-
Iran says would respond 'ferociously' to any US attack
-
Venezuelan foreign minister demands 'immediate release' of Maduro
-
Dane Vingegaard to start season at Paris-Nice in March
-
Australia PM backs removing UK's Andrew from line of succession
-
Where do Ukraine and Russia stand after four years of war?
-
Police investigating racist abuse of Premier League quartet
-
Fiji to start Nations Championship at 'home' to Wales in Cardiff
-
EU lawmakers to put US trade deal on hold after Supreme Court ruling
-
Rubio to attend Caribbean summit as US presses Venezuela, Cuba
-
'Ugly' England aim to spin their way to T20 World Cup semi-finals
-
Nigeria paid Boko Haram ransom for kidnapped pupils: intel sources
-
Tudor says Tottenham can still beat the drop despite Arsenal loss
-
Violence sweeps Mexico after most-wanted drug cartel leader killed
-
France giant Meafou capable of being 'world's best' lock
-
World champions South Africa announce eight home Tests for 2026/27
-
Liverpool boss Slot encouraged by Mac Allister's return to form
-
India replaces British architect statue with independence hero
-
Pakistan warn England's flaky batting to expect a trial by spin
-
Philippines' Duterte authorised murders, ICC told as hearings open
-
Iran says would respond 'ferociously' to any US attack, even limited strikes
-
New Dutch government sworn in under centrist Jetten
-
What the future holds for the CJNG cartel after leader killed
-
ICC kicks off pre-trial hearing over Philippines' Duterte
-
UN chief decries global rise of 'rule of force'
-
Nemesio Oseguera, the brutal Mexican drug lord known as 'El Mencho'
-
Senegal's Sahad, radiant champion of 'musical pan-Africanism'
-
New York orders citywide travel ban as major storm hits US
-
'Considered a traitor': Life of an anti-war Ukrainian in Russia
-
South Korea and Brazil sign deals on K-beauty, trade
-
Zimbabwe farmers seek US help over long-promised payouts
-
Hong Kong appeals court upholds jailing of 12 democracy campaigners
-
India battle for World Cup survival after 'messing up on grand scale'
-
'I will go': Bengalis in Pakistan hope for family reunions
-
North Korea touts nuclear advances as Kim re-chosen to lead ruling party
-
South Korea protests 'Victory' banner hung from Russian embassy
-
Asian stocks rally after Trump's Supreme Court tariffs blow
-
New Dutch government to be sworn in under centrist Jetten
-
New York mayor orders citywide travel ban as major storm hits US
-
ICC to begin pre-trial hearing for Philippines' Duterte
-
After two convictions, France's Sarkozy seeks to merge sentences
-
Bridgeman hangs on to claim first PGA Tour title at Riviera
-
Hong Kong appeals court to rule on jailed democracy campaigners
-
MentalHealth.com Calls for Realignment in Social Media and Mental Health
-
Auschwitz Jewish Center Foundation Hosts 26 U.N. Diplomats on Holocaust Education Visit to Poland
-
Zenwork Tax1099 Reminds Employers about ACA 1095-B & 1095-C Recipient Deadline Set for March 2, 2026
-
DataVault AI and Wellgistics Health Announce Plans to Expand Partnership to Include Healthcare Delivery Intellectual Property for Healthcare as a Service (HaaS) Blockchain-enabled Smart Contracts
-
Armanino Foods Announces First Quarter 2026 Dividend
-
Rio Grande Resources to Conduct High-Resolution Airborne Survey at Winston Gold/Silver Project, New Mexico
-
IGC Pharma Adds Visionary Investigators Network as Clinical Site to Phase 2 CALMA Trial
-
Ainos Activates Industrial-Scale Deployment Roadmap of Up to 20,000 Units, Advancing AI Infrastructure Integration in Semiconductor Production Environments
Forest boost survival bid to leave West Ham in turmoil
Morgan Gibbs-White's late penalty fired Nottingham Forest to a crucial 2-1 win over West Ham that left their relegation rivals in deep trouble on Tuesday.
Sean Dyche's side fell behind to Murillo's early own goal at the London Stadium.
But West Ham had a second goal from Crysencio Summerville controversially ruled out by VAR for the tightest of offside decisions.
Forest rubbed salt into West Ham's wounds with a stirring fightback as Nicolas Dominguez equalised before Gibbs-White netted from the spot after another VAR call went the visitors' way.
Fourth-bottom Forest are now seven points clear of third-bottom West Ham with 17 games left in the fight for survival.
Hammers boss Nuno Espirito Santo said last weekend's dismal 3-0 defeat against bottom of the table Wolves was the worst of his managerial career.
But this painful loss was even more damaging to their hopes of avoiding a first season in the Championship since 2011-12.
West Ham have gone 10 games without a win, managing just one point from their last six matches to leave Nuno facing calls for his sacking just months after arriving at the east London club.
Ending a run of four successive defeats was a massive boost to Forest's bid to beat the drop under boss Sean Dyche, who replaced Nuno at the City Ground in September.
Nuno was in charge of Forest for 21 months, leading them to their first European berth in three decades, before being sacked in September after a dispute with owner Evangelos Marinakis over the club's transfer policy.
He has been unable to replicate his Forest success with West Ham.
Since Nuno took charge on September 27 they have averaged fewer points per game than under his much-maligned processor Graham Potter.
- Forest on fire -
On a freezing night in east London, many West Ham fans showed their discontent by staying at home, leaving swathes of empty seats around the London Stadium.
Nuno's team took the lead with a huge stroke of luck in the 13th minute.
Tomas Soucek rose highest to flick Summerville's corner into the six-yard box and Murillo was unable to react in time as he glanced a header into his own net.
It was no surprise that the opening goal came from a corner -- only West Ham have conceded more goals from that route in the Premier League this season than Forest's eight.
West Ham thought they had doubled their advantage in the 51st minute through Summerville's powerful drive, but the goal was disallowed by VAR for a narrow offside call against debutant Valentin Castellanos in the build-up.
Nuno was furious but Forest seized on the reprieve to equalise in the 55th minute.
Once again, it was weakness at set-pieces that proved fatal for West Ham as Dominguez met Elliot Anderson's corner with a looping header that dropped into the far corner while the Hammers defence stood statuesque.
West Ham tried to respond but Sels made a vital double save from Kyle Walker-Peters and Castellanos before Areola's blunder handed Forest their decisive penalty.
In a bid to punch clear, Areola came off his line and thumped into Gibbs-White's head with his out-stretched arm.
The penalty was awarded after a VAR check and Gibbs-White dusted himself down to drill the spot-kick past Areola, pushing the crest-fallen Nuno to the brink.
M.Thompson--AMWN