Nottingham Forest F.C.

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Nottingham Forest
Nottingham Forest F.C. logo.svg
Full nameNottingham Forest Football Club
Nickname(s)
  • Forest
  • The Reds
  • Tricky Trees
  • The Garibaldi
Short nameForest
Founded1865;159 years ago (1865) [1]
Ground City Ground
Capacity30,455 [2]
Owner Evangelos Marinakis
ChairmanNicholas Randall KC
Manager Nuno Espírito Santo
League Premier League
2023–24 Premier League, 17th of 20
Website nottinghamforest.co.uk
Soccerball current event.svg Current season

Nottingham Forest Football Club is a professional association football club based in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire, England. The club competes in the Premier League, the top tier of English football.

Contents

Founded in 1865, Nottingham Forest have played their home games at the City Ground since 1898. The club have won two European Cups (now the UEFA Champions League), being one of only six English clubs to have won the coveted trophy. They have also won one UEFA Super Cup, one League title, two FA Cups, four League Cups, and one FA Charity Shield. The club has competed in the top two tiers of English football in all but five of the seasons since its admission to the Football League. Its most successful period was under the management of Brian Clough and Peter Taylor in the late 1970s and early 1980s, which back-to-back European Cup triumphs in 1979 and 1980.

In Clough's last decade at the club, Forest won the 1989 and 1990 League Cups and were losing finalists in the 1991 FA Cup final and 1992 League Cup final, before relegation from the Premier League in 1993. Upon their immediate return, Forest finished third in the Premier League in 1995 before again suffering relegation from the top flight in 1997 and 1999. The team returned to the Premier League by winning the play-offs in 2022.

Forest's main rivalry is with Derby County, with who they contest the East Midlands derby. In 2007 the Brian Clough Trophy was founded, which has since then been given to the winner.

History

19th century

The Playwright (geograph 6704515).jpg
Plaque to formation of Nottingham Forest FC (geograph 6721173).jpg
The Playwright, formerly the Clinton Arms, on Sherwood Street, Nottingham, where the Forest Football Club was founded in 1865

In 1865 a group of shinty players met at the Clinton Arms (now renamed The Playwright) at the junction of Nottingham's Shakespeare Street and North Sherwood Street. J.S. Scrimshaw's proposal to play association football instead was agreed and Nottingham Forest Football Club was formed. It was agreed at the same meeting that the club would purchase twelve tasselled caps coloured 'Garibaldi Red' (named after the leader of the Italian 'Redshirts' fighters). Thus the club's official colours were established. Matches were originally played at Forest Racecourse, [3] the presumed source of the word 'Forest' in the team's name.

From 2019 to 2023, Nottingham Forest claimed to be the oldest remaining club in the English Football League. In 2019, when Notts County were relegated from the league, Stoke City claimed to be the oldest remaining club, but football historian Mark Metcalf stated that Stoke was formed in 1868, rather than the 1863 date on the club's badge, and therefore Forest was the oldest club. [4] The EFL also stated that Nottingham Forest was the oldest. [5]

Forest's first ever official game was played against Notts County taking place on 22 March 1866. [6] On 23 April 1870, when the team played their first game in league play, the steward of the club was John Lymberry and William Henry Revis scored the first goal. On that day, Revis also won the prize for kicking a football furthest with a kick of 161 feet 8 inches. [7]

In their early years Nottingham Forest were a multi-sports club. As well as their roots in bandy and shinty, Forest's baseball club were British champions in 1899. [8] Forest's charitable approach helped clubs like Liverpool, Arsenal and Brighton & Hove Albion to form. In 1886, Forest donated a set of football kits to help Arsenal establish themselves – the North London team still wear red. Forest also donated shirts to Everton and helped secure a site to play on for Brighton.

In 1878–79 season, Nottingham Forest entered into the FA Cup for the first time. Forest beat Notts County 3–1 in the first round at Beeston Cricket Ground before eventually losing 2–1 to Old Etonians in the semi-final. [6]

Nottingham Forest's application was rejected to join the Football League at its formation in 1888. [6] Forest instead joined the Football Alliance in 1889.

They won the competition in 1892 before then entering the Football League. [6] That season they reached and lost in an FA Cup semi-final for the fourth time to date. This time it was to West Bromwich Albion after a replay.

The 1898 Cup-winning squad 1898team.jpg
The 1898 Cup-winning squad

Nottingham Forest's first FA Cup semi-final win was at the fifth attempt, the 1897–98 FA Cup 2–0 replay win against Southampton. The first game was drawn 1–1. Derby County beat Nottingham Forest 5–0 five days before the final. Six of the cup final side were rested in that league game. [6] In that 1898 FA Cup final at Crystal Palace before 62,000 fans, Willie Wragg passed a 19th minute free kick to Arthur Capes. Capes shot through the defensive wall to score. Derby equalised with a free kick headed home by Steve Bloomer off the underside of the cross bar after 31 minutes. In the 42nd minute Jack Fryer was unable to hold a Charlie Richards shot giving Capes a tap in for his second goal. Wragg's injury meant Forest had to change their line up with Capes dropping back to midfield. In the 86th minute John Boag headed away a corner by Nottingham Forest. John McPherson moved in to collect shooting low into the goal to win 3–1. [9]

First half of 20th century

Forest lost FA Cup semi-finals in 1900 and 1902. They finished fourth in the 1900–01 Football League followed with fifth place the season after. The club then started to slide down the table. Forest were relegated for the first time in 1905–06. Grenville Morris had his first of five seasons as the club's highest scorer en route to becoming the all-time club highest goalscorer with 213 goals.

Promotion as champions was immediate in 1906–07. The club was relegated a second time to the Second Division in 1911, and had to seek re-election in 1914 after finishing bottom of that tier; as the First World War approached it was in serious financial trouble. The outbreak of the War, along with the benevolence of the committee members, prevented the club going under. [6]

In 1919, the Football League First Division was to be expanded from twenty clubs to twenty-two in time for the 1919–20 Football League: Forest was one of eight clubs to campaign for entry, but received only three votes. Arsenal and Chelsea gained the two additional top tier slots. [10]

In a turnaround from the first six seasons struggling back in the Second Division, Forest were promoted as champions in 1921–22. They survived each of the first two seasons back in the top flight by one position. In the third season after promotion they were relegated as the division's bottom club in 1924–25. They remained in the second tier until relegation in 1949 to the Football League Third Division.

Re-emergence then decline (1950–1974)

They were quickly promoted back two years later as champions, having scored a record 110 goals in the 1950–51 season. They regained First Division status in 1957. [6]

Johnny Quigley's solitary 1958–59 FA Cup semi-final goal beat Aston Villa. Billy Walker's Forest beat Luton Town 2–1 in the 1959 FA Cup final. Like in 1898, Forest had lost heavily to their opponents only weeks earlier in the league. [6] Stewart Imlach crossed for a 10th-minute opener by Roy Dwight (the cousin of Reg Dwight better known as Elton John). Tommy Wilson had Forest 2–0 up after 14 minutes. The game had an unusually large number of stoppages due to injury, particularly to Forest players. This was put down to the lush nature of the Wembley turf. The most notable of these stoppages was Dwight breaking his leg in a 33rd minute tackle with Brendan McNally. Forest had been on top until that point. Luton though gradually took control of the match, with Dave Pacey scoring midway through the second half. Forest were reduced to nine fit men with ten minutes remaining when Bill Whare crippled with cramp, became little more than a spectator. Despite late Allan Brown and Billy Bingham chances Chick Thomson conceded no further goals for Forest to beat the Wembley 1950s 'hoodoo' (where one team was hampered by losing a player through injury). [11] Club record appearance holder Bobby McKinlay played in the final winning team captained by Jack Burkitt.

