For this interview, I look back at Nottingham Forest’s Champions Cup winning
run in 1979/80 season.
The Interview will be as a video link companion, while the Blog
will be a presentation of the events.
The Interviewee is:
English Podcaster Mr. Steven Toplis
Mr. Toplis is on the ‘1865: The #NFFC #PremierLeague Podcast’
Mr. Toplis’ contact info:
Twitter: @steven_toplis
Podacst
Twitter: @nottm_forest
My contact information:
on twitter @sp1873 and on
facebook under Soccernostalgia.
Nottingham Forest FC in the
Champions Cup 1979/80
But this story was
far from finished and Nottingham Forest were still hungry for success at
European level and Liverpool’s double triumphs in 1977 and 1978 and their own
in 1979, perhaps gave an aura of inevitability for English sides competing in
the Champions Cup.
In the aim to
achieve this goal, Clough had to do some tinkering with his squad.
Photo From: Onze, Issue 53, May 1980
Veteran defender
Frank Clark had retired and Scottish veteran Archie Gemmill had also left to
join Birmingham City. In addition, promising understudy to Peter Shilton, Chris
Woods joined Norwich City for some deserved playing time.
To replace the
departures, Clough signed Scottish International defender Frank Gray from Leeds
United.
Jimmy Montgomery
arrived from Birmingham City to replace Woods as back-up goalkeeper.
Scottish
International midfielder Asa Hartford was signed from Manchester City to
replace Gemmill.
While Gray was a
welcome addition, Hartford was offloaded as early as August (after three
matches) to Everton.
There was also
another problem as Forest had to write off record signing Trevor Francis’
participation in the first round of the Champions Cup.
Before joining
Forest, Francis had a deal in place to play for the NASL side Detroit Express
in the English off-season (summertime) and would return after the first rounds
of the Champions Cup.
This episode would
have consequences within the season as understandably Clough was opposed to
risk his player in such a way.
Photo From: France Football, Issue 1769, March 4, 1980
(Ian Bowyer
and John McGovern) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series,
issue 3, June 1980
(Brian
Clough, Kenny Burns and Larry Lloyd) |
Photo From: Soccer Monthly, November 1979
(Frankie Gray) |
In the First
round, Forest’s opponents were Swedish side Östers
IF. The First Leg was
at the City Ground on September 19, 1979. Clough selected Ian Bowyer to replace
the missing Francis and he would reward the Manager’s confidence with two
goals.
The Return leg at Växjö on October 3, 1979, was a tougher task for Forest.
This time the young Gary Mills was in the lineup instead of Bowyer.
Östers
took the lead in the 52nd minute through Mats Nordgren before Woodcock
headed in the equalizer in the 79th minute.
Around
this time, there were reports that the Forest hierarchy had discussed the
financial state of the club and how Clough and Taylor were running the club.
Clough responded to the press that if
they have any doubts, they should hire two other people.
He did praise the Nottingham Forest
President Stuart Dryden but attacked ‘parasites’ that that he felt were getting
involved in Football just elevate themselves.
Photo From: L’Annee du Football, 1980
(John
Robertson) |
Prior to the Second-Round matches
against Romanian Arges Pitesti, the Trevor Francis issue came up. He had
returned from the United States carrying an injury.
There were reports of a feud between
Francis and Clough and attempts to transfer the player elsewhere. Clough stated
that he would not be paying his wages.
Clough started, “We’ve 13 games under
our belts here, Trevor’s only got a money belt’.
For his part, Francis dismissed any
reports of a feud.
There were also growing concerns that
Gemmill’s absence was being felt. Liverpool Manager Bob Paisley was among those
who felt Forest were not playing well as Gemmill had not been adequately
replaced.
The First Leg was at the City Ground
on October 24, 1979. In addition to Francis, Martin O’Neill was also injured.
Clough selected the young Gary Mills to replace O’Neill with Bowyer deputizing
for Francis.
Forest won (2-0) with two quick goals
by Woodcock (12th minute) and Birtles (16th minute).
They were unable to capitalize
further and afterwards Clough said, “Players can either put the ball between
the wood or they can’t and I can’t teach the how.”
The
Second Leg was on November 7th, 1979, at Pitesti. The only change
for Forest was the inclusion of John O’Hare in place of
Mills.
