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West Ham United F.C.

West Ham United Football Club is an English professional football club that plays its home matches in Stratford, East London. The club competes in the Premier League, the top tier of English football. The club plays at the London Stadium, having moved from their former home, the Boleyn Ground, in 2016.

West Ham United
Full nameWest Ham United Football Club
Nickname(s)The Irons, The Hammers
Short nameWest Ham
Founded29 June 1895; 127 years ago (1895-06-29), as Thames Ironworks
5 July 1900; 122 years ago (1900-07-05), as West Ham United
GroundLondon Stadium
Capacity62,500[1]
Owner(s)David Sullivan (38.8%)
Daniel Křetínský (27%)
Estate of David Gold (25.1%)
Albert 'Tripp' Smith (8%)
Other investors (1.1%)[2]
ChairmanDavid Sullivan
ManagerDavid Moyes
LeaguePremier League
2021–22Premier League, 7th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club was founded in 1895 as Thames Ironworks and reformed in 1900 as West Ham United. They moved to the Boleyn Ground in 1904, which remained their home ground for more than a century. The team initially competed in the Southern League and Western League before joining the Football League in 1919. They were promoted to the top flight in 1923, when they were also losing finalists in the first FA Cup Final held at Wembley. In 1940, the club won the inaugural Football League War Cup.

West Ham have been winners of the FA Cup three times (1964, 1975 and 1980) and runners-up twice (1923 and 2006). The club have reached two major European finals, winning the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1965 and finishing runners-up in the same competition in 1976. West Ham also won the Intertoto Cup in 1999. They are one of eight clubs never to have fallen below the second tier of English football, spending 63 of 95 league seasons in the top flight, up to and including the 2020–21 season. The club's highest league position to date came in 1985–86, when they achieved third place in the then First Division.

Three West Ham players were members of the 1966 World Cup final-winning England team: captain Bobby Moore and goalscorers Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters. The club has a long-standing rivalry with Millwall, and the fixture has gained notoriety for frequent incidents of football hooliganism. West Ham adopted their claret and sky blue colour scheme in the early 1900s, with the most common iteration of a claret shirt and sky blue sleeves first emerging in 1904.[3]

History

Origins

 
Earliest club shot, during its founding year as Thames Ironworks in 1895

The earliest generally accepted incarnation of West Ham United was founded in 1895 as Thames Ironworks F.C., the works team of the largest and last surviving shipbuilder on the Thames, Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company, by foreman and local league referee Dave Taylor and owner Arnold Hills[4] and was announced in the Thames Ironworks Gazette of June 1895. Thames Ironworks was based in Leamouth Wharf in Blackwall and Canning Town on both banks of the River Lea, where the Lea meets the Thames. Thames Ironworks built many ships and other structures, the most famous being HMS Warrior. The last ship built there was the dreadnought HMS Thunderer in 1912 and the yard shut soon after.

The repair yard of the Castle Shipping Line was a very near neighbour and their work team, initially known as the Castle Swifts, would informally merge with the Thames Ironworks own team.

The team played on a strictly amateur basis for 1895 at least, with a team featuring a number of works employees. Thomas Freeman was a ships fireman and Walter Parks, a clerk. Johnny Stewart, Walter Tranter and James Lindsay were all boilermakers. Other employees included William Chapman, George Sage and Fred Chamberlain, as well as apprentice riveter Charlie Dove, who was to have a great influence on the club's future at a later date.[5]

 
 
 
 
 
 
1895–96: First kit[6]

Thames Ironworks won the West Ham Charity Cup, contested by clubs in the West Ham locality, in 1895, then won the London League in 1897. They turned professional in 1898 upon entering the Southern League Second Division, and were promoted to the First Division at the first attempt.[7] The following year they came second from bottom, but had established themselves as a fully fledged competitive team. They comfortably fended off the challenge of local rivals Fulham in a relegation play-off, 5–1 in late April 1900 and retained their First Division status.[7]

The team initially played in full dark blue kits, as inspired by Mr. Hills, who had been an Oxford University "Blue," but changed the following season by adopting the sky blue shirts and white shorts combination worn from 1897 to 1899.

Following growing disputes over the running and financing of the club, in June 1900 Thames Ironworks F.C. was disbanded, then almost immediately relaunched as West Ham United F.C. — reflecting the West Ham, London district where they played — on 5 July 1900 with Syd King as their manager and future manager Charlie Paynter as his assistant. Because of the original "works team" roots and links (still represented upon the club badge), they are still known as "the Irons" or "the Hammers" amongst fans and the media.[8][9]

Birth of West Ham United (1901–1961)

West Ham United joined the Western League for the 1901 season[10] while also continuing to play in the Southern Division 1. In 1907, West Ham were crowned the Western League Division 1B Champions, and then defeated 1A champions Fulham 1–0 to become the Western League Overall Champions.[10] The reborn club continued to play their games at the Memorial Grounds in Plaistow (funded by Arnold Hills) but moved to a pitch in the Upton Park area in the guise of the Boleyn Ground stadium in 1904. West Ham's first game in their new home was against fierce rivals Millwall (themselves an Ironworks team, albeit for a rival company) drawing a crowd of 10,000 and with West Ham running out 3–0 winners,[11] and as the Daily Mirror wrote on 2 September 1904, "Favoured by the weather turning fine after heavy rains of the morning, West Ham United began their season most auspiciously yesterday evening; when they beat Millwall by 3 goals to 0 on their new enclosure at Upton Park."

 
Billie the White Horse, saviour of the 1923 FA Cup Final

In 1919, still under King's leadership, West Ham gained entrance to the Football League Second Division, their first game being a 1–1 draw with Lincoln City, and were promoted to Division One in 1923, also making it to the first ever FA Cup Final to be held at the old Wembley stadium. Their opponents were Bolton Wanderers. This was also known as the White Horse Final, so named because an estimated 200,000 people came to see the match; spilling out on to the pitch, which had to be cleared prior to kick-off, by "Billie," a giant white horse (actually grey) being ridden by PC George Scorey. The Cup Final match itself ended 2–0 to Bolton. The team enjoyed mixed success in Division 1 but retained their status for ten years and reached the FA Cup semi-final in 1933.[12]

In 1932, the club was relegated to Division Two[13] and long term custodian Syd King was sacked after serving the club in the role of manager for 32 years, and as a player from 1899 to 1903. Following relegation, King had mental health problems. He appeared drunk at a board meeting and soon after committed suicide.[14] He was replaced with his assistant manager Charlie Paynter, who himself had been with West Ham in a number of roles since 1897 and who went on to serve the team in this role until 1950 for a total of 480 games. The club spent most of the next 30 years in this division, first under Paynter and then later under the leadership of former player Ted Fenton.

Fenton succeeded in getting the club once again promoted to the top level of English football in 1958. With the considerable input of player Malcolm Allison, Fenton helped develop both the initial batch of future West Ham stars and West Ham's approach to the game.[15][16][17][18]

Glory years (1961–1978)

Ron Greenwood was appointed as Fenton's successor in 1961 and soon led the club to two major trophies, winning the 1964 FA Cup Final. The team was led by the young Bobby Moore. West Ham also won the European Cup Winners' Cup.[19][20] During the 1966 FIFA World Cup, key members of the tournament winners England were West Ham players, including the captain, Bobby Moore; Martin Peters (who scored in the final); and Geoff Hurst, who scored the first, and only, hat-trick in a men's World Cup final.[20][21] All three players had come through the youth team at West Ham.[22]

 
Champions statue on Barking Road

There is a "Champions" statue in Barking Road, opposite The Boleyn Tavern, commemorating West Ham's "three sons" who helped win the 1966 World Cup: Bobby Moore, Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters. Also included on the statue is Everton's Ray Wilson.[23]
They also won the FA Cup in 1975 by defeating Fulham 2–0. The Fulham team had former England captains Alan Mullery and West Ham legend Bobby Moore.[24]

After a difficult start to the 1974–75 season, Greenwood moved himself "upstairs" to become general manager and, without informing the board, appointed his assistant John Lyall as team manager.[25] The result was instant success – the team scored 20 goals in their first four games combined and won the FA Cup, becoming the last team to win the FA Cup with an all-English side when they beat Fulham 2–0 in the 1975 final.[26] Lyall then guided West Ham to another European Cup Winners' Cup final in 1976, though the team lost the match 4–2 to Belgian side Anderlecht.[27] Greenwood's tenure as general manager lasted less than three years, as he was appointed to manage England in the wake of Don Revie's resignation in 1977.[28]

Ups and downs (1978–2005)

In 1978, West Ham were again relegated to Division Two, but Lyall was retained as manager and led the team to an FA Cup Final win against Arsenal in 1980, their last major honour. They reached the final by defeating Everton in the semi-final.[29] The Hammers won 1–0, with a goal scored from a header by Trevor Brooking in the 13th minute.[30] This is notable as no team outside the top division has won the trophy since. West Ham were promoted to Division One in 1981, and finished in the top ten of the first division for the next three seasons before achieving their highest-ever league finish of third in 1985–86; a group of players which came to be known as The Boys of 86. However, they suffered relegation again in 1989, which resulted in Lyall's sacking.[31] He was awarded an ex gratia payment of £100,000 but left the club in what Lyall described as "upsetting" circumstances, meriting only 73 words in a terse acknowledgement of his service in the club programme. Lyall left West Ham after 34 years service.[32]

 
Yearly performance of West Ham since joining the Football League

After Lyall, Lou Macari briefly led the team, though he resigned after less than a single season in order to clear his name of allegations of illegal betting while manager of Swindon Town.[33] He was replaced by former player Billy Bonds.[34] In Bonds' first full season, 1990–91, West Ham again secured promotion to Division One. Now back in the top flight, Bonds saw West Ham through one of their most controversial seasons. With the club planning to introduce a bond scheme, there was crowd unrest. West Ham finished last and were relegated back to Division Two after only one season.[35][36][37][38] However, they rebounded strongly in 1992–93. With Trevor Morley and Clive Allen scoring 40 goals, they guaranteed themselves second place on the last day of the season with a 2–0 home win against Cambridge United, and with it promotion to the Premier League.[39][40]

 
West Ham players on open-top bus near Upton Park celebrate winning the 2005 play-off final in Cardiff. From L-R Shaun Newton (crouching), Back row, Matthew Etherington, Jimmy Walker, Teddy Sheringham, Marlon Harewood, Front row Don Hutchison, Carl Fletcher, Elliott Ward and Mark Noble (with flag)

With the team in the Premier League, there was a need to rebuild the team. Oxford United player Joey Beauchamp was recruited for a fee of £1.2 million. Shortly after arriving at the club, however, he became unhappy, citing homesickness from his native Oxford as the reason. Bonds in particular found this attitude hard to understand compared to his own committed, never-say-die approach; providing for Bonds' further evidence of the decay in the modern game and modern player.[41] Fifty-eight days later, Beauchamp was signed by Swindon Town for a club-record combined fee of £800,000 which included defender Adrian Whitbread going in the opposite direction. Whitbread was valued at £750,000 in the deal.[42]

Assistant manager Harry Redknapp was also now taking a bigger role in the transfer of players, with the club's approval. With rumours of his old club AFC Bournemouth being prepared to offer him a position,[43] the West Ham board and their managing director, Peter Storrie, made a controversial move. The board were anxious not to lose Redknapp's services and offered Bonds a place away from the day-to-day affairs of the club—on the West Ham board. This would have allowed them to appoint Redknapp as manager. Bonds refused the post offered and walked away from the club.[44] His accusations of deceit and manipulation by the board and by Redknapp have continued to cause ill-feeling.[44] Peter Storrie claimed that they had handled the situation correctly, saying, "If Harry had gone to Bournemouth, there was a good chance Bill would have resigned anyway, so we were in a no-win situation. We're sad that Bill is going, and it's a big blow but it's time to move on and we have appointed a great manager."[45] Redknapp became manager on 10 August 1994.[46]

Redknapp's time at West Ham was notable for the turnover of players during his tenure and for the level of attractive football and success which had not been seen since the managership of John Lyall. Over 134 players passed through the club while he was manager, producing a net transfer fee deficit of £16 million, despite the £18 million sale of Rio Ferdinand to Leeds United.[47] Some were notably successful, such as the signings of Stuart Pearce,[48] Trevor Sinclair,[48] Paolo Di Canio,[48] John Hartson,[48] Eyal Berkovic[48] and Ian Wright.[49] Meanwhile, some were expensive, international players who failed at West Ham, such as Florin Raducioiu;[48] Davor Šuker, who earned as much in wages as the revenue gained from one entire stand and yet made only eight appearances;[47] Christian Bassila, who cost £720,000 and played only 86 minutes of football;[47] Titi Camara; Gary Charles, whose wages amounted to £4.4 million but made only three starts for the club;[47] Rigobert Song; Paulo Futre;[48] and Marco Boogers,[48] a player often quoted as one of the biggest failures in the Premier League.[50] His first season in charge saw West Ham fighting the threat of relegation until the last few weeks,[51] while his third season would also see another relegation battle. Always willing to enter the transfer market, Redknapp bought in the winter transfer window John Hartson and Paul Kitson who added the impetus needed at the season's end.[52]

In 1999, West Ham finished fifth, their highest position in the top flight since 1986.[48] They also won the Intertoto Cup beating French club Metz to qualify for the 1999–2000 UEFA Cup.[48][53] Things began to falter for Redknapp with the sale for £18 million to Leeds of Rio Ferdinand in November 2000. Redknapp used the transfer money poorly with purchases such as Ragnvald Soma, who cost £800,000 and played only seven league games, Camara, and Song. Redknapp felt he needed more funds with which to deal in the transfer market.[54] Chairman Brown lost patience with Redknapp due to his demands for further transfer funds. In June 2001, called to a meeting with Brown expecting to discuss contracts, he was fired.[54] His assistant Frank Lampard left too, making the sale of his son Frank Lampard Jr., inevitable;[54] in the summer of 2001, he joined Chelsea for £11 million.[55]

With several names, such as former player Alan Curbishley, now linked with the job, Chairman Brown recruited from within the club,[54] appointing reserve team coach Glenn Roeder as manager on 9 May 2001.[46] He had already failed in management with Gillingham, where he lost 22 of the 35 games he managed, and Watford.[56] His first big signings were the return of Don Hutchison for £5 million[57] and Czech centre back Tomáš Řepka.[58] Finishing seventh in his first season[59] Roeder, in his office at Upton Park, suffered a blocked blood vessel in his brain.[56][60] As Roeder needed medical help and recuperation, former stalwart Trevor Brooking stood in as caretaker manager.[60] Despite not losing another game, the Hammers were relegated on the last day of the season at Birmingham City with a record for a relegated club of 42 points from a 38-game season. Ten seasons of top-tier football were over.[61] Many top players including Joe Cole, Di Canio and Kanouté all left the club.

The next season, now in the second tier, Roeder resumed his stint as manager. Results were still poor, however, and after an away defeat to Rotherham United, he was sacked on 24 August 2003.[56] Brooking again took over as caretaker.[62] He lost only one game, a 2–0 away defeat to Gillingham[63] and is known as "the best manager West Ham never had."[64]

Former Crystal Palace player and manager of Reading Alan Pardew was lined up to be the next bench boss. Reading and their chairman, John Madejski, however, were reluctant to let him leave.[65] After serving a period of notice and gardening leave, and with West Ham paying Reading £380,000 in compensation, he was appointed manager on 18 October 2003, their tenth manager.[66] Pardew set out to rebuild the side bringing in Nigel Reo-Coker,[67] Marlon Harewood[68] and Brian Deane.[69] In his first season in charge, they made the playoff final only to lose to Crystal Palace.[70] His signings of Bobby Zamora, Matthew Etherington and veterans Chris Powell and Teddy Sheringham saw West Ham finishing sixth and subsequently beat Preston North End 1–0 thanks to a Zamora goal in the 2005 playoff final, securing a return to the Premier League.[71] After ensuring promotion, Pardew said, "It's a team effort. We defended well and we're back where we belong."[72]

Final years at the Boleyn (2005–2016)

On their return to the top division, West Ham finished in ninth place,[73] The highlight of the 2005–06 season, however, was reaching the FA Cup final and taking favourites Liverpool to a penalty shootout after a 3–3 draw. West Ham lost the shootout, but nonetheless gained entry to the following season's UEFA Cup as Liverpool had already qualified for the Champions League. In August 2006, West Ham completed a major coup on the last day of the transfer window after completing the signings of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano.[74] The club was eventually bought by an Icelandic consortium, led by Eggert Magnússon, in November 2006.[75] Manager Alan Pardew was sacked after poor form during the season[76] and was replaced by former Charlton Athletic manager Alan Curbishley.[77]

The signings of Mascherano and Tevez were investigated by the Premier League, who were concerned that details of the transfers had been omitted from official records. The club was found guilty and fined £5.5 million in April 2007.[78] However, West Ham avoided a points deduction which ultimately became critical in their avoidance of relegation at the end of the 2006–07 season. Following on from this event, Wigan Athletic chairman Dave Whelan, supported by other sides facing possible relegation, including Fulham and Sheffield United, threatened legal action.[79] West Ham escaped relegation by winning seven of their last nine games, including a 1–0 win over Arsenal, and on the last day of the season defeated newly crowned League Champions Manchester United 1–0 with a goal by Tevez to finish 15th.[80]

In the 2007–08 season, West Ham remained reasonably consistently in the top half of the league table, with Freddie Ljungberg in the team, despite a slew of injuries; new signing Craig Bellamy missed most of the campaign, while Kieron Dyer was out from August 2007.[81][82] The last game of the season, at the Boleyn Ground, saw West Ham draw 2–2 against Aston Villa, ensuring a tenth-place finish three points ahead of rivals Tottenham Hotspur. It was a five-place improvement on the previous season, and most importantly West Ham were never under any realistic threat of relegation.

