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Game played on 25 Sep 2016


25 Sep 2016
 
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West Ham 0-3 Southampton

Premier League    2016-17Match review
London Stadium   56,864
  SubsGoals  
13Adrian del Castillo    
4Havard Nordtveit    
2Winston Reid   
21Angelo Ogbonna    
11Alvaro Arbeloa   
16Mark Noble   
8Cheikhou Kouyate    
30Michail Antonio    
10Manuel Lanzini    
27Dimitri Payet   
5Simone Zaza   
7Sofiane FeghouliSubed #10   
24Ashley FletcherSubed #4   
31Edimilson FernandesSubed #16   
 PosTable as at 25 Sep 2016PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City63 009230 09318
2Tottenham Hotspur62 103121 07214
3Arsenal62 018521 07213
4Liverpool62 009221 17713
5Everton62 105220 15213
6Manchester United62 017320 15412
7Crystal Palace61 115320 15410
8Chelsea62 016311 14610
9Southampton61 203210 2448
10West Bromwich Albion61 115411 1228
11Watford51 025611 0537
12Leicester City62 105100 33107
13Hull City61 023611 1467
14AFC Bournemouth62 013301 2167
15Middlesbrough60 123511 1345
16Swansea City60 123710 2234
17Burnley51 113200 2064
18West Ham United61 023700 3493
19Stoke City60 122901 2262
20Sunderland60 033801 2241
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Sleek Southampton stroll to win and give West Ham grounds for concern
Jacob Steinberg at the London Stadium

Date Published Sunday 25 September 2016 18.16 BST

The initial temptation is to blame the ground and say that West Ham United were sorely mistaken when they decided to leave Upton Park. The burst of optimism that greeted their move to the London Stadium has given way to an unmistakable sense of drift, on and off the pitch, and Slaven Bilic could only watch helplessly as Claude Puel’s sleek Southampton inflicted a third defeat on his ragged team in their new home.

At this point, however, it would be a flimsy excuse for West Ham to argue that anyone would experience these teething problems after moving grounds. Their flaws run deeper than that. They have conceded two or more goals in 15 of their past 23 matches, did not force Fraser Forster to make a single save in the Southampton goal and played with the louche air of a team who are yet to accept the severity of the situation.

While West Ham find themselves stuck in the bottom three and look like a team without any discernible plan after losing five of their opening six league matches, Southampton shot up to ninth place, thanks to a performance that showcased the craft and intelligence that persuaded them to appoint Puel after Ronald Koeman’s summer departure to Everton.

It was a stroll for the visitors after Charlie Austin’s composed finish shattered West Ham’s fragile confidence long before James Ward-Prowse added a third goal in stoppage time and there was a pleasing verve to their play, their zest encapsulated by the way Dusan Tadic left Adrián on the floor before making it 2-0 shortly after the hour.

After a slightly unconvincing start to life under Puel this was their fourth successive victory in all competitions. “In the second half we could see a team with a good technical level,” the Frenchman said.

West Ham were fortunate not to be beaten out of sight and as a mood of uncertainty spread around this curious ground before kick-off, it felt like a sign of the times that, to borrow the terminology favoured by the stadium operators, customers were advised that persistent standing would result in offenders being ejected. Those kind of messages explain why it is difficult not to suspect that the club left an indelible part of its identity back at Upton Park and it was not long before stewards were trying to persuade the boisterous little pocket of home fans near the away end to sit down.

Arguments in the stands were not Bilic’s main concern. He needed a response after the defensive capitulations against Watford and West Bromwich Albion but West Ham were ponderous on the ball, predictable in attack and vulnerable whenever Southampton broke forward.

Mark Noble and Cheikhou Kouyaté were passengers in midfield unable to cope with Southampton’s diamond as the game wore on, while Dimitri Payet was subdued. Simone Zaza has not hit the ground running after joining on loan from Juventus and there was none of Michail Antonio’s usual brio.

Individual errors, tactical indiscipline and the failure to defend as a collective unit have all contributed to West Ham’s decline and it was no help that knee injuries to Arthur Masuaku and Aaron Cresswell deprived Bilic of both of his left-backs.

Álvaro Arbeloa, who did not possess the pace to support West Ham’s attack, filled in after moving across from the right while Havard Nordtveit was a fish out of water at right-back.

Comfortable in defence, measured in midfield and lively up front, Southampton sought to capitalise on that weakness and the origins of Austin’s opener were not a surprise, given that Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg had already fired an early warning shot. Nordtveit, who was signed to play in midfield, failed to read the danger when Tadic slipped a pass behind the Norwegian and Ryan Bertrand’s cutback found Austin, who took advantage of slack marking from Angelo Ogbonna by sweeping a low finish beyond Adrián.

Soon Cédric Soares was almost doubling Southampton’s lead after peeling behind Arbeloa and Bilic had seen enough, replacing the ineffectual Manuel Lanzini with Sofiane Feghouli at half-time. That change allowed Payet to slot into the No10 role but Zaza remained forlorn and isolated.

West Ham fought back from a goal down to win this fixture last season. But they are a pale imitation of their former selves, mustering little beyond a couple of half-hearted penalty appeals, and Southampton would not let them off the hook this time.

Although Tadic’s goal was a wonderful piece of skill, it was also a damning indictment of West Ham’s lax attitude. Winston Reid and Kouyaté took it in turns to bungle with the ball just outside their own area and Nathan Redmond combined with Austin, who released Tadic. Faced by Adrián again, the Serb duped the goalkeeper with a dreamy body swerve before rolling the ball into the unguarded net.

That masterclass in efficiency and imagination from Tadic encapsulated the difference between the two teams and the only surprise was that Southampton had to wait until the dying moments before Ward-Prowse scored a simple third.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS, PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE AND MATCH ZONE
WEST HAM (4-2-3-1): Adrian 5.5; Nordtveit 5.5 (Fletcher 71, 6), Reid 5.5, Ogbonna 5, Arbeloa 5; Noble 5.5 (Fernandes 82), Kouyate 4.5; Payet 5, Lanzini 5 (Feghouli 46, 5.5), Antonio 5; Zaza 4
SUBS NOT USED: Randolph, Obiang, Byram, Oxford
BOOKED: Noble, Zaza, Arbeloa, Reid, Payet
MANAGER: Slaven Bilic
SOUTHAMPTON (4-1-2-1-2): Forster 6.5; Cedric 7 (Martina 89), Fonte 6.5, Van Dijk 7.5, Bertrand 6.5; Romeu 7; Hojbjerg 6.5, Davis 7; Redmond 6; Tadic 7 (Ward-Prowse 80, 6.5), Austin 8 (Long 74, 6)
SUBS NOT USED: McCarthy, Yoshida, Clasie, Hesketh
SCORERs: Austin 40, Tadic 62, Ward-Prowse 90
BOOKED: Romeu, Van Dijk
MANAGER: Claude Puel
REFEREE: Jon Moss 5.5
* Ratings by Adam Crafton
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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