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Game played on 16 Aug 2025

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Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

Sunderland 3-0 West Ham

Premier League    2025-26Match review
Stadium of Light   46,233
  SubsGoals  
1Mads Hermansen    
25Jean-Clair Todibo    
3Maximilian Kilman   
5Nayef Aguerd    
29Aaron Wan-Bissaka    
8James Ward-Prowse    
24Guido Rodriguez    
12El Hadji Malick Diouf    
20Jarrod Bowen    
10Lucas Paqueta    
11Niclas Fullkrug    
9Callum WilsonSubed #24   
28Tomas SoucekSubed #8   
39Andrew IrvingSubed #25   
 PosTable as at 16 Aug 2025PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City10 000010 0403
2Sunderland11 003000 0003
3Tottenham Hotspur11 003000 0003
4Liverpool11 004200 0003
5Brighton and Hove Albion10 101100 0001
6Fulham10 000001 0111
7Aston Villa10 100000 0001
8Newcastle United10 000001 0001
9AFC Bournemouth10 000000 1240
10Burnley10 000000 1030
11West Ham United10 000000 1030
12Wolverhampton Wanderers10 010400 0000
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Mayenda sparks stunning Sunderland start to increase Potter's West Ham pain
Louise Taylor at the Stadium of Light
Date published: Sat 16 Aug 2025 17.16 BST

Advertising hoardings dotted around Sunderland are adorned with enticing images of long sandy beaches and invite visitors to embark on adventures in "our city by the sea". It is all part of an £80m project intended to reinvent and regenerate the post-industrial riverside area around the Stadium of Light but West Ham had evidently not bargained for this rejuvenation extending to the football team.

As the second half unfolded, an exhilarating afternoon that exceeded the wildest dreams of even the most optimistic Sunderland fans became not so much an adventure as an ordeal by the North Sea for West Ham's manager.

"Disappointed with that," said Graham Potter. "We have to learn the lesson that it's difficult to win matches. It's one game but we have to bounce back. We have to be better. We have to make it happen."

In marked contrast, Regis Le Bris looked as if he was struggling to stop smiling. "I'm happy for the fans," he said. "We just have to enjoy this. West Ham are a strong team who maybe didn't play their best football today."

Right from the start a counterattacking Sunderland, featuring seven summer signings, looked quick, agile and nimble-footed.

While an array of new faces including the excellent Habib Diarra and Granit Xhaka shone, it was three of the old boys, Eliezer Mayenda, Dan Ballard and Wilson Isidor, who scored the goals.

Although West Ham, with Jarrod Bowen looking dangerous, held their own in the opening half they were restricted to two chances. Then, in the course of a chastening second period featuring some assiduous man-to-man marking, the visitors folded.

They had perhaps failed to heed the warning delivered when Diarra, the club-record £30m midfield recruit from Strasbourg, showed off an impressive change of first-half pace as he executed a slick one-two with Mayenda. The heart of defence was pierced and only a decent save from Mads Hermansen kept the score goalless.

For all Diarra's fleet-footed probing, Noah Sadiki's snappy tackling and the way the deep-sitting Xhaka showed why Bayer Leverkusen were so reluctant to part with him, West Ham were still not exactly out of things. It took a sliding, last-ditch clearance on Ballard's part to prevent El Hadji Malick Diouf shooting the visitors ahead.

One of football's little mysteries revolves around the failure of one of the so-called "elite" clubs to poach Bowen. Goodness knows where West Ham would be without him.

Robin Roefs, Sunderland's new Netherlands Under-21 goalkeeper, who was preferred to the playoff hero Anthony Patterson, showed off some nifty footwork and had not been overexerted.

Nordi Mukiele must have felt reassured he was making the right choice in swapping Paris Saint-Germain for Sunderland. That move is poised to be confirmed on Saturday with the full-back becoming summer signing No 12.

When Omar Alderete, the Paraguay centre-half making his home debut as a substitute, hooked a cross into the area, Mayenda, a scorer at Wembley in May, backed into his marker before contorting his body into a position from where he headed Sunderland into the lead.

If Potter looked unhappy with that piece of defending he appeared furious as the unattended Ballard guided a tremendous header beyond Hermansen after meeting Adingra's deep cross.

Hermansen will not want to watch replays of the third goal, curled in superbly by the substitute Isidor who, having connected with Xhaka's delivery, ran at the defence before unleashing an effort that seemed to go through the former Leicester goalkeeper en route to the far corner.

Given that this particular Sunderland side had never played together before it is small wonder Wearsiders are convinced Le Bris really is a special one.

Daily Mail: MATCH RATINGS
Sunderland (4-3-3): Roefs 7: Hume 6, Ballard 7, Seelt 6.5 (Alderte 53 6), Reinildo 6; Diarra 8, Xhaka 7, Sadiki 6; Talbi 5.5 (Rigg 90+3), Mayenda 7 (Isidor 76), Adingra 6.5 (Le Fee 76) Subs unused: Patterson (Gk), Neil, Guiu, Roberts, Jones
Goal: Mayenda 61, Ballard 73, Isidor 90+2
West Ham (3-5-2): Hermansen 7: Todibo 5 (Irving 82), Kilman 6, Aguerd 6; Wan-Bissaka 6.5, Ward-Prowse 6, (Soucek 71 6), Paqueta 5, Rodriguez 6 (Wilson 71 6), Diouf 6.5; Bowen 7.5, Fullkrug 5 Subs unused: Areola (Gk), Walker-Peters, Alvarez, Mavropanos, Scarles, PottsBooked: Kilman
Referee: Robert Jones 7
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