Welcome to West Ham, Nuno, the crisis club with no vision and no structure | Jacob Steinberg
<p>Graham Potter’s great mistake was to think that he could build while the fire was raging around him</p><p>The timing of the news left a sour taste in the mouth. Graham Potter has been in trouble for more than a month. There was no decision after West Ham continued their dreadful start to the season last Saturday, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/football/2025/sep/13/west-ham-tottenham-premier-league-match-report">losing 2-1 to Crystal Palace</a> at a deflated London Stadium, and it seemed Potter had been given one last chance to save his job given that he conducted his usual media duties before facing Everton on Monday night.</p><p>There was defiance from the 50-year-old on Friday night. Blame the coach all you like, Potter said, but it is worth looking at the wider context. “You have to look at where the club was at,” he said. “Because then you can make an assessment of how long it needs to turn results around. What was the environment like? What was the culture like? What was the team like?”</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/football/2025/sep/27/west-ham-graham-potter-sacking-nuno-espirito-santo-football-premier-league">Continue reading...</a>
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The Guardian