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Game played on 21 May 2023

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West Ham 3-1 Leeds United

Premier League    2022-23Match review
London Stadium   62,478
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
5Vladimir Coufal    
4Kurt Zouma    
21Angelo Ogbonna    
33Emerson Palmieri    
28Tomas Soucek    
41Declan Rice 1  
20Jarrod Bowen 1  
11Lucas Paqueta   
8Pablo Fornals    
18Danny Ings    
24Thilo KehrerSubed #4   
10Manuel LanziniSubed #201  
31Ben JohnsonSubed #8   
72Divin MubamaSubed #18   
 PosTable as at 21 May 2023PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City3617 116017113 3331488
2Arsenal3713 324825123 4351881
3Newcastle United3611 52361487 3311869
4Manchester United3613 3130883 8223369
5Liverpool3713 51461764 8252666
6Brighton and Hove Albion3610 35362084 6343061
7Aston Villa3711 25312065 8182558
8Tottenham Hotspur3712 16372555 8293757
9Brentford379 72341857 7232856
10Fulham378 56312972 9232252
11Crystal Palace377 65202245 10192644
12Chelsea366 66191854 9172443
13Wolverhampton Wanderers379 37192025 11123341
14West Ham United378 47262433 12152940
15AFC Bournemouth376 49202852 11174239
16Nottingham Forest378 65272414 13104337
17Everton375 310152729 8183033
18Leeds United375 76253323 14224131
19Leicester City364 410212642 12284130
20Southampton372 412153342 13173624
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

West Ham strike hammer blow to Leeds' survival bid as Lanzini caps comeback
Jacob Steinberg at the London Stadium
Date published: Sun 21 May 2023 19.50 BST

This was an abject, pitiful way for Leeds United to squander the chance to take control of their destiny. There was no urgency during a wretched second half, no defiance, and no attempt to stop the day ending in another party for West Ham when Lucas Paqueta, dancing past a feeble challenge from Rasmus Kristensen in added time, gave Manuel Lanzini the opportunity to kill off any prospect of a dramatic comeback.

The stench of relegation hung over Leeds when Lanzini's goal completed a lively performance from West Ham. Sam Allardyce had seethed throughout the second half, the arch survivalist even spitting out his chewing gum and kicking it away in anger at one stage, and he spoke with an air of resignation afterwards. Listening to him run through his side's problems, it was as if he had already accepted where this is heading.

Allardyce has taken only one point since replacing Javi Gracia last month and, while there was a bit of noise about leaving nothing to chance when Tottenham visit Elland Road on the final day, the 68-year-old was almost raising the white flag when he turned his thoughts to how to reconfigure his attack after losing Patrick Bamford and Rodrigo to injury here.

The galling thing for Allardyce was that his side had displayed none of the fight that brought Everton a crucial point at Wolves on Saturday. A win would have taken Leeds out of the bottom three and Rodrigo volleyed them ahead in the 17th minute. Yet familiar flaws soon took hold.

It was as if Leeds, who have not kept a clean sheet since 25 February, thought it was going to be easy. They played as if they were sitting pretty in mid-table; as if they assumed that West Ham would already be dreaming of facing Fiorentina in next month's Europa Conference League final.

Everton and Leicester, the other sides left in the relegation scrap, need not have worried. West Ham played with integrity, even though their win against AZ Alkmaar on Thursday had taken a physical and emotional toll, and made light of David Moyes's decision to make six changes. The game changed when Declan Rice equalised and it was little surprise when Jarrod Bowen made it 2-1 midway through the second half.

Admittedly West Ham did not start well. It was not long before Rice was urging his teammates to wake up. They were being caught out by simple balls over the top and were fortunate not to concede when Rodrigo misread Bamford's cross. Leeds also went close when Jack Harrison volleyed at Leeds at Lukasz Fabianski.

Allardyce had made only two changes, Pascal Struijk replacing the suspended Junior Firpo at left-back and the steely Adam Forshaw coming in for Sam Greenwood in midfield, and the plan was working when the visitors went ahead.

The goal could not have been more Allardycian: a long throw from Weston McKennie, a mass of bodies in the West Ham area. Cue the battle. Players from both sides leapt for the header and everyone missed it. Rodrigo, holding off Angelo Ogbonna, smashed a volley past Fabianski. Throw-in, volley: could there possibly be a simpler route to goal? The ignominy stung West Ham, especially as they had conceded in similar fashion against Brentford last weekend. Wary of a rollocking from Moyes, they began to play. Joel Robles denied Tomas Soucek.

The strain began to show on Leeds. West Ham soon put together a lovely move. The ingenuity came from Pablo Fornals after he took a pass from Bowen. The Spaniard, West Ham's goalscorer in Alkmaar, scooped a beautiful pass over Struijk and Bowen lifted the ball across for Rice to mark the sixth anniversary of his professional debut by equalising with a composed finish at the far post.

Much has changed since an 18-year-old Rice came off the bench in a win against Burnley in 2017. The midfielder is likely to leave this summer and this may well have been his last home game for West Ham. Nobody, though, can accuse Rice of letting his focus drift. He is still driving this team on and his goal led to a period of dominance from the hosts, Robles denying them a second when he smothered an effort from Emerson Palmieri.

Leeds were beginning to panic. Bamford limped off after the equaliser, Wilfried Gnonto coming on, and Allardyce turned away in irritation after Harrison failed to punish an error from Kurt Zouma just before half-time.

West Ham, who replaced Zouma with Thilo Kehrer during the interval, looked more assertive. There were chances for Paqueta, Soucek and Danny Ings. Leeds could not get anything going and West Ham were rewarded for their dominance when Bowen beat Robles with a cute finish after a fine pass from Ings.

Leeds got what they deserved. Brendan Aaronson, Gnonto and Crysencio Summerville were criticised by Allardyce for doing little after coming on. There was a brief rally and Emerson denied Summerville. Yet it was too little too late, and that is likely to be the story of Leeds's season. They had the sinking feeling when Paqueta set up Lanzini.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS AND PLAYER RATINGS
West Ham (4231): Fabianski 6.5; Coufal 6.5, Ogbonna 7, Zouma 6.5 (Kehrer 46, 6.5), Emerson 7; Rice 7.5, Soucek 6.5; Fornals 7 (Johnson 90), Paqueta 8, Bowen 7.5 (Lanzini 84); Ings 7 (Mubama 90). Subs: Areola, Cresswell, Antonio. Cornet, Benrahma. Booked: Paqueta.
Moyes: 7.5
Leeds (4231): Robles 7; Ayling 6.5, Wober 6, Kristensen 6, Struijk 6 (Greenwood 84); Koch 6, Forshaw 6 (Aaronson 62, 6); Rodrigo 7, McKennie 6 (Roca 84), Harrison 6.5 (Summerville 62, 5.5); Bamford 5 (Gnonto 34, 5.5). Subs: Meslier, Cooper, Aaronson, Roca, Summerville, Rutter, Gnonto, Greenwood, Chilokoa-Mullen.
Allardyce: 6
Referee: Peter Bankes 6.5
Read full Daily Mail report:

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much respect to John Northcutt, Roy Shoesmith, Jack Helliar, John Helliar, Tony Hogg, Tony Brown, Fred Loveday, Andrew Loveday, Steve Bacon, Steve Marsh and all past/current West Ham players and supporters