After a row with the board over the sale of defenders Anton Ferdinand and George McCartney to Sunderland, manager Alan Curbishley resigned on 3 September 2008.[83] His successor was former Chelsea striker Gianfranco Zola, who took over on 11 September 2008 to become the club's first non-British manager.[84] In the 2008–09 season, West Ham finished ninth, a single place improvement.

In the 2009–10 season, West Ham started strongly with a 2–0 win over newly promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers with goals from Mark Noble and newly appointed captain Matthew Upson.[85] A League Cup match against old rivals Millwall brought about violent riots outside the ground as well as pitch invasions and crowd trouble inside Upton Park.[86] In August 2009, the financial concerns of Icelandic owners parent companies left the current owners unable to provide any funds until a new owner was found. The club's shirt sponsor SBOBET provided the club with help to purchase a much needed striker, the Italian Alessandro Diamanti.[87]

West Ham had a poor season which involved a prolonged battle against relegation.[88] They finally secured their survival with two games remaining by defeating Wigan 3–2.[89] The club managed to take 35 points from 38 games, seven fewer than the total they had when relegated seven years prior.[88] On 11 May 2010, two days after the end of the 2009–10 season, West Ham announced the termination of Zola's contract with immediate effect.[90] On 3 June 2010, Avram Grant signed a four-year deal to become the next manager of West Ham subject to a work permit.[91] West Ham's form continued to be poor with the team seldom outside the relegation zone,[92] placing Grant's future as manager under serious doubt.[93] A 4–0 Football League Cup quarter-final win over Manchester United was an otherwise bright spot in a disappointing season.[94] West Ham's form in the Premier League did not affect their form in the two domestic cups. The Hammers reached the semi-final of the League Cup before being eliminated by eventual winners Birmingham City as well as the quarter final of the FA cup before a 2–1 defeat at Stoke City.[95][96]

On 15 May 2011, West Ham's relegation to the Championship was confirmed after a comeback from Wigan at the DW Stadium. With West Ham leading 0–2 at half-time through two Demba Ba goals, Wigan battled back to win 3–2 thanks to an added-time strike from Charles N'Zogbia. Following the loss, West Ham announced the sacking of manager Avram Grant just one season into his tenure.[97] On 1 June 2011, Sam Allardyce was appointed as manager as Grant's replacement.[98]

The club finished third in the 2011–12 Football League Championship with 86 points and took part in the play-offs. They beat Cardiff City in the play-off semi-final 5–0 on aggregate to reach the final against Blackpool at Wembley on 19 May 2012. Carlton Cole opened the scoring, and although Blackpool equalised early in the second half, Ricardo Vaz Tê scored the winner for West Ham in the 87th minute.[99]

West Ham, on their return to the Premier League, signed former players James Collins and George McCartney on permanent deals, as well as record signing Matt Jarvis and Andy Carroll on loan.[100][101][102][103] They won their first game of the season, on 18 August 2012, 1–0 against Aston Villa thanks to a Kevin Nolan goal.[104] The highlight of the first half of the season was a 3–1 home win against reigning European champions Chelsea on 1 December 2012 which saw them in eighth position[105] and 12th at the end of the year.[106] On 22 March 2013, West Ham secured a 99-year lease deal on the Olympic Stadium, with it planned to be used as their home ground from the 2016–17 season.[107] Tenth place was secured at the end of the season with nine home wins and only three away from home. Only 11 away goals were scored, the lowest of the entire league.[108]

In 2013–14, West Ham finished 13th in the Premier League.[109] They also reached the semi-finals of the League Cup before losing 9–0 on aggregate to eventual cup-winners Manchester City.[110] A feature of the season were the criticisms of manager Sam Allardyce by supporters relating to his perceived negative playing tactics.[111][112][113] West Ham finished 12th in the 2014–15 Premier League, one place higher than the previous season. Minutes after the last game of the season, on 24 May 2015, the club announced that Allardyce's contract would not be renewed and that they were seeking a new manager.[114] By winning the Premier League Fair Play table for 2014–15, West Ham qualified for the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League, entering at the first qualifying round.[115]

On 9 June 2015, former West Ham player Slaven Bilić was appointed as manager on a three-year contract.[116] In Bilić's fourth game in charge, the team won at Anfield for the first time in 52 years, beating Liverpool 0–3, with goals from Manuel Lanzini, Mark Noble and Diafra Sakho.[117] At the end of the season, West Ham finished 7th in the Premier League. The team broke several records for the club in the Premier League era, including the highest number of points (62), the highest number of goals in a season (65), the fewest games lost in a season (8) and the lowest number of away defeats (5).[118] The season also marked the last season where the team played at the Boleyn Ground, with them moving to the London Stadium from next season - ending their 112-year stay at the stadium.

Move to London Stadium and recent years (2016–)

Following Manchester United's win in the 2016 FA Cup Final, West Ham took their Europa League place and qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2016–17 edition.[119] At the end of the tough first season at the London Stadium, the team finished 11th, along with having to deal with the departure of star man Dimitri Payet.[120] However, the team suffered a poor start to the following season, taking only two wins in their opening 11 games. Following a 4–1 defeat to Liverpool at home and with the team threatened by relegation, Bilić was sacked on 6 November 2017. He was replaced by former Sunderland boss David Moyes on a contract till the end of the season. The team battled inconsistent form for the rest of the season but managed to avoid relegation and finish 13th. Moyes was not offered a new contract and left the club on the expiration of it on 16 May 2018.[121]

On 22 May 2018, the club appointed former Manchester City boss Manuel Pellegrini as the new manager on a three-year deal contract.[122] In his first season in charge, the Hammers finished 10th, once again suffering from inconsistent form. However, after a poor first half to the following season, Pellegrini was sacked in December 2019 with the team only one point above the relegation zone. His last game in charge was a 2–1 home loss to Leicester City.[123] He was replaced by David Moyes, who returned for a second spell in charge a day later.[124]

On 22 July 2020, the club secured their Premier League status for another season, following a 1–1 draw away to Manchester United.[125] Ahead of the 2020–21 season, West Ham's ownership attracted criticism, including from club captain Mark Noble who publicly criticized the sale of academy graduate Grady Diangana.[126] Despite losing the opening two games of the season, West Ham's form improved and by the end of November, the club sat in fifth place.[127] The club would not drop out of a European spot for the rest of the season and went on to qualify for the 2021–22 UEFA Europa League group stages after finishing in 6th - exceeding many expectations.[128] Moyes signed a new 3-year contract on 12 June 2021.[129]

On 26 August 2021, West Ham were drawn in group H in the Europa League, alongside Dinamo Zagreb, Genk and Rapid Wien.[130] 2021 culminated with West Ham sitting fifth in the Premier League, having reached the fifth round of the EFL Cup and winning group H of the Europa League. West Ham won their first three games of 2022, temporarily elevating the club to fourth place in the Premier League.[131] On 10 March 2022, West Ham lost 1–0 away to Sevilla in the Europa League round of 16, before a 2–0 win after extra time seven days later secured West Ham's place in a European quarter-final for the first time in 41 years.[132] On 14 April 2022, following a 1–1 draw a week prior at the London Stadium, West Ham defeated French club Lyon 3–0 at the Parc Olympique Lyonnais to set up West Ham's first European semi-final since 1976.[133] Playing the same opposition they met in their 1976 European Cup Winners' Cup semi-final, Eintracht Frankfurt, the Hammers were knocked out of the Europa League, following a 3–1 aggregate loss to the German side.[134] At the end of the 2021–22 Premier League season, West Ham confirmed a second successive season of European football, qualifying for the UEFA Europa Conference League after finishing seventh. The season was also notable for being Mark Noble's final as a West Ham player, with the midfielder retiring from football after 18 years as a first team player at the club, making 550 appearances in all competitions, scoring 62 times.[135] By finishing 7th in the 2021–22 Premier League, West Ham qualified for the 2022–23 Europa Conference League entering at the play-off stage.[136]

Crest

 
Club crest (1987–1998)
 
Club crest (1998–2016)

Thames Ironworks FC

The Thames Ironworks Team (1895–1900) used the Union Flag as its badge.

Rivet Hammers

The principal element of the badge is the crossed pair of rivet hammers, tools that were used in the shipbuilding industry. The Blackwall and Canning Town neighbourhoods surrounding the Thames Ironworks echoed to the sound of hammers; steam hammers, sledge hammers and rivet hammers.[137]

Seven large mechanical steam hammers would punch small holes near the edges of the iron plates which would be joined to build the ships. The plates would be put in place and fixed together with rivets by teams of five, three inside the emerging vessel and two outside.

Inside the ship one member of the team would heat the rivets till they were white hot and, using Iron Fingers (blacksmith's tongs), throw them to a second person known as a 'catch-boy' or 'putter-in' who would pick the rivet up and place it the hole, also using tongs. The third person was known as the 'holder-on' and he would then smash the rivet home with a sixteen-pound sledge hammer and then use his sledgehammer to hold the rivet in place while the men on the other side flattened the other end of the rivet.

Outside the ship, exposed to the elements, two men with rivet hammers – one right-handed, one left-handed – would hammer the protruding and still glowing rivet flat, so securing one of the many points necessary to link each of the ship's large plates.

The crossed hammers were also incorporated into the coat of arms of the County Borough of West Ham and those of its successor, the modern London Borough of Newham.[138] The Thames Ironworks lay partly within what is now the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, however the blacksmiths tongs in that Borough's coat of arms represent the local saint, Dunstan, the patron saint of Stepney and metalworkers,[139] rather than the Ironworks.

Tower

A yellow or white tower was added, intermittently, from the 1950s onwards.[140] The primary reason for this seems to be to represent Anne Boleyn’s Tower, the most notable feature of Green Street House, an originally Tudor group of buildings which stood next to the Boleyn Ground until demolished in 1955. Green Street House was also known as Boleyn Castle through an association with Anne Boleyn. The manor was reputedly one of the sites at which Henry VIII courted his second queen, though there is no documentary evidence to support the tradition.[141]

There are a number of other factors which may have influenced the inclusion of the stylised castle feature, for instance:

  • to reflect the contribution made to the club by players of Old Castle Swifts
  • The imposing towers, roofs and doorway of the Engineering Department of the Thames Ironworks bore a strong resemblance[142] to the castle feature in earlier iterations of the badge.
  • The first verse of the club's anthem I'm forever blowing bubbles begins "I'm dreaming dreams, I'm scheming schemes, I'm building castles high".
  • The White Tower of the Tower of London as emblematic of East London. For hundreds of years, up until 1900, inner East London had been known as the Tower Division,[143] an area which owed military service to the Tower of London. The (originally whitewashed) White Tower was used as insignia for the area, for instance on cap badges of local units of the army.
  • In recognition of the ‘West Ham Pals’, the 13th Battalion of the Essex Regiment which was raised in Stratford in 1915 and saw extensive action and heavy losses on the Western Front in the World War I. The Battalion was formed from volunteers from West Ham and East London generally. Their war cry was “Up the Hammers”. The cap badge of the Essex Regiment was the castle and key of Gibraltar, though the unit made an unsuccessful request to the War Office that crossed hammers could be used instead.[144]
  • The adoption (in 1904) of Boleyn Castle FC[145] as the club's reserve side when they took over their grounds on the site.

Shield

A shield has been used in many iterations of the club badge, and the shape of the 2016 version matches the cross-section on the hull of HMS Warrior, the most famous ship built by the Thames Ironworks.[146] However examining draughtsman's diagrams[147] of the ship casts doubt on the resemblance between the shield and the ship.

Iterations

The crest was redesigned and updated in the late 1990s, featuring a wider yellow castle with fewer cruciform "windows" along with the peaked roofs being removed; the tops of the towers had previously made the castle appear more akin to Disneyland's Sleeping Beauty's Castle than a functioning fortress. The designer also altered other details to give a more substantial feel to the iconography.[148]

When the club rebuilt the west stand of the Boleyn Ground (construction finished 2001–02) the "castle" from the redesigned badge was incorporated into the structure at the main entrance to the ground. A pair of towers were prominent features of the ground's appearance, both bearing large club badges.[149]

A new badge was introduced following the end of the 2015–16 season, when the club moved into the Olympic Stadium.[150] It removes the Boleyn Castle due to the club moving away, leaving just the crossed hammers, which the club says is inspired by the crest before and during the career of Bobby Moore. The word "London" was introduced below to "establish the club firmly on the international stage", and the more minimalist approach is to give a "strong statement that is instantly West Ham United". The shape of the crest is that of the hull of HMS Warrior, the first ironclad warship in the Royal Navy, which was built by Thames Ironworks.[151]

Colours

The original colours of the team were dark blue, due to Thames Ironworks chairman Arnold Hills being a former student of Oxford University (see Oxford blue). However, the team used a variety of kits including the claret and sky blue house colours of Thames Ironworks, as well as sky blue or white kit.[152][153]

The Irons permanently adopted claret and blue for home colours in 1903.[154]

One story suggests that Thames Ironworks right-half Charlie Dove received the Aston Villa kit from William Belton, who was a professional sprinter of national repute, as well as being involved with the coaching at Thames Ironworks. Belton had been at a fair in Birmingham, close to Villa Park, the home ground of Aston Villa and was challenged to a race against four Villa players, who wagered money that one of them would win. Belton defeated them and, when they were unable to pay the bet, one of the Villa players who was responsible for washing the team's kit offered a complete team's "football kits" to Belton in payment. The Aston Villa player subsequently reported to his club that the kit was "missing."[155] This, however, is often disputed.[156]

Thames Ironworks, and later West Ham United, retained the claret yoke/blue sleeves design, but also continued to use their previously favoured colours for their away kits.

Supporters, hooliganism and rivalries

Supporters

I'm forever blowing bubbles,

Pretty bubbles in the air.
They fly so high, nearly reach the sky,
Then like my dreams they fade and die.
Fortune's always hiding,
I've looked everywhere ...
I'm forever blowing bubbles,

pretty bubbles in the air.

— original lyrics to "Bubbles", from John Helliar[157]

The team's supporters are famous for their rendition of the chorus of their team's anthem, "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" introduced to the club by former manager Charlie Paynter in the late 1920s. A Pears soap commercial featuring the curly haired child in the Millais' "Bubbles" was well known at the time. The child resembled a player, Billy J. "Bubbles" Murray, from local schoolboy team, Park School, where the headmaster was Cornelius Beal. Beal was known locally for his music and rhyme and wrote special words to the tune of "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" whenever any player was having a good game.[158]

Beal was a friend of Paynter, while Murray was a West Ham trialist and played football at schoolboy level with a number of West Ham players such as Jim Barrett. Through this contrivance of association the club's fans took it upon themselves to begin singing the popular music hall tune before home games, sometimes reinforced by the presence of a house band requested to play the refrain by Charlie Paynter.[157]

The 1975 FA Cup version – which contains the original lyrics, and features vocals from the team's then-current players – is always played before home games, with the home crowd joining in and carrying the song on after the music stops at the verse line "Fortune's always hiding".[159] Bubbles was published as a waltz whereas during the game the crowd sing it in common time.[159][160]

Since the 1950s, fans have also sung the East London pub song Knees Up Mother Brown. The song title is also the name of an internet forum related to the club.[161]

Like other teams, the team also have a history of adopting or adapting popular songs of the day to fit particular events, themes, players or personas. These have included serious renditions of theatre and movie classics such as "The Bells are Ringing," along with more pun-laden or humorous efforts, such as chanting former player Paolo Di Canio's name to the canzone "La donna è mobile" by Giuseppe Verdi,[162] or D.I. Canio to the tune of Ottawan's "D.I.S.C.O.", or the chant of "Who Let The Potts Out?" to the tune of Baha Men's "Who Let the Dogs Out?" when Steve Potts could be seen warming up to come on as substitute late on in his career, or "That's Zamora" to the tune of Dean Martin's 1953 "That's Amore" in honour of former striker Bobby Zamora. Other former players to be serenaded include Christian Dailly with vastly-altered lyrics to Frankie Valli's "Can't Take My Eyes Off You",[163] Joe Cole and Carlton Cole with Spandau Ballet's "Gold" song title sung as "Cole"[164] and Luděk Mikloško. A song for West Ham favourite Bobby Moore, "Viva Bobby Moore", is also sung based on The Business's "Oi!" rendition of the song, based on The Equals' 1969 release "Viva Bobby Joe".[165] In 2016, supporters adapted the lyrics of Billy Ray Cyrus' "Achy Breaky Heart" in honour of Dimitri Payet.[166]

Bow Bells are ringing, for the Claret and Blue,

Bow Bells are ringing, for the Claret and Blue,
When the Hammers are scoring, and the South Bank are roaring,
And the money is pouring, for the Claret and Blue,
Claret and Blue,
No relegation for the Claret and Blue,
Just celebration for the Claret and Blue,
One day we'll win a cup or two, or three,

Or four or more, for West Ham and the Claret and Blue.

