Manchester United extended their winning streak to seven matches with a
hugely-dominant victory over the Premiership's bottom side.
Goals by Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Juan Sebastian Veron, the Argentinian with a
wonderful direct free-kick, had set Sir Alex Ferguson's men on their way before
Sebastian Schemmel's own goal deepened West Ham's despair.
United are now level on points with Arsenal, at least until the Gunners play
their game at Tottenham tomorrow, and on the evidence of this display are back
to their very best. West Ham, a couple of players excepted, looked terrified
from the first whistle and offered little opposition.
Unsurprisingly, Ferguson kept an unchanged line-up with David Beckham once
again starting on the bench. Rio Ferdinand was still injured but there was a
Ferdinand on the team-sheet - his younger brother Anton being picked as a West
Ham substitute for the first time.
West Ham may have arrived as the bottom club in the Premiership but they were
the last side to prevent a United victory, with a 1-1 draw at Upton Park on
November 17.
Michael Carrick broke up some promising United moves in the early stages as
West Ham struggled to cope with Ferguson's 4-2-3-1 formation.
There was a half-hearted shout for a West Ham penalty when Jermain Defoe tried
to squeeze between two defenders but referee Rob Styles was not impressed.
David James' alertness prevented a goal when John O'Shea's flicked header from
Veron's corner arrowed towards the near post, but the respite was only temporary
as United poured forward again.
Gary Neville had plenty of time to deliver a tempting cross and though
Solskjaer's header was not top-notch the ball took enough of a deflection off
defender Tomas Repka's arm to deceive James.
Two minutes later Veron made it 2-0. From a free-kick 30 yards out on the
right, Beckham's usual territory, the Argentinian bent a curling shot inside the
far-post with James perhaps having expected the left-footed Ryan Giggs to have
taken it instead.
'We're going to win 3-2' sung the West Ham fans, but even they sounded
unconvinced as Glenn Roeder's men struggled to even get out of their half.
Finally the Hammers put together a decent attack - more than half-an-hour into
the game - but Trevor Sinclair's acrobatic overhead volley did not test Fabien
Barthez.
Ruud van Nistelrooy had been a constant lurking presence for West Ham and when
he spun in the box to confront James it looked odds-on to be 3-0 but the
goalkeeper did well to spread himself and block the shot.
Christian Dailly's hopeful 35-yard shot was only noteworthy for its rarity
value, and yet the visitors did manage to get the ball into the net only for a
poor linesman's decision to rule the goal out.
Phil Neville's attempted clearance struck Scott Minto in the face and
rebounded for Defoe to hammer an excellent shot high past Barthez. He was
flagged offside despite O'Shea's position clearly playing him onside.
West Ham started the second period the brighter and Joe Cole, who had had a
quiet first half, wriggled free down the left and delivered a penetrating cross
that United were grateful to see flicked away by O'Shea.
The West Ham skipper then tried his luck with a well-worked free-kick routine
but the ball took an unfortunate bobble and he skied his effort.
Neat work by O'Shea and Giggs levered open the West Ham defence and put van
Nistelrooy through on goal. The Dutchman tried to go past James but the keeper
got the faintest of touches to flick the ball away and O'Shea's follow-up was
blocked by Lomas.
On the hour mark a patient build-up by United ending in Schemmel scoring an
own goal to end what was left of the contest.
Scholes picked up possession, surged forward and flicked the ball out to Gary
Neville who fired a driven cross low across goal. Perhaps conscious of Giggs
waiting to pounce behind him Schemmel tried to clear but could only steer it
into his own net.
Diego Forlan came on as substitute and with his first touch set up van
Nistelrooy but the striker put the chance wide.
Barthez then made the save of the match - from his own player. Wes Brown
powered a header from Minto's cross towards his own goal and Barthez had to
fling himself to push the ball aside.
United kept up the pressure, James denied Forlan, Beckham fired way over, then
Barthez thwarted Cole just as when it looked as though he would get a
consolation.
Teams
Man Utd: Barthez, Gary Neville, Brown, Silvestre,
O'Shea (Blanc 73), Solskjaer (Beckham 45), Veron, Phil Neville,
Giggs, Scholes (Forlan 73), van Nistelrooy.
Subs Not Used: Ricardo, Richardson.
Goals: Solskjaer 15, Veron 17, Schemmel 61 og.
West Ham: James, Minto (Breen 89), Repka, Dailly, Schemmel,
Sinclair, Carrick, Lomas (Moncur 85), Cole, Defoe, Pearce.
Subs Not Used: Bywater, Camara, Ferdinand.
Booked: Repka.
Att: 67,555
Ref: R Styles (Hampshire).