Tag: Brian Clough

  • ‘Stuff of dreams’: Inside fairytale rise of PL ‘disruptors’… and the unlikely hero at its centre

    ‘Stuff of dreams’: Inside fairytale rise of PL ‘disruptors’… and the unlikely hero at its centre

    Nottingham Forest and Bournemouth battling the powerhouses for a Champions League place. No one predicted that.

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    There is only a third of the Premier League season remaining and the race for the top four has arguably never been more intriguing.

    Liverpool appears set to have one hand on the title, eight points clear of second-placed Arsenal, who have a game in hand, but the next rung down is where things get fascinating.

    Nottingham Forest third, Manchester City fourth and Bournemouth fifth.

    The latter jumped into the top five after Forest, Chelsea, Aston Villa and Newcastle all dropped points last weekend.

    Forest have won 14, drawn five and lost six, while Bournemouth have won 12, drawn seven and lost six.

    It reads like a Forest or Cherries fan plugging away on Football Manager for hours to get their team to dizzying heights, but supporters in England’s midlands and on the south coast better stop pinching themselves.

    They are not dreaming. This is real.

    The struggles of regular top six clubs Manchester United and Tottenham, along with Champions League Round of 16 bound Villa slipping in the league, presented opportunities, and Forest and Bournemouth have snatched them with both hands.

    The Forest story is famous.

    A powerhouse decades ago with back-to-back European Cup victories in 1979 and 1980 under legendary manager Brian Clough.

    A year before their first continental breakthrough, Forest won the English top flight and they were runners-up the season after.

    But following relegation from the Premier League in 1999, they fell into the football abyss.

    Forest did not return to the Premier League until 2022 and barely avoided relegation by finishing 16th and 17th in their first two seasons back in the top tier.

    Bournemouth were promoted from the Championship in the same season as Forest and initially found themselves in the bottom half of the table too.

    A 12th place finish last season was preceded by coming 15th in their prior campaign.

    Unlike Forest, however, Bournemouth is not a club with a rich pedigree.

    Its first season in the Premier League came under now Newcastle boss Eddie Howe in 2015/16 and a ninth-place finish in their second season was the club’s best result in the top flight.

    Years of mediocrity did not show too many hints of a breakout campaign in Bournemouth’s case, nor a stunning revival in Forest’s case.

    But the dream of Champions League nights at the City Ground or the Vitality Stadium is alive and well, and this how they have put themselves in the hunt for midweek action against the best clubs in Europe.

    Here is how they did it.

    FOREST’S KIWI FRONTMAN

    Like Forest’s, Chris Wood’s story is a fairytale.

    The 33-year-old captain of the New Zealand national team has remarkably played for 12 different clubs in England.

    He even went through a three-year period where he was sent out on loan six times by West Bromwich Albion.

    Wood bounced around the various tiers of English football after moving to the UK as a 16-year-old to chase his dreams, and now the Forest talisman is a bonified star.

    NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND – AUGUST 17: Chris Wood of Nottingham Forest celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the Premier League match between Nottingham Forest FC and AFC Bournemouth at City Ground on August 17, 2024 in Nottingham, England. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The six-foot three striker is third in the golden boot race.

    He has netted 18 goals so far this campaign, highlighted by a hat-trick in Forest’s 7-0 rout of Brighton earlier this month, to only sit behind Mohamed Salah (24) and Erling Haaland (19).

    It is his best Premier League season, and he still has 13 more opportunities to add to his tally.

    “When they talk about Mo Salah and Erling Haaland – they mention Chris Wood in the same breath – you can’t compete with that,” Wood’s high school coach former New Zealand international Mike Groom told Sky Sports.

    “It’s theatrical, it’s magical, it’s the stuff of dreams and kids’ dreams are fuelled by those images and that exposure.

    “We’re still a rugby-playing country, but Chris is single-handedly beginning to change that.”

    Wood’s height automatically makes him an aerial threat as a target man, he has scored six headed goals this season, the most in the league, but his finishing is still underrated.

    In fact, it is lethal.

    Wood has had 28 shots on target for the season, and scoring 18 of them makes him the most effective of any of the Premier League’s top strikers in front of goal.

