West Ham striker Carlos Tevez is clear to face Wanderers, despite fears he would not be allowed to play following fresh problems with a loan contract.

The Hammers, who were fined £5.5million by the Premier League for failing to reveal the full details surrounding the deal which brought Tevez and fellow Argentine Javier Mascherano to the club, were forced to amend the contract so Tevez could face Wigan last weekend.

It was believed that further contractual problems could make Tevez ineligible, but it is seems there is no reason why he should not play in tomorrow's crunch clash.

A third party agreement reached with players' part-owner Kia Joorabchian has now been terminated by the Hammers, which freed Tevez to play against Wigan last weekend and for the remainder of the season.

West Ham are in talks with Joorabchian over a new contractual arrangement regarding Tevez's future beyond the end of the season.

The Hammers could buy Tevez outright, which would cost them around £20million, or strike a similar loan deal that Mascherano has at Liverpool.

Any change to the status quo, any new arrangement must have met the Premier League's satisfaction for Tevez to play against Wanderers.

The Premier League are understood to be privately satisfied with the commission's final judgement as a whole.

But if West Ham succeed in staying up, sports lawyer Mel Goldberg believes the relegated clubs could have grounds to mount a legal challenge.