Fulham

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  1. 'We were convinced our name was on the trophy' - 2025 reportpublished at 16:15 GMT 31 December 2025

    Drew Heatley
    Fan writer

    Fulham fan's voice banner
    Bernd Leno of Fulham is mobbed by team-mates after saving the winning penalty in the shootout between Manchester United and FulhamImage source, Getty Images

    Best memory and why?

    Beating Manchester United on penalties in the FA Cup. At that point we were all convinced that our name was on the trophy, 50 years after our one and only domestic final appearance at Wembley. All that elation and joy, only for it all to fall apart in the next round against Crystal Palace!

    Worst moment and why?

    That Crystal Palace defeat, for the same reason - and for the meek way in which we lost. Everything was aligned and we just… surrendered. To watch Palace - who like us had never won a major honour - lift the cup was my worst moment in football generally! What could have been.

    If I could drink a New Year's brew with one member of our squad/management it would be...

    …Samuel Chukwueze

    and I'd ask them…

    …if he plans to stay at the club. He was making such an impression before he left for Afcon and seemed to fit in so well at Motspur Park. There is an option, so hopefully it is a foregone conclusion. Him and Kevin on the wings permanently is mouth-watering.

    The thing that's infuriated me in 2025 is...

    Our lack of concentration in key moments, whether in the first 10 minutes of a half, or the last. Newcastle's injury-time winner to knock us out of the League Cup at the quarter-final stage was one of so many examples where we mentally fell apart when it mattered most.

    My gut tells me 2026 will bring...

    A trophy. But it tells me that every year, so I will take that emotion with a pinch of salt.

    Find more from Drew Heatley at Fulhamish, external

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  2. Silva on togetherness, club ambition & Crystal Palacepublished at 16:14 GMT 31 December 2025

    Tyrese King
    BBC Sport journalist

    Fulham boss Marco Silva has been speaking to the media before Thursday's Premier League game against Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park (kick-off 17:30 GMT).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • On player availability: "So far no [new news]. The team is the same from the last game [West Ham]."

    • Marco Silva said he is "fully focused" going into Thursday's game against London rivals Crystal Palace as Fulham are enjoying "a very good run".

    • He is pleased with their recent form: "The main thing for us is the unit, the group and the group is reacting very, very well to all the circumstances that the Premier League is showing."

    • He added: "They have been very, very good, and let's hope that tomorrow we can perform again, we can be that focused, a team that shows our organisation, and wait for the quality and inspiration of some of our players – it's always needed in a football match to be there in the top level."

    • He said that 2025 has been "incredible" for the club and it proves that they are "always looking for me" improvement and success.

    • On Crystal Palace, who are winless since beating Fulham at Craven Cottage at the start of December: "Football is so, so tight, it's so demanding, and I don't know the reason [for Palace's form], I don't know, and it's not important for me to talk about it. Of course, we know that we are going to face a very good side and a very, very physical side."

  3. Who is on the 2025 naughty and nice list?published at 12:36 GMT 30 December 2025

    Henry Cowling
    BBC Sport journalist

    Antoine Semenyo, Sasa Lukic, Tino Livramento and Moises CaicedoImage source, Getty Images

    The festive period is decision time over who gets presents in their stocking and who gets a big lump of coal. Some Premier League players may find themselves in the latter category given their disciplinary record across 2025.

    This image displays a list from Opta via the BBC detailing the players who have committed the most fouls in the Premier League during 2025. 
Antoine Semenyo (Bournemouth) and Sasa Lukic (Fulham) are tied at the top with 70 fouls each.
Bruno Guimaraes (Newcastle) and Joao Gomes (Wolves) are tied for second place with 63 fouls each.
Moises Caicedo (Chelsea) rounds out the list with 56 fouls.
The data covers the calendar year 2025.

    One player with the joint-most fouls across the year is a name many probably would not have expected – Bournemouth winger Antoine Semenyo.

    Semenyo finds himself at the top of the rankings with 70 fouls committed in the Premier League in 2025, level with Sasa Lukic. The Fulham player is joined on the list by fellow combative midfielders Bruno Guimaraes, Joao Gomes and Moises Caicedo.

    It is Chelsea's Caicedo who has the most yellow cards in the Premier League in 2025, with 11.

