JK Rowling and Harry Styles among highest taxpayers
The annual Sunday Times Tax List has revealed the UK’s 100 biggest taxpayers, with gambling magnates Fred and Peter Done of Betfred topping the rankings for the first time, surpassing a host of musicians, entrepreneurs, and sporting icons.
Celebrities such as JK Rowling, Mo Salah, and Harry Styles also featured prominently.
The billionaire brothers, who established their Warrington-based business in 1967, contributed an estimated £400.1m in tax over the past year.
This significant sum marks a near 50 per cent increase from their previous year’s bill of £273.4m.
Their elevated tax payments, along with many others on the list, are attributed to changes in corporation tax rates and other fiscal adjustments implemented by the Labour government, aimed at bolstering welfare spending.
Collectively, the top 100 taxpayers paid a staggering £5.758bn in tax, a substantial rise from £4.985bn recorded the previous year.
Robert Watts, who compiles the list, noted its increasing diversity, stating: “This is an increasingly diverse list, with Premier League footballers and world-famous pop stars lining up alongside aristocrats and business owners selling pies, pillows and baby milk.
“This year there’s been a big jump in the amount of tax we’ve identified – largely because of higher corporation tax rates.”
Beyond the Done brothers, financial trading entrepreneur Alex Gerko secured second place with a £331.4m tax contribution, closely followed by hedge fund boss Chris Rokos, who paid £330m.
Among the new entries to the prestigious list was former One Direction star Harry Styles, whose tax payment reached £24.7m.
Footballing talent also made their mark, with Manchester City’s Erling Haaland debuting at number 72 with an estimated £16.9m tax bill, and Liverpool’s Mo Salah contributing an estimated £14.5m.
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Other familiar names included Harry Potter author JK Rowling, ranked 36th with a £47.5m bill, and musician Ed Sheeran, at 64th place with a £19.9m tax payment.
However, the list also highlighted a growing trend of wealthy individuals departing the UK.
Six taxpayers featured despite having left the country over the past year, amid speculation that moves were made to avoid higher taxes under Labour or due to the removal of non-dom status.
These individuals included Revolut founder Nik Storonsky, Wren Kitchens founder Malcolm Healey, and sports promoter Eddie Hearn.
Mr Watts commented on this exodus, observing: “One in nine of the people who make the tax list are no longer listed as resident here in the UK, instead choosing to live in Morocco, Dubai, Switzerland, Cyprus, Portugal, the United States and the Channel Islands.
“Clearly, the tax listers who have moved offshore are still delivering huge sums to HM Treasury through their businesses, but the Chancellor would no doubt be raising even more money from these people had they chosen to stay put and remain liable for personal tax here.”
Macaulay Culkin, Seth Rogen and Tim Burton lead tributes to Catherine O’Hara
Catherine O’Hara, the award-winning actor known for roles in films and TV, including Home Alone and Schitt’s Creek, has died at the age of 71.
O’Hara died Friday at her home in Los Angeles following a brief illness, her manager told Variety.
The two-time Emmy winner is perhaps best known for playing Kate McCallister in the first two Home Alone films, before going on to play matriarch Moira Rose on the hit TV series Schitt’s Creek.
O’Hara most recently appeared on 10 episodes of AppleTV’s The Studio and three episodes of the HBO series The Last of Us. Her work on both shows earned her Emmy nominations — the ninth and tenth of her career.
Emotional tributes have poured in from stars mourning the loss, including her Home Alone co-star Macaulay Culkin and The Last of Us co-star Pedro Pascal.
“Mama. I thought we had time,” Culkin began before adding, “But I had so much more to say.”
Pascal, meanwhile, wrote: “There is less light in my world, this lucky world that had you, will keep you, always.”
Follow below for updates as tributes come in…
‘Home Alone’ director says the film wouldn’t have worked without O’Hara
Chris Columbus, who directed Home Alone, has explained that the film would not have worked without O’Hara’s singular performance.
In a statement on Instagram, he wrote: “Today we lost Catherine O’Hara. I’m stunned and heartbroken, along with the rest of the world.
“I was an obsessive fan of Catherine’s brilliant comedic work on SCTV and was thrilled when she agreed to play Kevin’s mom in Home Alone.
