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Game played on 16 Dec 2024


16 Dec 2024
 
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Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

AFC Bournemouth 1-1 West Ham

Premier League    2024-25Match review
Dean Court   11,204
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
5Vladimir Coufal    
15Konstantinos Mavropanos    
26Maximilian Kilman    
29Aaron Wan-Bissaka    
10Lucas Paqueta 1 (1 P)  
28Tomas Soucek    
19Edson Alvarez   
4Carlos Soler   
14Mohammed Kudus    
20Jarrod Bowen    
11Niclas FullkrugSubed #4   
7Crysencio SummervilleSubed #19   
68Oliver ScarlesSubed #14   
42Kaelan CaseySubed #29   
 PosTable as at 16 Dec 2024PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Liverpool156 1115552 016836
2Chelsea164 3114961 1231034
3Arsenal165 3017633 212930
4Nottingham Forest164 2210742 2111228
5Manchester City165 12161232 3121127
6AFC Bournemouth164 2211732 3131425
7Aston Villa164 3113931 4111625
8Fulham164 22141324 210924
9Brighton and Hove Albion163 41131232 3131324
10Tottenham Hotspur164 13201131 416823
11Brentford167 10261401 761623
12Newcastle United164 2212823 3111323
13Manchester United164 13131123 38822
14West Ham United163 14121623 391319
15Crystal Palace161 4361023 3111116
16Everton152 329813 451315
17Leicester City162 33111212 5102214
18Ipswich Town160 4461222 4101612
19Wolverhampton Wanderers161 16122012 512209
20Southampton161 1672101 74155
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Enes Unal's stunning free-kick earns Bournemouth point against West Ham
Ben Fisher at the Vitality Stadium
Date published: Mon 16 Dec 2024 22.02 GMT

Change the brochures, scrap the strap line. Bournemouth has long been established as a relaxing seaside holiday destination but for Premier League teams it is becoming an increasingly uncomfortable, turbulent trip. Just ask Julen Lopetegui, whose West Ham side had to be chuffed at leaving with a point despite taking the lead via a contentious late penalty, awarded for handball and converted by Lucas Paqueta.

West Ham faced a barrage of shots, 29 in total, nine on target, but Bournemouth simply would not give in. It would have been a travesty had the hosts exited the pitch empty-handed and in the end an unstoppable free-kick from 25 yards by the substitute Enes Unal, two minutes after falling behind, earned Andoni Iraola's side a point. It was the least they deserved.

There is nothing serene about trying to stymie one of the most voracious sides in the division, especially here, where in recent months Bournemouth have overcome Manchester City, Arsenal and Tottenham. And the reality is they should have beaten West Ham, too.

Both teams hit the woodwork in a lively first half, Jarrod Bowen with a clever effort after Mohammed Kudus cut loose on halfway and, moments earlier, Antoine Semenyo saw an awkward shot shave a post. Carlos Soler and Tomas Soucek also had chances but the second half was largely one-way traffic, with Lukasz Fabianski making several important saves to keep the score level before the penalty, arguably the best of which kept out the substitute Philip Billing's effort. It said everything that Fabianski was their best player.

For Iraola, the obvious sore point was the penalty given to West Ham following a VAR review. Aaron Wan-Bissaka clipped a cross towards Niclas Fullkrug, the substitute powering a header, from a rare second-half opening for the visitors, at Kepa Arrizabalaga. Then the referee, Chris Kavanagh, indicated the VAR Michael Salisbury had encouraged him to visit the pitchside monitor. Wan-Bissaka's cross had skimmed the Bournemouth substitute Tyler Adams's left hand en route to Fullkrug, but the tiny deviation was only clear after numerous replays, from various angles.

At the time no West Ham player appeared to claim for a penalty. Iraola was frustrated the call did not marry with the message from the PGMOL, the referees' body, at the annual meeting at the beginning of the season. "They said players don't need to defend with hands behind their back in an unnatural position," the Bournemouth head coach said.

"It didn't affect the direction of the cross. They said: 'If it's a natural action, it's not going to cost you.' Bam, penalty. It's obviously natural because if you go running to block a cross, you finish with one hand down, one up, it's always like this. They explicitly told us defenders should not defend with hands behind back. What do I tell the defenders?"

No wonder Lopetegui wore the look of a man worried he had left the oven on. Bournemouth were relentless. They played with their usual endearing intensity and zip and West Ham had to withstand waves of pressure, surviving a few scares along the way.

Dango Ouattara saw an effort, engineered from a short-corner routine, deflect wide two minutes into the restart and then Fabianski gathered a Semenyo daisy-cutter. Ryan Christie had no such problem with conviction, his stinging left-foot shot from Evanilson's layoff triggering a right-hand save from Fabianski. The bad news for West Ham was that there were still 40-plus minutes to play.

West Ham needed to stem the flow but Maximilian Kilman, who impressed at centre-back, made a vital interception to shuffle across and block Semenyo's shot, after Bournemouth bombed upfield, via Evanilson's backheel. Illia Zabarnyi headed wide. West Ham's creative juices, meanwhile, had run dry.

When West Ham did get a glimpse of the Bournemouth goal in the second half, Zabarnyi was quickly on the scene to extinguish the danger. After Fullkrug clipped a pass through for Kudus, Zabarnyi flung his body to the floor to make a timely intervention.

Fabianski made a fine stop at his front post to push Evanilson's header from Christie's corner to safety late on and by now West Ham's focus was solely on keeping the ball out, not attacking at the other end.

Lopetegui's switch to a back five, handing Ollie Scarles his Premier League debut and only second his senior appearance, was indicative of the plan to ride out the storm. It seemed a dangerous game to play against a team with a habit of scoring late.

Strangely, it almost paid off but Bournemouth have now registered a league-high 10 goals in the final 15 minutes of matches, including five in stoppage time. "Bournemouth are one of the most demanding teams, especially at home," Lopetegui said. "It was a pity for us because we were very close to three points."

Daily Mail: AFC BOURNEMOUTH 1-1 WEST HAM - MATCH FACTS
BOURNEMOUTH: (4-2-3-1): Kepa 6; Smith 6.5 (Adams 68, 6), Zabarnyi 6.5, Huijsen 6.5, Kerkez 6; Christie 7.5, Cook 7; Semenyo 7, Ouattara 7, Kluivert 6.5 (Billing 80), Semenyo 6 (Brooks 68, 6); Evanilson 6.5 (Unal 80)
Scorers: Unal 90
Booked: None
Manager: Andoni Iraola 6.5
WEST HAM: (4-2-3-1): FABIANSKI 8; Coufal 7.5, Mavropanos 6.5, Kilman 7, Wan-Bissaka 6.5 (Casey 90); Alvarez 7 (Summerville 75, 6) , Soucek 7; Kudus 7.5 (Scarles 75, 6), Soler 6.5 (Fullkrug 56, 6.5), Paqueta 6; Bowen
Scorers: Paqueta 87
Booked: Soler, Paqueta, Lopetegui
Manager: Julen Lopetegui 6
Referee: Chris Kavanagh 6
Attendance: 11,204
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