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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 14/03/2018 12:29:59

| | Southampton stuck with Pellegrino too longITSROUNDANDITSWHITE |
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| Southampton target Mark Hughes faces 24-hour delay before meeting his new playersFOOTBALLFANCAST |
| | THEPOLITICALECONOMYOFFOOTBALL |
| | Mauricio Pellegrino - An Overview - Southampton NewsTHEUGLYINSIDE |
| | THESACKRACE |
| | Mauricio Pellegrino is very sorry in his open letterSBNATIONSTMARYSMUSINGS |
| | Coach Travel Available To Wigan - Southampton NewsTHEUGLYINSIDE |

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 14/03/2018 13:30:12

| | Report: Stoke will go for Southampton’s Alex McCarthy if Jack Butland leavesHEREISTHECITY |
| | Much-loved figure rules himself out of the running for Southampton jobFOOTBALLFANCAST |
| | Southampton fans need to hear this following managerial dramaFOOTBALLFANCAST |
| | Southampton are surely wasting their time if they want Brendan RodgersHEREISTHECITY |
| | THESACKRACE |

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Read Southampton

New content from (- Read Southampton)

| Hughes may not be a fashionable choice but Saints must accept the reality of their situation | Southampton’s reputation of talent-spotting when it comes to managers has suffered an almighty blow across the … 14-03-2018 |

Older content…

| Hughes, Bilic, Garcia and more: Southampton news round-up13 hours ago |
| Southampton make short-term contract offer to manager2 days ago |
| Southampton and Newcastle remain keen to land La Liga midfielder2 days ago |
| Southampton likely to finalise deal for manager by Wednesday2 days ago |
| Southampton make contact with ex-AC Milan manager over managerial vacancy2 days ago |
| Southampton defender agrees to join Premier League rivals2 days ago |
| Ex-Premier League boss not in contention for Saints job, despite his interest in the role2 days ago |
| Ex-England star says Southampton need to hire a “hit man” manager2 days ago |
| Southampton identify their number one candidate to take manager’s job2 days ago |

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Southampton: Are Saints trying to ‘do a Sunderland’ to ensure Premier League survival?

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Southampton have gambled that sacking Mauricio Pellegrino with only eight games left is their best bet of staying in the Premier League.

The club are just one point and one place above the relegation zone, having won just one of their past 17 league games.

Former Stoke boss Mark Hughes is in talks to take over at St Mary’s, but does he have enough time to save the Saints?

Only twice in 10 years has a manager taken over a relegation-threatened club this late on and guided them to safety - and both were Sunderland.

But the Black Cats did not get a third life and did eventually go down last year.

BBC Sport looks at the fortunes of every club that changed their manager in March or later during the past 10 Premier League seasons…

The gamble: Sunderland appointed the former Netherlands boss a day after sacking Gus Poyet. Like Southampton, the Black Cats were 17th and one point above the relegation zone after a run of one victory in 12 league games. They had nine games left.

The result: Advocaat guided Sunderland to safety by winning three and drawing three of their remaining nine matches, finishing 16th and three points clear of the drop.

What happened next? A cautionary tale. The Dutchman was due to leave the club that summer but signed a new one-year contract - only to resign after Sunderland won just one of their first eight games the following season. The Black Cats were relegated at the end of 2016-17 having survived the previous campaign under Advocaat’s successor Sam Allardyce and are now bottom of the Championship.

The gamble: The Italian succeeded Martin O’Neill after a run of poor results left Sunderland one point above the relegation zone with only seven games left.

The result: Di Canio’s side lost just twice in seven games. They failed to win any of their final three fixtures, but finished one place and three points above the relegation zone.

What happened next? Di Canio was sacked that September with Sunderland bottom after claiming just one point from five games. Gus Poyet came in and guided them to 14th before his own struggles the next season.

Want to read more on the Premier League relegation battle?

These clubs were already in the relegation zone when they dismissed their bosses. The new manager bounce was not enough to save any of them - several didn’t bounce at all.

The gamble: Middlesbrough sacked Aitor Karanka after a 10-game winless run that left the club 19th and three points from safety with 11 games remaining.

The result: Caretaker boss Agnew managed just one win and Boro were relegated with two games still to play.

