Uncategorized

A point yet no point against Hammers at Turf Moor

|
Image for A point yet no point against Hammers at Turf Moor

Burnley frustratingly gave up a two goal lead against high-flying West Ham at Turf Moor on Saturday in a clash of the Claret&Blue which finished 2-2. Although West Ham looked the better side at times, the Clarets dominated the first half thanks to two goals from first Marvin Bartley after 25 minutes and then Martin Paterson eleven minutes later.

A two goal cushion at half-time looked to be enough but there was always that doubt at the back of Clarets fans minds that should West Ham get a goal back we might buckle and so it would prove. We looked to be soaking up anything West Ham could chuck at us until Nolan pulled one back for the Hammers in the 68th minute. Within two minutes they had equalised after Nicky Maynard flicked on Mark Noble’s free-kick for Tomkins to make it 2-2. We had no response and not for the first time this season looked in danger of losing a game after being comfortably in control and enjoying a two goal lead.

It was now all about holding on as West Ham turned the screw and began to have the lion`s share of possession. We never really looked like getting our noses in front again but at least we managed to hold on for a point. In the end then a disappointing draw and a point did little to cheer up the home fans who have now had to endure seven games without a win. With the season effectively over and nothing to play for but pride, it was perhaps surprising we held our own and got a 2-0 advantage over a team still in the hunt for automatic promotion by the end of the first half. The fact West Ham came back the way they did, just sums up our disappointing season somehow.

Burnley remain in 16th spot with now 50 points still ten points behind the sixth placed club. That club is now Blackpool who we still have to play at Bloomfield Road next month. Blackpool have also played a game more than the Clarets and with eight games of the season still remaining and 24 points to fight for could there still be a miracle waiting round the corner?

It remains to be seen if any Clarets fans are still drinking their glass-half-full or not. They have tended to be rather quiet recently with blind faith taking somewhat of a pounding. Most are probably now resigned to joining the more pessimistic fans who have for sometime seen the writing on the wall as the club headed once more towards mid-table mediocrity. By any standards though 16th place or below if that`s where we finish is simply not good enough for a club plying its trade in the Premier League three seasons ago. All the hype about the club being set up for years to come after the promotion has simply not materialised and despite the parachute payments we now look to be in a worse position than when Cotterill left and even dare I say it, Brian Laws. In Eddie Howe we trust but he better hurry up and reward that trust!

The Line-Up

Rodriguez was sidelined with injury for this clash despite playing in midweek against Ipswich but Ings returned to the sixteen starting up front with Paterson.

Danny Lafferty was also absent after picking up a hamstring problem in the midweek game at Portman Road. Ben Mee was back at left back.

Stanislas would not get the chance to start against his former team in view of his woeful performance on Wednesday night and had to be content with a place on the bench.

There was also a place on the bench for midfielder, Steven Hewitt

In summary then we lined up as follows:

Grant, Trippier, Duff, Edgar, Mee, Wallace, McCann, Marney, Bartley, Ings, Paterson

Substitutes: Jensen, Hewitt, Stanislas, McQuoid, Austin

Full Match Report

On a mild sunny day in Burnley, Chris McCann led his team onto the pitch with most Clarets fans wondering what sort of side would turn up after the shocking performance against Ipswich in midweek. The Clarets ahead of this game had gone six games without a win and their play-offs hopes had been all but extinguished so would there be any spark against the Hammers considering it now looked like our season was effectively over with only pride to play for? Would Sam Allardyce`s men (playing still for an automatic promotion spot) run riot and add more misery during our poor end of season run in? We would soon find out and to be honest the first half was a joy to watch with Burnley looking bright and at last showing some pride and commitment. It was in fact a pulsating first half with both sides entertaining the fans in an open, end-to-end game. The Clarets though had the upper hand over the first 45 minutes basically because unlike the Hammers they took their chances.

Referee Mark Haywood from West Yorkshire got the game underway and in some early Hammers pressure, Carlton Cole spurned two opportunities to put his side ahead. His best chance came when he ran round Grant after being put clear by a Nolan through-ball. He left himself too tight an angle though and his scuffed shot was off-target hitting the side-netting.

With the Hammers missing their chances it was up to Burnley to show them how to take them and in the 25th minute they did just that to get their noses in front. Bartley weaving into the box latched on to a flick from Paterson to get the better of Tomkins and slide the ball past Hammers keeper, Robert Green. It looked a tame deflected shot that Green should have saved but they all count and Burnley were 1-0 up!

West Ham nearly hit back almost immediately and they looked to have got the equaliser one minute after our opener when Nolan headed home. The referee though felt the West Ham captain had pushed Bartley and scratched the goal out with the Hammers already in a mass celebration.

Burnley, it has to be said were enjoying a bit of luck in the first 45 minutes with West Ham`s wayward shooting letting them off the hook. Cole once more should have done better after hitting the post and our charmed life continued when the follow-up shot from Nolan was blocked by Grant on the line.

