Nottingham Forest

Latest updates

  1. Avoiding chaos and stadium development - fans on changes for next seasonpublished at 17:27 BST 5 June

    Your Nottingham Forest opinions banner
    Vitor Pereira, manager of Nottingham Forest, applauds the fans.Image source, Getty Images

    We asked for your views on what one thing needs to change at Nottingham Forest before the new campaign and why.

    Here are some of your comments:

    John: Keeping the group of the current team has to be fundamental to continuing the impressive last 10 Premier League matches. We cannot start over with the heart of the team ripped out. The spine needs to stay; Gibbs-White, Anderson, Murillo and Sels just have to remain. Then get that main stand replaced and construction started. This will demonstrate the club's ambitions fully!

    Kevin: Avoid the chaos of last season! A settled manager, a settled squad and get rid of Edu.

    Matt: Unity. We need a united front between Vitor and the club for our summer transfer strategy. The quicker the incomings and outgoings are sorted, the better our pre-season training will be. I fear this will all hinge on the sale of Anderson, who I would love to stay, but realistically we'll need the sale to reinvest in the squad and the sooner the better.

    Mossy: After the whistle was blown at the last game against Bournemouth, the next sound should have been bulldozers starting up to make a start on developing the stadium, years wasted on talks with the council will cost the club eventually. Mr Marinakis should have built a stadium elsewhere in Nottingham.

    Ollie: Recruitment - simply put, Forest need to get the recruitment right in the summer to drive on up the table and achieve another taste of European football. With everything that's gone on with Edu and the signings made last summer, the players signed seemed to be for a certain style, and not one that suits the current team. I'm expecting some movement with the squad, but whatever that amounts to, it needs to be spot on, with a new striker being the priority.

    David: We need to get on the front foot earlier this summer and bring in players to strengthen the squad in good time to allow the coaching staff to work with the whole squad as a group before the season begins. Last year we were too slow and too late and made some questionable signings which seemed to be panic-driven.

    Edward: Get all the transfer business agreed and done as early as possible so there can be a calm, uneventful and transformative pre-season. We all know what happens when that isn't the case.

  2. Souloukou to step down as Forest chief executivepublished at 17:24 BST 5 June

    Lina SouloukouImage source, Getty Images

    Lina Souloukou is to step down from her role as chief executive of Nottingham Forest.

    Souloukou has been in the position since January 2025.

    In a club statement, Souloukou said: "It has been an honour to serve as the chief executive of Nottingham Forest. I have enjoyed my time here enormously and feel that we have made incredible progress under the ownership of Evangelos Marinakis."

  3. 'One-buyer market' may slightly reduce Anderson fee - Storeypublished at 12:04 BST 5 June

    Elliot AndersonImage source, Getty Images

    The fee Nottingham Forest may eventually receive for Elliot Anderson may be "slightly deflated" because of there being a "one-buyer market" for the midfielder, says The i's chief football writer Daniel Storey.

    Manchester City had had an opening bid for Anderson rejected by Nottingham Forest on Wednesday, but there is a growing expectation the 23-year-old will leave the City Ground this summer.

    A potential fee could be a record for a British player and eclipse the £105m Arsenal paid West Ham for Declan Rice in 2023.

    "We have created an environment to let an exceptional footballer be the best version of himself, better than anyone thought he would be," Storey told BBC Radio Nottingham's Shut Up And Show More Football podcast.

    "One of the problems Forest have is they simultaneously want the fee to be as high as possible, which is absolutely right, and also would like a bit of a bidding war.

    "Premier League clubs now selling at high prices generally takes out the world outside England bar two or three teams. There has never been reported interest from Bayern Munich or Real Madrid or Barcelona so we have a Premier League market."

    Storey continued: "Manchester United were really keen but they have two or probably three midfielders to buy so I don't think they can go as high as the fee would be. So, effectively, we have a one-buyer market, which is Manchester City. In a one-buyer market, it is hard to avoid the fee being slightly deflated than what you'd like as City can wait it out and do their business towards the end of the window.

    "But, City may well also want to do business early and the fee, even if it is slightly deflated, I think will still be at least £90m which is an enormous amount of money.

