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Game played on 25 Sep 2010


25 Sep 2010
 
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West Ham 1-0 Tottenham Hotspur

Premier League    2010-11
Upton Park   34,190
  SubsGoals  
1Robert Green    
15Matthew Upson    
22Manuel da Costa    
4Daniel Gabbidon    
37Lars Jacobsen    
16Mark Noble    
8Scott Parker    
13Luis Boa Morte   
7Kieron Dyer    
30Frederic Piquionne 1  
33Victor Obinna    
12Pablo BarreraSubed #7   
9Carlton ColeSubed #30  
14Radoslav KovacSubed #33   
 PosTable as at 25 Sep 2010PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Chelsea63 0012020 19215
2Arsenal62 0112412 04311
3Manchester United53 009202 05511
4Manchester City62 105111 12111
5West Bromwich Albion62 105210 23910
6Fulham61 204303 0338
7Tottenham Hotspur61 113211 1338
8Blackburn Rovers61 113311 1448
9Newcastle United51 016211 1247
10Sunderland61 204302 1347
11Birmingham City61 202102 1577
12Aston Villa52 105100 2187
13Blackpool60 113420 26107
14Bolton Wanderers50 202211 1566
15Liverpool61 204301 2266
16Wolverhampton Wanderers51 103201 2365
17Wigan Athletic60 1311311 0105
18Stoke City51 114400 2144
19West Ham United61 023601 2174
20Everton60 214501 2023
match review copied from

West Ham 1 Tottenham 0 By Frank Malley, Chief Writer, Press Association Sport

Frederic Piquionne scored the goal which saw Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp suffer his first defeat against former club West Ham as a manager.

Piquionne's first-half header also gave West Ham their first league win of the season in a thrilling London derby at Upton Park.

It was no more than West Ham deserved as they showed the grit and determination which manager Avram Grant will need to see more of if they are to avoid relegation this season.

Goalkeeper Robert Green also made a string of athletic saves as he continued his rehabilitation following his World Cup howler for England, including one from Luka Modric in the first half which was a candidate for save of the season.

West Ham were hoping to build on their midweek Carling Cup victory against Sunderland and the confidence oozed from them, especially in the first half.

They might have taken the lead inside the first minute when Victor Obinna dragged a left-foot shot wide when clean through, but that set the tone for a match which swung from end to end.

A Kieron Dyer shot deflected just wide and a Manuel da Costa header also went close before the Hammers received their reward for their enterprising play in the 29th minute.

When it came, however, it had little to do with thrills. It was simple and direct, Mark Noble swinging across a swerving corner for Piquionne who rose above the rest to send a glancing header into the Tottenham net.

It was no more than West Ham deserved as they were playing football which belied their position in the relegation zone, one mazy Scott Parker dribble into the area typical of their increasing confidence.

But if the Hammers attacking play was impressive then it would have counted for nothing without Green.

Green has taken some fearful stick since his howler against the USA at the World Cup, but there is no doubt that on his day he is a supreme shot-stopper.

He needed to be, tipping away a thunderous drive from Jermaine Jenas and palming out a 20-yard left-foot shot from Van der Vaart.

But it was his save to deny Luka Modric which was world class. Brilliant work by Aaron Lennon down the right saw the ball arrive for Modric to swing his cultured left boot.

It was the sweetest of strikes, which looked goalbound until somehow Green threw himself to his right to tip it onto the bar and away to safety.

Tottenham had their chances in the second half, Alan Hutton putting Tom Huddlestone clear with just Green to beat.

The Tottenham captain did the hard bit, rounding the goalkeeper, but then contrived to send his tame shot horribly wide of the post.

Carlton Cole came on for the limping Piquionne but it was West Ham who should have extended their lead when Obinna got the better of the Spurs defence and fired in a left-foot shot which was brilliantly saved low down by Carlo Cudicini.

The Tottenham goalkeeper also denied Noble in the 73rd minute when he somehow managed to turn the midfielder's goalbound drive acrobatically around the post.

Redknapp threw on Robbie Keane for the ineffective Lennon in a bid to supply more fire power but Keane could only shoot straight into the hands of Green when his clearest chance presented itself.

One sour note for the heavily-criticised Grant was seeing an injured Dyer leave the field after 41 minutes to be replaced by Pablo Barrera.

But it was a match from which he will take great heart.

Teams

West Ham Green, Jacobsen, da Costa, Upson, Gabbidon, Dyer (Barrera 42), Parker, Noble, Boa Morte, Obinna (Kovac 89), Piquionne (Cole 64).

Subs Not Used: Stech, Ben-Haim, McCarthy, Faubert.

Booked: Boa Morte, Cole.

Goals: Piquionne 29.

Tottenham Cudicini, Hutton, Corluka, Bassong, Bale, Lennon (Keane 66), Huddlestone, Jenas, Modric, Van der Vaart (Giovani 78), Crouch (Pavlyuchenko 80).

Subs Not Used: Pletikosa, Palacios, Kranjcar, Sandro.

Att: 34,190

Ref: Martin Atkinson (W Yorkshire).

'arry's comments

Redknapp admitted Green made the difference. Redknapp said: "He has had a difficult time after his mistake at the World Cup but it looked like he was in great form again today. He made two world class saves.

For Redknapp there was the taste of defeat at his old club for the first time as a manager, but he was in philosophical mood. "It is the first time I've been beaten by the Super Hammers,'' he said. "But I don't feel any worse losing to West Ham. I've had a great run coming back here.

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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