West
Ham 1-2 Bournemouth
The only people more confused than the West Ham fans after this performance
will be the owners, who must be wondering what they have got for their £100
million outlay on players.
On this showing the team looks less organised than under David
Moyes, with some of the most expensive signings, such as Issa Diop (£22m) and
Andriy Yarmolenko (£17.5 m), left
warming the substitutes bench.
The swings and roundabouts of selection were underlined by the
fact that three players who started against Liverpool last week – Ryan
Fredericks, Michail Antonio and Declan Rice – were not evens subs for this
encounter and they were not the worse three against Jurgen Klopp’s team.
New West Ham manager Manuel Pellegrini seemed unperturbed by the
latest display, acknowledging that it was always going to take time for things
to settle with a new manager and so many new players.
Pellegrini highlighted how the team played well for the first 45
minutes but in the second half made mistakes.
He acknowledged that the struggle of last season could still be on
the player’s minds and contributing to a lack of confidence when things go
wrong. “We need to work for 90 minutes, not 45,” said Pellegrini.
West Ham started brightly enough, with some sharp interplays
between Felipe Anderson and Chicarito. One such exchange on the half hour saw
the Mexican striker’s legs swept from under him, resulting in a penalty, which
Marko Arnautovic converted with ease.
There were though some warning signs in the first half with Calum
Wilson having his shot easily saved by Lukasz Fabianski when clear in the
penalty area and new striker David Brooks shooting narrowly wide.
Bournemouth were a different side in the second half, pushing on
all the time and regularly carving the West Ham defence apart.
The equalising goal when it came was something special, with
Wilson picking the ball up deep and ghosting past Fabian Bulbuena and Pablos
Zabaleta before putting the ball wide of Fabianski.
Five minutes later, Angelo Ogbonna gave away a needless foul on
the edge of the penalty area. The resulting free kick saw Steve Cook power
between defenders to plant his header in the back of the net.
Bournemouth manager Eddie Howe was pleased with the reaction he
got from his players in the second half. He credited “Callum’s individual
moment of brilliance” for swinging the game in the vistor’s favour.
West Ham fans though will not be unhappy with another poor start
to a Premier League season, with the next opponents being Arsenal at the Emirates.
And despite all the spending they must be wondering is this the beginning of
another season of struggle at the wrong end of the table?
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