Enzo Maresca’s side were dealt a blow before a ball was even kicked, as Cole Palmer withdrew from the starting lineup due to an injury in the warm-up.
Their woes were compounded in the sixth minute when Lucas Paqueta fired home an absolute rocket with his left foot to put the Hammers in front,
However, the hosts’ defensive vulnerabilities soon came to the fore, allowing Chelsea to quickly restore parity. Marc Cucurella flicked on Pedro Neto’s corner towards Joao Pedro to head home his first goal against West Ham.
A breathless opening 20 minutes looked to have taken another twist when Niclas Fullkrug rifled in a left-footed strike, but VAR chalked it off due to an offside call against Jean-Clair Todibo in the build-up.
That short-lived joy which cascaded around the London Stadium was soon forgotten, with Chelsea completing the turnaround in the space of 17 minutes through Neto.
The Portuguese was allowed to ghost into the box unmarked to volley home from Pedro’s cross, with the Hammers’ defence static and unalert to the danger.
Palmer’s replacement, Estevao, was then the architect of Chelsea’s third goal, providing the cut-back for Enzo Fernandez to tap in and becoming the youngest player in PL history to assist a goal for Chelsea at 18 years and 120 days old.

Fernandez should have added a fourth just after the break, after Chelsea effortlessly carved open the West Ham defence once again, but he failed to find the target on this occasion from Neto’s delivery from the left.
A fourth soon arrived, though, as Mads Hermansen made a hash of an incoming corner and Moises Caicedo was on hand to punish the Dane’s error.
Trevoh Chalobah added a fifth two minutes shy of the hour mark following the home side’s hapless attempts to clear the danger, as many Hammers fans headed for an early exit.
This seemed to prompt a response from the hosts, who carried a threat for the first time in the match with a flurry of activity in Chelsea’s box. Substitute Kyle Walker-Peters’ cross-shot was cleared away from the goalmouth by Caicedo, with the Hammers showing something resembling a response.
It looked like Chelsea were about to score their sixth moments later, with Reece James brilliantly picking out Estevao, but the Brazilian’s effort took a deflection and Hermansen made a comfortable save.
Ultimately, it was a chastening evening for West Ham and Graham Potter, who has still never beaten Chelsea in eight managerial meetings (D4, L4).
After only picking up nine points in his first 10 home PL games in charge, he broke an unwanted club record previously shared by Alan Curbishley and Avram Grant, who managed 10 in their first 10.
As for Chelsea, they claimed their 33rd win in this competition against the Hammers, having only beaten Tottenham Hotspur more often (37), and for at least 17 hours or so, they go top of the table.
Flashscore Man of the Match: Pedro Neto (Chelsea)
