WHO Poll
Q: 2023/24 Hopes & aspirations for this season
a. As Champions of Europe there's no reason we shouldn't be pushing for a top 7 spot & a run in the Cups
24%
  
b. Last season was a trophy winning one and there's only one way to go after that, I expect a dull mid table bore fest of a season
17%
  
c. Buy some f***ing players or we're in a battle to stay up & that's as good as it gets
18%
  
d. Moyes out
38%
  
e. New season you say, woohoo time to get the new kit and wear it it to the pub for all the big games, the wags down there call me Mr West Ham
3%
  



Alan 3:42 Tue Sep 4
Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Mail

Diafra Sakho's decision to leave £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham sums up the club… the training ground isn't up to scratch and Europe laughs at scouting system and infrastructure

Diafra Sakho abandoned orange Lamborghini when he left for Rennes in January
The under-performing striker earned enough money to disregard a supercar
Money is being thrown at average players as Premier League TV income balloons
West Ham have lost four games from four despite spending £100m this summer
Meanwhile, their Rush Green training ground is in desperate need of investment

By Ian Herbert

The story of the orange Lamborghini sums up the malaise at the heart of West Ham United, a club with another new manager, another £100m of summer acquisitions and four straight Premier League defeats to show for it all.

The vehicle was parked up in the same bay for days last spring at the club's Rush Green training ground and when a regular visitor asked why, it emerged that it belonged to striker Diafra Sakho, who had left the club for Stade Rennais in France, a full three months earlier.

'He'd just bought it and left it there,' a source tells Sportsmail. 'The sheer waste of it, sitting there for everyone who walked past to see.


A picture of Sakho's first Lamborghini Aventador, which he crashed into a wall in January 2016. The car left in West Ham's training ground car park (not pictured) was orange.

The gargantuan incomes of Premier League football allowed a bang average forward, who has since flunked in the French league and been loaned on to Bursaspor in Turkey, to view the idea of selling a £200,000 vehicle as simply not worth the effort. Yet the same river of TV money has done pitifully little for the basic football fabric and infrastructure of the club he left behind.

When David Moyes made use of his manager's changing room at Rush Green last season, he was surprised to find 14 people also occupying it. He discovered that he was expected to share.

When the 'Beast from the East' struck last winter, Moyes had to take the players into the gym as there was inadequate undersoil heating at Rush Green. The gym wasn't big enough, so extra Astroturf was laid outside it as well.

A threadbare infrastructure would be easier to accept if West Ham possessed one of the more fundamental requirements of Premier League success - a serviceable system to find and buy the best players.

'They have a handful of scouts and no target lists,' one source tells Sportsmail. 'The transfer policy seems to stem from the same four or five agents calling [co-owner] David Sullivan and telling him what he needs.

'I've not come across a Premier League club like it for sheer lack of football infrastructure. The Premier League income affords them this way to try to buy their way out of trouble. The rest of Europe just laughs at this kind of thing.'

Here is a club which does not seem capable of looking beyond which players are on the market. It is thought that David Moyes had wanted to overhaul the club's antiquated and random way of buying players, earlier this year, having built his success at Everton on a meticulous system.

There were promises to fans from Sullivan that things would change after the home defeat to Burnley last March provoked a pitch invasion. But West Ham's big bang instead came with the arrival of Manuel Pellegrini, who has brought Mario Husillos, sporting director of Malaga, a club relegated from La Liga last season. Very early days, but as yet no improvement.

Pellegrini has been decisive on some matters. He insisted on a three-year deal for Jack Wilshere, while Sullivan was inclined to offer the midfielder one year. New goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski and the new central defensive combination are solid enough. Yet the initial signs are of a club still lacking any sense of what kind of football they want to play, or of how to bring the best from their players.

Marko Arnautovic is the best player on the club's books yet the very last thing he needs is a manager who tells him so. Moyes reined in the mighty ego and reaped the rewards, managing him more successfully than Mark Hughes at Stoke or Slaven Bilic. The more affable Pellegrini, whose man-management touch is much lighter, has made Arnautovic captain. His old Stoke traits seem to be back.

Few, if any, players will tell you Pellegrini has put a little fear in them. That was never much of a problem at Manchester City, where director of football Txiki Begiristain led the assembly of a vast squad. But there was a legacy. Pep Guardiola made Yaya Toure shed a stone after succeeding Pellegrini.

