing good opportunities for the
Baggies.
The game wasn’t exactly a
humdinger of an affair, infact it was the complete opposite of what Albion fans
have become accustomed to, although with most of the action in recent games
occurring in the Albion penalty box, the travelling fans and those watching on
TV were probably more concerned with picking up points than wanting excitement.
A Mark Noble shot after neat
play by Scott Parker from a free kick which Albion half cleared started the
proceedings. The first chance for the visitors arrived when Marc-Antoine Fortune
was played in by captain Greening but the striker chose to go it alone instead
of playing in the much better placed Chris Brunt. Albion were then apparently
robbed of a penalty with Paul Robinson going down after Lucas Neill made contact
with him in the area. Robinson protested vigorously with the ref but to no
avail. The game was end to end although both teams were guilty of producing
sloppy play. Albion almost took advantage of the Hammers’ carelessness when
Morrison was allowed to travel the length of the Hammers’ half and produced a
shot which Robert Green was equal to. The home side were dealt a blow on the 29
minutes when Matthew Upson had to leave the field of play due to injury which
seemed to be caused by overstretching. United created a further two chances
before half time, both which fell to Freddie Sears and both of which were
blocked by the steady Martis.
Half-Time
Straight after the re-start,
Sears was at the heart of the action again, only to see his good work down the
left flank blasted over by his strike partner David Di Michele. Ten minutes into
the second half the main talking point of the game occurred with both Albion
centre backs at the core of the incident. Brunt, who was showing signs in the
game of Mowbray’s philosophy with a wide array of passing, started the move
after neat work in the left corner. A cross was delivered and was headed against
the crossbar by Martis and bounced to safety. The near-miss was
overshadowed by Jonas Olsson’s aerial challenge which connected with Robert
Green in the West Ham goal. There was talk after the game of Olsson looking at
the keeper before jumping and showing intent to cause injury but replays
suggested that was not the case and the challenge was far from deliberate.
West Ham’s £9million striker
Savio Nsereko, who started on the left of midfield for the Hammers, created a
chance after a direct run through midfield, however his finish wasn’t what you
would expect from a player with his price tag. Graham Dorrans, the Scot who was
making his first Premier League start, was impressive throughout and was
involved in a passage of play which saw the ball fall to Robert Koren who had
his shot deflected wide. Another opportunity created by the midfield duo of
Dorrans and Morrison provided an opening for Greening but the chance was wasted
after he took too long waiting for Green to go to ground. A chance for West Ham
was the only significant action left in the match but Di Michele couldn’t manage
to direct Herita Ilunga’s cross sufficiently and inevitably saw the chance go
begging.
AFTERTHOUGHTS
Positives from the game were
the defence, especially Martis and Olsson who looked solid at the back. Martis
will surely keep his place in the team for Saturday’s game against Bolton and
hopefully Olsson will command the defence in future games to the same degree as
he did against the Hammers. The strikers really need to start taking chances at
the other end though but if we can start scoring the team will have a decent
chance of survival especially with home games against Stoke, Bolton, Sunderland
and Wigan to come.
Tony Mowbray’s comments after
the game with regards to a ‘blanket’ hinted that he feels we haven’t got the
ability to keep clean sheets and score goals in the same game. If this is the
case then perhaps we can’t begrudge Mowbray for neglecting the defence for the
sake of the forwards at times this season.
Currently seven points from
safety it really doesn’t look good at the moment but the point picked up in East
London could turn into an important one if it becomes a platform for successive
wins at home.
ALBION
MAN OF THE MATCH:
Shelton Martis
ARSENAL
MAN OF THE MATCH:
Scott Parker
PLAYER RATINGS
OUT OF TEN
ALBION:
Carson (7),
Zuiverloon (6), Olsson (8), Martis (8), Robinson (8), Brunt (7), Koren (7),
Dorrans (7), Morrison (6), Greening (7), Fortune (7) Subs: Simpson (6),
Moore (6), Teixeira (6)
WEST HAM UNITED:
Green
(7), Neill (7), Tomkins (7), Upson (7), Ilunga (6), Noble (5), Kovac (6), Parker
(7), Nsereko (5), Di Michele (5), Sears (6). Subs: Spector (5), Stanislas
(6), Boa Morte (6)
REF WATCH
Mark Halsey -
Everything as standard although missed a possible penalty against Paul Robinson.
Sam Bradley

Birmingham Mail:
“West Brom came within inches of a victory at Upton Park that would have
breathed life into their Barclays Premier League survival fight.”
kumb.com:
“The main starting line-up is not too bad but the quality of the rest of the
squad is just not good enough. On this form we have no chance of holding onto
7th place and a few away days to remote European towns and cities”

Tony Mowbray:
"It was
there for us to win tonight - I don't think West Ham were 100% at it.
"We had good
opportunities to win the game. James Morrison missed one and Jonathan Greening
clipped his shot over the bar.
"We find it hard
to keep clean sheets but we did that but unfortunately we didn't do it at the
other end."

Gianfranco Zola:
"We missed a few important players and
West Brom
played well.
"West Brom had very
good chances and they could have gone in front, which is why I'm saying this was
a very good point for our team."
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