— Supporters song to the tune of 'The Bells are Ringing', circa 1960[167]

When the players come onto the pitch, and at other times of celebration, as the song I'm forever blowing bubbles is being sung, around 60 bubble machines produce copious bubbles that rise high into the stadium.[168] Fans gained national attention after giving a torrid time to David Beckham in his first away match of 1998–99 the season after the England midfielder was sent off for a petulant foul on Diego Simeone.[169] Coinciding with the game, there were claims (and an image taken) that fans, organised by a hardcore, had hung an effigy of the player outside a local pub. Although it was later revealed that the pub was in South-East London, the heartland of West Ham's greatest rivals Millwall. The West Ham fans did, however, boo Beckham's every touch of the ball during the game.[170]

They have also displayed a particular zeal when it comes to abusing former players, particularly those who are perceived to have abandoned the club or performed some disservice. Paul Ince,[171][172] Frank Lampard,[173] Jermain Defoe,[174] Nigel Reo-Coker [175] and Jesse Lingard[176] have famously borne the brunt of verbal assaults and a guaranteed hostile reception at Upton Park. However, players such as Joe Cole, Michael Carrick, Rio Ferdinand, Bobby Zamora and Carlos Tevez receive applause and even standing ovations in honour of their contributions during their time at the club. Joe Cole subsequently rejoined West Ham from Liverpool midway through the 2012–13 season.[177]

 
West Ham fans display their rosettes, scarves and novelty hammers at an FA Cup match in 1933

Hooliganism

The origins of West Ham's links with organised football-related violence starts in the 1960s with the establishment of The Mile End Mob (named after an area of the East End of London).[178] During the 1970s and 1980s (the main era for organised football-related violence), West Ham gained further notoriety for the levels of hooliganism in their fan base and antagonistic behaviour towards both their own and rival fans, and the police. During the 1970s in particular, rival groups of West Ham fans from neighbouring areas often did battle with each other at games, most often groups from the neighbouring districts of Barking and Dagenham.[179]

The Inter City Firm were one of the first "casuals", so called because they avoided police supervision by not wearing football-related clothing and travelled to away matches on regular InterCity trains, rather than on the cheap and more tightly policed "football special" charter trains. The group were an infamous West Ham-aligned gang. As the firm's moniker "inter city" suggests violent activities were not confined to local derbies – the hooligans were content to cause trouble at any game, though nearby teams often bore the brunt.[179]

Both the 1989 film The Firm (starring Gary Oldman),[180] and the 2005 film Green Street (starring Elijah Wood and Charlie Hunnam) are based upon West Ham hooligan firms.[181]

Rivalries

West Ham have strong rivalries with several other clubs. Most of these are with other London clubs, especially with Tottenham Hotspur in an East versus North London derby[182] and with Chelsea in an East versus West London rivalry. The rivalry between West Ham and Tottenham has been fuelled by players such as Michael Carrick, Martin Peters, Paul Allen, Jermain Defoe and Scott Parker leaving the Hammers to join Tottenham. The rivalry deepened with the appointment of former Hammers manager Harry Redknapp as Tottenham's manager.[183] Since the 2006–07 Premier League season, West Ham have developed a strong rivalry with Yorkshire club Sheffield United due to the dubious circumstances surrounding the transfer of Carlos Tevez, who helped West Ham avoid relegation at Sheffield United's expense.[184][185]

 
 
The "Champions" statue, of Moore, with the World Cup, Hurst, Peters and Ray Wilson, boarded-up for protection before the visits of Millwall on 25 August 2009 and Tottenham Hotspur in March 2016

The oldest and fiercest rivalry is with Millwall. The two sides are local rivals, having both been founded by employees of local companies, with players living in the same localities. The early history of both clubs are intertwined, with West Ham proving to be the more successful in a number of meetings between the two teams at the time, resulting in West Ham being promoted at the expense of Millwall. Millwall later declined to join the fledgling Football League while West Ham went on to the top division and an FA Cup final. Later in the 1920s, the rivalry was intensified during strike action which Isle of Dogs-based companies (i.e., Millwall fans) refused to support, breeding ill will between the two camps, the bitterness of this betrayal enduring for years. In 1972, a Millwall supporter died at New Cross station after falling out of a train during a fight with West Ham fans.[186]

The rivalry between West Ham and Millwall has involved considerable violence and is one of the most notorious within the world of football hooliganism. The teams were drawn against each other in the second round of the 2009–10 League Cup and met on 25 August 2009 at Upton Park. This was the first time in four years that the two clubs had played each other, and the first ever in the League Cup. Clashes between fans occurred outside the ground, resulting in violence erupting up to half a mile away from the stadium, with serious injuries, including the stabbing of a Millwall supporter, damage to property and several arrests reported by police. There were also several pitch invasions by West Ham supporters which brought a temporary halt to the game.[187] In January 2010, West Ham were fined after being found guilty of violent, threatening, obscene and provocative behaviour and of failing to prevent their fans entering the field of play. Millwall were cleared of all charges.[188]

Nicknames

The team and supporters are known as The Hammers, in part because of the club's origins as Thames Ironworks.[189] They are also known as The Irons.[189]

Stadium

 
West Ham moved into the Olympic Stadium in 2016
 
Panorama of the interior of the London Stadium
 
West Ham and Domžale enter the pitch for first ever football game at London Stadium

Until 2016, West Ham were based at the Boleyn Ground, commonly known as Upton Park, in Newham, East London. The capacity of the Boleyn Ground was 35,016,[190] and had been West Ham's ground since 1904. Prior to this, in their previous incarnation of Thames Ironworks, they played at Hermit Road in Canning Town and briefly at Browning Road in East Ham, before moving to the Memorial Grounds in Plaistow in 1897. They retained the stadium during their transition to becoming West Ham United and were there for a further four seasons before moving to the Boleyn Ground in 1904.

Former chairman Eggert Magnússon made clear his ambition for West Ham to move to the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Summer Olympics, a desire reiterated by current chairmen Gold and Sullivan when they assumed control of the club stating that they felt it was a logical move for the Government as it was in the borough of Newham.

In February 2010, however, the British Olympic Minister stated that West Ham would not get the stadium, and it would instead be used for track and field.[191] On 17 May 2010, West Ham and Newham London Borough Council submitted a formal plan to the Olympic Park Legacy Company for the use of the Olympic Stadium following the 2012 Summer Olympics. The proposal was for a stadium with a capacity of 60,000 which would retain a competition athletics track. The proposal was welcomed by the chairman of UK athletics, Ed Warner, who said, "I think it will feel great as a football stadium and I speak as a football fan as well the chairman of UK Athletics. I think you'd find West Ham would cover the track in the winter season so it wouldn't look like you had a track between you and the pitch."[192][193]

On 30 September 2010, the club formally submitted its bid for the Olympic Stadium with a presentation at 10 Downing Street,[194] and on 8 October 2010 the world's largest live entertainment company, Live Nation, endorsed the club's Olympic Stadium plans.[195] Three days after Live Nation's endorsement, UK Athletics confirmed its formal support for West Ham United and Newham Council in their joint bid to take over the Olympic Stadium in legacy mode.[196] In November 2010, West Ham began a search for potential developers for "informal discussions" about what would happen to the ground if it were to win its bid to take over the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games. According to the club, the site could be vacated and open to redevelopment by summer 2014.[197] On 11 February 2011, the Olympic Park Legacy Committee selected West Ham as the preferred club to move into the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games.[198][199]

The decision in favour of West Ham's bid was unanimous,[200] although controversial as local Premier League rivals Tottenham Hotspur had also been bidding for the venue.[201] Hopes of moving to the stadium, however, were since placed under doubt following a legal challenge by Tottenham and Leyton Orient, with Leyton Orient – a perennial (since 1980) tier 3 to tier 5 club – fearful that having West Ham playing less than a mile away from their Brisbane Road ground could steal support from the club and put them out of business.[202] Both clubs' appeal for a judicial review, however, were rejected on 23 June 2011.[203] On 3 March 2011, West Ham's proposed move to the Olympic Stadium was formally approved by the British government and Mayor of London Boris Johnson.

On 8 June 2011, it was confirmed that the Westfield Shopping Centre had been in detailed talks with West Ham for naming rights of the new Olympic stadium which could be called the Westfield Stadium.[204] West Ham announced plans to move from the Boleyn Ground from the 2014–15 season.[205] In August 2011, an independent investigation initiated by the Olympic Park Legacy Company upheld the decision to award West Ham the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games.[206] On 29 June 2011, however, Tottenham announced that they were returning to the High Court again to fight the decision to award West Ham the stadium, in an oral hearing, to try to overturn the original High Court appeal being rejected.[207] On 25 August 2011, Tottenham and Leyton Orient were in fact granted a judicial review by the High Court into the Olympic Stadium bidding process.[208] On 11 October 2011, the deal to award West Ham the Olympic Stadium collapsed over concerns of legal pressure, with the government deciding that the stadium will stay in public ownership.[209] Six days later, Tottenham and Leyton Orient announced they had ended their legal challenge after the deal collapsed.[210]

Once the original deal collapsed, a new process to select a tenant was begun. West Ham immediately announced plans to become tenants of the stadium.[211] By March 2012, West Ham was one of the four bidders for the Stadium. With a decision due by the Olympic Park Legacy Company in May 2012, Mayor of London Boris Johnson delayed the final selection of future tenants until completion of the 2012 Summer Olympics, stating that it was "overwhelmingly likely" that the tenants would be West Ham.[212][213]

It was announced on 22 March 2013 that West Ham had signed a 99-year lease for the Olympic Stadium after the government agreed to put in an extra £1 million towards the costs of converting the site. The club's plan was to move into the stadium prior to the start of the 2016–17 season.[214] Supporters of rival clubs had pressed for an inquiry into the granting of West Ham's tenancy, arguing that West Ham were being given an unfair advantage by the arrangement. In September 2015, however, the government rejected holding such an inquiry.[215]

The Academy of Football

 
"Academy of Football"

The club promotes the popular idea of West Ham being "The Academy of Football", with the moniker adorning the ground's new stadium façade. The comment predominantly refers to the club's youth development system which was established by manager Ted Fenton during the 1950s, that has seen a number of international players emerge through the ranks.[216] Most notably, the club contributed three players to the World Cup-winning England side of 1966, including club icon Bobby Moore, as well as Martin Peters and Geoff Hurst who between them scored all of England's goals in the eventual 4–2 victory. Other academy players that have gone on to play for England have included Trevor Brooking, Alvin Martin, Tony Cottee and Paul Ince.

Since the late 1990s, Rio Ferdinand, Frank Lampard, Joe Cole, Michael Carrick and Glen Johnson began their careers at West Ham and all went on to play for much bigger clubs. Most recently, the likes of first teamers Mark Noble and James Tomkins, as well as Welsh international Jack Collison, have emerged through the Academy. Frustratingly for fans and managers alike,[217] the club has struggled to retain many of these players due to (predominantly) financial reasons.[218] West Ham, during the 2007–08 season, had an average of 6.61 English players in the starting line up, higher than any other Premier League club,[219] which cemented their status as one of the few Premier League clubs left that were recognised to be bringing through young English talent and were recognised as having "homegrown players." Between 2000 and 2011, the club produced eight England players, as many as Manchester United and one fewer than Arsenal.[220] Much of the success of the Academy has been attributed to Tony Carr, who was West Ham youth coach between 1973 and 2014.[221]

Players

First-team squad

As of 22 January 2023[222]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Other players under contract

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
40 FW   IRL Armstrong Oko-Flex
51 MF   ENG Daniel Chesters
59 MF   ENG Keenan Forson
No. Pos. Nation Player
62 MF   ENG Freddie Potts
75 DF   ENG Jamal Baptiste
DF   BRA Luizão

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   ENG Nathan Trott (at Vejle until 30 June 2023)
GK   ENG Joseph Anang (at Derby County until 30 June 2023)
DF   ENG Manny Longelo (at Birmingham until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   COD Arthur Masuaku (at Beşiktaş until 30 June 2023)
MF   CRO Nikola Vlašić (at Torino until 30 June 2023)
FW   IRL Mipo Odubeko (at Port Vale until 30 June 2023)

Under-21s

Former players

Retired numbers

Club captains

Dates Name Notes
1895–97   Bob Stevenson
1897–99   Walter Tranter
1899   Tom Bradshaw Bradshaw died on Christmas Day 1899.
1899–01   Charlie Dove
1901–03 Unknown
c.1903–04   Ernest Watts
1904–07   David Gardner
1907–11   Frank Piercy
1911–14   Tommy Randall
1914–15   Dick Leafe
1915–22   Billy Cope Also captained fixtures during World War I.
1922–25   George Kay
1925–26   Billy Moore
1926–28   Jack Hebden
1928–32   Stanley Earle
1932–37   Jim Barrett
1937–46   Charles Bicknell Remained captain for fixtures during World War II.
1946–51   Dick Walker Following his retirement, he helped to clean the boots of younger players
1951–57   Malcolm Allison Fell ill with tuberculosis after a game in 1957 and consequently had a lung removed
1957–60   Noel Cantwell First captain not from the United Kingdom
1960–62   Phil Woosnam
1962–74   Bobby Moore
1974–84   Billy Bonds
1984–90   Alvin Martin
1990–92   Ian Bishop
1992–93   Julian Dicks
1993–96   Steve Potts
1996–97   Julian Dicks
1997–2001   Steve Lomas
2001–03   Paolo Di Canio First captain not from the British Isles
2003   Joe Cole
2003–05   Christian Dailly
2005–07   Nigel Reo-Coker
2007–09   Lucas Neill First captain from outside Europe
2009–11   Matthew Upson
2011–15   Kevin Nolan
2015–22   Mark Noble
2022-   Declan Rice

West Ham dream team

In the 2003 book The Official West Ham United Dream Team, 500 fans were quizzed for who would be in their all time Hammers Eleven. The voting was restricted to players from the modern era.

Hammer of the Year

The following is a list of recipients of the 'Hammer of the Year' award.[225] The first award, to Andy Malcolm in 1957–58, was nominated by a journalist at The Stratford Express. Subsequent recipients would be awarded the title after a vote by supporters.[226] Trevor Brooking was the first player for West Ham United to have been honoured with the title of Hammer of the Year three times in a row in 1976, 1977 and 1978. Scott Parker repeated this feat between 2009 and 2011.[227] Brooking has won the award the most times, on five occasions: 1972, 1976, 1977, 1978 and 1984. Bobby Moore, Billy Bonds and Julian Dicks have each won it four times.

Bobby Moore has been runner-up four times, while Billy Bonds and Tony Cottee have both been runners-up three times.

Billy Bonds and Trevor Brooking's wins are notable in the amount of time between first and last Hammer of the Year award. Bonds has 16 years separating his wins whilst Brooking has 12.

Year Winner Runner-up
1958   Andy Malcolm
1959   Ken Brown
1960   Malcolm Musgrove
1961   Bobby Moore
1962   Lawrie Leslie   John Dick
1963   Bobby Moore   Jim Standen
1964   Johnny Byrne   Bobby Moore
1965   Martin Peters   Bobby Moore
1966   Geoff Hurst   Martin Peters
1967   Geoff Hurst   Bobby Moore
1968   Bobby Moore   Trevor Brooking
1969   Geoff Hurst   Billy Bonds
1970   Bobby Moore   Billy Bonds
1971   Billy Bonds   Bobby Moore
1972   Trevor Brooking   Bobby Ferguson
1973   Pop Robson   Trevor Brooking
1974   Billy Bonds   Mervyn Day
1975   Billy Bonds   Mervyn Day
1976   Trevor Brooking   Graham Paddon
1977   Trevor Brooking   Alan Devonshire
1978   Trevor Brooking
1979   Alan Devonshire   Pop Robson
1980   Alvin Martin   Ray Stewart
1981   Phil Parkes   Geoff Pike
1982   Alvin Martin   Trevor Brooking
1983   Alvin Martin   Phil Parkes
1984   Trevor Brooking   Tony Cottee
1985   Paul Allen   Tony Cottee
1986   Tony Cottee   Frank McAvennie
1987   Billy Bonds   Mark Ward
1988   Stewart Robson   Billy Bonds
1989   Paul Ince   Julian Dicks
Year Winner Runner-up
1990   Julian Dicks   Stuart Slater
1991   Luděk Mikloško   George Parris
1992   Julian Dicks   Steve Potts
1993   Steve Potts   Kevin Keen
1994   Trevor Morley   Steve Potts
1995   Steve Potts   Tony Cottee
1996   Julian Dicks   Iain Dowie
1997   Julian Dicks   Slaven Bilić
1998   Rio Ferdinand   Steve Lomas
1999   Shaka Hislop   Ian Pearce
2000   Paolo Di Canio   Trevor Sinclair
2001   Stuart Pearce   Paolo Di Canio
2002   Sébastien Schemmel   Joe Cole
2003   Joe Cole   Jermain Defoe
2004   Matthew Etherington   Michael Carrick
2005   Teddy Sheringham   Mark Noble
2006   Danny Gabbidon   Marlon Harewood
2007   Carlos Tevez   Bobby Zamora
2008   Robert Green   George McCartney
2009   Scott Parker   Robert Green
2010   Scott Parker   Alessandro Diamanti
2011   Scott Parker   Robert Green
2012   Mark Noble   James Tomkins
2013   Winston Reid   Jussi Jääskeläinen
2014   Mark Noble   Adrián
2015   Aaron Cresswell   Adrián
2016   Dimitri Payet   Michail Antonio
2017   Michail Antonio   Manuel Lanzini
2018   Marko Arnautović   Declan Rice
2019   Łukasz Fabiański   Declan Rice
2020   Declan Rice   Angelo Ogbonna
2021   Tomáš Souček   Vladimír Coufal
2022   Declan Rice   Jarrod Bowen

Lifetime Achievement Award

In 2013, West Ham United introduced a new annual award, the West Ham United Lifetime Achievement Award.

The first award was presented to club-record appearance maker Billy Bonds, who picked up the award on the pitch at Upton Park before kick-off against Cardiff City on the opening day of the 2013–14 season.[228]

The 2014 award was presented to Sir Trevor Brooking, a record five-time winner of the Hammer of the Year award. Brooking received the award before the 2014–15 season curtain-raiser against Tottenham Hotspur on 16 August 2014.[229] Brooking had already had the Centenary Stand at the Boleyn ground named after him in 2009.

