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Game played on 24 May 2015

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Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

Newcastle United 2-0 West Ham

Premier League    2014-15Match review
St James Park   52,094
  SubsGoals  
13Adrian del Castillo    
2Winston Reid    
3Aaron Cresswell    
32Reece Burke    
18Carl Jenkinson    
4Kevin Nolan    
8Cheikhou Kouyate    
11Stewart Downing    
30Alex Song    
31Enner Valencia    
24Carlton Cole    
21Morgan AmalfitanoSubed #31  
5James TomkinsSubed #32   
47Elliot LeeSubed #8   
 PosTable as at 24 May 2015PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
C1Chelsea3815 40369115 3372387
2Manchester City3814 324414104 5392479
3Arsenal3812 524114104 5302275
4Manchester United3814 23411568 5212270
5Tottenham Hotspur3810 36312494 6272964
6Liverpool3810 54302083 8222862
7Southampton3811 44371372 10172060
8Swansea City389 55272273 9192756
9Stoke City3810 36322256 8162354
10Crystal Palace386 310212776 6262448
11Everton387 75272154 10212947
12West Ham United389 46251837 9192947
13West Bromwich Albion387 48242647 8142544
14Leicester City387 57282243 12183341
15Newcastle United387 57262734 12143639
16Sunderland384 87162739 7152638
17Aston Villa385 68182552 12133238
R18Hull City385 59192436 10142735
R19Burnley384 78142135 11143233
R20Queens Park Rangers386 58232421 16194930
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Newcastle United avoid drop as West Ham’s Sam Allardyce is sacked
Daniel Taylor at St James' Park
Published Sunday 24 May 2015 17.10 BST

When it was all over, as Newcastle United briefly allowed themselves to bask in a pleasure that had been a long time coming, one moment stood out. There was bitterness and there was rancour. Yet the mutiny, for once, was not that of the fans in black and white. “Fuck off Sam Allardyce,” came the song from the away end. It was loud and jarring and that was the soundtrack that followed West Ham United’s manager out of the club.

“You’re getting sacked in the morning,” also came down, unsparingly, from the most vertiginous part of the Leazes End. As it turned out, West Ham’s board could not even wait that long. His departure was confirmed within three minutes of the final whistle and his best attempts to put on a brave face, laughing his way through a series of awkward interviews, did not disguise the fact he must feel deeply chastened about the way it has unravelled. “I didn’t want to stay,” he said. “And I guess they could say they didn’t want me to stay anyway.”

Mutual consent or mutual contempt? All that can be said with certainty is that his team were generous opponents for a team with Newcastle’s needs. John Carver’s side have been English football’s Slapstick XI over the past few months. Yet they could not have picked a better side to play than West Ham. The home players held their nerve, dealt with the different emotions and pressures and it was strange, ultimately, that a day that had been preceded by much tension, with the heavy threat of relegation and potential devastation, became a relatively stress-free occasion.

Newcastle would have been spared anyway because of Hull’s inability to beat Manchester United but Carver and his players have waited a long time to experience the explosion of joy that came at the end and, if nothing else, they deserved the crowd’s acclaim for dispelling the theory that it would be they who meekly waved a white flag. Yes, it was true that Allardyce’s players had sleepwalked through Allardyce’s final game. Yet Newcastle did play with a sense of togetherness that has not always been there in the Carver era and, in the process, they brought to an end a run of only one point out of the previous 10 games.

There was also a charming subplot attached to their day because of Jonás Gutiérrez’s contribution. Gutiérrez did not finish his chemotherapy for testicular cancer until November and the goal that extinguished any lingering relegation fears was his first since receiving the all-clear to resume his career. This was his last appearance for Newcastle because they have decided not to offer him a new contract now Mike Ashley is promising big-money arrivals to get the club – no sniggering, please – into the Champions League. For Gutiérrez, that late, deflected shot was some way to go and, for Newcastle, his victory run will be remembered as one of the most joyous moments of a bleak season.

It would be wrong, though, to say his goal was the all-important moment. Moussa Sissoko had put Newcastle ahead with a towering header nine minutes into the second half and there was never really any moment after that when West Ham seriously threatened to turn the game in their favour. Sissoko had shown considerably more determination than either Winston Reid or Aaron Cresswell to power in Gutiérrez’s left-wing cross and, as a snapshot of the game, that told a pretty accurate story.

Stewart Downing at least carried a flicker of menace during a prosaic opening half but Allardyce’s men have been in relegation form since Christmas and looked like a team in a hurry to reach their summer, officially. It was difficult to remember a more ineffectual strike partnership in the top division than Carlton Cole and Enner Valencia while, at the back, Cresswell seemed to have temporarily forgotten he is apparently West Ham’s player of the season.

Carver was close to tears afterwards in what strayed towards an Oscars-style thank you speech and his personal sense of relief must have been immense given his long association with the club and all the disparagement that has come his way. Carver had instructed his players not to read the sports pages or tune into the football shows during the long build-up to this match because he feared they might be suffocated by anxiety.

When the game started, it was also noticeable that he seldom left his dugout. The idea, again, was to spread a message of calm – or as near to it as possible – and it worked. Newcastle have rarely looked as composed during his brief tenure and could also look back on an extraordinary moment when Vurnon Anita and three of his team-mates ran from their own half in a four-on-one break. Anita’s attempt to lay the ball off was intercepted by the West Ham goalkeeper, Adrián, but Gutiérrez’s clinching goal quickly followed and Newcastle were safe.

Man of the match Jonas Gutiérrez (Newcastle United)

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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