Top 5 West Ham Players: Not Fit To Wear The Shirt…

Over the years some great players have pulled on a West Ham shirt, however there has also been a long list of truly bizarre and utterly frustrating catastrophes.

Narrowing it down to a top (or bottom) five proved a challenge due to the revolving door policy under Harry Redknapp, the over-priced, over-rated, has-beens of the Curbishley regime and the just downright ill conceived, reactionary purchases of Avram Grant and Glenn Roeder.

So the final shortlist is players that stand out for their shear bizarre ineptitude and incompetence that left many of us tearing our hair out and screaming into a cushion.

I could have made a list based on purely loan players that were never fit to wear the shirt, and there have been a lot of those. These include Sasa Ilic, who only played 50 minutes for the Hammers but managed to inspire Everton to a 4-0 victory at Upton Park before getting subbed.

Recently he appeared in some low budget films in his native Serbia, some say he had been acting as a goalkeeper his whole career. Mido was another shocker, he offered to play for just £1,000 a week, which appealed to the board at a time when our finances were in a similar state to Greece’s, it looks like we over-paid though.

Wayne Quinn took the biscuit. He was brought in with a host of loans signings during the first season back in the old Division 1 in 2003, his lack of pace, positioning, awareness and general ability to even kick a football amazed and confused fans and opponents alike. But as none of these geniuses were actual West Ham players they have all been left out for people we had to actually sign and waste money on.

First up in the hall of shame and propping up the rear with his massive backside, at number five, it’s Titi Camara. One of the many wastes of space Redknapp inflicted on us as he squandered the £18m we got for Rio Ferdinand. He was signed from Liverpool after earning a bit of a cult status for scoring some vital goals and playing after the death of his father.

At West Ham he only earned hatred and ridicule as he made 14 appearances between 2000 and 2003 before being loaned to Al-Ittihad in Saudi Arabia. During his spell he failed to score a single goal and when the club cancelled his contract for being useless and over-weight he tried to sue them…he was unsuccessful. He is now the sports minister and manager of the Guinea national team.

Number four is Joey Beauchamp. Signed by Billy Bonds as a promising young winger in 1994 for a then club record of £1.2m. After complaining about feeling home sick (for Oxford of all places) he couldn’t handle the traffic during his travel down the M40 to training each day. He was sold to Swindon (only 20 miles nearer to Oxford) without playing a competitive game.

Beauchamp makes the list purely because his sod-this-for-a-laugh attitude to football caused Bonds to question his faith in the game. Later he returned to Oxford United and became a very popular player for them. His story took a darker turn as he recently admitted to battling with drink and depression following his retirement.

Coming in at three is Marco Boogers. A Dutch striker signed by Redknapp from Sparta Rotterdam in 1995 as an answer to our goal scoring woes. In only his second appearance during an away trip to Old Trafford he was sent off early on for assaulting Gary Neville. Although extreme violence against Gary Neville is not he worst crime in the world, Boogers then legged it to Holland and reportedly hid in a caravan.

This turned out to be an urban myth and began with a misunderstanding by a journalist who heard ‘caravan’ instead of ‘car again’ when asking about Boogers travel arrangements to his rehab in Holland. He made a further two substitute appearances, then a recurring knee injury and a major case of don’t-fancy-it-itis saw him return permanently to the Low Countries. After he left Redknapp described him as an awful player and stated that he’d only seen him play in a video in which he looked ‘world class’…. a lesson there maybe?

The number two spot goes to the enigmatic Savio Nsereko. Supposedly a promising young striker who starred for the German under-19s, he was one of the more bizarre signings as part of Gianluca Nani’s ‘project’ during Gianfranco Zola tenure. He was signed to replace Craig Bellamy in the 2009 transfer window for reportedly up to £9m with add-ons from Brescia. Savio, as he was known, made a handful of less then average appearances in which he looked out of his depth in the Premier League, even against Hull and West Brom.

In the press conference at his unveiling his high-pitched voice sounded strangely similar to that of Michael Jackson’s, and as it turned out he kind of played like him too. He was later swapped as part of the Manual Da Costa deal with Fiorentina, where he failed to impress and was bounced around Europe in a succession of ever worsening loan moves. Most recently he fetched up at Serie B side Juve Stabia where he is now AWOL (for the second time) and currently being hunted by Interpol.

But the king of bad West Ham signings is Gary Breen. His constant poor performances during the 2002/03 relegation season have now become synonymous with the emotional roller-coaster of supporting West Ham and even inspired a book on the subject by Robert Banks.