What happened next? Boro regrouped this season in the Championship under Garry Monk, before he was sacked and replaced by Tony Pulis. Under the Welshman, Boro occupy the sixth and final play-off place with nine games to go.

The gamble: The Magpies were a point from safety with 10 games to go when they fired Steve McClaren in favour of former Liverpool, Chelsea, Real Madrid, Inter Milan and Valencia boss Benitez.

The result: Despite Benitez losing only three matches and improving their points per game ratio to 1.30 from 0.86 under McClaren, Newcastle were relegated with one game of the season left.

What happened next? The Spaniard stayed on and guided Newcastle to the Championship title last season. They are in a relegation battle again this term, but now sit five points clear of the bottom three with eight games left after beating Pellegrino’s Southampton 3-0 in their last match.

The gamble: There wasn’t one. Although not yet mathematically relegated, Villa were already doomed when they sacked Remi Garde. The club had just 16 points from 31 games - 12 fewer than 17th-placed Norwich.

The result: Under caretaker boss Eric Black, Villa earned just one more point - a draw against fellow relegated side Newcastle - as they dropped to the second tier for the first time since 1987.

What happened next? Villa’s next manager Roberto di Matteo was sacked after just 124 days in charge, but the club have stabilised under Steve Bruce, who guided them to 13th last year and they are now third in the Championship, seven points off automatic promotion.

The gamble: Reading were 19th and four points off safety when manager Brian McDermott was sacked on 11 March. When Nigel Adkins, who had been dismissed by Southampton in January, took over two weeks later the Royals were still 19th but seven points adrift.

The result: Reading won just once and drew twice in eight games under Adkins as they remained 19th, 11 points from safety.

What happened next? Adkins stayed on until he was sacked in December 2014 and replaced by Steve Clarke, who lasted just under a year before McDermott returned for a brief second spell. Now under Jaap Stam, the Royals are 19th in the Championship, six points above the drop.

The gamble: Hull brought in Dowie to replace Phil Brown when the club were second from bottom of the Premier League, with nine games remaining.

The result: The Tigers were relegated after taking only six of the available 27 points under Dowie.

What happened next? Dowie left at the end of the season and Hull spent the next three years in the Championship, followed by two back in the top flight before another yo-yo. The Tigers are 17th in the second tier after relegation from the Premier League last season.

The gamble: Club legend Shearer took over from Chris Hughton, who was in temporary charge as a result of Joe Kinnear’s illness, with the Magpies in the bottom three and two points from safety.

The result: Newcastle won just one of their last eight games under Shearer and dropped to the second tier for the first time in 16 years after defeat by Aston Villa on the final day of the season.

What happened next? Shearer returned to his punditry role with the BBC and has not managed since. Newcastle unveiled a statue of the former England captain outside St James’ Park in 2016. The Magpies bounced straight back with the 2010 Championship title, doing the same last year after Premier League relegation in 2016.

The gamble: Norwich were five points clear of the relegation zone with five games remaining when Chris Hughton was sacked amid a poor run of form and fan unrest.

The result: Disaster. Youth coach Neil Adams came in and the Canaries took just one point from the next four games. They went into the last match of the season needing to beat Arsenal, hoping West Brom lost to Stoke and also needing a 17-goal swing. The Baggies did lose but Norwich lost 2-0 and were relegated.

What happened next? Adams lasted until the following January when he was replaced by Alex Neil, who won promotion via the play-offs. The Canaries went straight back down and are 14th in the Championship under Daniel Farke, who replaced Neil’s successor Alan Irvine. Hughton’s Brighton are 11th in the Premier League and look on course for safety.

We asked for your views on Southampton’s plight - here’s a selection from #bbcfootball. Have your say in the comments below.

Dr Barry Gale, Southampton: Give it to Hughes until the end of the season. Bags of Premier League experience, played for Saints, owns a decent hairdryer, and already got a red and white tie.

Mark Davies: Southampton do not need a manager, they need a firefighter. Two come to mind, one manages Everton and the other manages Middlesbrough. Oops!

Adam, Southampton: I’m afraid Saints future is decided already with only eight games left. He should’ve gone in January before we lost the players as well as the fans.

David: Pellegrino should have gone months ago, we would 100% have gone down if he’d stayed in charge, makes sense to gamble with a new manager, they can’t do any worse!