“What most people don’t realize is that Catherine carries the weight of 50 percent of that film. The movie simply would not work without her extraordinary performance.
“Catherine grounds the picture with a profound emotional depth. I will miss her greatly. Yet there is a small sense of comfort, realizing that two of the finest human beings I’ve ever known, Catherine and John Candy, are together again, brilliantly improvising, making each other laugh.”
Macaulay Culkin pays emotional tribute to screen mother
“Mama. I thought we had time,” Culkin wrote about his Home Alone co-star.
“I wanted more. I wanted to sit in a chair next to you. I heard you. But I had so much to say.
“I love you. I’ll see you later.”
O’Hara shared role she most wanted to be remembered for prior to her death
O’Hara told a fan who she met at the airport prior to her death that, of all her iconic roles, she hoped she was remembered as the mother of her two sons, Matthew and Luke.
The actor welcomed her children with her husband Bo Welch in 1994 and 1997 respectively. Both Matthew and Luke went on to work in set design in Hollywood.
“It’s great to play a realised mother because it is one of the most important roles in life,” O’Hara told Variety in 2020 when discussing her role as Moira in Schitt’s Creek.
“I can’t see one more scene where the actress is juggling not just a role, but all kinds of props and business and choreography with child actors in a kitchen scene,” she said.
“The actress is working her ass off and the male actor stands there doing his lines. It is bulls***. Just like it’s bulls***in life.
“I want to see more couples and children that are old enough to share the work of the home. Make that the norm.”
O’Hara had ‘difficulty breathing’ before untimely death
O’Hara suffered from “breathing difficulty” and was rushed to hospital in a “serious condition” before her death, 911 dispatch audio obtained by Page Six has revealed.
Emergency responders from the Los Angeles Fire Department were dispatched to the actor’s Brentwood home address after receiving a call at 4.48am on Friday (30 January).
The 71-year-old had been expected to begin filming for the second season of Seth Rogen’s Hollywood satire The Studio, in which she plays executive Patty Leigh, in mid-January.
However, O’Hara pulled out of the show to deal with “personal matters” and episodes were “reworked…to focus on scenes without her character” per The Sun.
“It was not widely known she was dealing with any health or major issues,” a source told the newspaper.
‘O’Hara made flawed characters beloved’
From Delia Deetz in Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice to former soap star matriarch Moira in Schitt’s Creek O’Hara had a knack for making flawed characters loveable, writes The Independent’s Patrick Smith.
“[Moira] was pure O’Hara: monumentally self-absorbed, completely ridiculous, and somehow the show’s wounded core. It won her the Emmy and Golden Globe acting awards that had eluded her for decades. Moira’s wardrobe became as famous as her malapropisms, but it was O’Hara’s voice – that wonderfully bizarre instrument – that made the character indelible.”
Read the full tribute below:
Catherine O’Hara made deeply flawed characters not just bearable but beloved
Eugene Levy says ‘words seem inadequate’ to express grief
Eugene Levy, who starred in Schitt’s Creek as O’Hara’s husband, Johnny Rose, has shared in a statement that “Words seem inadequate to express the loss I feel today.”
“I had the honour of knowing and working with the great Catherine O’Hara for over fifty years. From our beginnings on the Second City stage, to SCTV, to the movies we did with Chris Guest, to our six glorious years on Schitt’s Creek, I cherished our working relationship, but most of all our friendship. And I will miss her.’
Dan Levy says O’Hara was ‘extended family’ long before ‘Schitt’s Creek’
Dan Levy, who created Schitt’s Creek with his father Eugene and played David Rose in the show, has said O’Hara was “extended family” long before she played his mother in the much-loved sitcom.
“What a gift to have gotten to dance in the warm glow of Catherine O’Hara’s brilliance for all those years,” Levy said.
“Having spent over fifty years collaborating with my Dad, Catherine was extended family before she ever played my family. It’s hard to imagine a world without her in it.
“I will cherish every funny memory I was fortunate enough to make with her.”
O’Hara shared how she wanted to die in resurfaced interview
While filling in the Proust questionnaire for Vanity Fair in 2013, O’Hara said she hoped to die “laughing, surrounded by my old grandchildren who are telling me to ‘let go, already, Grandma!”
