West Ham United welcome Arsenal to the London Stadium on Sunday evening, 10 May 2026, with the Premier League title picture and the battle at the wrong end of the table pulling in very different directions. Arsenal arrive as league leaders and, with Mikel Arteta’s side sitting on 76 points, every remaining fixture carries the weight of a title run-in. West Ham, meanwhile, are 18th on 36 points under Nuno Espírito Santo and still staring at the ugly business of trying to pull themselves clear of danger. That gap in the table is stark. So is the pressure.
The stakes are obvious for both. Arsenal need to keep their rhythm and avoid any slip that could reopen the title race, while West Ham need points, momentum and a serious lift from home. This is not just another London derby. It’s a meeting between a side chasing silverware and a side trying to stop their season from sliding further out of control. Arsenal have also been deep in Champions League knockout football, which adds another layer to the fixture load. West Ham don’t have that luxury. They need results, fast.
Form matters here, and so does the mood around each camp. Arsenal have been winning the big moments, grinding through tight games and keeping their standards high on two fronts. West Ham have been erratic, occasionally lively, often fragile, and nowhere near secure. That contrast shapes everything about this one.
West Ham United Form & Analysis
West Ham’s recent run tells a familiar story: a team that can still flick the switch at home, but not often enough, and not consistently enough to trust. Their last six have brought just one win in the league, and that came at home against Everton, a 2-1 success on 25 April. Before that, they had to settle for a goalless draw away to Crystal Palace, which at least showed some resolve. Then came the more eye-catching home performance, a 4-0 dismantling of Wolverhampton on 10 April, a reminder that when Nuno’s side get on the front foot at the London Stadium, they can still rattle a rival. But the away defeats bookend the run. Aston Villa beat them 2-0 on 22 March, and Brentford hammered them 3-0 last Saturday. There’s no sugar-coating that one.
That Brentford defeat was especially poor. West Ham created little of note, losing 3-0 with xG reading 0.92 and xGA at 1.48. The shot count was fairly even at 13-14, but Brentford found the sharper edge, and West Ham’s defensive structure fell apart after conceding an early own goal through Konstantinos Mavropanos. Igor Thiago’s penalty and Mikkel Damsgaard’s late strike finished the job. One cancelled goal by VAR did little to change the feeling that West Ham were second-best for long stretches. They didn’t look a team with answers. They looked rattled.
Their home record is still the clearest source of hope, though it’s hardly intimidating. West Ham have 5 wins, 4 draws and 8 losses at the London Stadium in league play, with 24 goals scored and 29 conceded. That’s not a fortress. It’s a ground where opponents can get at them, and where the defensive line has been breached too often. On the plus side, West Ham have shown a decent knack for scoring at home, and their recent run suggests they’ve got the capacity to nick a goal even in awkward matches. The flip side is obvious. They’ve conceded too many, and that leaves them exposed against a side as efficient as Arsenal.
Still, there are signs this isn’t a team without bite. West Ham have gone over 2.5 goals in four of their last five, which says plenty about the sort of games they’re playing. They’re not locking things down. They’re involved in open, messy contests, and that can be useful if you’re backing goals. It can also be dangerous if your defence doesn’t stand up. Against Arsenal, that edge is going to be tested properly.
Arsenal Form & Analysis
Arsenal arrive in far better shape, even if their recent schedule has been demanding. Their last six have included Champions League knockout ties against Atlético Madrid and a tidy league win over Fulham. They beat Atlético 1-0 at home on 5 May, with Bukayo Saka scoring just before half-time after a composed display that barely let the Spanish side breathe. Before that came a 3-0 win over Fulham on 2 May, a clean, controlled domestic result. The first leg against Atlético in Madrid ended 1-1, and earlier still they saw off Newcastle United 1-0 at home. The only league blemish in the stretch was a 2-1 defeat at Manchester City on 19 April, and even that was a narrow affair rather than a collapse. There’s a lot of control in this run. A lot of maturity too.
The Champions League tie with Atlético has been the sharpest test, and Arsenal have handled it well. They drew 1-1 away, then won 1-0 at home, limiting Atlético to very little in the second leg. In the return at the Emirates, Arsenal posted 1.58 xG while keeping Atlético to 0.50. They had 13 shots to 9 and, more importantly, stayed calm when the game threatened to get sticky. That’s the mark of a side with real title steel. They don’t have to blow teams away. They just keep churning out results. That’s what leaders do.
Their away record in the league is excellent. Arsenal are top of the away table with 9 wins, 5 draws and 3 losses, and a goals tally of 27 scored to 15 conceded on the road. Those numbers are the sort that travel. They’re not flashy, but they are strong enough to suggest Arsenal can control a game away from home without inviting too much danger. Conceding only 15 in 17 away league matches is a serious base. It gives them a platform in matches like this, where they’ll expect to spend long spells without panic.
There’s also a handy trend in Arsenal’s recent work: they’ve gone four games unbeaten since their last loss at Manchester City. More than that, they’ve often drawn first blood. Arsenal have been first to score in four of their last five, and that matters in a fixture like this. If they get in front at the London Stadium, West Ham will have to open up. That’s where the game can tilt quickly. Arsenal aren’t just good at managing leads; they’re good at making them hurt.
Mind you, it hasn’t been all plain sailing. The 0-0 draw with Sporting CP and the 1-1 in Madrid showed they can be pushed into lower-scoring territory by disciplined opponents. That’s fine. It doesn’t mean they’re blunt. It means they’re pragmatic. Arteta’s side know when to tighten the screws.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has thrown up some lopsided results in recent years, and Arsenal have been responsible for a couple of the heaviest. They thumped West Ham 6-0 at the London Stadium in February 2024, and followed it with a 5-2 win in east London in November 2024. That’s ugly reading for the hosts. Arsenal also won 2-0 in the reverse league meeting at the Emirates in October 2025, which keeps the recent pattern firmly in their favour.
West Ham have had their moments too. They beat Arsenal 1-0 at the Emirates in February 2025, and also took a 2-0 league win there on Boxing Day 2023. So this isn’t a one-way street across every season. But Arsenal’s recent superiority in the fixture is hard to ignore, and the more recent meetings have been defined by Arsenal’s ability to stretch West Ham when the game opens up.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 8/11 looks the strongest play here. Our round betting guide is a useful companion here because it breaks down round betting if you want a less standard market explained properly. West Ham’s home numbers are good enough to fancy a goal, even against the league leaders, and Arsenal’s away record suggests they’ll almost certainly find a way through as well. The xG projection has this at 1.3 apiece, which fits the shape of the matchup neatly. A 1-1 scoreline feels the likeliest outcome, with Arsenal having enough control to avoid defeat but West Ham likely scrapping for at least one moment of reward.
There’s a little tension in the scoreline, because Arsenal’s defensive numbers on the road are strong enough to make a clean sheet look plausible. Still, West Ham have scored in plenty of home games and have been involved in open contests of late. If you wanted an alternative, Arsenal draw no bet is the safer angle. But BTTS has the better balance of price and logic here.