By this time, Forest had replaced Notts County as the biggest club in Nottingham. Johnny Carey assembled a team including Joe Baker and Ian Storey-Moore that for a long spell went largely unchanged in challenging for the 1966–67 Football League title. They beat title rivals Manchester United 4–1 at the City Ground on 1 October. [12] The 3–0 win against Aston Villa on 15 April had Forest second in the table, a point behind United. [13] Injuries eventually took effect, meaning Forest had to settle for being League runners-up and losing in the FA Cup semi-final to Dave Mackay's Tottenham Hotspur. [6]

The 1966–67 season's success seemed an opportunity to build upon, with crowds of 40,000 virtually guaranteed at the time. Instead, a mixture at the club of poor football management, the unique committee structure and proud amateurism meant decline after the 1966-67 peak. Forest were relegated from the top flight in 1972. Matt Gillies' October 1972 managerial departure was followed by short managerial reigns by Dave Mackay and Allan Brown. [6] A 2–0 Boxing Day home defeat by Notts County prompted the committee (Forest had no board of directors then) to sack Brown.

Brian Clough and Peter Taylor (1975–1982)

Brian Clough (1935-2004) managed Nottingham Forest for 18 years Brian Clough Nottingham Statue 1.jpg
Brian Clough (1935–2004) managed Nottingham Forest for 18 years

Brian Clough became manager of Forest on 6 January 1975, twelve weeks after the end of his 44-day tenure as manager of Leeds United. [14] Clough brought Jimmy Gordon to be his club trainer, as Gordon had been for him at Derby County and Leeds. [15] Scottish centre-forward Neil Martin scored the only goal in Clough's first game in charge, beating Tottenham Hotspur in an FA Cup third round replay. [16]

Ian Bowyer was already at Forest and had won domestic and European trophies with Manchester City. Clough signed Scots duo John McGovern and John O'Hare in February, who both were part of Clough's Derby County 1971–72 Football League title win. He signed Colin Barrett in March, initially on loan. Clough brought John Robertson and Martin O'Neill back into the fold after they had requested transfers under Brown. [6] Viv Anderson had previously debuted for the first team and became a regular under Clough. [17] The young Tony Woodcock was at Forest but was then unrated by Clough and was to be loaned to Lincoln City. [18] Forest were 13th in English football's second tier when Clough joined. They finished that season 16th. Forest signed Frank Clark in July of that close season on a free transfer. [19] The season after, Forest finished eighth in Clough's 1975–76 Football League first full season in charge. [14] It was in this season, McGovern became long-standing club captain, taking over from a game in which Bob "Sammy" Chapman and Liam O'Kane were both injured. [20]

Peter Taylor on 16 July 1976 rejoined Clough, becoming his assistant manager, as he had been when winning the league at Derby. [14] Taylor, included being the club's talent spotter in his role. After assessing the players, Taylor told Clough, "that was a feat by you to finish eighth in the Second Division because some of them are only Third Division players". [21] Taylor berated John Robertson for allowing himself to become overweight and disillusioned. He got Robertson on a diet and training regime that would help him become a European Cup winner. [22] Taylor turned Woodcock from a reserve midfielder into a 42 cap England striker. [23] In September 1976, he bought striker Peter Withe to Forest for £43,000, selling him to Newcastle United for £250,000 two years later. [24] Withe was replaced in the starting team by Garry Birtles who Taylor had scouted playing for non-league Long Eaton United. Birtles also went on to represent England. [25] In October 1976 Brian Clough acting on Peter Taylor's advice signed Larry Lloyd for £60,000 after an initial loan period.

Together, Clough and Taylor took Forest to new heights. The first trophy of the Clough and Taylor reign was the 1976–77 Anglo-Scottish Cup. Forest beat Orient 5–1 on aggregate in the two-legged final played in December 1976. [14] Clough valued winning a derided trophy as the club's first silverware since 1959. He said, "Those who said it was a nothing trophy were absolutely crackers. We'd won something, and it made all the difference." [26]

On 7 May 1977, Jon Moore's own goal meant Forest in their last league game of the season beat Millwall 1–0 at the City Ground. [27] This kept Forest in the third promotion spot in the league table and dependent on Bolton Wanderers dropping points in three games in hand in the fight for third place. [28] On 14 May Kenny Hibbitt's goal from his rehearsed free kick routine with Willie Carr gave Wolves a 1–0 win at Bolton. [20] [29] Bolton's defeat reached the Forest team mid-air en route to an end of season break in Mallorca. [20] Forest's third place promotion from the 1976–77 Football League Second Division was the fifth-lowest points tally of any promoted team in history, 52 [6] [14] (two points for a win in England until 1981).

Taylor secretly followed Kenny Burns concluding Burns's reputation as a hard drinker and gambler was exaggerated. Taylor sanctioned his £150,000 July signing. Burns became FWA Footballer of the Year in 1977–78 after being moved from centre-forward to centre-back. [30] [31] Forest started their return to the top league campaign with a 3–1 win at Everton. Three further wins in league and cup followed without conceding a goal. Then came five early September goals conceded in losing 3–0 at Arsenal and beating Wolves 3–2 at home. [32] Peter Shilton then signed for a record fee for a goalkeeper of £325,000. Taylor reasoned: "Shilton wins you matches." [33] 20-year-old John Middleton was first team goalkeeper pre-Shilton. Middleton later in the month went in part exchange with £25,000 to Derby County for Archie Gemmill transferring to Forest. [34] Gemmill was another Scottish former 1972 Derby title winner. [30] [35]

Forest lost only three of their first 16 league games, the last of which was at Leeds United on 19 November 1977. They lost only one further game all season, the 11 March FA Cup sixth round defeat at West Bromwich Albion. [32] Forest won the 1977–78 Football League seven-points ahead of runners-up Liverpool. Forest became one of the few teams (and the most recent team to date) to win the First Division title the season after winning promotion from the Second Division. [nb 1] [36] [37] This made Clough the third of four managers to win the English league championship with two different clubs. [nb 2] Forest conceded just 24 goals in 42 league games. [33] They beat Liverpool 1–0 in the 1978 Football League Cup final replay despite cup-tied Shilton, Gemmill and December signing David Needham missing out. [38] Chris Woods chalked up two clean sheets in the final, covering Shilton's League Cup absence. McGovern missed the replay through injury, meaning Burns lifted the trophy as deputising captain. Robertson's penalty was the only goal of the game. [26] [39]

Forest started season 1978–79 by beating Ipswich Town 5–0 for an FA Charity Shield record winning margin. [14] In the 1978–79 European Cup they were drawn to play the trophy winners of the past two seasons, Liverpool. Home goals by Birtles and Barrett put Forest through 2–0 on aggregate. [40] 26-year-old Barrett suffered a serious leg injury ten days later against Middlesbrough that ultimately ended his professional career two years later. On 9 December 1978, Liverpool ended Forest's 42 match unbeaten league run dating back to November the year before. [14] The unbeaten run was the equivalent of a whole season surpassing the previous record of 35 games held by Burnley in 1920/21. [41] The record stood until surpassed by Arsenal in August 2004, a month before Clough's death. Arsenal played 49 league games without defeat. [42]

In February 1979, Taylor authorised the English game's first £1 million transfer signing Trevor Francis from Birmingham City. [43] In the European Cup semi-final first leg at home against 1. FC Köln, Forest were two goals behind after 20 minutes, then scored three to edge ahead before Köln equalised to start the German second leg ahead on the away goals rule. Ian Bowyer's goal in Germany put Forest through. Günter Netzer asked afterwards, "Who is this McGovern? I have never heard of him, yet he ran the game." Forest beat Malmö 1–0 in Munich's Olympiastadion in the 1979 European Cup final; Francis, on his European debut, scored with a back post header from Robertson's cross. Forest beat Southampton in the final 3–2 to retain the League Cup; Birtles scored twice, as did Woodcock once. Forest finished second in the 1978–79 Football League, eight points behind Liverpool.

