The Star Malaysia

Moyes walks into a mess at troubled West Ham

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LONDON: If West Ham’s owners were banking on a change of manager delivering a much-needed surge of positivity, they might have underestim­ated the depth of disgruntle­ment at the struggling club.

The arrival of David Moyes might have made the atmosphere worse, if anything.

Moyes largely escaped the vitriol of the fans during his first game in charge, a 2-0 loss at Watford on Sunday. Instead, that was directed at his players and the club’s hierarchy.

Chants of “You’ve destroyed our club,” “Sack the board,” and “You’re not fit to wear the shirt” rang out from the away support at Vicarage Road as West Ham slumped to a seventh loss in 12 league games this season.

The new coach might just be wondering what he has walked into.

Moyes is looking to rebuild a managerial reputation that was tarnished by failed spells in charge of Manchester United and Sunderland in the Premier League. Sandwiched between them was a stint at Spanish club Real Sociedad that also didn’t last a year.

Yet, it is clear West Ham are in turmoil both on and off the field, something Moyes must be aware of now.

Increasing­ly renowned for making blunt and honest assessment­s, Moyes has already been critical of summer signing Marko Arnautovic, told the senior players to take more responsibi­lity, and underscore­d his intention to work his players harder in training after arriving as a replacemen­t for the fired Slaven Bilic.

He didn’t hold back after the Watford game, either.

“Some big players with big reputation­s disappoint­ed me a lot,” Moyes said, without naming names.

“I thought they would show me more. They need to show me why they have got that reputation.

“I don’t enjoy the performanc­e and I expected us to do better. We tried to stay in the game and give ourselves a chance – and we probably did – but overall it was not good enough.”

Moyes is not a manager to massage players’ egos. He says things as he sees them, something the megarich stars of the Premier League aren’t used to these days.

Moyes needs Javier Hernandez, the team’s most prolific striker, to quickly recover from a hamstring injury that forced him to miss out this weekend. He needs to sort out a defence that have conceded more goals than any other Premier League team this season.

He also needs to figure out if tall, powerful striker Andy Carroll is going to be a player he will revolve his game plan around.

Then, Moyes needs the backing of West Ham’s fans. He has already made a call for unity.

“I don’t know the history and the reasons for that,” he said of the supporters’ anger.

“I thought they were supportive of me, and I’m thankful for that. “But we need them now, we need a united club.

“We need to find a way of making sure we get together. The club needs to be together.”

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