sundays news 18th march includes west ham

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sundays news 18th march includes west ham

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in our thoughts



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did not feel like doing this this morning bue here we go




the sun




Image
COL OF DUTY ... hero Dan celebrates






Leeds 1 West Ham 1


The Wales defender arrived at Upton Park only nine days ago.

But already he has kept the Hammers dream of automatic promotion back to the Premier League very much alive and kicking with a 90th-minute leveller.

Collins is on loan from Stoke for the rest of what is a crucial campaign for the East End outfit.

For football and financial reasons, it is vital they make an immediate return to the top flight following the bitter disappointment of relegation 10 months ago.

The experienced Collins is doing his best to make sure the Hammers clinch the prize they desperately crave.

In his first start for boss Sam Allardyce's side yesterday, he was a real rock at the heart of a defence that had a big job to contain a resurgent Leeds.

Not only that, Collins then conjured up a dramatic last-gasp equaliser to keep Big Sam's boys firmly in the hunt for a top-two finish.

Allardyce's side looked to be heading for a first defeat in eight league games when Luciano Becchio powered in an 83rd-minute header to put the home side in front.

The Argentinian striker's ninth goal of the season was sealed after Robert Snodgrass crossed for Paul Connolly to head against the bar.

But Collins buried a far post header from Mark Noble's well-flighted corner for a goal that a furious Neil Warnock believed should never have been allowed.

Leeds have won just one of their five games since Warnock succeeded the sacked Simon Grayson in the Elland Road hot seat.

But he rapped: "Their striker Carlton Cole fouled my defender Darren O'Dea in the box.

"It was a blatant push and referee Peter Walton has got to see something like that, surely.

"I spoke to him about it afterwards but he said to me that he was concentrating on what was happening on the goal line.

"It was a shame for the ref, really, because that was the only mistake he made all match. Other than that, Peter had a great game."

The same can be said of Collins, who came in for rich praise from his manager afterwards.

Allardyce said: "Danny is just what we need at this stage of the season.

"He has won promotion before from this league with Sunderland and Stoke so he knows exactly what it takes.His experience is going to be vital for us in the run-in and having him here can only help us.

"He has stepped into a new environment, but he has already slotted in nicely.

"He is looking comfortable with us already and his contribution today was superb."

Nicky Maynard had the first-half's best chance but a heavy touch allowed Leeds keeper Andy Lonergan to smother.

Cole headed a Noble cross over after the break before Hammers keeper Rob Green saved superbly from Connolly's 70th-minute header.

Allardyce added: "Some people might look at this and see it as a slip up but I certainly don't.

"This was a good point as far as I'm concerned and automatic promotion is still down to us, what we do.

"We are going to have to get to 90 points or more to go up automatically but we are all confident here that we can take the final step."







the mirror




Leeds 1-1 West Ham



These days Sam Allardyce can’t wait to escape his Hammers House of Horrors and take his side on the road.

You cannot blame him one bit. Stuttering results and performances at their Upton Park stronghold are threatening to seriously damage West Ham’s push for automatic promotion. Allardyce’s men have been booed off their own pitch in each of four successive home draws.

No wonder, then, that they are doing better away, where their travelling legion of fans are far more supportive and forgiving than they are on their own East End turf.

But a draw at Leeds – earned by a last-gasp goal from Danny Collins – still meant they lost further ground in the promotion race as Southampton and Reading tightened their grip on the top spots.

West Ham have now gone three league games without a win – their worst run of the season – and with just seven points from the last 15, they are losing momentum as their rivals turn up the heat.

But Allardyce remained defiant, saying: “This wasn’t a slip-up as far as I’m concerned – we’ve had those at home by drawing too many games just lately.

“That’s disappointing. And it’s true that too many draws have made us a bit edgy. But we are still confident we can take that final step and win promotion. It’s still in our hands.”

New Leeds boss Neil Warnock said: “Their equaliser should not have been given because there was a blatant push by Carlton Cole on my defender Darren O’Dea.

“The referee has got to see that but, when I asked Peter Walton about it afterwards, he said he was concentrating on what was happening on the goal line.

“It’s frustrating because I thought we deserved to win. But I can’t ask for any more from the lads. They are giving me everything in every game.”

West Ham have now gone eight games unbeaten, but never had it easy at Elland Road. It threatened to turn very sour, too, when Luciano Becchio powered in an 83rd-minute header to put Leeds in front.

But then defender Collins, on loan from Stoke, headed home Mark Noble’s 90th-minute corner.

Leeds had looked the more enterprising early on through the surging runs of skipper Robert Snodgrass and Aidy White down the flanks.

But it was centre-back Tom Lees who handed the Hammers their first scare with a fierce 20-yard drive which was deflected behind for a corner.

West Ham responded by carving open their hosts. Matt Taylor’s pass put Nicky Maynard in the clear, but Andy Lonergan dashed from his goal to save bravely at his feet.

Leeds were inches away from taking the lead on 37 minutes after Taylor was adjudged to have handled just outside his own box.

Snodgrass whipped in a curling free-kick which flew just wide, with Rob Green scrambling frantically across his goal.

Warnock’s men were out of luck again when Adam Clayton’s low shot on the turn from just inside the area scraped the paint off the outside of a post.

Snodgrass thought he had put the hosts in front on the stroke of half-time when he ****ed home a long throw from Paul Connolly... but it was ruled out for a push by Becchio.

Gary O’Neil replaced the injured James Tomkins at the start of the second half, and went close for the Hammers with only his second touch, sending a low drive just wide.

Green pulled off a fabulous save to keep out Connolly’s 70th-minute header but could do nothing about Becchio’s strike – his ninth of the season – after Connolly had rattled the bar from Snodgrass’s cross.

But Collins saved Hammers’ bacon by rising to meet Noble’s corner and powering his header past Lonergan.








the star





LEEDS 1 - WEST HAM 1: LAST-GASP DANNY COLLINS FIRES EXPLOSIVE FINISH


THE Championship’s two biggest clubs, its two biggest managerial names and a fixture that was Premier League in everything but name.

And it all added up to one big bore.


That was until the last seven minutes, which began with striker Luciano Becchio believing he had sealed a Leeds victory – only for West Ham defender Danny Collins to level right at the end.


Leeds boss Neil Warnock and West Ham counterpart Sam Allardyce lift the profile of English football’s second tier.


However, for all their experience, they could do little to raise the standard here until Argentinian Becchio headed in from close range after right-back Paul Connolly had nodded against the bar.


Collins replied when he rose to meet Mark Noble’s left-wing corner and plant home a header that extended West Ham’s unbeaten run to eight games with a third straight 1-1 draw.


The Hammers will be happy with that. They rarely get much change out of Leeds, who are now undefeated in the last nine meetings between the clubs.


