Players.bio is a large online platform sharing the best live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, Golf, Rugby, Cricket, F1, Boxing, NFL, NBA, plus the latest sports news, transfers & scores. Exclusive interviews, fresh photos and videos, breaking news. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7. Check our daily updates and make sure you don't miss anything about celebrities' lives.

Contacts

  • players.bio

West Ham relegated: What now for the Hammers?

West Ham’s relegation from the Premier League was confirmed on Sunday.

It ends West Ham’s 14-year stay in the top flight and leaves them picking up the pieces in the Championship next season.

Here, the Press Association looks at the impact that relegation will have on a club who basked in European glory just three years ago when winning the Conference League.


Parachute payments soften the blow for clubs dropping out of the Premier League.

But there is still a heavy price to be paid for relegation with most estimates putting the crippling cost at over £60million.

West Ham’s wage bill is four times that of the Championship average, so there would have to be some heavy pruning ahead of playing the likes of Lincoln and Preston instead of Arsenal and Manchester City.


Majority owner David Sullivan said the 2016 move to the London Stadium showed West Ham were not a “tinpot club”, and Karren Brady famously sold the switch as “a world-class stadium with a world-class team”.

Baroness Brady left in April after 16 years as Hammers vice-chair, but the supporters remain and loathe a stadium that has never come close to their hearts as its Upton Park predecessor.

The 68,000-capacity former Olympic Stadium has been dubbed a “soulless bowl’ by fans, and salt has been rubbed into those wounds with the news that London taxpayers may have to pay an extra £2.5m if West Ham are relegated, because of the club’s lease agreement for London Stadium.


As with any relegated team, it is always a good idea to keep a watch on the exit door.

Necessary trimming of the wage bill will inevitably lead to departures and club captain Jarrod Bowen, an England international, is one obvious saleable asset.

Midfielder Mateus Fernandes, winger Crysencio

Read more on breakingnews.ie
DMCA