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  1. West Ham 2-1 Everton: What Nuno and Wilson saidpublished at 18:24 BST

    Media caption,

    West Ham manager Nuno Espirito Santo speaking to Match of the Day: "We knew it was going to be tough until the end. It was important we keep believing, fighting 'til the last minute. That is something we have in our character and that is positive for us."

    On matchwinner Callum Wilson: "Callum is giving us huge moments. We are delighted. Fantastic, what can I say? We have all of the squad available. It [his selection up front] is a good headache to have."

    On the remainder of the relegation battle: "It is going to be until the end - keep fighting, keep believing. Tough one but we are in our path."

    West Ham goalscorer Callum Wilson speaking to BBC Sport: "Over the moon with the three points first and foremost, and I managed to pop up with the winning goal.

    "The atmosphere was electric. I think the fans and the players have really come together in this period and it has stood us in good stead."

    On the relegation battle: "We're the ones in the driving seat at the moment and if we take care of our own results, it should stand us in good stead come the end of the season.

    "When the goal went in it was a feeling of frustration, but when the eight minutes of added time went up I wanted to go and get that winning goal.

    "The lads are buzzing. You do ultimately look at other results, we knew they [Tottenham] were playing a game in which they were the favourites, so we had to do our job."

    Did you know?

    • West Ham United remain unbeaten in each of their last six Premier League home games (won three, drawn three), their best run at the London Stadium since another six-game spell between November 2023 and February 2024.

    • West Ham United's Callum Wilson has scored nine goals in his last eight Premier League appearances against Everton, and since the 2019-20 campaign, he has scored the most top-flight goals against the Toffees (nine).

    • Only Bruno Fernandes (11) has recorded more Premier League assists in 2026 than West Ham United's Jarrod Bowen (nine), who now has 10 assists for Tomás Soucek, the first Hammer to assist a teammate 10 times in the competition.

  2. West Ham v Everton: Team newspublished at 14:00 BST

    West Ham XI: Hermansen, Walker-Peters, Mavropanos, Disasi, Diouf, Fernandes, Soucek, Bowen, Summerville, Pablo, Taty

    West Ham are unchanged for the third successive game, as Tomas Soucek makes his 200th Premier League start.

    West Ham XI: Hermansen, Walker-Peters, Mavropanos, Disasi, Diouf, Fernandes, Soucek, Bowen, Summerville, Pablo, Taty.

    Subs: Areola, Wan-Bissaka, Scarles, Todibo, Potts, Magassa, Kanté, Adama, Wilson

    There are two changes for Everton as Thierno Barry and Michael Keane come in.

    They come in for Beto (concussion) and Jarrad Branthwaite, who is out for the remainder of the season with a hamstring injury.

    Everton XI: Pickford, O'Brien, Tarkowski (c), Keane, Mykolenko, Garner, Gana, McNeil, Dewsbury-Hall, Ndiaye, Barry.

    Subs: Travers, Patterson, George, Dibling, Coleman, Alcaraz, Rohl, Iroegbunam, Armstrong

    Everton XI: Pickford, O'Brien, Tarkowski (c), Keane, Mykolenko, Garner, Gana, McNeil, Dewsbury-Hall, Ndiaye, Barry.
  3. Follow Saturday's Premier League games livepublished at 11:29 BST

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    There are five games in the Premier League on Saturday and BBC Sport will bring you every moment.

    Kick-off times 15:00 BST unless stated

    Follow all of the action and reaction here

    You can also watch, listen a follow live text of the FA Cup semi-final between Man City and Southampton here (kick-off 17:15)

    You can also listen to today's 5 Live Premier League commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play West Ham v Everton" or "ask BBC Sounds to play Arsenal v Newcastle", for instance.

    Find out more about how to listen to Premier League football on BBC Sounds

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  4. Sutton's predictions: West Ham v Evertonpublished at 11:05 BST

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    What a great game this will be, with Everton boss David Moyes going back to his old club.

    We know how big a win would be for West Ham in their relegation fight but I was impressed by Everton against Liverpool, especially Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's performance.

    I thought the Hammers' point at Palace last time out was a decent result but the pressure is still on them to win this one at home.