Nicky Maynard was operating as a lone attacker for the visitors and he gave Leeds a scare in the 12th minute when he almost scored after blocking keeper Andy Lonergan’s attempted clearance.


Adam Clayton came close to breaking the deadlock for Leeds on 40 minutes but pulled his effort wide of the post.


Robert Snodgrass then turned the ball in from Connolly’s throw-in just before half-time – but Becchio was penalised for pushing and the home ­celebrations were cut short.


Allardyce brought on Carlton Cole in place of Maynard and the England striker headed Noble’s free-kick just over the bar.


After a double strike for the Hammers’ reserves this week, former Manchester United midfielder Ravel Morrison was handed his first-team debut as a substitute.


But within a minute of his 81st-minute introduction Becchio struck for Leeds, before Collins’ late header salvaged a point for Allardyce’s Hammers.


An unhappy Warnock said: “When you watch Carlton Cole at the corner for their goal, blatantly pushing Darren O’Dea, the referee has to see that.


“If he can see Becchio’s push in the first half, when he has four bodies in the way, he has to see Cole’s.”


Allardyce said: “This result isn’t a slip-up. It’s a slip-up drawing at home to Palace and Doncaster.


“We deserved the point. It still boils down to us for promotion.’’







the mail





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Noble cause: Mark Noble and Leeds United's Aidan White (left) clash
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Heads up: Leeds United's Luciano Becchio (right) and Danny Collins on the up at Elland Road
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Leeds lead: Becchio heads home but the advantage would last only seven minutes






Leeds 1 West Ham 1: Desperate Danny's last-gasp leveller floors hosts



Sam Allardyce's decision to strengthen his West Ham squad with Wales defender Danny Collins paid dividends on his first start for the club.

He rescued an invaluable point for their promotion push just as Leeds looked set to lift their own hopes of reaching the play-offs.

Collins, secured for the rest of the season on loan from Stoke, rose to head home a last-minute equaliser seven minutes after Luciano Becchio had given Leeds the lead and put them on course for a famous victory in front of a 33,366 crowd — the highest Elland Road attendance in nearly two years.

MATCH FACTS

LEEDS: Lonergan, Connolly, Lees, O'Dea, Robinson, Snodgrass, Brown, Clayton, White (Forssell 76), McCormack (Webber 76), Becchio. Unused subs: Pugh, Nunez, Thompson.

Goal: Becchio 83.

Booked: Robinson, Brown.

WEST HAM: Green, O'Brien, Collins, Faye, McCartney, Noble, Nolan, Collinson (Morrison 81), Tomkins (O'Neil 46), Taylor, Maynard (Cole 56). Unused subs: Henderson, Baldock.

Goal: Collins 90.

Booked: Noble.

Referee: Peter Walton.

‘This lad has stepped into a strange environment and looked very comfortable,’ enthused West Ham boss Allardyce.

‘The experience that Danny’s got is invaluable at this stage of the season. He’s seen two teams he’s been with get promoted — Sunderland and Stoke — and it didn’t look like Leeds were going to score today.’

The late equaliser was particularly timely for West Ham, who have drawn their last two home matches to drop out of the top two places and with Reading and Southampton winning, Collins’s intervention stopped them slipping further away from automatic promotion.

‘It’s not a slip-up today for me — we slipped up at home drawing against Palace, Watford and Doncaster,’ said Allardyce. ‘It still boils down to us knowing that the sort of points total we need to get to is 90 if you want automatic promotion.’

The match between the Championship’s two biggest clubs was played in a ferocious atmosphere after Leeds manager Neil Warnock had called for the fans to ‘come out and make some noise’, but for long spells, the two sides cancelled themselves out.


West Ham striker Nicky Maynard went closest to breaking the first-half deadlock when he burst on to Matt Taylor’s pass, only for goalkeeper Andrew Lonergan to race off his line and smother the shot, whereas Leeds were restricted to a Robert Snodgrass free-kick floating wide of the far post.

But the game exploded into life in the latter stages of the second half, with full-back Paul Connolly prompting West Ham goalkeeper Robert Green into a superb diving save after meeting Snodgrass’s left-wing free-kick with a powerful header.

Connolly’s ability in the air also proved crucial to the Leeds goal.

Snodgrass chipped the ball into the box after his corner was only half cleared and the Leeds defender’s diving header hit the bar with Becchio claiming his ninth Championship goal of the season from virtually on the goal-line.

Instead of accepting their fate, the Hammers powered forward and after winning a corner, Collins climbed highest to meet Noble’s centre then ran the length of the pitch to celebrate a dream start for his new club.


Disappointed Leeds boss Warnock was concerned by what he regarded as a push by substitute Carlton Cole inside the penalty area after referee Peter Walton disallowed a ‘goal’ by Becchio in first-half injury-time for a similar offence.

‘When you watch Carlton Cole at the corner where they score, he’s blatantly pushed Darren O’Dea over and he would have headed the ball clear,’ said Warnock.

‘If he can see Becchio when there are four bodies in front of him — and I’m not saying that wasn’t a foul — he’s got to see that when he’s got no one in front of him.

‘They’ve headed the goal from where the foul has occurred and that’s the only mistake made by Peter who, I thought, had a fabulous game.’





the express



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West Ham's Danny Collins rises highest in a crowded penalty area to snatch a point





LEEDS 1 - WEST HAM 1: DANNY BOY SAVES DAY FOR BIG SAM


THE Championship’s two biggest clubs. The Championship’s two biggest managerial names. And one big bore.

That was until the last magnificent seven minutes, which began with striker Luciano Becchio believing he had sealed a Leeds victory – only for defender Danny Collins to level at the end.

Argentinian Becchio headed in from close range after right-back Paul Connolly had nodded a header against the bar.

But Collins replied when he rose to meet Mark Noble’s left-wing corner and plant home a header that extended West Ham’s unbeaten run to eight games with a third straight 1-1 draw.

The Hammers will be happy with that. They rarely get much change out of Leeds, who are now undefeated in the last nine meetings between the clubs.

Leeds boss Neil Warnock and West Ham counterpart Sam Allardyce lift the profile of English football’s second tier. However, for all their experience, they could do little to raise the standard here in a fixture that, on the face of it, was Premier League in everything but name.

ì
We should’ve had four wins out of five since I’ve been here, so it’s frustrating
î

Leeds boss Neil Warnock

Warnock was, predictably, unhappy with referee Peter Walton.

“I’m disappointed,” he rapped. “When you watch Carlton Cole at the corner for their goal, blatantly pushing over Darren O’Dea, the referee has to see that.

“If he can see Becchio’s push in the first half, when he has four bodies in the way, he has to see Cole’s.

