Memries of Forest

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Kraft durch Freude
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Right, you lot. Stop getting all giddy about last night - it's time to concentrate on our next match and if we can go top! In the latest in an occasional series, I look back on memries of Nottingham Forest.

My first memory was on December 9th, 1976. After much cajoling, my dad let me attend my first away game on my own. Ticket for the Sheffield United Tours coach booked, I left for this second-tier fixture and never thought that people actually paid and travelled to see their team away. Jimmy Sirrel’s team duly obliged with a 1-6 thrashing (Chico Hamilton got our goal).



1990-91 was a fabulous season. We’d been promoted to the top flight (the promotion season was the one which featured on the ‘United’ documentary). Dave Bassett was still our manager and we could look forward to playing the likes of Man. United, Liverpool, Leeds etc. Ouch! The first sixteen games yielded only four points from four draws. On December 22nd, 1990 we faced Forest at home. On a drab pre-Christmas day, Ian (‘Jock’) Bryson put us 1-0 up before goals by Roy Keane and Stuart Pearce put Forest 2-1 up. Another goal by Bryson and a superb header by Bryan Deane finally got us our first win of the season – 3-2.



Our form improved after that and we comfortably escaped relegation.

By the 1992-93 season, we had consolidated in the top-flight. While never looking like threatening the top sides, we did enough to keep relegation at bay. Near the end of this season – on Bank Holiday Monday, May 1st 1993, 5000 Blades fans travelled to the City Ground. Finally finding some form (we only lost one game in the final 9), this was the very last home game for the legendary Forest (and Derby) manager Brian Clough. By this time both Clough (rumoured to be on 2 to 3 bottles of whisky a day) and Forest – who would finish rock-bottom – were a sorry sight. Dave Bassetts team triumphed 2-0 with goals from Glyn Hodges and Brian Gayle. In the Forest line-up were a certain Nigel Clough and Brian Laws.



On May 10th, 2003 we faced Forest at The City Ground in the first leg of the play-off semi-final to see who might get back into the top flight. Neil Warnock’s team were enjoying a superb season – the ‘Triple Assault’ season which would see us reach the semi-finals of the FA Cup, League (Worthington) Cup and the play-off final. Trailing to Forest 0-1, Michael Brown ‘bought’ us a penalty equaliser when he left a trailing leg for Michael Dawson. We scored the penalty and Dawson was sent off.

Five days later – May 15th, 2003 saw the second leg. Without doubt, the finest game of football I’ve ever seen. Over 30k fans packed Bramall Lane under the floodlights. On the half hour and following a mistake by United’s Curtis, Forest’s David Johnson scored past Paddy Kenny at the kop end. In the second half – and approaching the hour mark – Andy Reid made it 0-2 to Forest and United had a mountain to climb with the score at 1-3 to Forest on aggregate.

Within a minute, Carl Asaba had tempted Des Walker into conceding a goal on the edge of the kop-end penalty area, which Walker was booked for. ‘Playing’ the ref. as ever, Brown complained about the Forest wall not being ten yards back. Disrupting Forests’ concentration for around a minute with ‘dummy’ attempts at taking the free kick, Brown smashed the ball goalwards and a deflection from the hapless Des Walker made it 1-2 on the night and 2-3 on aggregate with just 30 minutes remaining. Game on!

On the 68 minute mark, a long clearance from goalkeeper Paddy Kenny found Steve Kabba just inside the Forest area. A brilliant flick over the Forest defender (once again, Des Walker!) was followed by Kabba smashing the ball home. As the Sky commentator said ‘Ooooh! That is brilliant! That is breathtaking! That is 2-2!’

So it was 3-3 on aggregate but ‘away goals count double’ only applied after extra time.

Extra time kicked off with an absolutely deafening roar from both sets of fans. I remember the air above the pitch actually crackling with the noise being generated on the floodlit emerald green swathe of Bramall Lane. (‘That’s enough sounding like Stuart Hall’ – Ed.) After just over 20 minutes of extra time, Paddy Kenny launched a huge kick downfield towards the kop end to Paul Peschisolido. What followed was – for me – the greatest goal in the greatest United game of all time. Paul collected the ball and then – with nine (or was it ten?) touches steered the ball into the net. 3-2 to United on the night and 4-3 on aggregate!

With just four minutes of extra time left, Steve Kabba crossed into the kop goalmouth and – who else but Des Walker? – headed into his own net. 5-3 on aggregate to United!

But hold on! With barely two minutes left, Forest scored again – possibly an own goal by United’s Rob Page. 5-4 on aggregate!

