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Game played on 11 Mar 2017

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AFC Bournemouth 3-2 West Ham

Premier League    2016-17Match review
Vitality Stadium   11,369
  SubsGoals  
1Darren Randolph    
8Cheikhou Kouyate    
11José Fonte    
2Winston Reid    
3Aaron Cresswell    
7Sofiane Feghouli    
16Mark Noble   
14Pedro Obiang   
10Manuel Lanzini    
9Andy Carroll    
30Michail Antonio 1  
23Robert SnodgrassSubed #16   
20Andre AyewSubed #71  
22Sam ByramSubed #8   
 PosTable as at 11 Mar 2017PlWHDHLHFHAHWADALAFAAAPts
1Chelsea271201368932211266
2Tottenham Hotspur271220337463201356
3Manchester City2775123131004301656
4Liverpool279313412644242252
5Arsenal269222613634291850
6Manchester United266712010732191249
7Everton289413010446172047
8West Bromwich Albion288242417356122040
9Stoke City286531815347142536
10Southampton265341414437182033
11West Ham United285361524437232533
12Burnley279232212021182831
13Watford275452123337122431
14AFC Bournemouth286352423239163130
15Leicester City277342218031082727
16Swansea City2852721303110153127
17Crystal Palace273191420437212625
18Hull City285451923121173124
19Middlesbrough27346111416781622
20Sunderland2733814262110102419
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Bournemouth’s Joshua King hits hat-trick in thriller with West Ham
Ben Fisher at the Vitality Stadium
Date Published Saturday 11 March 2017 17.18 GMT

The jubilation on the touchline said it all as Eddie Howe was mobbed by Joshua King, who wheeled away after scoring his first Premier League hat-trick to earn Bournemouth a much-needed first win this year. King and Benik Afobe had missed first-half penalties before the Norway striker scored his ninth, 10th and 11th goals of the season in a character-building home win that lifted them six points clear of the relegation zone.

“It is relief from my perspective, pure relief,” Howe said. “We have gone back to basics and worked incredibly hard to try and turn things around. We still need to get to 40 points or whatever the magic total is as quickly as we can. There is no complacency to think we are not involved in a relegation battle.”

Bournemouth were visibly desperate for their first win in 10 matches. West Ham, meanwhile, were eventually punished for a half-baked display, despite seemingly rescuing a point through the substitute Andrè Ayew seven minutes from time. Dimitri Payet had said how he grew bored of West Ham’s approach but this was anything but a tedious affair.

Sofiane Feghouli wrestled with the Bournemouth defender Charlie Daniels as he surged into the box, forcing the referee, Robert Madley, to point to the spot inside eight minutes. Fortunately for Feghouli, his clumsiness was not seized upon, with King striking the penalty wide of Darren Randolph’s left post. Forty-eight seconds later, Michail Antonio would open the scoring.

Feghouli picked out Antonio inside the Bournemouth box before the forward, returning to Slaven Bilic’s starting line-up after serving a one-match ban, swivelled with his back to goal before squeezing his shot low into the corner.

Manuel Lanzini was guilty of handing Bournemouth – and King – a chance to redeem themselves. The Argentinian’s misplaced pass on the edge of the area allowed Dan Gosling to start another attack, rounded off by King, who hooked the ball away from Josè Fonte with his right foot before prodding home with his left. He celebrated with both hands held aloft, appearing to apologise for his penalty miss.

West Ham lost control with Pedro Obiang and Mark Noble booked for cynical fouls. Bilic, too, grew unsporting, kicking the ball towards the advertising hoardings and away from Adam Smith on the touchline.

“The dirty small things, like second balls, they were better at,” Bilic said., after watching his team lose twice in six days. “They are very good at that and we did not match them.”

West Ham were unfortunate, though, to concede another penalty, when Marc Pugh fell theatrically fell inside the area under Fonte’s watch. Afobe, handed the responsibility by King from 12 yards this time, but his tame strike was saved by Randolph. In doing so, Bournemouth became the first team to miss two penalties in the first half of a Premier League match since Aston Villa, against Wimbledon, in 1998. Howe’s head fell to the floor.

The last time Madley was here he refereed a 4-3 win over Liverpool and while this might not have been such a nostalgic occasion, it was still full of drama. Bournemouth ought to have been out of sight though the half-time interval provided West Ham with a little respite.

The second half followed suit, with Bournemouth taking the lead through King after 48 minutes. Fraser whipped in a free-kick, which Afobe helped into the path of the striker to add his second of the game.

Bilic threw on Sam Byram and Ayew in a bid to halt Bournemouth’s rhythm and they did so, combining to steal an equaliser seven minutes from time. But the hosts, just as in that game against Liverpool in December, were not dead yet, with the substitute Jack Wilshere helping King to find a third – a priceless winner – with seconds of normal time to play.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS, LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE
Bournemouth (4-4-2): Boruc 6; A Smith 6.5, Francis 6, Cook 6.5, Daniels 6.5; Fraser 7 (Mousset 85), Gosling 6.5, Arter 5.5, Pugh 6.5; Afobe 6.5 (Wilshere 85), King 8
Unused subs: Gradel, Brad Smith, Allsop, Ibe, Cargill
Bookings: Cook, Gosling, Pugh, Afobe
Goals: King 31, 48, 90
West Ham (4-2-3-1): Randolph 7; Kouyate 5.5 (Byram 78), Fonte 5, Reid 5.5, Cresswell 6; Noble 5.5 (Snodgrass 58, 6), Obiang 7; Feghouli 6 (Ayew 58, 7), Antonio 7, Lanzini 5; Carroll 5.5
Unused subs: Adrian, Collins, Masuaku, Fernandes
Bookings: Noble, Obiang
Goals: Antonio 10, Ayew 83
Man of the Match: Joshua King
Referee: Robert Madley 6.5
Attendance: 11,369
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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