There can be no doubting that the vast majority of
changes made in E13 in the summer transfer window have been complete successes
thus far. Slaven Bilic looks composed and in control, unafraid to make
attacking changes if the side is losing, as exhibited against Southampton on
December 28th. Dimitri Payet has been worth every last penny of his reported
£10.4m transfer fee paid in the summer. Other purchases have made big impacts,
too. Darren Randolph showed his class to keep 3 straight clean sheets after
Adrian was sent off against Leicester in August. Victor Moses scored the opener
in the win at the Etihad and has injected pace down the wings, and Michail
Antonio has ensured that that productivity has not dropped off, even though
Moses has now gone down with an injury. His impressive performances have
rewarded him for his patience with 2 goals and an assist in his last two games
against Southampton and Liverpool.
Looking
back at the 2014/15 season under Big Sam (who did great things, but took the
club as far as he could), who honestly would feel confident in him if we still
had him at the helm? Sure, we sit 6th in the Premier League, but our
injury crisis has already hit, yet we’re still unbeaten in 8 games. Drawing 5
games in a row with Payet, Lanzini, and Sakho out is no mean feat, not to
mention the absences of Reid and Moses during that spell as well. Since Carl
Jenkinson was sent off against Bournemouth, James Tomkins has been by far the
better of the two options at RB, giving James Collins an opportunity alongside
Angelo Ogbonna in the middle, and he’s been rewarded with a new 2-year contract
following MOTM performances against Swansea, Aston Villa, and now Liverpool.
Even first-team players have been turning out impressive performances; Mark
Noble and Cheikhou Kouyaté have kept Alex Song out of the side, and Aaron
Cresswell looks to have stepped up and is playing more like the Hammer of the
Year he is, after a shaky start to the season.
Upcoming
games give the team a chance for revenge against a Bournemouth side who look
surprisingly comfortable in this league, as well as the opportunity to do the
double over Manchester City, with the home game coming on February 2nd.
The way Bilic has the squad playing is far more indicative of what all fans
want to see. By all fans, I include neutrals, because the team are playing with
a verve and electricity that I can’t remember seeing from a team in claret and
blue for a long, long time. Hitting teams on the counter attack with pace from
Antonio or Moses, creativity in abundance from Lanzini and Payet, and lethal
finishing in the air from Andy Carroll if a cross is put in the right area.
Even goals worked from open play seem more fluid and less
Allardyce-y. For example, Payet’s first goal against Newcastle saw Mark Noble,
Aaron Cresswell and Manuel Lanzini combining intricately on the left side of
the Newcastle penalty area. When, in the last 4 years, would you have seen
Noble turn on the corner of the box and play the ball square to someone who
caressed the ball into the top corner? Rarely. The ball would either have been
sent to the back post for a hopeful 50/50 header between Diafra Sakho or a
half-fit Andy Carroll and a centre-back, or it would have been played across
the box to a player like Gary O’Neil or Matty Taylor, who would have clattered
it high into the Trevor Brooking Upper.
Something about this team just
gives me more confidence in the club. The squad oozes confidence, and the team
spirit seems to be incredibly high. The game against Liverpool at the weekend
showed this in a number of ways. At one point, the cameras cut to a shot of
Dimitri Payet and Darren Randolph on the bench, sharing a joke and laughing
with one another. One is a French international worth his weight in gold, and
the other is our backup goalkeeper who has spent the vast majority of his
career in the Championship, yet they are both clearly having a great time
playing in the same team as one another. The spirit Bilic, and of course the
results, has fostered is refreshing to see, and for once it would seem that the
spirit isn’t one that comes about from there being cliques in the squad, as has
felt like the case in previous years. Mark Noble was the first to celebrate
with Payet when he scored against Newcastle, Adrian and Kouyaté always share a
massive hug at the end of a game, and Tomkins and Jenkinson have appeared in
numerous videos together despite vying for the starting right-back position.
Going deeper into 2016, it
would be ridiculous of me to think that West Ham can keep up their form over
the first half of the season, I’ve learnt too much from the last 4 years.
However, if the board can make a couple of intelligent signings in January, and
the team can finish 8th or 9th in the last season at
Upton Park with an FA Cup semi-final under their belts, then the 2015/16 season
could be considered a great success.
Agreed. If the squad stays healthy from now one we're top 6 quality. Other teams haven't seen the injuries we have so there's a chance one or two may fall off. Being honest, I'd be disappointed with less than top 8.
ReplyDelete