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Game played on 01 Jan 2022


01 Jan 2022
 
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Crystal Palace 2-3 West Ham

Premier League    2021-22Match review
Selhurst Park   24,351
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
5Vladimir Coufal    
15Craig Dawson    
23Issa Diop    
31Ben Johnson   
41Declan Rice    
28Tomas Soucek    
20Jarrod Bowen    
10Manuel Lanzini 2 (1 P)  
22Said Benrahma    
9Michail Antonio 1  
26Arthur MasuakuSubed #31  
11Nikola VlasicSubed #22   
16Mark NobleSubed #10   
 PosTable as at 01 Jan 2022PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City218 1131691 122753
2Chelsea205 4123872 120642
3Liverpool196 3022662 2281041
4Arsenal207 1218841 5151735
5West Ham United204 23181562 3191234
6Tottenham Hotspur187 12161032 371033
7Manchester United185 13171443 2131231
8Wolverhampton Wanderers183 245742 38725
9Leicester City185 13161223 4152125
10Brighton and Hove Albion183 338926 19924
11Crystal Palace204 52201213 591823
12Aston Villa184 14151430 691422
13Southampton192 619823 5112121
14Brentford183 15101124 3111420
15Everton174 13131313 581619
16Leeds United182 43101513 582116
17Watford182 17112220 6111413
18Burnley161 428804 571611
19Newcastle United191 54132203 662011
20Norwich City191 2751912 632310
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Manuel Lanzini doubles up as West Ham survive late scare at Crystal Palace
Ed Aarons at Selhurst Park
Date published: Sun 2 Jan 2022 04.37 GMT

This was the kind of ruthless performance that has defined David Moyes's second spell at West Ham. In front of a raucous New Year's Day home crowd and against opponents who clearly fancied their chances of bloodying the noses of their London rivals, two brilliant first-half goals from Michail Antonio and Manuel Lanzini - and Luka Milivojevic's helping hand - ensured that their Champions League dream remains alive and well despite a late Crystal Palace fightback.

Had Jean-Philippe Mateta's last-gasp volley sailed the other side of the post then it could have been a different story but with more than half the season completed, West Ham find themselves within a point of Arsenal and one ahead of Spurs, albeit having played two games more than Antonio Conte's side. Anyone who had already written them off after their mini-blip last month may have to think again.

"It was never comfortable but at this time of the year you take what you get," said Moyes. "I'm thrilled with us getting these results but we need to get back to being mean and not letting teams have opportunities against us."

Patrick Vieira had been given a warm welcome from the home supporters as he returned from his Covid-enforced two-match absence. Yet the hosts had to do without Wilfried Zaha and Cheikhou Kouyaté as both were isolating ahead of their scheduled departure for the Africa Cup of Nations. That meant a return for Milivojevic in midfield, while West Ham welcomed back Declan Rice from suspension.

Despite their stuttering form before Christmas, West Ham's hopes of finishing in the top four should remain realistic as long as Rice is in the side but Moyes will also know finding defensive reinforcements in the January market could prove vital. They should really have found themselves behind inside the first two minutes when Jordan Ayew's cutback picked out Jeffrey Schlupp but the Ghanaian somehow managed to hit the post from close range.

When Ben Johnson was called on to block another effort from Schlupp, it seemed only a matter of time before Palace found the breakthrough. But having weathered the initial storm, West Ham went 2-0 up after some smart finishing from Antonio and Lanzini. There was nothing Vicente Guaita could do about either: West Ham's top scorer only had to touch Saïd Benrahma's wicked inswinging cross to divert it in and Lanzini's goal three minutes later, after a typically surging run from Rice, was an instinctive strike with his third touch that flew past the Palace goalkeeper.

To their credit, Palace kept coming forward and should have pulled one back when Odsonne Édouard let fly after being set up by Ayew, only for his shot to cannon back off the bar. Christian Benteke did at least manage to hit the target twice in quick succession but found Lukasz Fabianski in top form.

Yet it was a moment of utter madness in first-half injury-time from Milivojevic that ended any chance of a Palace comeback. The Serbia midfielder probably thought he was being clever when he clearly handled the ball on the blind side of the referee, Darren England, and seemed to have got away with it initially. Unfortunately for him, VAR had spotted that the infringement had taken place just inside the box and it was left to Lanzini to stroke home his second from the spot.

Vieira left the pitch at half-time remonstrating with a bemused England and was shown a yellow card after continuing his protestations at the final whistle, even if he later acknowledged it had been the correct call.

"You have to give them credit. When they had the chances, they took them," said the Palace manager. "We had a couple we did not take. We are learning in a hard way."

An early sighter from Benrahma at the start of the second half could have given Palace even more of a mountain to climb. Ayew - who will now meet up with Ghana's Afcon squad - was the one constant threat down the right flank and his ball across the area could have given them a lifeline had Édouard been able to direct his shot on target. Milivojevic's miserable evening came to an end when he was replaced by Mateta with more than half an hour to play, while Antonio went close to doubling his tally with a shot from just outside the box.

Michael Olise - another substitute - was the architect of Palace's fightback when his excellent cross was tapped home by Édouard at the far post before he curled home a free kick to set up a tense finale. But it came just too late to throw Moyes and his side off course.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS
Crystal Palace (4-3-3): Guaita 5; Ward 5, Andersen 4, Guehi 5, Mitchell 5; Schlupp 5, Milivojevic 4.5 (Mateta 60, 6), Hughes 5.5 (Riedewald 75, 6); Ayew 6, Benteke 6 (Olise 68, 7), Edouard 6
Subs (not used): Butland, Matthews, Tomkins, Eze, Kelly
Scorers: Edouard (83), Olise (90)
Manager: Patrick Vieira 6
West Ham (4-2-3-1): Fabianski 6; Coufal 6.5, Diop 6, Dawson 6, Johnson 6.5 (Masuaku 45, 6); Rice 7.5, Soucek 7; Lanzini 8.5 (Noble 89), Benrahma 6.5 (Vlasic 71, 6), Bowen 7; Antonio 7
Subs (not used): Areola, Alese, Fredericks, Krul, Oko-Flex, Yarmolenko
Scorers: Antonio (22), Lanzini (25, 45)
Booked: Johnson, Masuaku
Manager: David Moyes 7
Referee: Darren England 6
Attendance: 24,351
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