It has been a roller coaster summer for
West Ham fans, who have been left scratching their heads as to what is going on
at the club.
Inititally, there seemed to be little
movement in the transfer market, beside the signing of veteran Manchester City
defender Pablo Zabaleta on a free
transfer.
Then came a burst of activity that saw Marko
Arnautovic, Javier Hernandez and Joe Hart (on loan) arrive at the club. Spirits
rose. There were concerns about some of those going out of the door,
particularly the promising Ashley Fletcher (£6 m to Middlesbrough) .
There was talk for weeks of Willam Carvalho
joining from Sporting Lisbon for around £35 m but this never
materialised.
So on the face of it West Ham have once
again spent little money, failing to strengthen key areas of the team. Strikers
were desperately needed. Herandez and Arnautovic look like they could do the job
in time. However, what has been desperately needed for a couple of seasons is
quality defenders. The team defended badly at times last season and have looked
even worse this time around.
The signing of Joe Hart surprised many, a
big name but so far, yet to show he is
any better than what the club already had.
Zabaleta looks like his best days are
behind him, with the Premiership now a step too far. However, the club seem
happy to push ahead with another old defender, rather than give the promising
Sam Byram the run in the team that he needs.
At central defence, the excellent, though
injury prone, Winston Reid is surrounded by ageing and inconsistent partners in
Jose Fonte, James Collins and Angelo Ogbonna. The clubs promising young centre
backs Reece Oxford and Reece Burke have been loaned out, while the other
prospect Declan Rice is being played in midfield. Why did the club not go in for
the likes of Harry Maguire (who joined Leicester from Hull for £17 m) or
Michael Keane (Burnley to Everton)
At the heart of the confusion seems to be a
lack of belief in the manager on the part of the clubs owners David Sullivan
and David Gold. There seems to be a pattern with managers coming to West Ham
that resembles an hour glass. They start popular with the owners because they
have decided to employ them. A honeymoon period ensues, which usually ends with
the first patch of bad form. Slaven Bilic was fortunate in many ways because
his first season, the last at the old Boleyn ground, was so successful that the
criticism mill didn’t really get going.
The second season was different. There were
problems from the start with the new stadium, complaints from fans, crowd
trouble and bad results on the pitch. Things settled down, with the team
securing a credible 11th finish in the table.
There were times when the owners and
manager did not seem to be seeing eye to eye. Another unhelpful feature of life
at West Ham is that when things are not going well, there seems to be a leap to
social media and anonymous briefing to put the manager under pressure.
The idea that everyone needs to pull together at a difficult time seems to be
something of an anathema. It is a strange way to run a football club.
The complaint of fans is that the owners
simply have not put the money in that is required for West Ham to succeed in
the Premiership. The frustration from the manager’s point of view no doubt is
that the owners seem to want a top six Premiership side but are only prepared
to provide the sort of funding that an aspiring Championship side would outlay.
It is frankly amazing that last season the
club paid £27 million out net on transfers and this year have reduced to £20
million. This is on the back of having pocketed millions for the sale of the
old Boleyn ground and crowds of 57,000 last season. Not to mention the huge TV
money – West Ham were rarely off the screens last season.
All of that said, things need to be viewed
from the owners side. They seem to have a fading belief in the powers of the
manager. The team performed beyond itself in the last season at the old ground,
however even then the cracks were beginning to appear. A better final couple of
weeks could have seen the club in the top four and playing Champions League
football last season – inconsistencies, particularly in defence cost the team
dear in the final analysis.
Last season was a difficult with the
inconsistency which began in Bilic’s first season seem to reappear. A string of
bad games would then be followed by a good run. This season has continued in
the same way, though no one has been helped by having to play all the games in
August away, due to the inordinate amount of time it takes to convert the
stadium back after the World Athletics Championship.
What seems clear is that the deal West Ham have done at the London Stadium may not be as good, as is widely touted.
So the worry going forward for the owners is that the team is not really progressing. Is that why they have not backed the manager in the transfer market? No doubt they are monitoring the situation of Rafa Benitez at Newcastle - the man they wanted ahead of Bilic back in the summer of 2015. Former Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has also been mentioned.
If the owners, though, don't have faith in the manager then they should have made the change and brought in a new man.What now beckons is months of inconsistent results, accompanied by undermining comments on social media. The managers chalice will then be passed to someone else, who the club will back with funds in January. However, by that time will it all be too late?
If results don't improve soon, this is going to prove a long hard season at the London Stadium, which could end in relegation. Things need to be sorted out from top to bottom at West Ham United if disaster is to be avoided.
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