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West Ham appoint Nuno after sacking Potter

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West Ham have appointed former Nottingham Forest manager Nuno Espirito Santo as head coach after sacking Graham Potter.

Nuno, 51, has signed a three-year contract with the Hammers and will take charge of his first match on Monday away at Everton in the Premier League.

Potter was dismissed on Saturday morning after only eight months in charge, with the club 19th in the table.

Nuno joins West Ham after being sacked on 9 September by Forest, who he guided to seventh in the Premier League last season – their highest finish since 1994-95.

“I am very pleased to be here and very proud to be representing West Ham United,” he said.

“My objective is to work hard to get the very best from the team and ensure that we are as competitive as we possibly can be. The work has already started and I am looking forward to the challenge that is ahead.”

Nuno joins West Ham shortly after a 21-month stint at the City Ground, where he was sacked only three games into this season.

He took his first training session in east London on Saturday afternoon before the club’s match at Everton on Monday.

West Ham said Nuno will be assisted in the interim by academy coaches Mark Robson, Steve Potts, Gerard Prenderville and Billy Lepine, with a further announcement on his coaching and backroom staff to be made in due course.

The Hammers took only three points from their opening five league games this season under Potter.

After dismissing the 50-year-old, West Ham said they believed “a change is necessary in order to help improve the team’s position in the Premier League as soon as possible”.

They added: “Results and performances over the course of the second half of last season and the start of the 2025-26 season have not matched expectations.”

In a statement via the League Managers Association, Potter said: “I am incredibly disappointed to be leaving West Ham, particularly without being able to achieve what we set out to achieve at the start of our journey in east London.

“I do, however, fully acknowledge that the results have just not been good enough up to now.”

‘Nuno is a Moyes-type of manager’ – analysis

Nuno Espirito Santo speaks to Jarrod Bowen during trainingGetty Images

Former West Ham winger Matt Jarvis:

I think as a manager, Nuno has been excellent. He went in at Forest and what he did there was incredible.

If you look at the number of players he put into a team… he somehow found a formation and style of play. And everyone was so together. That’s what he’s going to have to do again at West Ham.

It needs a bit of a reshuffle. There are a lot of players there who are not confident.

Will the West Ham fans be patient? David Moyes did an incredible job, and won a European trophy, but they weren’t really pleased with the style of play. They then got Julen Lopetegui in and they thought the style of play was going to be amazing and it wasn’t. They got Potter in thinking the exactly the same.

Now you are reverting back a little bit towards a Moyes-type of manager and style – and a counter-attacking approach. That is going to be an interesting dynamic. But as far as managers go, and in terms of who was out there, I think it’s a great appointment.

What went wrong for Potter?

Potter replaced Julen Lopetegui, who was sacked in January after six months in charge when West Ham were 14th in the table.

But the former Chelsea and Brighton boss found wins difficult to come by.

West Ham, who sold Ghana forward Mohammed Kudus to Tottenham for £55m in July, spent £126m on eight signings in the summer, including the £38m purchase of Portuguese midfielder Mateus Fernandes from Southampton.

But losses to Sunderland, Chelsea, Tottenham and Palace left them in the bottom three. They went out of the Carabao Cup in the second round with a 3-2 defeat by fellow strugglers Wolves.

That led to West Ham issuing a statement acknowledging “results and performances on the pitch over the past two seasons have not met the standards we set for ourselves”.

Disgruntled fans staged a demonstration against the board before the Palace match.

West Ham’s fortunes have declined since David Moyes’ departure a year after he won the Europa Conference League in 2023, the club’s first trophy in 43 years.

Potter’s arrival was supposed to herald a new brand of attractive football but the downward spiral has continued into this campaign.

How did Nuno’s spell at Forest finish?

Despite Forest’s success during Nuno’s time as manager, his relationship with owner Evangelos Marinakis deteriorated in his final few months at the club.

In August, Nuno revealed he feared for his job, with internal tensions believed to centre around disagreements over their transfer business, which was conducted by new global head of football Edu.

Despite spending about £196m on 13 players, former Wolves and Tottenham coach Nuno criticised the activity in the summer transfer window, saying Forest had wasted a good chance.

Forest suffered a poor run of form towards the end of 2024-25, taking only eight points from their final eight matches to slide out of Champions League contention.

In May, Marinakis appeared to confront Nuno on the pitch following a 2-2 draw against relegated Leicester, although Forest said there was “no confrontation” and it was “fake news” to suggest otherwise.