Trevor Francis, Brian Clough and John Robertson in 1980 Nottingham Forest FC (Amsterdam, 1980) - Francis, Clough, Robertson.jpg
Trevor Francis, Brian Clough and John Robertson in 1980

Forest declined to play in the home and away 1979 Intercontinental Cup against Paraguay's Club Olimpia. Forest beat F.C. Barcelona 2–1 on aggregate in the 1979 European Super Cup in January and February 1980, Charlie George scoring the only goal in the home first leg, while Burns scored an equaliser in the return in Spain. [44] In the 1979–80 Football League Cup Forest reached a third successive final. A defensive mix up between Needham and Shilton let Wolves' Andy Gray tap in to an empty net. Forest passed up numerous chances, losing 1–0. [45] In the 1979–80 European Cup quarter-final, Forest won 3–1 at Dinamo Berlin to overturn a 1–0 home defeat. In the semi-final, they beat Ajax 2–1 on aggregate. They beat Hamburg 1–0 in the 1980 European Cup final at Madrid's Santiago Bernabéu Stadium to retain the trophy; after 20 minutes, Robertson scored, after exchanging passes with Birtles, [46] and Forest then defended solidly. [47] Forest finished fifth in the 1979–80 Football League.

In the 1980–81 European Cup first round, Forest lost 2–0 on aggregate to 1–0 defeats home and away by CSKA Sofia. [46] McGovern subsequently said the double defeat by CSKA affected the team's self-confidence, in that they had lost out to modestly talented opponents. [20] Forest lost the 1980 European Super Cup on away goals after a 2–2 aggregate draw against Valencia; Bowyer scored both Forest goals in the home first leg. [48] On 11 February 1981, Forest lost 1–0 in the 1980 Intercontinental Cup against Uruguayan side, Club Nacional de Football. The match was played for the first time at the neutral venue National Stadium in Tokyo before 62,000 fans. [49]

The league and European Cup winning squad was broken up to capitalise on player sale value. Clough and Taylor both later said this was a mistake. [15] The rebuilt side comprising youngsters and signings such as Ian Wallace, Raimondo Ponte and Justin Fashanu did not challenge for trophies. Taylor said in 1982, [50]

For many weeks now I don't believe I've been doing justice to the partnership and I certainly haven't been doing justice to Nottingham Forest the way I felt. And consequently after a great deal of thought, there was no option. I wanted to take an early retirement. That's exactly what I've done.

John McGovern and Peter Shilton transferred and Jimmy Gordon retired in the same close season. [15]

Clough without Taylor (1982–1993)

Anderlecht beat Forest in the 1983–84 UEFA Cup semi-finals in controversial circumstances. Several contentious refereeing decisions went against Forest. Over a decade later, it emerged that before the match, referee Emilio Guruceta Muro had received a £27,000 "loan" from Anderlecht's chairman Constant Vanden Stock. [51] Anderlecht went unpunished until 1997, when UEFA banned the club from European competitions for one year. Guruceta Muro died in a car crash in 1987. [52]

Forest beat Sheffield Wednesday on penalties in the Football League Centenary Tournament final in April 1988 after drawing 0–0. [53] Forest finished third in the league in 1988 and made the 1987–88 FA Cup semi-finals. Stuart Pearce won the first of his five successive selections for the PFA Team of the Year.

On 18 January 1989, Clough joined the fray of a City Ground pitch invasion by hitting two of his own team's fans when on the pitch. The football authorities responded with a fine and touchline ban for Clough. [54] The match, against QPR in the League Cup, finished 5–2 to Forest. [55]

Forest beat Everton 4–3 after extra time in the 1989 Full Members Cup final, then came back to beat Luton Town 3–1 in the 1989 Football League Cup final. This set Forest up for a unique treble of domestic cup wins, but tragedy struck a week after the League Cup win. Forest and Liverpool met for the second season in a row in the FA Cup semi-finals. The Hillsborough disaster claimed the lives of 97 Liverpool fans. The match was abandoned after six minutes. When the emotional replay took place, Forest struggled as Liverpool won 3–1. Despite these trophy wins, and a third-place finish in the First Division, Forest were unable to compete in the UEFA Cup, as English clubs were still banned from European competitions following the Heysel Stadium Disaster. Des Walker won the first of his four successive selections for the PFA Team of the Year.

Nigel Jemson scored as Forest beat Oldham Athletic 1–0 to retain the League Cup in 1990. English clubs were re-admitted to Europe for the following season, but only in limited numbers, and Forest's League Cup win again did not see them qualify. The only UEFA Cup place that season went to league runners-up Aston Villa.

Brian Clough reached his only FA Cup final in 1991 after countless replays and postponements in the third, fourth and fifth rounds. Up against Tottenham Hotspur, Forest took the lead from a Pearce free kick, but Spurs equalised to take the game to extra-time, ultimately winning 2–1 after an own goal by Walker. Roy Keane declared himself fit to play in the final and was selected in preference to Steve Hodge; years later, Keane admitted he had not actually been fit to play, hence his insignificant role in the final. [56]

In the summer of 1991, Millwall's league top scorer Teddy Sheringham became Forest's record signing, for a fee of £2.1 million. That season, Forest beat Southampton 3–2 after extra time in the Full Members Cup final, but lost the League Cup final 1–0 to Manchester United thanks to a Brian McClair goal. This meant that Forest had played in seven domestic cup finals in five seasons, winning five of them. Forest finished eighth in the league that season to earn a place in the new FA Premier League.

Walker transferred to Sampdoria during the summer of 1992. On 16 August 1992, Forest beat Liverpool 1–0 at home in the first-ever Premier League game to be televised live, with Sheringham scoring the only goal of the match. A week later, Sheringham moved to Tottenham. Forest's form slumped, and Brian Clough's 18-year managerial reign ended in May 1993 with Forest relegated from the inaugural Premier League. [57] The final game of that season was away at Ipswich. Forest lost 2–1 with Clough's son, Nigel, scoring the final goal of his father's reign. [6] Relegation was followed by Keane's £3.75 million British record fee transfer to Manchester United.

Frank Clark (1993–1996)

Frank Clark from Forest's 1979 European Cup winning team returned to the club in May 1993, succeeding Brian Clough as manager. Clark's previous greatest management success was promotion from the Fourth Division with Leyton Orient in 1989. Clark convinced Stuart Pearce to remain at the club and also signed Stan Collymore, Lars Bohinen and Colin Cooper. Clark brought an immediate return to the Premier League when the club finished Division One runners-up at the end of the 1993–94 season. [58]

Forest finished third in 1994–95 [59] and qualified for the UEFA Cup – their first entry to European competition in the post-Heysel era. Collymore then transferred in the 1995–96 close season to Liverpool for a national record fee of £8.5million. Forest reached the 1995–96 UEFA Cup quarter-finals, the furthest an English team reached in UEFA competition that season. They finished ninth in the league.

