West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce vents frustration during a loss to Sydney FC on Saturday. Simon Watts / Getty Images
West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce vents frustration during a loss to Sydney FC on Saturday. Simon Watts / Getty Images

Sam Allardyce already in the hot seat at West Ham United



It may have been the worst trip down under for a British side since the England cricket team’s disastrous visit last winter. West Ham were beaten by Wellington Phoenix and Sydney FC and lost striker Andy Carroll. Divisions at the club were exposed, debate about manager Sam Allardyce’s position reopened.

Long before the season starts, a favourite has been installed in the sack race: Allardyce. To many, it was a surprise he survived the last campaign. When he did, it was a statement from the board talking about the club’s ethos and passing principles. Or, as it was predictably called, the “West Ham Way”.

Then there is the Allardyce Way. The diet of direct and defensive football, the emphasis on set-pieces, the willingness to subjugate more talented players according to the needs of his on-field lieutenant, the cumbersome Kevin Nolan. When philosophies collide, there are few winners. Certainly not West Ham, who scored twice – one an own goal – and conceded five in their New Zealand misadventure.

Allardyce blamed the 3-1 defeat to Sydney on an enforced change of approach.

“We’re just working on our new style as we’ve got to get a bit more open and expansive as it seems to be what’s demanded in the game now,” he said. “We’re working on that side but have lost the defensive resilience that saw us get 14 clean sheets last season.”

That has long been his argument, that there is a trade-off in the quest for attacking football.

Allardyce has often insisted his teams have entertained. He has tended to lose the argument. The Big Sam predicament has been a constant. He is a one-man guarantee of survival. His methods upset fans.

Both Newcastle and Blackburn were relegated 18 months after sacking him. West Ham, who are preparing to move into the Olympic Stadium in 2016, cannot afford to go down. Allardyce has twice steered them to safety, once without alarms and after a visit to the bottom three last season.

The board held their nerve when they were under pressure to sack him, then. They backed him again in May but there are increasing signs they are not enjoying his regime.

Allardyce was hounded out of Newcastle. West Ham have similar expectations of a style of play. And, it seems, stylish players. The gifted, unpredictable Ravel Morrison is becoming a cause celebre. A crowd-pleaser could be exiled. “Sam has said Ravel is not part of his plans but we, as a board, see him as part of our plans,” co-owner David Sullivan told Talksport.

It raises the question of who picks the players or, indeed, who signs and sells them. The summer recruitment drive has encompassed some uncharacteristic arrivals for an Allardyce side. Diego Poyet is a passing midfielder, Mauro Zarate a No 10 for a team who prefer to field the uncreative Nolan behind the sole striker to feed off the flick-ons. One offers more elegance, the other an efficiency proved over the best part of a decade in the manager’s teams.

While the Ecuadorian target man Enner Valencia is more of a typical Allardyce arrival and while it should give West Ham a better deputy for Carroll as, for the second successive campaign, he misses the opening months, another expensive batch of signings – amounting to some £30 million (Dh187.1m) – serves to confuse matters.

With West Ham seeming split in different directions, between the physical and the technical, the manager and the power brokers, it suggests a parting of the ways would have been more logical so they could have proceeded with one vision.

Instead, the seeds of a civil war seem sown. Allardyce is the ultimate Roundhead: stern, joyless, efficient. West Ham want to be Cavalier: fun-loving, pleasure-seeking, heedless of the future.

Big Sam’s mathematical formula invariably ensures a minimum of 40 points and the probability of 50. Owners and supporters hope to reach their destination in a more entertaining manner. But disharmony can lead to disappointment. As the England cricket team can testify, flaws exposed in Australasia do not always disappear on a return to British soil.

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hall of shame

SUNDERLAND 2002-03

No one has ended a Premier League season quite like Sunderland. They lost each of their final 15 games, taking no points after January. They ended up with 19 in total, sacking managers Peter Reid and Howard Wilkinson and losing 3-1 to Charlton when they scored three own goals in eight minutes.

SUNDERLAND 2005-06

Until Derby came along, Sunderland’s total of 15 points was the Premier League’s record low. They made it until May and their final home game before winning at the Stadium of Light while they lost a joint record 29 of their 38 league games.

HUDDERSFIELD 2018-19

Joined Derby as the only team to be relegated in March. No striker scored until January, while only two players got more assists than goalkeeper Jonas Lossl. The mid-season appointment Jan Siewert was to end his time as Huddersfield manager with a 5.3 per cent win rate.

ASTON VILLA 2015-16

Perhaps the most inexplicably bad season, considering they signed Idrissa Gueye and Adama Traore and still only got 17 points. Villa won their first league game, but none of the next 19. They ended an abominable campaign by taking one point from the last 39 available.

FULHAM 2018-19

Terrible in different ways. Fulham’s total of 26 points is not among the lowest ever but they contrived to get relegated after spending over £100 million (Dh457m) in the transfer market. Much of it went on defenders but they only kept two clean sheets in their first 33 games.

LA LIGA: Sporting Gijon, 13 points in 1997-98.

BUNDESLIGA: Tasmania Berlin, 10 points in 1965-66

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