“We should have had four wins out of five since I’ve been here, so it’s frustrating. I don’t think I’ve ever been disappointed like I am – but I must have been.’’

West Ham now trail second-placed Reading by three points, but Allardyce added: “This result isn’t a slip-up.



“It’s a slip-up drawing at home to Palace and Doncaster. I thought we deserved the point. We came back brilliantly in the end. It still boils down to us – it’s 90 points-plus for promotion.’’

Ravel Morrison’s West Ham career looked like it had begun to unravel before he had kicked a ball.

The midfielder, 19, moved from Manchester United in a January deal worth around £1m, but was last month fined £7,000 after admitting an FA charge over a homophobic comment on Twitter.

Despite a double strike for the reserves this week, and being tipped to start yesterday, Morrison had to wait until the closing minutes for his debut as a substitute. But within a minute of coming on, Becchio struck.

Leeds midfielder Adam Clayton was close to breaking the deadlock on 40 minutes, pulling his finish wide.

Robert Snodgrass then turned the ball in from Connolly’s throw-in, but Becchio was penalised for pushing and the crowd’s celebrations were cut short.

Allardyce brought on Carlton Cole in place of Nicky Maynard, and the England striker made a swift impact, heading over Noble’s free-kick.

But Rob Green had to be at his best on 70 minutes to keep out Connolly’s header.







the guardian




Image#
Leeds's Robert Snodgrass is dejected after his goal is disallowed against West Ham.






Leeds denied victory in last minute by West Ham's Danny Collins



Leeds United 1

Becchio 83

West Ham United 1

Collins 90+0



leeds west ham championship
Leeds's Robert Snodgrass is dejected after his goal is disallowed against West Ham. Photograph: John Clifton/Action Images

Loan defender Danny Collins scored a vital last-minute equaliser to earn West Ham what could prove to be a vital point at Leeds , as they extended their unbeaten run to eight games.

When Luciano Becchio nodded Leeds ahead with seven minutes to go, the ever-changing Championship promotion picture was not looking too favourable for the Hammers, with top two rivals Southampton and Reading both winning.

But, right on cue, Collins rose the highest to head in a Mark Noble corner and peg Leeds back in an act of damage limitation for Sam Allardyce's men, who are now five points off the lead and three points shy of second.

It was just the second goal Leeds have conceded under new manager Neil Warnock and perhaps one of their most costly of the season. Since the veteran replaced Simon Grayson a month ago, a renewed play-off push had seemed a possibility. A win was needed, though, and until Collins struck, it seemed they had got it.

Warnock had succeeded in his wish to see Elland Road sold out for the game, but those inside had little to cheer about in a chanceless opening 10 minutes. Things livened up after that, with Leeds defender Tom Lees' scuffed effort scraping just wide and Robert Snodgrass jinking his way into a shooting position, only to be crowded out.

West Ham's players were then angered by Paul Connolly's tackle on Kevin Nolan –deemed legal by referee Peter Walton –but had more to be concerned about moments later when Nicky Maynard missed the game's first genuine chance.

The striker nipped in ahead of Darren O'Dea to find himself through on Andy Lonergan's goal with 22 minutes gone, but his first touch was heavy and the goalkeeper was able to get out and smother the ball at his feet.

More clever play from Snodgrass then saw him create an angle to set Ross McCormack free but Matt Taylor nicked possession from him, before Snodgrass flashed a free-kick from the corner of the box just wide of the post.

Maynard's chance remained the best going into the break, though, but both sides had cause for complaint when the whistle was blown, with West Ham claiming a handball in the box against Michael Brown and Leeds confused as to why Snodgrass' touch beyond Robert Green was ruled out for apparent pushing by Becchio.

The Hammers had to replace James Tomkins, so effective in the sweeper position, at half-time, and his replacement, Gary O'Neil, skimmed an effort just wide within 60 seconds of his introduction.

With Maynard isolated and getting little change out of Lees and O'Dea, Allardyce opted to replace him with the more physical Carlton Cole and the former England striker nearly made an immediate impact, putting a ball across the six yard box that evaded everyone.

A couple of thundering tackles from loan defender Paul Robinson then helped whip up the home crowd, but it was West Ham who continued to probe with greater intent – Abdoulaye Faye nodding wide from a corner and Lonergan denying O'Neil after Jack Collison's shot flew loose.

Cole then arched a header over the bar from a Noble free-kick, before Green was forced to make his first save in the 70th minute when he showed terrific reactions to turn away a Connolly header.

Connolly rarely ventures into opposition territory but, when he did again with 83 minutes on the clock, it created the opening goal.

Snodgrass' cross got to the back post, Connolly headed against the bar and the ball fell to Becchio who did the rest.

The lead would only last seven minutes for the home side, though, as West Ham secured a deserved point when Collins connected with Noble's well-taken corner.






the telegraph




West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce defiant despite dropped points away to Leeds United at Elland Road
Sam Allardyce, the West Ham manager, insisted that his side’s 1-1 draw at Leeds was not a slip-up.



With leaders Southampton and Reading both winning, West Ham are three points off the automatic promotion places.

“It’s not a slip-up for me,” said Allardyce after West Ham’s Danny Collins cancelled out Luciano Becchio’s goal for Leeds.

“It’s a slip-up in the home games against Palace, Watford and Doncaster. That’s been the crux of our slip-up. We are eight undefeated, but there have been too many draws.

“When Leeds scored we were in our best spell of attacking. It was unfortunate that we slipped up, but we came back, got the draw and have to accept that it’s a good point.”







sky sports



Image




Big Sam takes positives


West Ham manager Sam Allardyce insists Saturday's 1-1 draw at Leeds was not a 'slip-up' in the race for Championship promotion.

With the top two of Southampton and Reading both winning, the ever-changing promotion picture was not looking kind for the Hammers when Luciano Becchio gave in-form Leeds an 83rd-minute advantage.

But with just seconds remaining on the clock, loan defender Danny Collins nodded in a Mark Noble corner to earn West Ham a damage-limiting point that extended their unbeaten run to eight games.
No slip-up

Five of those games have been draws, though, with United's home form particularly questionable and, with that in mind, Allardyce was not too disappointed to escape with another one-pointer on the road.

"It's not a slip-up for me," he said.

"It's a slip-up in the home games against Palace, Watford and Doncaster. That's been the crux of our slip-up. We are eight undefeated, but there have been too many draws.

"Today, when Leeds scored we were in our best spell of attacking. It was unfortunate that we slipped up, but we came back, got the draw and have to accept that it's a good point."

The Upton Park side are now five points behind leaders Southampton and three shy of second-placed Reading, but automatic promotion is still very much an option, according to Allardyce.

"We're all a little bit edgy because of what we've allowed to happen, but we're confident we can take the final step and start winning more games than we draw," he added.