    Lukic, Lucas Paqueta, Tyler Adams, Elliot Anderson and Andre all reached double figures across the year with 10 apiece.

    At the other end of the spectrum, Tino Livramento is top of the 'nice' list among regular starters. The full-back has committed just seven fouls across 2025 in the Premier League, four fewer then second-placed Alex Iwobi.

  4. West Ham 0-1 Fulham - the fans' verdictpublished at 09:21 GMT 29 December 2025

    Your opinions graphic

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    We asked for your thoughts after Saturday's Premier League game between West Ham and Fulham.

    Here are some of your comments:

    West Ham fans

    Peter: Ollie Scarles is a kid and we all make mistakes as we move forward. Who was marking Raul Jimenez? Who couldn't stick the ball in the net? Players with years of experience. Who facilitated the buying of this bunch of no-hopers? Are you reading this, David Sullivan and Karren Brady?

    Mo: The manager is not brave enough with his substitutions. He waits for the opposition to make changes. This game was crying out for Callum Wilson, Tomas Soucek and Konstantinos Mavrapanos in place of Lucas Paqueta, Scarles, and Soungoutou Magassa.

    David: This is all down to the ownership. We have had a succession of managers who, while not being Pep Guardiola or Mikel Arteta, are more than capable of getting us to mid-table. Poor transfer choices and the move to that ridiculous stadium are still a monkey on our back. All down to the penny-pinching owners. If Wrexham can get Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, Birmingham Tom Brady, and Swansea Snoop Dog, Martha Stewart and Luka Modric, why can't we get some big-name, media friendly, enthusiastic investors?

    Simon: We huffed and puffed but Fulham blew our house down. Since David Moyes left, we have been on a downhill trajectory. Tim Steiden is one of our worst signings ever. The duds he has bought we now want to sell and the person you blame for that hire is David Sullivan. With no striker and a brittle defence, we do look doomed.

    Fulham fans

    Teddy: I thought we had control of the game and that it was a deserved win. West Ham had a few good chances but I didn't once lose faith in Bernd Leno. An important three points and European qualification is back on!

    Bill: Grinding out results like this with three players away at Afcon along with injuries is very encouraging. Our form recently has been outstanding, so with shrewd transfers in January, who knows where we could end up?

    Lee: Marco Silva is getting the best out of a small squad of experienced players. Fulham may lack flair and look pedestrian at times but they play as a team and do their homework on their opponents. It looks like another mid-table finish beckons and for a club with the budget and resources of Fulham, that is commendable. Silva may feel that the owners lack the ambition to back him properly and I fear that this will be his last season with the club. A vital win for us against a West Ham side that lacks confidence and may well lose the battle against relegation.

    Gordon: We rode our luck. We have the players to make a half-chance count but soon our luck will run out. West Ham forged a number of chances and sliced us open a number of times but lacked luck with some of their shots. We need to use this momentum to tighten up at the back and work on creating more chances so we don't rely on Harry Wilson and his impossible shots.

  5. 'No coincidence Fulham's good form coincides with Robinson's return'published at 12:10 GMT 28 December 2025

    Sam Ashoo
    Final Score reporter at the London Stadium

    Antonee Robinson of FulhamImage source, Getty Images

    It is no coincidence that Fulham's recent good form has coincided with Antonee Robinson's return to action.

    The defender was out for almost three months earlier this season but since coming back into the side, the Cottagers have won three out of their past four matches.

    Their latest, against West Ham on Saturday, was arguably his best performance of the season, too.

    It speaks volumes that it is hard to say whether Robinson is better at attacking or defending. He is simply excellent at both.

    He consistently found space at London Stadium, linking well with Emile Smith Rowe in particular and his end product was pinpoint. Defensively, a clean sheet speaks for itself.

    For the stats lovers out there, Robinson had the second-highest amount of touches (93), a 94% accurate pass rate, created more chances than any other player (4) and a 100% accurate long ball rate.

    Robinson is known as 'Jedi' to his friends and family. It is safe to say that The Force is currently with Fulham.

  6. Fulham analysis: Cottagers into top half as excellent run continuespublished at 19:43 GMT 27 December 2025

    Michael Emons
    BBC Sport journalist

    Fulham celebrate a winImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Fulham have won three league games in a row

    Fulham have now gained six victories in nine games to ease their own relegation fears, with this success over West Ham taking them up to 10th.

