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  • Before Brian Clough arrived in 1975, Forest were an unremarkable club with a few brief

  • highs in the previous 110 years of their history.

  • Two FA Cups, one second-place finish, the odd notable player, but not much else to show

  • for their existence.

  • In the lower reaches of the Second Division, even Clough said they

  • were a team on its last legs.

  • But five years later, they had lifted the European Cup twice, after remarkably winning

  • the English title in their first season after

  • promotion.

  • Both successes were even more remarkable given that they had to get past

  • Liverpool, the dominant force in domestic and

  • continental competition in those years.

  • For a spell, Clough's men were referred to asthat

  • teamat Anfield.

  • They beat Liverpool in their first European Cup tie, a heroic performance by Peter Shilton

  • in the second leg setting them on their way.

  • Britain's first £1million player, Trevor Francis,

  • scored the goal that would beat Malmo in the 1979 final.

  • Then, almost casually, they did it again, this time getting past Kevin Keegan's

  • Hamburg, winger John Robertsonperhaps the

  • greatest player in the club's history, dubbed 'that little fat guy' by Cloughscoring

  • the winner.

  • In the following years, Clough broke the team up too quickly, with Francis, Robertson, Shilton

  • sold, and most importantly his footballing other half, Peter Taylor, left too.

  • More trophies came at the end of the 1980s, as Clough built

  • his second great team with son Nigel, Des Walker and Stuart Pearce.

  • But by 1992 it was clear that Clough's powers had waned, time

  • and alcoholism taking the edge off a once-great manager, and they were relegated.

  • There was a revival under European Cup-winner Frank Clark, who built an exciting team

  • around Pearce, Steve Stone and Stan Collymore.

  • Forest won promotion at the first time of asking, then finished third in the Premier

  • League and went into Europe, only defeated in the

  • UEFA Cup by Bayern Munich.

  • Alas, that team didn't last either.

  • Another relegation followed in 1997, and despite another

  • immediate promotion, key players were sold, Pierre van Hooijdonk went on strike in protest

  • at promises he said had been broken, and a third relegation in six years followed.

  • Forest have not been back to the top flight since.

  • Then came wilderness years, and a chance was missed in 2003, when a talented team

  • featuring Michael Dawson and Andy Reid reached the playoffs but was not built upon.

  • In 2005, they became the first team who'd won

  • the European Cup to drop into the third tier of

  • their domestic league.

  • There they stayed for three years, as Gary Megson alienated players and fans and was

  • eventually dismissed, before Colin Calderwood brought them back into the Championship in

  • 2008.

  • Billy Davies took Forest to two playoff semi-finals, but lost both and was replaced by

  • Steve McClaren , an experiment that lasted only a few months.

  • In these years, the club was owned by Nigel Doughty , a fan who conveniently also happened

  • to be a millionaire venture capitalist, but after some ill-advised decisions caused friction

  • with fans and staff, he put the club up for sale

  • in 2012.

  • Before the sale could go through, Doughty died suddenly, and the sale was put in the

  • hands of investment bankers, who chose the Al-

  • Hasawi family, led by Fawaz Al-Hasawi, as the new owners.​

  • Despite initial promising noises from the Al-Hasawis, Forest have finished in a lower

  • league position in each of the four full seasons

  • they have been in charge.

  • Those four seasons have seen seven permanent managersSteve Cotterill,

  • Sean O'Driscoll, Alex McLeish, Billy Davies (again), Stuart Pearce, Dougie Freedman and

  • Philippe Montanier.

  • The sale of young players, coupled with a lack of any real structure,

  • has meant the club has proved toxic, to the point

  • that Nigel Clough recently turned down the manager's job.

  • Now, after a proposed takeover by an American group collapsed, Forest have an uncertain

  • future.

  • Everyone knows they will never again reach the true glories of the past, but all the

  • fans ask for is a club they can be proud of again.

  • Who knows when, or if, that will happen.

Before Brian Clough arrived in 1975, Forest were an unremarkable club with a few brief

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