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Post by Football News on Oct 15, 2016 16:05:21 GMT
AFC Bournemouth 6-1 Hull CityHome team scorersCharlie Daniels 5 Steve Cook 41 Junior Stanislas 45 Pen Junior Stanislas 65 Callum Wilson 83 Dan Gosling 88 Away team scorersRyan Mason 34 Steve Cook atoned for a defensive howler by heading Bournemouth’s second goal in an eventful 200th club appearance as the Cherries hammered Hull City 6-1. Junior Stanislas fired a brace to add to goals from Cook, Charlie Daniels, Callum Wilson and Dan Gosling, as Eddie Howe’s men romped to their record Premier League victory. The centre-back Cook gifted Hull possession then clumsily diverted Ryan Mason’s speculative effort past the wrong-footed Artur Boruc, before burying a header at the other end just seven minutes later. Mason’s fortunate goal had Hull level at 1-1 and Cook pounding the turf in disbelief. When the Cherries stalwart nodded home Stanislas’ free-kick however, he relished his quick-fire redemption with a conciliatory wave to the home support. A dismal showing from Hull leaves Mike Phelan’s side without a Premier League win in their last six matches. That this was Phelan’s first game as their permanent manager after a lengthy caretaker stint made it feel all the worse. Bournemouth fired six Premier League goals for the first time amid another assured showing dictated by their midfield marshal Harry Arter. The 26-year-old picked the right day to conduct the tempo, with the Republic of Ireland manager, Martin O’Neill, a no doubt impressed spectator. Howe’s possession-based blueprint owes everything to his link men, Arter and Andrew Surman, the two deep-lying midfielders a constant outlet for their team-mates. Bournemouth immediately hit their attacking straps, the relentless Arter kick-starting every fluid move. Stanislas curled a free-kick off a post and Daniels buried the follow-up to hand the hosts the ideal start. Hull spent the next 25 minutes chasing shadows as Eddie Howe’s possession play took hold, Jordon Ibe growing in confidence if not end-product. Half-chances unconverted could have cost the Cherries however, with Wilson striking the bar after diverting Ibe’s low cut-back. Stanislas saw a low drive deflected wide and Ibe blasted over from 25 yards after being left in acres of space once too often. Just when Bournemouth looked to grapple total control, though, one mistake proved costly. Cook conceded possession far too cheaply with a stray pass, and Hull pounced. Bournemouth’s dominance was then fully realised when Robert Snodgrass crudely upended Callum Wilson in the Hull box. Stanislas took the ball from his team-mates once the penalty was awarded, and duly converted the spot-kick, firing straight down the middle. After the break Hull were perhaps unfortunate not to win a penalty when Mason went down under Surman’s challenge. But after that the visitors were unable to generate any tangible threat. Stanislas massaged the scoreline with his second and Bournemouth’s fourth goal, tapping in at the far post after an accurate low cross from Adam Smith. Wilson headed in the fifth, before Gosling curled home the sixth, heaping the indignity on hapless Hull. Guardian
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sheff
Dodgy Goalkeeper
Posts: 891
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Post by sheff on Oct 15, 2016 16:07:14 GMT
That's not the start their new manager would have wanted.
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Post by Avinalaff on Oct 15, 2016 16:19:24 GMT
That's not the start their new manager would have wanted. Hull started like a house on fire but they've gone right off the boil now.
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Post by jimmy on Oct 15, 2016 16:36:18 GMT
Danny Gosling with a late goal.
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Post by Koeman's Clogs on Oct 15, 2016 17:53:21 GMT
That's not the start their new manager would have wanted. You have to be struggling for a team like Bournemouth to put six past you.
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