Undeserved West Ham gain Premiership status

Last updated : 30 May 2005 By Paul Farrington
Ignore all the reports stating that the Hammers are a big club and are back where they belong. They are not.

West Ham finished a massive twelve points behind third placed Ipswich Town and have won promotion through the unfair system of the playoffs.

Do not get me wrong, West Ham won their games fair and square and deserved their victories. However the season is a year long and not just a test of who is the form side come the end of the season.

The Hammers overcame Preston by one goal to nil in the playoff final today with Bobby Zamora netting the winner early in the second half.

Here is how the table looked on the final day of the season.

Last game played on
Sunday 8th May 2005
PldHomeAwayOverallPtsGD
WDLFAWDLFAWDLFA
1[P] Sunderland 46164345211337312029710764194+35
2[P] Wigan Athletic 46135542151274372025129793587+44
3Ipswich Town 46173353267106323024139855685+29
4Derby County 461076383012383330221014716076+11
5Preston North End 461472442275112336211213675875+9
6West Ham United 46125636249593032211015665673+10

Match Report

Life-long West Ham fan Bobby Zamora led his team back to the promised land of the Premiership with a 57th-minute winner that left Preston North End in a Championship dead end.

Having lost last year's final to Crystal Palace, the Hammers were clearly determined to ensure that lightning did not strike twice and they dominated throughout as they deservedly climbed back into the top flight.

Just one place and two points separated these two sides over the course of a gruelling 46-game campaign.

Goalscorer Zamora celebrates winning promotion
And after finishing in fifth-spot, North End also held a psychological advantage over the Hammers following two feisty Championship victories in which there had been no love lost between the sides.

But straight from the kick-off, West Ham - who replaced Carl Fletcher with Shaun Newton following their semi-final victory over Ipswich Town - made sure that league form counted for nothing on the neutral turf of Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.

Indeed, after just four minutes, Nigel Reo-Coker played in the overlapping Tomas Repka who was denied his first goal for the Hammers on his last appearance for the club, when his eight-yarder crashed off Carlo Nash's left-hand post.

And as the East Enders dominated the early proceedings, Zamora tumbled under Claude Davis' clumsy challenge only for referee Mike Riley to wave away vociferous penalty claims.

Midway through the half, Zamora again caused problems when he released Matthew Etherington whose blistering 12-yarder was palmed to safety by Nash.

Apart from a couple of cleverly worked free-kicks, unchanged Preston struggled to threaten West Ham on the slippery surface. But just before the break, the hitherto redundant James Walker was relieved to gather Eddie Lewis' awkward corner when it arrived in his six-yard box.

Three minutes after the interval, another Lewis flag-kick caused the Hammers even more problems and only Newton's goal-line clearance prevented Richard Cresswell from heading the Lilywhites ahead.

Shortly afterwards, there was equal danger at the other end as influential United skipper Nigel Reo-Coker sent Marlon Harewood clear, and although Nash parried his shot, the ball spun to Zamora who saw his effort cleared off the line by Chris Lucketti before the grateful Preston 'keeper smothered Harewood's second follow-up.

There was to be no let off for the exposed Nash as the hour-mark approached, for when Etherington sent a low cross into the six-yard box, the supporting, alert, unmarked Zamora comfortably side-footed home his 13th goal of the campaign.

West Ham's scorer might then have added a second shortly afterwards but he wastefully headed wide.

As Preston desperately tried to rediscover a path to the Premiership, David Nugent saw his low 18-yarder comfortably saved before Richard Cresswell both volleyed wide and headed straight at Walker.

As the seconds ticked down, the consequently booked Hammers' 'keeper was then in the wars when he fell awkwardly after accidentally carrying a high up and under out of his area.

That was to lead to seven anxious, agonising minutes of stoppage-time for Alan Pardew's team, but Walker's replacement Stephen Bywater confidently held Lewis' subsequent free-kick and the Hammers held on to claim the deserved victory that now sees them make a daunting return to the Premier League following a two-season absence.