Forest started their season with a win over Brentford and a draw with Palace, before his reign was ended by a 3-0 home defeat by West Ham – the side he is now set to lead.

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Ukraine and Russia trade blame as Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant without power for fourth day

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THE RUSSIAN-OCCUPIED Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant has been off the grid for four days in a row, with Ukraine and Russia accusing each other of attacking power supply lines.

Though blackouts at Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant are frequent due to its proximity to the front line, the current one is the longest so far, which experts warn raises risks of incidents.

“As a result of Russian actions, the Zaporizhzhia NPP (Nuclear Power Plant) has been without power for the fourth day,” Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiga said on X.

Russia said the power plant has been receiving backup power supply since Tuesday, when it claimed Ukraine attacked the grid.

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“From 23 September 2025, the power supply for the needs of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is provided by backup diesel generators,” the Moscow-backed operator of the station said on Telegram.

It added that there were “sufficient” reserves of diesel to operate “for an extended period,” without specifying for how long exactly.

“Emergency diesel generators are considered a last line of defense to be used only in extreme circumstances,” NGO Greenpeace Ukraine said.

The group claimed Moscow could use the crisis “to try and reconnect to the temporary Russian-occupied grid of Ukraine,” to restart one of the reactors later.

Head of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency Rafael Grossi was in Moscow this week for talks with President Vladimir Putin and Russia’s nuclear agency Rosatom regarding safety at Zaporizhzhia.

The plant’s six reactors, which before the war produced around a fifth of Ukraine’s electricity, have been shut down since Moscow took over the plant in the first weeks of the war in 2022.

But the plant needs power to maintain cooling and safety systems, which prevent reactors from melting – a process that could set off a nuclear incident.

Since the start of the war, Zaporizhzhia has seen multiple safety threats, including frequent nearby shelling, repeated power cuts and staff shortages.

Located near the city of Enerhodar along the Dnieper river, the ZNPP is close to the front line. Both Moscow and Kyiv have repeatedly accused the other of risking a potentially devastating nuclear disaster by attacking the site.

Additional reporting from © AFP 2025 

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PM takes aim at ‘toxic’ Reform as he arrives for Labour conference

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The prime minister has warned Reform UK “will tear this country apart” ahead of the Labour party conference.

Arriving in Liverpool on Saturday, Sir Keir Starmer said Reform’s plans to abolish indefinite leave to remain (ILR) for legal migrants was one of “the most shocking things” Nigel Farage’s party had said.

Sir Keir said the conference would be an opportunity to show Labour’s alternative to the “toxic divide and decline” offered by Reform.

He is under pressure after opinion polls show Labour trailing Reform UK, alongside speculation Great Manchester mayor Andy Burnham could mount a leadership challenge.

Arriving at the conference centre in Liverpool, Sir Keir said it would be a “big opportunity to make our case to the country, and make it absolutely clear that patriotic national renewal is the way forwards – not the toxic divide and decline that we get with Reform”.

Last week, Reform UK announced it will replace ILR with visas and force migrants to reapply every five years, if the party wins the next election. That includes hundreds of thousands of migrants currently in the UK.

Applicants would also have to meet certain criteria, including a higher salary threshold and standard of English. ILR is a key route to gaining British citizenship and allows people to claim benefits.

During a visit to the office of newspaper Liverpool Echo, Sir Keir said: “These are people who have been in our country a long time, are contributing to our society, maybe working in, I don’t know, hospitals, schools, running businesses – our neighbours, and Reform says it wants to deport them in certain circumstances.

“I think it is a real sign of just how divisive they are and that their politics and their policies will tear this country apart.”

Farage told the Telegraph, Sir Keir’s language “smacks, frankly, of total desperation” after the prime minister referred to Reform as an “enemy” in an interview with the Guardian.

Speaking to teenagers at the Liverpool Echo visit, Sir Keir also insisted the government would not legalise cannabis, and defended his plans to lower the voting age to 16 in general elections.

“It already happens in Scotland, already happens in Wales, and the sky didn’t fall in,” he said.

Ahead of the Labour conference, backbench MPs and unions renewed calls to end the two-child benefit cap.

Several MPs from Liverpool were among those who wrote to Sir Keir ahead of the conference insisting the cap “is one of the most significant drivers of child poverty in Britain today”.

The prime minister’s plans for a new digital ID system, revealed on Friday, will also likely face scrutiny at the conference.

Senior Labour figures are meanwhile expected to set out the details of a fresh tranche of “New Towns” at the event.

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Rahm holes ‘quality’ chip on the eighth

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