    "We know he's going, we know he has to go, but it's all about how Forest replace him. It's hard to do when he's still at the club as it shows they're really happy to sell Anderson and then the fee drops a little again.

    "There has been no sense of him kicking up a fuss, he seems a really good guy, so we are now just in that negotiation phase. My gut feeling is it will be around £100m which somehow both doesn't feel quite enough but is also more than double what Forest have ever sold a player for."

    Listen to the full episode on BBC Sounds

    The orange BBC Sounds logo against a black background
  4. 🎧Forest at the 2026 World Cuppublished at 08:44 BST 5 June

    A new episode of BBC Radio Nottingham's Shut Up And Show More Football podcast is now available to listen to and download on BBC Sounds.

    David Jackson talks to journalist and Forest fan Daniel Storey before he heads to the USA to cover the World Cup.

    Hear his thoughts on Elliot Anderson's inclusion in Thomas Tuchel's England Squad, the prospect of his move to Manchester City this summer, and Morgan Gibbs-White's exclusion despite an excellent season.

    Listen below or on BBC Sounds here - and don't forget to subscribe to get each episode into your My Sounds feed.

    Media caption,

    Explore all Nottingham Forest content on BBC Sounds

    The orange BBC Sounds logo against a black background
  5. World Cup workload?published at 07:54 BST 5 June

    Chris Collinson
    BBC Sport statistician

    Table shows how many players from each Premier League club go to the World Cup.
Man City 19, Arsenal 16, Man Utd 13, Palace 12, Chelsea, Liverpool, Sunderland all on 11.
Aston Villa 10, Tottenham nine, Brighton and Newcastle 8. Fulham and Wolves 7. Bournemouth and Forest 6. Burnley and West Ham 5. Brentford, Everton, Leeds all on 4.

    With all 48 World Cup squads now confirmed, we look at how they shape up and compare with each other leading into the tournament.

    Which clubs have the most players?

    Looking just at the 20 clubs that made up the 2025-26 Premier League, only this season's top three have more players at the World Cup than Conference League winners Crystal Palace (12).

    Including players out on loan over the season, Sunderland remarkably have as many representatives on the global stage as Chelsea and Liverpool (11), showing just how globe-trotting their recruitment was following promotion last summer.

    The majority of Brentford, Everton and Leeds' squads can put their feet up and recharge their batteries for next season, with those clubs sending just four players each.

  6. What do Nottingham Forest need to change before August?published at 12:39 BST 4 June

    Nottingham Forest have your say banner

    The 2026-27 Premier League season will be here before we know it, with the first matches taking place on Saturday, 22 August.

    We have a simple question for you - what one thing needs to change at your club before the new campaign and why?

    It can be a player, manager, ticketing issue, owner, or wider change.

    Let us know in detail here

  7. Nottingham Forest quickfire reviewpublished at 11:05 BST 3 June

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Nottingham Forest manager Vitor PereiraImage source, Getty Images

    The turning point of the season was...

    It depends which way you look at it. It could be the fall out between Edu and Nuno Espirito Santo last summer, which ultimately paved the way for Nuno's departure after just three games and the chaos that came in the following weeks and months.

    Or it is appointing Vitor Pereira in February, who steadied the ship, reassured the players and guided Forest to safety.

    This season has exceeded/not matched up to expectation because...

    Forest's recent seasons have not been quiet - relegation battles or challenging for Champions League qualification - and this was no exception. It matched the expectation of upheaval but it did not meet what was demanded on the pitch. Forest wanted to build on last season's seventh place, especially after spending £180m, and did not plan for a season of struggle.

    Based off performances this year, the player who could break through next campaign is...

    Defender Zach Abbott is highly rated by Vitor Pereira, despite making only 10 appearances this season, and could make a further step up next term.

    The one player/coach who deserves more credit is...

    Elliot Anderson and Morgan Gibbs-White grabbed most of the headlines but Nikola Milenkovic continued to do his job at the back, perhaps not as consistently as the previous season but who was? He remains crucial to Forest while striker Igor Jesus deserves plaudits in his role in Chris Wood's absence as he adapted to the Premier League in his debut season.

    The goal for the summer has to be...

