West Bromwich Albion turn down West Ham’s £4m bid for Graham Dorrans

• Club confirms written offer made for midfielder
• Chairman Jeremy Peace insists he is not for sale

West Bromwich Albion have turned down a written bid in the region of £4m from West Ham United for midfielder Graham Dorrans.

The club’s chairman, Jeremy Peace, insists he is not for sale, saying: “As I have stressed several times since we achieved promotion over two weeks ago, our aim now is to retain our core players and try to strengthen our squad around them.

“I want to make it clear again that Graham Dorrans is not for sale.”

Dorrans has been in excellent form this season, scoring 18 goals from midfield, becoming the driving force behind the club’s successful promotion to the Premier League and being named in the PFA Championship team of the year.

Dorrans’ agent, Willie McKay, admits it would not come as a shock if West Ham were chasing the 22-year-old: “I would not be surprised if West Ham have made a bid for Graham as he has been the best player in the Championship,” McKay told skysports.com.

“Graham has had a fantastic season for West Brom and I know a lot of clubs are interested in him. As far as I know Graham is very happy at West Brom, but every player wants to play at the highest level they can.

“It is up to the two clubs and if a deal is agreed Graham will have a decision to make.”

West Brom, who will be keen to keep hold of the former Livingston man as they prepare to return to the Premier League, may struggle, however, to reject a big offer for the playmaker.

West BromWest Ham UnitedPremier LeagueChampionshipguardian.co.uk

West Ham United 0-1 Stoke City | Premier League match report

Gianfranco Zola flew home to Sardinia yesterday morning in search of head space. On Saturday he had seen his West Ham United side suffer their sixth successive defeat and slip perilously close to the relegation zone. The normally upbeat Italian was so downcast after the loss to Stoke City that he questioned his own ability to do his job and revealed he would contemplate quitting.

“I have to find out what the problem is,” he said dolefully. “If the problem is me then why not [resign]? I will consider overnight whether I am doing a good job.” West Ham players have been given three days off – whether Zola joins them for training on Wednesday depends on the result of his reflections, although reports last night claimed the Italian has told friends he is prepared to battle on, for now at least.

It is 43 years – Zola’s lifetime – since West Ham last suffered six consecutive league defeats. Back then the rotten run barely mattered because top-flight survival was already ensured; by contrast, the current streak leaves the club above the relegation zone on goal difference only and having played a match more than their closest rivals, Hull City, and the consequences of that form continuing could not be more bleak. The club’s debts of over £100m are such that the co-chairman, David Sullivan, warned upon taking over in January that relegation would trigger “Armageddon”.

That prospect has provoked panic at Upton Park. Sullivan previewed Saturday’s visit of Stoke by publicly and privately ridiculing his team’s recent performances and there is uncertainty about what motivated that move: was it a desperate attempt to stimulate an improved display – he had made a similar outburst before the visit of Birmingham City in February and claimed vindication after West Ham won 2-0 – or wasit designed to pressurise Zola, who was appointed by a previous regime, into resigning so that the club would not have to pay compensation on his £1.9m salary?

Certainly Zola considered the chairman’s comments unhelpful and this time the team did not respond with a victory, turning in a committed but clumsy display as Stoke triumphed thanks to the game’s one moment of class, a fine dribble and goal by the substitute Ricardo Fuller. Since then West Ham’s co-owner, David Gold, has publicly expressed his “100%” confidence in Zola’s ability to muster sufficient points from the season’s final six games. It is understood that since Saturday Sullivan has privately backed the manager, too, though it is not clear whether that is purely because he has been unable to find a suitable replacement.. And the question remains as to whether Zola retains confidence in himself.

This is first managerial job and he confessed to not quite knowing what to do. “We can always find new ideas, there’s no problem with that – it’s finding the ideas that can work in this team [that is the problem],” he said. “That’s the thing that we’ll be focusing on and that’s the thing I’m going to be thinking about.”

Zola has tried many formations and selections, either because of injuries or voluntarily, and on Saturday he opted for another revamp, changing five players from the midweek defeat by Wolves and partnering Mido and Carlton Cole up front. “I played with two big strikers and tried to be a little bit more direct than normal,” he said. “Unfortunately it didn’t work so we will have to try to find the right way.”

Last season Zola’s method was clear and West Ham played an effective passing game that lifted them to a commendable ninth-place finish. This term, however, started badly and since then the manager and team have betrayed a lack of conviction. In his eagerness to find a winning formula Zola may have become too frantic, his constant changes further destabilising the players who continue to trust in him. “We are all behind the manager, he is a top man,” said Mido. “We have a very good chance of staying up. I look at the faces of the players in the dressing room and I don’t see anyone who thinks they are in a team which will get relegated.”