"It boils down to us knowing the sort of total we need, and that's 90-plus to get automatic (promotion)."

Collins' goal was just the second Leeds have conceded in Neil Warnock's five games in charge, but it could perhaps be one of their most costly of the season.

A win would have put them right in the thick of the play-off picture and, although they remain peripheral contenders, with a five-point deficit to claw back over nine games, their odds are long.

Warnock, though, was more concerned about the way in which his side conceded, believing there to be a foul in the build-up.

"I can't ask any more, they've given me everything," he said.

"I said to the referee: 'When you watch Carlton Cole blatantly push Darren O'Dea over, you've got to see that'. O'Dea was going to head the ball and then you're left with Collins against Paul Robinson and Robert Snodgrass.
Foul

"He said he was concentrating on the line, but he's got to see that. He's headed the ball from where the foul was.

"But West Ham wouldn't have conceded a goal like that. They would have grabbed each other by the shirt and made sure they didn't.

"Since I've been here we should have won four out of five. We dominated Southampton and should have won today. We've dominated two of the best sides in the league and got one point.

"You've got to win games like that, I can't remember ever being this disappointed. I probably have, but I can't remember."






sporting life






Image





ALLARDYCE TAKES POSITIVE FROM DRAW


Sam Allardyce was reluctant to view his West Ham side's 1-1 draw at Leeds as two points dropped.

With the npower Championship's top two of Southampton and Reading both winning today, the ever-changing promotion picture was not looking kind for the Hammers when Luciano Becchio gave in-form Leeds an 83rd-minute advantage.

But with just seconds remaining on the clock, loan defender Danny Collins nodded in a Mark Noble corner to earn West Ham a damage-limiting point that extended their unbeaten run to eight games.

Five of those games have been draws, though, with United's home form particularly questionable and, with that in mind, Allardyce was not too disappointed to escape with another one-pointer on the road today.

"It's not a slip-up for me," he said.

"It's a slip-up in the home games against Palace, Watford and Doncaster. That's been the crux of our slip-up. We are eight undefeated, but there have been too many draws.

"Today, when Leeds scored we were in our best spell of attacking. It was unfortunate that we slipped up, but we came back, got the draw and have to accept that it's a good point."

The Upton Park side are now five points behind leaders Southampton and three shy of second-placed Reading, but automatic promotion is still very much an option, according to Allardyce.

"We're all a little bit edgy because of what we've allowed to happen, but we're confident we can take the final step and start winning more games than we draw," he added.

"It boils down to us knowing the sort of total we need, and that's 90-plus to get automatic (promotion)."

Collins' goal was just the second Leeds have conceded in Neil Warnock's five games in charge, but it could perhaps be one of their most costly of the season.

A win today would have put them right in the thick of the play-off picture and, although they remain peripheral contenders, with a five-point deficit to claw back over nine games, their odds are long.

Warnock, though, was more concerned about the way in which his side conceded, believing their to be a foul in the build-up.

"I can't ask any more, they've given me everything," he said.

"I said to the referee: 'When you watch Carlton Cole blatantly push Darren O'Dea over, you've got to see that'. O'Dea was going to head the ball and then you're left with Collins against Paul Robinson and Robert Snodgrass.

"He said he was concentrating on the line, but he's got to see that. He's headed the ball from where the foul was.

"But West Ham wouldn't have conceded a goal like that. They would have grabbed each other by the shirt and made sure they didn't.

"Since I've been here we should have won four out of five. We dominated Southampton and should have won today. We've dominated two of the best sides in the league and got one point.

"You've got to win games like that, I can't remember ever being this disappointed. I probably have, but I can't remember."







yorkshire evening post






Match report: Leeds United v West Ham United



Loan defender Danny Collins scored a last-minute equaliser to earn West Ham a point against Leeds United.

When Luciano Becchio nodded the Whites ahead with seven minutes to go, the ever-changing npower Championship promotion picture was not looking too favourable for the Hammers, with top two rivals Southampton and Reading both winning.

But, right on cue, Collins rose the highest to head in a Mark Noble corner and peg Leeds back in an act of damage limitation for Sam Allardyce’s men, who are now five points off the lead and three points shy of second.

It was just the second goal Leeds have conceded under new manager Neil Warnock and perhaps one of their most costly of the season.

Since the veteran replaced Simon Grayson a month ago, a renewed play-off push had seemed a possibility.

A win was needed today, though, and until Collins struck, it seemed they had got it.

Warnock had succeeded in his wish to see Elland Road sold out for the game, but those inside had little to cheer about in a chanceless opening 10 minutes.

Things livened up after that, with Leeds defender Tom Lees’ scuffed effort scraping just wide and Robert Snodgrass jinking his way into a shooting position, only to be crowded out.

West Ham’s players were then angered by Paul Connolly’s tackle on Kevin Nolan - deemed legal by referee Peter Walton - but had more to be concerned about moments later when Nicky Maynard missed the game’s first genuine chance.

The striker nipped in ahead of Darren O’Dea to find himself through on Andy Lonergan’s goal with 22 minutes gone, but his first touch was heavy and the goalkeeper was able to get out and smother the ball at his feet.

More clever play from Snodgrass then saw him create an angle to set Ross McCormack free but Matt Taylor nicked possession from him, before Snodgrass flashed a free-kick from the corner of the box just wide of the post.

Maynard’s chance remained the best going into the break, though, but both sides had cause for complaint when the whistle was blown, with West Ham claiming a handball in the box against Michael Brown and Leeds confused as to why Snodgrass’ touch beyond Robert Green was ruled out for apparent pushing by Becchio.

The Hammers had to replace James Tomkins, so effective in the sweeper position, at half-time, and his replacement, Gary O’Neil, skimmed an effort just wide within 60 seconds of his introduction.

With Maynard isolated and getting little change out of Lees and O’Dea, Allardyce opted to replace him with the more physical Carlton Cole and the former England striker nearly made an immediate impact, putting a ball across the six yard box that evaded everyone.

A couple of thundering tackles from loan defender Paul Robinson then helped whip up the home crowd, but it was West Ham who continued to probe with greater intent - Abdoulaye Faye nodding wide from a corner and Lonergan denying O’Neil after Jack Collison’s shot flew loose.

Cole then arched a header over the bar from a Noble free-kick, before Green was forced to make his first save in the 70th minute when he showed terrific reactions to turn away a Connolly header.

Connolly rarely ventures into opposition territory but, when he did again with 83 minutes on the clock, it created the opening goal.

Snodgrass’ cross got to the back post, Connolly headed against the bar and the ball fell to Becchio who did the rest.