With just 30 seconds of extra time left, Andy Reid crossed to Louis Jean who powered a header that was saved on the line by Kenny. 3 extra minutes of added time later, the final whistle blew. What a game, but don’t take my word for it, invest 22m 07 secs. of your time and savour the video.



Our last meeting with Forest came on February 16th, 2014 at Bramall Lane in the Fifth Round of the FA Cup. Manager Nigel Clough was taking us on an exhilarating FA Cup run – including wins away at Aston Villa and Fulham.

In front of a fervent crowd of 25,118, the highest at Bramall Lane this season, the League One Blades became the lowest-ranked side to reach the last eight of the competition since 1990 after stunning their Championship opponents. Trailing 0-1 at half-time, an equalizer by Conor Coady and two late goals by Chris Porter saw The Blades through to a Quarter-Final home tie with Charlton (which we won 2-0) before losing to Hull City in a memorable semi-final played at Wembley in front of over 71k spectators.



Anybody got any more?
 

You must be knackered after that but a good read with some great memories, I was at that 6-1 game ( my memory told me it was 5-1) but you will be right, remember leaving on about 90 minutes with some abuse ringing in my ear, we were on the side where the cameras were, but the games about cycles and as bad as that day was its our " turn" now, hopefully on Saturday. Good read.
 
In one of the more surreal moments in our history, Chris Morgan, that most agricultural of centre halves, the very embodiment of muck and nettleship, did this against Forest in a 3-0 cup win....




That was on SoccerAm showboat too.
 
My first time at City ground, 4th September 1971. Forest 2 Blades 3 (Dearden, Currie, Scullion). Top of the League

tony-currie-of-sheffield-united-and-doug-fraser-of-nottingham-forest-picture-id650076140
 
Many years ago the girlfriend ( now wife)and I hired a rowing boat down the Trent one Saturday lunchtime before a game and it went well until we turned round and realised we were, or rather ' I was' rowing against the current on the way back. Contentment and romance turned sour and we missed kick off by more than 15 minutes. The pressure on the rower by the coswain built minute by minute as she watched the fans rolling up to the game while I huffed and puffed, red faced and knackered. We were tempted to tie up the boat and jump ship but in those days even teenage football fans had honour and we did the right thing of course.
 
I've seen us win 5-2 1991/92 season and 2-0 in 1993 which was Clough's last match.

We've always done reasonably well v Forest.
 
The 5-2 win at their ground also lives with me forever. It is the one and only time I've been in a "home" stand (apart from t'Lane obviously)
How we didn't get thrown out I'll never know.
 
Always a good game against Forest with loads of needle between teams, managers and fans. For me they are a bigger rival than Leeds and second in line to the Pigs.

There's always a feeling that we as fans go to Forest and we take the proverbial. Had some great Away days down there over the years with their fans in the stand to the left giving some right lemon. Matches at BDTBL are equally always a cracking atmosphere.

Great to be back in the Champ int it?
 

1976 losing 6:1 away and the same season beating them 2:0 at Bramall Lane, both games memorable for different reasons.
 
Right, you lot. Stop getting all giddy about last night - it's time to concentrate on our next match and if we can go top! In the latest in an occasional series, I look back on memries of Nottingham Forest.

My first memory was on December 9th, 1976. After much cajoling, my dad let me attend my first away game on my own. Ticket for the Sheffield United Tours coach booked, I left for this second-tier fixture and never thought that people actually paid and travelled to see their team away. Jimmy Sirrel’s team duly obliged with a 1-6 thrashing (Chico Hamilton got our goal).



1990-91 was a fabulous season. We’d been promoted to the top flight (the promotion season was the one which featured on the ‘United’ documentary). Dave Bassett was still our manager and we could look forward to playing the likes of Man. United, Liverpool, Leeds etc. Ouch! The first sixteen games yielded only four points from four draws. On December 22nd, 1990 we faced Forest at home. On a drab pre-Christmas day, Ian (‘Jock’) Bryson put us 1-0 up before goals by Roy Keane and Stuart Pearce put Forest 2-1 up. Another goal by Bryson and a superb header by Bryan Deane finally got us our first win of the season – 3-2.



Our form improved after that and we comfortably escaped relegation.

By the 1992-93 season, we had consolidated in the top-flight. While never looking like threatening the top sides, we did enough to keep relegation at bay. Near the end of this season – on Bank Holiday Monday, May 1st 1993, 5000 Blades fans travelled to the City Ground. Finally finding some form (we only lost one game in the final 9), this was the very last home game for the legendary Forest (and Derby) manager Brian Clough. By this time both Clough (rumoured to be on 2 to 3 bottles of whisky a day) and Forest – who would finish rock-bottom – were a sorry sight. Dave Bassetts team triumphed 2-0 with goals from Glyn Hodges and Brian Gayle. In the Forest line-up were a certain Nigel Clough and Brian Laws.