    Stability. Vitor Pereira has already called for that and he will sign a new contract over the summer, having penned an 18-month deal when he joined in February. There needs to be calm, not chaos, over the summer.

  8. Bueno, Fernandes, Flemming? - Fan picks from relegated sidespublished at 18:01 BST 29 May

    Your Nottingham Forest opinions banner
    Hugo Bueno, Mateus Fernandes and Zian FlemmingImage source, Getty Images

    We asked for your views on which players Nottingham Forest should sign from the three relegated Premier League sides Wolves,Burnley and West Ham United..

    Here are some of your suggestions:

    Toby: I would take a punt on Hugo Bueno and Rodrigo Gomes from Wolves. They are both promising players, who looked good in a poor team. Mateus Fernandes from West Ham, who we were linked with last summer, is also someone who should be high on our list. I wouldn't mind either Taty Castellanos or Callum Wilson from there too. From Burnley, I could only really say Zian Flemming - but would he get near the starting XI? I'm not sure.

    David: For me, Fernandes from West Ham would make a better signing than Hayden Hackney from Middlesbrough. Andre and Joao Gomes from Wolves would also bolster the team and fit in with the other Portuguese speakers at the club.

    Phil: We should look at Jarrod Bowen from West Ham. He is a very good team player who gives 100%, he has a vast wealth of experience and he knows what is required to succeed in the Premier League.

    Stewart: Three choices for me. Jose Sa from Wolves could be ideal back-up for Matz Sels. Flemming from Burnley could be ideal back-up for Chris Wood up front. The cherry on top would be Bowen from West Ham, to give the attack something different and unexpected.

    Roger: I think we need to take a good look around the world first, before rushing to use the Championship market for often overpriced players. There is a lot of potential talent to be found abroad.

  9. Nottingham Forest quickfire end of season reviewpublished at 13:21 BST 29 May

    Colin Fray
    BBC Radio Nottingham reporter

    Nottingham Forest players huddle before kick-offImage source, Getty Images

    The most significant moment of the season - good or bad - was...

    Winning at Midtjylland in the Europa League. Identified as the night when Nottingham Forest's fringe players delivered, it was the moment Vitor Pereira says he knew he had a squad capable of staying up. They only lost once - very controversially - in the Premier League after that.

    The season has been a success because...

    Even with four head coaches, the club has managed to combine Premier League survival with a first European campaign for 30 years and a run to the semi-finals.

    The unsung hero of the season is...

    Is it possible to call the player of the year the unsung hero? Given all the headlines and plaudits rightly handed to the likes of Elliot Anderson and Morgan Gibbs-White this season, it was great to see Neco Williams crowned player of year. He has quietly gone about his business and he has played at a consistently high level all season.

    If there is a player or staff member with more to do in future it is...

    James McAtee. It has been a difficult first season at Forest for the attacking midfielder but more than one of Forest's head coaches this season has talked about the quality he shows in training and that he can do things others can't. Maybe next season will be when he flourishes.

    The major club issue or talking point lurking is...

    As always at this time of year, the major club issue lurking is whether they will lose any of their star talents.

    There is obviously a lot of talk about Anderson and it will be interesting to see Forest's stance on that during the summer. Can they keep him and, if that seems unlikely, how can they reinvest the club-record fee he would attract in order to compensate for his loss?

    The reason for hope going forward is...

    The last 10 games of the Premier League season. Under immense pressure, and with a squad decimated by injury, they lost just once (amid hugely controversial circumstances of course) to secure Premier League survival.

    Take away midweek European football, add in some shrewd summer investment and a new contract for Pereira, who has done an incredible job to reunite and regalvanise the club, and that certainly equals a recipe for hope.

  10. Stand name would 'flabbergast' Robertson - McGovernpublished at 11:35 BST 29 May

    Nottingham Forest players celebrate with the 1979 European CupImage source, Getty Images

    Two-time Nottingham Forest European Cup winning captain John McGovern has paid tribute to former team-mate John Robertson.

    Robertson, widely regarded as one of Forest's greatest players, died aged 72 at Christmas and after the final game of the season the club conducted a naming ceremony to mark the Bridgford Stand being renamed the John Robertson Stand in his honour.

