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Scottish International Snodgrass Burns His Bridges

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Submitted by nevillenixon on Wed, 30/08/2017 - 10:02

Scottish International Snodgrass Burns His Bridges

If Robert Snodgrass had planned to burn his bridges away from West Ham, then he should feel very proud of himself! Having witnessed his 'performances' first hand we suggest that he steps down from his cross and opens his eyes!
According to several news sources, particularly those in Scotland, when Slaven Bilic decided to splash out £10million on Robert Snodgrass he failed to research what position he best played. The criticism continued with that kind of lack of preparation it’s small wonder that the West Ham manager is fighting to save his job with his side propping up the English Premier League table without a single point.

29 year old Snodgrass this week ended his " hellish" seven month spell at the Irons when he was reunited with his former boss Steve Bruce after joining Aston Villa on a season long loan. Alarm bells started to ring from his first West Ham game as Slaven Bilic introduced him from the bench against Manchester City just days after his big money move from Hull.
Here are a selection of 'Snoddy's comments...

“I was coming on against City and he said ‘Where do you want to play, on the left or right?’ “I thought ‘You have just signed me and I have played on the right or behind the striker at Hull City all season’.“His answer was basically that when people are confident they can play anywhere.”“I joined as Dimitri Payet left and maybe it was a case of ‘you can play there’.“But I’d only filled in on the left on a couple of occasions. I hate that position but when you are Scottish you are brought up to play anywhere.“It’s fine to play for one or two games but you need to play in your right position, especially on the back of scoring nine goals for Hull.“At that stage nobody had scored more goals for Hull or West Ham. The manager was under a lot of pressure and I later said that out of respect I didn’t want to go in and see him during that period. “But when I eventually did speak to him I said I thought he would have known I wasn’t a left-midfielder and that he must have watched me after signing me for that type of money.

“There are certain things that I can’t really say here, but once you look at it I ended up getting a lot of stick for something after joining at probably the wrong time.there were a lot of broken promises and a lot of dishonesty and I realised it wasn’t what I am about. I want to wear my heart on my sleeve and be loyal. What you see is what you get. Sometimes if that is not a two-way street then I don’t want to be part of it.He wanted me to play cup games to try to impress but I said I had done it at international and Premier League level and there was no way on earth I was staying to play cup games.“I have nothing to prove to anyone. I’ve scored nearly 100 goals in my career and done it with a smile on my face.
I know myself that when there is a manager that knows how to get the best out of you then it’s different and that’s why I chose Villa. I wanted to work with Steve Bruce again.
but when you’re doing something for someone they should come out publicly and explain the reasons why but that was never done. “I’ve sat and let everyone else do the talking. They can go about their business and I will go about mine which is playing football, enjoying myself and being a good person every day. I have been at teams like Hull and Norwich and when you have been signed for big money they need to play you to get value. but West Ham are signing lads on double and treble what I signed for and when you’ve got too many and lads aren’t playing it’s not a good environment.they had to shift seven or eight out at the start of the season. People can judge my time at West Ham whatever way they want.”

Well we won't be seeing you again will we Snoddy! - Ed

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Getting Away

Submitted by HuddersfieldHammer on Tue, 29/08/2017 - 19:39

My first time at the London Stadium will be for the Huddersfield game, and I'll be travelling down with some Huddersfield fans. A couple of them are getting the train back up North after the game. They're booked on the 11 o clock from Kings Cross. Will they get back to Kings Cross in time, or will they need to leave early (and avoid their celebrations no doubt) or should they get back in time if they leave at full time?

Arse Wenger Wally

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 29/08/2017 - 13:15

so Arsenal in crisis after putting in a performance even worse than west ham against liverpool….and wenger's answer has been decisive….sell oxlade chamberlain the cause of all the ills….and bring in…yes wait for it……Johnny Evans. lol. you have to laugh. First Leicester wanted him, then Man C and now Arsenal? Wenger must be sitting in the office scratching his head 'well how do i fix this mess this time?' he picks up the papers….Man City want Evans…..'ah there we go…Johnny is the answer'

Bilic staying for now

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 29/08/2017 - 07:40

no real surprise. the board say he's staying for the time being. whether this means he's been told to get a result v huddersfield or 3 wins out of 5 etc who knows. I'm hearing a lot of sacking him would be 'harsh' after just 3 games etc. fair enough its only 3 games and they were all away. however two out of the 3 were winnable ones. also the manner of the 3 losses is a big concern. add to this the fact that once again the season kicks off and the players look no where near up for it…and i do wonder why Bilic is being paid. we are not the ones making the decisions, we are at the mercy of the board and manager. so i guess its the old 'lets get behind the team' mantra for now. hopefully we see a big improvement against huddersfield, i suspect we can't be any worse. however they are a team full of confidence and playing in a manner we won't like….pressing and pace. lets hope we match them at least in energy.