    I am expecting West Ham to play with the kind of intensity that is required but Everton can be a tough nut to crack.

    It finished 1-1 when these two sides met earlier in the season and this smells of another draw to me.

    Sutton's prediction: 1-1

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  5. West Ham v Everton: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 19:32 BST 24 April

    Prudent Nsengiyumva
    BBC Sport journalist

    West Ham United host Everton on Saturday (15:00 BST) with the margins tightening in their battle to stay in the Premier League. Everton arrive with encouragement drawn from a strong away record as they chase European qualification.

    Can Nuno guide the Hammers to safety?

    Football fortunes can turn quickly. Fewer than three years ago, West Ham were celebrating a first major trophy in 43 years after beating Fiorentina in the Europa Conference League final in Prague.

    Now, anxiety has replaced optimism as West Ham fight to preserve their top flight status. Nuno Espirito Santo's side earned a valuable point in Monday's goalless draw at Crystal Palace, with the Portuguese coach praising his team's discipline after another clean sheet.

    There are signs of resilience at the London Stadium too. West Ham are unbeaten in five home league matches and have kept two clean sheets in their past three there, following a long spell where defensive solidity proved hard to find.

    A table showing West Ham's last five Premier League results at home.

    Former boss to dent Hammers' survival hopes?

    Everton, under former West Ham manager David Moyes, are pushing for European football for the first time since 2017-18.

    Their away form has been a consistent strength this season. They have picked up 25 points on the road in the league this term (W7 D4 L5) — their strongest away tally across a season since 2020-21, when they collected 37.

    Nine Premier League visits to London Stadium have yielded three wins, three draws and three defeats.

    A trump card for the Toffees could be striker Beto. He has been lethal in the Premier League in 2026, finding the net seven times from just 19 efforts – an incredible 37% success rate – scoring every 81 minutes.

    Previously, he managed 12 goals from 111 shots, converting only 11% and scoring at a rate of one every 271 minutes.

  6. Nuno on good home form, being 'very confident' of staying up and Evertonpublished at 14:14 BST 23 April

    Marissa Thomas
    BBC Sport journalist

    West Ham boss Nuno Espirito Santo has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against Everton at London Stadium (kick-off 15:00 BST).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • On team news: "All [of] the squad is available and good."

    • On keeping spirits high: "The players realise the situation but work in a good environment, which is helpful."

    • On the departure of Baroness Karren Brady who stepped down as West Ham vice-chair after 16 years earlier this week: "She has been very supportive, good relationship. All the board have been supportive through difficult times. It has been a pleasure working with Karren."

    • On clarity about the future of the club's hierarchy: "That's up to the board. My job is to prepare the boys - especially against Everton."

    • When asked about the relegation battle, Nuno said: "There is a lot of football to be played so we have to focus on ourselves and Saturday is a big task for us."

    • On his first game in charge of West Ham being against Everton and whether he has taken time to reflect: "It has been very demanding, very intense, so we are always looking at how we can improve and get our objectives done." He added he is "very confident" that West Ham will stay up because "the performances of the team give us all in the club the hope and the belief that we are competing well".

    • Nuno said on West Ham's recent improved form: "The players are improving their levels and the standards. As long as we are improving our players, the team will improve.. We have been solid in defence, good in attack, sometimes not so good. Finding that balance in the remaining matches is going to be crucial for us."

    • On West Ham being better at home under him: "Since we joined, it was one of our main goals to try to be comfortable at home. Credit to the fans. I think the fans realise the situation of the team and really put an effort in to support us. The team is giving back and the atmosphere has been good. Three games out of [the past] five at home has really helped us."

    • On Chelsea loanee Axel Disasi: "He has been very helpful. Since he joined he has performed really good. We are positive that we have options at centre--half."

    • On what he expects against the Toffees: "It's a tough game against a good team, good players. David Moyes is a good manager. It is going to be at the London Stadium - I think we have been improving our home factor [with] the support of the fans and we count on them to try to compete well and have a good performance."