Ade Reynolds: From November it was obvious we’d be relegated under Pellegrino. Still had a decent squad, but everyone was off form, bemused by his tactics and sick of the cowardly approach to football.

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Sourced from Southampton FC - Official Site article

Wigan ticket update

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Saints travel to the DW Stadium for an Emirates FA Cup quarter-final clash with Wigan Athletic on Sunday and there are now fewer than 300 tickets remaining for the trip north.

General sale for the fixture began yesterday and supporters are reminded that there will be no collections on matchday at the DW Stadium; tickets must be collected in advance from St Mary’s.

Please note, the ticket office will not be able to post tickets after 3pm on Wednesday 14th March.

How to buy:

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Sourced from Sky Sports article

Mark Hughes in advanced talks to become Southampton manager

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Mark Hughes in advanced talks to become Southampton manager

Mark Hughes is in advanced talks to become the next Southampton manager, Sky sources understand.

The 54-year-old, who made just over 50 appearances for Saints as a player, is the leading candidate to take over at St Mary’s following the sacking of Mauricio Pellegrino on Monday night.

Southampton are hoping to have Pellegrino’s successor in place for Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final against Wigan Athletic.

Hughes was dismissed by Stoke City just two months ago, with the Potters in the bottom three following a poor run of form. But they had three ninth-place finishes under the Welshman before finishing 13th last term.

Hughes began his managerial career with the Wales national team and subsequently managed Blackburn, Manchester City, Fulham and QPR. He has never been relegated from the top flight as a manager.

Hughes will arrive to find Southampton languishing 17th in the Premier League after just one win in 17 top-flight matches.

Southampton were beaten 3-0 by Newcastle United at the weekend and head to West Ham United on March 31 in their next Premier League match.

Hughes will have eight games to help Southampton avoid relegation.

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@SouthamptonFC - Southampton FC

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Former #SaintsFC defender @SaintSkipper5 feels an #EmiratesFACup win against #WAFC could help prove a turning po… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/973920484285931521

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Sourced from Daily Echo article

COMMENT: Hughes fits the bill

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SAINTS need a firefighter manager and Mark Hughes is the nearest the club can get to appointing one at such short notice.

The 54-year-old might not command the same reputation as Sam Allardyce or Tony Pulis for helping clubs avoid the drop, but Hughes has never been relegated as a Premier League manager.

Survival is all that truly matters to Saints right now and Hughes is one of a few bosses equipped to deliver this.

The remaining eight league games are everything. Everything else, including the FA Cup, can be discounted.

Now is not the time to employ a sexy foreign name with the hope he’s the next Mauricio Pochettino.

Experience is key now and Hughes has 14 years under his belt as a Premier League manager.

None of Saints’ managers since their return to the top-flight in 2012/13 have had that much Premier League experience.

Saints must now set aside their recent traditions of avoiding those riding the ‘managerial merry-go-round’ and going for a more exciting but risky appointment if they are to survive.

Mauricio Pellegrino was a risk that didn’t come off and Saints just cannot afford to go for another left field boss at this stage.

They do not have the luxury of time nor a lot of options, the list of available managers is not extensive and those who have the necessary skills are few and far between.

Right now, with action needed immediately, negotiations with another club for an employed manager would be drawn out and could be costly, both in time and money.

Staying up in the Premier League is the be all and end all and perhaps, if Hughes achieves this, then there might be an appropriate time to look back into unearthing the next Poch.

Hughes might be underwhelming from a fan perspective but this would be an appointment borne out of logic, out of the aim to survive.

Saints must be more concerned about their status as a top-flight club right now than anything else. They should not be looking beyond the middle of May and the end of the top-flight campaign.

Pellegrino’s replacement must be a manager who has experience of the specific position Saints find themselves in and Hughes has overseen nearly 450 games as a Premier League boss.

He was hired by Queens Park Rangers in January 2012, replacing Neil Warnock and narrowly helped the club avoid the drop to Championship.

Mostly, he’s led his clubs to solid mid-table finishes, although was sacked by QPR in 2012/13 before they were eventually relegated under Harry Redknapp.

While Pellegrino was about as unexperienced as it got for a top-flight boss, Hughes has just about seen it all and is well equipped to deal with a relegation scrap.

On top of that, though, he’s available.

