Ipswich bid farewell to theirPremier Leaguestatus after just one year back in the top flight with defeat against West Ham in the final game of the season at Portman Road.
Town gifted the first goal to James Ward-Prowse just before the half-time break following a dreadful back-pass from the captain Sam Morsy. They equalised just after the restart through Nathan Broadhead but the teams were level for just three minutes after Jarrod Bowen restored West Ham’s lead and Mohammed Kudus put the icing on the cake with a goal three minutes from the end.
It was Ipswich’s ninth consecutive defeat in their dismal season and they won just four games, three away – at Tottenham, Wolves and Bournemouth – and just one at home against Chelsea. Meanwhile, West Ham’s season finished with them in 14th place.
The Ipswich defender Axel Tuanzebe’s backpass almost eluded Christian Walton and at the other end Omari Hutchinson shot was safely gathered by West Ham’s goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski.
Broadhead brought out an excellent save from Fabianski and Morsy hit a low shot just wide from outside the penalty box.
Niclas Füllkrug tangled with Dara O’Shea in the penalty area and the Hammers striker claimed he was fouled but the referee Tim Robinson turned away his appeals for a spot-kick.
Walton came to the rescue of the home side when he turned away a shot from Bowen and the ball rebounded to Ward-Prowse but he was crowded out by the Ipswich defence.
Hutchinson struck the left hand post of the West Ham goal when he was found on the right by O’Shea but the offside flag was raised and Ipswich fell behind in the 43rd minute following a dreadful error. Tuanzebe’s throw-in found Morsy and he put the ball into the path of an unmarked Bowen, who passed to Ward-Prowse for the West Ham midfielder to convert.
Graham Potter, the West Ham manager, said of Bowen: “I thought that his overall performance just sums up him as a person, how he performed today, the energy that he had. Everything that we did that was good. I thought it came through him. In and out of possession, helped the team, ran in behind, linked up, he was a real threat and everyone in the stadium could feel that when he had the ball there was a sharpness to him.”
Ipswich drew level in the 52nd minute through a wonderful strike from Broadhead. The Wales international collected the ball from Jens Cajuste and threaded his way into the penalty area, where he unleashed an unstopped shot past Fabianski.
West Ham were back in front three minutes later after Bowen played a one-two with Aaron Wan-Bissaka and rifled a shot past Walton.
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Within seconds of coming on as substitutes Jack Clarke and Liam Delap combined to almost make it 2-2 and Clarke’s mazy run and shot across the penalty area nearly led to a goal as the ball went inches wide.
Kudus struck West Ham’s third goal when he exchanged passes with Guido Rodríguez and bent a shot beyond Walton, while at the other end Clarke’s cross across the six-yard area found Hutchinson – who just failed to find the back of the net.
Massimo Luongo and Aaron Cresswell came on to play their final games for the two teams to loud cheers from both set of fans as the game drew to a close.
Kieran McKenna, the Ipswich manager, said: “I thought we had more chances in the game than them and we have spoken lots this year about the difference in the category of the games and I think it’s probably reflective of the challenges and the level we haven’t quite been able to hit. So I think against most of the teams in most of the matches this year we were able to compete in terms of our principles and organisation and our football between both boxes.
“We were able to get to good positions in good areas but the execution of top end players in this division … with the experience and the calibre that they have, they execute more often than ours. West Ham executed better than us in both boxes and they take the points.”