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A classic it was not. But if West Ham narrowly stay up, this goalless draw will be one of the bricks in the wall that kept them up. The Hammers are not yet there, though, with another big game this weekend against Everton. It will be interesting to see if West Ham are still clear of Tottenham come the end of the weekend – Spurs travel to now-relegated Wolves.

Pos Team P GD Pts
16 Nottm Forest 33 -9 36
17 West Ham 33 -17 33
18 Tottenham Hotspur 33 -11 31
19 Burnley 33 -33 20
20 Wolverhampton 33 -37 17

Thanks for reading, and for your emails. Until next time! Cheers!

Nuno Espírito Santo, West Ham manager, speaks to Sky Sports.

We performed well. We expect the best but we were compact in a difficult place in Selhurst Park. Our final pass was not quite there, though. Palace are a tough team to play against, with a big threat on the counter attack. We kept the balance and we were solid. Saturday [against Everton at home] we go again. We know we have to do better. It’s very tight.

Dean Henderson, Crystal Palace goalkeeper, speaks to Sky Sports. The reporter remarkably does not ask him about that night out in Florence after the Conference League triumph! Spill the tea, Dean!

We’re disappointed. There are a few tired legs out there. We pushed on late to get a winner but it wasn’t to be. We’ll take the clean sheet and move on. We have some important games coming up.

I think 12 clean sheets is an unbelievable return for a team in our position. We just have to keep that going. We wanted to win today, it feels like a bit of a missed opportunity tonight.

Ed Aarons' match report from Selhurst Park

Mateus Fernandes is given the player of the match award. The West Ham man was very tidy in midfield and I have just noticed that the 21-year-old made his international debut for Portugal earlier this month, coming off the bench to replace Bruno Fernandes in the friendly win over USA.

Jarrod Bowen, West Ham captain, speaks to Sky Sports:

Probably feeling both frustrated and happy with a draw. They are a good side, on a high from reaching a European semi-final, but on another day we had some chances that we could have scored. A point is certainly not the worst result. We play for West Ham United and we can’t rely on results elsewhere and fight to stay in the Premier League.

West Ham’s run-in is pretty good. Three of their five remaining matches are at home:

Everton (h)
Brentford (a)
Arsenal (h)
Newcastle (a)
Leeds (h).

Tottenham’s is, for my money, slightly harder:

Wolves (a)
Aston Villa (a)
Leeds (h)
Chelsea (a)
Everton (h)

This is what the result does to the Premier League table. The big news is that Wolves are down and West Ham are (again) two points clear of Tottenham.

It’s interesting that the match felt like something of a dead rubber to Palace, who seem focused on Europe, yet they would have been just two points shy of sixth-placed Chelsea had they won tonight. It matters not, Palace have just a point, and are 13th.

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Arsenal 33 37 70
2 Man City 32 36 67
3 Man Utd 33 13 58
4 Aston Villa 33 6 58
5 Liverpool 33 11 55
6 Chelsea 33 11 48
7 Brentford 33 4 48
8 AFC Bournemouth 33 0 48
9 Brighton 33 6 47
10 Everton 33 1 47
11 Sunderland 33 -4 46
12 Fulham 33 -3 45
13 Crystal Palace 32 -1 43
14 Newcastle 33 -3 42
15 Leeds 33 -7 39
16 Nottm Forest 33 -9 36
17 West Ham 33 -17 33
18 Tottenham Hotspur 33 -11 31
19 Burnley 33 -33 20
20 Wolverhampton 33 -37 17

Full-time: Crystal Palace 0-0 West Ham. Wolves are relegated

That point could be crucial in the relegation battle, with West Ham now two points clear of 18th-placed Tottenham. The point also confirms relegation for Wolves, who are mathematically now down.