    Asked how Robertson would react to having a stand named after him at the City Ground, McGovern told the Shut Up And Show More Football podcast: "Flabbergasted I would think!

    "John was what you'd call one of the lads - the lads being a very good football team! He fitted in brilliantly and was the best player in that team.

    "It was a marriage made in heaven. You had a team that wanted to play football managed by Peter Taylor and Brian Clough, which meant all the players would keep their feet on the ground.

    "In John's case there was no need for that, he would always keep his feet on the ground. Especially when he was running past full-backs which he did regularly at the time!

    "He was the best player in our side, the most consistent, and we were just glad he didn't get injured because it would be so difficult to replace him if he was out for a couple of weeks."

    Listen to the full episode on BBC Sounds

    Explore all Nottingham Forest content on BBC Sounds

    The orange BBC Sounds logo against a black background
  11. 🎧 End of term report - plus remembering Robertsonpublished at 18:47 BST 28 May

    The latest episode of Shut Up And Show More Football has landed.

    BBC Radio Nottingham's Colin Fray is joined by former Forest midfielder Steve Hodge to reflect on a season with "lots of sub-plots".

    Two-time European Cup winning captain John McGovern also reminisces about playing alongside the late John Robertson.

    Plus, there are exclusive interviews with player of the season Neco Williams and former club midfielder David Phillips.

    Listen below or on BBC Sounds here - and don't forget to subscribe to get each episode into your My Sounds feed.

    Media caption,

    Explore all Nottingham Forest content on BBC Sounds

    The orange BBC Sounds logo against a black background
  12. Who should Forest sign from the relegated clubs?published at 12:57 BST 28 May

    Nottingham Forest have your say banner

    The curtain has officially come down on the 2025-26 Premier League season.

    Players will depart and squads will be strengthened when the summer transfer window opens on Monday, 15 June.

    With Wolves, Burnley and West Ham United all heading down to the Championship - would you be keen to poach any of their players?

    Who would be good value for money and why? Which name would be best to avoid?

    Let us know your thoughts here

  13. Anderson makes Opta's team of the seasonpublished at 07:36 BST 28 May

    Opta have conjured up their Premier League team of the season based on data collected throughout the 2025-26 Premier League campaign.

    One Nottingham Forest player has been selected in the XI following a mixed campaign, which saw the Reds finish five points clear of the relegation zone after making three managerial changes.

    Opta's team of the season

    On Elliot Anderson, Opta said: Nottingham Forest's season may have had an element of chaos to it, being the first-ever team to have four permanent managers in a single Premier League season, but the ever-present Anderson provided a degree of stability.

    Among all the players, he had the most touches (3,300), won the most duels (297), won the most fouls (80) and won the most possession overall (306).

    Among the central midfielders, he made the most line-breaking passes (376), completed the most overall passes (2,038) and made the most dribbles (95).

    He was the first player to win possession more than 300 times and make more than 100 tackles in a Premier League season since Declan Rice in 2019-20. In addition, his 297 duels won were the best by an English midfielder in a campaign since records began in 2006-07.

    He worked hard out of possession too, with his 1,895 high-intensity pressures being the most applied by a central midfielder.

  14. 'Four different sets of emotions... 3/10 or 4/10' - season report cardpublished at 09:06 BST 27 May

    Pat Riddell
    Fan writer

    Nottingham Forest fan's voice banner
    Dejected players of Nottingham Forest Image source, Getty Images

    Season score out of 10 and overriding emotion?

    3/10... possibly 4/10. It has literally been a season of four parts - four different managers and four different sets of emotions. From the excitement at the start of the season, to almost immediate disappointment, dissolution, and then hope and pride again.

    Best moment and why?

    Was it taking a 1-0 lead into the second leg of our Europa League semi-final? Was it beating Liverpool 3-0 at Anfield? Or was it thrashing Sunderland 5-0 when we were desperately fighting relegation? For a disappointing season, there has been a number of moments - but perhaps just being in Europe for the first time in 30 years was a season-long high.

    Player of season and why?