It should not be underestimated how difficult a situation Saints are in and they need a manager who understands how to deal with it and fast.

It’s big pressure to be thrown in the deep end of a scrap for survival and you need a manager well-versed in these scenarios and who has a good understanding of English football.

Promises were made at the start of the campaign to deliver ‘attacking football’ to St Mary’s under Pellegrino’s stewardship.

But none of that came to fruition, leading Saints to axe their second manager in just under nine months after Claude Puel last June.

Now the club’s board must accept that they need to stop appointing experimental managers, who may have potential but come with a risk-factor.

They’ve got the last two appointments wrong and by going for Hughes are going for the most logical option.

The football doesn’t have to be pretty, just enough to keep the club up.

Players need galvanising. Fans need reassurance. Saints need saving and fast. The Newcastle performance was gutless and unacceptable.

Beyond this eight-game spell, Hughes might not be the right fit.

But his skills set are suited to the predicament Saints find themselves in now and he’s ready to go now.

That’s all that matters.

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Sourced from Daily Echo article

Saints set to make Hughes appointment

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SAINTS are set to appoint vastly experienced Premier League boss Mark Hughes as replacement to Mauricio Pellegrino today.

The one-time Saint, who made 60 appearances for the club between 1998 and 2000, is understood to have been in discussions with the St Mary’s hierarchy in the last 24 hours over the vacant manager’s position.

Saints are keen to make a quick and experienced appointment after sacking Pellegrino late on Monday evening as they bid to keep the club in the Premier League after a disastrous run of one win in 17 games.

With 14 years and nearly 450 top-flight matches under his belt as a manager, Hughes quickly became Saints’ first choice and an announcement is said to be planned for today.

The players have been given today off but have been told to report for duty at Staplewood tomorrow morning, when the club plan to have Hughes in place to take training ahead of Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final at Wigan.

The 54-year-old, who will likely be paid a lucrative bonus if he keeps the club in the Premier League, will need to immediately galvanise and rally a struggling group of players ahead of the remaining eight league games.

Saints sit one point outside the relegation zone, but a demoralising 3-0 defeat to Newcastle on Saturday has left the club in a deeply concerning, albeit salvageable, situation.

If there are no hiccups in agreeing terms, Hughes, who was sacked by Stoke City – Saints’ relegation rivals – in January after a run of five defeats in seven league games, will hold his first press conference on Friday, ahead of the Wigan trip.

Saints’ players were in training yesterday at Staplewood with first team assistant coach Kelvin Davis, goalkeeping coach Dave Watson and head of sports science Alek Gross leading the session.

Attacking midfielder Josh Sims insists he and his team-mates have every faith in the club’s board to make the right appointment.

“We have faith in the board that they’re going to be bring in the right manager and one who can help the club stay in the Premier League,” he said.

“That’s the big key now because the club deserves to be there. It doesn’t deserve to be relegated and we have faith in the staff to choose the right manager.”

The 20-year-old has been a bright spark in Saints’ troubled season of late and the youngsters reckons the boss will instantly see the quality in the team.

“It’s a difficult situation we’re in, but anyone coming in can see the talent that we’ve got here in the team and you’ll see the togetherness we’re going to show in the remaining fixtures,” he said.

Sims has urged Saints to stay focused during a turbulent time.

“It’s a big decision by the board but as players we have to focused on our job,” he said about Pellegrino’s sacking.

“We need to get the points on the board. We shouldn’t let that affect us. It’s up to the board to make their decision. We’ll let them do that and we’ll focus on the games.”

He added: “It’s not very nice. The performances have just not been good enough. I think we’ve been unlucky on a few occasions, but the result against Newcastle was a really bad performance.

“It’s not nice when you can affect it with performances on the pitch but unfortunately we’ve not picked up the points and the performances haven’t been good enough.”