    New Zealand’s record goal scorer, who is also nearing the record for most appearances for his country, has also endeared himself to football fans because he is not blessed with all the attributes of the likes of Salah and Haaland.

    The biggest difference is pace.

    Wood is not a quick player, and the fact he lacks speed seemingly contradicts the fact that Forest prefers to play counterattacking football.

    But he makes it work by timing his runs perfectly and seizing big moments.

    In some ways, it makes little sense but so has his entire football journey.

    “It’s definitely exceeded what I dreamt of when I was a kid and hopefully, I’ve got a lot more I can achieve to make it an even better dream,” Wood told Sky Sports.

    “I want to keep the path open for New Zealanders to hopefully make it into the Premier League one day – I want to grow that generation of new kids wanting to play football and wanting to dream of doing the best they can and ending up in the biggest league.”

    BOURNEMOUTH CREATE CHAOS

    Bournemouth’s blueprint in attack is not dissimilar to Forest’s.

    The two sides are comfortably the Premier League leaders for playing fast and direct football.

    They sit back and defend resolutely, and when they win the ball back, they are off to the races.

    Once the ball is in their attacking half, they press high and try to force turnovers in dangerous areas.

    It makes for exciting games to watch, and Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola has been heaped with praise this season for his tactics.

    “I sometimes value much more a player carrying the ball and forcing things to happen,” Iraola said in an interview with The Independent.

    “We have to prepare [positional] patterns, but we cannot just prioritise them. If you can see that you don’t have a teammate ahead, forget about the pattern, just drive the ball and try to force things to happen. I want him to attack first.”

    Meanwhile premierleague.com’s Alex Keble summed up the essence of their play as “disruption”.

    “High risk, high reward: that’s the mentality of Iraola and his team, whether in hounding the ball with an all-action and full-pitch press or piercing opposition lines with sharp vertical football and attacking overloads,” Keble said.

    “Perhaps the best word to encapsulate their tactical approach is “disruption”.

    “Disrupt the other team’s play with furious pressing, and disrupt the expected rhythms of your own attack with improvisations and surges forward in high numbers.”

    That philosophy has brought out the best in Justin Kluivert, who has scored 11 goals so far this campaign, four more than last season.

    The Dutchman has really found his groove in the Premier League in recent times.

    He was player of the month in January for scoring five goals and recording two assists in four appearances, of which Bournemouth won three and drew one.

    The highlight of his season so far was a hat-trick, and an assist, in a 4-1 away win against Newcastle who were previously unbeaten in nine matches before that January fixture.

    BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND – JANUARY 25: Justin Kluivert of Bournemouth celebrates after scoring to make it 1-0 during the Premier League match between AFC Bournemouth and Nottingham Forest FC at Vitality Stadium on January 25, 2025 in Bournemouth, England. (Photo by Robin Jones – AFC Bournemouth/AFC Bournemouth via Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    That victory was followed up by a 5-0 victory against Forest, where Kluivert contributed a goal and an assist to help end Forest’s eight-game unbeaten run.

    Knocking off several in-form teams led to Iraola taking home manager of the month, and David Brooks’ stunning volley against Everton made it a clean sweep of the awards by winning goal of the month.

    All of that came amid a length injury list, including strikers Evanilson and Enes Unal.

    But Kluivert’s breakout combined with the superb form of fellow attackers Dango Ouattara and Antoine Semenyo, who have scored seven goals apiece this season, has prevented injuries from being an excuse.

    No matter who is on the sidelines, once Bournemouth wins the ball back there are simply too many runners for opponents to attack.

    Remarkably, one would expect such a style of play to make them vulnerable at the back.

    But Iraola’s side do not play a high line, and they have the equal-third best defensive record in the league, alongside Forest, conceding 29 goals so far. Only Arsenal and Liverpool have been stingier at the back.

    They key has been the centre back pairing of Dean Huijsen and Illia Zabarnyi, a combination Iraola landed on during the season.

    In the 13 games they have started together, Bournemouth have lost once, to Liverpool.

    Zabaryni is the rock that has played every minute this season, while 19-year-old Huijsen has been a revelation.