The 1996–97 season quickly became a relegation battle. Clark left the club in December. [60]

Stuart Pearce and Dave Bassett (1997–1999)

34-year-old captain Stuart Pearce was installed as player-manager on a temporary basis just before Christmas in 1996 and he inspired a brief upturn in the club's fortunes. However, in March 1997 he was replaced on a permanent basis by Dave Bassett and left the club that summer after 12 years. [61] Forest were unable to avoid relegation and finished the season in bottom place. [62] They won promotion back to the Premier League at the first attempt, being crowned Division One champions in 1997–98. [63] Bassett was sacked in January 1999, with Ron Atkinson replacing him. [64] [65]

Into the 21st century below the top-flight (1999–2012)

Ron Atkinson was unable to prevent Forest from once again slipping back into Division One, and announced his retirement from football management when Forest's relegation was confirmed on 24 April 1999, with three weeks of the Premier League season still to play.

Former England captain David Platt succeeded Atkinson and spent approximately £12 million on players in the space of two seasons, including the Italian veterans Moreno Mannini, Salvatore Matrecano and Gianluca Petrachi. [66] However, Forest could only finish 14th in Platt's first season and 11th in his second. He departed in July 2001 to manage the England U21 side and was succeeded by youth team manager Paul Hart. [67]

Chart of yearly table positions of Forest since joining the Football League. NottinghamForestFC League Performance.svg
Chart of yearly table positions of Forest since joining the Football League.

Now faced with huge debts, which reduced Forest's ability to sign new players, they finished 16th in Hart's first season in charge. [68] By December 2001, Forest were reported as losing over £100,000 every week, [69] and their financial outlook was worsened by the collapse of ITV Digital, which left Forest and many other Football League clubs in severe financial difficulties. [70] Despite the off-field difficulties, Forest finished 2002–03 in sixth place [71] and qualified for the play-offs, where they lost to Sheffield United in the semi-finals. A poor league run the following season, following the loss of several key players, led to the sacking of Hart in February 2004 with Forest in danger of relegation. [72] The decision was unpopular with certain quarters of the fanbase and Hart was described as a "scapegoat". [73]

Joe Kinnear was subsequently appointed and led the club to a secure 14th place in the final league table. [74] The 2004–05 season saw Forest drop into the relegation zone once more, leading to Kinnear's resignation in December 2004. [75] Mick Harford took temporary charge of Forest over Christmas, before Gary Megson was appointed in the new year. Megson had already won two promotions to the Premier League with his previous club West Bromwich Albion, having arrived at the club when they were in danger of going down to Division Two, but failed to stave off relegation as the club ended the season second from bottom in 23rd place, [76] becoming the first European Cup-winners ever to fall into their domestic third division. [77]

In Forest's first season in the English third tier in 54 years, a 3–0 defeat at Oldham Athletic [78] in February 2006 led to the departure of Megson by "mutual consent" leaving the club mid-table only four points above the relegation zone. [79] Frank Barlow and Ian McParland took temporary charge for the remainder of the 2005–06 season, engineering a six-match winning run and remaining unbeaten in ten games, the most notable result a 7–1 win over Swindon Town. [80] Forest took 28 points from a possible 39 under the two, narrowly missing out on a play-off place, as they finished in 7th place. [81]

Colin Calderwood, previously of Northampton Town, was appointed as Forest's new manager in May 2006. He was their 12th new manager to be appointed since the retirement of Brian Clough 13 years earlier, and went on to become Forest's longest-serving manager since Frank Clark. The Calderwood era was ultimately one of rebuilding, and included the club's first promotion in a decade. In his first season, he led the club to the play-offs, having squandered a 7-point lead at the top of League One which had been amassed by November 2006. Forest eventually succumbed to a shock 5–4 aggregate defeat in the semi-finals against Yeovil Town; they had taken a 2–0 lead in the first leg at Huish Park, but were then beaten 5–2 on their own soil by the Somerset club. [82] Calderwood achieved automatic promotion in his second year at the club, following an impressive run which saw Forest win six out of their last seven games of the season, culminating in a dramatic final 3–2 win against Yeovil Town at the City Ground. Forest kept a league record of 24 clean sheets out of 46 games, proving to be the foundation for their return to the second tier of English football and leaving them just one more promotion away from a return to the Premier League.

However, Calderwood's side struggled to adapt to life in the Championship in the 2008–09 campaign and having been unable to steer Forest out of the relegation zone, Calderwood was sacked following a Boxing Day 4–2 defeat to the Championship's bottom club Doncaster Rovers. [83]

Under the temporary stewardship of John Pemberton, Forest finally climbed out of the relegation zone, having beaten Norwich City 3–2. [84] Billy Davies, who had taken Forest's local rivals Derby County into the Premier League two seasons earlier, was confirmed as the new manager on 1 January 2009 [85] and watched Pemberton's side beat Manchester City 3–0 away in the FA Cup, [86] prior to taking official charge. Under Davies, Forest stretched their unbeaten record in all competitions following Calderwood's sacking to six matches, including five wins. He also helped them avoid relegation as they finished 19th in the Championship, [87] securing survival with one game to go.

Forest spent most of the 2009–10 campaign in a top-three position, putting together an unbeaten run of 19 league games, winning 12 home league games in a row (a club record for successive home wins in a single season), going unbeaten away from home from the beginning of the season until 30 January 2010 (a run spanning 13 games) whilst also claiming memorable home victories over local rivals Derby County and Leicester City. The club finished third, missing out on automatic promotion, and in the two-legged play-off semi-final were beaten by Blackpool, 2–1 away and 4–3 in the home leg, the club's first defeat at home since losing to the same opposition in September 2009.

Robert Earnshaw and other key members of the 2010 play-offs side Rob Earnshaw, Gareth McCleary and Forest teammates vs Cardif City, 20 November 2010.jpg
Robert Earnshaw and other key members of the 2010 play-offs side

The 2010–11 season saw Forest finish in sixth place in the Championship table with 75 points, [88] putting them into a play-off campaign for the fourth time in the space of eight years. Promotion was yet again to elude Forest, as they were beaten over two legs by eventual play-off final winners Swansea City. Having drawn the first leg 0–0 at the City Ground, [89] they were eventually beaten 3–1 in the second leg. [90]

In June 2011, Billy Davies had his contract terminated, [91] [92] and was replaced as manager by Steve McClaren, who signed a three-year contract. [93] [94] Forest started the 2011–12 season with several poor results and after a 5–1 defeat away to Burnley, David Pleat and Bill Beswick left the club's coaching setup. [95] Less than a week later, following a home defeat to Birmingham City, McClaren resigned, and chairman Nigel Doughty announced that he intended to resign at the end of the season. [95] In October 2011, Nottingham Forest underwent several changes. These changes included the appointment of Frank Clark as new chairman of the club and also that of Steve Cotterill, replacing the recently departed Steve McClaren. [96]

Nigel Doughty: Nottingham Forest owner 1999-2012 Nigel doughty fans forum.jpg
Nigel Doughty: Nottingham Forest owner 1999–2012

Nigel Doughty, owner and previous chairman of the club, died on 4 February 2012, having been involved with the club since the late 1990s, with many estimating his total contribution as being in the region of £100 million.[ citation needed ]

Al-Hasawi era (2012–2017)

The Al-Hasawi family from Kuwait purchased the club in July 2012. They told the press that they had a long-term vision for the club based on a 3–5 year plan, and after interviewing several potential new managers, appointed Sean O'Driscoll, formerly the manager at Doncaster Rovers and Crawley Town, as the manager on 19 July 2012. He was known for playing an attractive brand of passing football (which had taken Doncaster Rovers into the league's second tier for the first time since the 1950s) and what football fans would consider the Forest way. [97] O'Driscoll had spent five months at the City Ground as coach under Steve Cotterill in the 2011–12 season.

