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Game played on 21 Sep 2016


21 Sep 2016
 
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West Ham 1-0 Accrington Stanley

League Cup round 3   2016-17Match review
London Stadium   39,877
( Premier League v. Football League Two )
  SubsGoals  
1Darren Randolph    
11Alvaro Arbeloa    
4Havard Nordtveit    
21Angelo Ogbonna    
26Arthur Masuaku    
14Pedro Obiang    
31Edimilson Fernandes    
7Sofiane Feghouli    
28Jonathan Calleri    
17Gokhan Tore    
5Simone Zaza    
10Manuel LanziniSubed #7   
27Dimitri PayetSubed #171  
30Michail AntonioSubed #28   
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

West Ham beat Accrington Stanley after Dimitri Payet’s last-minute strike
Owen Gibson at the London Stadium
Date Published Wednesday 21 September 2016 22.00 BST

Dimitri Payet has made a habit of scoring crucial late goals. But this cruel winner against a resolute and composed League Two Accrington Stanley side might yet take on an unlikely added significance.

In delivering Slaven Bilic’s team a barely deserved victory to halt a run of four straight defeats, half-time substitute Payet might just start to lift some of the gloom that has enveloped the club’s new home on and off the pitch since their move.

Yet even as they celebrated a last-ditch winner in a game that passed off without tension, West Ham were forced to immediately start planning for a potentially volatile fourth-round tie against Chelsea on 25 October and a vital Premier League meeting with Southampton on Sunday.

“It would be too arrogant for me to think about Chelsea now,” said Bilic afterwards. “I have a bigger task to think about – that is how to prepare the team against Southampton.”

Outfought and often outplayed by an estimable Stanley side, down to 10 men and facing extra time, Payet was brought down 25 yards out by substitute Rommy Boco. Goalkeeper Elliot Parish, who had kept his side in the tie with two key saves, stood to the right, the Frenchman went to his left and Stanley were condemned to a defeat they barely deserved.

The Accrington manager, John Coleman, paid tribute to his players but wanted no sympathy: “If you give a foul away in that area with Payet on the pitch, it’s tantamount to committing suicide.”

Having lost their last four matches and with fans on the verge of mutiny over a range of issues with the move, West Ham laboured in the first half and went off to muted boos at half-time.

Accrington Stanley, nestling in mid table in League Two, more than matched their opponents throughout a flat first period and for much of the second.

It was only with 15 minutes to play that Stanley began to tire and West Ham’s trio of substitutes – Payet, Manuel Lanzini and Michail Antonio all having been thrown on in desperation – started to exploit the extra space.

Until then Stanley were far more composed. Amid a number of first half opportunities, Sean McConville broke down the left and Jordan Clark flicked out a leg to send the ball just wide of Darren Randolph’s left-hand post.

Before the game, the rattled West Ham owners David Gold and David Sullivan outlined a series of measures they hoped would quell some of the discord at the London Stadium since their move.

But it will not be here against Accrington Stanley, whose 700 fans comprehensively outsung their West Ham counterparts, but Southampton on Sunday and, now, against Chelsea in this competition, that they will be tested. Herethey appeared more bemused than angry.

Outside, there were reports of long queues resulting in delayed entry. They might have counted themselves lucky during a dire first half. Despite the desperate run of defeats, Bilic shuffled his pack and rested key men. The former Real Madrid full-back Álvaro Arbeloa and £5.5m Swiss midfielder Edimilson Fernandes were handed debuts.

But he had seen enough at half-time, sending for Payet and Lanzini. The pair, all quick feet and menace, immediately sparkled, trying to rouse their team-mates and the crowd.

But Accrington defended resolutely, with Matty Pearson to the fore, and remained an occasional threat – most obviously when John O’Sullivan slipped the ball to McConville, who drew a smart save from Randolph.

Moments later Payet raced clear, before Lanzini fired over the crossbar and Parish saved superbly at close range from Simone Zaza.

As extra time loomed, there was an added edge of desperation as West Ham were reduced to 10 men when Arthur Masuaku was forced off with a knee injury.

But then up stepped Payet. His under-pressure manager called it “a great moment from a great player at a great time”.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS AND RATINGS
West Ham (4-2-3-1): Randolph 6; Arbeloa 6, Nordtveit 6, Ogbonna 6, Masaaki 6; Feghouli 4.5 (Payet 46 7), Obiang 6, Fernandes, Tore 5 (Lanzini 46 6); Calleri 5.5 (Antonio 69), Zaza 5.5
Subs not used: Adrian, Byram, Fletcher, Oxford
Goal: Payet 90+6
Manager: Slaven Bilic 5
Accrington Stanley (4-2-3-1): Parish 6.5; Vyner 6.5, Pearson 6, Beckles 8, Donacien 7; Brown 6 (Hughes 77), Conneely 6 (Boco 84); O'Sullivan 6.5 (Eagles 66 6), Clark 6.5, McConville 7; Kee 6
Subs not used : Gornell, Jones, Lacey, Chapman
Booked: Boco
Manager: John Coleman 7
Referee: Stephen Martin (Staffordshire)
Attendance: 39,877
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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