Disappointing (again). I really expected, with the pressure off and Fulham's poor record against West Ham at Craven Cottage - they've not beaten the Hammers since before England last won the World Cup - that the claret and blue would add to their woeful away record today. Added to the fact that Fulham rested over half the team that so spectacularly secured a Europa League final place last Wednesday and you have to view this as another poor result in a season of poor results.
The opening exchanges at Craven Cottage were pretty dull; the home side looking unsurprisingly drained after their mid-week exploits while the visitors looked as toothless and bereft of ideas as they have looked since mid-week last August!
Schwarzer pulled off a good save to stop a Mark Noble shot on the turn after 23 minutes while Dempsey came close three minutes later when his shot grazed the bar. Da Costa produced another good save from the Fulham keeper after 40 minutes when he struck hard from range but these were rare moments in a game that looked locked on stalemate until Dempsey hit home on the stroke of half-time following Davies' fine through ball.
In the second period, a Riise cross was volleyed over his own crossbar by Matthew Upson when it might have gone anywhere and from the resulting corner, Fulham went 2-0 in hilarious circumstances. The ball was cleared by Faubert but only to Baird whose shot - if you can call it that - was headed for the hoardings on the other side of the pitch until it struck Carlton Cole and flew into the net. The owniest (?) of own goals - even Baird had the good grace to look embarrassed.
The Hammers immediately made changes with Faubert and IIan coming off for Diamanti and Franco and the move was rewarded within seconds when Noble's cross from a free-kick was headed in by Cole for his first goal in ten games. It could have been a chance for the visitors to pressure the home side but the game was gifted to Fulham ten minutes after when Spector was easily dispossessed by Nevland who passed in front of the goal for an unmarked Okaka to slide home easily. It was a moment that summed up West Ham's season.
Franco scored a 90th minute consolation after exceptional work by Scott Parker to make it 3-2 but it was all too little and all too late.
Incredibly, West Ham's only away win this season was on the first day way back last August - remember then? - had I known I would have celebrated more than I did. Yet here we are, 19 games later, with nothing but a handful of draws to show for any endevours away from Upton Park. It's poor, to say the least, and the only consolation is West Ham survived the drop in a season they would surely have gone down in, in many other seasons.
The only way is up, eh?

Comments
Posted by Jay on 05/03/2010
I agree Billy. Once we see how Hull do tomorrow or when the last day rolls around we can finally focus on next season.
Posted by Kyle on 05/04/2010
As a yank, I hate to criticize my countryman, but Spector's weakest part of his game is defending. As a defender, that's a real problem. He gets forward quite well, sees the field well, and can deliver quality crosses. All of that though is secondary to his role.
Here's to a better season next year. Keep an eye on Heath Pearce for the US this summer. He might take Spector's starting spot.
Thanks for the commentary and insight all season.
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