Prem league v Lower league

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 28/08/2017 - 09:42

it was mentioned on another post but i think its worth discussing. The prem league is touted as the best football in the world to watch etc. I see it around the world and its created countries of new age fans…fans that watch it on the t.v each week but have no idea of the history of the club they support…even some of them changing clubs if their 'chosen' club is not winning. i notice 99 percent of these so called worldwide fans support Man C, Man U, Liverpool, Chelsea or Spurs….no surprise there. these glory seeking fans are welcome to their own world of football supporting but for me it begs the question, for the rest, the 'real' fans of a club, fans who grew up with the club, know its history, past players and managers etc…who were there in the glory days and the dark days…is prem league football better? compare ourselves to a sleeping giant who slipped out of the top flight into oblivion years before the prem league…say luton or notts county….isnt the whole match day experience just better? yes the toilets are not shiny and new, and the seats are cracked and rusty underneath, but is that what matters? has the prem league just become a version of tv show wrestling? all style and no substance? the players mega paid actors who are more interested in putting on a show to the world rather than actually playing proper football? its got to the stage where i would rather watch Stevenage v Cambridge on t.v than Arsenal v Liverpool. the game has lost its basic appeal…its all a plastic and for the most part predictable bore. whats the thoughts of those who have been going to prem league games? and of those who just watch it on tv too?

The dross served up in the moden game

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Submitted by Burkie 1 on Sun, 27/08/2017 - 22:48

The gulf between the top 6 7 and 8 and the rest appears to be getting wider i never thought i would see the dross served up yesterday again but i was wrong i watched the W B A v Stoke game today and the first thing that came into my head was how in the name of god are people content to pay good money to watch this shite ,at least yesterday the magpies put in a shift ,as for managers loosing the dressing room i think its goin to be a near thing who's the first to get the gooner Slav or Wenger its a strange phenomenon but when the boss doesn't have the support of the players thats it there's no getting it back ,wenger might as well pack his bags tomorrow

Benitez has a £5 million release clause in his contract

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Submitted by hammergirl on Sat, 26/08/2017 - 22:11

Sky sports just reported that the board are reviewing bilics position after todays display left them unnerved at how the team has performed...and reporting how benitez admired west ham and was touched with how we let him go to Madrid after agreeing to be our manager.....this coming weeks going to be interesting..will they or wont they? I could not begin to fathom how our board is motivated but a full stadium at home in the prem is better than a half empty one in the championship

Now That Was Truly Painful

nevillenixon's picture
Submitted by nevillenixon on Sat, 26/08/2017 - 18:36

Those Hammers fans of a certain age, who have been through the mill, will be perplexed but not surprised by by what is happening to their club, but spare a thought for those younger fans who were seduced from supporting traditional 'serial winners' Chelsea, Manchester's two clubs and Le 'Arse by the brief Hammers renaissance inspired by the now persona non grata Marseilles' captain, currently dropped from the french national team, Dimitri Payet.

Today's woeful and inept performance exemplified the serious issues facing the club, for the first time ever we at the Org are beginning to really question Slave Billic's ability to manage the team! Slaven is a good bloke, he really is a Hammer at heart and is generally adored by the bulk of fans, but is he too nice?

Ok there was the well known spat with Morgan Amalafitano where Bilic stamped his authority on the squad from a discipline point of view, but maybe the birth of a new child and the need for two hip operations, one of which has been done, might have taken Slav's might off the game.

The Elephant in the room that is the 'London Stadium Syndrome' has obviously not helped the situation, a team needs to run out in front of their own supporters early doors to help gain confidence, four matches away from home in a row is hardly ideal is it?

However, Newcastle were there for the taking, low on confidence and with significant injury problems, but they out thought and out fought West Ham.

Following the International break West Ham, currently bottom of the table, will face 'nose bleed' Huddersfield, it could only happen to us irons! -, Ed

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