90+4 min: Kante surges forward on the counter attack and feeds Walker-Peters. His cross is blocked but Kante wins the ball back and a late corner for West Ham! Everybody up? Not quite but here come Disasi and Mavropanos …

90+2 min: A clumsy slip from West Ham’s Diouf looks costly before the Senegalese left-back hurls down his Munoz with a cynical tug. Diouf is booked, as is Munoz for making the ‘booking’ gesture with his hands towards the referee. Silly lad.

90+1 min: A magnificent hoof from Diouf (say that three times fast) as West Ham clear their lines. Palace are pushing for a winner. Sort of.

90 min: Four minutes added on. You can tell your kids/grandkids that you were here.

88 min: Tired passes now. First from Soucek, then Mavropanos. This hasn’t been pretty but now West Ham just need to make sure that they don’t leave empty handed.

86 min: Bowen lofts a lovely little cross to the back post – the sort that Pablo and Castellanos would probably thrive on – but nobody is there to nod home. Wilson tries to retrieve the ball but Palace clear.

84 min: A defensive change for West Ham, who appear to be happy to play for a draw now. Mohamadou Kanté, a 6ft5in midfielder is on for Castellanos. Wilson will play as the sole striker for West Ham, with five in midfield.

GOAL DISALLOWED! Sarr has his goal for Palace ruled out for handball!

82 min: Chaos in the West Ham box as Disasi’s defensive header flies high into the south London sky. Hermansen chooses not to come for a punch and Mateta is first to the ball, nudging it to Sarr, who takes a touch and volleys into the net from close range! Buuuuuuuuuuut, replays show that Mateta clearly used his arm. A clear handball. It remains goalleess.

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79 min: Wilson looks every one of his 34 years. I’m not convinced that West Ham will be renewing his one-year deal in the summer.

77 min: Lerma bends a rather weak shot wide of the target, but Hermansen gets his calculations all wrong and tips is wide when he needn’t have bothered! Nuno looks less than impressed on the sidelines. Excitement! Palace have a corner!

Palace make another change: Devenny for Johnson (the corner is too deep and easily cleared).

75 min: West Ham do make a change in attack, but Pablo is replaced by Callum Wilson.

73 min: As things stand, remember, Wolves would be relegated. That is the case if West Ham get any sort of result.

71 min: As if to prove my point, Hermansen kicks the ball straight into touch. Eeeeesh. I’d be curious to see Adama Traoré on the right wing for West Ham. He might have more luck against Mitchell. Maybe move Bowen inside?

69 min: This is not a thrilling game of football. But there is still a lot riding on it.

67 min: Munoz’s goatee is really something. So thick. Almost a beard, but not quite.

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65 min: Summerville shows startling balance to evade two Palace tackles on the left wing but Lerma intercepts his attempted through ball to Castellanos. Lerma then slips and Castellanos pounces, only to stumble himself just as he was taking aim! Palace escape, there.

63 min: Bowen has had no change out of Mitchell this evening. The Palace left-back has been excellent. Not sure he will do enough to usurp O’Reilly and Lewis Hall in Tuchel’s plans for this summer, but Mitchell is a very dependable player (that probably won’t win you a World Cup).

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61 min: Nervier times for West Ham, with Palace in the ascendency. Hammers fans, would you take a draw at this point?

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59 min: Palace make a triple change! The home side have been much better this second period and Glasner smells blood. Here come the cavalry: Mateta for Strand Larsen, Sarr for Pino and Kamada for Hughes.

57 min: Another flowing Palace move – their best of the match – starts with Strand Larsen/Hughes/Pino and ends with another telling cross from the right curling towards the back post. Again, West Ham get bodies back and Fernandes is there to clear.

55 min: Wasteful from Johnson again! The former Spurs winger gets to the byline but crosses straight into the arms of Hermansen. I wonder if we might see Sarr replace Johnson soon, with the Welshman also on a booking.