On May 10th, 2003 we faced Forest at The City Ground in the first leg of the play-off semi-final to see who might get back into the top flight. Neil Warnock’s team were enjoying a superb season – the ‘Triple Assault’ season which would see us reach the semi-finals of the FA Cup, League (Worthington) Cup and the play-off final. Trailing to Forest 0-1, Michael Brown ‘bought’ us a penalty equaliser when he left a trailing leg for Michael Dawson. We scored the penalty and Dawson was sent off.

Five days later – May 15th, 2003 saw the second leg. Without doubt, the finest game of football I’ve ever seen. Over 30k fans packed Bramall Lane under the floodlights. On the half hour and following a mistake by United’s Curtis, Forest’s David Johnson scored past Paddy Kenny at the kop end. In the second half – and approaching the hour mark – Andy Reid made it 0-2 to Forest and United had a mountain to climb with the score at 1-3 to Forest on aggregate.

Within a minute, Carl Asaba had tempted Des Walker into conceding a goal on the edge of the kop-end penalty area, which Walker was booked for. ‘Playing’ the ref. as ever, Brown complained about the Forest wall not being ten yards back. Disrupting Forests’ concentration for around a minute with ‘dummy’ attempts at taking the free kick, Brown smashed the ball goalwards and a deflection from the hapless Des Walker made it 1-2 on the night and 2-3 on aggregate with just 30 minutes remaining. Game on!

On the 68 minute mark, a long clearance from goalkeeper Paddy Kenny found Steve Kabba just inside the Forest area. A brilliant flick over the Forest defender (once again, Des Walker!) was followed by Kabba smashing the ball home. As the Sky commentator said ‘Ooooh! That is brilliant! That is breathtaking! That is 2-2!’

So it was 3-3 on aggregate but ‘away goals count double’ only applied after extra time.

Extra time kicked off with an absolutely deafening roar from both sets of fans. I remember the air above the pitch actually crackling with the noise being generated on the floodlit emerald green swathe of Bramall Lane. (‘That’s enough sounding like Stuart Hall’ – Ed.) After just over 20 minutes of extra time, Paddy Kenny launched a huge kick downfield towards the kop end to Paul Peschisolido. What followed was – for me – the greatest goal in the greatest United game of all time. Paul collected the ball and then – with nine (or was it ten?) touches steered the ball into the net. 3-2 to United on the night and 4-3 on aggregate!

With just four minutes of extra time left, Steve Kabba crossed into the kop goalmouth and – who else but Des Walker? – headed into his own net. 5-3 on aggregate to United!

But hold on! With barely two minutes left, Forest scored again – possibly an own goal by United’s Rob Page. 5-4 on aggregate!

With just 30 seconds of extra time left, Andy Reid crossed to Louis Jean who powered a header that was saved on the line by Kenny. 3 extra minutes of added time later, the final whistle blew. What a game, but don’t take my word for it, invest 22m 07 secs. of your time and savour the video.



Our last meeting with Forest came on February 16th, 2014 at Bramall Lane in the Fifth Round of the FA Cup. Manager Nigel Clough was taking us on an exhilarating FA Cup run – including wins away at Aston Villa and Fulham.

In front of a fervent crowd of 25,118, the highest at Bramall Lane this season, the League One Blades became the lowest-ranked side to reach the last eight of the competition since 1990 after stunning their Championship opponents. Trailing 0-1 at half-time, an equalizer by Conor Coady and two late goals by Chris Porter saw The Blades through to a Quarter-Final home tie with Charlton (which we won 2-0) before losing to Hull City in a memorable semi-final played at Wembley in front of over 71k spectators.



Anybody got any more?


I'd add the only Adrian Heath game I remember fondly. Smith and Devlin had excellent games, and Forest had two sent off – including player manager David Platt in injury time. 3-1 win. Great game.
 
Apart from the aforementioned 5-2 and 2-0 wins, also went to the game that brought the undefeated run to an end. Andy Sayers debut.
Also went when Warnock was manger to a night game that ended in defeat. Few seasons later, sat in the players bit with a former Blades brother thanks to tickets from Neil Harris, drew 1-1.
 
I'm trying to decide what was better, the 2003 win against Forest or this week's win against Wednesday. Both were superb and I was lucky to be at both.