The 2015 award was awarded to Martin Peters.[230]

On 3 May 2016, it was announced via the club's official website that the fourth recipient of the award would be Sir Geoff Hurst, the club's second all-time leading goalscorer, and scorer of a hat-trick in the 1966 World Cup Final. Hurst would be honoured at the club's 2015/16 Player Awards Ceremony.[231] Ken Brown became the sixth recipient of the award, in April 2018.[232] The 2019 honour was awarded to midfielder Ronnie Boyce who made his debut for West Ham in 1960.[233]

Year Winner
2013   Billy Bonds MBE
2014   Sir Trevor Brooking
2015   Martin Peters MBE
2016   Sir Geoff Hurst
2017   Bobby Moore OBE
2018   Ken Brown
2019   Ronnie Boyce

Mark Noble Young Hammer of the Year Award

In honour of Mark Noble, who was also the award winner in 2004, and had been serving the club since 2000 and retired in 2022, the Young Hammer of the Year award was renamed to Mark Noble Young Hammer of the Year Award on 9 May 2022.[234]

Current staff

As of 4 January 2023

Staff and directors[235][236]

Position Name
Chairman   David Sullivan
Vice-chairman   Karren Brady CBE
Director   Daniel Křetínský
Director   Pavel Horský
Director   Peter Mitka
Director   Jiří Švarc
Director   Jack Sullivan
Director   David Sullivan Jr
Director   Daniel Cunningham
Non-executive director   Daniel Harris
Non-executive director   J Albert Smith
Honorary life president   Terry Brown
Club secretary   Andrew Pincher
Chief finance officer   Andy Mollett
Projects & stadium operations director   Philippa Cartwright
Executive director, marketing & communications   Tara Warren
Club ambassador   Tony Carr MBE
Sporting Director   Mark Noble

Coaching staff[237][238][239]

Position Name
Manager   David Moyes
Assistant manager   Billy McKinlay
Consultant   Alan Irvine
First team coach   Kevin Nolan
First team coach   Paul Nevin
First team coach   Mark Warburton
First Team goalkeeper coach   Xavi Valero
Fitness coach   Nick Davies
Academy manager & head of coaching and player development   Terry Westley
Academy operations and player development manager   Ricky Martin[240]
Head of medical services   Richard Collinge[241]
First team rehabilitation fitness coach   Eamon Swift
First team physiotherapist   Dominic Rogan

Managers

West Ham United have had 17 permanent managers in their history and an additional three caretaker managers.

Manager Caretaker Manager Period G W D L Win % Honours/Notes (major honours shown in bold)
  Syd King 1901–32 638 248 146 244 38.87 Club's longest serving manager (31 years). FA Cup runners-up 1923
  Charlie Paynter 1932–50 480 198 116 166 41.25
  Ted Fenton 1950–61 484 193 107 184 39.87 Division Two Champions 1957–58
  Ron Greenwood 1961–74 613 215 165 233 35.07 FA Cup winners 1964, UEFA Cup Winners Cup winners 1965. League Cup runners-up 1966.
  John Lyall 1974–89 708 277 176 255 39.12 FA Cup winners 1975, 1980. Highest league finish in club's history (3rd in Division One 1985–86). UEFA Cup Winners' Cup runners-up 1976; League Cup runners-up 1981.
  Lou Macari 1989–90 38 14 12 12 36.84
  Ronnie Boyce 1990 1 0 1 0 0.00
  Billy Bonds 1990–94 227 99 61 67 43.61
  Harry Redknapp 1994–01 327 121 85 121 37.00 UEFA Intertoto Cup joint winners 1999 (European qualification). Club's highest Premier League finish (5th, 1998–99)
  Glenn Roeder 2001–03 86 27 23 36 31.40
  Trevor Brooking 2003 14 9 4 1 64.29
  Alan Pardew 2003–06 163 67 38 58 41.10 Championship Play-off Winners 2005, FA Cup runners-up 2006 (UEFA Cup qualification)
  Alan Curbishley 2006–08 71 28 14 29 39.44
  Kevin Keen 2008 1 0 0 1 0.00
  Gianfranco Zola 2008–10 80 23 21 36 28.75 Club's first non-British manager.
  Avram Grant 2010–11 47 15 12 20 31.91 Club's first non EU manager.
  Kevin Keen 2011 1 0 0 1 0.00
  Sam Allardyce 2011–15 181 68 46 67 37.57 Championship Play-off Winners 2012.
  Slaven Bilić[242] 2015–17 111 42 30 39 37.84
  David Moyes 2017–18 31 9 10 12 29.03
  Manuel Pellegrini 2018–19 64 24 11 29 37.50
  David Moyes 2019– 158 70 33 55 44.30

Highest win percentage of club's permanent managers

Ownership and chairmen

In January 2010, David Sullivan and David Gold acquired a 50% share in West Ham, given them overall operational and commercial control.[243] At the end of May 2010, Gold and Sullivan purchased a further 10% stake in the club at a cost of £8 million. Taking their controlling stake to 60%, they announced that they could open up shares for fans to purchase.[244] On 9 August 2010, Gold and Sullivan increased their shares up to 30.6% each with "minority investors", (which included former owner Terry Brown, purchasing a further 3.8% of the club at a cost of around −4 million) leaving Icelandic Straumur Investment Bank owning 35% of the club.[245]

On 2 July 2013, Sullivan acquired a further 25% of shares after restructuring the debt of the club, leaving Straumur Bank with just 10%.[246] In order to clear club debts before a move to the Olympic Stadium in 2016, in December 2014 Sullivan announced the availability for sale of 20% of the club.[247] The clearing of club debts, given in July 2013 as £70 million, was given as a pre-condition to a move to the Olympic Stadium.[248]

On 10 November 2021, the club announced Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínský had acquired 27% of the shares of the club, reducing Gold and Sullivan's shares at the club.[249]

Co-chairman David Gold passed away on 4 January 2023, leaving Sullivan as the sole chairman.[250]

European and international record

Honours

[251]

Domestic

Leagues

Cups

Wartime

As Thames Ironworks F.C.

European

International

Indoor

  • London Fives
    • Winners: 1967, 1970, 1984
    • Runners-up: 1955, 1957, 1960, 1971, 1974, 1977, 1981

Other

Statistics and records

Attendance

Transfers

Record results and performances

Victories

  • League:
  • Premier League:
  • Division One:
  • Division Two:
  • FA Cup:
    • Home: 8–1 v Chesterfield (round one), 10 January 1914
    • Away: 5–0 v Chatham Town (5th qualifying round), 28 November 1903
  • League Cup:
    • Home: 10–0 v Bury (round two second leg) (12–1 aggregate scoreline), 25 October 1983
    • Away: 5–1 v Cardiff City (semi-final second leg) (10–3 aggregate scoreline), 2 February 1966
    • Away: 5–1 v Walsall (round two), 13 September 1967
  • European Cup Winners' Cup:
    • Home: 5–1 v Castilla CF (round one second leg) (6–4 aggregate scoreline), 1 October 1980
    • Away: 2–1 v Lausanne (quarter final second leg), (6–4 aggregate scoreline) 16 March 1965
  • UEFA Cup/Europa League:
    • Home: 3–0 v Osijek (round one first leg), 16 September 1999
    • Home: 3–0 v Lusitanos (first qualifying round first leg), 2 July 2015
    • Home: 3–0 v Genk (group H), 21 October 2021
    • Away: 3–0 v Lyon (quarter final second leg), (4–1 aggregate score line) 14 April 2022

Defeats

  • League:
  • Premier League:
  • Division One:
  • Division Two:
    • Away: 0–7 v Barnsley, 1 September 1919
  • FA Cup:
  • League Cup:
  • European Cup Winners' Cup:
    • Home: 1–4 v Dinamo Tbilisi (quarter final first leg) (2–4 aggregate scoreline), 4 March 1981
    • Away: 2–4 v FC Den Haag (quarter final first leg) (5–5 aggregate scoreline, West Ham won on away goals), 3 March 1976
    • Neutral: 2–4 v Anderlecht (Final), 5 May 1976
  • UEFA Cup:
    • Home: 0–1 v Palermo (round one first leg), 14 September 2006
    • Away: 0–3 v Palermo (round one second leg), 28 September 2006

Club league highs and lows

  • Home:
    • Most:
    • Most home wins: 19 (1980–81)
    • Most home draws: 10 (1981–82)
    • Most home defeats: 10 (1988–89)
    • Most home goals scored: 59 (1958–59)
    • Most home goals conceded: 44 (1930–31)
    • Fewest:
    • Fewest home wins: 3 (1988–89)
    • Fewest home draws: 1 (1934–35, 1980–81)
    • Fewest home defeats: 1 (1957–58, 1980–81)
    • Fewest home goals scored: 19 (1988–89)
    • Fewest home goals conceded: 11 (1920–21, 1922–23)
 
  • Away:
    • Most:
    • Most away wins: 13 (2011–12)
    • Most away draws: 10 (1968–69)
    • Most away defeats: 17 (1932–33)
    • Most away goals scored: 45 (1957–58)
    • Most away goals conceded: 70 (1931–32)
    • Fewest:
    • Fewest away wins: 1 (1925–26, 1932–33, 1937–38, 1960–61, 2009–10)
    • Fewest away draws: 1 (1982–83)
    • Fewest away defeats: 3 (1980–81)
    • Fewest away goals scored: 12 (1996–97)
    • Fewest away goals conceded: 16 (1990–91)
 
  • Total:
    • Most:
    • Most wins: 28 (1980–81)
    • Most draws: 18 (1968–69)
    • Most defeats: 23 (1931–32)
    • Most goals scored: 101 (1957–58)
    • Most goals conceded: 107 (1931–32)
    • Fewest:
    • Fewest wins: 7 (2010–11)
    • Fewest draws: 4 (1934–35, 1964–65, 1982–83)
    • Fewest defeats: 4 (1980–81)
    • Fewest goals scored: 37 (1988–89, 1991–92)
    • Fewest goals conceded: 29 (1980–81)

Club goal records

Follow link to Official West Ham United Records Page[261]

Player records

Appearances

  1. 799 Billy Bonds (1967–88)
  2. 670 Frank Lampard Sr. (1967–85)
  3. 644 Bobby Moore (1958–74)
  4. 643 Trevor Brooking (1967–84)
  5. 600 Alvin Martin (1977–96)
  6. 550 Mark Noble (2004–22)
  7. 548 Jimmy Ruffell (1921–37)
  8. 505 Steve Potts (1985–02)
  9. 505 Vic Watson (1920–35)
  10. 502 Geoff Hurst (1959–72)
 

Goals

  1. 326 Vic Watson (1920–35)
  2. 252 Geoff Hurst (1959–72)
  3. 166 John Dick (1953–63)
  4. 166 Jimmy Ruffell (1921–37)
  5. 146 Tony Cottee (1983–88), (1994–96)
  6. 107 Johnny Byrne (1961–67)
  7. 104 Pop Robson (1970–74), (1976–79)
  8. 102 Trevor Brooking (1967–84)
  9. 100 Malcolm Musgrove (1953–63)
  10. 100 Martin Peters (1962–70)

In popular culture

  • In a Monty Python sketch four communist thinkers and leaders appear on a news show World Forum, where they are asked football questions. Karl Marx fails to identify the nickname "the Hammers" as the nickname for West Ham.[262]
  • Steve Harris, leader of heavy metal band Iron Maiden, is a West Ham fan and was once scouted by the club. He has long displayed its logo on his Fender Precision bass guitar. The band and club have also collaborated on some merchandise, such as special edition shirts.[263]
  • For the IT Crowd episode "Are We Not Men" Roy pretends to enjoy football and claims to be a follower of West Ham, thinking he made the team up. Instead, it turns out everyone at the table is a supporter and they invite him to a match.[264]
  • In the final episode of season two of Ted Lasso, "Inverting the Pyramid of Success", former Richmond owner Rupert Mannion buys West Ham and installs Richmond's former kitman-turned-coach, Nate Shelley, as the head coach.[265]
  • In the British sitcom Till Death Us Do Part and its follow-on and spin-off series Till Death... and In Sickness and in Health the character Alf Garnett's biggest passion in life was his local football team West Ham United.[266]
  • The action film Final Score, a 2018 release starring Dave Bautista and Pierce Brosnan, was filmed at the club's former Upton Park stadium shortly before its demolition. It concerns a takeover of the venue during a fictional European cup game between West Ham and a Russian team. Co-owner David Sullivan is credited as executive producer.[267]