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 14/03/2018 14:30:27

| | Southampton next manager odds: The favourites to replace PellegrinoBIRMINGHAMMAIL |
|

| Premier League Southampton in advanced talk with Mark HughesPLYMOUTHHERALD |
| | Hughes 'in advanced talks with Southampton’SPORTSMOLE |
| | LCFC |

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Read Southampton

New content from (- Read Southampton)

| Stoke ready to make move for English shot-stopper | Stoke City are prepared to make a move for Southampton goalkeeper Alex McCarthy if they lose Jack Butland. According … 14-03-2018 |

Older content…

| Hughes, Bilic, Garcia and more: Southampton news round-up14 hours ago |
| Southampton make short-term contract offer to manager2 days ago |
| Southampton and Newcastle remain keen to land La Liga midfielder2 days ago |
| Southampton likely to finalise deal for manager by Wednesday2 days ago |
| Southampton make contact with ex-AC Milan manager over managerial vacancy2 days ago |
| Southampton defender agrees to join Premier League rivals2 days ago |
| Ex-Premier League boss not in contention for Saints job, despite his interest in the role2 days ago |
| Ex-England star says Southampton need to hire a “hit man” manager2 days ago |
| Southampton identify their number one candidate to take manager’s job2 days ago |

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Sourced from Daily Echo article

Hughes coming back to where his management career took off

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MARK ‘Sparky’ Hughes is about to become a manager at Saints for the second time.

Hughes, who was named Wales manager while still playing at The Dell, came to Saints for the first time in 1998 in the twilight of his career.

By then the Welshman had won virtually everything in English football as a player.

At Manchester United he won the FA Cup thrice, the Premier League twice and the League Cup once.

At Chelsea, he lifted the FA Cup again and at Blackburn Rovers won his second League Cup.

Hughes, a top-class forward in his day, won PFA Young Players of the Year and also Players’ Player of the Year.

In 1986/87, he played for Barcelona and following that campaign he went to German giants Bayern Munich.

He had a glittering career which was winding down by the time he arrived at The Dell.

Dave Jones brought him to the south coast in a £650,000 deal from Chelsea as an alternative option to David Hirst.

Hughes, then 35, was determined to continue his playing career.

However, he struggled in a poor Saints side.

By the time he exited for Everton in March 2000, he had more bookings than goals for Saints.

In the end, he had scored twice in 60 appearances in the all competitions.

Before Hughes left for the Toffees, though, he had been named manager of Wales.

It was the first time Saints could boast an international manager in their forward line.

Before retiring and focusing completely on management, Hughes won the League Cup with Blackburn Rovers.

After that, he hung up his boots at the ripe old age of 38 and concentrated on his duties with Wales.

It was back at Ewood Park in 2004 that Hughes started his career as a club manager.

He was tasked with keeping Rovers in the top-flight and duly suceeded, while also taking the club to the FA Cup semi-final for the first time in 40 years.

The following campaign, he led them to a top-six finish in the elite, before finishing tenth in his penultimate term in charge.

In his final season, Blackburn shot back up the league, finishing seventh.

Manchester City came calling for Hughes in 2008, but he was sacked in December 2009 and replaced by Roberto Mancini with the club’s new owners unhappy with a run of two wins in 11 Premier League games.

Hughes moved onto Fulham and was the first to take the Cottagers into the Europa League, but resigned after 11 months at the club in June 2011, stating he wanted to ‘further his experiences’ elsewhere.

In January 2012, he moved to relegation-threatened Queens Park Rangers, replacing Neil Warnock.

They stayed up by the skin of their teeth, but the following campaign Hughes lost his job with QPR in bother at the bottom.

It came down to a six-pointer at Saints, which Rangers lost 3-1 and Hughes was replaced by Harry Redknapp, who couldn’t save the Loftus Road outfit.

At the end of 2012/13, Hughes replaced Tony Pulis at Stoke and there he stayed for the subsequent four-and-a-half years, leading the Potters to three ninth-place finishes in a row.

In January, Hughes was sacked by Stoke after a 2-1 defeat to League Two Coventry in the FA Cup, which was his 200th in all competitions as Potters boss.

He was fourth longest-serving manager at a Premier League club and became the seventh managerial casualty of the season.

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Southampton manager latest as clubs close in on Pellegrino replacement

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Mark Hughes is set to be appointed manager of Southampton.

Saints sacked Mauricio Pellegrino on Monday with the side languishing 17th in the Premier League.

Saturday’s embarrassing 3-0 loss at fellow strugglers Newcastle was the final straw for the board

The club have acted swiftly to get in a new manager before Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final at Wigan, with ex-Stoke boss and former Saints player Hughes set to be appointed.