“The manager is a great man,” said the goalkeeper Robert Green, who insists the negative vibes around Upton Park have no impact on the players. “It’s not unlike West Ham to have drama, is it? Ever since I joined it has gone from one thing to another so now it’s like water off a duck’s back.” A few days away may refresh Zola’s zeal for that fight.

Premier LeagueWest Ham UnitedStoke CityGianfranco ZolaPaul Doyleguardian.co.uk

Ellis Short’s long shadow looms but Steve Bruce remains defiant | Dominic Fifield

The Sunderland manager is not alone among the top-flight strugglers in feeling relative security

Steve Bruce might have been forgiven the haunted look of the condemned man yet, as he considered Ellis Short’s presence at the Stadium of Light this evening, all he could offer was defiance. The Dallas‑based businessman is a rare visitor to Wearside but, with his investment treading water above the relegation zone, the time has come to witness their lack of progress first-hand. “There’s no trepidation that he is coming,” offered Bruce. “I’m glad he is. When you’re struggling, you need the support of the chairman and the owner. I have got that.”

Those managers currently in the scrap for survival must hope they are blessed with similar backing. Untimely weekend defeats for West Ham United and Hull City have left both Gianfranco Zola and Phil Brown embroiled in the congestion near the foot, with grumbling discontent welling at each club and the financial implications of demotion into the Championship horribly real. Sunderland, without a league victory since last November, have seen their most promising start to a campaign in a generation unravel wretchedly. In the desperate circumstances, a visit from a largely absentee owner might have sinister implications.

Logic suggests there is little point in changing managers at this time of year. The transfer deadline has passed, denying a new man the chance to refresh his squad for the run-in. Back when the cut-off for signings came in March, this period was littered with managerial casualties. These days, with six points covering the clubs from 13th to 19th in the Premier League and with hefty pay-offs to recompense the departed, upheaval may be too much of a risk. Outside the upper echelons, Hereford sacked John Trewick yesterday though theirs is a club meandering 11 points clear of trouble and with Graham Turner, their manager of 14 years up to April, already in situ. Back in the elite, Alan Shearer’s brief and ultimately unsuccessful tenure at Newcastle United that yielded five points from eight games serves as a warning; radical change, even instigated by a homecoming hero, does not always have the desired effect.

Bizarre selection policies or tactical decisions could still prompt the axe, of course, though there is a sense that each manager is largely extracting the most he can from his respective options. West Ham’s strongest available side was deflated by Bolton Wanderers at Upton Park, where pressure on Zola will persist given that he was not the new owners’ appointment. Hull included only five of the side who had beaten Manchester City last month when wilting at Everton, but Brown could point to injuries as a contributing factor in a 5-1 drubbing. His admission that “the gameplan was left in the dressing room at half-time, for whatever reason” was more damning but the last time the Hull manager departed Merseyside he had been granted the dreaded vote of confidence by his new executive chairman. This time, with only two games against sides currently in the top eight to come, there appears little prospect of a change at the top.

For Sunderland, the reality is more troubling. Bolton arrive on Wearside tonight having leapfrogged their hosts in pursuit of mid-table and, while Wanderers are upwardly mobile, the locals are slipping steadily towards the foot. The only victory gained out of the last 16 in all competitions was against Barrow, currently 21st in the Conference. Their descent is as baffling as it is alarming. “We had our best start in 35 years, and now we haven’t won a game for three months,” said Bruce. “We are all upset at what has happened. I have never been on a run when I’ve not got a result over the winter. It is staggering. I wouldn’t have thought it possible back in the autumn after the start we’d had.

“But you look to the chairman [Niall Quinn], the influence he has had, and the owner who has been very, very supportive in a very short period of time. We are very fortunate to have him. He lets you go on as a manager and do your job. I will never be complacent. I knew it was a difficult challenge when I took it on. They finished fifth bottom twice but we will eventually get there, I’m sure of that. It will take time but, eventually, I will reward [the owner] and give him the team he wants.”

He must weather this storm before he can begin to think long-term. Short converted £48m of loans into shares recently and has provided the funds to secure the likes of Michael Turner, Lorik Cana, Lee Cattermole, Darren Bent and, during the January transfer window, Matt Kilgallon and the loanees Alan Hutton and Benjani. He would expect more for his considerable investment than prolonged toil through to May. “I do have personal contact with Ellis Short,” added Bruce. “He’s at the Bolton game and I will see him on Wednesday, whatever the result.” Bolton’s visit is the second of four consecutive home league games that could ultimately prove key. This may no longer be sacking season but, even so, the Sunderland manager will privately be praying for a performance this evening to strengthen his position.

Premier LeagueSunderlandWest Ham UnitedHull CityDominic Fifieldguardian.co.uk