    Listen to full match commentary of West Ham v Everton on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra at 15:00 on Saturday

    Got a question about West Ham? Get in touch here and we'll seek answers from our experts

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  7. Fernandes leads the way for improving Hammerspublished at 10:54 BST 22 April

    Nat Hayward
    BBC Sport journalist

    Mateus FernandesImage source, Getty Images

    When Lucas Paqueta departed West Ham to return to Brazil in January, fans responding to his exit on this page were fairly resounding in their view that they were losing a great player but it was the right time to part ways.

    One of the reasons for that was the performances of summer signing Mateus Fernandes.

    "Fernandes is a very different option to Paqueta," one wrote. "Fernandes is a grafter with an eye for goal or a through pass. Lucas is a great player but he is a liability in a struggling side like ours."

    Another wrote: "He has been a great player for the club but now feels the right time to move on for both parties. On recent performances Fernandes has shown he can step up."

    When Paqueta signed for Flamengo at the end of January, the Hammers were in the Premier League's relegation zone, five points adrift of safety, and were only in that position after winning consecutive matches against Tottenham and Sunderland.

    On Monday, Fernandes was named player of the match as West Ham ground out a goalless draw at Crystal Palace which moved them two points above the relegation zone and kept their survival fate in their own hands.

    He won 100% of his aerial duels, seven out of eight ground duels, completed six of his seven attempted long balls, made nine passes into the final third, recorded an 87% pass accuracy and made 12 defensive contributions.

    It was a true all-action performance. Fernandes is not as capable of an x-factor moment or viral piece of skill as Paqueta was but, like the Hammers fan mentioned above said, he is a grafter with an eye for a pass.

    He has not adopted Paqueta's often free role behind the striker but instead regularly starts alongside Tomas Soucek in central midfield, giving him more protection to break forward and join January attacking signings Pablo and Taty Castellanos.

    Fernandes tops several key metrics in the West Ham squad, showing his importance from both a defensive and creative standpoint.

    He leads the way in possession won (156), passes ending in the final third (356), successful passes in the opposition half (575), tackles (85), duels won (167), recoveries (156) and midfield line-breaking passes (101).

    In the 23 league games West Ham played before Paqueta's departure, West Ham averaged exactly a goal per game and 1.96 goals conceded per game. In the 10 matches since, they have averaged 1.7 goals scored and 1.2 conceded per game.

    *Stats provided by Opta

  8. A 'trailblazer' who 'polarised opinion'published at 16:41 BST 21 April

    Simon Stone
    Chief football news reporter

    Karren BradyImage source, PA Media

    Baroness Karren Brady has long been seen as a leading woman in football, a trailblazer who others followed, but many West Ham fans see her as one of the main figures responsible for taking the club away from its roots, relocating to a hated athletics stadium and landing the club in its present state.

    One of the most significant figures in the game, Brady has polarised opinion, never frightened to voice a view, no matter how controversial, and even using the House of Lords as a platform to voice the Premier League's opposition to the football regulator.

    Yet for all her forceful and powerful personality, at West Ham she will forever be known as the third member of the trio responsible for moving the club out of their beloved, but antiquated, Boleyn Ground and into London Stadium.

    With current majority owner David Sullivan and long-time business partner David Gold, who died in January 2023, Brady helped negotiate a hugely favourable deal to move into the Olympic Stadium in 2016.

    The plan was to turn West Ham into an elite club and regular European contenders. It did not turn out the way envisaged.

    Many long-time fans were against the move in the first place. The distance from the pitch to the stands and a lack of atmosphere, created in part by below-par performances, only widened the disconnect.

    Sullivan, Gold and Brady were subjected to venomous abuse, which continues and is partly responsible for her decision to leave with immediate effect as the club battles to avoid relegation.

    There were positives.

    The 2023 Conference League final win against Fiorentina in Prague will go down as one of the best nights in West Ham's history - part of a run of three successive European campaigns, something the club had never done before.

    West Ham have also been in the Premier League since 2012 - and are bidding to extend their longest consecutive run of top-flight seasons since the 1960s, when World Cup heroes Bobby Moore, Martin Peters and Geoff Hurst were in their pomp.

    The 'Moore, Peters, Hurst' statue outside London Stadium is significant, as are aesthetic changes, like the maroon carpet behind the goal, which at least helps to create a sense of 'West Ham' at the ground.

