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West Ham United fans have a dream. In two weeks they will follow their team to Old Trafford and watch Carlos Tévez and his teammates beat Manchester United. West Ham will stay up, Wigan Athletic, Charlton Athletic and Watford will go down and the East End of London will rejoice.
Beating the drop after being ten points from safety in March would be one of the greatest escapes of all time, but as far as Paul Jewell is concerned, it would mean nothing. According to the Wigan manager, the FA Premier League has conspired to keep West Ham in the Barclays Premiership and the London club should have had points deducted on Friday instead of being fined £5.5 million after the inquiry into the transfers of Tévez and Javier Mascherano.
“I heard rumours that if West Ham had been marooned, they would have had points deducted,” Jewell said. “I’d bet you my last penny that if it had been Watford, they would have had points deducted. The Premier League were desperate for West Ham to be marooned — an insider told one of my people, ‘Please beat West Ham because the Premier League know they bottled it.’ ” Although the Wigan manager would not be drawn on whether West Ham had friends in high places, he insisted that Wigan would have been deducted points if they had been found guilty of fielding ineligible players in Premiership matches and that the inquiry panel had reached a compromise.
“If the Premier League have found out that Tévez is owned by a third party, they might have to look at one or two other London clubs who are high up in the table,” Jewell said. “They have set a dangerous precedent, but I think they are frightened of what they would find if they looked at some other clubs.”
Even after all the headlines and controversy, Tévez’s move will look good business if the Argentina forward performs as he did at the JJB Stadium, against Bolton Wanderers at Upton Park on Saturday and at Old Trafford on the last day of the season.
The 23-year-old forward was able to play against Wigan only after he received clearance from the Premier League at 5pm on Friday — another bone of contention for Jewell — but there was no arguing with the rapturous reception that he received from his club’s 6,000 supporters when he was substituted after 83 minutes. By then West Ham had a 3-0 lead thanks to an opportunistic lob by Luis Boa Morte and two breakaway goals by Yossi Benayoun and Marlon Harewood that were set up by the fast feet and quick thinking of the Argentina forward.
“Tévez is a good player and I don’t want this to sound like sour grapes, but what would have happened if I had played [Luis Antonio] Valencia, who was suspended today?” Jewell said. “If it would have just been a fine, then whatever fine it was would have been worth it because it could have kept us in the Premiership.”
Valencia will be available to play against Middlesbrough on Saturday after a three-match ban, but Wigan will need more than the return of the Ecuador midfield player to save them from the drop. Although the Premiership would miss Jewell, on this evidence his team belong in the Coca-Cola Championship. Two months ago, Wigan resembled a team who were desperate to climb away from the relegation zone when they won 1-0 away to Manchester City, but on Saturday they were hesitant in defence, pedestrian in midfield and isolated in attack.
“West Ham fully deserved their victory,” Jewell said. “My players were nervous and devoid of ideas and energy. The occasion seemed to get to them. We were poor defensively and we didn’t do anything going forward.”
While Jewell read the “riot act” to his players after the final whistle, Eggert Magnússon, the West Ham chairman, raced to the away team’s dressing-room from his seat in the directors’ box to congratulate his players. Not much has gone right for the Icelandic businessman since he completed his £85 million takeover in November, but he had something to celebrate.
“Friday was an expensive day, but this eases the pain,” Magnússon said after watching his team climb to within a point of safety. “I never lost hope. The team now have the passion and belief to fight for each other and I cannot ask for any more.”
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West Ham, being on the wrong side of London, will always be the whipping boys. If we win, it's "they were lucky", if we loose, it's "well what do you expect". We will never have any friends in the media until we get some stability into the club and achieve the currently, elusive out-of-reach titles.
The situation here was caused by two, or maybe three ex-board members fixing a deal, which affected the future of the club. The new owner, new manager, team and the supporters have been properly considered by the decision. However any club repeating this action, would be right to expect harsher punishment. This is a fair and just outcome, a tribute to common sense.
Any suggestion of conspiracy in the decision, by Mr. Jewell could be dangerous for him. Overall, the deal signed last August has cost West Ham £10.5m in total, because both players were only playing for one season and if we stay up, or go down, we will have nothing to show for it. Tevas will cost us £20m if we want to keep him.
Simon Cotton, West Mersea, Essex
From what I understand of both rules, the registration of Tevez & Masch was never in doubt, the question marks are over the ownership of the players and the potential influence of 3rd party owners, this is why whufc have not been deducted points and heavily fined, the new regime found the "ownership documentation" and presented it to the relevant authorities, had they tried to conceal these documents as per the previous owners, then a points deduction would be fair punishment.
The question of influence are targeted towards the owners, not the players, there registration is not in doubt and therefore they are eligible to play for WHUFC.
The matter is now closed and finished, West Ham did beat Wigan emphatically on Saturday, maybe the Wigan Manager should spend some time on the training ground with his defenders rather than ranting about injustices and bottle jobs.
John Taylor, London ,
Of course Paul Jewell is right. How can a club like West Ham deliberately deceive the Premier League to gain an unfair advantage and not be deducted points because it wouldn't be fair on their fans?
Compare that with the case of Middlesbrough who took advice in good faith from the Premier League that they had just cause to call off a game due to illness and who were then deducted three points which resulted in their relegation.
West Ham should have lost all of the points gained when playing ineligible players. Surely no team can ever be deducted points again after this decision.
Craig Smith, Stockton on Tees, UK
It's a pity PJ has taken this view. The FA may not have deducted points from West Ham, which would have made Wigan's path to safety much easier but West Ham then went on to stuff Wigan where it really matters, on the pitch. On their contrasting performances over the weekend I'd say West Ham deserve Premiership football next season more than Wigan.
Paul, Sydney, Australia
Paul Jewell may be speculating but I tend to agree with him. Any other club would probably have been dealt with more harshly than West Ham appear to have been, the injustice is further compunded by allowing Tevez to re-sign on Friday in order to play Saturday. Personally, I don't believe Wigan are a Premier league club but at the same time I don't think West Ham should be given they have broken league rules. This has set a very dangerous president which some clubs may follow.
Jinky Jase, Birmingham,