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24/10/2021
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West Ham United play their the second of three home games in the space of seven days on Sunday – and it’s a truly mouthwatering one with Tottenham Hotspur coming to town.

David Moyes’ men welcome their local rivals to east London looking to make it three wins in a row following impressive victories over Everton and KRC Genk on their return from the October international break.

The two Premier League meetings with Tottenham are always ones to look out for at the start of the season, and Sunday’s game is sure to be no different.

Last year, the Hammers came back from 3-0 down to score three times in the final eight minutes and secure an incredible 3-3 draw at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, before goals from Michail Antonio and Jesse Lingard gave them a 2-1 win in the return fixture.

Tottenham’s form has been up, down and then up again at the start of this campaign, as three consecutive wins to kick-off the season was followed by an equal number of defeats.

But they appear to have got back on track, in new manager Nuno Espirito Santo’s first term in charge, by bouncing back from derby defeat to Arsenal with successive victories over Aston Villa and Newcastle United.

That leaves them with 15 points from their opening eight games, one more than the Hammers and four fewer than league leaders Chelsea.

It means Sunday’s game is nicely poised as Moyes and the Hammers look to lay down an early-season marker.

 

Ticket News

Tickets sold out for this London derby, but that doesn't mean you have to miss out! Seats are available on the Ticket Exchange as Season Ticket Holders who cannot attend relist their seats.

Click here to find available seats.

 

How to follow

Sunday's kick-off is at 2pm, and will be broadcast live in the UK by Sky Sports. If you live overseas you might also able to watch the game live, and broadcast listings in your territory can be found here.

We will also be covering the game live with a blog and audio commentary on whufc.com and our Official App and across our social media channels, with goals, highlights and exclusive reaction to follow after the final whistle.

 

Team News

Michail Antonio

Michail Antonio is expected to return to the West Ham United squad for Sunday’s game after being rested for Thursday’s UEFA Europa League victory over KRC Genk.

David Moyes confirmed that there were no injury worries over the No9, who has six goals to his name this season already, and his game time was merely being managed during a busy period of the campaign.

Ryan Fredericks and Mark Noble both returned from injury to make substitute appearances against the Belgians, but Vladimír Coufal remains a doubt with a groin problem.

Alex Král is absent after returning a positive COVID-19 test, but could come back into the fold in the middle of next week.

For Spurs, Matt Doherty is out with a knock, while Ryan Sessegnon is suffering with a hamstring injury, but the likes of Harry Kane, Son Heung-min, Pierre-Emile Højbjerg and Hugo Lloris should all return after not featuring in Thursday’s UEFA Europa Conference League defeat to Vitesse Arnhem.

 

The opposition

It is just two-and-a-half years since Tottenham Hotspur opened their state-of-the-art stadium and competed in the UEFA Champions League final.

A miraculous run to Madrid, which included dramatic victories over Manchester City and Ajax, encapsulated a thrilling period under the management of Mauricio Pochettino that saw Spurs finish in the Premier League’s top four in four straight seasons between 2016-19.

While a trophy famously eluded Pochettino’s Tottenham – they were beaten 2-0 by Liverpool in that Champions League final and were denied a maiden Premier League title by Chelsea in 2016/17, despite losing just four matches – there was a sense that the north Londoners had established themselves among English football’s top clubs for years to come.

That feeling was compounded when Tottenham opened their eponymous new stadium in April 2019, replacing their historic White Hart Lane home with a £1billion venue featuring 62,850 seats and a range of eye-catching features.

But that Champions League final defeat – and stadium move – turned out to be a sliding doors moment for Spurs, whose fortunes have seemingly taken a downward turn since.

Tottenham players celebrate scoring at Newcastle

Pochettino departed six months later after a disappointing run of results and was replaced by José Mourinho.

Initially, the Portuguese had a positive impact, but soon things turned sour, with a UEFA Champions League exit at the hands of German side RB Leipzig, early domestic cup exits and a relatively disappointing sixth-place Premier League finish in 2019/20.

Mourinho continued last season but, despite guiding the club to the EFL Cup final, he departed in April this year with Spurs seventh in the Premier League and having suffered a second-leg collapse to lose to Dinamo Zagreb in the UEFA Europa League round of 16.