The lead would only last seven minutes for the home side, though, as West Ham secured a deserved point when Collins connected with Noble’s well-taken corner.








official site



danny delighted with debut




Image





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Argentina striker Lionel Messi has ruled out ever moving to the Premier League by revealing he wants to stay with Barcelona for the rest of his career.

Sunday Mirror

Manchester United are ready to pay £25m for Brazilian striker Leandro Damiao. The 22-year-old has been the subject of interest from Tottenham.

Metro

Italian legend Alessandro del Piero looks set to leave Juventus when his contract expires this summer, with Arsenal and QPR reportedly interested. The 37-year-old has spent 20 years at Juve scoring more than 200 goals in 700 appearances.
Footie-online.co.uk

Arsenal have added Birmingham's 19-year-old goalkeeper Jack Butland to their wanted list. Butland is currently on loan at League Two side Cheltenham.

Sunday Mirror

Germany striker Lukas Podolski has given a further indication that he is far from certain to sign for Arsenal in the summer. The 26-year-old Cologne forward has hinted he would be interested in a move to Lazio.

Metro


Manchester United keeper David de Gea has said manager Sir Alex Ferguson has told the players they must win their 10 remaining games this season if they want to win the Premier League title.







Manager Ally McCoist fears being sacked when a new owner takes over at Rangers. (Various)

Former Hearts and Kilmarnock boss Jim Jefferies is the man Dunfermline will turn to after sacking Jim McIntyre. (Sun)

However, former Pars boss Jimmy Calderwood could be tempted to make a short-term return to East End Park. (Daily Record)

The third bidder for Rangers is Chicago-based Club 9 Sports. (Various)

Club 9 Sports have previously failed with bids to invest in Sheffield Wednesday and Tranmere Rovers. (Sun)

St Johnstone forward Marcus Haber will miss his club's three matches before the SPL split since he is on international duty with Canada's U23s.

England U21 defender Steven Caulker admits he is tempted by a switch of allegiance to Scotland. (Sun)



Andy Robinson is calling on his Scotland players to show a "ruthless streak" in today's Six Nations Wooden Spoon decider with Italy. (Various)








BURTON SACK PAUL PESCHISOLIDO
Burton Albion have sacked manager Paul Peschisolido after the 4-1 home defeat to Torquay.

DALGLISH BACKS GERRARD TO GO ON
Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish has backed Steven Gerrard to shine for many years to come.

GREGG WYLDE JOINS BOLTON
Former Rangers winger Gregg Wylde has joined Bolton on a three-year contract.

JIM McINTYRE SACKED BY DUNFERMLINE
Dunfermline have confirmed that manager Jim McIntyre has been sacked.

DI MATTEO RELAXED ABOUT PLAYER POWER
Roberto Di Matteo has no problem with John Terry or any other Chelsea player giving orders.

HODGSON HOPES TO SECURE OLSSON FUTURE
Roy Hodgson wants to resolve Jonas Olsson's West Brom future sooner rather than later.

RODGERS EYEING SUMMER SIGNINGS
Brendan Rodgers has revealed Swansea want to bring in "three or four" new signings in the summer.

FREI AT HOME WITH COTTAGERS
Fulham teenager Kerim Frei has penned an extended deal that will keep him at the club until 2015.

WARNOCK WANTS CONTRACT TALKS
Neil Warnock wants to find out which players will commit to Leeds before the end of the season.

CARR DRIVING TOON RESURGENCE
Peter Beardsley says chief scout Graham Carr is "one of the most important people" at Newcastle.

HAMMERS LAND HENDERSON ON LOAN
West Ham have completed the loan signing of goalkeeper Stephen Henderson from Portsmouth.

THORNE IN PORTSMOUTH'S SIDE
Portsmouth have extended George Thorne's loan deal from West Brom for an additional month.

HALL JOINS DONS ON LOAN
West Ham striker Robert Hall has completed a loan move to MK Dons until the end of the season.

LEE MAIR EXTENDS CONTRACT
St Mirren defender Lee Mair has extended his contract at the club by two years.

BANTAMS BRING IN DAGNALL
Bradford have secured the loan signing of Barnsley's Chris Dagnall until the end of the season.

SEARS STAYS WITH U'S
West Ham striker Freddie Sears has extended his loan spell at Colchester until the end of the season.

MOUSSA MAKES LOAN SWITCH
Leicester midfielder Franck Moussa has joined Chesterfield on loan until the end of the season.

DIDIER DROGBA KEEN TO STAY AT CHELSEA
Didier Drogba has repeated his desire to stay at Chelsea for "as long as possible".

EDDIE NEWTON WANTS TO STAY
Eddie Newton says it would be impossible to turn down an offer to remain on the Chelsea coaching staff.

WOLVES: NO TRUTH IN MEGSON TALKS
Wolves say there is "no truth" in reports Gary Megson is being lined up by the club.

GUTHRIE SET FOR SUMMER TALKS
Danny Guthrie won't hold talks on a contract extension at Newcastle until the end of the season.

BRUCE: WOLVES JOB TOUGH FOR CONNOR
Steve Bruce believes Terry Connor will have his work cut out trying to keep Wolves safe.

OLIC AGENT DENIES WOLFSBURG DEAL
The agent of Bayern Munich's Ivica Olic has denied that the striker has agreed to join Wolfsburg.

MASCHERANO HOPING GUARDIOLA STAYS
Javier Mascherano insists Barcelona's players are not ready to let Pep Guardiola leave.

MULLINS JOINS READING ON LOAN
Reading have signed Hayden Mullins on loan for the remainder of the season from Portsmouth.

EDWARDS AGREES IPSWICH DEAL
Carlos Edwards has agreed a new contract to stay at Ipswich next season.

ARNASON HOPES FOR ABERDEEN DEAL
Aberdeen midfielder Kari Arnason insists he has yet to rule out signing a new contract at Pittodrie.

BERBATOV SET FOR MAN UNITED EXIT
Sir Alex Ferguson has confirmed Dimitar Berbatov is set to leave Man Utd in the summer.

REDKNAPP - OLDER IS WISER FOR ENGLAND
Harry Redknapp has claimed being England manager is "an older man's job".

ROSICKY - MONEY'S NOT EVERYTHING
Tomas Rosicky says he rejected mega-money offers from China and Russia to stay at Arsenal.

TERRY CONNOR: I WON'T QUIT
Wolves manager Terry Connor has dismissed reports that he is preparing to resign.

HILL-WOOD: VAN PERSIE IS HAPPY
Arsenal chairman Peter Hill-Wood believes Robin van Persie is settled at the club.

CANARIES DETERMINED TO KEEP LAMBERT
Norwich have vowed to do everything possible to keep Paul Lambert at the club.

NAPOLI WANT TO KEEP DUO
Napoli say it would take "crazy" money to buy Edinson Cavani or Ezequiel Lavezzi.

