Nottingham Post

What would Cloughie think?!

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WARTIME aside, I wonder if there has ever been a time when fans of two of the fiercest rivals in profession­al football have been so united in misery.

Separated by just 15 miles of the A52, they are worlds apart – proud, passionate and oftenbitte­r rivals, both led to their finest days by the same man: Brian Clough.

I wonder what he would have had to say about the dire straits Nottingham Forest and Derby County now find themselves in.

They say you can never be a Red AND a Ram and the nearreligi­ous fervour that divides supporters runs through building sites and boardrooms alike.

But these huge names in the annals of English football, between them past conquerors of England and Europe, now face a common nightmare: the prospect of relegation to League One.

Such a blow to the prestige of our region is almost unthinkabl­e. This time next year, football fans in this neck of the woods could be without a team within even striking distance of the top flight while the City Ground and Pride Park host scraps for third-tier survival against the likes of Cheltenham and Accrington Stanley.

Until Derby’s points deduction for going into administra­tion, Forest were bottom of the Championsh­ip, run by a board unable – until now at least - to choose the right manager to choose the right players from a squad littered with feeble signings and, according to friends and long-term season ticket holders, playing the worst football seen at the City Ground in years.

If owner Evangelos Marinakis is serious about bringing back the glory days, he must give newly-appointed head coach Steve Cooper the support – and freedom – to build a team capable of staying up, because once you start to slide down the leagues, getting back is a almighty task. Ask Sunderland, Sheffield Wednesday, Oldham

Athletic…

Derby’s plight is, of course, far worse. Up for sale and in administra­tion, the club is a shambles. Owner Mel Morris says he has personally invested £200 million in the club and gives various reasons for its present state – the coronaviru­s pandemic among them – but at the end of the day, a business of such size and stature should have the financial structure and practices in place to safeguard its future. One of the few bright lights in these dark days for Derby has been the behaviour of Wayne Rooney. In his first managerial role he has handled himself with great dignity despite learning from TV that the club was being put into administra­tion. Derby join Portsmouth, Bury, Macclesfie­ld, Wrexham, Boston United, Leeds, Bolton and Wigan in visiting the hall of shame marked Administra­tion. How many more must follow before football gets an independen­t regulator to ensure owners can fulfil their obligation­s?

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