The West Ham Vs Aston Villa lineups for the Premier League clash at Villa Park on 22 March 2026 told a story of contrasting ambitions, as Aston Villa ended a four-game winless run with an emphatic 2-0 victory over a West Ham side still mired in a relegation battle.
John McGinn struck a brilliant set-piece goal in the 15th minute and Ollie Watkins fired home a second-half rebound in the 68th, as Unai Emery’s side demonstrated the gulf in quality between a club challenging for Champions League football and one fighting for Premier League survival.
The result moved Villa five points clear of Liverpool in fifth place and kept their top-four ambitions firmly on track, coming three days after they had booked a Europa League quarter-final spot with victory over Lille.
For West Ham, defeat at Villa Park left them 18th in the table, still bottom three, having squandered a golden chance to move out of the relegation zone on a day when rivals Tottenham also lost.

The match was played in front of 42,130 supporters at Villa Park, Birmingham, with referee Paul Tierney in charge.
West Ham Vs Aston Villa Lineups And Team News
West Ham manager Nuno Espirito Santo was dealt a blow before kick-off when Jean-Clair Todibo picked up an injury in the warm-up, forcing a late reshuffle that brought Freddie Potts into the starting eleven and altered West Ham’s planned defensive shape.
Villa, meanwhile, were able to welcome back Matty Cash from a knee injury, and John McGinn returned to the side having played 74 minutes in the midweek win over Lille.
Both Youri Tielemans and Boubacar Kamara remained unavailable for Emery.
Aston Villa Starting XI (4-2-3-1): Emiliano Martínez; Matty Cash, Ezri Konsa, Pau Torres, Lucas Digne; Amadou Onana, Ross Barkley; Jadon Sancho, John McGinn (c), Morgan Rogers; Ollie Watkins.
West Ham United Starting XI (4-3-3): Mads Hermansen; Aaron Wan-Bissaka, Konstantinos Mavropanos, Axel Disasi, El Hadji Malick Diouf; Tomáš Souček, Freddie Potts, Manuel Fernandes; Jarrod Bowen (c), Taty Castellanos, Pablo Fornals.
First Half: Villa Dominate, McGinn Opens The Scoring
Villa imposed themselves from the outset with a high-energy display that had West Ham struggling to cope across the pitch.
Digne forced Hermansen into a superb early save from a fierce 25-yard drive before the breakthrough came in the 15th minute through a brilliantly worked free-kick routine.
Cash played short to Sancho on the edge of the area, and rather than crossing, Sancho cleverly rolled the ball sideways along the penalty box edge to McGinn, who was waiting to curl a composed left-footed finish into the corner past a helpless Hermansen.
Villa continued to press and Amadou Onana headed just wide from close range before Watkins was denied in a one-on-one by the West Ham goalkeeper.
A penalty was awarded when Mavropanos appeared to foul Watkins inside the area, only for VAR to overturn the decision, having determined that Mavropanos had cleanly won the ball in a challenge that replays showed to be legitimate.
Substitutions And Second Half Conclusion
West Ham made two changes at half time, with Callum Wilson and Adama Traoré replacing Castellanos and Potts, as Nuno sought more pace and physicality in the second half.
Villa responded by deploying a quadruple substitution in the 67th minute, bringing on Youri Tielemans, Douglas Luiz, Leon Bailey, and Emiliano Buendia to freshen up the side.
The decisive second goal arrived in the 68th minute.
Morgan Rogers’ driven effort was saved by Hermansen but Watkins was quickest to react, hammering the rebound emphatically into the roof of the net to settle any lingering nerves.
West Ham offered nothing in response, managing just one shot on target across the entire 90 minutes, and Villa were able to see the game out comfortably.
Match Timeline
| Minute | Event | Player | Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| KO | Kick Off | ||
| Early | Big save | Hermansen denies Digne | West Ham |
| 15′ | GOAL | John McGinn (assist: Sancho) | Aston Villa |
| 45′ | Yellow card | Wan-Bissaka | West Ham |
| HT | Half Time | 1-0 Aston Villa | |
| 45′ | Double sub | Wilson, Traore on | West Ham |
| 67′ | Quadruple subs | Tielemans, Luiz, Bailey, Buendia on | Aston Villa |
| 68′ | GOAL | Ollie Watkins | Aston Villa |
| 77′ | Sub | Buendia on, Rogers off | Aston Villa |
| 83′ | Double sub | Magassa, Kanté on | West Ham |
| 87′ | Sub | Abraham on | Aston Villa |
| FT | Full Time | 2-0 Aston Villa |
Match Commentary Highlights
| Minute | Commentary |
|---|---|
| Early | Digne fires a fierce 25-yard effort that Hermansen tips around the post in an electric early moment from Villa. |
| 15′ | Sancho delays and shifts the ball sideways to an unmarked McGinn on the edge of the area. The captain curls it beautifully into the corner. 1-0. |
| ~35′ | Penalty awarded for a Mavropanos challenge on Watkins, only for VAR to overturn the decision. Fortunate escape for West Ham. |
| 68′ | Rogers’ shot is saved by Hermansen but Watkins is first to react, hammering home the rebound with conviction. 2-0. |
| 90′ | West Ham have managed just one shot on target all afternoon. The scale of Villa’s dominance fully reflected in the final result. |
Match Statistics
| Stat | Aston Villa | West Ham |
|---|---|---|
| Possession | 59% | 41% |
| Shots on Goal | 7 | 1 |
| Shot Attempts | 23 | 9 |
| Yellow Cards | 0 | 1 |
| Attendance | 42,130 | Villa Park, Birmingham |
| Referee | Paul Tierney |
Substitutes Used
Aston Villa: Tielemans (on 67′, Barkley off), Douglas Luiz (on 67′, McGinn off), Leon Bailey (on 67′, Sancho off), Buendia (on 77′, Rogers off), Abraham (on 87′, Watkins off).
West Ham: Wilson (on 45′, Castellanos off), Adama Traoré (on 45′, Potts off), Magassa (on 83′, Wan-Bissaka off), Kanté (on 83′, Souček off).
Premier League Standings Following The Match
| Pos | Team | GP | W | D | L | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | Aston Villa | 31 | 16 | 6 | 9 | +5 | 54 |
| 11 | Sunderland | 31 | 11 | 10 | 10 | -4 | 43 |
| 18 | West Ham United | 32 | 8 | 8 | 16 | -17 | 32 |
| 19 | Burnley | 31 | 4 | 8 | 19 | -28 | 20 |
| 20 | Wolverhampton | 32 | 3 | 8 | 21 | -34 | 17 |
With Liverpool, Chelsea, and Brentford all dropping points on the same weekend, Villa’s win proved even more valuable than it might have appeared, cementing fourth place in the table and strengthening their case as genuine Champions League contenders heading into the business end of the season.

