July 4, 2024

Soccer Football - Premier League - West Ham United v Arsenal - London Stadium, London, Britain - February 11, 2024 West Ham United manager David Moyes looks dejected after the match Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs

‘Moyes receives fitting send-off at end of West Ham era’

David Moyes waves to the crowd at London Stadium

David Moyes got the send-off he deserved at London Stadium on Saturday.

A lovely warm day, a clear blue sky, a thrilling victory and a final goal from a home-grown youngster. It could not have gone much better.

As he made his way around the pitch, trailing his players on their annual end of season lap of appreciation, Moyes waved at fans, having signed autographs beforehand.

The warm and genuine acknowledgement at a job well done came back from the stands. The majority of a 60,000-plus crowd remained long after the final whistle.

They did not need to be told to pay Moyes due respect. Their growing irritation at negative results and performances was set aside in justifiable recognition at the superb job Moyes has done over the past four and a half years.

West Ham now are a different club to the one Moyes returned to in December 2019. They have had three European campaigns and, famously, won their first trophy in 43 years.

But even last summer, Moyes knew some fans wanted him to move on. That number has grown significantly over the second half of this season, during which time they have won four of 20 domestic matches.

It was similar last term, when they won five out of 20 domestic games, culminating in a four-goal hammering at Brighton.

This is not to downplay the job Moyes has done. This season alone, West Ham have beaten Chelsea, Tottenham, Arsenal and Manchester United.

Two weeks ago, they drew with Liverpool. They are assured of a top-10 finish for the third time in four years.

But West Ham are a different club now. Their aspirations are greater.

“David Moyes has done a good job and when you see what has happened to Aston Villa, it shows hard hard winning a European trophy actually is,” said Kent-based fan Philip Gambrill before the Luton game.

“But he doesn’t use his substitutes and he hasn’t played the young lads.

“Maybe we don’t have the strength in depth other clubs have but the fans still don’t understand why. I think most do accept it is time for it to end.”

‘Expectations raised from survival to Europe’

A fan holds up a cardboard cut out of David MoyesIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,

David Moyes guided West Ham to a first trophy in 43 years with last season’s Europa Conference League triumph in Prague

Insiders say it is realistic for West Ham to believe they can challenge the ‘big six’. That does not mean it is where they expect to finish but that, if stars aligned, they could.

This season, when Manchester United, Chelsea and Newcastle have all struggled for extended periods, it has been a disappointment the Hammers have faded out of the European qualification picture.

West Ham would have helped themselves, the argument goes, if they had not sold Pablo Fornals and Said Benrahma in January, only to find themselves short of attacking options as the season reached its crucial phase.

This ignores the fact Fornals wanted to leave because he had not been playing and Benrahma was unhappy because he had not been starting.

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