Sidley Austin’s high profile hires of Clifford Chance restructuring duo Philip Hertz and Melissa Coakley last month are the latest examples of the US firm’s efforts to build up in London.
Sidley kicked off a sustained period of investment in the City in 2023 and it has no plans to slow down now. Looking at its most recent financial results, which saw revenue in London jump by nearly a third to $299m, the success of the strategy is readily apparent.
Here, we look beyond the financials, digging into the Legal 500 data to see the impact of this hiring spree on the firm’s rankings.
Sidley more than doubled its ranked partners in five years
One key metric highlights the quality of the firm’s lateral hiring spree – the number of ranked partners it has in London. The most recent 2026 London data, published last autumn, shows Sidley has increased its total number of ranked partners from 11 in the 2022 research to 26 now (including Hertz and Coakley).
Notably, these gains are concentrated at the top end. The firm now has ten partners ranked in the Hall of Fame, which recognises the most senior partners at the very top of their fields. Five years ago, by contrast, it had just one: insurance partner Martin Membery who is ranked for insurance: corporate and regulatory.
No. of ranked partners London L500 2022 -2026
Sidley gained six new Legal 500 rankings in London
Sidley’s hiring spree has also shown results in its practice area rankings, with the firm going from 16 total rankings in the 2022 research to 22 in the most recent. It also increased its proportion of higher-tier rankings, with five Tier 2 rankings in the 2026 guide, up from just one in 2022.
Its most notable improvement has been in acquisition finance, where it climbed to Tier 2 in the most recent research, having only secured a first-time ranking in Tier 6 in 2023. The firm’s steep ascent up the table followed the addition of a five-partner team from Latham in 2024, including Hall of Fame partners Jayanthi Sadanandan and Sam Hamilton.
No. of London L500 rankings 2022-2026
More than half of Sidley’s Hall of Famers joined after 2023
Of the ten Sidley partners ranked in the Hall of Fame in the most recent guide, five have joined the firm since 2023. In addition to Sadanandan and Hamilton, as well as CC’s Hertz, these include private funds group head Ed Gander, who joined from Weil last May, and global technology group co-lead Clive Gringras, who joined from CMS in December 2024.
Other recently hired Hall of Fame partnes include energy and infrastructure practice co-lead James MacArthur, who came to the firm in March 2023, also from Weil.
Hall of Famers: new hires since 2023
| Name | Practice ranking | Date of hire | Former firm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philip Hertz | Corporate restructuring and insolvency | March 2026 | Clifford Chance |
| Ed Gander | Private funds | May 2025 | Weil |
| Clive Gringras | Industry focus: TMT | December 2024 | CMS |
| Jayanthi Sadanandan | Acquisition finance | October 2024 | Latham & Watkins |
| Sam Hamilton | Acquisition finance | October 2024 | Latham & Watkins |
| James MacArthur | Infrastructure: M&A | March 2023 | Weil |
Sidley has hired multiple ranked partners from several firms
Sidley’s search for top lateral talent has seen it return more than once to several major competitors, with multiple ranked individuals brought over in group moves.
The largest source of ranked partners has been Latham & Watkins in London, with seven of Sidley’s ranked individuals having joined from its Los Angeles-headquartered rivals since 2024.
In addition to Sadanandan and Hamilton, these include three leading partners: James Inness in equity capital markets: mid-large cap, David Stewart in debt capital markets, and Scott Colwell in high yield.
Inness joined this March and Stewart joined last August, while Colwell joined the firm in October 2024 alongside Patrick Kwak, who is also ranked in high yield, as a next-generation partner.
Sidley has also made a number of hires from Weil, with the firm previously home to five of Sidley’s currently ranked London partners. These hires span a much broader timeframe, with UK disputes head and premium commercial litigation leading partner Matthew Shankland joining in 2013. Europe finance head Rupert Wall followed in 2015, and is in the Hall of Fame for securitisation. The firm then brought over infrastructure pair MacArthur and Ed Freeman in 2023, before returning to Weil to hire Gander last spring.
Sidley’s ranked partners by firm of origin
Sidley saw six ranked partners leave for other firms over five years
Over the five years in which Sidley gained 15 new ranked partners in London, the firm saw six ranked individuals leave for other firms. Of these, only two were leading partners at time of departure, with the remaining four next-generation partners, and none in the Hall of Fame.
The firm’s most recent exits were restructuring duo Jifree Cader and Mark Knight, who left to launch the European restructuring offering at Davis Polk in November 2024. With its hires of CC’s Hertz and Coakley, Sidley has since replenished its restructuring ranks.
2024 also saw several other departures, with real estate-focused PE partners Lyndsey Laverack and Jade Williams-Adejei leaving for Covington & Burling in July and PE partner Fatema Orjela moving to legacy McDermott Will & Emery in April.
Sidley’s London Legal 500 2026 partner rankings – in full
| Name | Practice area | Ranking |
|---|---|---|
| Ed Gander | Private funds | Hall of Fame |
| Clive Gringras | Industry focus: tech, media and telecoms | Hall of Fame |
| Sam Hamilton | Acquisition finance | Hall of Fame |
| Philip Hertz | Corporate restructuring and insolvency | Hall of Fame |
| James MacArthur | Infrastructure: M&A | Hall of Fame |
| Maria Isabel Manley | Industry focus: life sciences and healthcare | Hall of Fame |
| Martin Membery | Insurance: corporate and regulatory | Hall of Fame |
| Leonard Ng | Financial services: non-contentious/regulatory | Hall of Fame |
| Jayanthi Sadanandan | Acquisition finance | Hall of Fame |
| Rupert Wall | Securitisation | Hall of Fame |
| Scott Colwell | High yield | Leading partner |
| Robert Darwin | Industry focus: life sciences and healthcare | Leading partner |
| Sara George | Financial services: contentious, and Fraud: white-collar crime (advice to individuals) | Leading partner |
| David Howe | Debt capital markets | Leading partner |
| James Inness | Equity capital markets: mid-large cap | Leading partner |
| Matthew Shankland | Commercial litigation: premium | Leading partner |
| David Stewart | Debt capital markets | Leading partner |
| Ramy Wahbeh | Private equity: transactions – high-value deals (£500m+) | Leading partner |
| Chris Boyle | Life sciences and healthcare | Next-generation partner |
| Melissa Coakley | Corporate restructuring and insolvency | Next-generation partner |
| Ed Freeman | Infrastructure: M&A | Next-generation partner |
| Alastair Hopwood | Commercial litigation: premium | Next-generation partner |
| Joseph Kimberling | Acquisition finance | Next-generation partner |
| Patrick Kwak | High yield | Next-generation partner |
| Adam Runcorn | Private equity: transactions – high-value deals (£500m+) | Next-generation partner |