    Brady always felt if she had been given the chance, she could have delivered the lucrative naming rights deal that is yet to be negotiated.

    But, for many, Brady's achievements at West Ham are far outweighed by the negatives that surround the stadium move.

    It could well be that in 20 years' time, when the arguments have stopped, she gets credit for looking to a brighter future for the club. But in the here and now, most West Ham fans will be glad she has gone.

    Read more on Brady's exit

  9. 'Won't be many supporters who are unhappy' with news of Brady's exitpublished at 14:46 BST 21 April

    Your West Ham opinions banner
    Karren BradyImage source, Getty Images

    We asked for your views on Baroness Karren Brady stepping down as West Ham vice-chair after 16 years.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Nicky: Good riddance. We are in debt and have been badly mismanaged. Now get David Sullivan [majority owner] out.

    Lee: There won't be many supporters who are unhappy with the news... hopefully Sullivan is right behind her going through the door.

    Michael: Her decision to step down is 15 years too late! As she is being credited with being instrumental in our move from Upton Park, without her perhaps we wouldn't be in a place that will never be home. Just need to get rid of Sullivan now.

    John: Should have stepped down after the move. She has no clue about customer service/fan engagement or what it takes to make a football club successful. I wish her well in her next step but hope she's learnt the lessons she gives on The Apprentice.

    Murray: There certainly has been a disconnect between Brady and the supporters. For someone so involved in the media world, it has been disappointing to witness this failure. Daniel Kretinsky [West Ham's joint-chair] should reflect closer to home.

    James: I believe a change is overdue. Best wishes to Karren.

  10. West Ham have 'confidence, form and mentality' to escape droppublished at 13:43 BST 21 April

    James Jones
    Fan writer

    West Ham fan's voice banner
    West Ham United players celebrateImage source, Getty Images

    It is easy to look at the 0-0 draw against Crystal Palace on Monday as a negative result.

    The chance to go four points clear of Tottenham and pile further pressure on them in the relegation battle was there to be taken, but I have always been a big believer in the saying: 'Respect the away point'.

    The reality is a two-point cushion over Spurs means all we need to do is match their results over the next five games to secure survival. That is more than achievable.

    Tottenham travel to already-relegated Wolves on Saturday, but that does not present the guaranteed victory many will be expecting.

    We have seen many times before how relegated teams suddenly start picking up results. They play without pressure, with more freedom and some players even start playing better with their immediate futures at risk.

    Meanwhile, despite Roberto de Zerbi showing signs of getting a bit of a tune out of his Spurs squad, we do not know just how damaging that last-minute Brighton equaliser at the weekend has been to their mentality. It was already fragile.

    After that, Spurs still play Aston Villa,Leeds United,Chelsea and Everton - all of which are difficult fixtures against teams that still have something to play for.

    We host Everton at London Stadium, where we have been much improved of late. We have not lost a league game at home since Nottingham Forest in January, picking up impressive results against Sunderland,Bournemouth,Manchester United and Manchester City in that time.

    It is our home form that will dictate our fate and that is where we are better right now.

    So Monday's draw, albeit not ideal, is still a good point and keeps us primed to achieve survival.

    This is going to go to the wire - and we are the team with the confidence, form and mentality to get over the line.

    Find more from James Jones at We Are West Ham, external

  11. Baroness Brady steps down after 16 years at West Ham Unitedpublished at 10:52 BST 21 April

    Karren BradyImage source, Getty Images

    Baroness Karren Brady has stepped down from her position as vice-chair of West Ham United after 16 years at the Premier League club.

    Her decision comes amid the Hammers' fight to avoid top-flight relegation, with Nuno Espirito Santo's side sitting just two points above the drop with five matches left to play.

    The 57-year-old took up her role at West Ham United in January 2010 after joint-chairmen David Gold and David Sullivan bought the club.

    Prior to that, she had been appointed as managing director at Birmingham City after Gold and Sullivan bought into the club in March 1993.

    Reflecting on her tenure in a club statement, Baroness Brady said: "It has been a privilege to work alongside the board, management, players, staff and supporters at West Ham United.

