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Game played on 31 Mar 2014


31 Mar 2014
 
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Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

Sunderland 1-2 West Ham

Premier League    2013-14
Stadium of Light   37,396
  SubsGoals  
13Adrian del Castillo   
20Guy Demel    
5James Tomkins    
2Winston Reid   
3George McCartney    
16Mark Noble   
14Matthew Taylor    
23Stewart Downing    
4Kevin Nolan   
21Mohamed Diame 1  
9Andy Carroll 1  
8Pablo ArmeroSubed #3   
28Roger JohnsonSubed #21   
47Antonio NocerinoSubed #4   
 PosTable as at 31 Mar 2014PlWHDHLHFHAHWADALAFAAAPts
1Liverpool3214114813844402671
2Chelsea321420399745231569
3Manchester City301301489844321967
4Arsenal3210512910925272764
5Everton3111312913664201860
6Tottenham Hotspur328351921925212356
7Manchester United327362219934301954
8Southampton327542921646201948
9Newcastle United327361922718192546
10Stoke City3286222152410153040
11West Ham United326372223448141937
12Aston Villa315291826456162034
13Swansea City325562923349162533
14Hull City3264619163211142433
15Norwich City3266415122212113932
16Crystal Palace317271418221162131
17West Bromwich Albion313851922267172629
18Cardiff City3254718291411113226
19Sunderland303391423348142525
20Fulham32411119343211123924
match review copied from

Sunderland 1 West Ham United 2

Geordie Andy Carroll helped nudge Sunderland closer to the relegation trapdoor as West Ham all but secured their own Barclays Premier League status with a 2-1 win at the Stadium of Light.

The England striker powered the visitors into an early lead and midfielder Mohamed Diame extended it five minutes into the second half on a night when there were no boos for Hammers boss Sam Allardyce.

Substitute Adam Johnson gave Sunderland, who had earlier seen strong penalty appeals go unanswered, hope when he pulled one back with 25 minutes remaining, and keeper Adrian had to pull off a double save to deny Ki Sung-yueng and Connor Wickham.

But ultimately, the Black Cats' depressing home run was extended to just one win in nine league games to leave the bulk of a crowd of 37,396 fearing the worst.

Former Newcastle frontman Carroll needed just nine minutes to plummet even further in the estimation of the home fans when he headed the visitors into the lead in trademark style.

Mark Noble's corner was tailor-made for him to climb high above John O'Shea and Wes Brown to score just his second goal of the season despite keeper Vito Mannone's best efforts on the line.

However, Sunderland, who have not won a Monday night game in 12 years, were aggrieved not to be handed a chance to level as half-time approached.

Skipper O'Shea bundled the ball into the penalty area as the home side staged an attack and opposite number Kevin Nolan appeared to block it with his arm, although referee Howard Webb was unmoved.

But their mood darkened further five minutes into the second half when Diame latched on to Carroll's knock-down and steered a deflected shot past the stranded Mannone to make it 2-0.

Johnson's strike - his 10th of the season - sparked a spirited fightback, but it was all too little, too late for Gus Poyet's men.

Poyet has had cause to rue the fine margins which exist between success and failure during his time on Wearside to date, and he headed for the dressing room at half-time once again reflecting on the fickle finger of fate.

Having once again decided to employ O'Shea, Wes Brown and Santiago Vergini in a three-man defence, he charged wing-backs Phil Bardsley and Marcos Alonso with the task of getting forward to support the men ahead of them, and Bardsley in particular obliged.

The problem was that neither they nor midfielders Liam Bridcutt, Lee Cattermole and Ki could make the most of the Black Cats' more or less even share of possession.

In addition, Sunderland were hampered with their inability to handle the physical and aerial presence of Carroll, who won virtually everything which came his way before the break to give the Hammers an ever-present threat.

There was an inevitability about the opening goal, which came as he rose to power Noble's left-wing corner past Mannone, although the Italian was equal to the test eight minutes before the break after the striker met George McCartney's cross.

In the meantime, Matt Taylor had screwed a long-range effort just wide at full-stretch with Stewart Downing and Diame enjoying the space left behind by Alonso and Bardsley.

The Black Cats had chances of their own with Bardsley thumping a swerving second-minute drive just wide of the far post and Cattermole failing to make the most of good work by Fabio Borini and Ki when he shot tamely at keeper Adrian.

However, they were desperately unfortunate not to be awarded a penalty seven minutes before the break when Nolan appeared to block the ball with his arm inside the box as it reared up off O'Shea.

Sunderland's uphill task increased markedly in gradient by the time 50 minutes had passed when, after Brown had been penalised for a foul on Carroll, the striker laid off James Tomkins' free-kick for Diame to fire home with the help of a deflection off Vergini.

Poyet replaced Cattermole with Johnson and Craig Gardner soon followed as O'Shea departed, and amidst the re-organisation, Downing should really have killed the game off when he got in behind Alonso, but fired inches wide of the far post.

Johnson gave the home side home when he collected Gardner's pass and curled home a 65th-minute shot, and suddenly, the Black Cats were transformed.

Adrian could not hold Ki's 68th-minute drive, but recovered to block Wickham's follow-up as the home fans sensed a change in the tide, but salvation proved to be beyond them as substitute Ignacio Scocco headed over at the death from Vergini's cross.

hits 11515997

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