Premier League
KO:20:00
23/08/2021
London Stadium
West Ham United
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Leicester City
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Tuesday 1st April 2025
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Wolverhampton Wanderers
West Ham United v Leicester City - All You Need To Know

 

After 541 days, West Ham United warmly welcome a capacity 60,000-strong crowd back to London Stadium for Monday's Premier League home opener with Leicester City!

With COVID restrictions lifted – but Premier League protocols remaining in place – a full stadium is expected, making for the first time the Irons have played in front of a full-strength Claret and Blue Army since the visit of Southampton on 29 February 2020.

Roared on by the best fans in the game, David Moyes' squad will be looking for a third straight Premier League win over Leicester, having done the double over the Foxes last season.

Both teams kicked-off 2021/22 with a win, with West Ham coming from behind twice to secure a 4-2 victory at Newcastle United and FA Cup holders Leicester holding off Wolverhampton Wanderers 1-0 at King Power Stadium.

Kick-off on Monday is at 8pm, with the match being broadcast live in the UK by Sky Sports from 7pm and across the world by the Premier League's international broadcast partners.

We will also be covering the game live with a blog on whufc.com and our Official App and across our social media channels, with goals, highlights and exclusive reaction to follow after the final whistle.

 

Ticket news 

A limited number of tickets remain available, so move quickly and book here if you want to be there in person for this historic and exciting occasion!

 

Leicester Tickets promo

 

Matchday information

For full matchday information, including details of how digital tickets work, our Code of Conduct, travelling to and from London Stadium and much more, click here to visit the Hammers Hub.

 

Team news

West Ham United has only one major injury concern, with Arthur Masuaku (knee) working his way back to full fitness.

Leicester City will be without centre-backs Wesley Fofana (broken leg), Jonny Evans (ankle/foot) and full-back James Justin (knee), but playmaker James Maddison (back), full-back Timothy Castagne (head), midfielder Nampalys Mendy (groin) and Ryan Bertrand (COVID) could all be available.

 

Taking the knee

As confirmed in a joint statement by English football's governing bodies, Premier League clubs will continue to take the knee before kick-off to protest against racism and discrimination.

The 20 Premier League clubs and players have resolved to work together against racism and all forms of discrimination. There is no place in football or society for any form of prejudice and while there have been strides made across our game, recent events have reminded us there is still much work to be done.

 

Aaron Cresswell takes the knee last season

 

Taking the knee is an individual choice that many players wish to make as a way of peacefully demonstrating against racism and injustice. This gesture of unity is not new, and we do not view it as an alignment to any political organisation or ideology, but rather raising the awareness of this important issue. We ask that fans respect any player that wishes to take the knee and support them in their stance against discrimination. 

While not all players will choose to express their opposition to discrimination through taking the knee, players, clubs and authorities are committed to work as a collective to address all prejudiced behaviour through the coming season and beyond.

 

The opposition – Leicester City

It should not be underestimated what an amazing Leicester City have been on over the previous decade or so.

Twelve summers ago, the Foxes were celebrating winning the League One title, with current West Ham United goalkeeper David Martin playing a big role in that success.

Five years later, in May 2014, after a series of near misses, Leicester added another piece of silverware to their trophy cabinet by romping to the Championship title with a club record 102 points.

Then, of course, came the most famous story of them all, as Claudio Ranieri guided an unfancied squad of 500/1 outsiders to Premier League glory in 2016.

Leicester reached the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals the following season and, after an understandable blip in league form following the sales of the likes of world-class players like Riyad Mahrez and N’Golo Kanté, have since established themselves as perennial challengers for European qualification.

A number of those who played central roles in that success remain, though, with Denmark goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel and Jamie Vardy producing the goods on a consistent basis, season after season.

Under the leadership of the club’s respected Thai owners and manager Brendan Rodgers, the Foxes have recorded consecutive fifth-place Premier League finishes – although some critics might suggest they should have qualified for the Champions League on each occasion, only for late-season dips to see them miss out – and recruited a succession of exciting young players from home and abroad.

 

Brendan Rodgers celebrates winning the FA Cup

 

While some have since departed for huge transfer profits – Harry Maguire to Manchester United and Ben Chilwell to Chelsea – the likes of Wilfred Ndidi, Youri Tielemans, James Maddison, Wesley Fofana remain at King Power Stadium, and Leicester look primed for another sustained push for a top-four finish.

When you consider the clubs they are competing with directly, and the relative difference in revenue between the Foxes and teams like Chelsea, the two Manchester, Liverpool and north London clubs, to win the title, finish fifth twice and win the FA Cup in the space of six seasons is nothing short of miraculous.

