Seven days after conceding to Arsenal at the London Stadium, West Ham arrive in the northeast still staring at the Championship. Nuno Espirito Santo’s side sit 18th with 36 points, two places and two points inside the relegation zone, and Tottenham (17th, 38 pts) are the immediate threat above them. Newcastle, a stable 13th on 46 points, have nothing pressing to play for on paper, but a run of three straight league defeats heading into late April gave this home fixture an edge worth watching regardless.

What’s at stake
West Ham are in the relegation zone with 36 points from 36 matches. Tottenham, directly above them in 17th, have 38 points. With two fixtures remaining (including this one), the Hammers need results to go their way both on and off the pitch. Burnley (19th, 21 pts) and Wolves (20th, 18 pts) are already down, so the fight is specifically about that 18th spot West Ham currently occupy. A loss at St. James‘ Park, combined with a Tottenham win elsewhere, would leave Nuno’s side in serious danger heading into the final matchday.
For Newcastle, the result has no bearing on their league position in any realistic sense. Eddie Howe’s side are 13th on 46 points, six clear of 14th-placed Leeds and 11 behind 12th-placed Sunderland. There is no European spot to chase and no threat from below. That context actually makes them a difficult read: a relaxed host can lose focus, or equally, can play with freedom and hurt a desperate visitor.

How they got here
Newcastle’s last five league matches read W-L-L-L-D, a sequence that tells the story of a side that beat Brighton 3-1 at home on May 2 before losing at Arsenal and at home to Bournemouth, then dropping a 1-2 at Crystal Palace, and finally drawing 1-1 at Nottingham Forest last weekend. Three defeats in that stretch dented any momentum Howe had built, and the Magpies head into this fixture without a win in their last four. West Ham’s last five are not much cleaner: W-D-W-L-L. A 4-0 home win over Wolves was followed by a goalless draw at Crystal Palace and a 2-1 home victory over Everton, but back-to-back losses since then (0-3 at Brentford, 0-1 at home to Arsenal) have kept the pressure on Nuno’s squad at the worst possible time.
On the table, Newcastle sit 13th with 46 points (13W-7D-16L, 50 goals scored, 52 conceded). West Ham are 18th with 36 points (9W-9D-18L, 42 scored, 62 conceded). The Hammers’ goals-against column is the worst among the teams still potentially safe, and it has been a recurring problem all season.
Key battle to watch
West Ham have shipped 62 goals in 36 league matches, averaging more than 1.7 per game against them. Newcastle’s attack, featuring Yoane Wissa and Anthony Gordon among others, will look to exploit a defence that has been consistently vulnerable on the road. The real test for Nuno is whether his defensive shape can limit Newcastle’s wide combinations long enough to give the Hammers’ forwards any foothold. Jarrod Bowen and Crysencio Summerville have the pace to hurt Newcastle on the break, but that only matters if West Ham can stay compact early. Bruno Guimaraes at the base of Newcastle’s midfield has the passing range and aggression to dictate tempo; if West Ham’s midfield loses that battle, the backline will be exposed again.
Key Stats
Our Prediction
West Ham’s defensive record (62 goals allowed) is an open invitation for a Newcastle side that has scored freely at St. James’ Park this season. Nuno’s team showed fight with wins over Everton and Wolves but have been outclassed by the top half since. Expect Newcastle to control large portions of this match, with the Hammers’ fate hinging on whether they can convert any moment of quality on the counter before the game gets away from them.