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Game played on 27 Nov 2016


27 Nov 2016
 
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Manchester United 1-1 West Ham

Premier League    2016-17Match review
Old Trafford   75,313
  SubsGoals  
1Darren Randolph    
8Cheikhou Kouyate    
19James Collins    
21Angelo Ogbonna    
30Michail Antonio    
14Pedro Obiang    
16Mark Noble    
3Aaron Cresswell   
10Manuel Lanzini    
27Dimitri Payet    
15Diafra Sakho 1  
24Ashley FletcherSubed #15   
20Andre AyewSubed #10   
7Sofiane FeghouliSubed #27   
 PosTable as at 27 Nov 2016PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Chelsea136 0120441 19631
2Liverpool135 1019442 1131030
3Manchester City133 3012560 117730
4Arsenal134 2115942 013428
5Tottenham Hotspur134 209424 110624
6Manchester United132 4110631 28920
7Everton133 309421 471119
8Watford133 13101022 271118
9West Bromwich Albion132 2210923 27717
10Southampton133 317512 36717
11Stoke City132 1371123 27816
12AFC Bournemouth133 1210612 451315
13Burnley134 1311801 411314
14Leicester City133 3111601 551613
15Middlesbrough131 145715 17812
16West Ham United132 226911 581512
17Crystal Palace131 1481021 4131611
18Hull City132 1461211 451611
19Swansea City131 24101611 46109
20Sunderland131 1481311 54108
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Manchester United draw at home with West Ham after José Mourinho sent off
Jamie Jackson at Old Trafford
Date Published Sunday 27 November 2016 18.30 GMT

This was not the first time Manchester United have failed to turn dominance into victory and not the first time José Mourinho has been sent to the stands.

United will rue their lack of ruthlessness and Mourinho may regret the 27th-minute incident in which he kicked a water bottle in anger at the booking by Jonathan Moss of Paul Pogba for diving, which was actually proved to be the correct decision by the referee.

Mourinho received a one-match ban for verbal misconduct towards Mark Clattenburg during the draw here with Burnley in October.

The United manager may well be handed a similar punishment – at a minimum – for his behaviour on Sunday, with Moss also the referee who dismissed him against West Ham United at the Boleyn Ground when he was with Chelsea last season.

Speaking in Mourinho’s absence his assistant, Rui Faria, said the manager’s ire derived from Pogba apparently deserving a foul earlier in the same incident, though what evidence there was seemed inconclusive.

None of this should distract from another disappointing result for United that leaves them with 20 points, their poorest return after 13 matches since the Premier League began.

“We were the best team on the pitch,” Faria said. “We didn’t have any tactical issues during the game. The game was what we expected. Defensively we were very compact. Offensively we created the chances to win. We are showing that as a team we are a strong side and we can do very good things.”

Of Diafra Sakho’s opening goal for West Ham, he said: “We will have time to analyse the goal. When you concede a goal there is always a reason for that and something that went wrong at a defensive set play. If it is something wrong it is something we will try to correct. We need to watch.”

Towards the end, Henrikh Mkhitaryan hit the right post and Jesse Lingard finished but this was adjudged offside. Pogba went close with a shot Darren Randolph – who had a fine outing – saved impressively.

However, despite the grandstand finish United might have lost. At the death the replacement Ashley Fletcher forced David de Gea into a frantic close-range stop.

This means Manchester United are now 11 points behind Chelsea and any title-challenging hopes distant. Faria dead-batted a question on whether the prospect is now gone.

“In this moment we are more looking to the team and trying to get the best results,” he said. “We knew the job was not easy and we try to change things. We believe things will change and what we are chasing will arrive for sure.

“If it was easy, the ones who were here before would do it. We had a lot of work in front and it is what we are doing. It is big work and we are also used to big clubs and we know how to take a big club to win. We know we will get it.”

For the third time this season United were caught out at the kick-off. The previous two occasions led to goals by Chelsea (after 40 seconds) and Fenerbahce (two minutes) – and 90 seconds were gone on Sunday when United went behind.

This was simple stuff. Dimitri Payet lifted a free-kick in from the right and Sakho eased ahead of Zlatan Ibrahimovic to head home. Ander Herrera may or may not have been impeded by Michail Antonio as the ball flew past but Ibrahimovic should still have done better. Or, perhaps, an actual defender – Phil Jones or Marcos Rojo – might have been detailed to mark Sakho.

The bottom line was that the Portuguese was reduced to waving his men back to restart quickly and United were behind far too soon.

Slowly, United took over and, 19 minutes later, equalised via the intelligence of Pogba and Ibrahimovic. When the Frenchman looked up he saw the No9 darting into space and landed a chip on his head from which Ibrahimovic beat Randolph for his ninth goal of the season.

Then came Mourinho’s latest altercation with an official.

When Pogba went down following a Mark Noble challenge it appeared the Frenchman had been fouled. Mourinho was incandescent that he was booked but replays showed Moss was correct. Moments before, Payet had bought a free-kick when Ander Herrera seemed to make zero contact and this also made Mourinho cross. This may have added to his fury at Pogba’s yellow card yet, really, he should have calmed himself. Instead, a water bottle went flying and off he went, though where to exactly was a mystery.

Arsenal’s 3-1 win against Bournemouth earlier had increased the need for United to win if they wished to keep the top four in sight. So as he ordered his side out for the second half Mourinho surely urged them to hunt for the three points.

The XI chosen showed six changes from Thursday night. Out went Wayne Rooney, Mkhitaryan, Luke Shaw, Sergio Romero, Michael Carrick and Daley Blind. In came De Gea, Rojo, Matteo Darmian, Marcus Rashford, Lingard and Herrera.

There was a place, too, for Bastian Schweinsteiger on the bench – yet by the close West Ham had an invaluable point and United were staring at a fourth consecutive home league draw.

The West Ham manager, Slaven Bilic, said: “I am very pleased with the performance.”

Daily Mail: PLAYER RATINGS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE FROM OLD TRAFFORD
MANCHESTER UNITED: De Gea 6, Valencia 6.5, Jones 6.5, Rojo 6, Darmian 5, Herrera 6.5, Pogba 7, Lingard 6 (Fellaini 85), Mata 5.5 (Mkhitaryan 65, 7), Rashford 5.5 (Rooney 65, 6), Ibrahimovic 6.5
Subs: Blind, Young, Romero, Schweinsteiger
Goals: Ibrahimovic 21
Bookings: Pogba, Valencia, Fellaini
WEST HAM: Randolph 8.5, Kouyate 7, Collins 6, Ogbonna 7, Antonio 7, Obiang 6.5, Noble 8, Cresswell 6.5, Lanzini 6.5 (Ayew 74, 6), Payet 7 (Feghouli 90+4), Sakho 7.5 (Fletcher 66, 6.5)
Subs: Nordtveit, Zaza, Adrian, Fernandes
Goals: Sakho 2
Bookings: Cresswell
Attendance: 75,313
Referee: Jon Moss (W Yorkshire) 6.5
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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