Bilic Mutes the Mutiny at the Last but West Ham’s Battlers Need a Plan

 ‘When we were on zero points, I didn’t see a lack of discipline in the camp,’ said Slaven Bilic. ‘I felt that we wanted to do it all together.’ Photograph: Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
‘When we were on zero points, I didn’t see a lack of discipline in the camp,’ said Slaven Bilic. ‘I felt that we wanted to do it all together.’ Photograph: Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
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Bilic Mutes the Mutiny at the Last but West Ham’s Battlers Need a Plan

 ‘When we were on zero points, I didn’t see a lack of discipline in the camp,’ said Slaven Bilic. ‘I felt that we wanted to do it all together.’ Photograph: Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
‘When we were on zero points, I didn’t see a lack of discipline in the camp,’ said Slaven Bilic. ‘I felt that we wanted to do it all together.’ Photograph: Zemanek/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock

Midway through the first half, Slaven Bilic switched his wingers. Michail Antonio went left, André Ayew went right. It was a sure sign that Bilic’s tactics were malfunctioning.

In theory it made sense for West Ham United to start in a 4-4-2 system, which plays to the strengths of both Andy Carroll and Javier Hernández, for the first time this season. Yet a plan that looks good on paper will never work if players are confused by their instructions and in practice West Ham’s ponderous approach rarely stretched Swansea City. There was no flow, no rhythm, and the disgruntled atmosphere at the London Stadium grew to a mutinous pitch when Diafra Sakho replaced the ineffective Hernández in the 78th minute.

A dire game was drifting towards a goalless draw and for the first time there was a sense of the narrative shifting against Bilic, whose hold over a hitherto adoring public seemed to be slipping, belatedly allowing the board to contemplate sacking the Croat without having to worry about a supporter backlash. Hernández furiously shook his head on the bench and the crowd sympathised with the £16m striker’s incandescence at having made way instead of Carroll.

Yet a prominent theme during the past 12 months has been West Ham’s knack of grinding out an ugly win just when Bilic is thought to be on the brink. It happened on several occasions last season and the pattern continued when Sakho, who tried to engineer a move to Rennes in the summer, vindicated Bilic’s unpopular decision by converting a cross from his fellow substitute Arthur Masuaku in the 90th minute.

There was a similar vibe when West Ham responded to losing their first three games by earning an unconvincing victory against Huddersfield Town last month and there is a temptation to conclude that winning while playing poorly is proof that a decent team will break out once confidence comes flowing back. It is partly this sense of longing that has protected Bilic, an intelligent and charismatic man who speaks articulately and wears his heart on his sleeve.

He is hard to dislike, which explains the desire to see him do well. Other teams in West Ham’s position might have downed tools in an attempt to force their manager out, but Bilic’s players continue to fight for him, masking the lack of any discernible style of play by demonstrating their battling qualities.

“I see that they want to do it,” Bilic said. “After the first three games, when we were on zero points, I didn’t see no discipline in the camp. On the contrary, I felt that we wanted to do it all together. Are they doing it for the manager or themselves? At the end of the day, it’s not important.

“You can talk about the quality of our performance today but we won the game because we didn’t give up. We didn’t raise unbelievably the quality of our game in the second half, but if I am on the pitch and I don’t care, it was the perfect situation not to care. But we didn’t. We forced that goal.”

The problem is that the longer this persists, the more Bilic will come across as a motivational cheerleader rather than a tactical mastermind. That might be enough to keep West Ham out of the relegation zone but it is not a solid foundation for success.

Having risen to 15th after picking up seven points from four games, West Ham have an opportunity to build after the international break. “Now I’m expecting for us to do much better,” Bilic said.

He is safe for now, but ultimately this was the kind of uneven performance that shows why his long-term future is less certain. Unless Bilic can snap them out of the wearying cycle of constantly needing a scrappy win to ward off a major crisis, West Ham will have few compelling reasons to extend his contract at the end of the season.

The Guardian Sport



Barcelona Loses at Home for 1st Time This Season, Falling 2-1 to Las Palmas

 epa11749529 UD Las Palmas Fabio Silva celebrates after scoring the 1-2 lead during the LaLiga EA Sports match FC Barcelona against UD Las Palmas at the olympic stadium Lluis Companys in Barcelona, north-eastern Spain, 30 November 2024. (EPA)
epa11749529 UD Las Palmas Fabio Silva celebrates after scoring the 1-2 lead during the LaLiga EA Sports match FC Barcelona against UD Las Palmas at the olympic stadium Lluis Companys in Barcelona, north-eastern Spain, 30 November 2024. (EPA)
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Barcelona Loses at Home for 1st Time This Season, Falling 2-1 to Las Palmas

 epa11749529 UD Las Palmas Fabio Silva celebrates after scoring the 1-2 lead during the LaLiga EA Sports match FC Barcelona against UD Las Palmas at the olympic stadium Lluis Companys in Barcelona, north-eastern Spain, 30 November 2024. (EPA)
epa11749529 UD Las Palmas Fabio Silva celebrates after scoring the 1-2 lead during the LaLiga EA Sports match FC Barcelona against UD Las Palmas at the olympic stadium Lluis Companys in Barcelona, north-eastern Spain, 30 November 2024. (EPA)

Barcelona lost at home for the first time this season when the Spanish league leader was stunned 2-1 by Las Palmas on Saturday.

Barcelona had played superbly in the first three months under new coach Hansi Flick and was flying high after convincing victories over Real Madrid in the domestic competition and Bayern Munich in the Champions League. It had won all eight home games overall.

But it has now gone three rounds of La Liga without a win. Prior to the loss to Las Palmas, it fell 1-0 at Real Sociedad and drew 2-2 at Celta Vigo.

Madrid, despite its own troubles especially in the Champions League, can now move ahead of Barcelona in the Spanish league. It trails Barcelona by four points with two games more to play.

Sandro Ramirez and Fábio Silva scored for the Canary Islands club on either side of Raphinha’s equalizer.

It was the first time the modest club that wears all yellow uniforms won at Barcelona since the 1971-72 season and just its third victory at the Catalan club overall. Las Palmas' other visits to Barcelona have ended in defeat 34 times, with three draws.

“We are thrilled because we have made history,” Sandro said. “When you start the season you think that these games are usually going to end in wins for the bigger side, but if there is one thing we believe in is our capacity to work hard all week to get results like this.”

Barcelona's Lamine Yamal returned from a right ankle injury that had sidelined with for three weeks as a halftime substitute, but Jasper Cillessen saved his best shot. The Las Palmas goalkeeper also did well to palm a Raphinha free kick over his bar in the final minutes.

Sandro, a former Barcelona youth player, capped a fine five-pass buildup by Las Palmas starting from its own box as it masterfully undid Barcelona’s high pressure in the 49th minute.

Raphinha had already hit the crossbar in the first half before he equalized in the 61st. The Brazil forward took a short pass from Pedri just outside the area, skirted across the edge and drilled a shot between two defenders.

It was Raphinha’s ninth league goal of the campaign. Only teammate Robert Lewandowski, with 15, has scored more in the league.

But Barcelona was caught pushing forward for a second goal when Silva controlled a ball from Javi Muñoz and sent a shot bouncing past Iñaki Peña and into the corner of the net in the 67th.