    A draw may have been the fair result, but boss Marco Silva was understandably delighted with his side's victory, which was secured thanks to Raul Jimenez's 85th-minute header.

    The Cottagers began the game well with Jimenez shooting over from 18 yards, before Wilson forced a superb save from Alphonse Areola with the goalkeeper tipping a powerful 25-yard strike over the bar.

    But, after a bright opening, the visitors were largely restricted to long-range efforts, although Joachim Andersen almost embarrassed Areola with a 35-yard strike, which the goalkeeper had to save with his legs.

    Jimenez fired well over from one of their few chances in the second half and Marco Silva's side had to defend well to stay level as the hosts missed opportunities to take the lead

    But Jimenez gave the Hammers a warning of what was to come as he forced a save from Areola, before the Mexico striker became the match-winner for the second game in a row.

  7. West Ham 0-1 Fulham: What Silva saidpublished at 19:36 GMT 27 December 2025

    Media caption,

    Fulham manager Marco Silva spoke to BBC Match of the Day after his side's victory over West Ham: "Big win for us, if last week was a crucial one and a massive three points, then this one was even more important for us to climb to a position in the table we deserved to be in. Third win in a row away from home is difficult to achieve in the premier league.

    "We were well organised most of the time, we knew what we had to do, knew we would have the possession.

    "We knew they are strong in the offensive transition, how they play those moments with Bowen, Summerville, with Paqueta being the player to link up. They had some dangerous moments, they created, but most of the time we were in control.

    "Second half we created more than the first. The dynamic in attack was better, we created chances, and keeping a clean sheet away from home is important.

    "A draw would not have been unfair. They had chances, we had chances. These types of games are important until the end. I thought when we scored were were the dominant team, but of course looking at chances, shots, the draw probably would have been fair."

    On Raul Jimenez's late goal: "It's what he's capable of, he showed again he gives everything for the shirt his work ethic is unbelievable for a player his age and what he can offer the team. He needs goals to be more confident. He deserves the credit, he has been working very hard."

    Did you know?

    • Fulham have won three consecutive league games for the first time since January 2023 (4), while manager Marco Silva now boasts more Premier League wins against West Ham United than any other opponent, with today his seventh (D1 L4).

  8. West Ham v Fulham: Team newspublished at 13:59 GMT 27 December 2025

    West Ham line-up graphic

    West Ham, who have not won in six matches in all competitions are unchanged from the 11 that began the 3-0 loss at Manchester City a week ago.

    West Ham XI: Areola, Todibo, Kilman, Magassa, Walker-Peters, Scarles, Potts, Fernandes, Summerville, Paqueta, Bowen

    Subs: Hermansen, Earthy, Mavropanos, Rodriguez, Soucek, Kante, Golambeckis, Mayers, Wilson

    Fulham also name the same 11 that began the 1-0 victory over Nottingham Forest on Monday. The Cottagers are aiming to secure their third away win in a row.

    Fulham XI: Leno, Robinson, Andersen, Cuenca, Tete, Lukic, Berge, Wilson, Smith-Rowe, Kevin, Jimenez

    Subs: Lecomte, Castagne, Reed, Diop, Ridgeon, Cairney, King, Traore, Kusi-Asare

    Fulham line-up graphic
  9. Follow Saturday's Premier League games livepublished at 11:28 GMT 27 December 2025

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    There are seven games in the Premier League on Saturday and BBC Sport will bring you every moment.

    Kick-off times 15:00 GMT unless stated

    Follow all of the action and reaction here

    You can also listen to today's 5 Live Premier League commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Arsenal v Brighton" or "ask BBC Sounds to play Chelsea v Aston Villa", for instance.

    Find out more about how to listen to Premier League football on BBC Sounds

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  10. Sutton's predictions: West Ham v Fulhampublished at 11:03 GMT 27 December 2025

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    West Ham really need a win here. They are staring down the barrel of relegation after taking only two points from their past five games.

    Nuno Espirito Santo got a bit of a bounce at the start of November but they have not maintained that form.

    There does not seem to be much Christmas cheer at London Stadium at the moment and if they get off to a bad start here, things could turn quite quickly.

    Fulham got an important win over Nottingham Forest on Monday, which was enough for them to keep their heads above water in the relegation struggle.