Glenn Roeder signed him on a free transfer as Breen was without a club and had turned in some impressive performances for the Republic of Ireland during the 2002 World Cup, in particular scoring against known world beaters Saudi Arabia. On that basis Breen had the pick of European clubs, he chose West Ham over some ‘generous offers’, reportedly Inter Milan and Barcelona, and more realistically Charlton. In an interview reminiscent of David Brent in The Office he stated on Sky’s Goals on Sunday in 2009 that he would have moved to the San Siro if he hadn’t failed a medical.

After an infamous bust-up with Roeder following a defeat away to Manchester United, in which he was heavily blamed for many of the goals, Breen tried to suggest the wet turf was the reason he was unable to play to his usual high standard and even posses the most basic levels of foot and eye co-ordination. The Manchester United players seemed to cope with the conditions as they ended up winning 6-0. Breen was let go in the cull following relegation that year after making 18 embarrassing appearances.

Although no list of terrible West Ham players would be complete without mentioning superstars such as Gary Charles, Benni McCarthy, Nigel Quashie and Keiron Dyer, who will only be remembered as a drain on resources and taking vast amounts of money for being either drunk, fat, rubbish or constantly injured (in that order) and lacking any integrity or professionalism when it came to their supposed careers, the main five stick out as the biggest horror shows.

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Aston Villa ace claims his innocence

Aston Villa winger Marc Albighton has stated that he is not a cheat, despite Wolves fans venting their frustration against him at the weekend.

Karl Henry was sent off for kicking out at the Villa midfielder in Alex McLeish’s side’s 3-2 win over the Molineux club, and Albrighton was given a hard time by the home fans after the incident.

Despite this, Albrighton has maintained that he was the victim and should not be accused of playacting.

“It [the kick] was pretty hard and it winded me. It’s something I wouldn’t want again,” he told Mirror Football.

“It hurts, definitely, when I read the papers on Sunday and Monday. It does hurt a lot, especially when people in the crowd call you a cheat when I was the victim, on the floor getting kicked.

“But that’s football, part and parcel of the game these days, and you have to take the criticism thrown at you. It spurs you on to do even better when people are booing you and calling you a cheat.

“I think he probably saw the red mist and lost his head a little. He’s probably a really nice guy off the pitch although I don’t really know him.

“Something stupid came over him. I’m not saying it’s right to go around kicking people on the sly but in the heat of the moment, these things happen. The emotions are high and the pressure is there,” he admitted.

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By Gareth McKnight

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Bundesliga Review – Bayern Resigned To Losing The Title?

Resignation – something tendered by the now former President Christian Wulff on Friday morning. No one at Bayern Munich will offer theirs yet but in deepest Badem-Wuttemberg, Germany’s most successful club slipped further behind Borussia Dortmund in the race for the title.

The Reds are now third, the same position they finished last season after another tepid away showing. Jupp Heycnkes, who was in charge last year at runners up Bayer Leverkusen, is unfamiliar to poor showings on the road. With his previous employers, he enjoyed the best away record in the division in the 2010/2011 season.

However, Bayern’s off colour showing at lowly Freiburg means his side have only won two of their last eight away matches in the Bundesliga. Their opponents on Saturday evening deserve credit for their determined performance. It might just irk Freiburg fans though that they’re the bottom placed side in Germany’s elite, in the knowledge their team can perform to that standard.

Two of their relegation rivals also had the challenge of trying to upset another two of the division’s high fliers. However, neither the recently wretched Hertha Berlin nor Kaiserslautern were able to overcome either of the league’s Borussias. Both victories were narrow which is of credit to the basement battlers. Hertha were greeted with the news on Friday that Otto Rehhagel would take over the vacant manager’s position or should it be Captain Otto?

He told Bild: “The Hertha ship has not sunk, but it has a large leak. I always have the last word. I am now there for Hertha, day and night, and I am always punctual.” His imminent arrival was unable to prevent Kevin Grosskreutz from grabbing a 1-0 win for Dortmund, maintaining the Champions position at the top.

Monchengladbach moved into second meanwhile as they emerged victorious at the Betzenberg, in a game which had two outstanding goals. Hermann put the away side ahead before a beautiful intricate move ended in Arango using the outside of his left foot to curl the ball past Kevin Trapp. Leon Jessen’s 30 yard thunderbolt halved the deficit but the counter attacking demons of Gladbach held on, meaning the Foals moved ahead of Bayern Munich for the first time since August.

