West Ham United 2 Wimbledon 1
FA Carling Premiership, Boleyn Ground, Sunday 26 March 2000, 4pm BST
West Ham United: Forrest, Lomas, R.Ferdinand, Stimac, Minto, Sinclair, Foe, Lampard, Moncur (Keller 89), Di Canio, Kanouté Subs not used: Feuer (GK), J.Cole, Ruddock, Wanchope
Wimbledon: Sullivan, Cunningham, Andersen, Willmott (Blackwell 72), Kimble, Ardley (Leaburn 78), Earle (Francis 65), Euell, Hughes, Gayle, Lund Subs not used: Heald (GK), Andresen
In truth, it may not have been one of the greatest matches in the history of the Boleyn Ground, but Paolo Di Canio’s scissor-kick volley against Wimbledon was undoubtedly one of the historic stadium’s greatest moments.
Few goals scored here have captured the essence of everything that makes being a West Ham United fan so special – skill, flair and audacity.
The Italian’s goal is still shown at the very top of any Premier League greatest goals montage, and rightly so. It was bold, it was brilliant, it was special, it was Di Canio summed up in one breath-taking, fluid movement.
Prior to the No10’s magic moment, which arrived at just after 4pm on Sunday 26 March 2000, the Hammers were enjoying an impressive, if not spectacular, Premier League season.
Harry Redknapp’s attractive, flamboyant and cosmopolitan side were a force to be reckoned with on home turf, where they had won eight and lost just two of their 14 league matches prior to the Dons’ visit.
West Ham had begun the 1999/00 campaign by winning the UEFA Intertoto Cup, beating Tottenham Hotspur in their opening home league game and sat third in the table come mid-September.
However, indifferent away form, in the main, had seen the Hammers slip down the Premier League table, while Redknapp’s side had been eliminated on their travels from the UEFA Cup and League Cup.
An administrative error had also cost West Ham their place in the League Cup in December 1999, meaning that by the time the Wombles came to town, Redknapp’s side could concentrate 100 per cent of their energies on chasing a European place via their league position.


