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Nottingham Forest 1 – 0 Swansea City: match report

A six-pointer against the team in fourth place. Lose and their game in hand puts them in pole position. Win and we gain some breathing space.

However, Billy was forced into some changes today;

Campo
Gunter Morgan Chambers Cohen
Anderson McKenna Moussi Boyd
Majewski
Blackstock

Wilson and Earnshaw had both injured themselves in training yesterday, meaning we essentially ended up playing our away side at home. New boy Georgie Boyd slotted in on the left wing, finally allowing left-footer Chris Cohen to take the left-back slot. But disaster struck early as McKenna sustained a serious injury, only to be replaced by Lewis McGugan who had a point to prove.

And if you’re travelling to Preston next Saturday, you can book yourself a coach; and if you’re making a night of it you can find yourself a hotel (or travel to Bristol in April).

 
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Nottingham Forest 1 – 0 Middlesboro: match report and podcast

6 points from two tricky games, and a record of nine consecutive home victories. Crisis?

The now traditional home 4-4-2 saw us line up as follows:

Campo
Gunter, Morgan, Wilson, Perchio
Cohen, McKenna, Majewski, Anderson
Blackstock, Earnshaw

Scrappy, physical, untidy. These are all just words. As are three points and clean sheet.

 
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Nottingham Forest 1 – 0 Sheffield United: good triumphs over evil

A welcome victory against a team that we NEVER seem to beat (albeit one who are on a poor run away from home). We have now won eight on the trot at home!

Billy Davies reverted to the more normal home line-up:

Campo

Gunter       Morgan    Wilson       Perchio

Cohen       Majewski      McKenna       Anderson

Blackstock     Earnshaw

Forest started well, with Chrissy Cohen coming in from the right to fire wide from the edge of the box, and it wasn’t long before we took the lead. Raddy’s corner was headed in by Ando (Ando?!) and little Robbie Earnshaw poked home on the goal-line. Only four minutes on the clock!

Forest continued their good play, with a return for some of the one-touch “champagne” football, although we did not realyl work their keeper enough. Raddy wasted a good opportunity on the counter-attack after a superb through ball from Chrissy Cohen, as the young Pole took one touch too many rather than having the shot, and Dex directed the ball straight at Mark Bunn in the Blades’ goal from another corner.

What was starting to take the eye was the rather, erm, physical approach that our opposition were taking. Rahoul couldn’t make it, so when he asked for a text update, I replied that they had “reverted to type i.e. dirty”. Darius Henderson is your archetypal “big strong lad up front”, and he is not scared to use his physical presence. I am not quite sure how he escaped a booking for repeated fouls in the first half, although the only caution in the first half was to Raddy, who committed a late tackle and chopped his man in the process. I am not quite sure how their centre-half escaped a red card for a challenge on the edge of the box which looked two-footed to me (reminded me of Garath McCleary’s deserved red on Saturday), but I sit in the Trent End, so perhaps any readers who are up in Victor’s Veranda could help me out?

Sheffield United almost scored when Nyron Nosworthy’s deep cross was misjudged by Perchio and forced Campo into a late intervention to palm the ball away from the far corner, but Forest should have scored with the best move of the match; excellent play from Gunts and Chrissy set up Ando just inside the box, but his first-time shot was just over when should really have hit the target. I was hoping that we wouldn’t regret the missed opportunities.

The second half started with the dismissal of Darius Henderson. I don’t know what for as I watched the ball, but two or three Forest players went mental at the ref and the linesman was flagging. Oddly enough, the ref produced the red card without consulting the lino, even though he clearly didn’t see the incident but his assistant did. Seems strange to me, although Henderson didn’t seem to argue too much.

I have to say that ten-man Sheffield United were excellent in the second-half. I guess the red card galvanised them, and their workrate was exceptional. However, they ratcheted up the dirtiness, and the referee failed to show any real authority. As an example, Lee Williamson fouled his man, and then kicked the ball away; I think the booking was for dissent, rather than the foul, but the ref called Williamson towards him, and then as the midfielder continued to back away, the ref walked towards the player instead. Way to go to stamp your authority on the match, Mr Referee! Also, the Blades were constantly stealing yardage at throw-ins, which would have been fine, except the ref kept telling them to move back, then failed to act when they took another ten yards.