By 15 December 2012, after the team's 0–0 draw away to Brighton, Forest sat in ninth position with 33 points, just three points off the play-off positions. On the same weekend, the club announced that Omar Al-Hasawi had stepped down for personal reasons and Fawaz Al-Hasawi, the majority shareholder with 75%, had taken the position, [98] with his brother Abdulaziz Al-Hasawi holding a 20% share and his cousin Omar Al-Hasawi holding a 5% share.

On 26 December 2012, O'Driscoll was sacked following a 4–2 victory over Leeds United, with the club stating their intentions of a change ahead of the January transfer window and hopes of appointing a manager with Premier League experience, [99] eventually hiring Alex McLeish. [100] Chief executive Mark Arthur as well as scout Keith Burt and club ambassador Frank Clark were dismissed in January 2013. [101] On 5 February 2013, Forest and McLeish parted company by mutual agreement after 40 days of cooperation. [102] Forest supporters and pundits alike registered their concern for the state of the club, [97] with journalist Pat Murphy describing the situation as a "shambles". [103]

Stuart Pearce returned as manager in 2014 Stuart Pearce first game back as Nottingham Forest manager.jpg
Stuart Pearce returned as manager in 2014

Two days after McLeish's departure, the club re-appointed Billy Davies as manager, having been sacked as the team's manager twenty months previously. [104] His first match in charge was a draw, [105] followed by a run of 10 undefeated games. In March 2014, the club terminated Davies's employment, following a 5–0 defeat by Derby County. [106] After initially rejecting the job in March 2014, [107] fans favourite Stuart Pearce was named the man to replace Billy Davies, taking over from caretaker manager Gary Brazil. He signed a two-year contract commencing on 1 July 2014. Pearce led Forest to an unbeaten start to the season but failed to keep up the form. He was sacked in February 2015 and replaced by another former Forest player, Dougie Freedman.

Another mid-table finish meant that Forest began the 2015–16 season still in the Championship and now in their 17th season away from the Premier League. On 13 March 2016, Freedman was sacked, following a 3–0 defeat at home to Sheffield Wednesday, [108] and Paul Williams was then appointed as temporary manager. Former Boulogne, Valenciennes, Real Sociedad, and Rennes head coach Philippe Montanier was appointed on a two-year contract on 27 June 2016 becoming the club's first manager from outside the British isles, but was sacked after fewer than seven months in charge. Mark Warburton was named as the club's new manager on 14 March 2017. Forest narrowly avoided relegation on the final day of the 2016–17 season, where a 3–0 home victory against Ipswich Town ensured their safety at the expense of Blackburn Rovers. [109]

Evangelos Marinakis and Premier League return (2017–present)

On 18 May 2017, Evangelos Marinakis completed his takeover of Nottingham Forest, [110] bringing an end to Al-Hasawi's reign as Forest owner. Incumbent manager Mark Warburton was sacked on 31 December 2017 following a 1–0 home defeat to struggling Sunderland, with a record of one win in seven. [111] He was replaced by Spaniard Aitor Karanka, who arrived on 8 January 2018, immediately after caretaker manager Gary Brazil had masterminded a 4–2 home win over holders Arsenal in the third round of the FA Cup. [112] Karanka made 10 new signings during the January transfer window, [113] and following a 17th-place finish, he made 14 new signings during the summer transfer window and the following season results improved. [114] Despite a strong league position, Karanka left his position on 11 January 2019 after requesting to be released from his contract. [115] He was replaced with former Republic of Ireland boss Martin O'Neill four days later. [116] O'Neill was sacked in June after reportedly falling out with some of the senior first team players, and was replaced with Sabri Lamouchi on the same day. [117] In Lamouchi's first season in charge, despite spending most of the season in the playoffs, Forest dropped to seventh place on the final day. [118] On 6 October 2020, Lamouchi was sacked by the club following a poor start to the 2020–21 season. [119] He was replaced by former Brighton manager Chris Hughton. [120] After an ultimately unsuccessful 11 months in charge, Hughton was sacked on 16 September 2021 after failing to win any of the club's opening seven games of the 2021–22 season. [121]

Forest chairman Nicholas Randall had initially promised that Forest planned to return to playing European football within five seasons, and yet poor transfers and a toxic club culture meant that Forest remained in the Championship four years into the Marinakis era. [122] In the summer of 2021, structural changes were made at the club to try and correct the previous mistakes. Forest appointed Dane Murphy as Chief Executive, and George Syrianos was brought in as head of recruitment to bring about a more analytics driven transfer policy. The Forest hierarchy committed to avoiding the "short-termism" of previous windows by no longer signing players for more than £18,000 a week and mostly targeting younger signings that could be sold for a profit. [123]

On 21 September 2021, Forest announced the appointment of Steve Cooper as the club's new head coach. [124] Cooper inspired a turnaround in form, arriving with the club in last place yet having them in 7th at Christmas, and all the way up in 4th by the end of the season, qualifying Forest for the playoffs for the first time since the 2010–11 season. [125] In the 2022 Championship play-off semi-final, Forest defeated Sheffield United on penalties to advance to the final against Huddersfield Town, [126] who they beat 1–0 at Wembley Stadium, and were promoted to the Premier League for the first time since the 1998–99 season. [127] Having entered the Premier League with a depleted squad after the promotion, in the leadup to the next season Forest signed 21 players for the first team squad. This was a British transfer record. [128] The club record fee was also broken multiple times, and the last such occasion in the transfer window was when Morgan Gibbs-White joined the club for £25 million with a potential to rise to £42 million subject to performance. [129]

On 7 October 2022, after five straight defeats, the club announced Cooper had signed a new three-year contract. [130] Results improved temporarily, but in early April, after another poor run beset with injuries, Marinakis was forced to again say he had confidence in the manager. “We have all been disappointed with recent performances, and it is very clear that a lot of hard work needs to be done to address this urgently. Results and performances must improve immediately," he said in a statement. [131]

On 11 April 2023, with the club in the relegation zone, sporting director Filippo Giraldi was sacked after six months in the job. [132]

On 20 May 2023, Nottingham Forest sealed their Premier League status for the following season with a 1–0 home victory over Arsenal, [133] which also confirmed the title for Manchester City. Forest collected 11 points from their last six games.