See also

References

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  2. ^ "Ownership". West Ham United F.C. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  3. ^ "West Ham United - Historical Football Kits". Historicalkits. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  4. ^ "The History of West Ham United 1895–1896". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  5. ^ Dale, Iain (1 August 2011). West Ham: A Nostalgic Look at a Century of the Club. Haynes Publishing. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-857330-45-1.
  6. ^ "West Ham United". Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  7. ^ a b 'Richard Rundle. "Source for Thames Ironworks statistics". Football Club History Database. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  8. ^ . EastLondonHistory.com. Archived from the original on 13 February 2006.
  9. ^ (PDF). Leeds Metropolitan University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 January 2005.
  10. ^ a b 'Richard Rundle. "Source for West Ham statistics". Football Club History Database. Retrieved 15 August 2009.
  11. ^ Northcutt, John; Roy Shoesmith (1993). West Ham United: A Complete Record. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 198. ISBN 978-1-873626-44-3.
  12. ^ "Game played on 18 March 1933". westhamstats.info. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  13. ^ "1st Division 1931–32". westhamstats.info. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  14. ^ Ronay, Barney (5 August 2010). The Manager: The absurd ascent of the most important man in football. Hachette Digital. ISBN 9780748117703. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  15. ^ Helliar, John (15 October 2010). . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 25 October 2010. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  16. ^ "Ted Fenton biography". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  17. ^ "A brief history of West ham United". ESPN. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  18. ^ . West Ham United. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  19. ^ . The Independent. London. 1 May 2012. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  20. ^ a b "Obituary: Ron Greenwood". BBC Sport. 9 February 2006. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  21. ^ . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 3 June 2010. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  22. ^ . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  23. ^ . London Borough of Newham. 14 January 2008. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  24. ^ "Hammers nail Fulham". The FA. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  25. ^ "Former West Ham boss Lyall dies". BBC Sport. 19 April 2006. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  26. ^ . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  27. ^ . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 7 December 2011. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  28. ^ . The Football Association. Archived from the original on 28 April 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  29. ^ "West Ham 1 Everton 1". The Times. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  30. ^ Bevan, Chris (1 January 2010). "When the Hammers shocked Arsenal". BBC Sport. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  31. ^ Julie Welch (20 April 2006). "Obituary John Lyall". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 29 April 2010.
  32. ^ Blowers, Steve (2005). Nearly Reached the Sky. Football World. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-9548336-8-8.
  33. ^ "Lou Macari". swindon-town-fc.co.uk. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  34. ^ Blows, Kirk (2000). The Essential History of West Ham United. Headline Book publishing. p. 193. ISBN 978-0-7472-7036-2.
  35. ^ Pierson, Mark (27 January 1997). . The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  36. ^ May, John (3 December 2002). "Who IS Terence Brown?". BBC Sport. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  37. ^ The Essential History of West Ham United. pp. 197, 198.
  38. ^ Kirkby, Darren. . When Saturday Comes. Archived from the original on 24 May 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  39. ^ "1st Division 1992–93". westhamstats.info. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  40. ^ . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  41. ^ "I was sold to save United says Beauchamp". Heraldseries.co.uk. 22 June 1994. Retrieved 16 June 2010.
  42. ^ . The Independent. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  43. ^ . football-england.com. Archived from the original on 3 July 2013. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  44. ^ a b Blow, Kirk (2010). Bring Me the Head of Trevor Brooking. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing Company. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-84596-661-4.
  45. ^ Crace, John (18 April 2013). Harry's Games The Biography of H. ISBN 9781780339122. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  46. ^ a b "Soccerbase – West Ham managers". soccerbase.com. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  47. ^ a b c d Dyer, Ken (8 November 2001). "Redknapp blamed for West Ham loss". London Evening Standard. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  48. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Harry Leaves his legacy". BBC Sport. 9 May 2001. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  49. ^ "Sport: Football: News". BBC Sport. 13 July 1998. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  50. ^ Hills, Dave (6 August 2000). "The 10 worst foreign signings of all time". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  51. ^ "Premier League 1994–95". westhamstats.info. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  52. ^ "Premier League 1996–97". westhamstats.info. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  53. ^ . West Ham United F.C. Archived from the original on 27 August 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  54. ^ a b c d "Cash row key to Redknapp exit". BBC Sport. 12 May 2001. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
  55. ^ "Chelsea land Lampard". BBC Sport. 14 June 2001. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  56. ^ a b c
west, united, this, article, about, football, club, women, team, women, west, united, football, club, english, professional, football, club, that, plays, home, matches, stratford, east, london, club, competes, premier, league, tier, english, football, club, pl. This article is about the men s football club For the women s team see West Ham United F C Women West Ham United Football Club is an English professional football club that plays its home matches in Stratford East London The club competes in the Premier League the top tier of English football The club plays at the London Stadium having moved from their former home the Boleyn Ground in 2016 West Ham UnitedFull nameWest Ham United Football ClubNickname s The Irons The HammersShort nameWest HamFounded29 June 1895 127 years ago 1895 06 29 as Thames Ironworks5 July 1900 122 years ago 1900 07 05 as West Ham UnitedGroundLondon StadiumCapacity62 500 1 Owner s David Sullivan 38 8 Daniel Kretinsky 27 Estate of David Gold 25 1 Albert Tripp Smith 8 Other investors 1 1 2 ChairmanDavid SullivanManagerDavid MoyesLeaguePremier League2021 22Premier League 7th of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonThe club was founded in 1895 as Thames Ironworks and reformed in 1900 as West Ham United They moved to the Boleyn Ground in 1904 which remained their home ground for more than a century The team initially competed in the Southern League and Western League before joining the Football League in 1919 They were promoted to the top flight in 1923 when they were also losing finalists in the first FA Cup Final held at Wembley In 1940 the club won the inaugural Football League War Cup West Ham have been winners of the FA Cup three times 1964 1975 and 1980 and runners up twice 1923 and 2006 The club have reached two major European finals winning the European Cup Winners Cup in 1965 and finishing runners up in the same competition in 1976 West Ham also won the Intertoto Cup in 1999 They are one of eight clubs never to have fallen below the second tier of English football spending 63 of 95 league seasons in the top flight up to and including the 2020 21 season The club s highest league position to date came in 1985 86 when they achieved third place in the then First Division Three West Ham players were members of the 1966 World Cup final winning England team captain Bobby Moore and goalscorers Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters The club has a long standing rivalry with Millwall and the fixture has gained notoriety for frequent incidents of football hooliganism West Ham adopted their claret and sky blue colour scheme in the early 1900s with the most common iteration of a claret shirt and sky blue sleeves first emerging in 1904 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Birth of West Ham United 1901 1961 1 3 Glory years 1961 1978 1 4 Ups and downs 1978 2005 1 5 Final years at the Boleyn 2005 2016 1 6 Move to London Stadium and recent years 2016 2 Crest 2 1 Thames Ironworks FC 2 2 Rivet Hammers 2 3 Tower 2 4 Shield 2 5 Iterations 3 Colours 4 Supporters hooliganism and rivalries 4 1 Supporters 4 2 Hooliganism 4 3 Rivalries 4 4 Nicknames 5 Stadium 6 The Academy of Football 7 Players 7 1 First team squad 7 1 1 Other players under contract 7 2 Out on loan 7 3 Under 21s 8 Former players 8 1 Retired numbers 8 2 Club captains 8 3 West Ham dream team 8 4 Hammer of the Year 8 5 Lifetime Achievement Award 8 6 Mark Noble Young Hammer of the Year Award 9 Current staff 10 Managers 11 Ownership and chairmen 12 European and international record 13 Honours 13 1 Domestic 13 1 1 Leagues 13 1 2 Cups 13 1 3 Wartime 13 1 4 As Thames Ironworks F C 13 2 European 13 2 1 International 13 2 2 Indoor 13 2 3 Other 14 Statistics and records 14 1 Attendance 14 2 Transfers 14 3 Record results and performances 14 4 Victories 14 5 Defeats 14 6 Club league highs and lows 14 7 Club goal records 14 8 Player records 15 In popular culture 16 See also 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 External linksHistoryMain article History of West Ham United F C Origins Main article Thames Ironworks F C Earliest club shot during its founding year as Thames Ironworks in 1895 The earliest generally accepted incarnation of West Ham United was founded in 1895 as Thames Ironworks F C the works team of the largest and last surviving shipbuilder on the Thames Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company by foreman and local league referee Dave Taylor and owner Arnold Hills 4 and was announced in the Thames Ironworks Gazette of June 1895 Thames Ironworks was based in Leamouth Wharf in Blackwall and Canning Town on both banks of the River Lea where the Lea meets the Thames Thames Ironworks built many ships and other structures the most famous being HMS Warrior The last ship built there was the dreadnought HMS Thunderer in 1912 and the yard shut soon after The repair yard of the Castle Shipping Line was a very near neighbour and their work team initially known as the Castle Swifts would informally merge with the Thames Ironworks own team The team played on a strictly amateur basis for 1895 at least with a team featuring a number of works employees Thomas Freeman was a ships fireman and Walter Parks a clerk Johnny Stewart Walter Tranter and James Lindsay were all boilermakers Other employees included William Chapman George Sage and Fred Chamberlain as well as apprentice riveter Charlie Dove who was to have a great influence on the club s future at a later date 5 1895 96 First kit 6 Thames Ironworks won the West Ham Charity Cup contested by clubs in the West Ham locality in 1895 then won the London League in 1897 They turned professional in 1898 upon entering the Southern League Second Division and were promoted to the First Division at the first attempt 7 The following year they came second from bottom but had established themselves as a fully fledged competitive team They comfortably fended off the challenge of local rivals Fulham in a relegation play off 5 1 in late April 1900 and retained their First Division status 7 The team initially played in full dark blue kits as inspired by Mr Hills who had been an Oxford University Blue but changed the following season by adopting the sky blue shirts and white shorts combination worn from 1897 to 1899 Following growing disputes over the running and financing of the club in June 1900 Thames Ironworks F C was disbanded then almost immediately relaunched as West Ham United F C reflecting the West Ham London district where they played on 5 July 1900 with Syd King as their manager and future manager Charlie Paynter as his assistant Because of the original works team roots and links still represented upon the club badge they are still known as the Irons or the Hammers amongst fans and the media 8 9 Birth of West Ham United 1901 1961 West Ham United joined the Western League for the 1901 season 10 while also continuing to play in the Southern Division 1 In 1907 West Ham were crowned the Western League Division 1B Champions and then defeated 1A champions Fulham 1 0 to become the Western League Overall Champions 10 The reborn club continued to play their games at the Memorial Grounds in Plaistow funded by Arnold Hills but moved to a pitch in the Upton Park area in the guise of the Boleyn Ground stadium in 1904 West Ham s first game in their new home was against fierce rivals Millwall themselves an Ironworks team albeit for a rival company drawing a crowd of 10 000 and with West Ham running out 3 0 winners 11 and as the Daily Mirror wrote on 2 September 1904 Favoured by the weather turning fine after heavy rains of the morning West Ham United began their season most auspiciously yesterday evening when they beat Millwall by 3 goals to 0 on their new enclosure at Upton Park Billie the White Horse saviour of the 1923 FA Cup Final In 1919 still under King s leadership West Ham gained entrance to the Football League Second Division their first game being a 1 1 draw with Lincoln City and were promoted to Division One in 1923 also making it to the first ever FA Cup Final to be held at the old Wembley stadium Their opponents were Bolton Wanderers This was also known as the White Horse Final so named because an estimated 200 000 people came to see the match spilling out on to the pitch which had to be cleared prior to kick off by Billie a giant white horse actually grey being ridden by PC George Scorey The Cup Final match itself ended 2 0 to Bolton The team enjoyed mixed success in Division 1 but retained their status for ten years and reached the FA Cup semi final in 1933 12 In 1932 the club was relegated to Division Two 13 and long term custodian Syd King was sacked after serving the club in the role of manager for 32 years and as a player from 1899 to 1903 Following relegation King had mental health problems He appeared drunk at a board meeting and soon after committed suicide 14 He was replaced with his assistant manager Charlie Paynter who himself had been with West Ham in a number of roles since 1897 and who went on to serve the team in this role until 1950 for a total of 480 games The club spent most of the next 30 years in this division first under Paynter and then later under the leadership of former player Ted Fenton Fenton succeeded in getting the club once again promoted to the top level of English football in 1958 With the considerable input of player Malcolm Allison Fenton helped develop both the initial batch of future West Ham stars and West Ham s approach to the game 15 16 17 18 Glory years 1961 1978 Ron Greenwood was appointed as Fenton s successor in 1961 and soon led the club to two major trophies winning the 1964 FA Cup Final The team was led by the young Bobby Moore West Ham also won the European Cup Winners Cup 19 20 During the 1966 FIFA World Cup key members of the tournament winners England were West Ham players including the captain Bobby Moore Martin Peters who scored in the final and Geoff Hurst who scored the first and only hat trick in a men s World Cup final 20 21 All three players had come through the youth team at West Ham 22 Champions statue on Barking Road There is a Champions statue in Barking Road opposite The Boleyn Tavern commemorating West Ham s three sons who helped win the 1966 World Cup Bobby Moore Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters Also included on the statue is Everton s Ray Wilson 23 They also won the FA Cup in 1975 by defeating Fulham 2 0 The Fulham team had former England captains Alan Mullery and West Ham legend Bobby Moore 24 After a difficult start to the 1974 75 season Greenwood moved himself upstairs to become general manager and without informing the board appointed his assistant John Lyall as team manager 25 The result was instant success the team scored 20 goals in their first four games combined and won the FA Cup becoming the last team to win the FA Cup with an all English side when they beat Fulham 2 0 in the 1975 final 26 Lyall then guided West Ham to another European Cup Winners Cup final in 1976 though the team lost the match 4 2 to Belgian side Anderlecht 27 Greenwood s tenure as general manager lasted less than three years as he was appointed to manage England in the wake of Don Revie s resignation in 1977 28 Ups and downs 1978 2005 In 1978 West Ham were again relegated to Division Two but Lyall was retained as manager and led the team to an FA Cup Final win against Arsenal in 1980 their last major honour They reached the final by defeating Everton in the semi final 29 The Hammers won 1 0 with a goal scored from a header by Trevor Brooking in the 13th minute 30 This is notable as no team outside the top division has won the trophy since West Ham were promoted to Division One in 1981 and finished in the top ten of the first division for the next three seasons before achieving their highest ever league finish of third in 1985 86 a group of players which came to be known as The Boys of 86 However they suffered relegation again in 1989 which resulted in Lyall s sacking 31 He was awarded an ex gratia payment of 100 000 but left the club in what Lyall described as upsetting circumstances meriting only 73 words in a terse acknowledgement of his service in the club programme Lyall left West Ham after 34 years service 32 Yearly performance of West Ham since joining the Football League After Lyall Lou Macari briefly led the team though he resigned after less than a single season in order to clear his name of allegations of illegal betting while manager of Swindon Town 33 He was replaced by former player Billy Bonds 34 In Bonds first full season 1990 91 West Ham again secured promotion to Division One Now back in the top flight Bonds saw West Ham through one of their most controversial seasons With the club planning to introduce a bond scheme there was crowd unrest West Ham finished last and were relegated back to Division Two after only one season 35 36 37 38 However they rebounded strongly in 1992 93 With Trevor Morley and Clive Allen scoring 40 goals they guaranteed themselves second place on the last day of the season with a 2 0 home win against Cambridge United and with it promotion to the Premier League 39 40 West Ham players on open top bus near Upton Park celebrate winning the 2005 play off final in Cardiff From L R Shaun Newton crouching Back row Matthew Etherington Jimmy Walker Teddy Sheringham Marlon Harewood Front row Don Hutchison Carl Fletcher Elliott Ward and Mark Noble with flag With the team in the Premier League there was a need to rebuild the team Oxford United player Joey Beauchamp was recruited for a fee of 1 2 million Shortly after arriving at the club however he became unhappy citing homesickness from his native Oxford as the reason Bonds in particular found this attitude hard to understand compared to his own committed never say die approach providing for Bonds further evidence of the decay in the modern game and modern player 41 Fifty eight days later Beauchamp was signed by Swindon Town for a club record combined fee of 800 000 which included defender Adrian Whitbread going in the opposite direction Whitbread was valued at 750 000 in the deal 42 Assistant manager Harry Redknapp was also now taking a bigger role in the transfer of players with the club s approval With rumours of his old club AFC Bournemouth being prepared to offer him a position 43 the West Ham board and their managing director Peter Storrie made a controversial move The board were anxious not to lose Redknapp s services and offered Bonds a place away from the day to day affairs of the club on the West Ham board This would have allowed them to appoint Redknapp as manager Bonds refused the post offered and walked away from the club 44 His accusations of deceit and manipulation by the board and by Redknapp have continued to cause ill feeling 44 Peter Storrie claimed that they had handled the situation correctly saying If Harry had gone to Bournemouth there was a good chance Bill would have resigned anyway so we were in a no win situation We re sad that Bill is going and it s a big blow but it s time to move on and we have appointed a great manager 45 Redknapp became manager on 10 August 1994 46 Redknapp s time at West Ham was notable for the turnover of players during his tenure and for the level of attractive football and success which had not been seen since the managership of John Lyall Over 134 players passed through the club while he was manager producing a net transfer fee