Former player Ryan Mason was appointed as caretaker manager, but the EFL Cup final ended in defeat by Manchester City and Tottenham ended the season in seventh, missing out on Champions League or Europa League football.

This past summer was then dominated by two distracting storylines.

The first focused on who would be appointed to manage Tottenham, with a succession of names being linked to the job before the club settled on the appointment of former Wolverhampton Wanderers boss Nuno Espírito Santo as their new head coach in June.

The second surrounded star striker Harry Kane, with the England captain reportedly eager to leave north London after over a decade of prolific service.

The 28-year-old was reportedly promised verbally that he could leave his boyhood club, with Manchester City allegedly his most likely destination, but when the transfer window closed Kane remained a Tottenham player.

With the transfer window closed for now, the job of Nuno, Kane and recently-appointed Director of Football Fabio Paratici – recruited from Juventus – is to steer Spurs back into the top four.

However, two-and-a-half years on from that Champions League final, that job is a big one.

 

Previous Meetings

Manuel Lanzini scores at Tottenham

West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur have met 50 times in the Premier League, with Spurs winning 24 to the Hammers' 16, while ten matches have been drawn.

Michail Antonio opened the scoring when the Hammers defeated Tottenham 2-1 at London Stadium in the most-recent meeting in February and the No9 has now scored five goals in ten appearances for West Ham against Spurs.

West Ham have twice beaten Tottenham by a three-goal margin in the Premier League – a 4-1 victory in April 1994 and a 3-0 win in October 2013 – with both victories coming away from home in north London.

The Irons have twice beaten Spurs 2-0 in home Premier League meetings, in March 2003 and May 2014.

David Moyes has faced Tottenham on no fewer than 31 occasions as a manager, winning eight, drawing ten and losing 13.

No Room for Racism

All Premier League matches taking place between 16 and 24 October will be dedicated to No Room For Racism, as the League and clubs continue to urge fans to challenge and report discriminatory behaviour wherever they see it.

The League has released a video to reinforce the message that there is no place for racist abuse and that fans can play a key role in the fight against discrimination.

The video reminds supporters that the introduction of League-wide sanctions at the start of the 2021/22 season means that anybody found guilty of racist abuse, whether it occurs within stadiums or online, will be permanently banned from all Premier League grounds. Enhanced training for matchday stewards is helping ensure they are equipped to respond to discriminatory abuse and assist in gathering evidence to ban perpetrators.

The Premier League continues to work alongside other authorities and organisations within the game to tackle online hate, lobbying Government and challenging social media companies to eliminate abuse on their platforms.

Through its online reporting system, the League supports any players, managers and their families who receive discriminatory abuse. A dedicated team investigates cases to identify perpetrators, with legal action taken when required. Since 2019, the Premier League has been proactively monitoring social media platforms and has reported thousands of items of abusive content to social media companies for removal. 

For more information on the Premier League’s No Room For Racism Action Plan, our education resources and for guidance on how to report racism, visit: www.premierleague.com/norroomforracism.

 

Match Officials

Paul Tierney

Referee: Paul Tierney
Assistant Referees: Constantine Hatzidakis and Neil Davies
Fourth Official: Peter Bankes
Video Assistant Referee: Jared Gillet
Assistant Video Assistant Referee: Neil Hopton

40-year-old Paul Tierney takes the whistle for Sunday’s derby clash with Tottenham Hotspur.

The Wigan-born official has been a Premier League referee since the 2014/15 season and has taken charge of two showpiece matches at Wembley Stadium – the 2019 Championship Play-off final between Aston Villa and Derby County, and last year’s Carabao Cup final between Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur.

He has refereed the Hammers on ten previous occasions, with his last West Ham assignment being the extra-time 1-0 defeat to Manchester United in the FA Cup fifth round last term.

Tierney was also in the middle for that unforgettable 3-3 draw at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in October last year, when Manuel Lanzini’s last-gasp strike secured an incredible point.

West Ham have won two of those ten games under Tierney’s charge, with five draws and three defeats.

 

Michail Antonio returned to haunt Tottenham Hotspur yet again as West Ham United roared back into the Premier League’s top four at a sold-out London Stadium.

