Welcome to the Wonderful World of West Ham United Statistics

Game played on 30 Nov 2013


30 Nov 2013
 
e-mail
HOME
links
programmes
cup shocks
player debuts
top 10 lists
managers
hammer awards
daily WHU news

Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

West Ham 3-0 Fulham

Premier League    2013-14
Upton Park   34,946
  SubsGoals  
22Jussi Jaaskelainen    
3George McCartney   
5James Tomkins   
19James Collins    
20Guy Demel    
4Kevin Nolan    
7Matt Jarvis    
16Mark Noble    
21Mohamed Diame 1 
23Stewart Downing    
11Modibo Maiga    
26Joe ColeSubed #71  
15Ravel MorrisonSubed #4   
24Carlton ColeSubed #111  
 PosTable as at 30 Nov 2013PlWHDHLHFHAHWADALAFAAAPts
1Arsenal1350113551114531
2Liverpool12501133231111024
3Chelsea125101452227524
4Everton134301362318724
5Newcastle United1342111730381123
6Manchester City1260026211481022
7Southampton124201122224522
8Manchester United1232185312121021
9Tottenham Hotspur12312553124720
10Aston Villa13214692317516
11Swansea City1213211113036515
12West Bromwich Albion132228614271015
13Hull City123214210551314
14Norwich City133228710531614
15West Ham United132148101324413
16Stoke City132315311571513
17Cardiff City1322371012341013
18Fulham1311461120551310
19Sunderland132046100252148
20Crystal Palace131144101063127
match review copied from

West Ham United 3 Fulham 3

Martin Jol's chances of hanging on to his job took a serious blow as West Ham condemned struggling Fulham to their fifth straight league defeat.

Mohamed Diame's deflected shot beat Maarten Stekelenburg and substitute Carlton Cole scored his first goal of the season before Joe Cole sealed a 3-0 win for the Hammers.

Jol admitted prior to the match that he could lose his job if his team were defeated, and Fulham fans made their feelings clear in the second half, chanting "Jol out!" and "You're getting sacked in the morning!"

Jol remained on the bench for most of the game, with his new right-hand man Rene Meulensteen barking orders at the team for the majority of the game.

Speculation will surely increase that the former Manchester United coach will replace his compatriot following the team's ninth defeat of the season.

Some Fulham fans chanted Meulensteen's name towards the end. They clearly want him to replace Jol as soon as possible.

One thing is for sure - Fulham need to improve fast. Only Adel Taarabt came away from this match with any credit. Without the ill Dimitar Berbatov, the Cottagers lacked any conviction up front and Fulham cannot afford to commit sloppy errors like the one that Sidwell made in the build-up to the first goal.

Fulham remain in the relegation zone, but for West Ham, the win - their first at home since the opening day of the season - was a welcome boost.

Manager Sam Allardyce dispensed with the "false nine" system and it paid off as the Hammers put on a clinical display of attacking football.

West Ham were booed off following last week's defeat to Chelsea, so captain, chairman and manager united in their programme notes to urge the fans to get behind their team.

The home side started well. Matt Jarvis and Stewart Downing stretched the Fulham defence with some incisive runs and Modibo Maiga looked lively.

West Ham peppered the Fulham box and Mark Noble may have given the hosts the lead had his shot not been blocked by former team-mate Scott Parker, who captained Fulham in the absence of Berbatov.

Maiga stole in front of his marker to meet Noble's free-kick but his effort struck a post and bounced out to safety.

Sensing the importance of the game, both teams were really going for it. Tensions boiled over on two occasions, resulting in bookings for Kieran Richardson and James Tomkins, who cleaned out Pajtim Kasami with a late two-footed challenge. Sidwell would later join them for a similar foul on Mohamed Diame.

Other than the odd run from Taarabt, Fulham looked impotent in attack. Elsad Zverotic piled a long-range free-kick into the Bobby Moore stand.

James Collins was the next man to go close for West Ham when he headed a Downing cross inches wide. Downing had a go himself moments later, but Stekelenburg saved.

West Ham were fortunate to keep George McCartney on the pitch just before the break when the left-back tugged at Darren Bent's shirt, sending the former Aston Villa man tumbling to the ground just outside the box.

Luckily for the Hammers, Martin Atkinson saw it as a booking.

Still, Fulham had a good opportunity to test Jussi Jaaskelainen, but the fans were once again sent scrambling for cover as Richardson thumped the set-piece way over the bar.

Nolan horribly messed up an overhead kick, but West Ham were clapped off the pitch at half-time for their efforts.

Those fans had to wait just 72 seconds after the restart before they saw their team go ahead. Fulham helped them on their way. Parker lost possession 30 yards out and Sidwell then dallied on the ball, allowing Diame to advance towards goal. The midfielder fired a low drive which flicked Amorebieta's leg, diverting the ball past a helpless Stekelenburg.

West Ham pushed for a second. Stekelenburg saved well from Maiga and Downing fired the follow-up just over the bar.

Bent cleared Tomkins' header off the line. Jol brought on Bryan Ruiz, but West Ham continued to dominate.

Stekelenburg saved a close-range header from Jarvis and Downing then curled an effort on to the bar.

Kasami fired a warning with a low shot that skidded just wide of Jaaskelainen's goal.

Fulham's travelling support had seen enough. With 15 minutes left they knew their team were not capable of equalising and they sang "Jol out!" en masse.

Allardyce strengthened his team by bringing on Joe Cole, Carlton Cole and Ravel Morrison.

Morrison crashed a shot barely an inch wide but Carlton Cole did not miss his opportunity, tapping in Downing's cross.

Allardyce and his coaching staff sprung from the bench in glee. Jol just sat there, looking despondent.

The Dutchman then had his head buried in his hands two minutes from time when Joe Cole wrapped up the win for the hosts.

hits 12256461

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