To put it in the simplest possible terms, from the outside looking in, Leicester City appears to be a well-run football club, with a strategy and vision for where they want to get to, and how they are going to get there, on and off the pitch.

When the club’s owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha was tragically killed following West Ham’s visit to King Power Stadium in October 2018, the outpouring of grief among the club’s staff, players and supporters was genuine and heartfelt.

The billionaire, who purchased Leicester in 2010, made a hugely positive impact on the club and the city, and his legacy remains in the shape of a forward-thinking club who this week announced plans to expand their home stadium to 40,000 seats, complete with a hotel, apartment block and an events and entertainment arena.

A second fairytale Premier League title may be beyond them, but Leicester City is a club that is undoubtedly here to stay.

 

Previous meetings

As mentioned above, West Ham United did the Premier League double over Leicester City last season, winning 3-0 at King Power Stadium in September 2020 and 3-2 here at London Stadium in April.

Jarrod Bowen scored in both meetings, with Pablo Fornals and Michail Antonio also on target at King Power Stadium and Jesse Lingard hitting the net twice on home turf.

Overall, the two clubs have met 28 times in the Premier League, with West Ham holding the edge with 13 wins to nine, with six draws.

In all competitions, West Ham’s biggest-ever league win over Leicester came in the promotion-winning 1922/23 season. The Hammers thrashed the Foxes 6-0 at Filbert Street on their way to the First Division on 15 February 1923, with Billy Moore scoring a hat-trick, fellow England internationals Jimmy Ruffell and Jack Tresadern and Wales international Dick Richards also getting their names on the scoresheet. Leicester’s biggest win over West Ham came in the First Division on 15 September 1928, when the Foxes won 5-0 at Filbert Street.

 

Mark Noble and Jesse Lingard celebrate against Leicester

 

As he begins his final season on home turf as a West Ham player, Club captain Mark Noble has faced Leicester 15 times as a West Ham player – ten in the Premier League, four in the Championship and once in the EFL Cup. The Club captain has scored two goals in those fixtures, including a memorable volley to secure a 2-0 win at King Power Stadium that kept the Irons in the Premier League in May 2018. Noble was also sent-off in a 1-1 draw at the same venue in November of the same year

 

Match officials

Referee: Michael Oliver 
Assistant Referees: Stuart Burt and Simon Bennett
Fourth Official: Graham Scott
VAR: Darren England
Assistant VAR: Dan Robathan

Born in Ashington, Northumberland in February 1985, Michael Oliver has been a member of the Select Group of Referees since August 2010, when he was just 25.

Oliver started refereeing in the Northern Premier League from 2003 to 2005 before quickly working his way up through the National League and EFL to reach the Premier League in January 2010.

The 36-year-old refereed the 2007 Conference National and 2009 League One Play-Off finals and controlled the 2016 EFL Cup final, 2018 FA Cup final and 2021 FA Cup final, which saw Leicester City overcome Manchester City 1-0 to win the trophy.

Oliver was appointed to the FIFA List in 2012 and has since refereed competitive and friendly international, UEFA Champions League and Europa League fixtures.

He has refereed West Ham United on 30 occasions, including the penultimate game at the Boleyn Ground against Swansea City in May 2016, and most-recently the Premier League wins at Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Bromwich Albion at the tail-end of last season.

 

How can I follow the game?

Monday's 8pm kick-off will be broadcast live in the UK by Sky Sports from 1pm and across the world by the Premier League's international broadcast partners.

The Club will also be covering the game live with a blog on whufc.com and our Official App and across our social media channels, with goals, highlights and exclusive reaction to follow after the final whistle.

 

Leicester Tickets promo

 

Michail Antonio


West Ham United 4-1 Leicester City
Premier League, Monday 23 August 2021, 8pm

West Ham United celebrated the return of a capacity crowd to London Stadium by storming to the top of the Premier League with a sensational 4-1 win over Leicester City.

The Hammers were at their very best on a celebratory night in east London, as 60,000 supporters returned home for the first time in 541 days.

Pablo Fornals sent the West Ham fans wild by opening the scoring midway through the first half, before Saïd Benrahma made it two after Ayoze Pérez had been sent-off.

And, after Youri Tielemans had pulled one back for the Foxes, Michail Antonio ensured he would make history on this memorable evening, netting two second-half goals to break the Club’s all-time Premier League scoring record.

There had been plenty for the Claret and Blue Army to enjoy before kick-off, too, with the presentation of the Hammer of the Year award to Tomáš Souček, an interview with 2012 Championship Play-Off final match-winner Ricardo Vaz Tê and a stunning light and music show.