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53 min: Finally, Palace click into gear! Seemingly for the first time, Strand Larsen gets away from Disasi and finds Munoz with a neat pass. It goes down the line to Johnson, who whips a very useful pass across West Ham’s six-yard box. Walker-Peters cleans up at the back post, with Mitchell lurking. Better from the home side.

51 min: More West Ham pressure! Bowen tries his luck from range – blocked by Hughes – before West Ham’s captain hooks a useful cross to Palace’s back post, where Richards clears.

49 min: Bowen, one of just two English players in West Ham’s starting XI tonight, nearly scores direct from a corner! Only the alertness of Canvot at the near post stops the ball from going into the net!

46 min: Almost immediately after kick-off, Disasi’s elbow crashes into the back of Strand Larsen, who folds like a deck chair and lies crumpled on the ground. Ouch.

Peeeeeeeep!

We’re off again in south London. No changes from either side.

Half-time: Crystal Palace 0-0 West Ham

Palace (and Spurs) are fortunate that it is still goalless.

45+2 min: “Wolves fans will be picking themselves off the floor after your suggestion Joao Gomes, Hwang Hee-Chan and Angel Gomes are the most likely players to be picked up byvprem clubs. Hwang is useless, 4 goals in 43 Premier League appearances over the last two seasons! Angel Gomes has been a disappointment, gets subbed off before the hour mark when he starts. Not physical enough for the league.”

Have to say I haven’t watched a lot of Wolves recently. Angel Gomes is a fine player – he played for England as recently as November 2024 and in the Champions League for Marseille this season. But he has obviously not made the right impact at Wolves. He dictates play and isn’t very good defensively and that’s not much use when Wolves don’t have much of the ball.

45 min: Four minutes added on. Palace have been really poor this half but burst forward on the counter-attack, at the end of which Mitchell drags a shot wide.

Bullet header from Mavropanos, saved!

43 min: Fair play to Henderson, who has had a clumsy first half but makes an excellent save here to keep West Ham at bay. Diouf wriggles free on the left and swings a inch-perfect cross with verve and dip to the back post. Mavropanos arrives right on time and nods powerfully at goal, but Henderson is equal to it!

41 min: Pleased to say that both Diouf and Johnson are back on their feet and back on the pitch. Play on.

39 min: Johnson and Diouf clash heads and both men hit the turf. That looked a nasty one and the medical teams rush onto the pitch to treat the two players.

Lacroix clears an overhead kick off the line!

38 min: Henderson punches poorly under a high ball and the loose ball falls to Castellanos on the penalty spot. The Argentinian tries the spectacular bicycle kick and the connection is good, but Lacroix is in the right place to knee the shot away! Henderson was bailed out by his mate there, and it remains goalless.

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35 min: A nasty (albeit unintentional) tackle from Hughes leaves Summerville on the deck again, with the Dutchman clutching at his achilles. Again, no card.

33 min: “A couple of decades ago, there was an experiment in non-league football about switching to kick-ins instead of throw-ins,” emails Andy Flintoff. “All this led to was six-yard boxes being crowded waiting for the kick whenever the ball went out within 40 yards of the goal, and tedious football so the experiment was discarded. Now each Premier League team has at least one player who can hurl the ball 30+ yards from a throw-in, so now we have crowded six-yard boxes waiting for the long throw whenever the ball is put out within 40 yards of the goal, and tedious football. Funny how history repeats itself, isn’t it?”

I don’t think it will be soon as I don’t think it is a problem that is easily solved, but I wonder if we might see a rule change in a few years. Those throws really are an abominable spectacle, once you get over the athleticism/novelty of it all.

31 min: After Henderson gifts West Ham a corner, Diouf nods back towards goal towards Disasi, who slices a shot over the bar on the swivel. The West Ham loan signing was actually offside, but it was still a dangerous situation for the visitors, who look the more likely to score.

29 min: Great defending from Richards to deny Summerville. The West Ham winger had only the American to beat as he surged forward, but Richards stood his ground, read where Summerville was going and blocked a dangerous shot.

