Iain Dowie keen to end Hull City’s wretched away record at Portsmouth

• ‘It’s not a must-win game. It’s far too early to say that’
• ‘If everybody brings their A game, then we’ll be OK’

Iain Dowie has been in charge of Hull City for only a matter of days and already his new job is threatening to provoke domestic tensions. “Debbie, my wife, was born in Portsmouth, her family are all from down there and Lee, my brother-in-law, is a particularly big Pompey fan,” Dowie said as he prepared to take his new squad to Fratton Park for this game.

“I think my wife will be onside,” he added. “But there will be divided loyalties in her family; just the other week Lee was up at Burnley watching Portsmouth and I’m sure there’ll be a few texts flying around.”

As a former Southampton striker, Dowie can expect a hot reception from home fans on a day when he hopes to mark his first match as Hull’s manager – or, to be pedantic, the freelance “managerial consultant” who stepped in when Phil Brown was placed on gardening leave last week – by ending the club’s year-long failure to win away in the Premier League.

With Hull second bottom, Dowie’s players need to start collecting points fast but he was careful not to decree victory tomorrow as imperative. “No, it’s not a must-win game,” he said. “It’s far too early to say that. But it’s very important we put in a positive performance, that’s the key element.”

Dowie decided his starting XI in the early hours of Wednesday morning, shortly after being appointed as Brown’s successor, and has spent two subsequent training sessions concentrating on shape and organisation while endeavouring to ease dressing-room tensions.

“Yes, I know my team,” he said. “I think our shape is very, very important. I want us to play open, attractive football but, when we don’t have the ball, I want us to be difficult to play against.”

Hull’s board trust Dowie will help heal squad divisions which had manifested under Brown and resulted in Nick Barmby trading blows with Jimmy Bullard in front of a Women’s Institute march.

“Everyone needs to concentrate on what they can bring to the party,” Dowie said, aware that Stephen Hunt and Bullard have not always been the best of friends either. “If everybody brings their A game, then we’ll be OK.”

Apart from enhancing harmony, he aims to bolster self-confidence. “We’ve got to change the mentality, we’ve got to develop belief. It’s amazing what confidence can do. I honestly believe some of the players have forgotten the positive things which got them here in the first place. Several are internationals. Sometimes people forget how good they are.

“I don’t want the players to feel afraid to make mistakes. If you don’t make mistakes, you don’t do anything in life.”

Hull CityIain DowiePremier LeaguePortsmouthLouise Taylorguardian.co.uk

West Ham United 3-0 Hull City | Premier League match report

For West Ham the ghost of relegation may finally be starting to fade after a fourth successive clean sheet at home, and a second successive win. That it came against another of the sides battling at the bottom of the Premier League will only make the victory taste sweeter, but the reality is that despite being a goal up for almost the entire game, a man up for nearly half of it and two men to the good by the end, the home side were still far from convincing.

Carlton Cole’s goal, the second of the game, came from what was by some distance the best move of the match, even if it consisted of just a single pass – Julien Faubert’s superbly weighted through-ball – and a smart, calm clipped finish. People will also talk of a 70th-minute shot from inside his own half by the frequently frustrating Alessandro Diamanti which drew a save from Boaz Myhill, though it would almost certainly have missed the target had he left it. The performance from the home side was adequate, and no more.

Hull’s was considerably less. Thirteen league games now without a win and soon to celebrate, if that’s the right word, the first anniversary of their last success away from home, the visitors played pretty much to form throughout and a series of miserable gaffes started in just the third minute. Tom Cairney surrendered possession to Valon Behrami, who passed to Guillermo Franco. The Mexican, making his first appearance of 2010, miscontrolled so badly that the ball bobbled perfectly into the path of Behrami, who scored with ease from 15 yards.

Myhill made two decent saves in the first half, both also from Behrami and the second, after the midfielder headed Diamanti’s cross from close range, quite excellent. Then seven minutes into the second half Craig Fagan, already booked for fouling Scott Parker, gave the slightest tug to Diamanti’s shirt, the Italian tumbled theatrically and Hull were down to 10 men.

Shortly after the second goal they made a triple substitution, always something of a calculated risk. It didn’t work out well: although one of the new players, Jozy Altidore, missed a decent chance in the 74th minute it left them with no further options when their captain, Anthony Gardner, fell awkwardly in the 81st minute. He was carried off on a stretcher, left leg heavily strapped, and Hull ended the game with nine men.

Their numerical disadvantage might explain the third goal, when Faubert collected Radoslav Kovac’s pass, ran into the area without the merest hint of a challenge and thumped a shot into the top left corner. A miserable end to another miserable Hull performance

West Ham UnitedHull CityPremier LeagueSimon Burntonguardian.co.uk

Squad sheets: West Ham United v Hull City

The winners could rise to 13th. The losers could drop into the relegation places. If there were not eight teams involved in the survival scrap, the game would be branded, erroneously, a six-pointer. Phil Brown calls the prospect “mouth-watering”. He has urged Hull, without an away win, to recall such victories as last season, at Arsenal and Spurs. They are buoyed anyway by George Boateng’s availability (red card rescinded). Jimmy Bullard may be on the bench. West Ham are buoyed by their 2-0 defeat of Birmingham. Jeremy Alexander

Venue Upton Park

Tickets £35-51 (0871 222 2700)

Last season West Ham 2 Hull 0

Referee M Atkinson

This season’s matches 20 Y84, R2, 4.30 cards per game

Odds West Ham 5-6 Hull 4-1 Draw 13-5

West Ham

Subs from Kurucz, Stech, Da Costa, Stanislas, Daprela, Collison, Mido, Ilan, Franco, Ngala, Spence

Doubtful Daprela (foot), Franco (hamstring)

Injured Gabbidon (hamstring, 23 Feb), McCarthy (knee, 23 Feb), Dyer (hamstring, 6 Mar), Ilunga (hamstring, 13 Mar), Boa Morte (knee, May), Hines (knee, May), Davenport (legs, unknown)

Suspended None

Form guide WLDDDL

Disciplinary record Y47 R3

Leading scorer Cole 8

Hull

Subs from Duke, Zayatte, Kilbane, Olofinjana, Barmby, Garcia, Bullard, Zaki, Sonko, Ghilas, Marney

Doubtful Bullard (knee), Ghilas (thigh), Marney (calf)

Injured Geovanni (knee, 7 Mar), Ashbee (knee, May)

Suspended None

Form guide LWDDLD

Disciplinary record Y49 R3

Leading scorer Hunt 6

Match pointers

• Hull’s current run of 18 away matches without a win is the worst in the division

• West Ham were the only London side to win at home against Hull in 2008-09

• Jimmy Bullard’s only league appearance for Hull last season came at Upton Park and lasted 37 minutes

• If selected, Robert Green will be making the 350th league start of his career

• William Gallas and Aaron Hughes (2,340) are the only outfield players to have played more minutes in the Premier League than Andy Dawson (2,317) this season

West Ham UnitedHull CityPremier Leagueguardian.co.uk