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Game played on 27 Feb 2022


27 Feb 2022
 
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Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

West Ham 1-0 Wolverhampton Wanderers

Premier League    2021-22Match review
London Stadium   59,946
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
31Ben Johnson    
15Craig Dawson    
4Kurt Zouma    
3Aaron Cresswell    
28Tomas Soucek 1  
41Declan Rice    
20Jarrod Bowen    
10Manuel Lanzini    
8Pablo Fornals    
9Michail Antonio   
23Issa DiopSubed #9   
11Nikola VlasicSubed #8   
 PosTable as at 27 Feb 2022PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City2710 12369112 128866
2Liverpool2610 3036783 2341360
3Chelsea256 51271083 222850
4Manchester United277 34211665 2231847
5West Ham United277 34251963 4211545
6Arsenal249 22221051 5161745
7Tottenham Hotspur257 14181562 5171742
8Wolverhampton Wanderers265 25101072 5141140
9Southampton265 71181034 6162735
10Brighton and Hove Albion263 55101647 2151433
11Crystal Palace274 64221726 5152130
12Aston Villa254 35202050 8131730
13Leicester City235 34211823 6162527
14Newcastle United253 64182424 6102125
15Brentford274 28141924 7132524
16Leeds United263 46152524 7143523
17Everton245 16181813 8102322
18Burnley242 63101016 6122021
19Watford262 110123133 7131619
20Norwich City262 3882522 973017
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

West Ham revive top-four challenge as Tomas Soucek delivers win over Wolves
Nick Ames at the London Stadium
Date published Sun 27 Feb 2022 22.46 GMT

West Ham might appear outsiders in the top-four race but they are not going away. Under David Moyes they always find a way to hang in there, and that is what happened here: victory over Wolves was vital for their chances and they came away with an entirely deserved three points. Moyes punched the air with both fists at full-time and may feel that, by beating a close rival in the table, his players have put a frustrating spell to bed.

Any other outcome would have flattered a blunt and largely passive Wolves whose performance did not, to the less trained eye, match Bruno Lage's estimation. West Ham should have scored at least once either side of Tomas Soucek's winner, which happened to arise after their least convincing spell, and showed far more of the energy that had sapped in recent weeks.

Soucek put in his sharpest performance in some time and his winner was assisted by another player, Michail Antonio, who also looked close to his best.

Soucek's reputation as a poacher from midfield has not held up quite as well this season; he will still need six more goals to match last season's tally of 10. But his instinct held up well when Antonio, helped by Rúben Neves' deflection of an Aaron Cresswell pass, burst into space inside the left of the box. Antonio centred low and Soucek, sticking out a long leg, diverted past Jose Sa.

"I'm hoping that gives him confidence, I thought he played better today," Moyes said. It was a pleasant way for Soucek to mark his 27th birthday and, despite plenty of bluster, Wolves rarely looked like finding a way back from there.

Given that it moved West Ham five points above Wolves, the goal may prove crucial in its narrow footballing context. Before kick-off West Ham's players marked the infinitely more important global issues that have clouded recent days. Their Ukrainian forward, Andriy Yarmolenko, was given compassionate leave by the club on Friday in the wake of his country's invasion by Russia; West Ham warmed up in shirts displaying his name and number, while Declan Rice held up a similarly adorned home shirt as the teams lined up before kick-off. A message on the scoreboard, coloured in Ukrainian yellow and blue, read: "Sending love and prayers to Andriy Yarmolenko and the people of Ukraine."

Moyes said Yarmolenko hopes to train on Monday. "We're really just more interested that he's got his family safe and that everyone connected with him is OK," he said. "I think there's a message from the Premier League, a brilliant message that they're putting out all around, saying that nobody here, nobody in this part of the world, is recognising war. We don't want it, we don't want to hear about it, we support Ukraine and we support our player in Yarmolenko."

West Ham set out as if eager to do their teammate proud and should have been ahead by half-time. Wolves were forced deep from around the 15-minute mark and hung on by a thread when Antonio drew a parry from Sa, who had deflected in the unfortunate own goal that undid them at Arsenal three days previously. Rice came closest, whipping a delicious strike against the far post, and the visitors had offered nothing until Hwang Hee-chan swept a decent chance wide as the interval approached.

"It was a tight game, but a really good result for us," Moyes said. "We got a goal up in the end and maybe we were a little bit unfortunate before and after it that we didn't score again."

Jarrod Bowen ought to have rendered that sentiment unnecessary but, set up by the impressive Pablo Fornals, prodded an uncertain left-footed effort at Sa. Then Antonio spun Conor Coady thrillingly on halfway and outran Max Kilman but, with one of the season's better solo goals in prospect, unselfishly sought to tee up Bowen and saw the ball cleared.

Fabio Silva squeezed wide at the near post straight after Soucek's winner but, although they pressed towards the end, Lukasz Fabianski was equal to everything. "Fabianski is one of the best goalkeepers in the world to stop crosses," Lage said pointed out, although that also said something for Wolves' lack of variation.

"I think it was a good performance, I think we played the way we want and like," Lage said. In truth it was forgettable, although he was not wrong to say Wolves had still run both of their opponents of recent days close and it will be far from damning if they end up scrambling for a Europa League spot come May.

West Ham can retain higher designs, although Moyes spoke about Champions League football in a longer-term sense. "I want to concentrate on us and focus on making us better, growing us into a club that can be classed as a top-four club," he said. Much stranger things have happened.

Daily Mail MATCH FACTS AND PLAYER RATINGS
West Ham (4-2-3-1): Fabianski 6.5; Johnson 6, Dawson 6.5, Zouma 7.5, Cresswell 7.5; Soucek 7.5, Rice 7.5; Bowen 7.5, Lanzini 6.5, Fornals 7.5 (Diop 90); Antonio 7 (Vlasic 90).
Subs not used: Areola, Noble, Benrahma, Kral, Oko-Flex, Alese, Perkins.
Booked: Antonio
Manager: David Moyes 7.5
Wolves (3-4-2-1): Sa 7.5; Kilman 6.5, Coady 7, Saiss 7; Hoever 6, Neves 6.5, Dendoncker 6, Marcal 5.5 (Neto 76); Trincao 5.5 (Podence 60, 6), Hwang 5.5 (Jimenez 81); Silva 5.5
Subs not used: Ruddy, Ait-Nouri, Jimenez, Boly, Jonny, Moutinho, Cundle.
Manager: Bruno Lage
Referee: Anthony Taylor 7
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