The one place where Bayern have found consistency is at home, winning nine of their eleven at the Allianz Arena. However, Schalke visit next weekend.They’re now the top scorers in the Bundesliga having beaten Wolfsburg 4-0 on Sunday. Next weekend’s match-up will see the league’s top goalscorers, Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and Mario Gomez go head to head. Should the Royal Blues win, they’ll move above their hosts. Huub Stevens must seek inspiration from the forces above – no, nothing supernatural, just Gladbach and Dortmund who have both won in Munich this season

Each of the top four have key players missing currently and the table shows who’s currently coping the best. Lying just four points off the top, it would be foolish to rule Bayern out of the title race, although they are starting to lose vital ground on leaders Borussia Dortmund.

However, they haven’t had the panache of Champions. As Captain Philip Lahm stated after Saturday’s game, “If we continue to play like we did today, it will be hard to win the title.” Whilst they are not resigned to losing the title just yet, anyone connected with Bayern Munich will have felt more than an air of resignation after their latest performance.

For more on the Bundesliga, follow @arhindtutt on Twitter.

Matchday 22 Results:

Hoffenheim 1-1 Mainz

Bayer Leverkusen 4-1 Augsburg

Hamburg 1-3 Werder Bremen

Hertha Berlin 0-1 Borussia Dortmund

Kaiserslautern 1-2 Gladbach

Nuremberg 2-1 Cologne

Freiburg 0-0 Bayern Munich

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Schalke 4-0 Wolfsburg

Hannover 4-2 Stuttgart

Bundesliga Table

Rank

Club

Matches

W*

D*

L*

G*

GD*

PTS*

1

Borussia Dortmund

22

15

4

3

47:14

+33

49

CL*

2

Borussia Mönchengladbach

22

14

4

4

36:13

+23

46

CL*

3

FC Bayern Munich

22

14

3

5

49:14

+35

45

CL*

4

FC Schalke 04

22

14

2

6

50:28

+22

44

CL* Qual.

5

SV Werder Bremen

22

10

6

6

37:36

+1

36

EL* Qual.

6

Bayer 04 Leverkusen

22

9

7

6

32:29

+3

34

EL* Qual.

7

Hannover 96

22

8

10

4

27:27

0

34

8

VfL Wolfsburg

22

8

3

11

27:42

-15

27

9

VfB Stuttgart

22

7

5

10

33:32

+1

26

10

1899 Hoffenheim

22

6

8

8

24:26

-2

26

11

Hamburger SV

22

6

8

8

27:37

-10

26

12

1. FC Nuremberg

22

7

4

11

21:32

-11

25

13

1. FSV Mainz 05

22

5

9

8

30:36

-6

24

14

1. FC Köln

22

7

3

12

30:43

-13

24

15

Hertha BSC Berlin

22

4

8

10

25:37

-12

20

16

1. FC Kaiserslautern

22

3

9

10

16:28

-12

18

Play-offs

17

FC Augsburg

22

3

9

10

20:37

-17

18

Relegation

18

SC Freiburg

22

4

6

12

27:47

-20

18

Relegation

Table thanks to Bundesliga Official Website

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Oxlade-Chamberlain set for Arsenal switch

Arsenal look set to land long-term target Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain according to the Telegraph with Arsene Wenger finally making moves in the transfer market.

The Southampton winger has been tracked by the Gunners for some time and now looks set to follow in the footsteps of former Saint Theo Walcott in moving to North London.

A fee of £12 million has been protracted with Arsenal paying £7 million up front and the remaining £5 million being paid through performance-related add-ons.

Southampton’s insistence of adding a 40 per cent sell-on fee almost caused the deal to collapse only for both parties to reach an agreement after further talks.

His move to the Emirates will certainly prove to be a major coup for Wenger with the 17-year-old also being monitored by Liverpool and Manchester United.

However the England Under-21 star has always maintained that his preference was a move to the Emirates. Despite the prospect of a season of limited Premier League action he is keen to make the move to London.

It will also be a substantial boost to Wenger and the Gunners fan who have endured a difficult summer in the transfer market so far.

The deal for Oxlade-Chamberlain will certainly appease those in the stands who have craved some serious transfer activity with Gervinho the only major incoming.

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Arsenal expect the deal to be completed this week with personal terms expected to be a mere formality.

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Alan Pardew hails players after win

Newcastle recorded an excellent 3-1 away victory over West Brom on Sunday at the Hawthorns.

Hatem Ben Arfa and Papiss Cisse scored in the first 12 minutes to give the Tyneside club a stranglehold on the fixture, before the Senegal international scored his second and Newcastle’s third just after the half-hour mark.

Shane Long pulled one back for the Baggies after the break, but the game finished in favour of the Geordies, who are now level on points with Chelsea.

Alan Pardew was quick to praise his squad after the victory.