    They always seem to pose a goal threat, and I have a feeling they will have something to celebrate here, too.

    Sutton's prediction: 2-1

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  11. West Ham United v Fulham: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 18:07 GMT 26 December 2025

    Matthew Hobbs
    BBC Sport journalist

    West Ham United aim to end their six-game winless run against in-form Fulham.

    BBC Sport examines some of the key themes ahead of Saturday's meeting at London Stadium (15:00 GMT).

    Festive failings

    The phrase 'too good to go down' is one often used in relation to certain Premier League teams, although West Ham's current run of poor form may mean it is not attributed to the Hammers very often during the festive season.

    The east London club's tally of 13 points is their joint-lowest Premier League tally at Christmas, matching the 13 they recorded in 2010-11 – a campaign in which they were relegated after finishing bottom of the table.

    So while the West Ham roster boasts players as talented as Jarrod Bowen and Lucas Paqueta, they have not won in the Premier League since a 3-2 victory against Burnley on 8 November.

    The data suggests that poor results stem from a squad still struggling to adapt to head coach Nuno Espirito Santo's counter-attacking style.

    The Hammers have less of the ball on average than under predecessor Graham Potter, but record fewer shots on target and fewer touches in the opposition box, alongside facing a greater number of shots on target themselves.

    Nuno is averaging just 0.83 points per game as Hammers boss, the lowest tally of any permanent manager in their Premier League history.

    The image displays a table from Opta and the BBC detailing the worst records of permanent West Ham managers during the Premier League era, ranked by points per game.
Nuno Espirito Santo has the lowest points per game record with 0.83.
Avram Grant is second lowest with 0.89 points per game.
Julen Lopetegui has the highest points per game among these five managers with 1.15.
The data is sourced from Opta.
    Image caption,

    Nuno Espirito Santo has the lowest points-per-game tally of any permanent West Ham manager

    Fulham in form before festive fixtures

    Facing in-form Fulham may not be on West Ham's Christmas list given they have lost all five of their Premier League games against fellow London sides this season, conceding 14 goals and scoring just twice.

    The Hammers last lost six consecutive league London derbies between April 1996 and January 1997.

    Fulham, meanwhile, have been resurgent in recent weeks, winning four of their past six matches.

    Only Manchester City, Arsenal and Aston Villa have won more than Fulham's 15 points since the start of November, while the Cottagers have triumphed in their past two away Premier League matches, as many as in their previous 12 fixtures on the road combined.

    The image displays a Premier League table showing team performance since November 1st. 
Manchester City and Aston Villa are tied at the top with 21 points each. 
Both teams have a record of 7 wins, 0 draws, and 1 loss. 
Arsenal is in third place with 17 points, followed by Chelsea and Fulham, both with 15 points.
The data is sourced from Opta.
    Image caption,

    Fulham have been in top-five form since the start of November

    Striker Raul Jimenez was the match-winner against Nottingham Forest on Monday night. His decisive penalty equalled former Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure's perfect record of 11 successful penalties from 11 – the joint best 100% record in the competition's history.

    Jimenez also likes playing against West Ham. He has scored six goals against them, his joint best tally against any top-flight club, along with Everton.

  12. Silva on Wilson, Christmas and West Hampublished at 11:24 GMT 26 December 2025

    Karan Vinod
    BBC Sport journalist

    Fulham boss Marco Silva has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against West Ham at London Stadium (kick-off 15:00 GMT).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • On the availability of recent talisman Harry Wilson, who picked up an injury late on during the win over Nottingham Forest on Monday: "In that moment, it looked more serious than what it is right now. We are still assessing his big knock in the knee. It was painful, still painful, so let's see. We have to assess him. We are going to have another session and then take a decision."

    • Silva labelled Wilson as "crucial", describing him as a player "in the top of his confidence" and as someone who is "helping the team win football matches".

    • He also confirmed Ryan Sessegnon remains unavailable because of a thigh injury.

    • On the need for discipline from players over Christmas: "We all know the way they should behave; of course, we are there to repeat it every time you think it is necessary."

    • Silva said that the fixtures and preparation around Christmas this season are "slightly different" than usual, adding he believes "the busiest period will come after the West Ham game".

    • With five games in the next 15 days, the Fulham boss said he has "an idea" of the players who can "recover quicker than the others" and those "who are the players that need more time".