It is understood Hughes will be appointed on Wednesday, with an initial deal until the end of the season likely.

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Hughes set to be appointed Southampton manager

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Mark Hughes is set to be appointed manager of relegation-threatened Southampton, Press Association Sport understands.

Saints sacked Mauricio Pellegrino on Monday with the side languishing 17th in the Premier League after an embarrassing 3-0 loss at fellow strugglers Newcastle.

The club have acted swiftly to get in a new manager before Sunday’s FA Cup quarter-final at Wigan, with ex-Stoke boss and former Saints player Hughes set to be appointed.

Press Association Sport understands the club is hoping to announce the Welshman on Wednesday, with an initial deal until the end of the season likely.

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 14/03/2018 15:30:41

|

| Why you can’t blame Southampton for their terrible mistakeFOOTBALLFANCAST |
| | Southampton set to announce Mark Hughes as managerBTSPORT |
| | Matt Le Tissier comments on Southampton managerial situation | SportslensSPORTSLENS |
| | Report: Newcastle and Southampton tempted by La Liga ace Dani GarciaHEREISTHECITY |
| | Pellegrino out: Now Southampton’s £13.5m-rated under-performing star must step up | | Where football transfer …THETRANSFERTAVERN |

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Ahead of our #EmiratesFACup trip to #WAFC, we’ve picked out :five: classic quarter-finals involving #SaintsFC: http://sfcne.ws/BestQFs

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 14/03/2018 16:30:54

| | Matt Le Tissier shares the huge regret that the Southampton board will haveHEREISTHECITY |
|

| ‘Must be desperate’ … West Ham fans taunt relegation rivals about huge changeFOOTBALLFANCAST |
| | Simon Donnelly comments on Rodgers to Southampton rumoursHEREISTHECITY |
| | Mark Hughes set to be appointed as Southampton manager until end of season - Stoke Loud & ProudSTOKELOUDANDPROUD |
| | Mark Hughes set to get Southampton jobTEAMTALK |

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West Ham issue statement on pitch invaders and make plea to fans ahead of Southampton game

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The Premier League match at the London Stadium was marred by four separate pitch invasions as well as protests against West Ham’s board as hundreds of supporters congregated beneath the directors’ box.

Joint-owners David Gold and David Sullivan were advised to leave their seats for their own safety, with the latter having been struck on his glasses by a coin.

A West Ham statement read: "The club is working in close conjunction with the Metropolitan Police to identify those individuals who entered the pitch during the second half and to identify those who threw missiles.

"Any individual found guilty will be banned from attending any West Ham United fixture, home and away, for life.

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Lundekvam: Quarter-final win could prove a catalyst

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Lundekvam was part of the Saints side that reached the final of the competition back in 2003 against Arsenal at the Millennium Stadium.

And the Norweigan remembers that particular run fondly, after growing up watching a special competition from afar.

“To grow up in Norway or any Scandinavian country, the English league and the FA Cup are something very special,” Lundekvam reflected.

“Becoming involved yourself and to experience an FA Cup final like I did was one of my absolute career highlights.

“When you’re into the quarter-finals like Southampton are this year, anything can happen. For the club now, the game against Wigan could really help them to pull together.

“I can understand they will be disappointed with the results in the league but this is a chance to play for a semi-final and do something positive.

“I think a win can change the season. It can put them on the right track because it helps the belief in the dressing room.

“Watching from the outside, they’ve got enough quality to stay in the league comfortably.”

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 14/03/2018 17:31:08

| | Stoke ready to make move for English shot-stopperREADSOUTHAMPTON |
| | Football rumour mill: | Southampton to appoint Mark Hughes as new manager today | Man City unlikely to move for …DERRYJOURNAL |
| | Report: Southampton expected to hire Mark HughesCNNSI |
| | Welshman In Talks With SouthamptonVITALFOOTBALL |
|

| Revealed: Staggering 75% of Southampton fans don’t want club’s reported talks to progressFOOTBALLFANCAST |
| | Southampton: Saints in advanced talks with Mark HughesFANSIDEDSAINTSMARCHING |
| | Celtic Should Re-Sign Former £10million Champions League HeroCELTSAREHERE |
| | Southampton fans on Hughes appointment: ‘Solid’, 'Underwhelmed’NINETYMINUTESONLINE |

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