27 min: Johnson bends one just wide! Fair play to the Palace winger, who has endured a torrid opening 27 minutes, but undeterred he takes responsibility on a counter-attack, cutting inside and curling a shot just a yard wide. Hermansen was struggling to get there and was lucky that Mavropanos got a little deflection on the strike – one that was not picked up by the referee or even the players.

25 min: Re that West Ham away kit, Ian Sargeant gets in touch:

“Ecru (rather than beige) apparently - though a lighter shade than that mid-90s number worn by Mark Bowen and co back in the day. Can’t shift it at the club shop. Down to £28 if you really like it, Michael.”

23 min: Another West Ham free-kick, this time Munoz leaving Summerville in a heap. The Colombian escapes a booking.

21 min: A poor couple of minutes for Johnson! He is booked for a clear trip on Diouf! Hooked before half-time?

Golden chance for Johnson!

19 min: Speaking of people that haven’t scored for their new clubs, here comes Palace’s Brennan Johnson. An inswinging cross comes in from the left, Disasi mis-reads his header and Johnson has a free header: six yards out, middle of the goal, completely unmarked. The Palace man inexplicably heads it five yards wide! The bloke can’t buy a goal!

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17 min: Pablo has shown some lovely touches. He’s got a very languid style, like a Diet Berbatov, and his flicked assist for Castellanos against Wolves was outrageous. Before people lose my minds at that Berbatov, I should mention that he has yet to score since signing for West Ham in January, so there is that …

15 min: Neat interchange of passing from West Ham – Summerville to Fernandes to Pablo to Castellanos – with the latter lashing a wild shot over the bar when he had Bowen to his right.

13 min: Ominously for a side that have conceded 15 times from corners this season (comfortably the worst record record in the Premier League), West Ham are having to deal with long throws pumped into their penalty box from Richards, who hauls the ball a full 40 yards, from about mid-way into the Hammers’ half! The visitors survive, this time.

10 min: West Ham have shaded the first 10 minutes. Fernandes has shown some neat touches in midfield and the full backs (Diouf and Walker-Peters) are pushing very high. It’s actually a very attacking team with those full-backs and arguably only Soucek as a defensively-minded midfielder.

8 min: Stand Larsen darts to the near post and connects with a low cross but can only divert it wide.

6 min: After a slow start in a Palace shirt, Canvot has excellent since coming into the side after the departure of Guehi. And the French teenager has made a fine start here, dispossessing Summerville in full flight and a couple of minutes later, bringing the ball out of defence and skipping past Bowen, earning a foul.

4 min: Quite like this West Ham away kit, an all-beige number. Reminds me of their away kit in 1996-97.

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2 min: Walker-Peters gets to the byline sends in a brilliant cross for West Ham but Munoz wins his header at the back post. Good work from the West Ham man, who seems to have displaced Wan-Bissaka as the first-choice right-back.

Peeeeeeeeep!

‘Faithless – Insomnia’ blares around Selhurst Park (lead singer Maxi Jazz was a supporter and even an associate director of the club) and we are ready to go!

Adam Wharton is said to be injured. Palace fans will feel a bit better about that with the rumours of a potential summer departure floating about.

Wolves’ relegation will be confirmed this evening if West Ham avoid defeat this evening. Who from the Wolves squad will get a move back to the Premier League, do we reckon?

Mateus Mané will have some suitors but I imagine Wolves will want to keep hold of him for the Championship. He will not be on big wages and Wolves will have their parachute payments. Who else? João Gomes? Hwang Hee-chan? Angel Gomes?

Maxence Lacroix speaks to Sky Sports about Palace balancing the demands of Premier League/European football.

I think we learned a lot with the games. There are a lot of minutes. This is like a family, everyone wants to fight for each other. At first it was difficult and we are on our way and really happy where we are. The mood is totally different. We don’t have injuries – apart from Eddie [Nketiah], we are sad for him.