O’Hara is survived by her sons, Matthew and Luke Welch, who also work in Hollywood as set designers.
In a 2007 interview with Toronto Star, the Argylle star opened up about her sons’ senses of humour.
“They’re very funny, and we encourage it,” O’Hara said.
“The older one does Warners cartoon bits, really old-fashioned, cheap-a** funny vaudeville stuff. And the little one does word play.”
She continued, “I’m proud to say, we all make each other laugh. In my home, growing up. I learned that from my parents. They made each other laugh to the end, God bless ‘em. How great is that?”
‘Schitt’s Creek’ co-stars say working with O’Hara was a ‘magical gift’
Two of O’Hara’s Schitt’s Creek co-stars have recalled their time working with the late star.
Karen Robinson, who played Ronnie Lee, said in a statement to USA Today: “The unmitigated good fortune of sharing space and work and laughter with the brilliance that was Catherine O’Hara is something that I will treasure forever.
“I am heartbroken for her family and all circles of her friends and loved ones. Oh Canada – what a loss. Thank you, Catherine, for everything you gave us before you left us. So much and so timeless that a part of you will always stay with us.”
Jennifer Robertson, who played Jocelyn Schitt, added:
“I am deeply saddened to hear we have lost Catherine. Being in Catherine O’Hara’s orbit was a beautiful, magical gift.
“She was [an] absolute star who never understood why people made such a fuss about her. Her passing is a loss for everyone who knew and loved her. My deepest condolences to Bo, her sons, and the O’Hara family.”
‘The Shield’ star says O’Hara was ‘universally loved and admired’
The Shield star Michael Chiklis reacted to news of O’Hara’s death by writing on X: “Precious few people in this world are universally loved and admired. Catherine O’Hara was not only one of those few… she deserved it. Rest In Eternal Peace”
Chernobyl loses power as mass blackouts continue across Ukraine
The Chernobyl power plant has lost power off-site as blackouts across Ukraine continue.
Russia has been repeatedly targeting the country’s energy facilities during the winter as the war grinds towards it’s fourth anniversary in February. It is not yet clear what caused the brief Chernobyl outage.
On Thursday Trump claimed Russian president Vladimir Putin had agreed to not attack Ukrainian energy infrastructure this weekend at a time when the war-hit nation is experiencing particularly harsh winter conditions.
The Kremlin has said the brief and limited ceasefire will end on Sunday while Ukraine said it will not attack Russia’s energy grid in exchange.
Three way peace talks are due to take place between Kyiv, Moscow and Washington on Sunday.
However, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has suggested the talks may not go ahead as planned due to growing tensions between the US and Iran.
“From our point of view, something is happening in the situation between the United States and Iran, and those developments could affect the timing,” Zelensky said.
The power outages come amid mounting concerns among US and European officials over hundreds of millions of dollars in American energy assistance for Ukraine that remain unreleased.
The aid was originally intended to help Ukraine import liquefied natural gas and rebuild infrastructure damaged by Russian strikes, say sources including a US and a Ukrainian official.
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) had notified Congress during the Biden administration of its intention to disburse some funds.
Yet, after USAID was effectively shuttered in the initial weeks of the Trump administration, some money fell into what sources described as “bureaucratic limbo.”
Technical malfunction blamed for outages
Ukraine’s Energy Minister Denys Shmyhal blamed a technical malfunction that caused simultaneous outages on two high-voltage power lines, one linking the grids of Romania and Moldova and another connecting western and central Ukraine.
Moldova’s energy ministry said the disruption there was triggered by serious problems in Ukraine’s grid that led to a voltage drop on the line connecting Romania and Moldova.
Romania’s energy ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The accident caused a shutdown on Ukraine’s side, triggered automatic protection at substations and the temporary disconnection of nuclear power plant units from the grid, Shmyhal said.
Power partially restored in both countries
The metro in Kyiv suspended operations and water supplies in the city were cut.
Traffic lights and some public transport in Chisinau were not working, according to the city mayor, and most districts did not have electricity.
At a metro station in Kyiv with dimmed lights, some passengers were waiting, hopeful of resuming their journeys.
