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Aston Villa v West Ham United: Premier League – live | Premier League

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Key events

The players are in the tunnel. Kick-off is just a few minutes away!

Jonathan Wilson was at Selhurst Park to see Brentford pinch victory. Here’s his match report:

For Brentford, there was a measure of relief. It’s probably fair to say that the run of one win in nine games in which they went into this weekend was not representative of how they’d played but, still, it’s as well to stifle as early as possible any thought that they were going through a mid-winter slump similar to last season’s. Survival may not quite be mathematically assured but breaking the 30-point mark with 15 games remaining makes it almost certain they will be in the Premier League next season.

After a slow start, the game was rather better than the conditions. It was an afternoon of truly filthy weather, a raw morning yielding to heavy rain, a blustery breeze, and skies of unremitting grey. It was an afternoon to be grateful for modern drainage, the pitch remaining slick and green throughout. With Brentford in a blancmange pink and aubergine away kit that evoked the once-aspirational bathroom in a seedy bedsit in which terrible things have happened from an 80s crime drama, the overall effect was of almost artistic bleakness, a sort of Croydon Noir.

Much more here:

“I can’t think of a more defensive West Ham team in my lifetime,” says Jamie Redknapp. “I guess he just wants to make sure they’re difficult to beat. I think he’s looking at it thinking, let’s get control of midfield and then you hope [someone] can do something special. He just hasn’t got the players at his disposal and most of the players that are fit are defensive ones”

Graham Potter has a pre-match chat:

We’re trying to find the right balance between defence and attack, trying to get the team stable. We have to get that balance. But I’m really happy with how the group have taken on the ideas. We’re at the start and we need to keep working.

Whenever you come in January the ideal scenario would be everything’s calm and we’ve no problems or challenges and obviously that’s not the case. But we’ve got a team we’ve been working with this week and a team we’ve been happy with. All you can do is focus on the players you have and keep working.

In the early afternoon kick-offs Brentford have beaten Crystal Palace 2-1 away from home, and Leicester have done the same to Tottenham. The league table in full:

Looks like a pretty dismal day in Birmingham. Let’s hope we get some sunshine football, or something.

Fans arrive at Villa Park ahead of the game between Aston Villa and West Ham. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/Reuters

The teams!

The team sheets have been handed in, and here is the news. Ollie Watkins starts again, with Duran on the bench for Villa, with Leon Bailey and Lucas Digne the new faces from the team that drew with Arsenal. West Ham bring in Alphonse Areola in goal, and Vladimir Coufal and Carlos Soler out of goal.

Aston Villa: Martinez, Cash, Konsa, Mings, Digne, Tielemans, Kamara, Bailey, Rogers, Ramsey, Watkins. Subs: Olsen, Zych, McGinn, Duran, Buendia, Garcia, Malen, Maatsen, Bogarde.
West Ham: Areola, Coufal, Kilman, Cresswell, Wan-Bissaka, Alvarez, Soler, Emerson Palmieri, Lucas Paqueta, Soucek, Kudus. Subs: Fabianski, Foderingham, Luis Guilherme, Ings, Rodriguez, Irving, Casey, Scarles, Orford.
Referee: Peter Bankes.

Hello world!

“Of course, West Ham, they are not being consistent, but they have now a new coach. Tactically, they are going to improve,” said Unai Emery on Friday. We’re about to find out how much improvement they’ve managed, but Villa have some improving to do: sure, they’re eighth in the table which is fine “(“The most important for us is the Premier League, and to be in the table’s top eight positions,” Emery added), and have lost only one of their last five league games, but away from home they’re not so hot: two wins and five defeats in their last eight in the league, which would put them 16th in a notional last-eight-away-from-home table (in mitigation, those fixtures included visits to Newcastle, Nottingham Forest, Chelsea and Liverpool). Emery said their ambition was to “try to be consistent like we are at the moment at home”, where they would be sixth and unbeaten in a last-eight-games table.

Graham Potter also thinks West Ham are going to improve. “Our ambition is there – we want to get better. We want to move towards a style of play that our supporters recognise and are fond of,” he said at his press conference on Friday. “It has been nice to have a decent stretch of training. We have managed to do some good work, analyse the last game and prepare for Aston Villa, so I think we have used the time well. In every training session and after every message, I think the intention has been there.”

Aston Villa v West Ham: a test of Graham Potter’s coaching chops Photograph: Allstar Picture Library Ltd/Nigel French/Apl/Sportsphoto

This will be an ideal test of their improvement since Potter’s arrival, and what he’s managed to achieve with that decent stretch of training: these teams played here in the FA Cup a couple of weeks ago, a day after he was unveiled as Julen Lopategui’s replacement, and Villa won 2-1.

Since then West Ham have beaten Fulham 3-2 (in a game where they had four shots overall and only three on target) and lost 2-0 to Crystal Palace (in a game where they had four shots overall and none at all on target). For context, last season the average Premier League game featured 27.2 shots in total. Since Christmas West Ham have had a total of 11 shots on target across six games, while conceding 15 goals at the other end. It’s obvious where that improvement needs to be demonstrated. So, let’s see how they’ve got on, shall we?

Article by:Source: Simon Burnton

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