Forest won (2-1) with
two goals in the first half, through Bowyer (5th minute) and Birtles
(23rd minute). The Romanians replied in the second half through a
penalty by Barbulescu (60th minute),
but Forest were comfortably on their way to the Quarterfinals.
Photo From: World Soccer, January 1980
(Tony Woodcock) |
Ahead of
the Quarterfinals against East German side Dinamo Berlin, there was some
transfer activity. Striker Tony Woodcock left to join West German side FC Koln.
His
contract was set to expire at the end of the season and potentially there could
be a big drop in his transfer fee at the end of the season.
In
addition, Koln’s financial offer was much superior to Forest’s, and he could
not refuse.
Clough
signed Stan Bowles in December 1979 from Queens Park Rangers. Clough also
welcomed Southampton’s Charlie George in a month-long loan in January 1980.
As a
boost ahead of the Quarterfinals, Nottingham Forest defeated Barcelona in the
UEFA Super Cup to earn extra European silverware.
It was also reported that Clough had
received a lucrative offer from Greek side Olympiakos. However, Clough stated
that given his family obligations and the age of his children, an adventure in Greece
was out of the question.
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 3, June 1980
(Trevor Francis) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 3, June 1980
(Trevor Francis) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 3, June 1980
(Trevor Francis) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 3, June 1980
(Trevor Francis) |
The First Leg was at the City Ground
on March 5, 1980. Trevor Francis was available for the first time in Europe.
Viv Anderson was suspended and
replaced in the lineup by Bryn Gunn.
New signing Stan Bowles was in the
lineup as well.
Despite continuous pressure, Forest
were caught in the break by Berlin and Hans-Jürgen Riediger scored in the 63rd minute.
In addition, Kenny Burns
was booked and would be suspended for the Second Leg.
This was Forest’s first
loss in Europe in 14 matches.
At this point, there were
also rumors that qualification was important for Forest to build a new stand.,
however, Clough dismissed these reports and stated that Football is not an
exact science and Finance is not his domain.
In between the First and
Second Legs, Forest faced further disappointment as they lost in the League Cup
Final on March 15th, 1980, to
Wolverhampton Wanderers (0-1 loss).
Following this, Clough started to
criticize Francis in the Press. He stated that Francis was not performing given
the money spent.
There were also questions regarding
Francis’ position. At Birmingham, he was on the left side, while at Forest he
was confined to the right side.
Francis was so dismayed by Clough’s
attacks that in the days leading up to the match in Berlin, he was not on speaking
terms with Clough.
Before the match, Clough noticed that Francis was sad, he asked where he wanted to play and Francis replied ‘upfront’ and Clough said ‘Done’.
Clough also hesitated in starting
with Bowles again, as allegedly the player lost effectiveness when traveling by
plane. In the end, Bowyer started in his place.
David Needham also deputized for the
suspended Burns and Viv Anderson was back in the squad following his
suspension.
As far as Berlin, they were missing key
midfielder Reinhard Lauck, and this
disrupted their plan.
The Second Leg was on
March 19th, 1980, in East Berlin. After early Dinamo Berlin
pressure, Forest would take over and win convincingly away from home.
Trevor Francis scored
twice in the 15th and 25th minutes. His second goal was
somewhat controversial and had to be validated by the Linesman as it was
unclear whether it had crossed the line.
Afterwards, Francis said that if a
referee had validated a goal (like the one he scored), here (in England) or in
a Western country he would have been lynched.
Forest scored a third through a
penalty kick by John Robertson.
Early in the Second Half, Berlin
pulled a goal back through a penalty kick of their own by Frank Terletzki (49th minute).
Forest were through the
semifinals and were deserved winners.
The Press proclaimed the
return of the Miracle Man, as Clough was praised for overturning the deficit
and Forest winning away from home.
Regarding his tactic to motivate
Francis, Clough said he was not expecting flowers from Francis but hoped that
the player got the message.
Clough also said he did not care who
their semifinal opposition would be, he said when you return from hell, the
name of the hospital does not matter.
Photo From: Official Match Programme,
Nottingham Forest v Ajax, 1980
(Nottingham
Forest squad in East Berlin) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series,
issue 3, June 1980
(Brian
Clough, Peter Taylor, Trevor Francis) |
In the end the Semifinals opponents
in April would be Dutch side Ajax Amsterdam. Clough was confident ahead of
these matches and of winning the trophy again. He stated Ajax was the draw they
were hoping for.