    “Huijsen is undoubtedly the star of the two,” Keble wrote.

    “Signed from Juventus for around £15 million last summer, his strength in the air, composure in possession, and – crucially – assertive front-foot style have catapulted Bournemouth to new heights.”

    LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – FEBRUARY 08: Dean Huijsen of Bournemouth looks on during the Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round match between Everton and AFC Bournemouth at Goodison Park on February 08, 2025 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Chris Brunskill/Fantasista/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    FOREST’S ELITE DEFENCE

    ESPN’s Bruce Schoenfeld summed up Forest’s defensive brilliance in writing that manager Nuno Espirito Santo’s “football has hardly changed even though instead of a relegation battle, he has European qualification in his sights”.

    Forest defends like their life depends on it.

    They have comfortably made more clearances than any other team, including the equal most amount of clearances off the line.

    They are level with Liverpool for the most number of clean sheets with ten.

    Goalkeeper Matz Sels has punched away the aerial more than anyone else.

    They are desperate.

    And they are bringing an enormous amount of pride to the club’s greats.

    “I haven’t watched a better pairing at the back than Murillo and Nikola Milenkovic in my 50 years of watching Forest,” former England and Forest midfielder Steve Hodge said on BBC Radio last month.

    “I really mean that – pound for pound what they are as footballers and as a pair,” he added. “They have everything. As a pair, they complement each other perfectly and they both seem to be calm characters even under severe pressure.”

    Nikola Milenkovic of Nottingham Forest celebrates victory during the Premier League match between Nottingham Forest and Brighton and Hove Albion at the City Ground in Nottingham, England, on February 1, 2025. (Photo by MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Milenkovic joined from Fiorentina last summer and the 31-year-old Serbian is in many pundits’ team of the season so far.

    He is an old-fashioned, no-nonsense centre back whose heading ability has led to him scoring two goals as well as clearing many attacking threats.

    But in the coming games, Forest face arguably the biggest defensive test of the season.

    Away at Newcastle, home to Arsenal and home to Manchester City are their next three league games.

    They passed with flying colours earlier in the season, defeating Liverpool at Anfield and taking a point from them at home.

    That shows that there is little to doubt that Forest’s steeliness will remain.

    BOURNEMOUTH’S EXCELLENT ROAD RECORD

    A major part of Bournemouth’s success has been their impressive away record.

    The Cherries have won six, drawn four and lost three of their matches on the road this season, including going unbeaten in their last seven away games.

    That streak has included a pair of 2-2 draws against rivals for the European places Chelsea and Fulham, as well as the Newcastle win mentioned earlier.

    Their most recent away win was a 3-1 win against cellar dwellers Southampton in a south coast derby, and post-match Iraola identified fast starts as the reason for their away success.

    “I think it’s key, especially when you play away,” he said.

    “I think we are having good starts. I remember last games, Newcastle away, Everton the other day.

    “Even the two goals in 16 minutes, but in the first minute I think we had two corners for us.

    “It’s a good start and a message that we are coming here and we want to win this game and we are not happy with the 0-0 and we want things to happen quickly.

    “Also, I think they are a team that now is aggressive in the press. I think there were spaces behind them. There were spaces behind us.

    “The game could go very open and I’m happy, especially first half, I think we controlled the game very well.”

    Their ability to get results on the road will be severely tested later in the season as they visit Arsenal and Manchester City in the final four games of their campaign.

    They could be vital to their European hopes.

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  • ‘Lucky’ Reds survive amid controversy; ‘clinical’ CL hopefuls score SEVEN — PL Wrap

    ‘Lucky’ Reds survive amid controversy; ‘clinical’ CL hopefuls score SEVEN — PL Wrap

    Title favourite Liverpool rode its ‘luck’ in a touch-and-go win at Bournemouth, while Nottingham Forest has continued its charge towards a Champions League berth in a stunning display.

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    REDS RIDE ‘LUCK’ AMID CONTROVERSY

    Arne Slot admitted Liverpool rode their luck to go nine points clear at the top of the Premier League as Mohamed Salah inspired a controversial 2-0 win at Bournemouth on Sunday (AEDT).

