Welcome to the Wonderful World of West Ham United Statistics

Game played on 24 Apr 2022


24 Apr 2022
 
e-mail
HOME
programmes & links
cup shocks
player debuts
top 10 lists
managers
hammer awards

Welcome to the Private memorabilia collection of theyflysohigh from Steve Marsh

Chelsea 1-0 West Ham

Premier League    2021-22Match review
Stamford Bridge   32,231
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
31Ben Johnson    
15Craig Dawson   
3Aaron Cresswell    
5Vladimir Coufal    
28Tomas Soucek    
16Mark Noble    
26Arthur Masuaku    
7Andriy Yarmolenko    
8Pablo Fornals    
22Said Benrahma    
41Declan RiceSubed #16   
20Jarrod BowenSubed #7   
10Manuel LanziniSubed #22   
 PosTable as at 24 Apr 2022PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City3313 225013123 130880
2Liverpool3314 30457104 2401579
3Chelsea328 533218113 235965
4Arsenal3311 24281581 7242560
5Tottenham Hotspur3310 15311883 6252058
6Manchester United349 44282165 6253054
7West Ham United349 44302263 8222252
8Wolverhampton Wanderers337 27181682 7151349
9Newcastle United347 64242644 9162943
10Leicester City328 44262035 8213142
11Brighton and Hove Albion343 77122267 4192041
12Brentford346 38181954 8233040
13Southampton346 74212036 8193640
14Crystal Palace325 74251736 7182437
15Aston Villa325 37242561 10182137
16Leeds United324 57183044 8203833
17Burnley335 66162017 8132531
18Everton327 27212013 12133529
19Watford332 113153943 10162822
20Norwich City333 311123423 11103521
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Christian Pulisic spares stuttering Chelsea against West Ham
Sam Dalling at Stamford Bridge
Date published Sun 24 Apr 2022 16.17 BST

Craig Dawson had enjoyed virtually the perfect afternoon. West Ham's only fit centre-back had been a man mountain, repelling everything thrown at him. The "Ballon D'Orson" flag his own fans had put together was looking apt.

Then the Chelsea substitute Romelu Lukaku burst through and, out of desperation, Dawson pulled. Down Lukaku went, and the penalty was given, a yellow card turning red following a video consultation. Dawson trudged off forlorn.

But Jorginho's run was stuttered, unconvincing. Like Chelsea, some might say. Lukasz Fabianski will scarcely save an easier penalty. Mercy then. But no: on 90 minutes Marcos Alonso's cross was converted by another substitute, Christian Pulisic. Football can be cruel.

"He played ever so well," David Moyes said of Dawson, whose suspension means West Ham will be without a senior centre-back this Sunday against Arsenal. "But he gave the referee a decision to make and today it went against us. We've only got ourselves to blame. We didn't defend well enough in those last four or five minutes."

And so three successive home defeats did not become four for Chelsea and Thomas Tuchel. When advent started they led the league by one but they will have spent Sunday morning shooting nervous glances over their shoulder. A one-time inevitable Champions League spot needed a little TLC. It came, but only just.

"Honestly games like West Ham are very hard to have spectacular, open games," said Tuchel, who praised the visitors. "We were a bit stuck in the first half. But that was because of the uncertainty because of the latest results at home. We never lost patience. We understood the situations a bit better. We joined with more courage and with more players when the acceleration was there."

Tuchel barely left his seat for the first hour, much of it spent scrawling furiously in his notebook. Dawson's name may well have been added in biro. He requires new centre-backs. Andreas Christensen, a late withdrawal with illness, and Antonio Rüdiger – who Tuchel confirmed after the game would not be signing an extension – are heading to La Liga. Age might even be catching up with Thiago Silva. Moyes on the other hand, until the late drama, had cut largely a relaxed figure, likewise his assistant Kevin Nolan who bellowed instructions sat on a white box. Their one moment of first-half concern came when Tomas Soucek and Silva clashed heads. Fortunately for those in claret and blue, Soucek was OK.

West Ham's European exertions have stretched a wafer-thin squad, and six points now from eight games makes them top-four outsiders. Their likeliest Champions League entry route comes via silverware, which Moyes had clearly determined before kick-off making half-dozen changes to his side.

He had virtually a whole eye on the Europa League semi-final first leg with Eintracht Frankfurt on Thursday – Michail Antonio, Jarrod Bowen and Declan Rice were all rested.

"I did because I thought it's such a big event on Thursday night," Moyes said. "I wanted to give the players the best available opportunity."

There was a healthy dollop of pre-season to the afternoon, sunshine and empty seats aplenty. Chelsea did plenty to shape their own downfall in the first half, with César Azpilicueta – distanced from the front row through a switch to the left of a back three after his confrontation with a fan following the defeat to Arsenal – more nervous debutant than senior pro.

When he dallied too long, Saïd Benrahma nicked in and drew a save from Édouard Mendy. Ukrainian Andriy Yarmolenko almost marked his first league start in 17 months with the opener, flashing a half-volley wide.

Each time Chelsea ventured forward in the first half, they struggled to create. Timo Werner ran into Ben Johnson on the edge of the box, and Ruben Loftus-Cheek hit a tame cross-cum-shot at Fabianski. That was it.

Tuchel reoccupied his seat several minutes before his players returned to the pitch; most likely there was little more he could say. Another docile few minutes followed and then, finally, life. Werner's point-blank header was blocked by Dawson. Soon after he did likewise to N'Golo Kanté's left-footed shot, Fabianski reacted sharply to hold, having already gone to ground. Chelsea had some wind.

When Fabianski was tested again, pushing Trevoh Chalobah's effort from distance wide, Moyes determined it was Rice time. Immediately, he drew a foul. More Chelsea pressure followed, this time Mason Mount getting a pair of shots away. Who was there to block? Dawson is not a pointless answer. On came the Chelsea cavalry, and eventually it worked.

What Chelsea crave desperately is certainty. Expectations had been that the Raine Group would announce a preferred bidder this week, but reports Sunday morning suggest an additional stage.

And so, smoke continues to billow from Stamford Bridge. It is unclear though, whether the house is burning down or the Phoenix is mid-rise.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS AND PLAYER RATINGS
Chelsea 343: Mendy 6.5; Chalobah 6.5, Silva 7.5, Azpilicueta 6; Loftus-Cheek 6 (Ziyech 76, 6.5), Kante 7, Jorginho 5.5, Alonso 6; Mount 6.5, Havertz 6 (Pulisic 76, 7), Werner 6 (Lukaku 76, 6.5).
Subs: Arrizabalaga, Sarr, Niguez, Barkley, Kenedy.
Goals: Pulisic 90
Bookings: Alonso
Manager: Thomas Tuchel 6.5
West Ham 343: Fabianski 7; Johnson 7, Dawson 7, Cresswell 7; Coufal 6.5, Noble 6 (Rice 62, 6), Soucek 6, Masuaku 6; Yarmolenko 5 (Bowen 72, 6), Fornals 6, Benrahma 5 (Lanzini 78).
Subs: Areola, Antonio, Lanzini, Vlasic, Fredericks, Kral, Alese.
Sent off: Dawson 86
Manager: David Moyes 6
Ref: Michael Oliver 6
Read full Daily Mail report:

hits 12659797

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