deficit of 16 million despite the 18 million sale of Rio Ferdinand to Leeds United 47 Some were notably successful such as the signings of Stuart Pearce 48 Trevor Sinclair 48 Paolo Di Canio 48 John Hartson 48 Eyal Berkovic 48 and Ian Wright 49 Meanwhile some were expensive international players who failed at West Ham such as Florin Raducioiu 48 Davor Suker who earned as much in wages as the revenue gained from one entire stand and yet made only eight appearances 47 Christian Bassila who cost 720 000 and played only 86 minutes of football 47 Titi Camara Gary Charles whose wages amounted to 4 4 million but made only three starts for the club 47 Rigobert Song Paulo Futre 48 and Marco Boogers 48 a player often quoted as one of the biggest failures in the Premier League 50 His first season in charge saw West Ham fighting the threat of relegation until the last few weeks 51 while his third season would also see another relegation battle Always willing to enter the transfer market Redknapp bought in the winter transfer window John Hartson and Paul Kitson who added the impetus needed at the season s end 52 In 1999 West Ham finished fifth their highest position in the top flight since 1986 48 They also won the Intertoto Cup beating French club Metz to qualify for the 1999 2000 UEFA Cup 48 53 Things began to falter for Redknapp with the sale for 18 million to Leeds of Rio Ferdinand in November 2000 Redknapp used the transfer money poorly with purchases such as Ragnvald Soma who cost 800 000 and played only seven league games Camara and Song Redknapp felt he needed more funds with which to deal in the transfer market 54 Chairman Brown lost patience with Redknapp due to his demands for further transfer funds In June 2001 called to a meeting with Brown expecting to discuss contracts he was fired 54 His assistant Frank Lampard left too making the sale of his son Frank Lampard Jr inevitable 54 in the summer of 2001 he joined Chelsea for 11 million 55 With several names such as former player Alan Curbishley now linked with the job Chairman Brown recruited from within the club 54 appointing reserve team coach Glenn Roeder as manager on 9 May 2001 46 He had already failed in management with Gillingham where he lost 22 of the 35 games he managed and Watford 56 His first big signings were the return of Don Hutchison for 5 million 57 and Czech centre back Tomas Repka 58 Finishing seventh in his first season 59 Roeder in his office at Upton Park suffered a blocked blood vessel in his brain 56 60 As Roeder needed medical help and recuperation former stalwart Trevor Brooking stood in as caretaker manager 60 Despite not losing another game the Hammers were relegated on the last day of the season at Birmingham City with a record for a relegated club of 42 points from a 38 game season Ten seasons of top tier football were over 61 Many top players including Joe Cole Di Canio and Kanoute all left the club The next season now in the second tier Roeder resumed his stint as manager Results were still poor however and after an away defeat to Rotherham United he was sacked on 24 August 2003 56 Brooking again took over as caretaker 62 He lost only one game a 2 0 away defeat to Gillingham 63 and is known as the best manager West Ham never had 64 Former Crystal Palace player and manager of Reading Alan Pardew was lined up to be the next bench boss Reading and their chairman John Madejski however were reluctant to let him leave 65 After serving a period of notice and gardening leave and with West Ham paying Reading 380 000 in compensation he was appointed manager on 18 October 2003 their tenth manager 66 Pardew set out to rebuild the side bringing in Nigel Reo Coker 67 Marlon Harewood 68 and Brian Deane 69 In his first season in charge they made the playoff final only to lose to Crystal Palace 70 His signings of Bobby Zamora Matthew Etherington and veterans Chris Powell and Teddy Sheringham saw West Ham finishing sixth and subsequently beat Preston North End 1 0 thanks to a Zamora goal in the 2005 playoff final securing a return to the Premier League 71 After ensuring promotion Pardew said It s a team effort We defended well and we re back where we belong 72 Final years at the Boleyn 2005 2016 On their return to the top division West Ham finished in ninth place 73 The highlight of the 2005 06 season however was reaching the FA Cup final and taking favourites Liverpool to a penalty shootout after a 3 3 draw West Ham lost the shootout but nonetheless gained entry to the following season s UEFA Cup as Liverpool had already qualified for the Champions League In August 2006 West Ham completed a major coup on the last day of the transfer window after completing the signings of Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano 74 The club was eventually bought by an Icelandic consortium led by Eggert Magnusson in November 2006 75 Manager Alan Pardew was sacked after poor form during the season 76 and was replaced by former Charlton Athletic manager Alan Curbishley 77 The signings of Mascherano and Tevez were investigated by the Premier League who were concerned that details of the transfers had been omitted from official records The club was found guilty and fined 5 5 million in April 2007 78 However West Ham avoided a points deduction which ultimately became critical in their avoidance of relegation at the end of the 2006 07 season Following on from this event Wigan Athletic chairman Dave Whelan supported by other sides facing possible relegation including Fulham and Sheffield United threatened legal action 79 West Ham escaped relegation by winning seven of their last nine games including a 1 0 win over Arsenal and on the last day of the season defeated newly crowned League Champions Manchester United 1 0 with a goal by Tevez to finish 15th 80 In the 2007 08 season West Ham remained reasonably consistently in the top half of the league table with Freddie Ljungberg in the team despite a slew of injuries new signing Craig Bellamy missed most of the campaign while Kieron Dyer was out from August 2007 81 82 The last game of the season at the Boleyn Ground saw West Ham draw 2 2 against Aston Villa ensuring a tenth place finish three points ahead of rivals Tottenham Hotspur It was a five place improvement on the previous season and most importantly West Ham were never under any realistic threat of relegation After a row with the board over the sale of defenders Anton Ferdinand and George McCartney to Sunderland manager Alan Curbishley resigned on 3 September 2008 83 His successor was former Chelsea striker Gianfranco Zola who took over on 11 September 2008 to become the club s first non British manager 84 In the 2008 09 season West Ham finished ninth a single place improvement Kevin Nolan lifts the trophy after the 2012 Football League Championship play off Final In the 2009 10 season West Ham started strongly with a 2 0 win over newly promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers with goals from Mark Noble and newly appointed captain Matthew Upson 85 A League Cup match against old rivals Millwall brought about violent riots outside the ground as well as pitch invasions and crowd trouble inside Upton Park 86 In August 2009 the financial concerns of Icelandic owners parent companies left the current owners unable to provide any funds until a new owner was found The club s shirt sponsor SBOBET provided the club with help to purchase a much needed striker the Italian Alessandro Diamanti 87 West Ham had a poor season which involved a prolonged battle against relegation 88 They finally secured their survival with two games remaining by defeating Wigan 3 2 89 The club managed to take 35 points from 38 games seven fewer than the total they had when relegated seven years prior 88 On 11 May 2010 two days after the end of the 2009 10 season West Ham announced the termination of Zola s contract with immediate effect 90 On 3 June 2010 Avram Grant signed a four year deal to become the next manager of West Ham subject to a work permit 91 West Ham s form continued to be poor with the team seldom outside the relegation zone 92 placing Grant s future as manager under serious doubt 93 A 4 0 Football League Cup quarter final win over Manchester United was an otherwise bright spot in a disappointing season 94 West Ham s form in the Premier League did not affect their form in the two domestic cups The Hammers reached the semi final of the League Cup before being eliminated by eventual winners Birmingham City as well as the quarter final of the FA cup before a 2 1 defeat at Stoke City 95 96 On 15 May 2011 West Ham s relegation to the Championship was confirmed after a comeback from Wigan at the DW Stadium With West Ham leading 0 2 at half time through two Demba Ba goals Wigan battled back to win 3 2 thanks to an added time strike from Charles N Zogbia Following the loss West Ham announced the sacking of manager Avram Grant just one season into his tenure 97 On 1 June 2011 Sam Allardyce was appointed as manager as Grant s replacement 98 The club finished third in the 2011 12 Football League Championship with 86 points and took part in the play offs They beat Cardiff City in the play off semi final 5 0 on aggregate to reach the final against Blackpool at Wembley on 19 May 2012 Carlton Cole opened the scoring and although Blackpool equalised early in the second half Ricardo Vaz Te scored the winner for West Ham in the 87th minute 99 West Ham on their return to the Premier League signed former players James Collins and George McCartney on permanent deals as well as record signing Matt Jarvis and Andy Carroll on loan 100 101 102 103 They won their first game of the season on 18 August 2012 1 0 against Aston Villa thanks to a Kevin Nolan goal 104 The highlight of the first half of the season was a 3 1 home win against reigning European champions Chelsea on 1 December 2012 which saw them in eighth position 105 and 12th at the end of the year 106 On 22 March 2013 West Ham secured a 99 year lease deal on the Olympic Stadium with it planned to be used as their home ground from the 2016 17 season 107 Tenth place was secured at the end of the season with nine home wins and only three away from home Only 11 away goals were scored the lowest of the entire league 108 In 2013 14 West Ham finished 13th in the Premier League 109 They also reached the semi finals of the League Cup before losing 9 0 on aggregate to eventual cup winners Manchester City 110 A feature of the season were the criticisms of manager Sam Allardyce by supporters relating to his perceived negative playing tactics 111 112 113 West Ham finished 12th in the 2014 15 Premier League one place higher than the previous season Minutes after the last game of the season on 24 May 2015 the club announced that Allardyce s contract would not be renewed and that they were seeking a new manager 114 By winning the Premier League Fair Play table for 2014 15 West Ham qualified for the 2015 16 UEFA Europa League entering at the first qualifying round 115 On 9 June 2015 former West Ham player Slaven Bilic was appointed as manager on a three year contract 116 In Bilic s fourth game in charge the team won at Anfield for the first time in 52 years beating Liverpool 0 3 with goals from Manuel Lanzini Mark Noble and Diafra Sakho 117 At the end of the season West Ham finished 7th in the Premier League The team broke several records for the club in the Premier League era including the highest number of points 62 the highest number of goals in a season 65 the fewest games lost in a season 8 and the lowest number of away defeats 5 118 The season also marked the last season where the team played at the Boleyn Ground with them moving to the London Stadium from next season ending their 112 year stay at the stadium Move to London Stadium and recent years 2016 Following Manchester United s win in the 2016 FA Cup Final West Ham took their Europa League place and qualified for the third qualifying round of the 2016 17 edition 119 At the end of the tough first season at the London Stadium the team finished 11th along with having to deal with the departure of star man Dimitri Payet 120 However the team suffered a poor start to the following season taking only two wins in their opening 11 games Following a 4 1 defeat to Liverpool at home and with the team threatened by relegation Bilic was sacked on 6 November 2017 He was replaced by former Sunderland boss David Moyes on a contract till the end of the season The team battled inconsistent form for the rest of the season but managed to avoid relegation and finish 13th Moyes was not offered a new contract and left the club on the expiration of it on 16 May 2018 121 On 22 May 2018 the club appointed former Manchester City boss Manuel Pellegrini as the new manager on a three year deal contract 122 In his first season in charge the Hammers finished 10th once again suffering from inconsistent form However after a poor first half to the following season Pellegrini was sacked in December 2019 with the team only one point above the relegation zone His last game in charge was a 2 1 home loss to Leicester City 123 He was replaced by David Moyes who returned for a second spell in charge a day later 124 On 22 July 2020 the club secured their Premier League status for another season following a 1 1 draw away to Manchester United 125 Ahead of the 2020 21 season West Ham s ownership attracted criticism including from club captain Mark Noble who publicly criticized the sale of academy graduate Grady Diangana 126 Despite losing the opening two games of the season West Ham s form improved and by the end of November the club sat in fifth place 127 The club would not drop out of a European spot for the rest of the season and went on to qualify for the 2021 22 UEFA Europa League group stages after finishing in 6th exceeding many expectations 128 Moyes signed a new 3 year contract on 12 June 2021 129 On 26 August 2021 West Ham were drawn in group H in the Europa League alongside Dinamo Zagreb Genk and Rapid Wien 130 2021 culminated with West Ham sitting fifth in the Premier League having reached the fifth round of the EFL Cup and winning group H of the Europa League West Ham won their first three games of 2022 temporarily elevating the club to fourth place in the Premier League 131 On 10 March 2022 West Ham lost 1 0 away to Sevilla in the Europa League round of 16 before a 2 0 win after extra time seven days later secured West Ham s place in a European quarter final for the first time in 41 years 132 On 14 April 2022 following a 1 1 draw a week prior at the London Stadium West Ham defeated French club Lyon 3 0 at the Parc Olympique Lyonnais to set up West Ham s first European semi final since 1976 133 Playing the same opposition they met in their 1976 European Cup Winners Cup semi final Eintracht Frankfurt the Hammers were knocked out of the Europa League following a 3 1 aggregate loss to the German side 134 At the end of the 2021 22 Premier League season West Ham confirmed a second successive season of European football qualifying for the UEFA Europa Conference League after finishing seventh The season was also notable for being Mark Noble s final as a West Ham player with the midfielder retiring from football after 18 years as a first team player at the club making 550 appearances in all competitions scoring 62 times 135 By finishing 7th in the 2021 22 Premier League West Ham qualified for the 2022 23 Europa Conference League entering at the play off stage 136 Crest Club crest 1987 1998 Club crest 1998 2016 Thames Ironworks FC The Thames Ironworks Team 1895 1900 used the Union Flag as its badge Rivet Hammers The principal element of the badge is the crossed pair of rivet hammers tools that were used in the shipbuilding industry The Blackwall and Canning Town neighbourhoods surrounding the Thames Ironworks echoed to the sound of hammers steam hammers sledge hammers and rivet hammers 137 Seven large mechanical steam hammers would punch small holes near the edges of the iron plates which would be joined to build the ships The plates would be put in place and fixed together with rivets by teams of five three inside the emerging vessel and two outside Inside the ship one member of the team would heat the rivets till they were white hot and using Iron Fingers blacksmith s tongs throw them to a second person known as a catch boy or putter in who would pick the rivet up and place it the hole also using tongs The third person was known as the holder on and he would then smash the rivet home with a sixteen pound sledge hammer and then use his sledgehammer to hold the rivet in place while the men on the other side flattened the other end of the rivet Outside the ship exposed to the elements two men with rivet hammers one right handed one left handed would hammer the protruding and still glowing rivet flat so securing one of the many points necessary to link each of the ship s large plates The crossed hammers were also incorporated into the coat of arms of the County Borough of West Ham and those of its successor the modern London Borough of Newham 138 The Thames Ironworks lay partly within what is now the London Borough of Tower Hamlets however the blacksmiths tongs in that Borough s coat of arms represent the local saint Dunstan the patron saint of Stepney and metalworkers 139 rather than the Ironworks Tower A yellow or white tower was added intermittently from the 1950s onwards 140 The primary reason for this seems to be to represent Anne Boleyn s Tower the most notable feature of Green Street House an originally Tudor group of buildings which stood next to the Boleyn Ground until demolished in 1955 Green Street House was also known as Boleyn Castle through an association with Anne Boleyn The manor was reputedly one of the sites at which Henry VIII courted his second queen though there is no documentary evidence to support the tradition 141 There are a number of other factors which may have influenced the inclusion of the stylised castle feature for instance to reflect the contribution made to the club by players of Old Castle Swifts The imposing towers roofs and doorway of the Engineering Department of the Thames Ironworks bore a strong resemblance 142 to the castle feature in earlier iterations of the badge The first verse of the club s anthem I m forever blowing bubbles begins I m dreaming dreams I m scheming schemes I m building castles high The White Tower of the Tower of London as emblematic of East London For hundreds of years up until 1900 inner East London had been known as the Tower Division 143 an area which owed military service to the Tower of London The originally whitewashed White Tower was used as insignia for the area for instance on cap badges of local units of the army In recognition of the West Ham Pals the 13th Battalion of the Essex Regiment which was raised in Stratford in 1915 and saw extensive action and heavy losses on the Western Front in the World War I The Battalion was formed from volunteers from West Ham and East London generally Their war cry was Up the Hammers The cap badge of the Essex Regiment was the castle and key of Gibraltar though the unit made an unsuccessful request to the War Office that crossed hammers could be used instead 144 The adoption in 1904 of Boleyn Castle FC 145 as the club s reserve side when they took over their grounds on the site Shield A shield has been used in many iterations of the club badge and the shape of the 2016 version matches the cross section on the hull of HMS Warrior the most famous ship built by the Thames Ironworks 146 However examining draughtsman s diagrams 147 of the ship casts doubt on the resemblance between the shield and the ship Iterations The crest was redesigned and updated in the late 1990s featuring a wider yellow castle with fewer cruciform windows along with the peaked roofs being removed the tops of the towers had previously made the castle appear more akin to Disneyland s Sleeping Beauty s Castle than a functioning fortress The designer also altered other details to give a more substantial feel to the iconography 148 When the club rebuilt the west stand of the Boleyn Ground construction finished 2001 02 the castle from the redesigned badge was incorporated into the structure at the main entrance to the ground A pair of towers were prominent features of the ground s appearance both bearing large club badges 149 A new badge was introduced following the end of the 2015 16 season when the club moved into the Olympic Stadium 150 It removes the Boleyn Castle due to the club moving away leaving just the crossed hammers which the club says is inspired by the crest before and during the career of Bobby Moore The word London was introduced below to establish the club firmly on the international stage and the more minimalist approach is to give a strong statement that is instantly West Ham United The shape of the crest is that of the hull of HMS Warrior the first ironclad warship in the Royal Navy which was built by Thames Ironworks 151 ColoursThe original colours of the team were dark blue due to Thames Ironworks chairman Arnold Hills being a former student of Oxford University see Oxford blue However the team used a variety of kits including the claret and sky blue house colours of Thames Ironworks as well as sky blue or white kit 152 153 The Irons permanently adopted claret and blue for home colours in 1903 154 One story suggests that Thames Ironworks right half Charlie Dove received the Aston Villa kit from William Belton who was a professional sprinter of national repute as well as being involved with the coaching at Thames Ironworks Belton had been at a fair in Birmingham close to Villa Park the home ground of Aston Villa and was challenged to a race against four Villa players who wagered money that one of them