On 19 December 2023, the club sacked Cooper; he was replaced by previous Al-Ittihad manager Nuno Espírito Santo. [134] On 15 January 2024, Nottingham Forest was charged with breaching Premier League profit and sustainability rules in their accounts for 2022–23. [135] On 18 March 2024, the club was docked four points, pushing them into the relegation places, after an independent commission found Forest's 2022–23 losses breached the £61m threshold by £34.5m. [136] The club appealed against the penalty, [137] but their appeal was rejected. [138]

Nottingham Forest secured their survival in the Premier League for the 2023–24 season with a 2–1 victory over Burnley at Turf Moor on 19 May 2024. [139] [140]

On 11 October 2024, it was announced that the team would be fined £750,000 over comments of the VAR official Stuart Atwood, on social media, following their game against Everton on the 21st April, earlier that year. [141] They have since put out a statement saying that they were concerned by the sanction, and that it was disproportionate and the decision would be appealed. [142]

Club identity

Crest and colours

Jordan Lawrence-Gabriel in Forest's red shirt, 2016 Jordan Gabriel.jpg
Jordan Lawrence-Gabriel in Forest's red shirt, 2016

Nottingham Forest have worn red since the club's foundation in 1865. At the meeting in the Clinton Arms which established Nottingham Forest as a football club, the committee also passed a resolution that the team colours should be 'Garibaldi red'. [143] This decision was made in honour of Giuseppe Garibaldi, the Italian patriot who was the leader of the redshirts volunteers. At this time, clubs identified themselves more by their headgear than their shirts and a dozen red caps with tassels were duly purchased, making Forest the first club to 'officially' wear red, a colour that has since been adopted by a significant number of others. Forest's kit is the reason behind Arsenal's choice of red, the club having donated a full set of red kits to Arsenal following their foundation (as Woolwich Arsenal) in 1886. Forest's tour of South America in 1905 inspired Argentine club Independiente to adopt red as their club colour, after club's President Arístides Langone described the tourists as looking like diablos rojos ("red devils"), which would become Independiente's nickname. [144]

The first club crest used by Forest was the city arms of Nottingham, which was first used on kits in 1947. [145] The current club badge was introduced in 1974, [145] following a competition in 1973 to design a new badge. The winning design was by Trent Polytechnic graphic design lecturer David Lewis. [146] The logo has been incorrectly reported as being the brainchild of manager Brian Clough. [147] However, he did not arrive at the club until the following year. Forest have two stars above the club badge to commemorate its European Cup victories in 1979 and 1980. [148]

PeriodKit manufacturerMain Shirt sponsor
1973–76 Umbro None
1976–77 U-Win [149]
1977–80 Adidas
1980–82 Panasonic
1982–84 Wrangler
1984–86 Skol
1986–87 Umbro Home Ales
1987–93 Shipstones
1993–97 Labatt's
1997–2003 Pinnacle
2003–09 Capital One
2009–12 Victor Chandler
2012–13John Pye Auctions [150]
2013–16 Adidas Fawaz International Refrigeration & Air Conditioning Company
2016–18 888sport
2018–19 Macron [151] BetBright [152]
2019–21 Football Index [153]
2021–22BOXT
2022–23 UNHCR [154]
2023– Adidas Kaiyun [155]

Nomenclature

The club has garnered many nicknames over time. Historically, the nickname of "the Reds" was used, [156] as was "Garibaldis". [157] "The Forest" [158] or the simpler "Forest" – as used on the club crest – is commonly used. Another, lesser-used, nickname referring to the club is the "Tricky Trees". [159] [160]

Stadium

City Ground

The City Ground on the banks of the River Trent. Nottingham MMB 15 City Ground.jpg
The City Ground on the banks of the River Trent.

Since 1898, Nottingham Forest have played their home games at the City Ground in West Bridgford, on the banks of the River Trent. Prior to moving to the City Ground, Forest played their home games at Forest Recreation Ground, then Trent Bridge, and finally the purpose-built Town Ground. Since 1994, the City Ground has been all-seater, a preparation that was made in time for the ground to be a venue for Euro 96, and currently has a capacity of 30,404.

The City Ground is 300 yards away from Notts County's Meadow Lane stadium on the opposite side of the Trent, meaning the two grounds are the closest professional football stadia geographically in England. In 1898 the City Ground was within the boundaries of Nottingham, which had been given city status the year before and gave rise to the name of the stadium. However, a boundary change in the 1950s means that the City Ground now stands just outside of the city's boundaries in the town of West Bridgford.

On 28 February 2019, Nottingham Forest announced plans to redevelop the City Ground and surrounding area, including the "creation of a new, world-class Peter Taylor Stand". It is expected this will increase the capacity of the stadium to 38,000, making it the largest football stadium in the East Midlands. The club was hopeful that building work could begin at the end of the 2019-20 season, but the development was put on hold due to "delays in the planning process". [161] In September 2022, Rushcliffe Borough Council's planning committee approved the club's request for planning permission. [162]

Ground history

PeriodGroundLocation
1865–78 Forest Recreation Ground Forest Fields
1879–80 Castle Ground The Meadows
1880–82 Trent Bridge Cricket Ground West Bridgford
1882–85 Parkside Ground Lenton
1885–90 Gregory Ground Lenton
1890–98 Town Ground The Meadows
1898–98 City Ground The Meadows
1898– City Ground West Bridgford

Local rivals, derbies and supporters

Whilst Notts County is the closest professional football club geographically, Forest have remained at least one division higher since the 1994–95 season and the club's fiercest rivalry is with Derby County, located 14 miles away. [163] The rivalry stems from the 1898 FA Cup final when Forest caused a major upset, beating strong favourites Derby County 3–1. The two clubs contest the East Midlands derby, a fixture which has taken on even greater significance since the inception of the Brian Clough Trophy in 2007. As of February 2024, the two clubs have met on 111 occasions, with Forest winning 43 times and Derby winning 38 times with 30 games drawn. [164]

Leicester City were widely considered to be Forest's main East Midlands rivals prior to Brian Clough's success at both Derby and Forest. The ferocity is now most fiercely felt by fans who live around the Leicestershire-Nottinghamshire border.[ citation needed ]

Forest's other regional rival is Sheffield United, based in the neighbouring county of South Yorkshire, a rivalry which has roots in the UK miners' strike of 1984–85 when the miners of South Yorkshire walked out on long strikes but some Nottinghamshire miners, who insisted on holding a ballot, continued to work. The 2003 Championship play-off semi-final between the two clubs, in which Sheffield United finished as 5–4 aggregate winners, also fuelled the rivalry.[ citation needed ] They met again in the 2022 play-offs, with Forest coming out on top this time, and in 2023–24 faced each other in the Premier League for the first time since 1993, with Forest winning 2–1 at home, [165] and 3-1 away. [166]

Managers

Information correct as of match played 28 September 2024. Only competitive matches are counted.

