Last week, you may remember, I ran a story from a trusted source suggesting West Ham would not appoint a director of football if the club remained in the Premier League.
At the time, it was put to me that survival would see Nuno Espírito Santo, alongside his agent Jorge Mendes, continue to oversee recruitment.
Why the story gained traction
Ordinarily, that wouldn’t have been much of a story.
Most fans have been pleased with the January business, which has played a big part in the upturn in form — dragging West Ham out of the relegation zone and turning the tables on Tottenham.
You could even argue it makes sense. After all, who knows a squad’s needs better than the manager?
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The issue was timing.
Club stance appears unchanged
On 26 February, when the Fans’ Advisory Board met with vice-chair Karren Brady, they were assured a director of football would be appointed regardless of which division West Ham are in next season.
Following the Claret & Hugh piece, the FAB sought clarification — and as Martin write yesterday, the club responded with the following:
The media reporting in question does not originate from a club source and is considered speculative
The position communicated to the FAB on 26 February remains unchanged, namely that a director of football will be appointed at the end of this season
The club does not intend to issue any further public clarification at this time
Encouraging update — with a hint of caution
My response to that is simple — it’s good news.
Regular readers will know I’m a big advocate of that kind of structure, especially given how well it has worked for other clubs.
That said, I’m not entirely surprised. The club contacted Claret & Hugh directly last week to say much the same thing following the blog.
Source vs club messaging
It’s worth stressing that at no point did I claim the original information came from the club.
The source remains highly trusted and well connected.
But if that information turns out to be wide of the mark, I’ll happily take that outcome because West Ham will be building a better structure. That said, I remain cautious until it happens.
The key detail that really matters
With just six games remaining, the suggestion that a director of football could be appointed before the end of the season is, frankly, exciting.
But — and it’s a big but — the role has to carry real authority.
There’s little point appointing a figurehead if decisions can still be overridden by the manager or David Sullivan.
A line in the sand?
West Ham fans have seen this play out too many times.
Chairman-led deals, agent influence, and a lack of structure have all contributed to inconsistency in recruitment.
If this appointment is done properly — and given genuine power — it could finally signal that those days are behind us.