Officials in both countries reported that power was partially restored in the early afternoon following rushed efforts to stabilise interconnected grids.
“By evening, we will be back to where we were before the accident,” Oleksandr Kharchenko, director of the independent Energy Research Centre in Kyiv, told Reuters.
Ukraine and Moldova hit by blackouts from grid malfunction
Parts of Ukraine and Moldova, including the capitals of both neighbouring countries, were plunged into blackouts on Saturday caused by malfunction of high-voltage power lines, officials said.
Officials did not directly link the accident to war damage, although Ukraine’s power grid has suffered from the accumulated impact of Russian air strikes leading to severe restrictions on electricity supplies in recent weeks.
Ukraine’s digital ministry also said a cyberattack was not to blame.
The system is under greater pressure as a cold spell returns this weekend.
At least five Ukrainian regions and some parts of Moldova were affected by the blackouts, as well as capitals Kyiv and Chisinau, after the malfunction at 10:42 a.m. Kyiv time.
Putin envoy heads for talks with US delegation
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy Kirill Dmitriev headed for meetings with members of a U.S. delegation in Miami at 8am local time, a source with knowledge of the visit told Reuters.
This weekend’s talks are due to be held between Kyiv, Moscow and Washington following similar discussions last weekend.
Ukrainian president Zelensky had suggested the talks on Sunday could be delayed, however, due to ongoing tensions between the US and Iran.
Mapped: Battlefield situation as of Friday
The British Ministry of Defence shared its latest Defence Intelligence update on the situation in Ukraine on Friday:
Russia claims two more villages in Ukraine
Russia’s defence ministry said today that forces had captured the villages of Petrivka and Toretske.
Petrivka is in Ukraine’s southeastern Zaporizhzhia region. Toretske is in the eastern Donetsk region.
It was not possible to immediately verify the claims.
Chernobyl power station knocked offline
The Ukrainian power station at Chernobyl briefly lost all off site power, the UN’s atomic watchdog reported on Saturday.
Ukraine is working to stabilise the grid and restore output, they said, adding that there no direct impact on nuclear safety was expected.
Although no longer a working power station, the plant still requires constant management.
Parts of Ukraine and Moldova, including the capitals of both neighbouring countries, were plunged into blackouts on Saturday caused by malfunctions to high-voltage power lines, officials said.
‘Millions for Ukraine held in USAID limbo’, officials claim
US and European officials are concerned that millions of dollars set aside for energy assistance for Ukraine have not been released at a time when Russia is scaling up attacks on energy infrastructure.
Several sources, including a US official and a Ukrainian official, told Reuters that the US Agency for International Development (USAID) had been expected to release the funds before Donald Trump effectively shuttered the agency last year.
Some of the funds fell into what sources called a bureaucratic limbo. It was unclear how much was held up. The previous Biden administration pledged significant funding for Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, including $824m in mid-2024, for instance.
Zelensky rejects Putin’s offer to come to Moscow
Volodymyr Zelensky rejected Russia’s offer to travel to Moscow on Friday, while signalling he was open to meet with Vladimir Putin in a more appropriate format.
“I can just as well invite him to Kyiv, let him come. I’m openly inviting him, if he dares,” Zelensky told reporters.
He added: “We are serious about the need to end the war. Any real format for a meeting of leaders is suitable.”
The two leaders have not met since 2019, before the start of the full-scale war.
Renowned activist arrested over placard at pro-Palestine protest
Renowned activist Peter Tatchell has been arrested at a pro-Palestine march in central London, his foundation said on Saturday.
Mr Tatchell, 74, was arrested, it said, over a placard reading: “Globalise the intifada: Non-violent resistance. End Israel’s occupation of Gaza & West Bank.”
In a statement released by the Peter Tatchell Foundation, Mr Tatchell said Saturday’s arrest was “an attack on free speech”.
He said: “The police claimed the word intifada is unlawful. The word intifada is not a crime in law.
“The police are engaged in overreach by making it an arrestable offence.
“This is part of a dangerous trend to increasingly restrict and criminalise peaceful protests.”
Mr Tatchell said “intifada”, an Arab word, means “uprising, rebellion or resistance against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza”.
He added: “It does not mean violence and is not antisemitic. It is against the Israeli regime and its war crimes, not against Jewish people.”
