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09/09/2025
Just another normal day at Nottingham Forest
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Barry Glendenning |
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FOREST GRUMP |
While it is unusual for a football club to break news of a managerial sacking on their Social Media Disgrace channels shortly after midnight, if Football Daily had to stake its life on one Premier League outfit doing so, we would have picked Nottingham Forest and lived to tell the tale. Owned by a Greek entrepreneur who has always conveyed the impression he would be happy to take care of business at any hour, there have been suggestions that Forest waited until the ladies and gentlemen of the English football press were tucked up in their beds to announce the departure of Nuno Espírito Santo in a bid to “bury bad news”. Considering this particular bit of news that only seems bad from the perspective of Forest fans has been clearly signposted to anyone who has been privy to the morose and forlorn existential crises that have passed for recent Nuno press conferences, the more plausible – or slightly less implausible – scenario is that rumours of the Portuguese’s imminent demise were already circulating late on Monday and the put-upon Forest FaceTok team were instructed to confirm they had not been greatly exaggerated.
A hugely popular presence at the City Ground due in no small part to the fact he saved Forest from relegation and then got them into Europe and isn’t Steve Cooper, the first clues that Nuno’s relationship with his employer was strained became apparent when he kept telling reporters how strained it was at every available opportunity, even if he’d just been asked about the status of Nicolás Domínguez’s knee-knack. “I think everybody at the club should be together but it’s not the reality,” he sighed in one of his more upbeat pressers. “The reality is that [it] is not what it used to be. It was a good, respectful relationship, but was more based on trust and sharing opinions, and now it’s not so good.” A famously inscrutable individual who is not prone to knee-jerk reactions and public emotional outbursts, it was no surprise his boss, Evangelos Marinakis, bided his time and waited for a couple of weeks and a shellacking from West Ham before wielding the axe. “Nottingham Forest Football Club confirms that, following recent circumstances, Nuno Espírito Santo has today been relieved of his duties as head coach,” yawned that club statement issued in the early hours of this morning before rolling over and going back to sleep.
Never one to let the grass grow under his feet, Marinakis had already lined up Nuno’s replacement, although it remains to be seen what Forest fans will make of the news that it comes in the form of the man who masterminded the heroic double of winning Bigger Vase with Spurs while finishing one place above the relegation zone last season. Yes, Ange Postecoglou will be taking over and the flamin’ Australian will be in charge when Forest travel to face Arsenal this weekend. Given Nuno’s success at Forest was built on a foundation of rock-solid defence married to lightning-quick counter-attacks, Postecoglou will need time to instil his fabled philosophy of no defence married to all-out attack “because it’s just the way we play, mate”. With this season’s promoted sides showing far more signs of life than their dismal counterparts last season, it is to be hoped Forest’s players can acquire enough points to avoid the drop before having all of the Nuno drilled out of them, or else Ange’s best chance of winning something in his second season, should he last that long, will be promotion back to the Premier League.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY |
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There were cheap flights to Budapest. Scotland trips are fantastic, but usually the worst bit is the 90 minutes. So, when we heard this game was on and we couldn’t get in - we just had to come! We’ve been told they are trying to organise somewhere for Scotland fans to go and watch on the TV, so we’ll probably go there” – despite being told in no uncertain terms that no fans would not be let into the stadium to watch the behind-closed-doors match between Belarus and Scotland, Jane Grigor was one of a handful of the Tartan Army that made the trip to Zalaegerszeg anyway. The city in Hungary, chosen to host the World Cup qualifier after Belarus were banned from staging home matches in their own country because of their government’s support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine, is 80 miles from the nearest airport but then again, the flights were cheap and there might have been somewhere to watch the game, which Scotland won 2-0. |
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 Scotland fans ‘soak up the atmosphere’ outside the ZTE Arena before the match … Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA |
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 … and start their long journey back to Scotland on Tuesday morning. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA |
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FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS |
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Nottingham Forest is about to be comedy gold: Australia’s surliest man, employed by Greece’s surliest man. Like a 1970s sitcom, or an alt-right talk show” – Kev. |
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So (metaphorical) blood pouring from the eyes was Football Daily’s reaction to enduring the England/Andorra match? I dread to think what your reaction would have been to sitting through the entire Australia v New Zealand game last Friday in a freezing cold, antiquated, shoddy old Canberra Stadium where there were 88 minutes of absolute dross enlivened at the last minute by a goal for a debutant with perhaps his first touch of the game. Australia’s tactics of playing with a back five at home against the mighty Oceania heavyweights, while constantly ceding possession in midfield and relying on back passing to the keeper to then hoof into touch seemed like a strange way to roadtest players for the next World Cup. Most painful was finding out that the Socceroos are ranked 24th in the world! I cannot imagine another 170 teams that could perform worse than that rabble” – Drew Wagner. |
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Your portrait of Jackie Charlton was typically mostly correct. However he would have been in his waders in the River Tweed. Allegedly he once rapidly left a Newcastle training session because salmon have been seen in the aforesaid river” – Steven Rye. |
Send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s prizeless letter o’ the day winner is … Steven Rye. Terms and conditions for our competitions can be viewed here. |
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AZZURED PERFORMANCE |
There is no greater synopsis for Italy’s last-minute 5-4 victory over Israel than Gennaro Gattuso’s immortal line: “sometimes maybe good, sometimes maybe $hit”. Indeed, Italy and Israel were both very good at attacking and very $hit at defending in their World Cup qualifying slugfest, which ended with Sandro Tonali’s 91st-minute winner to give Gattuso – who was surprisingly appointed as Italy’s manager back in June – a second successive victory after Friday’s 5-0 thrashing of Estonia. Four goals between Italy and Israel in the final 10 minutes made for a scene more chaotic than Joe Jordan and Gattuso throttling each other in 2011. “It was a real nightmare today,” growled Gattuso after the win. “We weren’t brilliant and that’s normal, it was the second game. We have to improve, we’ll hold on to the victory which was fundamental. But we’re crazy, we conceded absurd goals and we’re too fragile.” |
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 A win is a win. Photograph: Claudio Villa/FIGC/Getty Images |
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RECOMMENDED LOOKING |
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 Good times. Gooooooood times. Illustration: David Squires/The Guardian |
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NEWS, BITS AND BOBS |
Manchester City and the Premier League have settled their dispute over rules that limit the ability of top-flight clubs to sign sponsorship deals with companies related to their ownership.
MLS has suspended Luis Suárez for three league games for his role in the mass brawl between his Inter Miami side and the Seattle Sounders. Suárez put Sounders midfielder Obed Vargas in a headlock and was seen yelling at and spitting on Sounders security director Gene Ramirez.
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 Oh, Luis! Photograph: Alika Jenner/Getty Images |
The 2026 World Cup could be North America’s last without urgent climate adaptation, according to a new study, which also suggests that by 2050, nearly 90% of North America’s host stadiums will require adaptation to extreme heat while one third will face water demand equalling or exceeding supply.
Thomas Tuchel has said England are “afraid of nothing” apart from long tunnels in Serbia. “The tunnel is not so agreeable,” admitted the German.
Craig Bellamy has compared Premier League players to “cyborgs” as he discussed the growing physicality in the game. “It has become a running game,” sighed the Wales manager, previously famed for his own running ability. “It has become beyond extreme with the physical capabilities”.
André Onana is expected to complete his loan move this week from Manchester United to Trabzonspor, where – remarkably – the goalkeeper will earn even more dosh than he is currently.
And the Socceroos have retained the Flamin’ ‘Soccer Ashes’ after a 3-1 win over New Zealand in a friendly in Auckland. Hopefully that’s cheered up Drew (above).
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MOVING THE GOALPOSTS |
‘Not ideal’: WSL coaches react to mid-match TV interviews, with the new approach from broadcasters also leaving many supporters unimpressed. Suzanne Wrack has more. |
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