The Clarets having soaked up all the pressure now had a sting in the tail, doubling their lead in the 36th minute. Timing his run to perfection, Paterson got in behind James Collins to latch onto a cross from Ben Mee and steer the ball past Green and make it 2-0 Clarets.

The Hammers would not lie down though and they came back strongly. Jack Collison unleashed a 40 yard screamer only to see an impressive Lee Grant tip the ball over the bar. Matt Taylor then came close following some uncertainty in our defence but he could only poke the ball off-target.

Burnley responded well yet again though and almost went into the break 3-0 up following an in-swinging cross by Ross Wallace. With nobody able to get a touch, the ball hit the foot of the post with Green well-beaten.

Eddie Howe had no need to make any changes for the start of the second-half with Burnley seemingly in control and Hammers gaffer, Sam Allardyce clearly rattled. Big Sam responded by making a double substitution for the restart. Nicky Maynard and Sam Baldock came on to replace Taylor and Cole in an effort to improve their firepower up front.

The game continued in a similar vein though and once again the Clarets looked to be giving the Hammers a run for their money. David Edgar could have done better with his shot after getting in the box and then Paterson blasted over the bar as Burnley continued to press forward.

You could see why West Ham were still in the hunt for automatic promotion though and they never gave up trying to get back into the game. Full back, George McCartney brought out a save from Lee Grant after shaking off our defence and you just sensed if they got a goal back we could lose our lead.

Everything the Hammers tried though seemed to lead to nothing but just as Clarets fans were beginning to relax the away team got the goal everybody feared. It was a defensive blunder too by Michael Duff that let them in to score. He misjudged the bounce and let the ball fall to Gary O`Neil. His through-ball found Nolan who charged past both Duff and Grant to lob the ball into an empty net.

Our defence now began to play like plonkers and it came as no surprise when just two minutes later, West Ham were level

The back-four had no answer to a Noble free kick and there was Tomkins to pounce and side-foot the ball home to make it 2-2.

From a relatively comfortable position and two goals to the good we were now in danger of losing the game with West Ham now sensing blood and Burnley looking shell-shocked. There now seemed to be an endless battery of attempts on our goal with the defence looking shaky and Burnley unable to get out of their own half.

Maynard got round the back of the defence to thump over a low cross only for the ball to be scrambled away before Nolan could pounce. In the last few minutes of the game and with Clarets fans nerves jangling, West Ham had three attempts to nick all three points. John Carew failed with his attempt and then Baldock fired wide of target following a knock-down by Carew. It was Baldock again who came close in the dying seconds but thankfully he could not get the better of Grant.

Apart from one-half chance by Austin towards the end that came to nothing, the second-half had been virtually all West Ham and begrudgingly you have to admit they deserved their point in the end and were unlucky not to win.

The Post-match Eddie-Torial

Eddie talked about his disappointment of losing a two goal lead after the match:

‘I’m very disappointed as we were excellent and very brave. We took 10-15 minutes to settle but we had a lot of confidence.

‘They are a strong, physical side, but the third goal was crucial in the game and they got it.

‘We have to say people are growing. We wanted to have a show of spirit and play for the club. I’m disappointed by the result but I’m very enthusiastic about the performance.

‘We’re kicking ourselves because I believe we had the capability of being good enough this year. We’ve surrendered some leads and that’s something we need to focus on.

‘We’ve competed really well against the top sides and given good accounts of ourselves in the big games. It’s perhaps more the games against the teams down the lower end when we’ve struggled and dropped points when we should not have done so.

‘It’s such small margins as we could easily have been knocking on the door. We will have to learn that quickly for next year and keep the group together and have a good push for promotion.’

Match Stats

Burnley: Grant, Trippier, Duff, Edgar, Mee, Wallace, McCann, Marney, Bartley (Austin – 81), Paterson (Stanislas – 90), Ings (McQuoid – 86)

Subs Not Used: Jensen, Hewitt

Goals: Bartley 25, Paterson 36

Booked: Yellow Card for Duff

West Ham United: Green, McCartney, Tomkins, O’Brien, Collins, Nolan, Collison (Carew – 82), Taylor (Maynard – 46), Noble, O’Neil, Cole (Baldock – 46)

Subs Not Used: Potts, Lansbury

Goals: Nolan 68, Tomkins 70

Booked: Yellow Cards for Tomkins, Collinson and Maynard

Possession: 45% Burnley, 55% West Ham (Source: BBC Sport)

Ref: Mark Haywood (West Yorkshire)

Share this article

Vital BFC Editor

14 comments

  • turfmanphil says:

    Grrrrrrrrrrrr, these are frustrating times at Turf Moor! Not a happy bunny at all.