West Ham’s Konstantinos Mavropanos also speaks:

We just have to focus on ourselves [in the relegation battle]. We have worked so hard the last couple of months to be in this position. We just want to keep the momentum. We have shown togetherness defensively.

An email from Eric Peterson:

“Tanking is too strong a word, but Spurs sure didn’t prioritise their league matches down the stretch last season, saving their strongest lineups for the Europa League. Manchester United pulled the same stunt, and they paid the price by losing the Europa League final to Tottenham and missing out on Europe entirely this season. I fully expect Palace to do the same thing the rest of this season. And I can’t say I blame them. They’re not a reasonable relegation risk, and leapfrogging a half-dozen teams to get to Europe through the final table is nowhere near as likely as just winning the Europa Conference and making the Europa League that way.”

This is a strong Palace side, but certainly not the best XI. Ismaïla Sarr scored crucial goals in both legs against Fiorentina but is back on the bench tonight. Adam Wharton has been heavily linked with Liverpool this week and it is a worry for Palace fans that he is not in the squad at all today, with no mention of an injury.

It is not a surprise to see West Ham unchanged from the 4-0 win over Wolves. I have put 4-2-2-2 as the formation, with Soucek and Fernandes sitting deeper and Bowen and Summerville almost as two wide No 10s, but they could easily morph into a more conventional 4-4-2, or a 4-4-1-1 with Pablo dropping deep.

Team news!

Crystal Palace (3-4-2-1): Henderson; Richards, Lacroix, Canvot; Munoz, Lerma, Hughes, Mitchell; Johnson, Pino; Strand Larsen.
Subs: Benitez, Sarr, Mateta, Clyne, Kamada, Sosa, Riad, Devenny, Cardines.

West Ham (4-2-2-2): Hermansen; Walker-Peters, Disasi, Mavropanos, Diouf; Soucek, Fernandes; Bowen, Summerville; Pablo, Castellanos.
Subs: Areola, Wilson, Traore, Todibo, Magassa, Wan-Bissaka, Scarles, Potts, Kante.

Preamble

What was a bad weekend for Tottenham Hotspur could get a whole lot worse at Selhurst Park. Spurs could and probably should have beaten Brighton to leapfrog West Ham in the relegation but a late, late equaliser for the south-coast side – compounded by wins for Leeds and Nottingham Forest – have left Tottenham staring down the barrel with just five games to go.

West Ham – with a game in hand – will stay 17th with a victory this evening but would put themselves four points clear of Spurs in 18th, an important margin given the east Londoners’ inferior goal difference. The Hammers are on something of a tear recently, revitalised under Nuno Espírito Santo, and since 17 January have the fifth best points tally in the Premier League. That they are still in the mire shows how far they had previously fallen.

Pos Team P GD Pts
16 Nottm Forest 33 -9 36
17 West Ham 32 -17 32
18 Tottenham Hotspur 33 -11 31
19 Burnley 33 -33 20
20 Wolverhampton 33 -37 17

Nuno deserved a lot of credit, and new signings have made a huge impact. Taty Castellanos and Pablo have given West Ham a focal point up top, while Axel Disasi and Konstantinos Mavropanos have formed an excellent partnership at the back – so much so that the Greek is even now being linked with a move to Borussia Dortmund, quite the transformation.

A trip to Palace is not normally easy, but this is a good time to face the Eagles, who (marooned in mid-table) have nothing to play for in the Premier League and are focused on Europe after reaching the Conference League semi-finals on Thursday. And following that aggregate victory at Fiorentina, Oliver Glasner allowed his players to celebrate by painting Florence red and blue. Spurs fans look away now: a crunch European tie, added travel and a potential hangover on Friday was not the ideal way to prepare for tonight’s game.

Selhurst Park under the lights is (nearly) always a cracker. Good luck to both teams.

Kick-off: 8pm BST.

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