ABRAMOVICH RECORD CRITICISED BY LMA
Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich has come under attack from the head of the LMA.

CONNOR: JOHNSON IS STAYING
Terry Connor says captain Roger Johnson is not going to leave the club anytime soon.

LITTLE CONSIDERED QUITTING GERS
Andrew Little admits he thought about leaving Rangers amid the financial cutbacks.

PALACE WARN OFF ZAHA SUITORS
Crystal Palace boss Dougie Freedman has warned off clubs plotting a summer move for Wilfried Zaha.

POYET HOPES TO KEEP ASSULIN
Gus Poyet believes Brighton could keep Gai Assulin for the rest of the season.

MORATTI BACKS CLAUDIO RANIERI
Inter Milan president Massimo Moratti has handed a vote of confidence to Claudio Ranieri.

COLLINS SET FOR TYKES SWITCH
Barnsley are set to sign Port Vale's Lee Collins on loan with a view to a permanent deal.

SAM MOVES TO MAGPIES
Leeds winger Lloyd Sam has joined Notts County on loan until the end of the season.

McDERMOTT COY OVER MULLINS DEAL
Brian McDermott says "watch this space" after Hayden Mullins was linked with a move to Reading.

NEW DEAL FOR DIGBY
Barnsley teenager Paul Digby has been rewarded with a new two-year deal.

PLAYER POWER CLAIMS 'NONSENSE' - TERRY
John Terry has rubbished claims that Chelsea's senior players effectively run the club.

CAVANI SHRUGS OFF SPECULATION
Edinson Cavani says he's only focused on Napoli's clash with Chelsea rather than his future.

MAN UNITED 'EXCITE' EDEN HAZARD
Eden Hazard has hinted at a move to Man United after lavishing praise on Sir Alex Ferguson.

SWIFT CHANGES COST AVB - MATA
Juan Mata says Andre Villas-Boas may have been sacked for trying to change Chelsea too quickly.

VERTONGHEN OPEN TO ARSENAL MOVE
Ajax defender Jan Vertonghen has revealed he is keen on a move to Arsenal.

MOURINHO DOES NOT FEAR THE AXE
Jose Mourinho does not fear he'll be sacked by Real Madrid if they get knocked out of Europe.

MULLINS SET FOR READING SWITCH
Hayden Mullins looks set to leave crisis-club Portsmouth and join Reading.

McLEISH A POGREBNYAK FAN
Aston Villa boss Alex McLeish is reportedly a planning a swoop for Fulham's Pavel Pogrebnyak.

RANGERS' GOIAN SNUBS CHINA OFFER
Rangers defender Dorin Goian has reportedly turned down a big-money move to China.

RANIERI BULLISH ON INTER MILAN FUTURE
Claudio Ranieri insists his future at Inter Milan does not rest on Tuesday night's clash with Marseille.

BROCCHI EYES LAZIO DEAL
Cristian Brocchi is keen to talk over a new one-year contract at Lazio, according to his agent.

ROMA DISMISS SWAP TALK
Roma have played down speculation suggesting they want to swap Simon Kjaer for Matias Silvestre.

BRETT HOLMAN AGREES VILLA SWITCH
Brett Holman has agreed to join Aston Villa at the end of his contract with AZ Alkmaar this summer.

REDKNAPP UNSURE OVER ENGLAND ROLE
Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp says he is "not sure" whether he wants to take the England job.

ROSICKY SIGNS NEW GUNNERS DEAL
Arsenal midfielder Tomas Rosicky has signed a new contract with the Gunners.

REDKNAPP INTERESTED IN HAZARD
Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp has confirmed he would like to sign Eden Hazard.








FABRICE MUAMBA FACES CRUCIAL 24 HOURS
Bolton midfielder Fabrice Muamba remains critically ill in intensive care this morning.

VALLECANO'S STOCK RISES
Rayo Vallecano continued their rise up the standings with a 3-0 home victory over Real Betis.

GOMIS HAUNTS FORMER CLUB
Bafetimbi Gomis came off the bench to give Lyon a 1-0 win at St Etienne.

JALLET EARNS POINT FOR PSG
A review of the weekend's action so far in France's Ligue 1.

FIVE-STAR JUVE KEEP PRESSURE ON
Juventus returned to within four points of leaders AC Milan thanks to a 5-0 win at 10-man Fiorentina.

NIJMEGEN BOOST SURVIVAL BID
NEC Nijmegen pulled further clear of relegation danger after a 2-0 victory at struggling VVV-Venlo.

DE GRAAFSCHAP SURVIVAL HOPES FADE
Krisztian Nemeth scored the only goal to give RKC Waalwijk a 1-0 win over De Graafschap.

LATE SHOW FROM EXCELSIOR
Struggling Excelsior earned a dramatic late 2-1 win over Roda JC.

BARCA KEEP PRESSURE ON REAL
Lionel Messi continued his incredible scoring form as Barcelona beat Sevilla 2-0.

MONTPELLIER SLIP FURTHER BEHIND
Montpellier slipped further behind PSG in the title race after going down to 1-0 defeat at Nancy.

DIJON CUT THE MUSTARD
Marseille's poor run in Ligue 1 continued as Dijon won 2-1 at the Stade Velodrome.

PSG GRAB A POINT AT THE LAST
Paris St Germain needed a last-minute equaliser to snatch a 2-2 draw at struggling Caen.

LORIENT BACK ON WINNING TRAIL
Lorient came from behind to register their first Ligue 1 win since November with a 2-1 victory over Brest.

AJACCIO GRAB LATE EQUALISER
Yoann Poulard scored a dramatic late equaliser to earn Ajaccio a 1-1 draw at Bordeaux.

EVIAN WIN AT AUXERRE
Thomas Kahlenberg and Kevin Berigaud scored the goals as Evian won 2-0 at Auxerre.

OWN GOAL HANDS GETAFE THE POINTS
Inigo Martinez's own goal handed Getafe a 1-0 victory over Real Sociedad.

APPLETON BEMOANS MISSED CHANCES
Post-match reaction to the 0-0 draw between Portsmouth and Bristol City.

ROBBEN HAT-TRICK IN BAYERN ROUT
Arjen Robben scored a hat-trick as Bayern Munich hammered Hertha Berlin 6-0.

GILLS SHOOT DOWN ROBINS
Gillingham earned a fifth win in six matches to strengthen their hold on a play-off berth with a 3-0 win at Cheltenham.

McDERMOTT FOCUS ON READING DISPLAY
Post-match reaction to Reading's 4-0 victory over Barnsley.







