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West Ham United

Latest updates

  1. gs and sales - your transfer window prioritiespublished at 10:05

    Your views banner
    Jarrod BowenImage source, Getty Images

    We asked for you to tell us what West Ham need to do in the summer transfer window.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Andy: We have a soft centre at the moment. We invested heavily in central defenders and midfield players that are slow and not up to the standard required. Esteve from Burnley would be ideal and maybe try to tempt Franck Kessie back to top-level football to add more dynamism in midfield.

    Dave: I want us to be like other clubs who unearth stars cheaply then sell them for a profit. We need strengthening all over the park - if that means selling the family silver, apart from the captain, so be it.

    Nick: We always have a midfield that overflowed. What we need is a straight-up striker to Bowen and to invest in defenders!

    James: We need young, athletic, and hungry players! A proven number nine is a must, as is a quality goalkeeper. Need more legs in midfield, plus ball-playing centre-backs. In essence, a big rebuild!

    Derek: We need pace and legs in the midfield - the game is all about pace all around the pitch now and we have neglected that to the extreme for the past four or five years.

    Mark: We surely need to a decent clearout. However, we may end up with 13 players and rely on the young lads coming through. It's certainly not going to be the window of last summer. Hopefully Fullkrug will stay and have a decent season. Kudus, Paqueta and Alvarez are probably on their way out.

    Dean: WE NEED A STRIKER! Simple as that. Antonio is undoubtedly a club legend but we cannot rely on him again.

  2. Thank you for your published at 09:14

    Premier League club graphic

    Thank you for the you submitted on the Premier League club pages.

    Our aim is to contain all of the BBC's in-depth coverage of that team in one place, so it helpful to hear from you - you are who the pages are for after all.

    We are going through all your responses and will take suggestions on board for next season.

  3. What needs to happen in the transfer window?published at 12:12 30 May

    Have your say banner
    Graham PotterImage source, Getty Images

    The transfer window opens on Sunday - albeit for 10 days initially, mainly so sides competing in the Club World Cup can get early business done - before reopening for the rest of the summer on 16 June.

    Are there certain players you are desperate for West Ham to sign, or an area of the squad that needs improving? Or maybe holding on to a key player is your biggest priority.

    And what about sales - who needs to go?

    So over to you... what names need bringing in and shipping out?

    Let us know here

  4. What if... the season started in January?published at 11:32 30 May

    Nicola Pearson
    BBC Sport journalist

    Graphic showing 2025 calendar year table top six:

Pos Team              P     GD  PTS
1	Man City	19	22	40
2	Liverpool	20	17	39
3	Arsenal	        20	16	38
4	Aston Villa	19	10	37
5	Newcastle	19	10	34
6	Brighton	19	  6	34

    As the dust settles on the 2024-25 Premier League season, we have been taking a look at some of the alternative ways the the table could have finished...

    A Premier League season can sometimes be a tale of two halves.

    Some come flying out of the blocks, while others are more sluggish starters.

    The busy Christmas period can be a turning point with the arrival of the January transfer window feeling like a fresh start.

    So what might have happened if the league season only start on 1 January?

    Well, Pep Guardiola's title-winning machines would have picked up their fifth Premier League trophy in a row.

    Playing one game fewer than actual champions Liverpool - who secured the title with four games remaining - they would have finished one point clear of the Reds, not withstanding Arne Slot's side slowdown in form after sealing the title.

    City always seem to come good after January, but this time it was not enough to outweigh the torrid time they had from late autumn.

    The rest of the top six is not too dissimilar to the final placings, although in this case, Aston Villa would have secured Champions League football and Brighton a Europa League spot in the absence of Chelsea - whose form nose-dived at the very beginning of the year.

    And while the new year is a new start for some, it is less so for others.

    That was the case for many of those down the bottom of the league.

    The relegated trio would still have been relegated and Manchester United and Tottenham would still have ended up in the bottom six. West Ham find themselves one place lower after Wolves picked up form under Vitor Pereira.

    So what does this tell us? If you wan to achieve your Premier League ambitions, it is about making sure you are there for nine months and not just from January.

    *Table data from Football365

    2025 calendar year table bottom six graphic showing:

Pos Team             P     GD  PTS
15	West Ham	19	-4	20
16	Man Utd	19	-5	20
17	Tottenham	19	-14	14
18	Leicester 	19	-27	11
19	Ipswich   	19	-31	7
20   S'oton            19	-33	6
  5. When will the 2025-26 Premier League fixtures be released? published at 08:21 29 May

    The Premier League trophy with BBC's Ask Me Anything brandingImage source, Getty Images

    The BBC's Ask Me Anything team have done all of the research ahead of the announcement detailing next season's Premier League matches.

