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I think it's good that West Ham can mix it up by either keeping it on the ground or hitting the big man. Swansea aren't a tall, strong, physical side, so hitting more long balls to Carroll made sense, and paid dividends. That won't work against every team, think it might on the 28th though ;-)...

red devil Wrote:

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> I think it's good that West Ham can mix it up by

> either keeping it on the ground or hitting the big

> man.


Have to agree - the problem was always that BFS had ONE idea, one plan and one route to goal and no plan B. Ironically (given his talent) the only proper route-one goal was Sakho's. Just hope we can hang onto him. Worry for me is the Nolan/Carroll brand may take over when we lose Sakho, Song and Kouyate in Jan for the Africa Nations Cup.


Great crosses from Jenkinson btw - Wenger must be glad he kept Chambers.

Refs are making strange decisions regarding the advantage rule this season. During the City v Everton game, a City player was fouled slightly, remained on his feet still in possession and control of the ball, and unimpeded played a pass to another City player who then played a crappy pass that went straight to an Everton player. The ref pulled it back to the original foul presumably because he felt no advantage had been gained. How much advantage do they need?...

???? Wrote:

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> Don't worry Otta - jah and PD happy with their

> teams tippy-tappying to mid-table obscurity :)



West Ham fans getting overjoyed a third of the way through the season beacuse of their lofty position, yet forget they have been the butt of jokes for years. Make the most of it, it won't last.

Ladygooner Wrote:

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> red devil Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > If Sakho had scored after Fabianski clattered

> into

> > him, would Fabianski still have been sent

> off?...

>

> Apparently not, according to the commentator


Probably because he hadn't been denied a goalscoring chance.

Ally McCoist offers his resignation from Rangers

Ally McCoist has offered his resignation as Rangers manager, BBC Scotland understands.


But, as it stands, he will be in charge for Friday evening's Scottish Championship fixture against Queen of the South - until told otherwise.


The 52-year-old has a 12-month rolling contract with the Glasgow club, who have yet to comment officially.


So either the club pays his salary up in full, comes to a settlement, or keep him in place for the next 12 months.


It is believed that the players have not yet been informed.



(That sort of assumes the players don't have access to the internet)

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