    "Together we have achieved remarkable milestones, but the highlight for me will always be lifting the Europa Conference League trophy - a moment that will stay with me forever.

    "I am deeply grateful for the relationships, challenges and opportunities that have shaped my time at the club."

    Baroness Brady also led negotiations to secure the club's move to the London Stadium and built a season ticket base of more than 50,000 supporters.

    "Her contribution to our growth, such as the long-term contract for the London Stadium, shareholders transition and the British record transfer of Declan Rice, has been absolutely essential and not always fully appreciated," said joint-chair Daniel Kretinsky.

    What do you think about the announcement? Was this the right time for Baroness Brady to go? How big an impact will this have on the club moving forward?

    Let us know your thoughts here

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  12. Crystal Palace 0-0 West Ham - the fans' verdictpublished at 10:50 BST 21 April

    Your opinions graphic
    Media caption,

    We asked for your thoughts after Monday's Premier League game between Crystal Palace and West Ham United at Selhurst Park.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Crystal Palace fans

    Al: A dour draw against a fighting West Ham side. I'm worried about Brennan Johnson, he looks lost and out of confidence. Perhaps a break before next season will help. Another game of seeing Jaydee Canvot getting better and better. Anfield up next against a shaky Liverpool, which might just be ideal for Palace.

    Richard: Humdrum stuff from Palace, but teams in West Ham's position can be hard to play against. Johnson did himself no favours with that miss though. Dean Henderson's save was worth the admission though. I'm not grumbling after Thursday.

    D Lowe: If Ismaila Sarr and Jean-Philippe Mateta had started, this was a game Palace should've won. I'm not happy that two points were lost. We fielded a weaker team at the start, which is never good. Canvot has definitely replaced Marc Guehi, and he still has years of playing time.

    Dave: The performance was kind of expected from Palace. It was a good point against a fired up West Ham. We missed Adam Wharton and we were too slow in transition. The substitutes made an impact in the second half, but we didn't do enough to win the match. I'm really pleased we didn't get any new injuries as the main focus is the Europa Conference League game!

    West Ham fans

    Chris: I can't help feeling it was a missed opportunity for three points, but it was still a good and confidence-building performance. Jarrod Bowen was kept quiet by their left-back and Crysencio Summerville isn't back to his best. So while the defence claims another clean sheet, there's better to come up front. It just has to happen soon.

    Sue: It's so frustrating watching at the moment. They are playing well but they can't seem to score. They have to keep going and keep thinking positively. A point away to Palace is a good effort.

    Norbet: We didn't have the decisive edge to win against Palace, who had no motivation and no chance of gaining European football. It's looking decidedly like the Championship beckons for a poor West Ham side.

    James: Very cagey but the old adage of 'if you can't win then don't lose' comes to mind. If a point is all it takes for survival come the final day, this will be priceless.

    Bubba: If only we had played like this throughout the whole season. It remains to be seen if this turnaround will be sufficient enough or too little too late. I hope the fans who worked to get David Moyes out are admitting, at least to themselves, that they are responsible for our current predicament.

  13. Who's favourite to get the last relegation spot?published at 08:42 BST 21 April

    Sam Drury
    BBC Sport journalist

    A split graphic showing Xavi Simons of Tottenham, Jarrod Bowen of West Ham, Morgan Gibbs-White of Nottingham Forest and Dominic Calvert-Lewin of Leeds UnitedImage source, Getty Images

    West Ham's draw against Crystal Palace on Monday night, means it is essentially 'as you were' in the battle against relegation, with Tottenham still two points from safety as they fight to avoid a first top-flight demotion since 1977.

    Leeds and Nottingham Forest were the two big winners from the latest round of fixtures as both claimed big home wins to move eight and five points from the drop zone, respectively.

    For Daniel Farke's Leeds side, that might prove to be enough and they will hope they soon find themselves excluded from the relegation conversation.

    But, with Wolves now gone and Burnley set to follow, there is still work for all four sides to do in the coming weeks.

    A scatter graph showing the points tally of the 18th placed team (+1) since 1996. It depicts that 36 points has been enough to survive relegation in the past nine seasons.

