Daily Mirror

EAST END ANNOYS... AND WEST END GOALS

Ward-Prowse: We didn’t suffer from Brentford’s brilliance... we made mistakes and got punished

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DAVID MOYES may be trying to introduce a more expansive style at West Ham – but attacking flair and fluency is not worth much without the ability to consistent­ly control games.

Mohammed Kudus and Jarrod Bowen had the Hammers in front after Brentford’s Neal Maupay opened the scoring.

But, as stand-in captain James Ward-Prowse admits, the Hammers beat themselves with sloppy mistakes.

Michail Antonio, whose influence seems to be diminishin­g weekly, contrived to steal a tap-in from the feet of a fuming Said Benrahma when the visitors were dominant and leading 2-1 before half-time.

And Moyes’ men just failed to turn up after the break, inviting Brentford on until the pressure became too much.

Thomas Frank (above) and his home side deserved plenty of credit as they strung together a third straight win and Bryan Mbeumo again caused havoc.

Yet Ward-Prowse, wearing the armband with Kurt Zouma injured, felt it was ultimately a case of West Ham shooting themselves in the foot.

“There’s a few mistakes we made throughout the game and that’s really disappoint­ing because we caused the defeat ourselves,” Ward-Prowse said.

“We’ve not suffered from their brilliance, we’ve made the mistakes and been punished.

“In the Premier League, you can’t afford to give any team three goals and then expect ourselves to score four. At 2-1 up, it was a pivotal moment for us, and we should have seen the game out.

“You need to do it throughout when you’re playing against any team. And if you’re not on your mettle then you’re going to get punished. That was our doing, not theirs.”

West Ham missed the tenacity of Edson Alvarez and work ethic of Lucas Paqueta, both suspended, while Zouma’s absence from defence was keenly felt when it came to managing the second period.

Dinos Mavropanos, stepping in for Zouma, was a touch unfortunat­e when conceding the own goal that brought Brentford level.

But the Greece star endured a torrid afternoon, and the Hammers were punished on 69 minutes when defender Nathan Collins (below) scored his first goal for the Bees to seal a comeback victory.

There appears to be a significan­t drop-off beyond Moyes’ best XI and, with the calendar set to become even more packed after this month’s internatio­nal break, that must be a cause for concern.

It is also underminin­g the stellar work of Bowen, who became the first player in the Premier League era to score in his team’s first six away games.

On Saturday he continued in a centre-forward role having done so well in last week’s Carabao Cup win over Arsenal. That result now looks an anomaly in a run that otherwise reads four defeats from the past five in all competitio­ns. Bowen may be in sublime individual form but that means nothing to him when three points were thrown away. And he is calling on the team to get back on track against Olympiakos in the Europa League on Thursday before hosting Nottingham Forest on Sunday. “Talk is cheap now, we’ve had really poor results minus Arsenal,” Bowen said.

“It has got to change on the pitch and we have to do that as players, as a whole collective. “Win on Thursday and win on Sunday, those are the standards we have to set ourselves.”

 ?? ?? HAMMER BLOW Said Benrahma fails to convert for West Ham ... and it proved costly
HAMMER BLOW Said Benrahma fails to convert for West Ham ... and it proved costly
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