Manchester United 2-0 West Ham: Teenager Lauren James scores in historic Old Trafford win
- Published
Teenager Lauren James scored as Manchester United claimed victory over struggling West Ham on a historic day that saw Old Trafford host a Women's Super League match for the first time.
James, 19, rose to flick home Maria Thorisdottir's header from a corner to make it 1-0 just after the break.
USA forward Christen Press thumped in a second after she was slipped through by Jackie Groenen six minutes later.
United, who usually play at Leigh Sports Village, sit third in the table.
James, one of England's most promising youngsters, was excellent in the first half and was rewarded for her fine performance when she became the first woman to score at Old Trafford just five minutes after the restart.
She has now scored the first goal for Manchester United women in the Championship, the WSL, the FA Cup and now at Old Trafford.
James showed skill, intelligence and pace throughout, coming close again in the second half when her curling strike flew inches past the right post.
Before her opener, the hosts were struggling to break down West Ham, who remain bottom of the table and without a win in seven WSL matches.
Press had opportunities to score and twice fizzed balls across the six-yard area which evaded James and midfielder Ella Toone.
Sloppiness in possession almost proved costly for the hosts too as West Ham's Martha Thomas, Kenza Dali and Dagny Brynjarsdottir all had chances to get in behind the home defence in the first half after being gifted the ball.
The Hammers were made to pay for not taking their chances though as James and Press provided the clinical edge Manchester United had craved, before Laura Vetterlein's second yellow card made life even harder for the visitors in the final stages.
The result leaves Casey Stoney's side six points above Arsenal, who take on north London rivals Spurs at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium later on Saturday (15:30 GMT).
West Ham are one point below Bristol City, who face fellow relegation rivals Birmingham City on Sunday (16:00 GMT).
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Manchester United manager Casey Stoney: "We weren't good in the first half - that was probably the worst I've seen us in a long, long time, so I think there was definitely a case of the occasion. That's done now. They know what it's like.
"Players know when they are not good enough. I said [at half-time] if you want to qualify for Champions League football, you have to play at a Champions League standard and we weren't.
"When we started playing collectively in the second half we were better."
Manchester United midfielder Ella Toone: "As a Manchester United fan it was a dream come true to play on such an amazing pitch so it was a special occasion and I'm glad we went out there and got the three points."
West Ham boss Olli Harder on playing at Old Trafford: "The players all thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to be here. It was a decent promotion for women's football.
"For somebody who grew up at the bottom of the world and only seeing Old Trafford on TV, to say it was a dream to come here and coach is not even true because you wouldn't even dream it! It's not real when you live in New Zealand.
"It was a fantastic occasion for myself personally but more importantly, for the girls to come and play at arguably one of the most historic stadiums in the world."
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