    Slot’s side took the lead in the first half when Salah netted with a penalty awarded after Cody Gakpo appeared to trip over his own feet rather than go down from Lewis Cook’s challenge.

    Gakpo was barely onside as well, with Bournemouth left outraged after referee Darren England’s on-field decision was upheld by VAR.

    Bournemouth’s David Brooks was denied an equaliser by an equally tight offside against Milos Kerkez in the build-up.

    Salah added insult to injury for Bournemouth when he struck again late in the second half to extend Liverpool’s lead over second-placed Arsenal.

    The Egypt forward has 21 goals from 23 league games this season, reaching the 20-mark for the fifth time in his English top-flight career.

    Liverpool are unbeaten in 19 league games, winning 17 of their 23 top-flight matches in a remarkable run since Slot replaced Jurgen Klopp in the close-season.

    Pursuing an English record-equalling 20th title and their first in the competition since 2020, Liverpool can sit back and wait to see if old rivals Manchester City do them a favour against Arsenal on Monday morning.

    “If you want to win here maybe you need a bit of luck because the margins are so small,” Slot said.

    “Our penalty was just not offside, their goal on 1-1 was on the margin offside, they hit the post twice.

    “We had our chances as well but it was a close call for us to win this game. We weren’t unlucky, let’s put it this way.” Bournemouth had already beaten Manchester City, Arsenal and high-flying Nottingham Forest at home this season.

    Slot acknowledged the Cherries had given Liverpool one of their toughest tests this term, with Antoine Semenyo and Marcus Tavernier both hitting the woodwork.

    Semenyo was also denied by a superb save from Liverpool keeper Alisson Becker as Bournemouth’s 11-game unbeaten run in the league came to an end.

    “I haven’t seen it back but one of my players is on a clear one-v-one with the goalkeeper and he’s fallen down,” Slot said of the Gakpo penalty incident.

    “So either he makes a dive or they touch him. If they touch him that for me is a penalty.

    “I can come up with three, four, five examples where we didn’t have the luck or the decision we deserved this season.

    “That’s always the difficult thing in football, people will always say there’s that luck for Liverpool or for the one that is the one that is number one at the moment.” Trent Alexander-Arnold was forced off injured in the second half and Slot said he would be surprised if the defender is fit for Friday’s League Cup semi-final second leg against Tottenham.

    Quadruple-chasing Liverpool will try to overturn a 1-0 first leg deficit when Ange Postecoglou’s struggling side visit Anfield.

    Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring Liverpool’s first goal during their Premier League win over AFC Bournemouth. (Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    FOREST PUTS SEVEN PAST GULLS

    Chris Wood netted a hat-trick as Nottingham Forest thrashed Brighton 7-0 to reignite their charge towards next season’s Champions League at the City Ground on Sunday.

    Morgan Gibbs-White, Neco Williams and Jota Silva were also on target after Lewis Dunk’s own goal opened the scoring in an astonishing performance from Nuno Espirito Santo’s men as they bounced back from a 5-0 defeat at Bournemouth last weekend.

    Victory takes Forest level on points with second-placed Arsenal and opens up a seven-point cushion on sixth-placed Chelsea.

    Fifth place in the Premier League this season is almost certain to be enough for Champions League qualification due to a strong start by English clubs in European competitions.

    Two-time European Cup winners in 1979 and 1980 during the club’s heyday under Brian Clough, Forest last played in Europe back in 1996.

    But a run of 10 wins from their last 12 games has put them well on course to end that two-decade wait for continental competition.

    Forest became just the second side in Premier League history to respond to losing a game by five or more goals by winning by that margin.

    “That is exactly what we wanted after last week, and exactly what the fans wanted,” said Gibbs-White.

    “Last week was no way near our standards and we have been working on things to put it right all week in training and the lads were incredible today.

    “We completely nullified everything they did and caught them a couple of times on the counter. We were clinical in the final third.” Brighton boss Fabian Hurzeler set out with a bold selection that included five forwards in his starting 11.

    However, that backfired massively as the Seagulls were wide open and punished by Forest’s frightening pace and precision going forward.

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