West Ham United 3 Cardiff City 0 (West Ham United win 5-0 on aggregate)
EFL Championship Play-Off semi-final second leg, Boleyn Ground, Monday 7 May 2012, 4.30pm BST West Ham United: Green, Demel, Reid, Tomkins, Taylor, Noble, O’Neil, Collison (Lansbury 48), Nolan © (McCartney 69), Vaz Te, Cole (Maynard 86) Subs not used: Henderson (GK), Faubert
Cardiff City: Marshall, McNaughton (Blake 81), Taylor, Hudson, Turner, Whittingham, Lawrence, Gunnarsson, McPhail (Cowie 76), Miller (Kiss 76), Mason Subs not used: Heaton (GK), Earnshaw
When West Ham United began the 2011/12 season following relegation with the experienced Sam Allardyce installed as the Club's new manager, the expectation among many fans was that the Hammers would win the Championship title.
The signings of Kevin Nolan, Matt Taylor, Abdoulaye Faye and John Carew added to the optimism that the Club’s fortunes would turn around immediately following the horror-show of 2010/11, when the Hammers finished rock bottom of the Barclays Premier League.
However, a 1-0 home defeat by Cardiff City on the opening Sunday of the season gave those same supporters a reality check. Promotion was not guaranteed.
Despite achieving a Club-record 13 away wins, losing just eight of their 46 league matches and amassing 86 points under Allardyce, West Ham had to make do with third place and a spot in the Play-Offs.
There, in the semi-finals, West Ham would face the same Cardiff side which had beaten them nine months earlier.
Malky Mackay’s Bluebirds had finished eleven points behind the Hammers in sixth, but they had lost just nine league matches all season. The men from the Welsh capital would be no pushovers.
The first leg was played at the Cardiff City Stadium on Thursday 3 May 2012 amid raucous noise, with 20,000 home fans singing ‘Men of Harlech’ at the tops of their voices in the lead up to kick-off.
West Ham’s players did not cower, however, and it took just nine minutes for Jack Collison – a Wales international who had represented his country in the same stadium just two months before – to nod the visitors into the lead after David Marshall had parried his initial shot.
Four minutes before half-time, Collison stunned his fellow countrymen a second time by driving a shot in from the edge of the box, albeit with the help of a deflection off Liam Lawrence.
Despite a determined effort from Cardiff after the break, West Ham would take a two-goal advantage back to London for the second leg.
“We all know how important this fixture is to everyone connected with West Ham United,” penned manager Allardyce in his programme notes for the return match, “and we will be doing absolutely everything we can to win through to the final. We are in a good position, but there is still plenty of hard work to be done.”
Nearly 35,000 fans crammed into the Boleyn Ground on a Bank Holiday Monday afternoon, with the tie set for an unusual 4.30pm kick-off time.
Just as it had been in South Wales, the atmosphere for the second leg was fantastic, with the sound of ‘Bubbles’ and ‘Come on you Irons!’ filling the air as the two teams took to the field.
Big Sam was able to name an unchanged side from the first leg, with Kevin Nolan captaining the side alongside recently-crowned Hammer of the Year Mark Noble and Gary O’Neil in midfield, with first-leg match-winner Collison and Ricardo Vaz Te supporting Carlton Cole in attack.
At the back, the dependable Robert Green started in goal, with Guy Demel and Matt Taylor at full-back and Winston Reid partnering James Tomkins in central defence.
After a lively opening 14 minutes, that man Collison was at the centre of the action again, nut-megging Cardiff left-back Andrew Taylor before winning a corner.
Matt Taylor’s kick bounced off the shoulder of Cardiff defender Andrew Hudson and Nolan was on hand to nod home from two yards. As the Boleyn Ground erupted, the skipper celebrated with his trademark ‘Chicken Dance’.