I do recall going to Forest and watching Marlon Harewood score against us. It was funny because as he celebrated he was pumping his arms in the air - in doing so he accidentally uppercutted the linesman and knocked him out.
 
The 2-0 win was, in hindsight, quite a poignant afternoon. You only have to look at those purple blooms on Clough's face to know he was in an advanced state of Alcoholic Liver Disease, but it seemed at the time that everyone was looking the other way and pretending that there was nothing really wrong with him. My other memory is walking back to the car, their away shirt was a very similar design to ours and we ended up walking in a group of about twenty of their lot, who weren't particularly happy as you might expect.
 
My first away game on my own , they tried " taking " the Kop and got smashed to bits ,
Any help Neuschwanstein
There was a lot of aggro at both the games, but that was nothing out of the norm back then. They did pack out the Bramall Lane end, and as we know had an amazing season the following year,
 
Good and bad day. watched the Blades spank Forest 3-0. Then nearly got put into the Trent for wearing my treasured Carl Asaba shirt from the play-offs 2nd leg at BDTBL. Had to seek safety at the Notts County Ground. Were all the coppers had their vans parked. Near miss. Looked fookin cold in the river that day.
 
The 5-2 away victory in 1992 comes to mind. another for 'Zico' Lake and a right-footed(?) volley from the much maligned John Gannon among the goals.


Was on the Trent end for this one had to go stand at front when Gannon scored to stop me getting battered.
 
Right, you lot. Stop getting all giddy about last night - it's time to concentrate on our next match and if we can go top! In the latest in an occasional series, I look back on memries of Nottingham Forest.

My first memory was on December 9th, 1976. After much cajoling, my dad let me attend my first away game on my own. Ticket for the Sheffield United Tours coach booked, I left for this second-tier fixture and never thought that people actually paid and travelled to see their team away. Jimmy Sirrel’s team duly obliged with a 1-6 thrashing (Chico Hamilton got our goal).



1990-91 was a fabulous season. We’d been promoted to the top flight (the promotion season was the one which featured on the ‘United’ documentary). Dave Bassett was still our manager and we could look forward to playing the likes of Man. United, Liverpool, Leeds etc. Ouch! The first sixteen games yielded only four points from four draws. On December 22nd, 1990 we faced Forest at home. On a drab pre-Christmas day, Ian (‘Jock’) Bryson put us 1-0 up before goals by Roy Keane and Stuart Pearce put Forest 2-1 up. Another goal by Bryson and a superb header by Bryan Deane finally got us our first win of the season – 3-2.



Our form improved after that and we comfortably escaped relegation.

By the 1992-93 season, we had consolidated in the top-flight. While never looking like threatening the top sides, we did enough to keep relegation at bay. Near the end of this season – on Bank Holiday Monday, May 1st 1993, 5000 Blades fans travelled to the City Ground. Finally finding some form (we only lost one game in the final 9), this was the very last home game for the legendary Forest (and Derby) manager Brian Clough. By this time both Clough (rumoured to be on 2 to 3 bottles of whisky a day) and Forest – who would finish rock-bottom – were a sorry sight. Dave Bassetts team triumphed 2-0 with goals from Glyn Hodges and Brian Gayle. In the Forest line-up were a certain Nigel Clough and Brian Laws.



On May 10th, 2003 we faced Forest at The City Ground in the first leg of the play-off semi-final to see who might get back into the top flight. Neil Warnock’s team were enjoying a superb season – the ‘Triple Assault’ season which would see us reach the semi-finals of the FA Cup, League (Worthington) Cup and the play-off final. Trailing to Forest 0-1, Michael Brown ‘bought’ us a penalty equaliser when he left a trailing leg for Michael Dawson. We scored the penalty and Dawson was sent off.

Five days later – May 15th, 2003 saw the second leg. Without doubt, the finest game of football I’ve ever seen. Over 30k fans packed Bramall Lane under the floodlights. On the half hour and following a mistake by United’s Curtis, Forest’s David Johnson scored past Paddy Kenny at the kop end. In the second half – and approaching the hour mark – Andy Reid made it 0-2 to Forest and United had a mountain to climb with the score at 1-3 to Forest on aggregate.

Within a minute, Carl Asaba had tempted Des Walker into conceding a goal on the edge of the kop-end penalty area, which Walker was booked for. ‘Playing’ the ref. as ever, Brown complained about the Forest wall not being ten yards back. Disrupting Forests’ concentration for around a minute with ‘dummy’ attempts at taking the free kick, Brown smashed the ball goalwards and a deflection from the hapless Des Walker made it 1-2 on the night and 2-3 on aggregate with just 30 minutes remaining. Game on!