Antonio’s third matchwinner against Spurs following his memorable deciders at the Boleyn Ground in 2016 and Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in 2019 settled a competitive, if not classic, derby in the Irons’ favour.

The goal arrived 18 minutes from the end, when the No9 stole a march on Harry Kane to volley home Aaron Cresswell’s left-wing corner and secure a victory that took the Irons above their opponents, Brighton & Hove Albion and Manchester United in the table.

West Ham now have 17 points from their opening nine matches and have won nine of their opening 13 games in all competitions, losing just two.

Concentrating on Sunday’s game, after the drama of the  historic comeback at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and the euphoria of a home win last season, this was a far cagier affair, in the main.

And it says everything about David Moyes’ West Ham that they negotiated it and made it three wins and three clean sheets in the space of eight days, following a 1-0 Premier League victory at Everton and 3-0 UEFA Europa League Group H win at home to Belgians KRC Genk.

In truth, the first half failed to live up to lofty expectations, as both teams struggled to gain the ascendancy for long, resulting in a bitty, low tempo opening 45 minutes.

That said, it still featured 15 goal attempts, including a handful of clear-cut chances at both ends.

The first arrived on eight minutes, when Pablo Fornals took to the air to meet Jarrod Bowen’s cross, but Hugo Lloris was equal to the effort low to his right.

From then on, the sides traded opportunities, with Tomáš Souček, Fornals, Michail Antonio and Ben Johnson all firing efforts off target for the home side, while Łukasz Fabiański dealt with shots from Pierre-Emile Højbjerg and Son Hueng-min and a Tanguy Ndombele header at the other.

 

 

West Ham’s clearest opportunity of the first half went to Souček ten minutes before the interval. The Czech rose high above Sergio Reguilón to Fornals’ cross at the far post, but uncharacteristically powered his header a yard the wrong side of the upright.

Reguilón then turned provider at the other end, hanging up a centre for Harry Kane to attack with a header of his own, but Fabiański was positioned perfectly to claw the ball over the crossbar to safety.

The second half started at a higher pace than the first, with both defences immediately more stretched as a result.

Saïd Benrahma and Bowen both saw shots blocked as again West Ham started the brighter, while Ben Johnson produced some encouraging runs down the right touchline, but Spurs closed down space well whenever the home side got within view of Lloris’ goal.

While the game was bubbling under, what it really needed was a moment to really get the crowd going, and it was provided by Spurs defender Cristian Romero, who was booked for needlessly taunting Fornals after making a challenge on the Spaniard.

The melee that followed brought the Claret and Blue Army into things and, with the volume levels rising, West Ham went on the offensive.

It was Fornals himself who led the charge, winning the ball back deep in Tottenham territory before seeing his shot flick off Dier and out for a corner.

And it was from that set piece that the deadlock was finally broken. Runs from Rice and Souček  created space at the near post and when Cresswell delivered the ball, there was Antonio to hold off Kane and volley powerfully into the bottom left-hand corner.

Having seen his side fall behind, Nuno Espírito Santo sent on Bryan Gil, Giovani Lo Celso and Steven Bergwijn, but neither they, nor Harry Kane or Son Heung-min, could find a way through this outstanding, resilient West Ham rearguard.

Next up for Moyes’ men is a mouth-watering Carabao Cup fourth-round tie with Manchester City at London Stadium on Wednesday evening. You can be part of a record-breaking attendance in that competition by securing your seat now!

 

West Ham United: Fabiański, Johnson, Zouma, Ogbonna, Cresswell, Rice ©, Souček, Bowen (Dawson 90), Benrahma (Lanzini 84), Fornals, Antonio
Subs not used: Areola (GK), Ashby, Masuaku, Diop, Noble, Vlašić, Yarmolenko

Booked: Souček, Ogbonna

Goal: Antonio 72

 

Tottenham Hotspur: Lloris ©, Emerson Royal, Dier, Romero, Reguilón (Gil 84), Højbjerg, Skipp, Lucas Moura (Bergwijn 90+1), Ndombele (Lo Celso 84), Son, Kane
Subs not used: Gollini (GK), Tanganga, Davies, Sánchez, Rodon, Alli

Booked: Romero

 

Referee: Paul Tierney

Attendance: 59,924
 

Lineups
Match Statistics