Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Newcastle 5-0 West Ham

Leon Best reminded Andy Carroll that there is more than one striker on Tyneside as Newcastle dumped woeful West Ham deep into relegation trouble.

Best, making his first Premier League start for the club in the absence of the injured Carroll and Shola Ameobi, finally opened his account on his 15th appearance with a fine hat-trick to repay a large slice of his £1.2 million transfer fee.

They were the 24-year-old's first goals in a week short of a year and came on the day it was revealed Newcastle had rejected an approach from Tottenham for Carroll.

Best's first-half brace and skipper Kevin Nolan's 45th-minute strike put the Magpies in the driving seat, and his third on the hour completed a first double of the campaign and ended the Hammers' recent revival before Peter Lovenkrands helped himself to a fifth.

It was the third time this season Newcastle had scored five or more at St James' Park, and substitute Nile Ranger passed up a glorious opportunity to match the six they managed against Aston Villa back in August.

There was an air of anxiety when it was revealed that Ameobi had joined Carroll in the treatment room.

However, manager Alan Pardew had insisted that both Best and Ranger would get chances this season and his faith in the former Coventry man proved spectacularly well-founded.

Best made his first appearance of the season as a substitute at the DW Stadium at the weekend after a miserable run of injuries had hampered his progress on Tyneside.

But he needed just 18 minutes to justify his selection when he ran on to Lovenkrands' ball over the top to thump a left-foot volley across Robert Green and into the bottom corner.

West Ham had arrived in the north east buoyed by a run of four league games without defeat, but in the relegation zone as a result of victories for Fulham and Birmingham on Tuesday.

Former Magpie Scott Parker had earlier tested Steve Harper with a swerving shot and he attempted to stamp his authority on the midfield battle as the visitors looked for a way back into the game.

However, Cheik Tiote and Joey Barton recognised the danger and started to close Parker down, and with Jonas Gutierrez and Jose Enrique teaming up to terrorise the Hammers down their right, the home side were threatening at regular intervals.

They increased their lead six minutes before the break when a quick-thinking Barton and Lovenkrands carved the sleeping visitors open from a free-kick.

Barton picked out the Dane's run into space and when he slid the ball across goal, Best was again on hand to fire home left-footed.

West Ham's woes deepened markedly on the stroke of half-time when Gutierrez once again found space down the left and sent in a low cross which James Tomkins could only stab out to Nolan two yards inside the penalty area.

Nolan was a model of composure as, with Green desperately trying to recover his ground, he sidefooted the ball firmly into the bottom corner.

Hammers boss Avram Grant sent on Valon Behrami and Victor Obinna for Radoslav Kovac and Frederic Piquionne at the break in a desperate attempt to breathe new life into his team as Mike Williamson replaced Steven Taylor for the Magpies.

But despite Parker's continuing industry they were unable to create anything of note, and Newcastle killed off any hope of a fightback with 30 minutes left when Nolan turned Enrique's pass into the unmarked Best's path and he completed his hat-trick with aplomb.

Lovenkrands added a fifth three minutes later and there was still time for Ranger to fire horribly wide with the goal at his mercy 10 minutes later with the Hammers in tatters.

Newcastle United manager Alan Pardew praised the contribution of hat-trick hero Leon Best in his team's 5-0 demolition of West Ham.

"Leon had been knocking on my door for the last two weeks telling me he hasn't really had an opportunity," Pardew said. "I spoke to him and said, 'You have been here a year and there are no assist, no goals - what is there for us to keep about you?"

"He kept telling me he could do it, and he has proved that tonight. He had an opportunity, somewhat fortunately, because he wasn't due to start. He has a good cameo at Wigan and he was definitely going to come on at some stage tonight, but Shola pulled out this morning.

"I called him with the news about 10.30am and he couldn't wait, I could tell on the phone. It was a brilliant night for him and he deserves it."

Pardew also took the chance to confirm Newcastle's position on striker Andy Carroll, who has been the subject of an enquiry from Tottenham.

"We have given the answer to anyone who has contacted us that he is not for sale, it's as simple as that.

"Harry hasn't rung me and made an inquiry directly. We had a conversation after the game, briefly, about some of his squad who might be of interest to me.

"He asked me how good Andy was and I said, 'He ain't bad', and that was it. But whether there has been a connection above me, as yet I don't know.

"I can't say to you strongly enough that Andy Carroll will not leave this football club in this window, 100%."

West Ham boss Avram Grant is confident his team can bounce back from their humiliating defeat.

"I don't like the game," Grant said. "I don't like the performance, I don't like how we played, but in football, that happens. Sunderland lost here 5-1 and afterwards, they have won many games, so it happens.

"Today was a bad day at the office. Everything we tried to do was not good - not the desire, not the effort, not passing the ball well, putting pressure on the other team.

"But those are things we did very well in the games before, so we need to continue.''

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