Nottingham Forest sacks boss Nuno


Nuno Espirito Santo was sacked as head coach by Nottingham Forest early on Tuesday after 21 months in charge at the Premier League club.
"The club thanks Nuno for his contribution during a very successful era," said a club statement released just after midnight.
Nuno becomes the first Premier League manager to lose his job this season, just two weeks after admitting his relationship with club owner Evangelos Marinakis had deteriorated.
"Nottingham Forest Football Club confirms that, following recent circumstances, Nuno Espirito Santo has today been relieved of his duties as head coach," said the club.
The 51-year-old took charge in December 2023 after Steve Cooper was sacked and went on to save it from relegation.
Last season the club finished seventh in the Premier League, its highest since 1994-95.
That secured its first European berth in 30 years, with a Europa League place handed to Forest instead of its initial Conference League spot, after Crystal Palace's demotion for breaching UEFA's multi-club ownership rules.
"The club thanks Nuno for his contribution during a very successful era at the City Ground, in particular his role in the 2024-25 season, which will forever be remembered fondly in the history of the club," said the statement.
"As someone who played a pivotal role in our success last season, he will always hold a special place in our journey."
Forest sits 10th in the Premier League after three games this season, and was beaten 3-0 by West Ham in Nuno's last game in charge.
British media reported that talks to appoint a successor quickly had already begun, with former Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou said to be among the candidates.
Nuno, also a former Spurs manager, had been critical of Forest's transfer activity since the end of last season, with new sporting director Edu Gaspar reportedly taking a more hands-on role in signings.
"I always had a very good relationship with the owner. Last season, we were very close and spoke on a daily basis. This season, it is not so good," Nuno said of his dealings with Marinakis. "Our relationship has changed, and we are not as close. Everybody at the club should be together, but this is not the reality."
But Nuno later said he had spoken to Marinakis on the phone and was confident reports that he could be sacked were wide of the mark.
"These kinds of things should be done in the right moment. We have the international break, and I think that is the right moment."
AFP
Today's Top News
- Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng to go to Spain for trade talks with US: commerce ministry
- China tests moon-mission rocket
- Martyrs' remains return to homeland
- Forum eyes world peace and stability
- FM urges US to 'exercise prudence in words, deeds'
- Large lenders go all in on tech finance