The Leicester players were welcomed with playful boos before Declan Rice led West Ham out of the tunnel to what was surely the loudest rendition of ‘Bubbles’ heard in the five-plus seasons London Stadium has been our home.

The two teams took the knee to applause before another loud roar of encouragement signalled for Souček to kick-off, with the Irons unusually shooting towards the Sir Trevor Brooking Stand in the opening 45 minutes.
 

Declan Rice


No matter. West Ham were the better team throughout, with Antonio’s outstanding centre-forward play providing a platform on which the Hammers could build attack after attack.

The first chance took under six minutes to arrive and it fell to the in-form Saïd Benrahma. Rice drove at the Leicester defence before exchanging passes with Pablo Fornals. The Spaniard laid the ball back and Benrahma’s curler was gathered by Kasper Schmeichel.

The second fell to Rice himself when Vladimír Coufal’s cross was prodded out to him by Ricardo Pereira, but the captain’s 25-yarder flew comfortably over Schmeichel’s crossbar.

And the third went to Antonio, seeking a Club-record 47th Premier League goal, as burst clear of Wilfred Ndidi but sliced wide from just outside the penalty area.

On 26 minutes, the opener West Ham so richly deserved arrived, and it was a thing of beauty.

Rice dispossessed Jamie Vardy and found Jarrod Bowen. The winger passed into Fornals, who put the ball into Benrahma’s path on the left edge of the penalty area. The Algerian did not need to break stride as he crossed and it was Fornals who converted with an inch-perfect, first-time, left-foot half-volley that bounced in off the far post.
 

Pablo Fornals


In the stands, 541 days of absence were forgotten as the Claret and Blue Army erupted. And they so nearly had a second to celebrate before half-time, but Souček headed Fornals’ cross past the post, before Ogbonna did likewise from Bowen’s inswinging corner.

Leicester’s task got even harder six minutes before the break when they were reduced to ten men. Ayoze Pérez initially escaped punishment after catching Fornals high on the calf, but Michael Oliver decided he had no option but to send the Spaniard off after being told to look at the pitchside screen by VAR Darren England.

When the half-time whistle was blown, Leicester had been outshot 9-2 and failed to muster a single effort on target.

With a man advantage, West Ham kept the pressure on after the interval, with another incisive attack ending with Souček toe-poking over the top five minutes in.

Two minutes later, only Schmeichel’s heroics prevented Leicester falling 2-0 down, the Dane pushing Antonio’s powerful header clear after a sensational cross from Fornals.

A second goal seemed only a matter of time and it duly arrived on 56 minutes when Antonio latched onto Çağlar Söyüncü’s errant backpass, picked out Benrahma and he gleefully smashed into the net from 16 yards out.

For a second time, London Stadium erupted, elated to witness the Algerian wizard’s first home goal in Claret and Blue.
 

Said Benrahma


It was one-way traffic now and it took a sensational stop from Schmeichel low to his right to initially prevent Antonio from netting his record-setting goal for the Club, with Aaron Cresswell volleying narrowly over from the resulting corner.

Just when it looked like Moyes’ men were cruising to a comfortable home win, however, there was a sting in the tail as Belgian Youri Tielemans stabbed a low shot past Łukasz Fabiański after his initial effort had been blocked by Cresswell.

Undeterred, West Ham went on a hunt for a third goal of their own and, after Craig Dawson’s header flashed wide, Antonio’s big, record-breaking moment arrived in trademark style.

The No9 controlled Rice’s low ball in, held off Söyüncü and hammered a low shot past Schmeichel, before celebrating as only he could by holding a cardboard cut-out of himself high above his head!

And there was still time for the 31-year-old to grab his second of the night, controlling Coufal’s centre before prodding into the corner to send West Ham top of the Premier League for the first time since 22 August 2006.
 

Michail Antonio

 

West Ham United: Fabiański, Coufal, Dawson, Ogbonna, Cresswell, Rice ©, Souček, Bowen, Fornals, Benrahma (Noble 88), Antonio (Yarmolenko 89)
Subs: Areola (GK), Fredericks, Johnson, Baptiste, Diop, Coventry, Lanzini, Yarmolenko

Goals: Fornals 26, Benrahma 56, Antonio 80, 84

Leicester City: Schmeichel ©, Pereira, Amartey, Söyüncü, Thomas, Ndidi, Tielemans, Pérez, Maddison (Soumaré 81), Barnes (Daka 64), Vardy (Iheanacho 81)
Subs: Ward (GK), Castagne, Dewsbury-Hall, Choudhury, Praet, Albrighton

Goal: Tielemans 69

Sent-off: Pérez

Booked: Pereira

Referee: Michael Oliver

Attendance: 59,901
 

Lineups
Match Statistics