    The fixtures for the 2025-26 season will be released at 09:00 BST on Wednesday, 18 June 2025 and the release will include the weekly schedule of all 380 matches.

    The season will begin with a single fixture played on Friday, 15 August 2025 and conclude on Sunday, 24 May 2026, when all matches will be played at 16:00 BST. There will be 33 weekend rounds of fixtures, plus five midweek rounds.

    The exact date and time at which individual matches are played during each weekend will be determined at regular intervals throughout the season, based on TV selections made by broadcasters.

    Read the full article here

  6. How will this season be ed?published at 14:24 28 May

    Simon Stone
    Chief football news reporter

    West Ham expert view banner
    Graham PotterImage source, Getty Images

    Regression. Stagnation. Depression. General underachievement.

    Take your pick.

    It is a bit weird to point out that the Hammers ended up finishing in exactly the same spot as they did two seasons ago when they won the Europa Conference League.

    It is the reality but it only happened because West Ham won two of their past three games to finish top of the little four-team mini-league that were - just - too good to go down but absolutely miles off competing for any form of European qualification.

    It absolutely was not supposed to be like this when David Moyes departed after three successive European campaigns.

    New manager Julen Lopetegui and Tim Steidten as technical director were supposed to usher in a new world for the east London outfit. Both were gone by the beginning of February.

    Many of the new arrivals did not work and neither did Graham Potter for a long period.

    Wins over Manchester United and Ipswich put a positive gloss on a season to forget at the London Stadium.

    Potter needs to hit the ground running in August.

  7. Your West Ham player of the seasonpublished at 13:35 28 May

    We asked you to select your West Ham player of the season from the four candidates chosen by our fan contributor.

    And with the poll now closed, we can reveal the winner is... Aaron Wan-Bissaka!

    Here's what James Jones from We Are West Ham, external said about him:

    He found it difficult under Julen Lopetegui because he was asked to play so high up the pitch, almost like an inverted right wing-back.

    But under Graham Potter he has flourished and has arguably been our best defender since the turn of the year. A snip at £15m.

    See the final poll breakdown

    Aaron Wan-BissakaImage source, Getty Images
  8. The players who run and run...published at 12:34 28 May

    Chris Collinson
    BBC Sport statistician

    Most distance covered graphic

    Newcastle's Bruno Guimaraes covered the most ground this season, running 261 miles (St James' Park to Wembley is 271 miles).

    He retains the award after racking up 263 miles in the competition last season.

    Josko Gvardiol, Daniel Munoz, Bryan Mbeumo and Milos Kerkez complete the top five for most distance covered across the Premier League season.

    Hardest runners table by distance covered per 90 minutes
Dejan Kulusevski 7.7 miles 
Tomas Soucek 7.4
Bernardo Silva 7.3
Yasin Ayari 7.2

    Taking time on the pitch into (out of players that played over half the available minutes), Guimaraes was pipped by Newcastle team-mate in the list by team-mate Sandro Tonali who covered more ground per 90 minutes than the Brazilian…although Bruno still ran 7.2 miles per 90 minutes!

    Tottenham's Dejan Kulusevski ran harder than any other player this season, covering 7.7 miles per 90 minutes on average.

    West Ham midfielder Tomas Soucek ran an average of 7.5 miles per 90 minutes, while Manchester City's Bernardo Silva (7.3) and Brighton's Yasin Ayari complete the top five.

  9. Which teams put a shift in this season?published at 08:03 28 May

    Chris Collinson
    BBC Sport statistician

    A graph plots distance covered on x axis and sprints on y axis. Brighton covered most distance. Most sprints is Bournemouth followed by Tottenham. Nottingham Forest are low for both metrics.

    Bournemouth and Tottenham were the most physical teams in the Premier League this season when considering the distance they covered and the number of sprints performed.

    The results might explain why they had a lot of injuries.

    Newcastle and Brighton were not too far behind though, with Brighton actually covering the most ground in the league, with fewer sprints.

    Chelsea and Liverpool's style of play saw them sprint a lot but not cover a lot of ground, while Manchester City and Arsenal were the opposite (ran a lot but didn't sprint a lot).

    Nottingham Forest very much had their own style of play this season as they both ran and sprinted the least.

  10. Fan scorecard: Unsung hero? Ideal g?published at 09:54 27 May

    James Jones
    Fan writer

    West Ham fan's voice banner
    Max KilmanImage source, Getty Images

    Season rating: 4/10 - and that is probably being generous. Wins at Crystal Palace, Newcastle, Arsenal and Manchester United were arguably our highlights, but aside from those wins, there wasn't a great deal to shout about as the post-David Moyes era left us all desperately wanting the season to end by Christmas.

