Ho’s Tottenham up and running as England penalty sinks West Ham | OneFootball

Ho’s Tottenham up and running as England penalty sinks West Ham | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: The Guardian

The Guardian

·7 September 2025

Ho’s Tottenham up and running as England penalty sinks West Ham

Article image:Ho’s Tottenham up and running as England penalty sinks West Ham

Martin Ho’s first game in charge of Tottenham ended in a celebratory mood as Bethany England’s late penalty gave the north London side a slender but valuable victory in their season opener against West Ham.

For large parts of the contest, during which the opposing goalkeepers generally had little to do, it had looked as though the teams might play out a goalless draw, but Katrina Gorry fouled Eveliina Summanen inside the area to present the home side with a chance to win the game on 86 minutes, and England tucked her spot-kick into the right-hand corner.


OneFootball Videos


“The players are speaking to each other [saying]: ‘We’ve missed this feeling, we want this feeling more,’” said Ho, who has taken over a team that had failed to win any of their final 10 league games of last season. “They were completely rock bottom, if we’re going to be honest, in terms of confidence and belief. They were a shadow of themselves. Seeing them today now, it’s a totally different team in terms of the confidence, the belief, the energy and the enthusiasm.”

Ho’s new side had controlled more of the possession and had plenty of the ball in the final third, offering them some cause for optimism long‑term, but what they were initially lacking on Sunday was that spark of creativity and a decisive ball inside the West Ham penalty area.

In terms of generating opportunities to test the goalkeeper, similar could be said of West Ham, although they missed a big chance when Seraina Piubel volleyed out at the back post, just moments into the second half.

There was a blow for West Ham when their starting goalkeeper Kinga Szemik, who played for Poland at Euro 2025 this summer, had to be withdrawn with what looked like an ankle injury, after landing awkwardly when she did well to keep out a deep cross from Drew Spence that had looked destined to drop inside the far post.

Szemik hobbled off with help from two members of West Ham’s physio team, and she was replaced by Megan Walsh, who got a hand to England’s penalty kick half an hour later but could not quite keep it out.

“Overall, I thought we played really well, stuck to the gameplan and exploited their right-hand side,” the West Ham manager, Rehanne Skinner, said. “We created good opportunities. I don’t think our final ball was as good as it could have been in the first half, but we’ve limited them [Spurs] to one shot on target, which comes from the penalty spot, so by the nature of it, it’s disappointing to not get something out of the game on that basis.”

A winning start for Tottenham will feel priceless, after a disappointing campaign last season in which they finished 11th. Their key summer decision was to choose Ho to try to start a new era. It is understood Spurs were blown away by the passion he showed in his interview presentation, which one source said was so detailed and thorough that Ho had to be asked politely to stop because time was up. The club wanted a coach who is obsessive and they believe they have found one. They are understood also to have received very strong personal recommendations for the former Manchester United assistant coach, including a glowing character reference from the former United manager Casey Stoney.

The Merseyside-born coach was all smiles all he waved with both arms to Spurs when he was introduced before kick-off, amid an optimistic mood, and as his team wrapped up the points he was understandably delighted, clenching his fists as he turned back towards the crowd. After the match he praised his team’s character, saying: “The grit, the determination, the willingness; you could see how hard they wanted that result.

“That’s what got us over the line, that little bit of edge we had over them. The conviction in how we defended, and how aggressive we wanted to be. I thought they were trying to do the right things. We know there are so many areas for us to be better and we will be.

“You always want to start with a win, but for me personally it means a lot. You don’t have a lot of time to implement a lot of things in five weeks and I think we’ve done as much as we can, and now I’m more happy for the players. I’m only the coach; they do the work.”

Next, West Ham will host Arsenal on Friday, before Tottenham travel to Everton on Sunday.


Header image: [Photograph: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images]

View publisher imprint