  • deadlydave says:

    Phil, we are mid table at best this year given all the changes to the squad and the lack of options in defence/ central midfield. VERY FRUSTRATING, all we can do now is hope we keep our best players and add to the squad the quality and number to turn us into a side with a shout for promotion next Year. Typical clarets really!!!!!

  • turfmanphil says:

    Yes, I think that’s why it is particularly frustrating! Same old Clarets and back to square one pleading poverty and looking at methods to buy sticking plaster again. I really,really thought we could avoid all this after reaching the Premier League and yet it is like it never happened! I don’t think we have been in danger of finishing so low down since Cotts have we? Problem is it is clear the squad is no way near good enough for a promotion push unless we invest and improve it. We never do,do we?

  • cornwallclaret says:

    We seem to play better against the better sides. This is nice for the purists but does not get the points against the cloggers. What do we want? results which could mean unattractive football week in week out or good games even if the result is not what we want. I have no doubt that if we want to have the best chance of promotion we have to start with an uncompromising defence and forget attractive football.

  • VinRogue says:

    As you put it tmp…worse position than when Laws left. I think the two situations have some similarity, Laws took over when the heart had been ripped out of the club, Howe has had to manage change but he was unable to convinvce Cork and Fox to stay, they decided on a 1st Division outfit promoted into the Championship ahead of staying at Burnley. Eagles and Mears believed they would play for Coyle………so did Blake rather than stay with us. Based on what I believe of the two situations Laws vs Howe one wonders where we would have been under steady Brian??

  • Claretdale says:

    It is frustrating to lose a two goal lead BUT, looking at the stats and the fact WHU are challenging for automatic promotion – is a point not a reasonable result?

  • Couch Potato says:

    No doubt Eddie has noticed that his successor at Bournemouth, Lee Bradbury, has been axed for something like no wins in 6… the frustrating thing for me this season has been that, during both of our poor streaks, we have rarely been far off getting better results, and it would not have required a major turnaround in luck/breaks/goals to be right in the play-off mix, which would have been a considerable achievement, given the scale of rebuilding. So I would encourage patience amongst the Board, and a judicious mix of bringing in a couple of more experienced players (perhaps one as captain) with giving members of our terrific youth team a chance (rather than risk them being lured away to places like the other youth semi-finalists). I’d not be surprised to see several players do better next year, as is reasonable to expect given their age, and for Pato and McCann to be back closer to what we loved about them, as they rebuild after long lay-offs. But the last two months have indeed been painful.

  • Grimsby Claret says:

    We have got to stick with Eddie and Jason now. But if Laws was still in charge he would have achieved at least the same League standing as find ourselves in under Steady Eddie.

  • cubanclaret says:

    I think we might have been relegated this season if we had kept Brian Laws. Not sure he would have adjusted moving from his “strong hand” to the vastly reduced budget apparently afforded to Howe.
    His spell has wreaked havoc for anyone following him, hence a vastly revised strategy this season.

  • cornwallclaret says:

    In my opinion, which is not worth very much according to my wife (Spurs supporter) and the prediction league, I think EH is streets ahead of the accountant appointed BL. I am looking forward to seeing some of our talented youngsters given a chance to develop in the first team. If they are good enouigh they are old enough, I remember Duncan Edwards, Jimmy Greaves, George Best, who knows what we might have in the cupboard.

  • VinRogue says:

    Not sure Laws reaked havoc, leaving us 6th and bringing in EH to push on for automatic which….didn’t even end up as 6th and play-offs. I do think after Coyle left the experienced players reaked havoc not unlike the Chelsea situation where en masse the experienced players decided they had the hump and not even Alex Ferguson would have won them round. Laws wasn’t brilliant but he wasn’t as bad as people make out, lets not forget he pleaded with Kilby to sign Jack Cork before he established himself at Under 21’s and become too expensive, I think he may have even said he thought so much of Jack Cork that his daughter would be…..well there is another story. Not brilliant but certainly not as useless as some who hated him from day one would make out. Was AVB the man that set up an amazing unbeaten year for Porto dropping only 4 points in the league (2 away draws) also winnning the Europa League Cup or just the bloke that worked for Mourinho at Chelsea? Ask Chelsea players and its the latter of course. Was Laws capable of pushing us forward or just someone who couldn’t replace God?

  • Couch Potato says:

    I’m a gradualist rather than backside kicker. So I am right behind Eddie. It does though occur to me that while we call him Steady Eddie, and his level-headed interviews deserve that, his results at Bfc have been as streaky as bacon. Bacon, of course, can be cured, and I reckon Eddie will cure the rashes of relatively little things that have turned the maybe 5-10 games which could have left us right in the play-off mix

  • cubanclaret says:

    VR – I never hated Brian Laws but he did spend most of our money….and most of it unwisely.

  • turfmanphil says:

    Seems strange for a manager that came highly related by a firm of accountants!! By gum,this Board have made some mistakes these past three seasons and I still don’t think they have smelt the coffee!!

Comments are closed.