    But for all De Zerbi's faith in his players' capabilities, the evidence of this season does not suggest a team capable of winning five on the bounce.

    Spurs have not won any of their past 15 league games, meaning they are without a top-flight victory in 2026 and have managed only two since 26 October.

    They must beat bottom side Wolves on Saturday to avoid equalling the club's worst-ever winless league run - set some 91 years ago, between 1934 and 1935.

    By contrast, the form of Spurs' relegation rivals has been picking up.

    Leeds have won back-to-back games to move to the brink of safety, Forest have two wins in their past three games and are unbeaten in five and West Ham have won two of their past five.

    Zoom out a little further and the Hammers have taken 19 points from their past 12 games, Forest have 18 from their past 13 and for Leeds it's 18 from 14.

    Since beating Palace on 28 December, Spurs have taken six points from 15 matches.

    A table showing the Premier League's bottom six final fixtures. Leeds Forest West Ham Spurs Burnley Wolves
Bournemouth(A) Sunderland(A) Everton(H) Wolves(A) City(H) Spurs (H)
Burnley(H) Chelsea(A) Brentford(A) Aston Villa(A) Leeds(A) Sunderland(H)
Spurs(A) Newcastle(H) Arsenal(H) Leeds(H) Aston Villa (H) Brighton(A)
Brighton (H) Man Utd (A) Newcastle(A) Chelsea(A) Arsenal(A) Fulham (H)
West Ham(A) Bournemouth(H) Leeds (H) Everton(H) Wolves(H) Burnley (A)
    Image caption,

    Remaining fixtures for PL bottom six

    With five games remaining, Spurs will definitely think their run-in, at least on paper, gives them every chance of staying up.

    Next up is a trip to Wolves, whose relegation to the Championship was confirmed on Monday night.

    A home match against Leeds on 11 May is another Tottenham will view as an opportunity, especially if Daniel Farke's side have beaten Burnley at Elland Road in their previous game and essentially ensured their safety.

    Even a tricky looking match at Champions League-chasing Aston Villa on 3 May comes at a good time for Spurs, as it falls between the two legs of the Europa League semi-final for Unai Emery's men.

    A visit to rivals Chelsea before hosting Everton on the final day is not a straightforward way to finish given both teams seem likely to be fighting for European places.

    But given how tight things are, that is something all the relegation candidates will have to deal with.

    West Ham host Everton on Saturday before an away game at Brentford - and it only gets tougher with title-chasing Arsenal the visitors to London Stadium on 10 May.

    Even with Newcastle enduring a disappointing season, an away game at St James' Park on the penultimate weekend is far from simple and there could be plenty riding on the home match against Leeds on the last day.

    Forest arguably face the toughest last five with away games at Chelsea and Manchester United in May - the former coming just three days before the second leg of their Europa League semi-final against Villa.

    Home games against Newcastle and Bournemouth, on the last day, could be crucial but getting a result at Sunderland on Friday would help alleviate a lot of stress for Vitor Pereira's side before the remainder of the run-in.

    Read Sam's whole relegation debrief here

  14. Point gained or missed opportunity for West Ham?published at 23:19 BST 20 April

    Sam Drury
    BBC Sport journalist

    West Ham players applaud the fans.Image source, Getty Images

    A game in which so little happened could yet come to prove pivotal for West Ham but in a good way or bad?

    How Hammers fans come to view this result will be determined by whether or not they stay up - were they in a more comfortable position, it's doubtful they would remember it at all.

    The visitors were the better side in the first half and moved the ball nicely but failed to turn some promising openings into many chances of note.

    Konstantinos Mavropanos' header from El Hadji Malick Diouf's cross was as clear a sight of goal as they had all night.

    But where they lacked the ruthlessness up front, there was no lack of resilience defensively as they restricted Crystal Palace to just one shot on target despite the home side finishing stronger.

    That much will please Nuno but he and fans might wonder if it might have been worth taking a risk or two more when they were on top.

    Certainly turning one point into three would have felt huge for their survival chances but given how much of a blow it would have felt had they lost, the Hammers - for now at least - must view this as another point towards their goal.