    • However, he gave the caveat that while he has "a plan in mind", injuries and recovery timelines can force changes. He also noted that a thin squad will not offer opportunity for much rotation.

    • On facing struggling West Ham: "Position in the table can give you confidence, but sometimes it doesn't speak about your quality. We expect them with all the energy they have to change the last few results, and with the individual quality they have, some key players that can at any moment decide a game."

  13. 'High risk for a high reward' - should Fulham take striker gamble?published at 14:04 GMT 23 December 2025

    Drew Heatley
    Fan writer

    Fulham fan's voice banner
    Marco Silva watches the action from the touchlineImage source, Getty Images

    There is the long-running debate about whether there is any value in the January transfer window.

    And, truth be told, it entirely depends on the buying club and what it needs. January is a seller's market.

    Fulham desperately need a striker in the window. Rodrigo Muniz remains sidelined after surgery and Raul Jimenez's all-round game is suffering through fatigue. He needs someone to lessen the burden and we need someone to help fire us up the table.

    Our plight is public – so clubs will raise their prices accordingly. And who can blame them?

    There is, of course, the option to avoid spending millions and bring someone in on loan.

    We currently have Jonah Kusi-Asare, a teenage prospect from Bayern Munich whose chances of a first-team run have been played down at every opportunity by Marco Silva, who clearly does not think he is ready. Why not send him back and bring in a more seasoned striker in that same spot?

    It has paid dividends for us in the past. Vincenzo Montella arrived on loan in January 2007 and scored five goals in 14 to help steer us clear of the drop zone.

    Five years later, Pavel Pogrebnyak came in and scored four goals in his first three games to rocket us from 14th to eighth. We must now look for something similar.

    The January window is for fighting fires, for plugging gaps. If clubs take a punt on a player to instantly solve their problem – and it works – then the value of the deal cannot be debated.

    It is high risk for a high reward – but that is what makes the game so fun.

    Find more from Drew Heatley at Fulhamish, external

  14. The inconsistency of VAR on penaltiespublished at 10:55 GMT 23 December 2025

    Dale Johnson
    Football issues correspondent

    Thierno Barry of Everton clashes with William Saliba of ArsenalImage source, Getty Images

    On Saturday, Everton were adamant they should have been given a penalty.

    Arsenal defender William Saliba had kicked the boot of Thierno Barry. Referee Sam Barrott said no and, after some deliberation, he was backed up by the video assistant referee (VAR), Michael Salisbury.

    On Monday, Fulham's match-winning penalty against Nottingham Forest came after Douglas Luiz had lightly kicked the foot of Kevin. Referee Anthony Taylor pointed to the spot.

    Fans might well say the Saliba challenge looked like more of a penalty. The key difference? The on-field decision.

    In the early days of VAR in the Premier League there were many soft penalties. Most memorable is probably the spot-kick given to Brighton when Liverpool's Andy Robertson kicked the boot of Danny Welbeck, who went down theatrically.

    So ahead of the 2021-22 season the threshold for a VAR intervention was raised.

    Now when two players challenge for a ball which is off the ground, and both have a realistic prospect of winning it, the VAR is not expected to give a spot-kick if one player gets there marginally faster.

    Indeed, two seasons ago Arsenal's Gabriel Jesus wanted a penalty against Aston Villa when he was kicked, coincidentally, by Douglas Luiz.

    The Premier League's Key Match Incidents Panel voted the VAR was correct not to get involved in the incident, which had similarities to Saliba on Barry.

    The issue is that, as we saw with Fulham's spot-kick, if the referee had given the penalty to Everton the VAR would not have said it was wrong.

    In Europe, Saliba's challenge would almost certain have been a penalty.

    European leagues penalise these offences more strictly to ensure consistency.

    In the Premier League, the high bar means the on-field decision is more important - and that can only lead to inconsistencies, perceived or otherwise.

  15. Fulham 1-0 Nottingham Forest - the fans' verdictpublished at 09:46 GMT 23 December 2025

    Your opinions graphic

    This content isn't available anymore.

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    We asked for your thoughts after Monday's Premier League game between Fulham and Nottingham Forest.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Fulham fans

    James: Jimenez never misses from the penalty spot! It was a very evenly matched and well battled game. It wasn't great to watch but all that matters is that they got the winning goal and the three points.

