Gianfranco Zola says he is ‘determined to carry on’ at West Ham

• Italian had gone home to Sardinia to consider future
• No one should write us off, Hammers manager says

Gianfranco Zola has today made it clear he intends to stay at West Ham and guide them to Premier League safety.

Zola spoke from his family home in Sardinia, where he returned following the 1-0 defeat by Stoke City that has left his side on the brink of the relegation zone. After that game the dejected Italian admitted he would consider his future over the weekend, but today he declared: “I am determined to carry on.

“Losing on Saturday was emotional for everyone, but I know we can turn it around and we have the ability to achieve our objectives. My only thought for now is to keep this club in the Premier League and that remains my goal. I will give everything I can to make this happen between now and the end of the season.

“I have had time to think and reflect, and will have to work harder than we have before. I know we can get the results we need and it is just a question of making it happen. The performance was better on Saturday, but it is still not the level we should be at. We can, and we will, do better as a team.”

Zola mentioned the injuries to Guillermo Franco – who did not play against Stoke – and Kieron Dyer, who came off at half-time. “That is typical of our season,” he said on the West Ham website. “But we will not make excuses and we will keep on going.

“I have a great staff and we will work together to find the solutions. We have a responsibility to turn things around and that is what we will do. I am here and I am ready to do what I need to do to get the results. There is no doubt about that. We have seen before that we are capable of playing at a high level.

“No one should write us off. Although we are in a serious position, we have time to sort things out and be in control of our destiny at the end of the season. We said before Stoke that one game would not define the season, but we also know that each of the games we have left will be cup finals. They will be massive and I know the fans will once again get behind us starting with Everton [away on Sunday 4 April] and we will give everything to reward their support. They have been brilliant and we owe them.”

Gianfranco ZolaWest Ham UnitedPremier LeagueStoke CityEvertonguardian.co.uk

Everton trusted me, now I want to pay them back, says Mikel Arteta

Goodison’s returning Spaniard is ready to make up for lost time in midfield after year on the sidelines with a serious knee injury

A confessional in the latest edition of the Evertonian fanzine When Skies Are Grey shows there is still a place for idolatry in the Premier League and at Goodison Park that place is reserved for Mikel Arteta Amatriain. “As I saw him run on to the Goodison pitch after far too long away,” writes the author of an article on whether it is permissible to cry at the match, “tears streamed down my face and my wife looked at me with a mixture of disbelief and resignation. It was a wonderful moment and proof to me that, along with Duncan Ferguson, Peter Reid and Bob Latchford, he will always be, forgive me for a Kenwright-ism, a God to me.” And Everton lost that day too.

There were many upset Evertonians on 23 January, mainly due to an FA Cup exit at home to Birmingham City. The return of Arteta to the substitutes’ bench against Alex McLeish’s side was to provide immense consolation, however. Eleven months and three operations since rupturing a cruciate ligament at Newcastle United, the midfielder whose composure and creativity had been painfully missed by David Moyes’s team replaced Landon Donovan to a riotous reception with 15 minutes remaining. There was to be no fairytale comeback to save interest in the Cup but, after almost a year in professional purgatory, when every setback fuelled Merseyside rumours that he might never play again, preserving a career was all that mattered.

Arteta, an affable and optimistic soul, says he never allowed the worst fears to fester in his mind. But there were plenty of dark moments, not least when his scheduled return was aborted due to a third unforeseen complication. “The lowest point was after the third setback in November,” the Spaniard recalls. “I was in Barcelona at the time and came down for dinner about 8pm. I walked downstairs but felt a bit sick and my missus said: ‘Look at the size of your knee.’ It had really ballooned, so I went straight back to hospital that night. They told me it didn’t look good, so they drained it, but the next day it was the same again. They had to go inside it to have a proper look, get the fluid out and test everything again.

“The stitches in my knee had flaked and had to be repaired. I’d gone through it all before, having the brace on, working on mobility and strength and I was back at the start. That was a really bad time. It put me back a few months because the bacteria could have affected the cruciate too and the cartilage. I feel like I’ve done a masters in medicine, I’ve learned that much.”

That he hit the depths in Barcelona is a painful coincidence not lost on the 27-year-old. It was in Catalonia that Arteta launched what became a nomadic career until finding a connection with Everton. Invited to join the Barcelona academy at 15 from Antiguoko – his boyhood team in San Sebastián, where he played alongside his close friend Xabi Alonso – the midfielder made his senior debut at 16 as a substitute for his childhood hero Pep Guardiola. That fleeting appearance in the first team found the teenager in the company of Luis Figo, Rivaldo and Luis Enrique but more recent experiences in the city have been far removed from Camp Nou’s glamour.