On the 68 minute mark, a long clearance from goalkeeper Paddy Kenny found Steve Kabba just inside the Forest area. A brilliant flick over the Forest defender (once again, Des Walker!) was followed by Kabba smashing the ball home. As the Sky commentator said ‘Ooooh! That is brilliant! That is breathtaking! That is 2-2!’

So it was 3-3 on aggregate but ‘away goals count double’ only applied after extra time.

Extra time kicked off with an absolutely deafening roar from both sets of fans. I remember the air above the pitch actually crackling with the noise being generated on the floodlit emerald green swathe of Bramall Lane. (‘That’s enough sounding like Stuart Hall’ – Ed.) After just over 20 minutes of extra time, Paddy Kenny launched a huge kick downfield towards the kop end to Paul Peschisolido. What followed was – for me – the greatest goal in the greatest United game of all time. Paul collected the ball and then – with nine (or was it ten?) touches steered the ball into the net. 3-2 to United on the night and 4-3 on aggregate!

With just four minutes of extra time left, Steve Kabba crossed into the kop goalmouth and – who else but Des Walker? – headed into his own net. 5-3 on aggregate to United!

But hold on! With barely two minutes left, Forest scored again – possibly an own goal by United’s Rob Page. 5-4 on aggregate!

With just 30 seconds of extra time left, Andy Reid crossed to Louis Jean who powered a header that was saved on the line by Kenny. 3 extra minutes of added time later, the final whistle blew. What a game, but don’t take my word for it, invest 22m 07 secs. of your time and savour the video.



Our last meeting with Forest came on February 16th, 2014 at Bramall Lane in the Fifth Round of the FA Cup. Manager Nigel Clough was taking us on an exhilarating FA Cup run – including wins away at Aston Villa and Fulham.

In front of a fervent crowd of 25,118, the highest at Bramall Lane this season, the League One Blades became the lowest-ranked side to reach the last eight of the competition since 1990 after stunning their Championship opponents. Trailing 0-1 at half-time, an equalizer by Conor Coady and two late goals by Chris Porter saw The Blades through to a Quarter-Final home tie with Charlton (which we won 2-0) before losing to Hull City in a memorable semi-final played at Wembley in front of over 71k spectators.



Anybody got any more?

Yes getting chucked in fookin trent at the 76 game the bastard winter weren't as warm as summer at least all I got was flu and not a kicking, and don't worry I always remind my so called mates who ran off and left me ,there was only about 30 of them (mind you I was that pissed swimming was the only thing I could do :D)
 
For some reason it always seems to be a good game when we play Forest. I remember a home game against them in the 1997 when Gareth Taylor scored with a fantastic shot from about 30 yards in the last minute.
 
Never liked Forest since going to Notts Co for the Watney cup game, a hundred or so maybe two hundred went on an early train getting there around noon. As soon as we were clear of the station we were ambushed by a huge mob of forest fans, never seen anything like it bricks and bottles flying everywhere, charge then counter charge no coppers to be seen to start off with. After what seemed like a hour of this bollocks me and a few mates slipped unseen into a boozer and left them to it until the football special arrived. Some think it's bad today pah that day was a war like a scene from a Belfast riot, it was much worse in the 70's.
 
Yes some great games against forest. I did an article on here about my top 5 high scoring games and Forest had 2 in the top 5 and that didn't include the 4 - 2 and 5 - 2 wins in the same season (91/92) - mind you that was only the 2nd best double we did that season.

Article here if anyone fancies a read - reckon I might have a new top three entry after Sunday mind :D

https://www.s24su.com/blades-news/goals-goals-and-more-goals-2170
 
My first away game was the 6-1 defeat at Forest, not a match I have fond memories of.
I was also there when we won 5-2 but was sitting in the home section as I couldn't get an away ticket. Having a Nottingham address helps at times.
Have been to all the recent away games as for me, being within walking distance of The Forest ground, it's easier to get to than Bramall Lane.
My son in law is also a Forest season ticket holder so Saturday night could be quite interesting.

A friend of mine went to watch Forest on Tuesday night. She hadn't seen them for some times and reckons they were awful. No defence, one up front, and a midfield that kept falling over one another. Saturday could be interesting.
 

Other Forest memries as well as those mentioned:

The worst 0 - 0 of all time when a Billy Davies led Forest started timewasting at minute 1.

One of Warnock's, ahem, crazier moments. The day he decided to go to high flying Forest and play Carl Asaba at left wing back with Jon Harley (the good version) left on the bench. Harewood and Johnson destroyed us.
 

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