The first leg, on April
9th, was played at Nottingham’s City Ground.
Clough
decided to start Stan Bowles in midfield in place of Ian Bowyer.
Nottingham
Forest took the lead in the 33rd minute with Francis scoring
off a rebound following a corner.
Forest
doubled the lead in the 60th minute through a penalty kick by
Robertson after a handling offense.
Brian
Clough praised Francis afterwards and stated, “If Trevor (Francis)
maintains his current form, not only will he take us to the Final but win it
for us”.
Ruud
Krol said afterwards, “If any English club had any interest on me, after such a
night, they would have certainly changed their mind”.
The
second leg, on April 23rd, was played at Amsterdam’s Olympisch
Stadion.
There
was only one change with Forest. Ian Bowyer reclaimed his spot in midfield
ahead of Bowles.
Nottingham
Forest chose to play with a defense in line and the use of the offside tactic
to repel Ajax’s expected attacks.
Ajax dominated
though the chances were rare as they failed to connect in the final third.
Ajax
scored their only goal in the 66th minute with Lerby heading in
a corner kick.
Clough
stated afterwards, “We should have never conceded the corner, let alone the
goal.”
During
that week, Ruud Krol signed for Vancouver Whitecaps of the NASL. He later
learned that Nottingham Forest had actually wanted him, and he had been unaware
of it.
Clough
had preferred not to contact player before the end of contract, preferring to
discuss with Ajax Club President and Manager of Ajax (In another source not
contacting Krol directly was said to have been at the behest of Ajax
hierarchy).
Nottingham
were willing to sign him, however, Vancouver had made a better offer.
Krol
expressed regret as he would have preferred to go to England.
Photo From: Onze, Issue 53, May 1980
(April
9, 1980, Champions Cup, Nottingham Forest 2- AFC Ajax 0 and April 23, 1980, Champions Cup, AFC Ajax 1- Nottingham
Forest 0) |
Photo From: L’Annee du Football, 1980
(April
23, 1980, Champions Cup, AFC Ajax 1- Nottingham Forest 0) |
Nottingham Forest
were in the Final for the second year running facing strong opposition in the
West German side SV Hamburger with English star Kevin Keegan.
Forest had shown
their ability to overcome obstacles and overturn seemingly difficult odds such
as with Koln in the previous season and with Dinamo Berlin in this season’s
Quarterfinals.
The West Germans
managed by the Yugoslav Branko Zebec, not only featured Keegan but also West
German Internationals Ditmar Jakobs, Wolfgang Magath and Horst Hrubesch to name
a few and had eliminated Real Madrid in the semifinals.
In the end, Zebec
chose not to risk and start with Hrubesch as he was carrying an injury and
included him as a substitute.
Last season’s
goalscoring hero Trevor Francis missed this match through injury and Gary Mills
started in his place.
Clough decided on
a more defensive formation in Francis’ absence (4-5-1 formation according to
reports).
It would be a
somewhat disappointing match like the previous year’s Final. Hamburg had come
to attack though they were unable to break through. Keegan was disappointing in
his final outing for the West German side.
Forest scored in
the 19th minute with a long-range effort through Robertson and that
was all they needed.
Peter Shilton was
the star for Forest as he came through with many saves.
Clough stated afterwards that Hamburg
were better technically but Forest were better on application and effort.
He admitted they were forced to
defend given the circumstances (missing Francis).
Nottingham Forest
were Champions of Europe to continue the four-season domination of England in
the Champions Cup.
This was the
zenith of Forest, despite a somewhat weaker Forest side reaching the semifinals
of the UEFA Cup in 1983/84.
In the League,
they finished Fifth and soon were no longer a force capable of winning League
titles.
