Match Report

 

Wednesday, 13th August 1997
Upton Park

West Ham United 2 VS 1 Tottenham Hotspur

Miklosko, Breacker, Potts, Rieper, Kitson (Hughes, 88), Hartson (Dowie, 86), Lomas, Ferdinand, Moncur (Lampard, 85), Lazaridis, Berkovic. Attendance
25,354

Referee
S J Lodge
Walker, Edinburgh, Howells, Nielsen (Sinton, 77), Ferdinand, Carr, Ginola, Vega, Scales, Iversen, Campbell (Clemence, 16).
Subs not used: Rowland, Sealey. Subs not used: Calderwood, Baardsen, Fenn.
Booked: Lomas. Booked: Clemence, Iversen.
Goal Scorer: Hartson 4, Berkovic 70 Goal Scorer: Ferdinand 83


    Eyal Berkovic marked his Upton Park debut with the winner that piled the summer heat on beleaguered Gerry Francis.
    Israeli ace Berkovic had not made any secret of his wish to play for Tottenham after his season at Southampton.
    But instead he moved to East and not North London, and tonight his 70th-minute goal, after he had gone past Ramon Vega, proved decisive.
    Harry Redknapp's side were sent on course for their best start in 11 seasons when John Hartson capitalised on shocking defensive work to claim his first of the season.
    And even though Les Ferdinand opened his White Hart Lane account after his £6 million move from Newcastle with a close-range strike late on, Spurs knew they were second-best.
    Indeed Francis must be fearing the worst after another horror show from his team, made more worrying by a knee injury for Sol Campbell.
    The Spurs boss claimed he would not be deflected after Sunday's opening defeat by Manchester United.
    But there could be no excuses tonight as a side containing five players who have cost him £22 million in 1997 alone folded in abject fashion.
    Outclassed and outfought, Spurs were never at the races as Redknapp's side showed the commitment and desire sadly lacking in Francis' troops.
    The writing was on the wall inside 15 minutes, by which time sorry Spurs were already a goal and a key player down.
    In fact, it took barely three minutes for their frailties to become apparent, with Steve Carr gifting the ball to Stan Lazaridis and then never getting near the Aussie as he tracked down the left.
    Lazaridis crossed low and there was Hartson, who had opened his Hammers account against Spurs in February, to bounce a side-footer down and into the net from eight yards.
    That was bad, but there was worse to come. Tottenham were ragged, shapeless, artless and, Steffen Iversen aside, often hopeless.
    Campbell's exit, following a clash with Paul Kitson, did not help their cause.
    Steve Clemence came on, with John Scales dropping into the back line after starting as a man-marker on Berkovic.
    But without Ian Walker, who made point-blank stops to deny Hartson and then Kitson, it would have been all over long before the interval.
    David Ginola was peripheral at best, with Ferdinand totally overshadowed by teenage cousin Rio, and panic was the order of the day, especially when Berkovic was allowed the time to fire a whisker wide.
    Norwegian Iversen had at least caused the odd concern at the other end, but Ludek Miklosko was only really tested in the closing minutes of the period, a diving one-handed stop from Allan Nielsen followed by a block at Ferdinand's feet.
    Ginola was more visible after the break, and Marc Rieper had to block Nielsen as the Dane steamed in, but the Hammers still looked the better side.
    One Berkovic-inspired move ended with Hartson's diving header flashing over the angle, before the tensions of the night boiled over just before the hour.
    Carr clashed with Berkovic and John Moncur and a free-for-all ensued, referee Steve Lodge consulting twice with his linesman before deeming Iversen and Steve Lomas the guilty men. The FA may well be studying the video.
    Within 10 minutes, however, it seemed over as a contest. Spurs had survived one more scare when Kitson headed over from a matter of yards, but it was delaying the inevitable, which came in the 70th minute.
    Lazaridis slid through to Berkovic and Vega completed a miserable week after his Sunday own goal by allowing the little Israeli past him.
    Vega appealed for hands perhaps he had a case but Berkovic did not care, as he poked beyond Walker for his first goal in claret and blue since his £1.75 million move from The Dell.
    Ferdinand then took advantage of good work by substitute Andy Sinton to give Spurs undeserved hope, and, in a frantic finish, Frank Lampard smashed against the Spurs bar and Vega forced a great stop from Miklosko.
    But Spurs could have no complaints, West Ham had what they were worth.

 

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