would win Belton defeated them and when they were unable to pay the bet one of the Villa players who was responsible for washing the team s kit offered a complete team s football kits to Belton in payment The Aston Villa player subsequently reported to his club that the kit was missing 155 This however is often disputed 156 Thames Ironworks and later West Ham United retained the claret yoke blue sleeves design but also continued to use their previously favoured colours for their away kits Supporters hooliganism and rivalriesSupporters Main article West Ham United F C supporters I m forever blowing bubbles Pretty bubbles in the air They fly so high nearly reach the sky Then like my dreams they fade and die Fortune s always hiding I ve looked everywhere I m forever blowing bubbles pretty bubbles in the air original lyrics to Bubbles from John Helliar 157 The team s supporters are famous for their rendition of the chorus of their team s anthem I m Forever Blowing Bubbles introduced to the club by former manager Charlie Paynter in the late 1920s A Pears soap commercial featuring the curly haired child in the Millais Bubbles was well known at the time The child resembled a player Billy J Bubbles Murray from local schoolboy team Park School where the headmaster was Cornelius Beal Beal was known locally for his music and rhyme and wrote special words to the tune of I m Forever Blowing Bubbles whenever any player was having a good game 158 Beal was a friend of Paynter while Murray was a West Ham trialist and played football at schoolboy level with a number of West Ham players such as Jim Barrett Through this contrivance of association the club s fans took it upon themselves to begin singing the popular music hall tune before home games sometimes reinforced by the presence of a house band requested to play the refrain by Charlie Paynter 157 The 1975 FA Cup version which contains the original lyrics and features vocals from the team s then current players is always played before home games with the home crowd joining in and carrying the song on after the music stops at the verse line Fortune s always hiding 159 Bubbles was published as a waltz whereas during the game the crowd sing it in common time 159 160 Since the 1950s fans have also sung the East London pub song Knees Up Mother Brown The song title is also the name of an internet forum related to the club 161 Like other teams the team also have a history of adopting or adapting popular songs of the day to fit particular events themes players or personas These have included serious renditions of theatre and movie classics such as The Bells are Ringing along with more pun laden or humorous efforts such as chanting former player Paolo Di Canio s name to the canzone La donna e mobile by Giuseppe Verdi 162 or D I Canio to the tune of Ottawan s D I S C O or the chant of Who Let The Potts Out to the tune of Baha Men s Who Let the Dogs Out when Steve Potts could be seen warming up to come on as substitute late on in his career or That s Zamora to the tune of Dean Martin s 1953 That s Amore in honour of former striker Bobby Zamora Other former players to be serenaded include Christian Dailly with vastly altered lyrics to Frankie Valli s Can t Take My Eyes Off You 163 Joe Cole and Carlton Cole with Spandau Ballet s Gold song title sung as Cole 164 and Ludek Miklosko A song for West Ham favourite Bobby Moore Viva Bobby Moore is also sung based on The Business s Oi rendition of the song based on The Equals 1969 release Viva Bobby Joe 165 In 2016 supporters adapted the lyrics of Billy Ray Cyrus Achy Breaky Heart in honour of Dimitri Payet 166 Bow Bells are ringing for the Claret and Blue Bow Bells are ringing for the Claret and Blue When the Hammers are scoring and the South Bank are roaring And the money is pouring for the Claret and Blue Claret and Blue No relegation for the Claret and Blue Just celebration for the Claret and Blue One day we ll win a cup or two or three Or four or more for West Ham and the Claret and Blue Supporters song to the tune of The Bells are Ringing circa 1960 167 When the players come onto the pitch and at other times of celebration as the song I m forever blowing bubbles is being sung around 60 bubble machines produce copious bubbles that rise high into the stadium 168 Fans gained national attention after giving a torrid time to David Beckham in his first away match of 1998 99 the season after the England midfielder was sent off for a petulant foul on Diego Simeone 169 Coinciding with the game there were claims and an image taken that fans organised by a hardcore had hung an effigy of the player outside a local pub Although it was later revealed that the pub was in South East London the heartland of West Ham s greatest rivals Millwall The West Ham fans did however boo Beckham s every touch of the ball during the game 170 They have also displayed a particular zeal when it comes to abusing former players particularly those who are perceived to have abandoned the club or performed some disservice Paul Ince 171 172 Frank Lampard 173 Jermain Defoe 174 Nigel Reo Coker 175 and Jesse Lingard 176 have famously borne the brunt of verbal assaults and a guaranteed hostile reception at Upton Park However players such as Joe Cole Michael Carrick Rio Ferdinand Bobby Zamora and Carlos Tevez receive applause and even standing ovations in honour of their contributions during their time at the club Joe Cole subsequently rejoined West Ham from Liverpool midway through the 2012 13 season 177 West Ham fans display their rosettes scarves and novelty hammers at an FA Cup match in 1933 Hooliganism The origins of West Ham s links with organised football related violence starts in the 1960s with the establishment of The Mile End Mob named after an area of the East End of London 178 During the 1970s and 1980s the main era for organised football related violence West Ham gained further notoriety for the levels of hooliganism in their fan base and antagonistic behaviour towards both their own and rival fans and the police During the 1970s in particular rival groups of West Ham fans from neighbouring areas often did battle with each other at games most often groups from the neighbouring districts of Barking and Dagenham 179 The Inter City Firm were one of the first casuals so called because they avoided police supervision by not wearing football related clothing and travelled to away matches on regular InterCity trains rather than on the cheap and more tightly policed football special charter trains The group were an infamous West Ham aligned gang As the firm s moniker inter city suggests violent activities were not confined to local derbies the hooligans were content to cause trouble at any game though nearby teams often bore the brunt 179 Both the 1989 film The Firm starring Gary Oldman 180 and the 2005 film Green Street starring Elijah Wood and Charlie Hunnam are based upon West Ham hooligan firms 181 Rivalries See also Millwall F C West Ham United F C rivalry London derby and East London derby West Ham have strong rivalries with several other clubs Most of these are with other London clubs especially with Tottenham Hotspur in an East versus North London derby 182 and with Chelsea in an East versus West London rivalry The rivalry between West Ham and Tottenham has been fuelled by players such as Michael Carrick Martin Peters Paul Allen Jermain Defoe and Scott Parker leaving the Hammers to join Tottenham The rivalry deepened with the appointment of former Hammers manager Harry Redknapp as Tottenham s manager 183 Since the 2006 07 Premier League season West Ham have developed a strong rivalry with Yorkshire club Sheffield United due to the dubious circumstances surrounding the transfer of Carlos Tevez who helped West Ham avoid relegation at Sheffield United s expense 184 185 The Champions statue of Moore with the World Cup Hurst Peters and Ray Wilson boarded up for protection before the visits of Millwall on 25 August 2009 and Tottenham Hotspur in March 2016 The oldest and fiercest rivalry is with Millwall The two sides are local rivals having both been founded by employees of local companies with players living in the same localities The early history of both clubs are intertwined with West Ham proving to be the more successful in a number of meetings between the two teams at the time resulting in West Ham being promoted at the expense of Millwall Millwall later declined to join the fledgling Football League while West Ham went on to the top division and an FA Cup final Later in the 1920s the rivalry was intensified during strike action which Isle of Dogs based companies i e Millwall fans refused to support breeding ill will between the two camps the bitterness of this betrayal enduring for years In 1972 a Millwall supporter died at New Cross station after falling out of a train during a fight with West Ham fans 186 The rivalry between West Ham and Millwall has involved considerable violence and is one of the most notorious within the world of football hooliganism The teams were drawn against each other in the second round of the 2009 10 League Cup and met on 25 August 2009 at Upton Park This was the first time in four years that the two clubs had played each other and the first ever in the League Cup Clashes between fans occurred outside the ground resulting in violence erupting up to half a mile away from the stadium with serious injuries including the stabbing of a Millwall supporter damage to property and several arrests reported by police There were also several pitch invasions by West Ham supporters which brought a temporary halt to the game 187 In January 2010 West Ham were fined after being found guilty of violent threatening obscene and provocative behaviour and of failing to prevent their fans entering the field of play Millwall were cleared of all charges 188 Nicknames The team and supporters are known as The Hammers in part because of the club s origins as Thames Ironworks 189 They are also known as The Irons 189 StadiumSee also Memorial Grounds Boleyn Ground and London Stadium West Ham moved into the Olympic Stadium in 2016 Panorama of the interior of the London Stadium West Ham and Domzale enter the pitch for first ever football game at London Stadium Until 2016 West Ham were based at the Boleyn Ground commonly known as Upton Park in Newham East London The capacity of the Boleyn Ground was 35 016 190 and had been West Ham s ground since 1904 Prior to this in their previous incarnation of Thames Ironworks they played at Hermit Road in Canning Town and briefly at Browning Road in East Ham before moving to the Memorial Grounds in Plaistow in 1897 They retained the stadium during their transition to becoming West Ham United and were there for a further four seasons before moving to the Boleyn Ground in 1904 Former chairman Eggert Magnusson made clear his ambition for West Ham to move to the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Summer Olympics a desire reiterated by current chairmen Gold and Sullivan when they assumed control of the club stating that they felt it was a logical move for the Government as it was in the borough of Newham In February 2010 however the British Olympic Minister stated that West Ham would not get the stadium and it would instead be used for track and field 191 On 17 May 2010 West Ham and Newham London Borough Council submitted a formal plan to the Olympic Park Legacy Company for the use of the Olympic Stadium following the 2012 Summer Olympics The proposal was for a stadium with a capacity of 60 000 which would retain a competition athletics track The proposal was welcomed by the chairman of UK athletics Ed Warner who said I think it will feel great as a football stadium and I speak as a football fan as well the chairman of UK Athletics I think you d find West Ham would cover the track in the winter season so it wouldn t look like you had a track between you and the pitch 192 193 On 30 September 2010 the club formally submitted its bid for the Olympic Stadium with a presentation at 10 Downing Street 194 and on 8 October 2010 the world s largest live entertainment company Live Nation endorsed the club s Olympic Stadium plans 195 Three days after Live Nation s endorsement UK Athletics confirmed its formal support for West Ham United and Newham Council in their joint bid to take over the Olympic Stadium in legacy mode 196 In November 2010 West Ham began a search for potential developers for informal discussions about what would happen to the ground if it were to win its bid to take over the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games According to the club the site could be vacated and open to redevelopment by summer 2014 197 On 11 February 2011 the Olympic Park Legacy Committee selected West Ham as the preferred club to move into the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games 198 199 The decision in favour of West Ham s bid was unanimous 200 although controversial as local Premier League rivals Tottenham Hotspur had also been bidding for the venue 201 Hopes of moving to the stadium however were since placed under doubt following a legal challenge by Tottenham and Leyton Orient with Leyton Orient a perennial since 1980 tier 3 to tier 5 club fearful that having West Ham playing less than a mile away from their Brisbane Road ground could steal support from the club and put them out of business 202 Both clubs appeal for a judicial review however were rejected on 23 June 2011 203 On 3 March 2011 West Ham s proposed move to the Olympic Stadium was formally approved by the British government and Mayor of London Boris Johnson On 8 June 2011 it was confirmed that the Westfield Shopping Centre had been in detailed talks with West Ham for naming rights of the new Olympic stadium which could be called the Westfield Stadium 204 West Ham announced plans to move from the Boleyn Ground from the 2014 15 season 205 In August 2011 an independent investigation initiated by the Olympic Park Legacy Company upheld the decision to award West Ham the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games 206 On 29 June 2011 however Tottenham announced that they were returning to the High Court again to fight the decision to award West Ham the stadium in an oral hearing to try to overturn the original High Court appeal being rejected 207 On 25 August 2011 Tottenham and Leyton Orient were in fact granted a judicial review by the High Court into the Olympic Stadium bidding process 208 On 11 October 2011 the deal to award West Ham the Olympic Stadium collapsed over concerns of legal pressure with the government deciding that the stadium will stay in public ownership 209 Six days later Tottenham and Leyton Orient announced they had ended their legal challenge after the deal collapsed 210 Once the original deal collapsed a new process to select a tenant was begun West Ham immediately announced plans to become tenants of the stadium 211 By March 2012 West Ham was one of the four bidders for the Stadium With a decision due by the Olympic Park Legacy Company in May 2012 Mayor of London Boris Johnson delayed the final selection of future tenants until completion of the 2012 Summer Olympics stating that it was overwhelmingly likely that the tenants would be West Ham 212 213 It was announced on 22 March 2013 that West Ham had signed a 99 year lease for the Olympic Stadium after the government agreed to put in an extra 1 million towards the costs of converting the site The club s plan was to move into the stadium prior to the start of the 2016 17 season 214 Supporters of rival clubs had pressed for an inquiry into the granting of West Ham s tenancy arguing that West Ham were being given an unfair advantage by the arrangement In September 2015 however the government rejected holding such an inquiry 215 The Academy of FootballMain article West Ham United F C Under 21s and Academy Academy of Football The club promotes the popular idea of West Ham being The Academy of Football with the moniker adorning the ground s new stadium facade The comment predominantly refers to the club s youth development system which was established by manager Ted Fenton during the 1950s that has seen a number of international players emerge through the ranks 216 Most notably the club contributed three players to the World Cup winning England side of 1966 including club icon Bobby Moore as well as Martin Peters and Geoff Hurst who between them scored all of England s goals in the eventual 4 2 victory Other academy players that have gone on to play for England have included Trevor Brooking Alvin Martin Tony Cottee and Paul Ince Since the late 1990s Rio Ferdinand Frank Lampard Joe Cole Michael Carrick and Glen Johnson began their careers at West Ham and all went on to play for much bigger clubs Most recently the likes of first teamers Mark Noble and James Tomkins as well as Welsh international Jack Collison have emerged through the Academy Frustratingly for fans and managers alike 217 the club has struggled to retain many of these players due to predominantly financial reasons 218 West Ham during the 2007 08 season had an average of 6 61 English players in the starting line up higher than any other Premier League club 219 which cemented their status as one of the few Premier League clubs left that were recognised to be bringing through young English talent and were recognised as having homegrown players Between 2000 and 2011 the club produced eight England players as many as Manchester United and one fewer than Arsenal 220 Much of the success of the Academy has been attributed to Tony Carr who was West Ham youth coach between 1973 and 2014 221 PlayersFirst team squad As of 22 January 2023 222 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK POL Lukasz Fabianski 3rd captain 2 DF ENG Ben Johnson3 DF ENG Aaron Cresswell vice captain 4 DF FRA Kurt Zouma5 DF CZE Vladimir Coufal7 FW ITA Gianluca Scamacca8 MF ESP Pablo Fornals9 FW JAM Michail Antonio 5th captain 10 MF ARG Manuel Lanzini11 MF BRA Lucas Paqueta12 MF ENG Flynn Downes13 GK FRA Alphonse Areola14 MF CIV Maxwel Cornet No Pos Nation Player18 FW ENG Danny Ings20 FW ENG Jarrod Bowen21 DF ITA Angelo Ogbonna 4th captain 22 MF ALG Said Benrahma24 DF GER Thilo Kehrer27 DF MAR Nayef Aguerd28 MF CZE Tomas Soucek32 MF IRL Conor Coventry33 DF ITA Emerson Palmieri35 GK IRL Darren Randolph41 MF ENG Declan Rice captain 50 DF SCO Harrison Ashby72 FW ENG Divin MubamaOther players under contract Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player40 FW IRL Armstrong Oko Flex51 MF ENG Daniel Chesters59 MF ENG Keenan Forson No Pos Nation Player62 MF ENG Freddie Potts75 DF ENG Jamal Baptiste DF BRA LuizaoOut on loan Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player GK ENG Nathan Trott at Vejle until 30 June 2023 GK ENG Joseph Anang at Derby County until 30 June 2023 DF ENG Manny Longelo at Birmingham until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player DF COD Arthur Masuaku at Besiktas until 30 June 2023 MF CRO Nikola Vlasic at Torino until 30 June 2023 FW IRL Mipo Odubeko at Port Vale until 30 June 2023 Under 21s Main article West Ham United F C Under 21s and AcademyFormer playersRetired numbers Main article Retired numbers in association football 6 Bobby Moore Defender 1958 74 posthumous honour 223 38 Dylan Tombides Striker 2010 14 posthumous honour 224 Club captains Dates Name Notes1895 97 Bob Stevenson1897 99 Walter Tranter1899 Tom Bradshaw Bradshaw died on Christmas Day 1899 1899 01 Charlie Dove1901 03 Unknownc 1903 04 Ernest Watts1904 07 David Gardner1907 11 Frank Piercy1911 14 Tommy Randall1914 15 Dick Leafe1915 22 Billy Cope Also captained fixtures during World War I 1922 25 George Kay1925 26 Billy Moore1926 28 Jack Hebden1928 32 Stanley Earle1932 37 Jim Barrett1937 46 Charles Bicknell Remained captain for fixtures during World War II 1946 51 Dick Walker Following his retirement he helped to clean the boots of younger players1951 57 Malcolm Allison Fell ill with tuberculosis after a game in 1957 and consequently had a lung removed1957 60 Noel Cantwell First captain not from the United Kingdom1960 62 Phil Woosnam1962 74 Bobby Moore1974 84 Billy Bonds1984 90 Alvin Martin1990 92 Ian Bishop1992 93 Julian Dicks1993 96 Steve Potts1996 97 Julian Dicks1997 2001 Steve Lomas2001 03 Paolo Di Canio First captain not from the British Isles2003 Joe Cole2003 05 Christian Dailly2005 07 Nigel Reo Coker2007 09 Lucas Neill First captain from outside Europe2009 11 Matthew Upson2011 15 Kevin Nolan2015 22 Mark Noble2022 Declan RiceWest Ham dream team See also Category West Ham United F C players In the 2003 book The Official West Ham United Dream Team 500 fans were quizzed for who would be in their all time Hammers Eleven The voting was restricted to players from the modern era ParkesMartinMooreStewartDicksBondsPetersDevonshireBrookingHurstDi Canio 1 GK ENG Phil Parkes2 DF SCO Ray Stewart3 DF ENG Julian Dicks4 MF ENG Billy Bonds5 DF ENG Alvin Martin6 DF ENG Bobby Moore captain 7 MF ENG Martin Peters8 MF ENG Trevor Brooking9 FW ENG Geoff Hurst10 FW ITA Paolo Di Canio11 MF ENG Alan Devonshire Hammer of the Year This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The following is a list of recipients of the Hammer of the Year award 225 The first award to Andy Malcolm in 1957 58 was nominated by a journalist at The Stratford Express Subsequent recipients would be awarded the title after a vote by supporters 226 Trevor Brooking was the first player for West Ham United to have been honoured with the title of Hammer of the Year three times in a row in 1976 1977 and 1978 Scott Parker repeated this feat between 2009 and 2011 227 Brooking has won the award the most times on five occasions 1972 1976 1977 1978 and 1984 Bobby Moore Billy Bonds and Julian Dicks have each won it four times Bobby