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West Ham United welcome Everton to the London Stadium on Saturday evening in a Premier League meeting that carries very different kinds of pressure. West Ham are still looking over their shoulder in 17th place, a season of too many dropped points leaving them on 33, while Everton arrive from a far healthier position in 10th with 47 points and a real chance to finish the campaign comfortably in the top half.
That gap in the table gives the game a slightly odd feel. For West Ham, it’s about stopping the slide and making sure their survival work is wrapped up without drama. For Everton, it’s about finishing strongly and proving their away form isn’t a fluke. This isn’t a glamorous fixture, but it matters. A lot.
There’s also some managerial weight behind it. Nuno Espírito Santo has had to steady West Ham after a tricky season, and David Moyes returns with Everton having found a more reliable rhythm under him away from home. That alone gives the contest a layer of familiarity. These are two teams who know how to make life awkward for each other.
West Ham’s latest run tells a familiar story: a side that can still produce a proper performance, but not nearly often enough. They went into Crystal Palace and came away with a 0-0 draw on 20 April, a result that felt about right given the balance of play. Before that, they blew Wolverhampton away 4-0 at home on 10 April, which was the kind of emphatic win that should've sparked a turn. It didn’t quite stick. The 2-2 draw with Leeds United in the FA Cup on 5 April came before a 2-0 defeat at Aston Villa in the league on 22 March, and then they’d previously shared draws with Manchester City and Brentford. Plenty of signs of competitiveness. Not enough wins. That’s been the frustration all season.
At home, West Ham’s numbers are not pretty. They’ve taken just 16 points from 16 league matches at the London Stadium, with four wins, four draws and eight defeats. They’ve scored 22 and conceded 28 there, which is a home record that simply doesn’t carry much fear. The odd blowout win is there — Wolverhampton were the latest to feel it — but the baseline has been too soft, especially when games stay tight. West Ham can still create moments, and they’ve found the net 40 times overall this league season, yet the defensive side keeps dragging them back. A team sitting on a negative goal difference of 17 doesn’t need much reminding of the problem.
Still, they’re not coming into this on a total collapse. The draw at Palace extended a short unbeaten spell to three matches since their last defeat, and that matters a little. They’ve at least stopped giving games away so cheaply. The issue is converting those steadier spells into three points. Against Everton, who are stronger than their league position might imply, West Ham can’t afford another slow start or another spell of defending deep for long periods. They’ve done enough to show they can hang around. They haven’t done enough to suggest they’ll control this.
Everton arrive with a recent defeat on the books, losing 2-1 at home to Liverpool on 19 April, and the scoreline was about as frustrating as it sounds. They competed, stayed in it, and still came away empty-handed. Before that, they drew 2-2 at Brentford, which was a decent road point, and beat Chelsea 3-0 at home in a result that still stands out as one of the cleaner performances of their season. Go back a little further and there was a 2-0 defeat at Arsenal, a 2-0 home win over Burnley, and that lively 3-2 success at Newcastle. It’s a mixed run, but not a weak one. Everton have been hard to pin down, and that’s probably why they sit where they do: comfortable enough, but not quite ruthless.
The road record is the really interesting part. Everton are fifth in the away table with 25 points from 16 away matches, which is a serious return. They’ve won seven, drawn four and lost five on their travels, scoring 18 and conceding 18. Balanced. Efficient. They don’t need to dominate games to get something out of them, and that’s often the sign of a team with the right competitive edge away from home. It’s not flashy. It doesn’t need to be. David Moyes has built a side that can stay in matches, and on the road that usually matters more than possession or pretty patterns.
The concern, if there is one, is that Everton have looked a touch easier to disrupt when forced to chase a game. The Liverpool defeat was a reminder of that. They had moments, they created enough to worry the visitors, but they didn’t quite land enough blows. The 1.3 xG projection for this trip suggests they should have chances again, though not a flood of them. That’s the key. Everton are well set up for a tight contest, but not necessarily for one where they have to go and force the issue for long spells. If West Ham score first, this becomes awkward. If Everton settle into their usual away rhythm, they’re more than capable of nicking something.
There’s enough recent history here to suggest this won’t be settled by reputation alone. The last meeting at Everton ended 1-1 on 29 September 2025, and the same scoreline came up at Goodison Park in March 2025 too. West Ham beat Everton 2-1 in a friendly in July 2025, but the league meetings are what matter, and they’ve been tight. West Ham also drew 0-0 at home with Everton in November 2024 and won 3-1 away in March 2024. That’s a decent little pattern for a fixture that rarely opens up completely.
One West Ham angle stands out. They’ve avoided defeat in five straight league meetings with Everton. That doesn’t guarantee anything on Saturday evening, but it does point to a matchup they’ve usually handled well enough. Mind you, this is still the same Everton side that’s awkward away from home, so no one should expect a simple ride.
Double Chance X2 at 8/15 looks the right angle here. Everton’s away record is stronger than West Ham’s home numbers, and that’s the backbone of the pick. West Ham have only four home league wins all season and a negative goal difference at the London Stadium, while Everton have been far more reliable on the road, with seven wins and just five defeats away from home. That’s the split that matters.
A 1-1 draw is the call. It fits the recent head-to-head pattern, it fits the shape of both teams, and it fits the xG projection too, with West Ham at 1.4 and Everton at 1.3. Neither side screams control here. West Ham should get chances. Everton usually do. The safest read is that the visitors avoid defeat in a game that probably stays close right to the end.
If you want a smaller alternative, both teams to score has some appeal given the recent meetings between the sides and the fact both have found the net regularly enough in league play. Still, X2 is the stronger and cleaner play.
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