West Ham United 4 Tottenham Hotspur 3 Dicks 19, 72 (pen), Sheringham 6, Anderton 29 Kitson 21, Hartson 38 Howells 53
FA Carling Premiership, Boleyn Ground, Monday 24 February 1997
West Ham United: Mikloško, Breacker, Dicks, Potts, R.Ferdinand, Bowen, Moncur, Hughes, Bishop, Hartson, Kitson (Dowie 79)
Tottenham Hotspur: Walker, Austin, Carr, Calderwood, Campbell, Wilson, Howells (Rosenthal 83), Anderton, Sinton (Nielsen 79), Iversen, Sheringham
West Ham United were not in a good place when rivals Tottenham Hotspur paid a visit to the Boleyn Ground for a Monday Night Football derby in February 1997.
The Hammers had lost their previous five matches, four in the league and an embarrassing 1-0 home FA Cup third-round replay defeat by Second Division Wrexham.
Indeed, Harry Redknapp’s side were on an eight-match winless run stretching back to a 2-0 home league victory over Sunderland on 28 December 1996.
That unwanted record had left West Ham sat in 18th position in the 20-team FA Carling Premiership table and in grave danger of being relegated flight for the first time since being promoted to the new top-flight in 1993.
A winless January left Redknapp desperately seeking the formula needed to save West Ham’s season.
Drastic action was needed. First, the manager delved into the transfer market, shelling out a combined £7million to bring in strikers John Hartson and Paul Kitson from Arsenal and Newcastle United respectively.
Next, he handed rookie defender Rio Ferdinand, then just 18, a full league debut in a 1-0 defeat at Derby County on 15 February.
Nine days later, Redknapp fielded all three in his starting XI for the first time for the mouth-watering, must-win visit of their local rivals, Spurs.
On a blustery night, the footballing winds would blow one way and then the other during what was an unforgettable London derby.