Nonetheless, Yeates followed Williamson into the book (again, apparently for dissent, rather than the foul), and I don’t understand how makeshift right-back Jamie Ward did not get booked for repeated fouls on Ando. Towards the end, Sheffield United’s left-back Kallio took down Gunts in full-view of the ref and lino, and the ref was not going to punish the defender until the assistant encouraged him to do so. Well done linesman, and although Kallio argued his case, he missed the ball and took the man.

Back to the actual football, and we were being pressed back by the ten men of Sheffield United. As so often, Forest were guilty of sitting too deep, and they looked a bit tired and backed off too much, allowing space to the opposition. There were a few hairy moments, although Campo did not have too many nasty moments to deal with, other than a couple of mid-rangers from the dangerous Yeates (one missed and one saved). Forest did create a couple of chances on the break, a decent effort from Chrissy was parried by Bunn, and Ando, looking knackered and on his wrong foot, could only direct the rebound into the side netting. Ando was soon replaced by Tys, and the least-popular-man-in-Derby soon forced an excellent save from Bunn as he drove for the far corner after a good pass from Earnie (who soon made way for Goldie).

With Forest looking tired, Raddy was withdrawn for the Mooooossssse, who made a decent cameo as an energetic box-to-box player in the last five minutes, but there was still time for Perchio to make the tackle of the day, as Stephen Quinn bore down on goal in stoppage time. An excellent intervention from a player who still looks rather uncomfortable to be playing on his wrong foot, and one that probably earned us two points. Well done James.

Billy commented afterwards that we look tired, and I don’t think many Reds fans would disagree with him (although he also used the interview as an opportunity to remind everyone that our squad in weaker now than a month ago). Ando has only just come back from a rest, and looked knackered after sixty minutes, Robbie Earnshaw was in a similar position, and while Chrissy was his usual industrious self, he seemed half a yard behind at times today. Fortunately, we have a better squad than last season, so can still call on the likes of Lewis, Goldie, Tys, G-Man and Big Dele. Man of the match today is probably between the two central midfielders: Raddy showed some amazing skill in the first half and a prodigious workrate in the second, but for me the main man today was the skipper, who showed that he still has it with some superb tackling and imposing himself on the match even as the Blades threatened. Nice one.

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Nottingham Forest 2 – 1 Sheffield Wednesday: match report and podcast

After last week’s setback (and its subsequent fallout), we finally get back in action in front of nearly 4000 Wednesday fans.

A couple of changes see us line up in a 4-4-2:

Campo
Gunter, Morgan, Wilson, Perchio
Cohen, McKenna, Moooooooooose, Tyson
Blackstock, Earnshaw

This saw Tyson replace Anderson on the left (probably giving Ando a rest) and Moooooose replacing Majewski in the middle – a controversy that Billy brought to everyone’s attention in the post-match interview. As you’ll hear, we have our own feelings on this; Billy and the club are both playing a dangerous game.

As for the game itself, it was pretty poor from us, Wednesday looked well-drilled and organised, but the match really belonged to the officials who were as poor as anything I’ve seen in a long while.

 
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Nottingham Forest 5 – 0 Queens Park Rangers

My first midweek game in ages against an “ambitious” side with lots of money and love of merry-go-rounds saw 23500 at the City Ground – a decent attendance for a cold Tuesday night, especially as QPR didn’t bring that many.

Mr Davies saw one change from the team against Reading, with James Perchio replacing the suspended Nicky Shorey at left-back. From the sounds of it we are working hard to secure a loan extension for Shorey, so I hope it’s not the last we see of him in a red shirt.

So the line-up was:

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Gunter Morgan Wilson Perchio
Cohen McKenna Majewski Anderson
Earnshaw Blackstock

And again our unbeaten run continues, our fantastic form continues and our amazing football continues. The players look so confident they could beat anyone and everyone seems to be enjoying themselves – we barely broke a sweat as we banged them in.