    Terry: We looked lightweight at times against a Forest side who played some very nice football, and only a fantastic effort from our defence kept them out. An ugly game, but three vital points.

    Dan: Solid win for Fulham and shows squad depth we have this year. We need to talk about Kevin!

    Will: Definitely won't win any game of the seasons nominations but a very important three points to move us towards the top 10. Raul cool as ice as per usual.

    Forest fans

    Jon: Awful performance. No quality and no idea how to break Fulham down. The subs came on and killed the game. Does Dyche really think bringing McAtee and Awoniyi on will work? Both terrible! Will be a relegation battle all the way.

    Austin: Really poor from Forest against a weakened Fulham. So many misplaced passes and overhit crosses. No real intensity. Even Anderson was very poor. We have to do better away from home or we will stay in a relegation fight all season.

    Tom: That was intensely disappointing. Never looked likely to come back from the penalty. The lack of goal threat was worrying, with 30-yard shots not going to do it.

    James: I dream of the day we will beat either Fulham or Bournemouth...

  16. Fulham 1-0 Nottingham Forest: What Silva saidpublished at 07:58 GMT 23 December 2025

    Media caption,

    Fulham boss Marco Silva spoke to Sky Sports after the match against Nottingham Forest: "We are very happy and pleased for the players for the three points. They are massive for us. We spoke before the match about how it's going to be important for us to get the three points and win again at home, and to have back-to-back Premier League wins after the last three points against Burnley. Those three points make more sense if you're going to win at home, and we did it.

    "At the end, a difficult game. The first half was better than the second from ourselves. You manage well the second half off the ball. On the ball was not at our level, but the first half we had some good moments the way we started the game.

    "We scored at an important moment of the game, before half-time. The second half we did manage well, I can't remember one chance from Nottingham Forest - that is the truth."

    Did you know? Since the start of November, only Manchester City (21), Aston Villa (21) and Arsenal (17) have earned more points in the Premier League than Fulham (15).

    On the reliability of Raul Jimenez: "He's very important and he needed goals. He had two good chances with the head, two great headers from him. One in the first half because the reality in the first half we had two great chances. One with Sasa Lukic at the edge of the box and the other of Raul to start leading the score.

    "He's a hard worker. He's a guy that always puts everything on the pitch. He gives his heart for the team. He's going to fight for the shirt every single moment. Of course, he needs confidence. The goals will give him confidence because he will start to link our game to be the right guy. I'm pleased for him. In that moment he was cool enough to decide in a great penalty."

    Did you know? Fulham's Raúl Jiménez has the joint-best 100% penalty conversion rate in Premier League history (11/11), along with Yaya Touré.

  17. Analysis: Kevin shines in front of Brazil assistantpublished at 07:58 GMT 23 December 2025

    Keifer MacDonald
    BBC Sport journalist

    Kevin and Raul Jimenez celebratingImage source, Getty Images

    With manager Marco Silva without several of his key players because of international commitments, this was a huge victory for Fulham.

    With Alex Iwobi, Calvin Bassey and Samuel Chukwueze spending the month representing Nigeria at Afcon, the Cottagers were missing a trio who had started a collective total of 34 out of a possible 48 games in the Premier League this season.

    But when Kevin, making just his fourth start of the league campaign, raced past the Nottingham Forest defence and whipped a delightful ball across the face of goal within the first 30 seconds, it was clear Fulham were out to show they were more than capable of securing victory in the absence of their key men.

    On the night, it was the unpredictability of Kevin and the experience of left-back Antonee Robinson that spurred the Cottagers to victory.

    Brazil youth international Kevin, who arrived from Shakhtar for a club record £34.6m in September, was lively throughout his 78 minutes of action before being replaced by King, with his trickery and close control drawing a foul from Luiz in first-half stoppage time to earn the decisive spot-kick for his side.

    At 22-years-old, it is only natural that the wide forward has plenty to learn and improve upon, his decision-making in particular, but this outing is one that will provide plenty of excitement for Fulham fans, particularly when they are without Chukwueze.

    With Brazil's assistant manager Paul Clement in attendance, Kevin's performance could give the national coaches something to think about before next summer's World Cup.

    In the meantime, he is likely to have plenty more opportunities to impress in the Premier League until Chukwueze returns from international duty.