EPL Index
·25 May 2026
Relegated manager set to be dismissed

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·25 May 2026

Nuno Espírito Santo’s short West Ham United reign appears to be hanging by a thread after The Times reported that the Portuguese coach has been called into crisis talks with the club hierarchy.
According to The Times, Nuno has been summoned to meet David Sullivan, West Ham’s co-chairman, and other board members, with his future as head coach now in serious doubt. The report states that the meeting “could well conclude with Nuno’s dismissal”, a dramatic development after West Ham’s relegation from the Premier League on Sunday.
Nuno signed a three-year contract in September after Graham Potter’s departure, with the deal worth up to £8million including bonuses. Yet West Ham’s failure to survive reportedly allows the club to activate a clause enabling them to dismiss him without compensation.

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That detail matters. In modern football, poor decisions often carry heavy financial punishment. Here, West Ham may have a cleaner route towards change, although another reset would raise serious questions about strategy, planning and leadership.
Should Nuno leave, West Ham would be seeking a fourth permanent manager in two years since David Moyes’s second spell ended. Former Hammer Scott Parker and Slaven Bilic are already expected to be among the names considered.
For supporters, that speaks to instability as much as ambition.
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For a concerned football supporter, this report lands with the thud of inevitability. West Ham have not simply reached a difficult crossroads, they have driven at speed into a wall built from poor planning, short-term thinking and managerial churn.
Nuno Espírito Santo may carry responsibility for results, as every head coach must, yet the wider picture feels more troubling. Four permanent managers in two years would not scream elite structure. It would whisper panic. West Ham were once a club speaking about growth, European nights and pushing into a higher bracket. Now the conversation is about relegation clauses, compensation escapes and another managerial shortlist.
There is also a sadness in seeing names such as Scott Parker and Slaven Bilic linked so quickly. Both understand the club, but sentiment cannot be allowed to replace clarity. West Ham need an identity before they need another familiar face.
From a fan perspective, the frustration would be immense. Relegation hurts. Uncertainty hurts more. If Nuno goes, the next appointment must be part of a proper rebuild, not another reaction to failure. Supporters deserve a football plan with conviction, not another press conference promising a fresh start while the foundations remain cracked.







