    Neco Williams was the frontrunner for a long time - throughout the good and the bad, he was unbelievably consistent. But it is impossible not to mention Elliot Anderson, whose statistics prove he is already an elite player. However, it was Morgan Gibbs-White who really shone in the final run-in. He produced possibly the best form of his life, which makes his England exclusion all the more baffling. His 18 goals and seven assists is still only half the story - his commitment, dedication and work-rate are on another level.

    Unsung hero and why?

    Ibrahim Sangare is perhaps the quiet revelation of this season. The record signing from almost three years ago has finally proven he is the player many of us knew he could be, even after contracting malaria as well as numerous injuries. Our midfield looked bereft without him in the games he wasn't available.

    Biggest disappointment?

    Appointing Ange Postecoglou. Everybody knew it was doomed - except the board. In some ways, it is better that it went even worse than imagined and he was gone before any further damage was done.

    What needs to change this summer?

    Our transfer policy because it didn't exactly go to plan last summer. I imagine several of those signings might be off to other clubs, but the squad needs Premier League-ready players to really strengthen.

    Major hope for next season?

    To actually have a relatively steady season of growth and progression. Staying well clear of the bottom three and pushing hard for top 10, or even higher, would represent a level of success after some of the turmoil we have been through.

    Find more from Pat Riddell at The Famous Club, external

    This is your Nottingham Forest page. Bookmark it and come back for news, fan opinions, punditry and reporter insight, audio clips and more.

    If you're on the BBC Sport app, press the bell icon at the top and select news alerts. And don't forget to 'follow' if on the app or signed in on a browser to start seeing more Nottingham Forest content.

  15. Man City lead rivals in race for Andersonpublished at 17:27 BST 26 May

    Football reporter Nick Mashiter byline banner

    Manchester City are leading the race to sign Elliot Anderson, with the Nottingham Forest midfielder leaning towards a move to Etihad Stadium instead of rivals Manchester United.

    There is a growing expectation Anderson will leave the City Ground this summer.

    United are unwilling to overpay, or get drawn into protracted negotiations.

    No deal has been struck between Forest and City and the clubs are far apart on their valuation for the 23-year-old, meaning the situation could still change.

  16. 'Our aim is to try to get European football every season' - Williamspublished at 11:16 BST 26 May

    Media caption,

    Neco Williams believes Nottingham Forest "belong in Europe" and says everyone at the club will "do everything they can" to ensure the Reds secure a spot in either the Champions League, Europa League or Conference League next season.

    Vitor Pereira's side reached the Europa League semi-finals but finished just five points above the Premier League relegation zone this season - thought was also only nine points off qualifying for the Conference League.

    "Having had that taste of European football this season, that is where I believe Nottingham Forest belong," Williams told BBC Radio Nottingham. "We will do everything we can to achieve that next season.

    "This season has been difficult, but there have been lots of memories made. It has been a season us boys can be proud of, but we are just looking forward to next season now.

    "Our aim [as a club] is to try to get European football every season.

    "I do think that is where we should be aiming at, especially with the owner we have, the ambition he has and the support he gives us as players.

    "We will do everything we can to achieve it."

    Hit play above to hear the full interview, or listen on BBC Sounds here

  17. 'Pereira restored calm - but a big summer is ahead'published at 08:04 BST 26 May

    Vitor PereiraImage source, Getty Images
    Chief football writer Phil McNulty byline banner

    Now the curtain has come down on the 2025-26 Premier League campaign, here is my end-of-season review - with a look back to what I predicted in August.

    Prediction: 10th

    It is ridiculous that Nottingham Forest found themselves fighting relegation until late in the season, especially given they possess players of the highest quality such as Elliot Anderson and Morgan Gibbs-White.

    This was the consequence of having four managers in one season.

    In appointing Ange Postecoglou to succeed Nuno Espirito Santo, Forest went from one style to another. He was sacked after 39 days and then Sean Dyche, the supposedly pragmatic choice, lasted only 114 days.

    Vitor Pereira restored calm and performances finally reflected the standard of the squad.

    There is a big summer ahead, though, given the speculation around the future of Anderson.

    What I said in August: "No-one can question the ambition of owner Evangelos Marinakis."

    Check out the rest of my review here

Scores & Fixtures