“I just thought we had a real good control of our passing today and our movement was terrific,” he told Sky Sports after the game.

“We tried to work down the sides of (Youssouf) Mulumbu because he protects the centre of the pitch really well and that worked well for us.

“But you need outstanding players to win games here and our best player stepped forward today – Hatem Ben Arfa was really, really difficult to play against, some of his runs were incredible.

“And Demba (Ba) and Papiss are going to score goals and I kept saying to the staff, ‘we’re going to get three goals in a game shortly because we’ve got so many goalscorers’, and today it came.

“We’ve just got a really good bunch who are trying so hard. To have the same points as Chelsea at this stage is phenomenal, really.

“And you have to take your hats off to the players – they’ve worked really, really hard,” he concluded.

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Newcastle host Liverpool next Sunday at the Sports Direct Arena.

By Gareth McKnight

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One rule for Arsenal and one for everyone else?

Despite having already played 54 times this season, Arsenal youngster Jack Wilshere looks set to be named in Stuart Pearce’s squad for the Under-21 European Championships next month. A stout protector of his own players, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has been campaigning for Wilshere to be rested for the summer for the sake of his own health and future after a long season for both club and country. Having also broken into the senior England side, Wenger has questioned why Wilshere is still involved with the Under-21s.

Wenger’s complaints look to have fallen on death ears so far. But, another player to have broken into the Senior side and originally earmarked for the Under-21 squad looks set to be rested following concerns from his club. Since his £30 million switch to Liverpool, Andy Carroll has struggled for fitness with an injury first sustained at Newcastle.

With the FA seemingly willing to rest Carroll but not Wilshere, expect a tirade of criticism from Wenger. But does the Frenchmen have a valid arguement?

Wilshere has played a great deal more games than Carroll. And, with the Championship set to take place in under two weeks and run until the end of June, Wilshere would only have around six weeks until the start of the new Premier League campaign. With Wenger stating the midfielder needs four weeks of complete rest, he would struggle to be match-fit and ready for the new season.

Carroll, meanwhile, would be allowed a full two and half months before the start of next season. But the player has struggled to play regularly since his January switch to Liverpool and would represent a gamble anyway. More importantly, were Carroll to seriously aggravate his knee injury and face a lengthy spell on the sidelines, the FA would run the risk of serious action from Liverpool over their club record signing.

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Wenger seems to undermine the importance of the Under-21 tournament itself. Whilst not as high-profile as last year’s World Cup, it would be of definite importance to the future of English football. With the likes of Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard and John Terry all the wrong side of 30, it would give the next generation a great opportunity to play in a tournament together. Likewise, it would be a great experience for the likes of Wilshere and Carroll.

The FA cannot be seen to favour Liverpool’s wishes over Arsenal’s. But, Wenger must remember that Carroll has had a completely different season to Wilshere. Wenger has never been a great believer in the importance of internationals at the expense of club football, but Wilshere would be a key player for the Under-21s and the Wenger must see the influence it could have on his development.

Two football institutions could help pave the way for greater success

We get a lot of criticism in this country for the way we produce our players. Accusations of a coaching mentality based on direct football and not enough investment in our youth appears to be in stark contrast to better-organised foreign national academies such as France’s Clairefontaine, one of twelve national academies in France.

Gareth Southgate, Head of Elite Development at the FA, has been one of the major critics for the way we coach our football and has suggested that the way we start coaching young players should be different. Southgate proposed preventing players from playing eleven a side games until they were thirteen. His reasoning for this was that similar systems occur in Spain, France and Italy. The benefits of this proposal are that players concentrate more on technique and skill as opposed to physicality and athleticism.

Everyone can see why this would be positive for the English game, too rarely do we see players such as Wilshere or Rooney come through with such natural ability and technique. However this doesn’t mean we should abandon the ‘English’ style of football altogether, nor does it mean that we can’t find a balance between the way we coach now and the continental approach.

Wallsend

Undoubtedly one of the most successful junior football teams in England, Wallsend graduates include: Alan Shearer, Peter Beardsley, Michael Bridges, Steve Bruce, Michael Carrick, Steven Taylor and Brian Laws. Wallsend, a suburb of Newcastle, has produced sixty-seven professional footballers in all and thirty-four coaches. They must be doing something right.

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Senrab F.C.

Based in East London Senrab is our other bastion of English coaching. A true vindication of the way we coach our youth the Sunday League club has produced players such as: Sol Campbell, Jermain Defoe, John Terry, Bobby Zamora and Ledley King as well as coaches like Ray Wilkins and Alan Curbishley.

