Archive for February 3, 2021

West Ham Win Away at Villa

That could hardly have gone any better! West Ham immediately bounced back from their disappointing defeat against Liverpool last Sunday and won 3:1 at Villa Park on Wednesday night.

West Ham gave a superb display from back to front and were rewarded with all three points. Loan signing Jesse Lingard (above) was man of the match and really brought quality in to the team.

Tomas Soucek got us going six minutes after the break, before Jesse Lingard (28), on loan from Manchester United since January, took over with a debut double. With Lingard West Ham had a “Grealish” of it’s own.

And Villa’s Jack Grealish got two “securities” on “his” left side of the park, a perfect move from West Ham manager David Moyes.

West Ham remain fifth, two points behind fourth-placed Liverpool who lost 1-0 at home to Brighton, while Villa stay ninth, six points behind the Hammers.

Best season since 1986

The win on Wednesday gave West Ham 38 points, their highest tally after 22 matches of a top-flight season since 1985-86.

The Hammers have won three consecutive away league matches for the first time since December 2018 and have already beaten last season’s total of 10 Premier League victories with their eleventh win last night! A brilliant season so far – exceeding all our expectations!

In David Moyes we trust!

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/55820961

February 3, 2021 at 11:19 pm Leave a comment

O Captain, our Captain!

In the 1989 movie “The Dead Poets Society“ by Peter Weir, the poem “O Captain, my captain“ by Walt Whitman is referred to several times. The poem was written in 1865 about the death of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. In Weir’s movie it is the respectful address of the club’s students for the popular English teacher John Keating (Robin Williams). When Keating is fired and returns to collect his belongings, the students stand on their desks and address Keating as “O Captain! My Captain!”

Now the first line of it was used by a commentator in The Telegraph by telling us about the death of 100 year old Captain Tom Moore. The WWII veteran had raised almost 40m Pounds for the NHS in spring by walking 100 laps in his garden in Bedfordshire.

Captain Tom died of pneumonia having tested positive for Covid-19 (The Guardian)

Captain Sir Tom Moore rallied the nation’s morale at a low moment during the spread of coronavirus. He wasn’t a knight then, of course. “One small soul like me won’t make much difference,” he said as he set out to do 100 laps of his garden in the days before his 100th birthday. He did it, and he raised more than £32 million. It was not the money that made him lovable, but straightforward decency. This was a man who loved restoring fast motorbikes, and then did his duty as a despatch rider in Burma in the war. Duty meant risking his life. And what could have been more moving than to see the Queen knight him with her father’s sword? She knew well what duty meant. It was no irony that he succumbed to the virus against which he had found something noble to do. That is the hero’s way.

Remarkable Captain Tom was the very best of us (The Telegraph)

February 3, 2021 at 4:02 am Leave a comment


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