Life at West Ham is vastly less comfortable and on the evidence of the first four games, the club need steel from their manager's office. There was a fecklessness in Saturday's last-gasp defeat to Wolves which took us back to the dog days of the Bilic era and asked why Sullivan considered Pellegrini to be an upgrade on Moyes in the first place.

Players out of position, not looking for each other and barely co-existing on the field. Some dreadful decision-making from Aaron Cresswell ahead of the late goal. Three rolls of the managerial dice on three substitutes who were not remotely interested in defending.

West Ham have no intentions of parting company with their new manager, having invested so heavily in him. On Monday, Sullivan declared: 'The manager has our 100 per cent support. It's a difficult moment but we must have a strong reaction.'

Pellegrini has also demanded an upgrade at Rush Green, as Sportsmail revealed in July, though that will have minimal impact against the London Stadium's next three visitors: Chelsea, Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur.

But the upgrade needs to come on the pitch - and fast.

Replies - In Chronological Order (Show Newest Messages First)

Mr. Burns 3:45 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
'They have a handful of scouts and no target lists,' one source tells Sportsmail. 'The transfer policy seems to stem from the same four or five agents calling [co-owner] David Sullivan and telling him what he needs.

'I've not come across a Premier League club like it for sheer lack of football infrastructure. The Premier League income affords them this way to try to buy their way out of trouble. The rest of Europe just laughs at this kind of thing.'

Makes for great reading that.

scott_d 3:45 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
What a typical nothing story.

Side of Ham 3:51 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
If that's a photo his first Lambo, why did he have Carroll's or Cresswells initials as his number plate?

Hammer and Pickle 3:51 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
I’m not reading all that.

chim chim cha boo 3:57 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Absolute arse-wipe of an article. I actually resent the three minutes it took to read it.

Arnie is showing traits of his Stoke days? All I see is him being the only player who looks like he actually gives a fuck.

If you haven't read the article yet, don't bother.

SurfaceAgentX2Zero 4:01 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Absolute bollocks from start to finish.

boltkunt 4:03 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
One of the worst pieces of journalism I've read in a long, long time.

Sven Roeder 4:06 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Didn’t ABOU leave his club car in a KFC car park with the keys in the ignition when he left?

Or was that an urban myth?

Mike Oxsaw 4:06 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Higher probability is that it was leased and just sat there waiting for the lease to expire and the owners to come & collect it. No incentive for them to do so if the lease is fully paid up

Jim79 4:10 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
I was just in the middle of typing just that Mike. Most players especially foreign ones are members of car clubs paying a monthly premium allowing them to drive almost any car they want and chop and change at will. I've got some friends who run a club like this and most of their business come through players and their agents. Complete bollocks non story.

charleyfarley 4:11 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
According to MID database it's not insured

master 4:12 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
car crash story.

Side of Ham 4:24 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Sven.......

ABOOooooooooooooooooudoned you say?

Dr Moose 4:45 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
By Ian Herbert

The story of the orange Lamborghini sums up the malaise at the heart of West Ham United, a club with another new manager, another £100m of summer acquisitions and four straight Premier League defeats to show for it all.

When have we previously spent £100m in a summer?

Cheezey Bell-End 5:00 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
I googled Andy Carroll's car and there are pics of a Mustang with the same reg as the Lambo with comments that it was his car from 2 years ago.

Russ of the BML 5:33 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
This is a wind up, right?

A player leaves his car in the club car park and that signifies the club has a poor infrastructure.

I mean, the article may raise some valid points but the way its been put across is about as classy as a shit on a plate.

Mike Oxsaw 5:57 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
In other news..."Carlos Tevez & Javier Mascherano join West Ham in a surprise move on the last day of the transfer window and the mainstream media never had a clue..."

Lee Trundle 6:19 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
I thought this DICKHEAD was to do a "tell all" story this summer that all the social media mob would lap up?

Buster 6:23 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
It's not his number plate. It's something Marlon Harewood's AC13 company put on cars that they've done up when they're taking photos of them.

boltkunt 6:37 Tue Sep 4
Re: Sakho left his £200,000 Lamborghini at West Ham
Rumor has it, that's your motor, B man son?

Page 1 - Next




Copyright 2006 WHO.NET | Powered by: