West Ham 1-2 Bolton | Premier League match report

Before the game, one of the televisions in the press room was unplugged because Bolton’s team of match analysts needed the scart lead. It was an easy enough problem to fix. West Ham had a collective screw loose, and that proved somewhat more problematic.

This was always supposed to be a one-sided game, but the surprising thing was the identity of the one side. West Ham had kept four successive clean sheets at home in the league, while Bolton had not scored in their last five away, but the visitors were, in their own way, magnificent. On this evidence, Owen Coyle has not transformed their playing style, rather he seems to have supercharged it. We all know what Bolton do well, but they did it better. Much, much better.

West Ham were two down at half-time, and it could have been four or more. The goals came in the opening 16 minutes, from attacks down the right wing. Both were embarrassingly easy, the second particularly so.

In the 10th minute, Fabrice Muamba challenged Alessandro Diamanti in the centre circle, winning the ball. The Italian fell to the ground, clutching his leg, as play continued via Gretar Steinsson to Lee Chung-Yong. The Korean’s cross from the right curled back towards goal and landed on the head of the onrushing Kevin Davies, six yards out. Diamanti was barely back on his feet by the time the ball hit the back of the net.

Six minutes later, Steinsson chipped the ball down the inside-right channel, James Tomkins attempted to usher it out of play and Davies stole in to poke the ball towards the centre. Had the attack ended there it would have been embarrassing enough. It did not. To their credit, Bolton had two men in the box, gambling on Davies winning the ball. One of them, Tamir Cohen, headed the ball down and the other, Jack Wilshere, volleyed into the net.

It was a humiliating goal to concede, but there could have been more: Johan Elmander was allowed a free header from a long throw, and missed an easy chance in first-half stoppage time. From a Lee cross, Wilshere had a free header; if he had been any taller than 5ft 8in he would surely have scored. All of this before half-time.

Bolton could not keep up that level of intensity, and once Cohen was given a second yellow card with 20 minutes to play, their task became one of containment. West Ham threw on attacking players, but still they could not attack with conviction. With less than two minutes to go, Diamanti picked up a loose ball on the right wing, cut inside and shot inside the far post. He celebrated almost apologetically, as well he might. After a recent improvement, the shadow of relegation hangs over his side once again.

West Ham UnitedBolton WanderersPremier LeagueSimon Burntonguardian.co.uk

Squad sheets: West Ham United v Bolton Wanderers

Context is everything. West Ham must win this match, for it presents their sole realistic chance of success in a run that includes Manchester United, Arsenal and Chelsea. Bolton, meanwhile, are in a run of games against fellow relegation-battlers, having beaten Wolves last week and with Sunderland and Wigan to come. So much for the context, what of the contest? On paper, there should be none: West Ham have conceded in one of their last five at home, Bolton have scored in none of their last five away. Simon Burnton

Venue Upton Park, Saturday 3pm

Tickets £35-51 (0871 222 2700)

Last season West Ham 1 Bolton 3

Referee L Probert

This season’s matches 15 Y52, R3, 3.67 cards per game

Odds West Ham 5-6 Bolton 4-1 Draw 13-5

West Ham

Subs from Kurucz, Stech, Da Costa, Stanislas, Daprela, Collison, Mido, Ilan, McCarthy, Dyer, Ngala

Doubtful Dyer (leg), McCarthy (knee)

Injured Gabbidon (hamstring, 13 Mar), Noble (arm, 13 Mar), Ilunga (calf, 20 Mar), Boa Morte (knee, Aug), Hines (knee, Aug), Davenport (legs, unknown)

Suspended None

Form guide LWWLDD

Disciplinary record Y49 R3

Leading scorer Cole 9

Bolton

Subs from Al Habsi, Bogdan, Gardner, Weiss, Ward, Samuel, A O’Brien, Shittu, Riga, Cohen, Klasnic, Vaz Tê

Doubtful None

Injured Cahill (arm, 20 Mar), Basham (knee, Apr), Holden (broken leg, Apr), McCann (foot, Apr), Davis (knee, Aug), M Davies (ankle, unknown), J O’Brien (knee, unknown)

Suspended None

Form guide WLDLDL

Disciplinary record Y52 R2

Leading scorer Klasnic 6

Match pointers

• Three of the last four meetings between these sides in all competitions have finished 3-1 to Bolton

• West Ham have won one of their last 11 league meetings with Bolton (3-1 in May 2007), losing nine of the other 10

• Bolton have failed to score away from home in the Premier League for seven hours and two minutes

• If selected, Scott Parker will be making his 250th Premier League appearance

• 67% of Bolton’s goals have come from set-plays, the largest proportion in the Premier League

Premier LeagueWest Ham UnitedBolton Wanderersguardian.co.uk

Tessa Jowell invites West Ham to tender for the Olympic Stadium

• Olympics minister throws door open to London club
• Stadium use likely to be granted to highest bidder

West Ham United’s hopes of occupying the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games gained fresh impetus today when Tessa Jowell invited the Premier League club to put in a formal bid to take it over.

The Olympics minister announced that the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC), which will manage the Stratford site after the Games, is preparing a tender process for interested parties to compete. “The legacy company is inviting bids for potential legacy tenants,” Jowell said. “It is not a decision for government. We are a stakeholder but it is a decision for the board of the legacy company. The fact is there is going to be a competition to determine the tenant and if West Ham want to submit a proposal, they are welcome.”

As Jowell was specifically calling on West Ham to bid, Britain’s International Olympic Committee member, Sir Craig Reedie, was stressing that the £537m stadium should be reduced to a 25,000 capacity in order to accommodate the athletics legacy pledged to the IOC in London’s bid. He considers that promise still to be compatible with the ambitions of either a football or a rugby club.

However, it is not a scheme that would suit West Ham and there were early indications yesterday from well-placed informants saying that OPLC will grant tenancy of the stadium to the highest bidder. It is believed that the terms of reference will be broad and that all options will be examined but, as public money is involved, there is a determination to get the best deal for the taxpayer.

The legacy-company board has yet to formulate its terms of reference for the tenancy procurement process, having only met for the first time late last year. The company is believed also to have an open mind to a deal that would see a tenant paying a fixed sum for a multi-year lease at the stadium as much as to an outright purchase.

That is likely to mean UK Athletics’ best chance of securing its tenancy is in a formal partnership with another tenant. That is not likely to be West Ham.

Olympic games 2012West Ham UnitedPremier LeagueTessa JowellMatt Scottguardian.co.uk