Everton 5-1 Hull City | Premier League match report

Phil Brown’s previous visit to Merseyside ended with a vote of confidence from the Hull City board following a 6-1 destruction by Liverpool. His days of being on the brink of the sack may have passed, but the threat to Hull’s Premier League status remains very much alive after this stroll for Everton.

Mikel Arteta orchestrated the return to winning ways for David Moyes’s side, who have now won six successive league games at Goodison Park – their best sequence in four years. He scored twice and forced Richard García to head into his own net. Despite a superb equaliser and first league goal for Tom Cairney, the visitors were a distant second-best throughout and only Everton’s generosity spared them from a heavier defeat than on the opposite side of Stanley Park.

Hull can at least take solace in the return of Jimmy Bullard, the man upon whom survival arguably rests, in his first start since December. As Arteta has discovered, it can be a slow journey back to form and fitness after a serious knee injury but the Spaniard, in his finest display since his return from an 11-month absence, is getting there.

Arteta gave Everton an early lead when Leon Osman released Yakubu wide on the left and, from the Nigerian’s inviting cross to the back post, the midfielder ghosted in unmarked to despatch a deceiving volley past the keeper at the near post. Yakubu then won and wasted a controversial penalty when he fell under a challenge from Kamil Zayette but stroked a lazy, arrogant penalty that Boaz Myhill saved comfortably. As well he should have.

Yakubu’s miss seemed to assume added significance when Phil Jagielka, another player starting after a long-term knee problem, headed Bullard’s free-kick clear and Cairney swept an outstanding volley beyond the keeper from the edge of the area. But a fine collective move, involving Osman, Victor Anichebe and a nonchalant back-heel from Steven Pienaar, prised apart the Hull defence and enabled Arteta to roll his second into the far corner.

García headed into his own net attempting to clear Arteta’s chip over Myhill in the second half, before Landon Donovan, on his scheduled final appearance at Goodison before returning to LA

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

Blackburn Rovers 1-0 Hull City | Premier League match report

Master overcame apprentice once more as Sam Allardyce continued his unbeaten Premier League record against former sidekick Phil Brown. But, it was the loss of one of Brown’s on-field generals, the Dutch midfielder George Boateng, to a contentious first-half red card, that had more to do with the outcome than a tactical triumph by the Blackburn boss.

Blackburn, whose form at Ewood Park could not be more of a contrast to their woeful away displays, reacted well to the shake-up in personnel and formation imposed by manager Allardyce following their tepid defeat at Stoke.

There were changes aplenty; former Hull player Keith Andrews, and the more illustrious pair of Míchel Salgado and El Hadji Diouf were all drafted in, the defence redesigned due to Christopher Samba’s suspension and the policy of two frontmen ditched for a more conservative 4-1-4-1 system.

Hull goalkeeper Boaz Myhill acrobatically flipped a glancing header from Ryan Nelsen over the bar following a Morten Gamst Pedersen free-kick and then flapped at another nod across his six-yard box by Diouf before the home team took the lead on the quarter-hour.

Moment of fortune, or moment of magic, it came from a surge from left-back Martin Olsson who, taking Pedersen’s chipped pass in his stride, repelled a bustling challenge from Craig Fagan and, keeping his feet, he forced a left foot shot in off Myhill from an acute angle.

Seconds earlier, Hull might have been ahead themselves as an intricate exchange of passes led to Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink’s measured effort being turned around a post by Paul Robinson’s outstretched left hand.

But Hull’s chances of clawing their way back into the contest received a significant blow when Boateng was dismissed for a robust aerial challenge on Pedersen six minutes before the break. It was the kind of decision from referee Lee Probert that would make one advocate the use of technology in breaks of play.

Although Boateng was late, it appeared a genuine clash of heads and as both men lay prostrate, Probert’s reach for the red sparked mass remonstrations from those in amber shirts. They were to no avail, and after the Dutchman received lengthy treatment, he was dismissed.

Hull’s sense of injustice would have intensified had Nelsen managed to get a telling touch, two yards out, on the stroke of half-time. By that time, Vennegoor of Hesselink had been sacrificed as Brown stiffened his midfield.

While there was debate as to whether Boateng’s trailing arm had struck Pedersen, there was no doubt about the contact made by Paul McShane’s lash at Probert, which greeted a booking for a challenge on Diouf. It was a moment of petulance for which he should have walked.

McShane did exit as part of double substitution designed to give the 10 men more offensive capacity. However, it was Myhill who kept the deficit to only, fisting out a Brett Emerton drive and diverting a point-blank Gael Givet header onto the bar.

Blackburn RoversHull CityPremier LeagueSam AllardycePhil Brownguardian.co.uk