    Happy with your manager? Julen Lopetegui was a failure and Graham Potter inherited half a Moyes squad in decline and half a Lopetegui squad struggling desperately for consistency and form. Potter hasn't pulled up any trees yet but he has improved us in key areas, securing away wins at Emirates Stadium and Old Trafford along the way. The proof will be in what he can do with his own squad of players.

    Unsung hero: Max Kilman. His £40m fee raised eyebrows but he has barely put a foot wrong all season, while being the only West Ham player to feature in every Premier League game this season. The team's early form under Lopetegui, especially defensively, led to Kilman becoming something of a scapegoat at times, but in truth it wasn't his fault the defence was always left so exposed by haphazard tactics. He was much improved under Potter in the second half of the season. Shoutout to Tomas Soucek, too. How any West Ham fan wants to see him sold this summer is beyond me.

    Player you would most like to sign: Once again, we go into a summer transfer window desperately needing to sign a striker. I would love us to sign Liam Delap but think he will end up at a club playing in Europe. Lazio's Valentin Castellanos looks an interesting prospect, too. It is likely, though, that we will be linked with about 50 strikers and will kick off the first game of next season with Michail Antonio leading the line. Again.

    Right now, my overriding emotion from the season is: Apathy. After the success under Moyes, there was an element of excitement heading into this season, especially after almost £150m was spent on the squad last summer. But the campaign has been so disappointing that it is difficult to be anything other than apathetic towards the club and what the immediate future holds.

    Do you agree with James' answers? Pick one or two categories and send your views

    Have your say banner

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

  11. 'A joyless season for the Hammers'published at 09:48 27 May

    The London StadiumImage source, Getty Images
    Chief football writer Phil McNulty byline banner

    Here's my quick assessment of West Ham's Premier League season - and a return to my August predictions.

    Ended the season: 14th

    Pre-season prediction: 8th

    A joyless season for the Hammers, who had high expectations following Julen Lopetegui's arrival. It proved an ill-fated appointment. He was sacked after only six months in charge, while Graham Potter has been unable to engineer any significant improvement.

    Potter can only really be judged once he has put his own stamp on the squad, with Jarrod Bowen the player he will build around, but there is no escaping this has been a desperate campaign.

    What I said in August: "Lopetegui has replaced David Moyes, whose full worth to West Ham United may yet become clear in the months ahead, and not just because he won the Conference League."

    Read my assessments of the other 19 teams here

  12. Bowen's 'perfect response' to England snubpublished at 12:37 26 May

    Sam Ashoo
    Final Score reporter

    Jarrod BowenImage source, Getty Images

    Considering neither of these two sides had anything to play for, I thought it was a really good game at Portman Road.

    The stand-out man was quite clearly Jarrod Bowen, who capped off his season with a goal and an assist. Bowen, who formed a front two alongside Niclas Füllkrug, often dropped into the number-10 role, floating in and around the edge of the area. That is a position that seems to suit him more as he gets older.

    His assist, as highlighted by Micah Richards on Match of the Day, demonstrated both intelligence and selflessness, while his second-half strike served as yet another reminder that his left foot firmly belongs in the 'wand' category.

    It means that Bowen finishes the season on 13 goals and eight assists, an impressive tally considering West Ham's poor season.

    He may have missed out on an England call-up last week, but Sunday's performance was the perfect response.

    Thomas Tuchel may well be regretting his decision.

  13. 'Better than the relegated teams - and not many others'published at 09:30 26 May

    Your views banner
    West Ham goalkeeper Lukasz FabianskiImage source, Getty Images

    We asked for your views on West Ham's season after closing out with victory at Ipswich Town on Sunday.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Stephen: The Hammers' season was a result of poor investment in players over the past five years. They made a wrong decision on the first manager who had no intention of looking at the academy players. I also think David Moyes didn't use the academy enough - he stuck to his favourites and then they went stale. Need to give Graham Potter time to assess the squad and have a transfer window.

    Tom: This game defined our season. We have been better than the relegated teams and not many others. We seemed to play well though, so I am glad we ended the season on a high. The summer transfer window cannot come quickly enough, and I'm very happy that Freddie Potts, Callum Marshall and George Earthy are coming back to the club

    Ian: A decent win against an already relegated side. Big rebuilding in the summer to ensure no repeat of this season. Need to keep Mohammed Kudus and sign hungrier and younger players for next season. Then we can talk about regaining European football. It's up to Potter to make sure this happens.

