Welcome to the Wonderful World of West Ham United Statistics

Game played on 11 Dec 2016


11 Dec 2016
 
e-mail
HOME
programmes & links
cup shocks
player debuts
top 10 lists
managers
hammer awards

Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

Liverpool 2-2 West Ham

Premier League    2016-17Match review
Anfield   53,068
  SubsGoals  
1Darren Randolph    
4Havard Nordtveit    
2Winston Reid    
21Angelo Ogbonna    
20Andre Ayew    
16Mark Noble    
14Pedro Obiang    
3Aaron Cresswell    
10Manuel Lanzini    
27Dimitri Payet 1  
30Michail Antonio 1  
9Andy CarrollSubed #20   
31Edimilson FernandesSubed #10   
 PosTable as at 11 Dec 2016PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Chelsea157 0121451 112737
2Arsenal155 21181052 018534
3Liverpool155 2021642 2161431
4Manchester City153 3113860 2191130
5Tottenham Hotspur155 2014424 210727
6Manchester United153 4111632 291024
7Watford154 13131222 381421
8West Bromwich Albion153 22131023 37820
9Everton153 4010521 591420
10Southampton154 318512 461020
11Stoke City153 1391123 381119
12AFC Bournemouth154 1214912 571618
13Burnley155 13141001 511517
14Leicester City154 3115801 661816
15Crystal Palace152 14111022 4161915
16Middlesbrough152 146715 27915
17West Ham United152 2371412 5101713
18Swansea City152 24131611 561512
19Hull City152 2491511 551712
20Sunderland152 14101411 641311
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Divock Origi earns Liverpool point after West Ham turn tables at Anfield
Andy Hunter at Anfield
Date Published Sunday 11 December 2016 18.32 GMT

Ray Clemence and Bruce Grobbelaar were sat together at Anfield and it was no stretch to re-imagine the former Liverpool goalkeepers as those old curmudgeons from the Muppet Show, Waldorf and Statler, ripping into the failings of today’s generation. Loris Karius’s teething troubles continued while Darren Randolph reacted to the final whistle by burying his head in a towel. The West Ham United keeper’s despair was understandable but, for his manager, humiliation has given way to hope.

Slaven Bilic has been under intense scrutiny since the 5-1 home defeat by Arsenal and endured an ominous start at Anfield when Adam Lallana swept Liverpool into an early lead. West Ham’s reaction was not that of a team calling time on their manager. Bilic’s name resonated several times from the away end and his players gave what they could to alleviate the pressure. No cause was lost as Dimitri Payet and Michail Antonio edged the visitors ahead by the interval. They were under siege throughout the second half and cracked when Randolph gifted an equaliser to Divock Origi but, with Winston Reid and the goalkeeper impeccable thereafter, they held firm.

It was Jürgen Klopp who had cause for concern after Liverpool’s latest suspect defensive display. The Liverpool manager may have been enraged by Steve Cook’s admission that Bournemouth targeted Karius as the weak link in last Sunday’s 4-3 reverse but his goalkeeper’s struggle to convince otherwise is the bigger problem. His 23-year-old’s positioning at Payet’s free-kick was questionable and his reactions slow for Antonio’s goal – though he was not the only Liverpool player culpable on that score.

Klopp pinned Liverpool’s failure to win at home for only the second time this season on a collective rather than individual issue. “1-0 up, all good,” he said. “Then we got a little bit too excited, I would say. We had not a real formation for protection in these moments, nearly everybody was involved in our offensive situations and we had two centre-backs and sometimes Hendo behind the ball, and nearly everybody else the other side. We had a problem with second balls, but not too often and the goals weren’t in situations like that. But we let the game go a little bit away in these moments. We were not completely in control like we could have been.”

West Ham started like a team shorn of confidence and their defensive organisation was non-existent as Liverpool prospered from their first meaningful attack. Sadio Mané exchanged passes with Origi and reached the byline without a challenge in sight. The Belgium international forward just failed to connect with an inviting cross but it dropped to Lallana who, with Angelo Ogbonna ineffectual and Reid static, had time to control and beat Randolph with a low left foot finish.

Just as defensive frailties persisted in the visitors, the same was true of the hosts. Karius and the defenders around him were again vulnerable under minimal pressure, as in the late collapse at Bournemouth, and Bilic’s forwards found encouragement to haul their team back into the contest. A routine clearance from Reid was sufficient to give Antonio the visitors’ first shot on goal with Liverpool wide open at the back. Karius saved on that occasion but was found wanting when West Ham levelled through Payet.

The intentions of the France international were abundantly clear as soon as Lallana tripped Pedro Obiang 25 yards from Liverpool’s goal. Not that being forewarned aided the Liverpool goalkeeper. Having sized up the free-kick in a central position Payet curled his effort over the wall and a yard inside Karius’ right hand post. The Germany under-21 international got a hand to the free-kick but, having positioned himself too far to the left, was unable to deny the set-piece specialist.

West Ham’s second was far worse from a Liverpool defensive perspective. Bilic’s side were the more threatening team as the first half wore on and their prodigious work-rate, typified by Mark Noble chasing down a lost cause and winning a corner from James Milner, was impressive. But they were gifted the lead when Havard Nordtveit’s cross deflected off Jordan Henderson’s head and wrong-footed the otherwise commanding Joël Matip. Neither Karius or Nathaniel Clyne reacted quickly enough to the danger and Antonio was given the freedom of Liverpool’s penalty area to flick the ball around the keeper and watch it trickle over the line.

To their credit, Liverpool dominated thereafter with Roberto Firmino twice going close before the interval and Payet fortunate not to concede a penalty with a risky push on Lallana. They drew level courtesy of the biggest goalkeeping error of the game when Mané crossed from the left and Randolph, coming to claim at full stretch, let the ball fall from his grasp on to the toes of Origi. The Liverpool striker could barely believe his luck as he converted via the inside of a post from four yards out.

Klopp’s team laid siege to the visiting defence for the majority of the second half. Georginio Wijnaldum twice went close, Clyne drove over from 18 yards and Randolph atoned for his error with a stunning save to prevent Henderson finding the top corner from fully 30 yards. “That was a crucial moment for us,” Bilic said. “Liverpool play a risky game and I expected us to hurt them more than we did in the second half, but it was a great point for us and a positive situation before a crucial week.”

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS, PLAYER RATINGS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE
LIVERPOOL (4-3-3) Karius 5: Clyne 5.5, Matip 7, Lovren 6 (Klavan 46mins 6), Milner 7: Wijnaldum 6, Henderson 7.5, Lallana 7: Mane 7, Origi 7, Firmino 6
UNUSED: Mignolet (GK), Moreno, Lucas, Ejaria, Woodburn, Alexander-Arnold
WEST HAM (4-1-3-1) Randolph 7: Nordtvelt 7, Reid 8, Ogbonna 7, Cresswell 7: Obiang 7.5: Lanzini 6.5 (Fernandes 78mins), Noble 7, Payet 7: Ayew 5 (Carroll 62mins), Antonio 7
UNUSED: Adrian (GK), Carroll, Fletcher, Fernandes, Quina, Browne, Pike
Goals – Lallana (5), Payet (27), Antonio (38), Origi (48)
Booked – Firmino, Mane
Attendance – 53,068
Referee – M Clattenburg
Man-of-the-Match – Winston Reid
Read more:

hits 12596517

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