Baleba stunner ends Brighton’s winless run and adds to Potter’s West Ham pain

Baleba stunner ends Brighton’s winless run and adds to Potter’s West Ham pain

Only three teams have collected fewer points than West Ham since Graham Potter took charge. Southampton, Leicester and Ipswich have earned less than West Ham’s 13 points in 14 games. The thing those three clubs have in common: they have been relegated.

In theory, West Ham’s trip to Brighton offered a chance for redemption as Potter returned to the club where he enjoyed three and a half seasons. And there was no better time to play them with Fabian Hürzeler’s side winless in five league games.

Yet, two different stats were a sign of what was to come: Brighton had conceded at least two goals in each game of that winless run and West Ham were without a comeback win all season. A 3-2 Brighton victory should have been no surprise really.

Potter said: “I’m not a robot. I’m a human being as well. I stand there myself. I give everything to what I’m doing. Of course I’m going to be upset … If you want me to swear, I can swear.”

Brighton dominated possession in the first half and Hürzeler’s side looked much more threatening than Potter’s team.

Kaoru Mitoma heads home Brighton’s equaliser against West HamView image in fullscreen

Brighton’s pressing and probing paid off in the 13th minute when Yasin Ayari curled a stunning strike into the top right corner from the edge of the box. Simon Adingra, who often found himself in space on the left, played the ball infield to Brajan Gruda who teed up Ayari for the finish.

Adingra found himself involved in the action again when his goal was ruled out for offside after a fantastic double save from Alphonse Areola. The Ivorian winger tapped in from six yards out but as soon as he started to celebrate, the flag went up to signal that Mats Wieffer had strayed offside in the buildup.

West Ham, who played with three at the back, struggled to control the midfield, instead relying on their counterattack. Tomas Soucek had a couple of chances in the first half, the first of which hit the side netting from a tight angle after Aaron Wan-Bissaka’s pass. His second opportunity was even better: a towering header tipped on to the crossbar by Bart Verbruggen.

Still it was not enough from Potter’s side. What West Ham lacked in finesse was made up for in away support. Perhaps relenting to pressure from the crowd, Potter finally did what needed to be done. He brought on Niclas Füllkrug.

Carlos Baleba (centre) comes back down to earth after celebrating his brilliant third goalView image in fullscreen

The change added a new dimension to West Ham’s attack with their front three made up of the speedy Jarrod Bowen, the strong Mohammed Kudus and the tall Füllkrug. They got their reward within two minutes of his entry, albeit without Füllkrug’s involvement, as Wan-Bissaka threaded a ball through to Bowen who cut it back for Kudus to tap in.

Yet, the attack seemed to be the only thing going for West Ham as Potter delayed making another change. Against the run of play, Bowen curled in a perfect cross for Soucek, who had the simple task of heading past the keeper from four yards out.

Potter was seven minutes away from the biggest victory of his West Ham career but his former club did not get the memo. With the clock ticking down, Brighton launched the ball into the box. Gruda headed the ball across to Kaoru Mitoma who headed in the equaliser with two minutes to go. The stadium erupted.

Then, just when you thought it could not get any louder, Carlos Baleba decided to rival Ayari and curl in a winner from the edge of the box. Delight for Hürzeler and despair for Potter.

Source: theguardian.com