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Game played on 10 May 2016


10 May 2016
 
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West Ham 3-2 Manchester United

Premier League    2015-16Match review
Upton Park   34,602
  SubsGoals  
1Darren Randolph    
2Winston Reid 1  
3Aaron Cresswell    
21Angelo Ogbonna    
30Michail Antonio 1  
8Cheikhou Kouyate    
16Mark Noble    
27Dimitri Payet    
28Manuel Lanzini    
9Andy Carroll   
15Diafra Sakho 1  
14Pedro ObiangSubed #28   
5James TomkinsSubed #15   
11Enner ValenciaSubed #27   
 PosTable as at 10 May 2016PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Leicester City3712 613518115 2321780
2Tottenham Hotspur3710 63351597 2331570
3Arsenal3711 43271187 4342568
4Manchester City3712 25472176 5231965
5Manchester United3711 5224874 8222663
6West Ham United379 73342677 4302362
7Southampton3710 35352176 6201960
8Liverpool368 73322183 7292758
9Chelsea365 85312974 7262248
10Stoke City377 47202365 8193148
11Swansea City378 55191945 10223246
12Everton365 58323059 4242244
13Watford366 57181763 9182744
14Crystal Palace376 310192356 7192442
15West Bromwich Albion376 48192548 7142242
16AFC Bournemouth375 59233464 8213042
17Sunderland365 67202035 10234035
18Newcastle United376 75272323 14124134
19Norwich City365 58222832 13133431
20Aston Villa372 512143513 14133717
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

West Ham sink Manchester United in thrilling Boleyn Ground sendoff
David Hytner at Upton Park
datePublished Wednesday 11 May 2016 07.20 BST

Louis van Gaal’s knack for escapism has been a pronounced feature of the season but on a wild night in east London, when West Ham United yelled farewell to their home of 112 years, the Manchester United manager could not summon the trick when he needed it so sorely.

The equation had been simple enough. Win here and, with Manchester City stumbling, Van Gaal would have a shot at the redemption of a fourth-placed finish in his own hands on the final day of the season. It has felt for a long time that the Dutchman needs qualification for the Champions League to keep himself alive at Old Trafford.

Van Gaal has used up a clutch of lifelines during a trying season and, for a period in the second half, he could enjoy control of his destiny. West Ham should have been out of sight at half-time, such was their dominance but they were not and, when Anthony Martial conjured a pair of finishes on the counterattack, the result that Van Gaal craved was on.

Martial had been passed fit after a minor hamstring injury and, not for the first time, United could be grateful to the summer signing who has become their best outfield player by a distance. His pace and power, allied to his precision, have marked him as a beacon of hope.

But this was West Ham’s party and no one was going to spoil it. Van Gaal’s team are blighted by vulnerabilities and West Ham exposed the one he had highlighted beforehand to complete a thrilling and deserved comeback. Van Gaal said he was worried about his team’s lack of height and physicality on set pieces and twice, West Ham made capital from Dimitri Payet deliveries.

The first saw him retrieve his initial effort, which had been blocked, to cross for Michail Antonio, who outpaced Antonio Valencia to convert. For the second, Payet picked out Winston Reid, who was too strong for Daley Blind and his header had too much on it for David de Gea. The visitors’ lead had lasted four minutes. Four minutes after that the Boleyn Ground could begin the countdown to an emotional triumph.

The practical consideration for West Ham had been to secure a win to fire their Europa League qualification hopes but the evening was about more than that. Much more. The script had called for victory to sate the rocking hordes in claret and blue and, although they wobbled, they came through.

Slaven Bilic felt tears well at full time. It was some sendoff to the old ground, before next season’s move to the Olympic Stadium, and none of the 34,602 who were present will forget it. The party continued long into the night.

Van Gaal argued his team were not dead in terms of the top four; they still have an outside chance on the final day, when they play Bournemouth at Old Trafford but they will need Manchester City to lose at Swansea City. It was West Ham who shaped the occasion and they embraced it.

The scenes before kick-off had been disturbing. United had arrived late and it had not been a pretty entrance. As their team bus was snarled up on Green Street, it was pelted with bottles. The reinforced windows did their job but, more serious, were the chaotic scenes around them. Briefly, there was panic. Parents lifted their children on to their shoulders. Witnesses talked of a crush.

When the football started, West Ham tore into their opponents. The hot atmosphere drove them. Van Gaal’s team were all over the place at the outset and they might have been further behind by half-time. Andy Carroll was denied one-on-one by De Gea, while Payet jinked inside and ballooned his shot. Payet and Manuel Lanzini buzzed around Carroll. It was one-way traffic.

The breakthrough had come when Aaron Cresswell slipped a pass to Lanzini, who was in yards of space in the inside-left channel, and Diafra Sakho dropped smartly off Blind for the cutback. Sakho shot first time and his effort flicked off Blind to spin beyond De Gea and into the corner.

The half-time scoreline was a reprieve for Van Gaal but he and his players set about making the most of it. The equaliser came from United’s first chance of any note and it followed a bit of tomfoolery from the West Ham fans behind De Gea’s goal. They refused to give the ball back to the goalkeeper but they did when another one was supplied for him.

De Gea promptly drove United up the field with a long clearance and, suddenly, there was Marcus Rashford feeding Juan Mata and he crossed for Martial, who tapped home. The goalkeeper turned to pump his fists and his hips at the fans behind him. A bottle was thrown in his direction.

West Ham created further chances for Payet, Sakho and Carroll but Martial hit them hard when he beat Darren Randolph at his near post after Wayne Rooney and Rashford had created a break. Van Gaal sensed the smash and grab. West Ham had other ideas.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE
West Ham (4-3-2-1): Randolph 5; Antonio 7.5, Reid 8.5, Ogbonna 6.5 , Cresswell 6.5; Lanzini 7 (Obiang 84min, 6), Kouyate 7, Noble 8; Payet 7.5 (Valencia 90), Sakho 7.5 (Tomkins 84, 6); Carroll 6.5
Subs not used: Collins, Moses, Emenike, Spiegel
Booked: Carroll
Goals: Sakho (10), Antonio (76), Reid (80)
Manager: Slaven Bilic 7.5
Manchester United (4-2-3-1): De Gea 5.5; Valencia 6 (Januzaj 87, 6), Smalling 7.5, Blind 5.5, Rojo 6.5; Schneiderlin 5.5 (Carrick 46, 6.5) Ander Herrera 6 (Lindgard 83); Mata 7, Rooney 7.5, Martial 8; Rashford 7
Subs not used: Jones, Depay, Romero, Borthwick-Jackson
Booked: Martial, Valencia, Herrera
Goals: Martial (51, 72)
Manager: Louis van Gaal 7
Referee: Mike Dean 7
Man of the match: Winston Reid
Attendance: 34,602
Ratings by Sami Mokbel
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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