Wednesday, 8 October 2008

THE SECRET IS OUT

OLAS 444 Sunday 5th October

It’s a closely guarded secret but I can reveal that our next sponsors are going to be “Debtsure” – the UK debt solutions specialists whose catchy slogan is “we can clear 70% of your debts”. They have won the contract just ahead of the Consumer Credit Counselling Service – “a registered charity offering free confidential advice and support to anyone who is worried about debt”, who themselves just about pipped Scott Duxbury’s first choice – Lehman Brothers – that right bunch of bankers. So, all you Hammers can look forward to ordering your shirts again without the discredited XL which has flown into the ground. Now we will have the words “Debtsure; Paying off those bastards in Sheffield very slowly”, proudly emblazoned on our chests and pie-filled tummies.


There was never any doubt that the dodgy South American deal was going to come back and bite us on the arse and the rumours are it could cost us £30million or more, though I suspect the actual amount will be smaller. One of the problems about it is that we won’t know for a while. It is unlikely to be confirmed until well into the new year, and unless we also imported large quantities of drugs from South America at the same time or there is a pot of gold that one of our directors has been keeping for such a rainy day, it certainly puts paid to any interesting forays into the transfer market in January. The best that we can hope for there is to pick up inflated prices for some of our dummies and to get a couple more loan players. Not that that is necessarily a bad thing. Di Michele and Ilunga are settling in well and making their mark.

When it comes to assessing the merits of the compensation claim, there is no doubt that the whiff of hypocrisy is all around, What is so different about the arrangements that Man U or Liverpool have made with Honest Kia Joorabchian for Tevez and Mascherano? Who owns the players now? And why were Sheffield United so quiet when we were languishing in bottom place for so long that awful season? Now, I might be a bit mutton, but was there even a teeny-weeny peep out of them when they thumped us 3-0 in April 2007 with Tevez playing, and barely a few matches left? Sheffield United went down not because of Tevez but because they were crap. They may deserve pity for being crap, but nobody deserves compensation for being crap.

If West Ham don’t succeed in getting this judgement overturned in a higher court, if such a challenge is permissible, then the floodgates will truly open, as all sorts of compensation claims will be made against referees making strange decisions, tea-ladies dishing up dodgy sandwiches, Michael Fish for saying it wouldn’t rain, and God-knows-who, seen as unfairly responsible for teams gong down. It may not be much of a time to be a banker or a venture capitalist at the moment, but, if this judgement stays, it promises to be a bumper time to be a lawyer.

None of this excuses Hammers involvement in such transparently spiv-like businesses (no offence intended to any spivs that are reading, apparently there are one or two in East London ), but it is a jungle out there and those running the club should have known better than to get drawn into its “anything goes” practices that are the jungle norm.

Despite all these matters, on the field it’s going pretty well. Four wins out of six is a fabulous start. With two of the teams that finished above us last year – Everton and Portsmouth – making very stuttering starts to their campaigns, and Hull currently holding down a top-half place that won’t last, we have every incentive to attempt what looked very unlikely at the start of the season – a European place.

There were many who felt that the Popular Front for the Liberation of West Ham from the Deadweight of Curbishleyism, of which I was a leading propagandist and activist, overdid it, were too harsh and damning and far too negative. But when you witness the cultural change that Zola has brought within just a couple of weeks, the Popular Front know that the ends justified the means. And besides, we didn’t kill him.

In that short time Zola has liberated the players and the fans. Football is coming home at Upton Park. In a day and age when, unfortunately, the word “academy” has been tainted and means little more than some grubby little capitalist getting their grubby little paws on a school building and the land around it, then converting some of the classrooms into luxury flats for a quick buck, and attempting to squeeze more profits out of education, the “academy of football” is starting to mean something again.

When I saw us nestling in 5th place in the league table after the win at Fulham, for the first time in ages I checked to see who was above us that we could possibly catch rather than worry about who was below us. At the beginning of the season I was dreading October 26th when we are home to Arsenal. I work in a school dominated by Gooners, and under Curbishley I was expecting us to be trounced – the only compensation being that it was the beginning of half-term and the kids may have forgotten about it by the time we came back. But now I hear myself screaming “Bring it on!” – I wish we were playing them this week. When we do face them I doubt there will be many points between us. Mind you we do have to play Hull next week…

Earlier this season I was bemoaning the lack of quality in depth in the squad and gave examples of players who were tryers but just not up to it. Mattie and Natalie fell into that bracket then, but look at them now and you have two highly motivated players, desperate to to do well, really working at their game and improving all the time. Why, even Lucas Neill looks motivated (I didn’t say he’s any better, just more motivated) And Zola’s insistence that the players enjoy playing, and won’t get bollocked for giving the ball away if they are trying to play good football, is giving them the freedom to improvise and entertain. Our Saturday afternoons are filled with excitement and anticipation again. Thank you Gianfranco. And Curbishley, you boring little man, if you are awake, look and learn.

Today I fancy we are in for a tough game. Three wins out of three at home means that teams are going to come here very defensively-minded and seek a goal on the break. Bolton are dull as shite but look a bit more solid than they did a year ago. I’m sure Steve Clarke is working hard at tightening up our defensive play but he can only work with the material he has got and I’m not convinced we have a solid partnership in defence yet. In terms of attack Zola has shown that he is keen to use the wings and the key to unlocking defensively-minded teams will surely be to use the full width of the pitch to stretch them and also have players like Di Michele drawing players to him, then weaving some magic on the ground. I haven’t made any match predictions this season yet, so there is no harm in me saying 1-0, goal by Mark Noble – I might even put money on it. Enjoy the game – I do these days! COYI!!!

1 comment:

Debtadvisor11 said...

I heard that debt sure were sponsoring us from another site, sounds like good news. Looks like west ham are on the up