One more goal would have seen us go top, above Newcastle – if I were a Geordie I’d be very nervous right now – when was the last time you complained about only winning five nil?

Lastly, Billy was on Radio 5 – he was stressing the importance of building your infrastructure slowly, of taking your time to go up. But the interviewer said if we carry on like this, we’ll have no choice – we’ll be up this year. To which Billy replied “I still have unfinished business in the Premiership – it holds no fear for me”. Absolutely awesome.

So what are you doing on Saturday?

 
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Nottingham Forest 2 – 1 Reading

After our cup exploits against Birmingham, Billy reverted back to his (probably) first choice line-up, in an orthodox 4-4-2 – with a surprise return for Earnie and no place, even on the bench, for the Moooooooooooooooose.

Camp
Gunter Morgan Wilson Shorey
Cohen McKenna Majewski Anderson
Earnshaw Blackstock

The first half was as good a performance as I have ever seen; obviously brimming with confidence and ability. But the second half saw complacency sink in and if it wasn’t for Lee Camp it could well have no points, not three.

 
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Nottingham Forest 2 – 0 Coventry City

Another game undefeated for Billy’s men.

Five changes from the draw at Watford saw us line up, initially as a 4-4-2, but later as a 4-3-3 (Cohen moving to left midfield and Tyson joining Dex and Earnie up front).

Campo,
Gunter, Morgan, Wilson, Shorey,
Cohen, McKenna, Majewski, Tyson,
Earnshaw, Blackstock

Coventry set out to make life difficult for us and it worked – for most of the game, things were pretty dour. But two fantastic goals, pretty much out of nothing sealed yet another victory for us.

Points to note: both Earnie and Dexter were outstanding, Raddy got his own chant as he was substituted and McCleary, Lewis and Dele terrified the knackered Coventry players when they came on at the end. But it was the defence winning the plaudits today, with both Morgan and Wilson truly outstanding.

 
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Nottingham Forest 5 (five) – 1 Leicester City

The East Midlands premier, most important, highly charged local derby was an excellent affair.

    Campo    
Gunter Morgan   Wilson Shorey
Cohen McKenna (c)   Majewski Anderson
  Blackstock   Earnshaw  

After ten minutes of hoofball we took control of the game, playing excellent, incisive, passing football at pace – and Leicester had no real answer. A couple of bits of referee weirdness, a guest appearance by the 2nd Mercian regiment on their return from Afghanistan (who got a fantastic reception from the crowd and a goal dedication from Rob Earnshaw) and goals galore.

Phew – what a day – the best entertainment I’ve seen at the City Ground in ages.

Unfortunately it’s a solo podcast today as my brother was away (and he will be for the next few weeks), so a bit shorter than usual and probably less professional (haha).

 
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Nottingham Forest 4 – 1 Doncaster Rovers: match report and podcast

The biggest win of Billy Davies’ Forest career saw us line up in a 4-4-2 formation:

    Campo    
Gunter Morgan   Wilson Shorey
Anderson McKenna   Majewski McCleary
  Blackstock   Earnshaw  

Aston Villa loanee and potential January target Nicky Shorey slotted in at left-back and an injury to the Moose saw us drop the two-defensive-midfielder-five-man-midfield formation.

But while the first half was quite subdued, Majewski, in particular, took the game by the scruff of the neck to see us batter Donny in the second half.

 
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Nottingham Forest 1 – 1 Bristol City: match report and podcast

We lined up unchanged from last week’s heroics at Cardiff with Billy again playing McGoldrick as a lone striker in front of a packed midfield.

    Campo    
Gunter Morgan   Wilson Cohen
  McKenna (c)   Moussi  
Garner   Majewski   Anderson
    McGoldrick    

The game itself started with an impeccably observed minute’s silence for Remembrance Sunday today. And then settled into a pattern of defensive organisation from Bristol and frustration for us. Joe Garner looked particularly frustrated out on the right (but looked great when he played centrally) and Moose was more of a headless chicken than usual. But it was fantastic to see us try to play our way through them, rather than just resorting to hoofball. And Adebola, when he came on, made a real difference – probably the best I have seen him play for us, in front of his old club.

 
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