Declan Rice at the centre of West Ham’s revival that shows why he has such a bright future

Rice was the beating heart of West Ham’s side as they secured a third straight away win at Southampton, showing why his future was of top priority at the London Stadium

Jack Pitt-Brooke
Friday 28 December 2018 04:29 EST
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West Ham: A look back at 2018

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Five wins out of six. Three straight away from home. Comfortable ninth place in the table. West Ham United have discovered something that few expected them to show under Manuel Pellegrini, after their latest summer lurch and relaunch, new manager, new players, new director of football. And yet they are winning, showing nous, focus, intelligence, and game management.

And at the centre of it all is Declan Rice. This team has desperately needed a calm presence in deep midfield, someone to protect the back four, break up attacks, and get things going for West Ham. Mark Noble is a valuable asset but he is more of a scurrier and disrupter than someone who has the composure to take over and try to run things for his team.

Rice has been quietly impressive all season but Thursday night at Southampton was one of his best games yet. Away from home, at the busiest time of the year, against a side desperate to stay up and riding their new manager bounce into this game. They tried to overwhelm West Ham with their intense pressing in the first five minutes and it nearly worked.

But Rice was more important than anyone to West Ham getting a foothold in the game, holding off the Southampton surge and eventually turning the match their way. Because he so impressively won the physical battle with his counterparts. There was one moment in the first half when Mario Lemina drove forward in the inside-left channel and Rice held him off, beating him physically, keeping hold of the ball and carrying it away to safety. It was the supreme strength and cool of a top-level centre-back.

There were other moments that stood out, like Rice shrugging off a challenge from the powerful Oriol Romeu and leaving him on the floor. Or throwing himself into blocking shots. Or pinging crossfield passes to get West Ham through the Saints press and onto the offensive.

Most significant was the West Ham away end singing that the club should sign Rice to a new contract as soon as they can. He has become the most popular, important young British player at West Ham since the 1990s generation, all of whom went on to great things at other clubs. The greatest question for West Ham was whether Rice would go the same way.

Seeing Declan Rice hold off Mario Lemina showed he had the core strength of a leading centre-back
Seeing Declan Rice hold off Mario Lemina showed he had the core strength of a leading centre-back (PA)

Rice had 18 months left on his West Ham contract, with another one-year option on that deal which effectively meant that he was tied to the club until the summer of 2021. The club were thought to be willing to wait until the summer before trying to agree anything new with the player to take the pressure off negotiations, but behind the scenes Rice had already seen what he needed to make up his mind.

On Friday afternoon, West Ham eased the worries of all their supporters and announced that the 19-year old had signed a new deal carrying him through to the summer of 2024.

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