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West Ham 0
Chelsea 0
Will
Chelsea be up for a wet Sunday afternoon in Stratford? Come to that will West
Ham? It’s a midday trip on the Overground to Hackney Wick, where there’s now a
grander entrance to cope with the footie crowds, complete with some strange
concrete hieroglyphics last seen in Tomb
of the Cybermen.
Inside
the stadium Alison and Scott have forgotten their season tickets. They’ve had
to queue up at the ticket office and in scenes reminiscent of Bodyguard prove their identities.
Several other Hammers fans have also forgotten their tickets, including two
lads in their twenties agreeing they should probably have gone to bed after
their night out rather than go straight to the match. We’re joined by Fraser,
Matt, Lisa and Michael the Whovian (fresh from meeting legendary Hammers fan
and actor Donald Sumpter at The Prisoner),
while Nigel is up in Liverpool seeking some Momentum.
There’s
no Arnie and Pellegrini’s gameplan is rather Moyes-esque, with the side letting
Chelsea’s defenders have the ball and sitting back with three holding
midfielders. The game is also noticeable for Chelsea’s garish yellow away kit —
they look like a team of lemons. Hazard shoots at Fabianski and Giroud miscues
a volley, but West Ham’s system works pretty well.
With
half an hour gone the Hammers suddenly look dangerous on the break. Anderson
dummies to find space and releases Antonio with a fine through ball, only for
Mikhail to slice wide. Then the excellent Rice intercepts and finds Yarmolenko
with a good ball out wide. He runs at goal and is blocked, with the ball
falling to Antonio, who fires against Kepa’s legs. Kante heads wide before the
break in a late warning of Chelsea's quality.
The
second half sees Yarmolenko cut inside and fizz a left-foot shot just over,
while Fabianski saves Morata’s effort with his face. Antonio tries to beat
Rudiger for pace but comes a definite second, rather emphasising his recent
sharpness and fitness problems. He’s hooked for Perez, who this time has
warmed-up.
Bizarrely
a fan behind us spends most of the game swearing at Anderson for not steaming
into tackles like Julian Dicks. Robert Snodgrass eventually comes on for Felipe
and the chance for West Ham to win it comes as Snoddy gets in an excellent
cross and the unmarked Yarmolenko seems certain to score, only to head wide of
the post. Cue collective heads in hands. A shame, as making a crucial goal
might have kick-started Snoddy’s Hammers career.
Mystic
Matt produces a stat about how often Chelsea have scored after the 79th minute.
Can the Hammers hold on for a gritty point? The crowd help with a chorus of
“Stick your blue flag…” Kante forces a decent opportunity over the bar as
Chelsea dominate possession with Jorginho setting a Premier League record of
180 passes. Though after a late flight back from Greece the Blues lack a
cutting edge.
Substitute
Barkley produces a great bending shot that Fabianski brilliantly turns round
the post. The former Swansea keeper has bossed his area well today. There’s a
nice ovation for Mark Noble as he goes off for Sanchez. We have a nervous four
minutes of added time, which sees Willian slice wide, but Diop and co remain
resolute. Mike Dean blows his whistle and it’s a fine point against a side that
had won its previous five games and scored 16 goals.
Lost by the River Lea |
After
the match we take a very circuitous route along the River Lea to eventually
find the Olympic Village and a bar called The Neighbourhood. Inside we find
Gambling Dan, who has bet on every score except 0-0. Over pints of Mosaic and
Goose we muse upon the impossibility of finding the perfect pub. Maybe George
Orwell could help. Michael is impressed by the splash-proof urinals but not the
prices, while we fear it might be too hipster for Nigel, who also rejects craft
beer and Wetherspoon’s. Strange, as we happily all went along to the Central at
Upton Park. Perhaps we are spoilt for choice.
Still,
we enjoy a drink in the unexpected sun. After losing the first four games the
pundits were suggesting we’d lose the first seven. Four points from two games is
progress.
PLAYER RATINGS:
Fabianski 8; Zabaleta 7, Diop 8, Balbuena 7, Masuaku 6; Noble 7 (Sanchez 5),
Rice 8, Obiang 6; Anderson 6 (Snodgrass 7), Antonio 5 (Perez 5), Yarmolenko 6.
2 comments:
And who was it who gave Yarmy man of the match 5 minutes after that miss?!!
Yes, that was unfortunate! He played quite well apart from the miss though. I see the players stuck a picture of a bloke with a square head on his locker - so at least good for banter.
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