Moore has been runner up four times while Billy Bonds and Tony Cottee have both been runners up three times Billy Bonds and Trevor Brooking s wins are notable in the amount of time between first and last Hammer of the Year award Bonds has 16 years separating his wins whilst Brooking has 12 Year Winner Runner up1958 Andy Malcolm 1959 Ken Brown 1960 Malcolm Musgrove 1961 Bobby Moore 1962 Lawrie Leslie John Dick1963 Bobby Moore Jim Standen1964 Johnny Byrne Bobby Moore1965 Martin Peters Bobby Moore1966 Geoff Hurst Martin Peters1967 Geoff Hurst Bobby Moore1968 Bobby Moore Trevor Brooking1969 Geoff Hurst Billy Bonds1970 Bobby Moore Billy Bonds1971 Billy Bonds Bobby Moore1972 Trevor Brooking Bobby Ferguson1973 Pop Robson Trevor Brooking1974 Billy Bonds Mervyn Day1975 Billy Bonds Mervyn Day1976 Trevor Brooking Graham Paddon1977 Trevor Brooking Alan Devonshire1978 Trevor Brooking 1979 Alan Devonshire Pop Robson1980 Alvin Martin Ray Stewart1981 Phil Parkes Geoff Pike1982 Alvin Martin Trevor Brooking1983 Alvin Martin Phil Parkes1984 Trevor Brooking Tony Cottee1985 Paul Allen Tony Cottee1986 Tony Cottee Frank McAvennie1987 Billy Bonds Mark Ward1988 Stewart Robson Billy Bonds1989 Paul Ince Julian Dicks Year Winner Runner up1990 Julian Dicks Stuart Slater1991 Ludek Miklosko George Parris1992 Julian Dicks Steve Potts1993 Steve Potts Kevin Keen1994 Trevor Morley Steve Potts1995 Steve Potts Tony Cottee1996 Julian Dicks Iain Dowie1997 Julian Dicks Slaven Bilic1998 Rio Ferdinand Steve Lomas1999 Shaka Hislop Ian Pearce2000 Paolo Di Canio Trevor Sinclair2001 Stuart Pearce Paolo Di Canio2002 Sebastien Schemmel Joe Cole2003 Joe Cole Jermain Defoe2004 Matthew Etherington Michael Carrick2005 Teddy Sheringham Mark Noble2006 Danny Gabbidon Marlon Harewood2007 Carlos Tevez Bobby Zamora2008 Robert Green George McCartney2009 Scott Parker Robert Green2010 Scott Parker Alessandro Diamanti2011 Scott Parker Robert Green2012 Mark Noble James Tomkins2013 Winston Reid Jussi Jaaskelainen2014 Mark Noble Adrian2015 Aaron Cresswell Adrian2016 Dimitri Payet Michail Antonio2017 Michail Antonio Manuel Lanzini2018 Marko Arnautovic Declan Rice2019 Lukasz Fabianski Declan Rice2020 Declan Rice Angelo Ogbonna2021 Tomas Soucek Vladimir Coufal2022 Declan Rice Jarrod BowenLifetime Achievement Award In 2013 West Ham United introduced a new annual award the West Ham United Lifetime Achievement Award The first award was presented to club record appearance maker Billy Bonds who picked up the award on the pitch at Upton Park before kick off against Cardiff City on the opening day of the 2013 14 season 228 The 2014 award was presented to Sir Trevor Brooking a record five time winner of the Hammer of the Year award Brooking received the award before the 2014 15 season curtain raiser against Tottenham Hotspur on 16 August 2014 229 Brooking had already had the Centenary Stand at the Boleyn ground named after him in 2009 The 2015 award was awarded to Martin Peters 230 On 3 May 2016 it was announced via the club s official website that the fourth recipient of the award would be Sir Geoff Hurst the club s second all time leading goalscorer and scorer of a hat trick in the 1966 World Cup Final Hurst would be honoured at the club s 2015 16 Player Awards Ceremony 231 Ken Brown became the sixth recipient of the award in April 2018 232 The 2019 honour was awarded to midfielder Ronnie Boyce who made his debut for West Ham in 1960 233 Year Winner2013 Billy Bonds MBE2014 Sir Trevor Brooking2015 Martin Peters MBE2016 Sir Geoff Hurst2017 Bobby Moore OBE2018 Ken Brown2019 Ronnie BoyceMark Noble Young Hammer of the Year Award In honour of Mark Noble who was also the award winner in 2004 and had been serving the club since 2000 and retired in 2022 the Young Hammer of the Year award was renamed to Mark Noble Young Hammer of the Year Award on 9 May 2022 234 Year Winner2003 Glen Johnson2004 Mark Noble2005 Mark Noble2006 Anton Ferdinand2007 Junior Stanislas2008 James Tomkins2009 Jack Collison2010 Zavon Hines2011 Freddie Sears2012 Dan Potts2013 George Moncur2014 Sam Howes2015 Reece Burke2016 Reece Oxford2017 Declan Rice2018 Declan Rice2019 Declan Rice2020 Nathan Holland2021 Ben Johnson2022 Ben JohnsonCurrent staffAs of 4 January 2023Staff and directors 235 236 Position NameChairman David SullivanVice chairman Karren Brady CBEDirector Daniel KretinskyDirector Pavel HorskyDirector Peter MitkaDirector Jiri SvarcDirector Jack SullivanDirector David Sullivan JrDirector Daniel CunninghamNon executive director Daniel HarrisNon executive director J Albert SmithHonorary life president Terry BrownClub secretary Andrew PincherChief finance officer Andy MollettProjects amp stadium operations director Philippa CartwrightExecutive director marketing amp communications Tara WarrenClub ambassador Tony Carr MBESporting Director Mark NobleCoaching staff 237 238 239 Position NameManager David MoyesAssistant manager Billy McKinlayConsultant Alan IrvineFirst team coach Kevin NolanFirst team coach Paul NevinFirst team coach Mark WarburtonFirst Team goalkeeper coach Xavi ValeroFitness coach Nick DaviesAcademy manager amp head of coaching and player development Terry WestleyAcademy operations and player development manager Ricky Martin 240 Head of medical services Richard Collinge 241 First team rehabilitation fitness coach Eamon SwiftFirst team physiotherapist Dominic RoganManagersWest Ham United have had 17 permanent managers in their history and an additional three caretaker managers Main article List of West Ham United F C managers Manager Caretaker Manager Period G W D L Win Honours Notes major honours shown in bold Syd King 1901 32 638 248 146 244 38 87 Club s longest serving manager 31 years FA Cup runners up 1923 Charlie Paynter 1932 50 480 198 116 166 41 25 Ted Fenton 1950 61 484 193 107 184 39 87 Division Two Champions 1957 58 Ron Greenwood 1961 74 613 215 165 233 35 07 FA Cup winners 1964 UEFA Cup Winners Cup winners 1965 League Cup runners up 1966 John Lyall 1974 89 708 277 176 255 39 12 FA Cup winners 1975 1980 Highest league finish in club s history 3rd in Division One 1985 86 UEFA Cup Winners Cup runners up 1976 League Cup runners up 1981 Lou Macari 1989 90 38 14 12 12 36 84 Ronnie Boyce 1990 1 0 1 0 0 00 Billy Bonds 1990 94 227 99 61 67 43 61 Harry Redknapp 1994 01 327 121 85 121 37 00 UEFA Intertoto Cup joint winners 1999 European qualification Club s highest Premier League finish 5th 1998 99 Glenn Roeder 2001 03 86 27 23 36 31 40 Trevor Brooking 2003 14 9 4 1 64 29 Alan Pardew 2003 06 163 67 38 58 41 10 Championship Play off Winners 2005 FA Cup runners up 2006 UEFA Cup qualification Alan Curbishley 2006 08 71 28 14 29 39 44 Kevin Keen 2008 1 0 0 1 0 00 Gianfranco Zola 2008 10 80 23 21 36 28 75 Club s first non British manager Avram Grant 2010 11 47 15 12 20 31 91 Club s first non EU manager Kevin Keen 2011 1 0 0 1 0 00 Sam Allardyce 2011 15 181 68 46 67 37 57 Championship Play off Winners 2012 Slaven Bilic 242 2015 17 111 42 30 39 37 84 David Moyes 2017 18 31 9 10 12 29 03 Manuel Pellegrini 2018 19 64 24 11 29 37 50 David Moyes 2019 158 70 33 55 44 30 Highest win percentage of club s permanent managersOwnership and chairmenFurther information Ownership of West Ham United F C In January 2010 David Sullivan and David Gold acquired a 50 share in West Ham given them overall operational and commercial control 243 At the end of May 2010 Gold and Sullivan purchased a further 10 stake in the club at a cost of 8 million Taking their controlling stake to 60 they announced that they could open up shares for fans to purchase 244 On 9 August 2010 Gold and Sullivan increased their shares up to 30 6 each with minority investors which included former owner Terry Brown purchasing a further 3 8 of the club at a cost of around 4 million leaving Icelandic Straumur Investment Bank owning 35 of the club 245 On 2 July 2013 Sullivan acquired a further 25 of shares after restructuring the debt of the club leaving Straumur Bank with just 10 246 In order to clear club debts before a move to the Olympic Stadium in 2016 in December 2014 Sullivan announced the availability for sale of 20 of the club 247 The clearing of club debts given in July 2013 as 70 million was given as a pre condition to a move to the Olympic Stadium 248 On 10 November 2021 the club announced Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky had acquired 27 of the shares of the club reducing Gold and Sullivan s shares at the club 249 Co chairman David Gold passed away on 4 January 2023 leaving Sullivan as the sole chairman 250 European and international recordFurther information West Ham United F C in international footballHonours 251 Domestic Leagues First Division Premier League Tier 1 252 Highest placing 3rd 1985 86 Second Division Championship Tier 2 252 Champions 2 1957 58 1980 81 Runners up 1922 23 1990 91 1992 93 Play off winners 2005 2012 Southern League First Division Highest placing 3rd 1912 13 Western Football League Champions 1906 07 Section A champions 1906 07Cups FA Cup Winners 3 1963 64 1974 75 1979 80 Runners up 1922 23 2005 06 League Cup Runners up 1965 66 1980 81 FA Charity Shield Winners 1964 shared Runners up 1975 1980 Football League War Cup Winners 1940 Southern Floodlit Cup Winners 1956 Runners up 1960 London Challenge Cup Winners 9 1924 25 1925 26 1929 30 1946 47 1948 49 1952 53 1956 57 1967 68 1968 69 Essex Professional Cup Winners 3 1951 1955 shared 1959 Runners up 1952 1958 London Charity Cup 253 Runners up 1902Wartime London Combination Champions 1916 17 Runners up 1915 16 Supplementary Tournament 1917 18 League South A Runners up 1939 40 League South C Runners up 1939 40 Regional League South Runners up 1940 41 League South Runners up 1943 44 1944 45As Thames Ironworks F C Southern League Division Two Winners 1898 99 London champions 1898 99 London League Winners 1897 98 Runners up 1896 97 West Ham Charity Cup Winners 1896 Runners up 1897European European Cup Winners Cup Winners 1964 65 Runners up 1975 76 UEFA Intertoto Cup Winners 1999 Anglo Italian League Cup Runners up 1975International International Soccer League Winners 1963 American Challenge Cup Runners up 1963Indoor London Fives Winners 1967 1970 1984 Runners up 1955 1957 1960 1971 1974 1977 1981Other BBC Sports Personality of the Year Team Award 1965 254 Honorary Degree awarded to the club in 2009 by the University of East London 255 Statistics and recordsMain article List of West Ham United F C records and statistics Attendance Record attendance 62 467 vs Brentford Premier League 30 December 2022 256 At the Boleyn Ground 42 322 v Tottenham Hotspur Division One 17 October 1970 257 Lowest league attendance 4 373 v Doncaster Rovers Division Two 24 February 1955Transfers Biggest transfer fee paid 51 2 million to Lyon for Lucas Paqueta 29 August 2022 258 259 Biggest transfer fee received 25 million from Marseille for Dimitri Payet 29 January 2017 260 Record results and performances Victories League Premier League Home 6 0 v Barnsley 10 January 1998 Away 5 0 v Derby County 10 November 2007 Division One Home 8 0 v Sunderland 19 October 1968 Away 6 1 v Manchester City 8 September 1962 Division Two Home 8 0 v Rotherham United 8 March 1958 Away 6 0 v Leicester City 15 February 1923 FA Cup Home 8 1 v Chesterfield round one 10 January 1914 Away 5 0 v Chatham Town 5th qualifying round 28 November 1903 League Cup Home 10 0 v Bury round two second leg 12 1 aggregate scoreline 25 October 1983 Away 5 1 v Cardiff City semi final second leg 10 3 aggregate scoreline 2 February 1966 Away 5 1 v Walsall round two 13 September 1967 European Cup Winners Cup Home 5 1 v Castilla CF round one second leg 6 4 aggregate scoreline 1 October 1980 Away 2 1 v Lausanne quarter final second leg 6 4 aggregate scoreline 16 March 1965 UEFA Cup Europa League Home 3 0 v Osijek round one first leg 16 September 1999 Home 3 0 v Lusitanos first qualifying round first leg 2 July 2015 Home 3 0 v Genk group H 21 October 2021 Away 3 0 v Lyon quarter final second leg 4 1 aggregate score line 14 April 2022Defeats League Premier League Away 0 6 v Everton 8 May 1999 Division One Home 2 8 v Blackburn Rovers 26 December 1963 Away 0 7 v Sheffield Wednesday 28 November 1959 Division Two Away 0 7 v Barnsley 1 September 1919 FA Cup Away 0 6 v Manchester United round four 26 January 2003 League Cup Away 0 6 v Oldham Athletic semi final first leg 14 February 1990 Away 0 6 v Manchester City semi final first leg 8 January 2014 European Cup Winners Cup Home 1 4 v Dinamo Tbilisi quarter final first leg 2 4 aggregate scoreline 4 March 1981 Away 2 4 v FC Den Haag quarter final first leg 5 5 aggregate scoreline West Ham won on away goals 3 March 1976 Neutral 2 4 v Anderlecht Final 5 May 1976 UEFA Cup Home 0 1 v Palermo round one first leg 14 September 2006 Away 0 3 v Palermo round one second leg 28 September 2006Club league highs and lows See also List of West Ham United F C seasons Home Most Most home wins 19 1980 81 Most home draws 10 1981 82 Most home defeats 10 1988 89 Most home goals scored 59 1958 59 Most home goals conceded 44 1930 31 Fewest Fewest home wins 3 1988 89 Fewest home draws 1 1934 35 1980 81 Fewest home defeats 1 1957 58 1980 81 Fewest home goals scored 19 1988 89 Fewest home goals conceded 11 1920 21 1922 23 Away Most Most away wins 13 2011 12 Most away draws 10 1968 69 Most away defeats 17 1932 33 Most away goals scored 45 1957 58 Most away goals conceded 70 1931 32 Fewest Fewest away wins 1 1925 26 1932 33 1937 38 1960 61 2009 10 Fewest away draws 1 1982 83 Fewest away defeats 3 1980 81 Fewest away goals scored 12 1996 97 Fewest away goals conceded 16 1990 91 Total Most Most wins 28 1980 81 Most draws 18 1968 69 Most defeats 23 1931 32 Most goals scored 101 1957 58 Most goals conceded 107 1931 32 Fewest Fewest wins 7 2010 11 Fewest draws 4 1934 35 1964 65 1982 83 Fewest defeats 4 1980 81 Fewest goals scored 37 1988 89 1991 92 Fewest goals conceded 29 1980 81 Club goal records Most league goals in a season 101 Division Two 1957 58 Top league scorer in a season Vic Watson 42 Div One 1929 30 Top scorer in a season Vic Watson 50 Div One 1929 30 Most goals in one match Vic Watson 6 v Leeds United h 9 February 1929 Geoff Hurst 6 v Sunderland h 19 October 1968Follow link to Official West Ham United Records Page 261 Player records Appearances 799 Billy Bonds 1967 88 670 Frank Lampard Sr 1967 85 644 Bobby Moore 1958 74 643 Trevor Brooking 1967 84 600 Alvin Martin 1977 96 550 Mark Noble 2004 22 548 Jimmy Ruffell 1921 37 505 Steve Potts 1985 02 505 Vic Watson 1920 35 502 Geoff Hurst 1959 72 Goals 326 Vic Watson 1920 35 252 Geoff Hurst 1959 72 166 John Dick 1953 63 166 Jimmy Ruffell 1921 37 146 Tony Cottee 1983 88 1994 96 107 Johnny Byrne 1961 67 104 Pop Robson 1970 74 1976 79 102 Trevor Brooking 1967 84 100 Malcolm Musgrove 1953 63 100 Martin Peters 1962 70 In popular cultureIn a Monty Python sketch four communist thinkers and leaders appear on a news show World Forum where they are asked football questions Karl Marx fails to identify the nickname the Hammers as the nickname for West Ham 262 Steve Harris leader of heavy metal band Iron Maiden is a West Ham fan and was once scouted by the club He has long displayed its logo on his Fender Precision bass guitar The band and club have also collaborated on some merchandise such as special edition shirts 263 For the IT Crowd episode Are We Not Men Roy pretends to enjoy football and claims to be a follower of West Ham thinking he made the team up Instead it turns out everyone at the table is a supporter and they invite him to a match 264 In the final episode of season two of Ted Lasso Inverting the Pyramid of Success former Richmond owner Rupert Mannion buys West Ham and installs Richmond s former kitman turned coach Nate Shelley as the head coach 265 In the British sitcom Till Death Us Do Part and its follow on and spin off series Till Death and In Sickness and in Health the character Alf Garnett s biggest passion in life was his local football team West Ham United 266 The action film Final Score a 2018 release starring Dave Bautista and Pierce Brosnan was filmed at the club s former Upton Park stadium shortly before its demolition It concerns a takeover of the venue during a fictional European cup game between West Ham and a Russian team Co owner David Sullivan is credited as executive producer 267 See also Association football portal English football portal London portalReferences Important supporter update capacity increase West Stand reconfiguration amp 2022 23 ticketing West Ham United F C www whufc com Ownership West Ham United F C Retrieved 10 November 2021 West Ham United Historical Football Kits Historicalkits Retrieved 11 July 2020 The History of West Ham United 1895 1896 Spartacus Educational Retrieved 15 August 2009 Dale Iain 1 August 2011 West Ham A Nostalgic Look at a Century of the Club Haynes Publishing p 10 ISBN 978 0 857330 45 1 West Ham United Retrieved 12 September 2014 a b Richard Rundle Source for Thames Ironworks statistics Football Club History Database Retrieved 15 August 2009 East London History regarding Thames Ironworks EastLondonHistory com Archived from the original on 13 February 2006 Pg24 citing study into West Hams community ties PDF Leeds Metropolitan University Archived from the original PDF on 17 January 2005 a b Richard Rundle Source for West Ham statistics Football Club History Database Retrieved 15 August 2009 Northcutt John Roy Shoesmith 1993 West Ham United A Complete Record Derby Breedon Books p 198 ISBN 978 1 873626 44 3 Game played on 18 March 1933 westhamstats info Retrieved 5 October 2013 1st Division 1931 32 westhamstats info Retrieved 5 October 2013 Ronay Barney 5 August 2010 The Manager The absurd ascent of the most important man in football Hachette Digital ISBN 9780748117703 Retrieved 5 October 2013 Helliar John 15 October 2010 Malcolm Allison 1927 2010 West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 25 October 2010 Retrieved 5 October 2013 Ted Fenton biography Spartacus Educational Retrieved 4 October 2013 A brief history of West ham United ESPN Retrieved 4 October 2013 Tributes pour in for Bond West Ham United Archived from the original on 28 September 2012 Retrieved 4 October 2013 England managers How Roy Hodgson s predecessors fared The Independent London 1 May 2012 Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 a b Obituary Ron Greenwood BBC Sport 9 February 2006 Retrieved 4 October 2013 World Cup Hammers West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 3 June 2010 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Bonzo plays tribute West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Champions Sculpture London Borough of Newham 14 January 2008 Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Hammers nail Fulham The FA Retrieved 4 October 2013 Former West Ham boss Lyall dies BBC Sport 19 April 2006 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Hammeralelia Wembley special West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Anderlecht deny European repeat West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 7 December 2011 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Ron Greenwood The Football Association Archived from the original on 28 April 2012 Retrieved 4 October 2013 West Ham 1 Everton 1 The Times Retrieved 4 October 2013 Bevan Chris 1 January 2010 When the Hammers shocked Arsenal BBC Sport Retrieved 4 October 2013 Julie Welch 20 April 2006 Obituary John Lyall The Guardian London Retrieved 29 April 2010 Blowers Steve 2005 Nearly Reached the Sky Football World p 18 ISBN 978 0 9548336 8 8 Lou Macari swindon town fc co uk Retrieved 30 May 2013 Blows Kirk 2000 The Essential History of West Ham United Headline Book publishing p 193 ISBN 978 0 7472 7036 2 Pierson Mark 27 January 1997 Football West Ham fear FA censure over pitch invasion The Independent London Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2013 May John 3 December 2002 Who IS Terence Brown BBC Sport Retrieved 30 May 2013 The Essential History of West Ham United pp 197 198 Kirkby Darren Peter Storrie When Saturday Comes Archived from the original on 24 May 2012 Retrieved 30 May 2013 1st Division 1992 93 westhamstats info Retrieved 30 May 2013 On this day 2 May West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2013 I was sold to save United says Beauchamp Heraldseries co uk 22 June 1994 Retrieved 16 June 2010 Coventry ask Babb bidders to raise offers Liverpool made to wait The Independent Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 12 September 2014 Billy Bonds football england com Archived from the original on 3 July 2013 Retrieved 18 August 2013 a b Blow Kirk 2010 Bring Me the Head of Trevor Brooking Edinburgh Mainstream Publishing Company p 136 ISBN 978 1 84596 661 4 Crace John 18 April 2013 Harry s Games The Biography of H ISBN 9781780339122 Retrieved 19 August 2013 a b Soccerbase West Ham managers soccerbase com Retrieved 18 August 2013 a b c d Dyer Ken 8 November 2001 Redknapp blamed for West Ham loss London Evening Standard Retrieved 14 August 2013 a b c d e f g h i j Harry Leaves his legacy BBC Sport 9 May 2001 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Sport Football News BBC Sport 13 July 1998 Retrieved 18 August 2013 Hills Dave 6 August 2000 The 10 worst foreign signings of all time The Guardian Retrieved 18 August 2013 Premier League 1994 95 westhamstats info Retrieved 19 August 2013 Premier League 1996 97 westhamstats info Retrieved 19 August 2013 On this day 24 August West Ham United F C Archived from the original on 27 August 2013 Retrieved 5 October 2013 a b c d Cash row key to Redknapp exit BBC Sport 12 May 2001 Retrieved 15 August 2013 Chelsea land Lampard BBC Sport 14 June 2001 Retrieved 18 August 2013 a b c spa, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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