    Bubba: The game? Dire. The season? Dire. The parade of mediocre managers this year? Dire. The decision to get rid of our most winning manager in modern times? Dire. We are a dire team. No top player or manager wants to be associated with direness, given a choice. Our future? Dire. This is a deep-rooted malaise, not something that a few good transfers over the summer will resolve.

    Harry: Just happy we finished above Spurs and Manchester United. Happy we got a decent win, but I am very concerned that Kudus didn't even bother to celebrate his screamer. Was that goodbye? I hope not.

    Hayley: Wrong manager at the start of the season, Potter was brought in when it looked like we couldn't go down, so I feel he has been playing with the team, looking at a lot of the players we have. I feel next year will be a good season. Bring in a few new players early, have a full pre-season and come back with a good start, which breeds confidence. Potter is a good manager - let's get behind him next year.

    Brendan: OK, nice result. But if West Ham lose Kudus and maybe Jarrod Bowen, and possibly a few others (rich pickings for other clubs), it's hard to see a way out of the mess.

    An image detailing how to follow your Premier League team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
  14. 'I will never hide' - Bowenpublished at 22:49 25 May

    Jarrod Bowen celebrates scoringImage source, Getty Images

    West Ham captain Jarrod Bowen and goalscorer, speaking to BBC Radio London about his future after the final day win at Ipswich: "You score a couple of goals, transfer window comes around the corner and people are interested in you.

    "I have been linked a few times in different transfer windows when I have had good seasons. I have been here for five, five and a half years now and I have got good numbers in goals and assists so I think that is always going to come.

    "But we are sitting here at a club where we have won a European trophy, we have finished in high places, had a Europa League semi-final, so we have had a lot of success as well since I have been here. We have had a blip this season and when we won the Conference League I think we finished lower as well, but no-one re that because we won the trophy as well.

    "This is the first season where we have had no Europe and we have been really poor in the league position, so talk is going to happen. But for me, unless the club turned around and said they were selling me then I won't be going anywhere."

    On being the captain and seeing what he can do next season: "Having the role of captain this year is a different responsibility and people look at you in a different light.

    "When a season is not going as well the questions are on you and as a captain you have to accept that responsibility. You have to turn up every week, week in and week out, speak to the fans and speak to the media and not hide away from it.

    "That is something I pride myself in, that I will never hide. In my performances, I will always try to leave everything out there.

    "That has been my mindset this year with being captain."

  15. Bowen stands out againpublished at 19:05 25 May

    Tim Oscroft
    BBC Sport journalist

    Jarrod Bowen scored on his 200th Premier League appearance, having played in the top flight for Hull City early in his career.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Jarrod Bowen scored on his 200th Premier League appearance, having played in the top flight for Hull City early in his career.

    West Ham captain Jarrod Bowen led by example again with a goal and an assist as the Hammers despatched relegated Ipswich Town with a 3-1 win on the last day of what has been a disappointing season for the Londoners.

    Bowen rattled in his 13th goal of the league campaign, scoring for the fourth game in a row and set up James Ward-Prowse for the opner just before half-time.

    But with Aaron Cresswell, Łukasz Fabiański, Vladimír Coufal and Danny Ings all set to leave West Ham this summer, external, it seems that Graham Potter will go on a recruitment drive to provide some much-needed back up for Bowen.

    Potter will look forward to having a full transfer window to putting his own stamp on the squad that he inherited from Julen Lopetuegi in January.

    West Ham languished worryingly close to the relegation zone at times this season and after finishing in 14th place, Hammers fans will demand much better next term.

    An image detailing how to follow your Premier League team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
  16. Did you know?published at 18:43 25 May

    Graham Potter looks onImage source, Getty Images

    In his 18 Premier League games in charge of West Ham this season, Graham Potter has seen his side average 1.11 points per game with a 28% win rate - lower than previous Hammers boss Julen Lopetegui (1.15 points per game, 30% win rate in 2024-25).

    Overall, Potter's points-per-game figure is better only than Avram Grant's Premier League record with the club among permanent bosses (0.89 points per game).

  17. Ipswich 1-3 West Ham - send us your thoughtspublished at 17:59 25 May

    Have your say banner

    So the curtain has come down on West Ham's season with a win at Ipswich.

    With inconsistency and a managerial change, it may not have been the campaign Hammers' fans had hoped for at the beginning, but attention can now turn to next season under the leadership of Graham Potter.

    So how are you feeling after the game and at the end of a long campaign?

    Have your say on West Ham's performance and season

    Come back to this page on Monday to find a selection of your replies