NumberManagerFromToPlayedWonDrawnLostWon %Drawn %Lost %
1 Harry Radford 1 August 188931 May 189717669347339.2%19.3%41.5%
2 Harry Hallam 1 August 189731 May 190946218810417040.7%22.5%36.8%
3 Flag of England.svg Fred Earp [167] 1 August 190931 May 191212035265929.2%21.7%49.2%
4Bob Masters1 August 191231 May 19253851089718028.1%25.2%46.8%
5John Baynes1 August 192531 May 192918269476637.9%25.8%36.3%
6 Flag of England.svg Stan Hardy 1 August 193031 May 1931431492032.6%20.9%46.5%
7 Noel Watson 1 August 193131 May 193622379578735.4%25.6%39.0%
8 Flag of England.svg Harold Wightman 1 August 193631 May 193911933275927.7%22.7%49.6%
9 Flag of England.svg Billy Walker 1 May 19391 June 196065027214723141.8%22.6%35.5%
10 Flag of Scotland.svg Andy Beattie 1 September 19601 July 196314052305837.1%21.4%41.4%
11 Flag of Ireland.svg Johnny Carey 1 July 196331 December 196826799659338.5%25.3%36.2%
12 Flag of Scotland.svg Matt Gillies 1 January 196920 October 197217749488027.7%27.1%45.2%
13 Flag of Scotland.svg Dave Mackay 2 November 197223 October 19734413141729.5%31.8%38.6%
14 Flag of Scotland.svg Allan Brown 19 November 19733 January 19755720172035.1%29.8%35.1%
15 Flag of England.svg Brian Clough 3 January 19758 May 199396844725826346.2%26.7%27.2%
16 Flag of England.svg Frank Clark 13 May 199319 December 199618073594840.5%32.7%26.6%
17 Flag of England.svg Stuart Pearce 20 December 19968 May 19972479829.2%37.5%33.3%
18 Flag of England.svg Dave Bassett 8 May 19975 January 19997633202343.4%26.3%30.2%
19 Flag of England.svg Micky Adams 5 January 199911 January 199910010.0%0.0%100.0%
20 Flag of England.svg Ron Atkinson 11 January 199916 May 199917521029.4%11.8%58.8%
21 Flag of England.svg David Platt 1 July 199912 July 200110337254135.9%24.3%39.8%
22 Flag of England.svg Paul Hart 12 July 20017 February 200413542444931.1%32.6%36.3%
23 Flag of Ireland.svg Joe Kinnear 10 February 200416 December 20044415151434.1%34.1%31.8%
24 Flag of England.svg Mick Harford 16 December 200410 January 2005621333.3%16.7%50.0%
25 Flag of England.svg Gary Megson 10 January 200516 February 20065917182428.8%30.5%40.7%
26 Flag of England.svg Frank Barlow
Flag of Scotland.svg Ian McParland
17 February 200630 May 20061384161.5%30.8%7.7%
27 Flag of Scotland.svg Colin Calderwood 30 May 200626 December 200813657423741.9%30.9%27.2%
28 Flag of England.svg John Pemberton 27 December 20084 January 20092200100.0%0.0%0.0%
29 Flag of Scotland.svg Billy Davies 4 January 200912 June 201112653363742.1%28.6%29.4%
30 Flag of England.svg Steve McClaren 13 June 20112 October 20111333723.1%23.1%53.8%
31 Flag of England.svg Rob Kelly 2 October 201115 October 201110010%0%100%
32 Flag of England.svg Steve Cotterill 14 October 201112 July 2012371271832.4%18.9%48.6%
33 Flag of Ireland.svg Sean O'Driscoll 20 July 201226 December 201226109738.5%34.6%26.9%
34 Flag of Scotland.svg Alex McLeish 27 December 20125 February 2013712414.3%28.6%57.1%
35 Flag of England.svg Rob Kelly 5 February 20139 February 201310010%0%100%
36 Flag of Scotland.svg Billy Davies 7 February 201324 March 20145925211342.3%35.6%22.0%
37 Flag of England.svg Gary Brazil 24 March 20143 May 2014922522.2%22.2%55.6%
38 Flag of England.svg Stuart Pearce 1 July 20141 February 20153210101231.25%31.25%37.5%
39 Flag of Scotland.svg Dougie Freedman 1 February 201513 March 20165719162233.3%28.1%38.6%
40 Flag of England.svg Paul Williams 13 March 201612 May 20161024420.0%40.0%40.0%
41 Flag of France.svg Philippe Montanier 27 June 201614 January 201730961530.0%20.0%50.0%
42 Flag of England.svg Gary Brazil 14 January 201714 March 20171141636.4%9.1%54.5%
43 Flag of England.svg Mark Warburton 14 March 201731 December 2017371531940.5%8.1%51.4%
44 Flag of England.svg Gary Brazil 31 December 20178 January 2018211050.0%50.0%0.0%
45 Flag of Spain.svg Aitor Karanka 8 January 201811 January 20195116191631.4%37.2%31.4%
46 Flag of England.svg Simon Ireland 11 January 201915 January 201910010.0%0.0%100.0%
47 Ulster Banner.svg Martin O'Neill 15 January 201928 June 20191983842.1%15.8%42.1%
48 Flag of France.svg Sabri Lamouchi 28 June 20196 October 20205520161936.4%29.1%34.5%
49 Flag of Ireland.svg Chris Hughton 6 October 202016 September 20215314172226.4%32.1%41.5%
50 Flag of Ireland.svg Steven Reid 16 September 202121 September 20211100100.0%0.0%0.0%
51 Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Steve Cooper 21 September 202119 December 202310842273943.3%24.5%32.2%
52 Flag of Portugal.svg Nuno Espírito Santo 20 December 2023present331091430.3%27.3%42.4%

European record

CompetitionPldWDLGFGAGD
European Cup 2012443214+18
UEFA Cup 2010551816+2
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 6303891
European Super Cup 421143+1
Intercontinental Cup 1001011
Total 512710146243+19
Source: [168] [ unreliable source? ]
SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1961–62 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup First round Flag of Spain.svg Valencia 1–50–21–7
1967–68 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup First round Flag of Germany.svg Eintracht Frankfurt 4–01–05–0
Second round Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg FC Zürich 2–10–12–2 (A)
1978–79 European Cup First round Flag of England.svg Liverpool 2–00–02–0
Second round Flag of Greece.svg AEK Athens 5–12–17–2
Quarter-final Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Grasshoppers 4–11–15–2
Semi-final Flag of Germany.svg Köln 3–31–04–3
Final Flag of Sweden.svg Malmö FF 1–0
1979 European Super Cup Flag of Spain.svg Barcelona 1–01–12–1
1979–80 European Cup First round Flag of Sweden.svg Öster 2–01–13–1
Second round Flag of Romania.svg Argeş Piteşti 2–02–14–1
Quarter-final Flag of East Germany.svg BFC Dynamo 0–13–13–2
Semi-final Flag of the Netherlands.svg Ajax 2–00–12–1
Final Flag of Germany.svg Hamburg 1–0
1980 European Super Cup Flag of Spain.svg Valencia 2–10–12–2 (A)
1980 Intercontinental Cup Flag of Uruguay.svg Nacional 0–1
1980–81 European Cup First round Flag of Bulgaria.svg CSKA Sofia 0–10–10–2
1983–84 UEFA Cup First round Flag of East Germany.svg Vorwärts Frankfurt 2–01–03–0
Second round Flag of the Netherlands.svg PSV Eindhoven 1–02–13–1
Third round Flag of Scotland.svg Celtic 0–02–12–1
Quarter-final Flag of Austria.svg Sturm Graz 1–01–12–1
Semi-final Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Anderlecht 2–00–32–3
1984–85 UEFA Cup First round Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Club Brugge 0–00–10–1
1995–96 UEFA Cup First round Flag of Sweden.svg Malmö FF 1–01–22–2 (A)
Second round Flag of France.svg Auxerre 0–01–01–0
Third round Flag of France.svg Lyon 1–00–01–0
Quarter-final Flag of Germany.svg Bayern Munich 1–51–22–7