Mr Tatchell was taken to Sutton police station to be detained, according to his foundation.
The Metropolitan Police said in December that protesters chanting “globalise the intifada” would be arrested because the “context has changed” in the wake of the Bondi Beach terror attack.
In a post on X, the Met said: “Officers policing the Palestine Coalition protest have arrested a 74-year-old man on suspicion of a public order offence. He was seen carrying a sign including the words ‘globalise the intifada’.”
Mr Tatchell had been marching near police officers and with the sign on display for about a mile from Russell Square to the top of the Strand when the group came across a counterprotest, according to a witness.
At that point, he was stopped and “manhandled by 10 officers”, according to Jacky Summerfield, who was with him.
“I was shoved back behind a cordon of officers and unable to speak to him after that,” she said.
“I couldn’t get any closer to hear anything more than that; it was for Section 5 [of the Public Order Act].
“There had been no issue until that, he was walking near the police officers,” she added.
“Nobody had said or done anything.”
Veterans protest at US embassy over Trump’s Greenland threats
Hundreds of Danish veterans, many of whom served alongside American forces, staged a silent protest on Saturday outside the US Embassy in Copenhagen.
The demonstration was a direct response to the Trump administration’s suggestions of acquiring Greenland and what they perceive as a dismissal of their combat contributions.
Earlier in January, President Donald Trump claimed that Nato soldiers avoided the front line in the Middle East, and he was not sure that the alliance would “be there if we ever needed them”.
He told Fox News: “They’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan … and they did, they stayed a little back, a little off the front lines.”
“Denmark has always stood side by side with the USA — and we have showed up in the world’s crisis zones when the USA has asked us to,” Danish Veterans & Veteran Support said.
“We feel let down and ridiculed by the Trump administration, which is deliberately disregarding Denmark’s combat side by side with the USA.”
The group added: “Words cannot describe how much it hurts us that Denmark’s contributions and sacrifices in the fight for democracy, peace and freedom are being forgotten in the White House.”
The veterans initially gathered at a monument honouring fallen Danish service members before marching to the nearby US Embassy.
There, they observed five minutes of silence, dedicating one minute to each branch of Denmark’s armed forces: the army, air force, navy, emergency management agency, and police.
Danish veterans are furious at how the White House rhetoric disregards the right to self-determination of Greenland, a territory of Nato ally Denmark.
They also strongly object to Trump’s claim that Denmark is incapable of protecting the West’s security interests in the Arctic.
Forty-four Danish soldiers were killed in Afghanistan, the highest per capita death toll among coalition forces. Eight more died in Iraq.
Tensions were further inflamed on Tuesday when 44 Danish flags — one for every Danish soldier killed in Afghanistan — that had been placed in front of the embassy were removed by embassy staff.
The State Department later said that, as a general rule, guard staff remove items left behind following demonstrations and other “legitimate exercises of free speech”. The flags were returned to those who left them, it said.
The smart moment to get ahead of your business budget
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Hundreds protest in Milan against ICE involvement at Winter Olympics
Hundreds of Italians have taken to the streets to protest US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents’ involvement in the Winter Olympics.
The demonstrators gathered in Milan on Saturday, blowing whistles and singing Bruce Springsteen songs, in an echo of some of the tactics used by anti-ICE protesters in the US.
It was announced this week that ICE staff will help to protect the US delegation at the Games, which run from 6-22 February in Milan and the Alpine resort of Cortina d’Ampezzo.
The security role is consistent with support provided by various federal agencies for US diplomats at previous Olympic events.
However, the news was met by uproar in Italy due to the fatal shootings of US citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minnesota.
Umberto Daddario, a 54-year-old industrial chemist, was at the protest with his daughter Giorgia, 16.
They carried a hand-written placard that read “ICE=FASCISM.”
Fabio, a 49-year-old architect from Milan, attended the demonstration, with his wife and daughters aged 10 and six.
“We are here at the request of our daughters who wanted to demonstrate as a protest against what is going on in the USA,” he said.
Italy has detailed a sweeping security plan for the Winter Olympics, stressing that it will keep command of all operations.