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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by RyanWHUFC »

Cheers CH :thup:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Kent-Hammer15 »

Thanks CH. Thoughts with Fabrice
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by PrawnSandwich »

Always appreciated CH.
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Kitt the car »

Thank you, CH
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by smuts »

Thanks as always CH.....all the best too for Muamba. :thup:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by cockney hammer »


View from the opposition (The Scratching Shed)

33,000 As Leeds Match West Ham

Neil Warnock summed up the mood after Leeds took away a 1-1 draw against West Ham in front of 33,366 yesterday tea-time:

“I can’t ask any more, they’ve given me everything. […] We’ve dominated two of the best sides in the league and got one point.”

That sums up the mood. We’ve come away without the results we needed for a very improbable playoff-push, but we’ve been easily good enough to match the best teams in the division this year. And you’d have been confident if we had got a play-off spot!

There was a plethora of positives to take away from the match. Leeds began the sharper side yet again, winning the first corner of the match within the first five minutes. The pressure told as Rob Green mis-kicked a clearance for a throw, and West Ham’s fullback mis-passed inside the box and almost played Ross McCormack in.

Both sides played relatively defensively and had one eye on organizing a defence even as they attacked. What ensued was a scrappy, wholehearted battle with both teams effectively cancelling each other out.

And The Whites made mistakes, too. Lonergan mis-hit a clearance at the head of Maynard, a West Ham pass would have been given off-side, but ballooned up off a defender, and would have been collected by a West Ham player wide open had Leeds not been quick out of the traps to get to the ball first – while West Ham were left flat-footed and indecisive. And Maynard used his agility to play a one-two, turning past Tom Lees and out-barged Paul Robinson to be through on goal, only for Lonergan to scuttle out, make himself big, and wrap his body around the ball.

That’s all a part of football and to say the defence was poor would be ridiculous. Tom Lees had another solid game, O’Dea did his job well, Connolly defended and linked up going forward very well, and Paul Robinson put another fantastic shift in for Leeds. It was Paul Robinson who really fired the fans up in the second half.

The referee, Peter Walton, showed he was far from a home-banker early on when Adam Clayton had his ankles clipped by Kevin Nolan, got straight up and made a decent tackle, and got penalised. Nolan continued to put the boot in every bit as much as you’d expect from Michael Brown, and the referee seemed never to see it as Nolan inexplicably escaped the match without even a card, though he had a bit of banter with Neil Warnock on the touchline…

It was to the background of this ostensibly biased referee that Paul Robinson turned Elland Road’s volume up to the highest I remember it since May 2010. Robinson single-handedly built an attack, tackling one to keep the attack going, and then Noble made a long slide for the ball which was matched by Robinson. Robinson tackled well and kept the ball and was promptly yellow carded. You couldn’t believe it. Clearly anything resembling an athlete taking part in a sport is too much for football’s modern bureaucrats! Moments later, after chants of “the refs a w-….”, he showed the ref what he thought with a tough and clean tackle on the edge of Leeds’ box, before a crunching (and clean) tackle to put the ball out of touch. The crowd loved it, while an FL official had a nose-bleed and began hyperventilating. Okay… I made that bit up. But 30,000 Leeds fans suddenly found their voice.

The noise didn’t have the desired effect, but unlike in previous matches for many a year, this wasn’t a case of the players freezing. Becchio’s belief couldn’t be questioned when he blazed an ambitious volley over from a way back, and when West Ham redoubled their efforts and found themselves with a corner, the Argentinian looked suspiciously like Diego Maradona in the Leeds box, (though he didn’t get to the ball)… At the other end, Luci! At the other end!

And later in the second half Leeds got one of the best chances of the match. Aidy White was great again today. He looked a constant danger when he got the ball, with every run gaining a free-kick, a throw-in, or resulting in a cross. And when he gained another free-kick, Ross McCormack floated the ball in from the left, to the far post. Paul Connolly’s head met it and Rob Green pulled off a fantastic save for West Ham – showing perhaps why he’s a capped England keeper.

After 80 minutes, though, it looked like the match would play out for a scrappy 0-0. Carlton Cole had come on after about 60 minutes and looked twice the threat of Maynard. Cole had bullied Tom Lees a little bit in August from set-pieces (with the lad playing right-back that day); that wasn’t the case today, but Cole still carved out a couple of chances for West Ham. Leeds had matched West Ham on every part of the pitch, though, and neither side had found many chances. Although I felt the game had drifted very slightly from us in the second half, it was Leeds who looked to get the winner.

Jack Collison came off with ten minutes left. The lad had been very good in West Ham’s midfield, and his replacement – Scum Academy product Ravel Morisson – had an immediate effect. His first action was to give away a throw in from an attacking play. In the resulting run Webber (on for White) won Leeds a corner. The corner was taken by Snodgrass from the left, and was floated into the near post. It was cleared but only as far as Becchio, who passed it back to Snodgrass. The cross found Paul Connolly’s head and Connolly found the crossbar. It was Luciano Becchio who scored a real poacher’s goal as he threw himself into the path of the ball, and nodded it into an empty net. Elland Road erupted.

With a victory against West Ham, who could possibly beat us? But there were still five minutes to survive.

Deafening chants of Marching On Together cheered the lads on as they got their foot in to break up plays. West Ham had made a few mistakes today, and it was a mistake that ultimately gifted them a goal. George McCartney got in a cross; like most of West Ham’s final passes today it was mis-hit, yet Lonergan was forced to tip it out for a corner. Leeds had struggled with West Ham’s corners last summer, and yet again West Ham found a relatively easy header to equalize.

And after a couple of minutes that was it. The fans a little deflated, but a great performance in which our supposedly mid-table team once again equalled, and at times bettered, a top Championship club – this one on Premiership wages.

The defence did well as I said. But it was a thorough team effort. At one point Robert Snodgrass slid in to tackle a West Ham forward, and Ross McCormack shepherded it out for a Leeds goal kick. That summed the team up for me. Becchio constantly came back and battled for possession along with Adam Clayton who was like a dynamo in midfield showing not only his good attacking sense but getting stuck in as well. I’ve felt him bypassed sometimes when Leeds haven’t had the time on the ball to play it, but today he showed an excellent all-round performance and looks to be a fantastic centre-mid in the making. Michael Brown did his job well again, and Aidy White was always a threat when he had the ball, with McCormack and Snodgrass as good as ever.

And this will be the headache facing Neil Warnock. He wants to improve the team, but is there a single player we could drop?

On the Leeds side you could have a few man of the matches. Lonergan pulled off a great save in the first half and did his job well when called upon. Paul Robinson got stuck in and galvanized the fans. Paul Connolly passed well, headed well going forward, and was solid at the back. Aidy White played well when he had it. Adam Clayton looked a proper little midfield general, Snodgrass’ trademark mazey runs were on display again, and McCormack got stuck in well.

