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Game played on 21 Mar 2021


21 Mar 2021
 
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West Ham 3-3 Arsenal

Premier League    2020-21Match review
London Stadium   0
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
5Vladimir Coufal   
15Craig Dawson    
23Issa Diop    
3Aaron Cresswell   
28Tomas Soucek 1  
41Declan Rice    
20Jarrod Bowen 1  
11Jesse Lingard 1  
9Said Benrahma    
30Michail Antonio   
16Mark NobleSubed #20   
24Ryan FredericksSubed #9   
 PosTable as at 21 Mar 2021PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City3012 223613103 128871
2Manchester United297 34291996 0271357
3Leicester City297 162519104 1281356
4Chelsea297 52251174 4191451
5West Ham United298 43261863 5191749
6Tottenham Hotspur297 34251473 5241648
7Liverpool297 26221865 3261846
8Everton285 27192292 3211546
9Arsenal296 35181563 6221742
10Aston Villa285 26201873 5191241
11Leeds United295 36191770 8263039
12Crystal Palace295 55152152 7162637
13Wolverhampton Wanderers295 45151544 7132335
14Southampton295 27181844 7183333
15Burnley294 65121643 7102133
16Brighton and Hove Albion292 76161954 5161732
17Newcastle United294 46172333 9112528
18Fulham302 41092337 4141526
19West Bromwich Albion292 5893314 9112418
20Sheffield United293 111102211 1262814
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Lacazette's leveller completes Arsenal's comeback for 3-3 draw at West Ham
Nick Ames at the London Stadium
Date Publised: Sun 21 Mar 2021 17.04 GMT

Sometimes the journey brings more pleasure than the destination. The bare fact that West Ham and Arsenal took a point each tells nothing of a contest that may not be improved upon all season and left everyone involved torn between joy and regret. Essentially this was two games in one: the 35 minutes in which the team managed by David Moyes overwhelmed their opponents and looked certain to burnish their top-four credentials handsomely; then the hour or so in which Arsenal stepped up several gears, overhauled a three-goal deficit and mustered their best football of a see-sawing campaign.

Nobody who had watched West Ham perform so redoubtably since September would have looked past them when Tomas Soucek scored their third goal, inadvertently deflecting Michail Antonio’s header past Bernd Leno. They were in complete control: Arsenal had barely posed them a question and looked every inch an inconsistent mid-table side dogged by the added burden of Thursday night Europa League assignments. The away side looked leggy, sloppy, sluggish in mind and body; that only made the upturn in their output even more remarkable and it said plenty that, by the end, they looked the more likely winners.

If this match can be reduced to anything then perhaps it was a battle of two loanees, both stationed nominally in the No 10 position but given freedom to roam. Jesse Lingard was an electric presence for West Ham, cracking in a blistering opener and thinking quickly to create a second goal for Jarrod Bowen. While Martin Ødegaard’s influence will not be recorded quite as clearly for posterity, the Norwegian was the outstanding individual on the pitch as Arsenal worked their way back. It was the kind of display through which a player makes his own teammates better: Ødegaard had a hand in all of Arsenal’s goals, his gliding movement and weight of passing proving impossible to stifle.

“He had an incredible performance,” said Mikel Arteta of Ødegaard. “He showed how much he wants to win. When everybody was trembling a little bit, he gave us that ability and composure on the ball, and he created chance after chance.”

Never mind trembling: Arsenal were rocked wildly in those early moments by an attack-minded West Ham team that scented blood. This was another occasion to buck the expired cliche that Moyes’s offerings are pale and stale. Soucek had missed two headed half-chances before Lingard, found perceptively on the edge of the box by Antonio after the striker had made ground down the left, sliced across the ball and sent it rocketing into the far corner.

Within two minutes Arsenal were on their heels after Bukayo Saka fouled Antonio. Lingard knew it and played a quick free-kick to Bowen, whose angled shot went through Leno. The goalkeeper had to do better but he was hardly alone in that. Kieran Tierney, usually so reliable, was the next culprit when failing to control a Leno ball out to the left. Several passes later Vladimir Coufal was swinging over a dipping cross that Antonio, beating David Luiz in the air, converted via Soucek’s toe.

Those concessions were “unacceptable”, Arteta said. From West Ham’s perspective it was, according to Moyes, “as well as we’ve played in a while”. He justifiably felt that a less profitable snick off Soucek, helping Alexandre Lacazette’s 37th-minute shot past Lukasz Fabianski, was the turning point. Ødegaard had fed a galloping Calum Chambers to create the chance and it set the tone for what followed.

Saka could have scored twice before half-time and, moments after the restart, Issa Diop cleared heroically off the line from Lacazette. It had become that kind of game, largely controlled by Arsenal and Ødegaard but with West Ham packing a punch on the counter. Moyes and his players were furious before the hour when the referee, Jon Moss, refused to play advantage on a promising break; moments later their tempers worsened when Bowen thought he had won a free-kick but instead saw it awarded to the visitors. This time Arsenal were the alert ones, moving possession on instantly, and Ødegaard sent Chambers clear again with a cute reverse pass. The deputy right-back’s wicked delivery was volleyed into his own net at full pelt by an unfortunate Craig Dawson.

“The officiating was tough for the players today,” said Moyes in a thinly veiled attempt at diplomacy. That would have been forgotten if Antonio, sliding in front of goal after bewitching approach work from Saïd Benrahma, had not hit the post when given a golden chance to settle West Ham’s doubts.

Instead Arsenal kept coming and, by the time it came, the equaliser seemed inevitable. Nicolas Pépé had just come on when, found by Ødegaard, he made rare good use of his weaker right foot and whipped across a ball that Lacazette converted with a thundering far-post header.

“Probably the best that I have seen us play,” Arteta said when assessing the final hour. “Looking at the chances, we could have scored six or seven.” Pépé could have won it but shot at Fabianski; Declan Rice had his own late opening but saw Leno parry. What a long road to such a prosaic outcome, but what a scintillating exhibition along the way.

Daily Mail: PLAYER RATINGS, MATCH FACTS AND PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE
West Ham (4-2-3-1): Fabianksi 6; Coufal 7, Dawson 6.5, Diop 7, Cresswell 6.5; Soucek 7, Rice 7; Bowen 7 (Noble 73, 6), Lingard 7.5, Benrahma 7.5 (Fredericks 79); Antonio 7.
Subs not used: Martin, Trott, Balbuena, Lanzini, Alves Ibsen, Johnson, Odubeko.
Booked: Coufal
David Moyes 7.5
Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Leno 5; Chambers 7, Luiz 5.5, Mari 6, Tierney 6; Partey 5.5, Xhaka 6 (Smith Rowe 74, 6); Aubameyang 5 (Martinelli 81), Odegaard 8, Saka 6.5 (Pepe 74, 6); Lacazette 7.5
Subs not used: Ryan, Gabriel, Ceballos, Holding, Soares, Elneny.
Booked:
Mikel Arteta 7.5
Jonathan Moss 6
Read full Daily Mail report:

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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