While they would remain
a stable First Division side into the next decade, they would not feature in
Europe, as they had in these two seasons of 1978/79 and 1979/80
Photo From: L’Annee du Football, 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: L’Annee du Football, 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: L’Annee du Football, 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: L’Annee du Football, 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: World Soccer, July 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: World Soccer, July 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 4, July 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 4, July 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Photo From: Mondial, New series, issue 4, July 1980
(May 28, 1980, Champions Cup,
Nottingham Forest 1- Hamburg
SV 0) |
Nottingham
Forest Football Club (1979/80 season):
Players
who took part in these matches (on the field or on the bench):
Goalkeeper:
Peter Shilton (September 18, 1949, Leicester) (aged
30 years old at the time)
Jimmy
Montgomery (October
9, 1943, Hendon, Sunderland) (aged 35-36 years old at the time) (part of
squad, but did not take part in any match)
Defenders:
Viv Anderson (July 29, 1956, Clifton, Nottingham)
(aged 23 years old at the time)
Kenny Burns (Scotland) (September 23, 1953, Glasgow, Scotland) (aged 25-26
years old at the time)
Larry Lloyd (October 6, 1948, Bristol)
(aged 30-31 years old at the time)
Bryn Gunn (August 21, 1958, Kettering) (aged 21 years old at the time)
Francis
Tierney ‘Frankie’ Gray (Scotland) (October 27,
1954, Glasgow, Scotland) (aged 24-25 years old at the time)
Dave Needham
(May 21, 1949, Leicester) (aged
30-31 years old at the time)
Colin Barrett
(August 3, 1952, Stockport) (aged
27 years old at the time) (part of squad, but did not take part in any match)
Midfielders:
Martin O’Neill (Northern
Ireland)
(March 1,
1952, Kilrea, Northern Ireland) (aged 27-28 years old at the time)
John McGovern (Scotland)
(October 28, 1949, Montrose,
Scotland) (aged 29-30 years old at the time)
John Robertson (Scotland)
(January 20, 1953,
Viewpark, Lanarkshire, Scotland) (aged 26-27 years old at the time)
Ian Bowyer
(June 6, 1951, Little Sutton, Ellesmere Port) (aged 28 years old at the time)
Gary Mills
(November 11, 1961, Northampton) (aged
17-18 years old at the time)
John O’Hare (Scotland) (September 24, 1946, Renton, Scotland) (aged
32-33 years old at the time)
Stanley Bowles (December 24, 1948, Collyhurst) (aged
30-31 years old at the time)
Richard Asa Hartford (Scotland) (October
24, 1950, Clydebank, Scotland) (aged 28 years old at the time) (transferred in
August to Everton after 3 matches)
Forwards:
Garry Birtles (July 27, 1956, Nottingham) (aged 23 years
old at the time)
Tony Woodcock (December 6, 1955, Eastwood,
Nottinghamshire) (aged 23-24 years old at the time) (Transferred in November
to FC Koln in West Germany)
Trevor Francis (April
19, 1954, Plymouth) (aged 25-26 years old at the time)
Frederick Charle ‘Charlie’ George
(October
10, 1950, Islington, London) (aged 29 years old at the time) (arrived on loan
form Southampton in January and left in February)
Coach:
Brian Clough (March 21, 1935, Middlesbrough-September 20, 2004, Derby) (aged 43-44
years old at the time)
Team
Captain: John
McGovern (Scotland)
Official
Kit Supplier/Designer: Adidas
Shirt
Sponsor: None
Transfer
Activity:
Arrivals:
Francis Tierney ‘Frankie’ Gray (Leeds United)
Jimmy Montgomery (Birmingham City)
Richard Asa Hartford (Manchester City)
Stanley
Bowles (Queens Park
Rangers) (arrived December 1979)
Frederick Charle ‘Charlie’ George
(loan from Southampton in January 1980)
Note:
Trevor Francis was loaned to Detroit
Express in the summer and returned at beginning of season.
Departures:
Frank Clark-Retired
Archie Gemmill (Birmingham City)
Chris Woods (Norwich City)
Tony Woodcock (FC Koln in
November 1979)
Richard Asa Hartford (Everton) (August
1979)
Frederick Charle ‘Charlie’ George
(loan return to Southampton in February 1980)
References:
World
Soccer, October, November, December 1979
World
Soccer, January, March, April, May, June, July 1980
France Football, Issue
1746, September 25, 1979
France Football, Issue
1748, October 9, 1979
France Football, Issue
1769, March 4, 1980
France Football, Issue
1772, March 25, 1980
France
Football, Issue 1775, April 15, 1980
France
Football, Issue 1777, April 29, 1980
L’Annee
du Football, 1980
Guerin Sportivo, No 23 (290), June 4-10, 1980
Onze,
Issue 253 May 1980
Onze,
Issue 54, June 1980
Mondial, New series, issue 3, June 1980
Mondial, New series, issue 4, July 1980
Photo From: Panini England 78/79
(Nottingham Forest squad 1978/79) |
Photo From: Panini England 78/79
(Nottingham Forest squad 1978/79) |
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