The US delegation will be led by Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Milan’s mayor Giuseppe Sala earlier said that ICE is “not welcome” in the Italian city.
“They are not aligned with our democratic way of managing security,” Mr Sala told RTL Radio 102.
The Minnesota shootings
Mother of three Renee Nicole Good was shot dead in her car after a disagreement with ICE agent Jonathan Ross on 7 January.
The Trump administration has consistently stated that Mr Ross acted in self defence when he shot the woman.
However, footage seems to show Ms Good attempting to turn her car past the agent to drive away.
Intensive care nurse Alex Pretti was then shot dead on 24 January, with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claiming the agent fired in self-defence after stating that Mr Pretti had a handgun and resisted attempts to disarm him.
This version of events has been challenged by eyewitnesses and Mr Pretti’s family.
Jarrod Bowen curler gives West Ham early lead at Stamford Bridge
Chelsea will hope to continue a strong start to life under Liam Rosenior as they host West Ham United in the Premier League.
Rosenior has won his first two league games in charge after succeeding Enzo Maresca at Stamford Bridge, and safely steered his side to a valuable victory at Napoli in midweek to secure a top-eight Champions League finish. The manager needs to continue the winning run and decided to start Cole Palmer for today’s clash following his impressive outing in Italy.
West Ham are also in a relatively buoyant mood despite the fact they still occupy a place in the relegation zone. Wins over Tottenham and Sunderland have restored some hope that Nuno Espirito Santo and his squad can fight their way out of a situation that appeared bleak, and a surprise success here today could really get them going.
Follow all of the latest from the Premier League clash with our live blog below:
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
27 mins: Gittens hobbles off the pitch and looks like he may have stretched something.
As play resumes, Liam Delap dribbles forward with the ball but his attempt to pick out a teammate results in the Irons intercepting the pass.
Gittens can’t continue and Rosenior hooks him off to replace him with Pedro Neto.
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
24 mins: Liam Rosenior calls over a few players during a pause in play and issues more instructions.
Bowen has a chat with Nuno Espirito Santo as well but the West Ham seem happy enough.
West Ham have looked decent so far.
The break in play is due to Jamie Gittens receiving some medical treatment.
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
21 mins: Chelsea are trying to get some control of this game but the Irons have kept a solid shape.
A counter-attack for the Blues looks to be in action but Garnacho runs into trouble with the ball and loses possession.
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
18 mins: Chelsea are awarded a free kick deep in West Ham’s half.
It’s within shooting range and Cole Palmer decides to take it one.
His strike is pretty good but Alphonse Areola has it covered the entire way and clings on to a simple catch.
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
15 mins: Save!
Bowen and Wan-Bissaka cause problems on the right wing again and it’s the West Ham captain who slips the ball into the penalty area.
Taty Castellanos collects it and drives a fizzing effort towards the near post where Robert Sanchez does well to keep the ball out.
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
13 mins: Chelsea slowly build out from the back before Enzo Fernandez increases the intensity with a dart through the middle of the pitch.
He looks for Garnacho on the left wing but can’t pick out his teammate and West Ham recover the ball.
Chelsea 0-1 West Ham
10 mins: Chelsea needed to come from behind during the week in order to beat Napoli and they’ll have to do so again today.
Rosenior has plenty of options on his bench but he’ll be hoping his starting XI can get them back into this one.
GOAL! Chelsea 0-1 West Ham (Jarrod Bowen, 7′)
Wow!
Aaron Wan-Bissaka steals the ball off Alejandro Garnacho on the right wing and drives forward.
He holds it up and slips a pass to Jarrod Bowen.
Bowen swings in a cross to the far post but no-one can get on the end of the ball.
Robert Sanchez is worried about the central attacker and shuffles over to his left but when the ball bounces he’s too far away from it and it curls into the back of the net!
Chelsea 0-0 West Ham
3 mins: Chelsea start the match on the front foot and work the ball into the West Ham box from the right.
The visitors scramble the ball away but it’s quickly recovered by the Blues.
Kick off! Chelsea 0-0 West Ham
West Ham get the ball rolling at Stamford Bridge. Liam Rosenior looks relaxed despite the sweeping changes he’s made to the Chelsea line-up.
Can West Ham capitalise on that? Let’s find out…