Sunday Mirror

Cooper isn’t finished in the transfer market yet... but he has to get new signings to gel

- @neil_moxley

STEVE COOPER says the revolving dressing-room door at Nottingham Forest will keep turning until the transfer window closes.

As the two-time former European Champions prepare to host their first Premier League fixture at home in 23 years, they do so against the backdrop of a huge upheaval in playing staff.

Owner Evangelos Marinakis has already bankrolled a £100million spree – with a glut of new faces arriving at the City Ground.

Watford’s Emmanuel Dennis is primed to be added to Cooper’s squad, along with free agent and former Crystal Palace star Cheikhou Kouyate.

And the Forest chief says the spending is not over yet.

He said: “We’ve have signed a lot of players – and we will continue signing players. We’re nowhere near finished in terms of players coming in and leaving. The sooner, the better, because then you can get your group together and the window shuts.

“But this is the situation we are in. We’re not looking at it negatively, it’s part of the journey.”

Cooper knows there is a buzz about the amount of work that Forest have done. However, a significan­t chunk of their Championsh­ip play-off winning side was loaned to them.

Djed Spence, James Garner and Keinan Davis were only ever temporary stop-gaps – but all of them played an integral part in the club’s promotion to the top flight.

Cooper knows that a huge question hangs over the club as to whether he can forge a bond that will see them adapt to life among the big boys.

He said: “At the moment, the narrative is, ‘Look at Forest, there’s a load of new players, are they going to gel?’

“If that’s the case, I think it’s an easy one to focus on, but I understand it and, yes, that’s the situation.

“There’s still a lot of players and staff who were here last season. So there’s a lot of continuity. The club captain is Joe Worrall and the vicecaptai­n is Ryan Yates. They’ve been here years – let’s not lose sight of that.

“The question is how quickly are you going to become a team – and that’s about togetherne­ss and a culture.

“If you want to be all of those things, for me, it’s about daily behaviour. It’s not about a team-bonding session where you all go off and climb a mountain.

“All of those things can be important, of course, they can. But the real way to become the team you want to be is by living and breathing it every day. It’s by being consistent, sticking to the plan. To be the team we want, it has to be not just on a match day or by giving an interview, it has to be the way we live every single day.”

With Forest’s return, questions about the history and the achievemen­ts of the legendary Brian Clough are at the forefront.

But Cooper has embraced the challenge. Asked if he feels the hand of history on his shoulders, he said: “It’s never been on my shoulders.

“We will always stand on the shoulders of those great teams and and we stand on it proudly because this club was built on that era.

“This summer, I really loved getting to understand it even more and meeting John McGovern, Garry Birtles and Frank Clark – people who should always be here as much as they want to be around the club.

“I’ve enjoyed learning about it. I had an amazing phone call from Nigel Clough during the summer. We are always looking to really understand the past because it just motivates us to create a future.

“It sounds a bit cheesy, but it’s true.

“We don’t want to fear the hand of history – in fact, we take pride in it.”

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