“I travelled between here and Spain about 15 times in the last year and made a lot of friends in the [Quirón] hospital,” he adds. “I went to see Ramón Cugat in Barcelona, who is in the top three knee surgeons in the world, and it was just very fortunate that when the knee did swell up I was still in Barcelona. I was due to come back but because I had started running that week he asked me to stay a bit longer and see if there was any reaction from the impact.

“If I’d been in England when it happened, I wouldn’t have been able to fly back and would have had to wait until he was free to come here, which would have set things back even further. But staying in the hospital in Barcelona put a lot of things into perspective for me. I saw a lot of things with the kids that were unbelievable. I’d just had a baby and when you see youngsters who are ill it is even worse. I knew that at the end of all I was going through I would be fine but a lot of the kids in there wouldn’t be.”

Gabriel Arteta was born last July with an eye condition that required frequent medical attention but, like father, like son, his recovery is now well underway. On a professional level, tThe torment of being sidelined as an injury-plagued Everton team lost last season’s FA Cup final and toiled through the first half of this campaign also had an impact. “I watched every match from last season while I was doing my rehab and, while I love watching football, it was really hard watching Everton. I hated it,” he recalls. “You know what they’re going to do because they’re your mates and you work with them every day. Watching them win was beautiful but losing is even worse because you can’t do anything to help. When we played Benfica in Europe and lost 5-0 [in October] I felt embarrassed because I hated the image of us that it gave to everyone else.”

It may surprise those at Rangers who recall a talented but fragile midfielder that Everton’s adulation towards Arteta is based on spirit as well as quality. The characteristics that prompted the club’s effusive chairman, Bill Kenwright, to draw comparisons between Moyes’ £2.2m signing – repeat, £2.2m signing – and Alex Young, ‘The Golden Vision’, have not diminished during Arteta’s prolonged spell on the sidelines.

As the Everton manager has stressed, his No10 should be making only cameo appearances as he builds match fitness and still has a psychological barrier to overcome regarding fully committed tackles. But he has started in ­Everton’s last two important victories, against Chelsea and Sporting Lisbon, due to the ankle injury to Marouane Fellaini that will deprive the team of a captivating central midfield partnership for the next six months. Despite being back in action for only a month, it is typical of Arteta’s standing at Goodison that much will depend on his influence when Manchester United arrive on Merseyside today.

“We were planning for me to have three or four weeks just training with the lads but we got a few more injuries so I had to speed it up,” Arteta says matter-of-factly. “Everyone at Everton has been really good to me, keeping in touch with texts and calls from the lads, the medical staff, the manager and the chairman. They told me to take as long as I needed, to stay with my family and friends. They trusted me basically, they knew I wasn’t going to be lying around on the beach and to come back and beat Chelsea last week was fantastic. You know you can pretty much beat anyone if you can beat them but for me it’s just great to be involved in everything again.”

EvertonPremier LeagueAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk

Tim Cahill plans appeal for victims of the tsunami in Samoa

• Everton midfielder has family in village hit by disaster
• ‘If I could leave training and do aid work I’d do it’

Everton’s Tim Cahill is to launch an appeal to help the victims of the tsunami in Samoa. The midfielder, who was born in Sydney to a Samoan mother, dedicated his goal in Thursday night’s 2-1 Europa League victory over BATE Borisov to those affected by the disaster but now plans to go further.

“The tsunami in Samoa affected the village where my family comes from, which is a place that’s very close to my heart,” he said. “Some people are now staying in tents with plastic sheets over the top of them – they’re just trying to deal with it and they are trying to arrange a mass funeral for all the people who have died.

“I go back there quite a lot and help the kids with shoes, clothes, kit and things like that. I’ve done some soccer clinics there. I will now start some sort of appeal. I am working on something now, which might take a bit of time, to try to help. I’ve got some great sponsors in Australia and a lot of people there want to help out.

“If I could leave training for a week and do some aid work I’d do it, but obviously I can’t do that. However, I can put people in place to help but it’s not something that will happen overnight.”

Cahill represented Western Samoa at under-20 level but has since gone on to win 34 caps for Australia.

EvertonSamoaguardian.co.uk