Between these two clubs some of our country’s best players have been produced. Brian Laws, one of Wallsend’s graduates, told The Telegraph that the Tyneside outfit taught him:

“Guidance and discipline. It was always very well organised, everything always ran smoothly. Kids’ football could be pretty chaotic, but not at Wallsend…you were treated like a pro. It gave you a sense of comfort, and you’d do everything the best you could…they were good people and you gave them your all.”

Lessons to be learned

Our academy systems in England may not be perfect, but that does not mean that the formula is completely wrong. People criticise English coaching for a whole number of reasons but a large part of that is a consequence of the failures of the national team. People see the failures of the national team as a failure of the way those players have been taught. And maybe to a certain extent that is the case. However it is far more likely that there are simply not enough clubs like Wallsend or Senrab around. Perhaps before completely revamping the coaching system in this country people like Gareth Southgate, with his position of responsibility, should try to learn from these few successful clubs before forcing them to change their approach.

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Before we look abroad to find examples of success we should be looking at examples of success in our own country. Yes we can take positives from foreign systems and incorporate them in to our own, not to do so would be both ignorant and arrogant, but that doesn’t mean that there are not many strengths in the way our coaching is carried out. We have produced some of the best players in the world in this country and our failures on the international stage are down to a number of reasons, not just the lack of basic training for under fourteens.

Follow Hamish Mackay on Twitter @H_Mackay

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Frank Lampard out for two more weeks

Chelsea and England midfielder Frank Lampard is set to be sidelined for another fortnight as he struggles to recover fully from recent hernia surgery.

The 32-year-old has not featured for the Blues since the 2-0 win at home to Stoke City a month ago and will definitely miss the Champions League clash with Marseille this week.

Lampard is also highly unlikely to feature in the showdown with Arsenal next weekend and he is a major doubt for England European Championship qualifier against Montenegro at Wembley on October 12.

Meanwhile, Lampard’s Stamford Bridge team-mate Didier Drogba has dropped a major hint that he may not end his career with the Blues.

He told The Sun:“When I signed a new contract at Chelsea, I always said I wanted to finish my career here. But I am well placed to say that anything can happen.

“When I was at Marseille I said I would finish my career there but, one week later, everything changed.”

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Striker Drogba, 32, still has another two years left on his current contract, having joined the Blues in the summer of 2004 and gone on to score 136 goals in 267 appearances in all competitions.

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Capello waits on FA decision

Fabio Capello wants to remain England manager but has revealed his future is in the hands of the Football Association following World Cup disappointment.

Capello held talks with Club England chairman Sir David Richards following Sunday's 4-1 defeat by Germany, which ended a disappointing campaign at the last 16 stage.

Speaking immediately after the game in Bloemfontein, Capello claimed he had no thoughts of walking away from a job where he remains under contract for two more years.

England left the training base in Rustenburg on Monday lunchtime but, before boarding the plane bound for London, the Italian held a press conference where he revealed that, although he would like to stay on as manager, the FA will have the final say over his future following a period of reflection.

The Italian had previously declared that anything less than a World Cup final appearance would be a disappointment for a team which he believed was one of the best prepared in the tournament.

"I spoke this morning with Sir Dave Richards," said Capello."He told me that he needs two weeks to decide.

"I said I can be for next season, the manager of England, but they have to decide."

Capello was appointed England manager in December 2007 and guided the Three Lions to World Cup qualification in impressive fashion after winning nine of their ten games on the road to South Africa.

However, the World Cup did not go to plan for either the Italian coach or his heavily-criticised players following back-to-back opening draws against the USA and Algeria before a 1-0 final group win over Slovenia set-up a last-16 meeting with Germany.

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When asked why England had failed to perform in South Africa, Capello replied:"All players were really tired at this competition.

"All the coaches told me physical situation of players was not like the players we know."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

Chris Hughton: We can’t complain

Newcastle United manager Chris Hughton as admitted his side can have no complaints after they crashed to a 3-0 defeat at Manchester United on their return to the Premier League.

After cruising to the Championship title last term, the Magpies were never going to have it all their own way at Old Trafford and goals from Dimitar Berbatov, Darren Fletcher and Ryan Giggs ensured the hosts started their campaign with a dominant victory.

Hughton wants to forget about their early loss and concentrate on next weekend's home clash against managerless Aston Villa.

"It is always a daunting task coming here and all you can do is restrict the opportunities they have and I think we did that for periods of the game," said Hughton.

"I think with them having so much of the ball and the quality they have got you just don't want to concede again.

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"For us the important thing was to come out of today with some credit going into what is an important game next week."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

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