But my man of the match has to be Luciano Becchio – a lad I’ve said I didn’t think could play in the Premiership last year. With the change of style under Neil Warnock, he’s looking absolutely excellent. He got stuck in in the midfield, he is benefitting from more realistic passing to him, and held the ball up well, and got the goal again. The lad has looked to be giving it his all since returning from injury and my highlight of the match was during a conflagration and more crowd cries of “the ref’s a w-….” when Becchio got properly stuck in and channelled his inner “This is Sparta!”

In my personal opinion, that’s probably the end of our playoff hopes with a couple of results not going our way and two points dropped. But it was a great performance in front of a Leeds crowd of old. If only Neil Warnock had been here from the start of the season!
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by cockney hammer »

THE SUN SUNDAY

Football broke down in tears as Fabrice Muamba collapsed on the pitch at White Hart Lane.

Frank Lampard says Andre Villas-Boas was too focused on the future at Chelsea and took his eyes off the present.

Sergio Aguero has urged Manchester City boss Roberto Mancini to reunite him with Argentine compatriot Carlos Tevez this week.

Joe Hart is ready to take on the England captaincy.

Tottenham defender Steven Caulker may switch his international allegiance to Scotland.

Roberto Di Matteo will not demand to be handed the Chelsea job on a permanent basis.

Arsenal are considering a summer bid for young Birmingham keeper Jack Butland.

Swansea will offer Scott Sinclair a new deal to keep the Premier League's big spenders at bay.

Liverpool are stepping up their interest in Athletic Bilbao winger Iker Muniain and defender Javi Martinez.

Newcastle are preparing a summer raid for PSV left-back Erik Pieters.

SUNDAY MIRROR

Bolton star Fabrice Muamba is fighting for his life after collapsing at White Hart Lane.

Louis van Gaal has emerged as a leading contender to take over as Chelsea boss.

Roberto Mancini has been told his job is safe even if Manchester City lose out to Manchester United in the title race.

Bayern Munich fear Chelsea and Manchester United will attempt to lure Arjen Robben back to the Premier League this summer.

Belgium defender Jan Vertonghen has revealed that Arsenal top the list of clubs he would consider joining when he leaves Ajax this summer.

Arsene Wenger has added Birmingham's brilliant goalkeeper Jack Butland to his wanted list.

John Terry is eyeing a cup double at rejuvenated Chelsea.

James Milner believes Carlos Tevez can become Man City's title talisman.

THE PEOPLE

Football was stunned into silence as Bolton midfielder Fabrice Muamba fought for his life in a London hospital.

Celtic are prepared to play in League One to make their dream of playing in English football a reality.

John Terry insists Chelsea's senior players wanted Andre Villas-Boas to stay.

Steve Bruce will reject any approach from relegation-threatened Wolves.

Bobby Zamora is eyeing a summer move away from QPR - just six weeks after joining the Premier League strugglers.

Junior Hoilett is ready to snub Spurs and Newcastle for a move to Germany.

Swansea are in contract talks with star winger Scott Sinclair.

Fulham are ready to snatch Kyle Naughton from under Norwich's noses this summer.

Chelsea are tying up a deal for Colombian superkid Joao Rodriguez.

Aston Villa are plotting a summer move for 6ft 5in Heerenveen striker Bas Dost.

THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

Tottenham's FA Cup tie with Bolton was called off after Fabrice Muamba collapsed.

Joleon Lescott says Manchester City's players are delighted to see Carlos Tevez back in their ranks.

John Terry says Andre Villas-Boas will deserve some of the credit if Chelsea lift a trophy this season.

Paul Gascoigne has urged Harry Redknapp not to take the England job.

SUNDAY EXPRESS

Fabrice Muamba was in hospital last night after his heart stopped beating during Bolton's FA Cup clash at Tottenham.

Rodney Marsh says Manchester City should not hand Carlos Tevez a recall against Chelsea.

Roy Hodgson's international experience could yet earn him the England job.

SUNDAY MAIL

Lee McCulloch has told of the turmoil that has engulfed Rangers during the darkest period in the club's history.

Neil Lennon insists Celtic could cope with life in the English Premier League
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

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Bobby Zamora wants to leave QPR - just six weeks after signing for the club. The former Fulham striker is regretting his switch and would welcome a potential move back to West Ham if they get promoted. (The People)
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by cockney hammer »

Bayern fear Robben could be bound for Manchester

Wenger adds Brum keeper to growing shopping list

Doubts surround Rooney while United eye up Eriksen

EXCLUSIVE: Vertonghen admits Arsenal are top of his list

Arsenal target Podolski talks up Lazio move

Messi: I'll NEVER leave Barca

Hoilett vows not to let speculation affect his game


Manchester United have joined the race to sign Spurs transfer target Leandro Damiao. The Red Devils are thought to be preparing a £25m bid for the 22-year-old Internacional striker. (Gazzetta dello Sport)

Liverpool are stepping up their interest in Athletic Bilbao pair Iker Muniain and Javi Martinez. (Sun on Sunday)

Bobby Zamora wants to leave QPR - just six weeks after signing for the club. The former Fulham striker is regretting his switch and would welcome a potential move back to West Ham if they get promoted. (The People)

Newcastle are plotting a summer raid on PSV for £5m-rated left back Erik Pieters. (Sun on Sunday)

Fulham want to sign Tottenham full-back Kyle Naughton. The Spurs defender is currently on loan at Norwich. (The People)

Swansea will offer Scott Sinclair a new deal keep the Premier League big spenders at bay. (Sun on Sunday)

Chelsea are tying up a deal for Colombian starlet Joao Rodriguez after flying him in for talks. (The People)

Blackburn star Junior Hoilett is poised to snub Newcastle and Spurs in favour of a move to Germany, with Bayern Munich keen on the Rovers man. (The People)
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Swiss Pauli »

Cheers, CH.
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Claretdave »

Great stuff CH, and thoroughly appropriate to open with a tribute to Fabrice. :crest:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Hammer Matty »

Cheers CH :thup:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by MrMum »

My prayers are with Fabrice and his family at this difficult time.

Thanks, as ever, to top bloke CH.

Colin can take a flying jump, some of his teams tackling was criminal yesterday and in my opinion a red card should have been shown.

Finally, respect for our superb travelling support, by far the best in ANY league. IRONZ!
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by taffhammer »

Thanks CH ,the look on Warnocks face in the first picture of Collins is priceless.
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Muddy »

Cheers CH.
I love that picture with Warnock giving Collin's the evils. :lol:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Canadianhammer »

Thanks CH.
We could use Zammo right now.
:crest:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Hammer Smith »

Thanks CH
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by simon hammer »

Cheers C.H :thup:
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Re: sundays news 18th march includes west ham

Post by Chicken Run Supreme »

Cheers CH, as always.
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