Players

First-team

As of 13 September 2024 [169] [170]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
4 DF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Morato
5 DF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Murillo
6 MF Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg  CIV Ibrahim Sangaré
7 DF Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  WAL Neco Williams
8 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Elliot Anderson
9 FW Flag of Nigeria.svg  NGA Taiwo Awoniyi
10 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Morgan Gibbs-White (vice-captain)
11 FW Flag of New Zealand.svg  NZL Chris Wood
12 DF Flag of Ireland.svg  IRL Andrew Omobamidele
14 FW Flag of England.svg  ENG Callum Hudson-Odoi
15 DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Harry Toffolo
16 MF Flag of Argentina.svg  ARG Nicolás Domínguez
17 DF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Eric da Silva Moreira
No.Pos.NationPlayer
18 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG James Ward-Prowse (on loan from West Ham United)
19 DF Flag of Spain.svg  ESP Àlex Moreno (on loan from Aston Villa)
20 FW Flag of Portugal.svg  POR Jota Silva
21 FW Flag of Sweden.svg  SWE Anthony Elanga
22 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Ryan Yates (captain)
24 FW Flag of Paraguay.svg  PAR Ramón Sosa
26 GK Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  BEL Matz Sels
28 MF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Danilo
30 DF Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg  CIV Willy Boly
31 DF Flag of Serbia.svg  SRB Nikola Milenković
33 GK Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Carlos Miguel
34 DF Flag of Nigeria.svg  NGA Ola Aina
44 DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Zach Abbott

First team out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
GK Flag of the United States.svg  USA Matt Turner (on loan to Crystal Palace)
DF Flag of Angola.svg  ANG David Carmo (on loan to Olympiacos)
DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Jonathan Panzo (on loan to Rio Ave)
DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Omar Richards (on loan to Rio Ave)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Lewis O'Brien (on loan to Los Angeles FC)
MF Flag of New Zealand.svg  NZL Marko Stamenić (on loan to Olympiacos)
FW Flag of England.svg  ENG Josh Bowler (on loan to Preston North End)

Other players under contract

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
25 FW Flag of Nigeria.svg  NGA Emmanuel Dennis

B team

As of 30 August 2024 [171]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
36 GK Flag of England.svg  ENG George Murray-Jones
45 DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Fin Back
46 FW Flag of the United States.svg  USA Kristian Fletcher (on loan from D.C. United)
51 MF Flag of Australia (converted).svg  AUS Shae Cahill
53 FW Flag of England.svg  ENG Joe Gardner
55 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Josh Powell
58 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Jack Perkins
59 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Ben Perry
60 MF Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  WAL Sam Collins
61 GK Flag of England.svg  ENG Harry Griffiths
62 GK Flag of England.svg  ENG William Brook
63 GK Flag of England.svg  ENG Aaron Bott
64 DF Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  WAL Ben Hammond
No.Pos.NationPlayer
65 DF Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  WAL Justin Hanks
66 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Jack Nadin
67 DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Jack Thompson
70 DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Kyle McAdam
71 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Archie Whitehall
72 FW Flag of Latvia.svg  LVA Danny Anisjko
73 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Faruq Smith
76 DF Flag of England.svg  ENG Jimmy Sinclair
81 GK Flag of England.svg  ENG Keehan Willows
82 GK Flag of Ireland.svg  IRL Theo Avery-Brown
98 DF Flag of Scotland.svg  SCO Jamie Newton
99 MF Flag of England.svg  ENG Adam Berry

B team out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
DF Ulster Banner.svg  NIR Aaron Donnelly (on loan to Colchester United)
MF Ulster Banner.svg  NIR Jamie McDonnell (on loan to Colchester United)
FW Flag of England.svg  ENG Manni Norkett (on loan to Cheltenham Town)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
FW Flag of England.svg  ENG Esapa Osong (on loan to Rotherham United)
FW Ulster Banner.svg  NIR Dale Taylor (on loan to Wigan Athletic)

Club staff

Coaching staff

Source: [172]

Nuno Espirito Santo is the current manager of the club Nuno Espirito Santo (cropped).jpg
Nuno Espírito Santo is the current manager of the club
RoleName
Manager Flag of Portugal.svg Nuno Espírito Santo
Assistant managers Flag of Portugal.svg Rui Pedro Silva
Flag of Argentina.svg Julio Figeroa
First team goalkeeper coach Flag of Portugal.svg Rui Barbosa
Fitness coach Flag of Portugal.svg Antonio Dias

Executive

RoleName
Majority owner Flag of Greece.svg Evangelos Marinakis
Minority owner Flag of Greece.svg Sokratis Kominakis
Chairman Flag of England.svg Nicholas Randall KC
Director Flag of Greece.svg Ioannis Vrentzos
Non-executive director Flag of England.svg Simon Forster
Non-executive director Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Jonny Owen
Chief football officer Flag of Scotland.svg Ross Wilson
International sporting advisor Flag of Slovenia.svg Miran Pavlin
Global technical director Flag of Greece.svg George Syrianos
Head of football administration Flag of England.svg Taymour Roushdi
Head of football operations Flag of England.svg Ed Henderson
Head of recruitment Flag of Portugal.svg Pedro Ferreira
Head of academy recruitment Flag of England.svg Chris Brass
Recruitment operations manager Flag of England.svg Connor Barrett
Head of football development Flag of Scotland.svg Craig Mulholland
Head of academy Flag of England.svg Chris McGuane
Chief operating officer Flag of England.svg Paul Bell
Finance director Flag of England.svg Tom Bonser
Director of communications Flag of England.svg Wendy Taylor

Notable former players

Player of the Season

All-time XI

In 1997 and 1998, as part of the release of the book The Official History of Nottingham Forest, a vote was carried out to decide on the club's official All Time XI. [173]

PositionPlayerYears at club
GK Flag of England.svg Peter Shilton 1977–82
RB Flag of England.svg Viv Anderson 1974–84
RCB Flag of England.svg Des Walker 1984–92; 2002–04
LCB Flag of Scotland.svg Kenny Burns 1977–81
LB Flag of England.svg Stuart Pearce 1985–97
RCM Ulster Banner.svg Martin O'Neill 1971–81
ACM Flag of Ireland.svg Roy Keane 1990–93
LCM Flag of Scotland.svg Archie Gemmill 1977–79
RW Flag of England.svg Ian Storey-Moore 1962–72
CF Flag of England.svg Trevor Francis 1979–81
LW Flag of Scotland.svg John Robertson 1970–83; 1985–86

In 2016, Nottingham Forest season ticket holders voted for the club's greatest eleven to commemorate the club's 150th anniversary. [174]

PositionPlayerYears at club
GK Flag of England.svg Peter Shilton 1977–82 [175]
RB Flag of England.svg Viv Anderson 1974–83
CB Flag of Scotland.svg Kenny Burns 1977–81
CB Flag of England.svg Des Walker 1983–04
LB Flag of England.svg Stuart Pearce 1985–97
RW Ulster Banner.svg Martin O'Neill 1971–81
CM Flag of Ireland.svg Roy Keane 1990–93
CM Flag of Scotland.svg John McGovern 1974–81
LW Flag of Scotland.svg John Robertson 1970–83
ST Flag of England.svg Stan Collymore 1993–95
ST Flag of England.svg Ian Storey-Moore 1962–72

International players

Records and statistics

Honours

source: [186] [nb 3] [nb 4]

Domestic

League

Cup

European

Minor titles

Other NFFC teams

See also

Notes

  1. The others were Liverpool in 1906, Everton in 1932, Tottenham Hotspur in 1951 and Ipswich Town in 1962. Forest remain the only club to achieve this feat having not been promoted as champions.
  2. The others are Tom Watson, Herbert Chapman and Kenny Dalglish.
  3. From 1888 to 1992 the Football League First Division was the top tier of English football. It was superseded by the Premier League in 1992.
  4. Upon its formation in 1992, the Premier League became the top tier of English football; the First and Second Divisions then became the second and third tiers, respectively. The First Division is now known as the EFL Championship and the Second Division is now known as EFL League One.

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