Premier League

Faith in Bruno Lage fades as West Ham show up for David Moyes

Gianluca Scamacca celebrates after scoring his first Premier League goal in a 2-0 West Ham win over Wolves

Wolves have won once in 15 games and Bruno Lage can no longer swerve the spotlight after the pressure shifted from David Moyes at the London Stadium…

 

You can barely move in the Midlands for under-pressure managers. None of Brendan Rodgers, Steve Cooper or Steven Gerrard will have felt completely secure during an international break that was earmarked for sackings, yet Bruno Lage seemingly swerved much of the scrutiny. Not any more.

Lage wasn’t even the manager facing most questions at the London Stadium where his Wolves side took on West Ham in what was deemed the first of four games that could dictate David Moyes’ future with the Hammers. But after a 2-0 win in which Gianluca Scamacca and Jarrod Bowen both showed up for their boss, the burden of pressure shifted across the technical areas and landed squarely on Lage’s shoulders.

Scamacca scored his first Premier League goal on a rare league start before Bowen capped a massively-improved performance with a wonderfully-taken second goal from which Wolves never looked likely to recover.

Those were two moments of rare quality in a weirdly low-key clash between two sides that struggled to show why we should believe that they occupied false positions in the table.

At least West Ham provided those flashes. Wolves, a team full of ‘moments’ players, showed worryingly little spark while all-too-willingly accepting the Hammers’ place in the bottom three.

 


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Wolves spent over £100million this summer, since when they have won one game in eight. Their stagnation goes back even further, almost six months, in which time a 1-0 triumph over Southampton a month ago is their only victory in 15 games. Rodgers, Cooper and Gerrard could all point to better records yet Lage seemed to benefit from greater patience.

That evaporated as bubbles blew into the east London evening sky. ‘You don’t know what you’re doing’ chanted the Wolves supporters after a late double substitution that, evidently, failed to inspire any confidence whatsoever.

Already Diego Costa had been dispatched from the bench for his first Premier League appearance since 2017 and his first competitive game of any type since January. The 34-year-old, inevitably, was a handful and peak-Costa – and perhaps a fitter one – would have buried a header that drifted narrowly wide in the later stages.

At least Costa offered some intent….

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