
Nuno Espirito Santo argues with Nottingham Forest owner on City Ground pitch moments after disastrous draw
NOTTINGHAM FOREST Evangelos Marinakis charged onto the pitch to confront his manager Nuno Espirito Santo at the final whistle against Leicester.
Forest conceded in the last ten minutes to draw 2-2 with the Foxes - denting their Champions League aspirations.
2
2
That led Marinakis to enter the field of play as players and coaches went through their post-match handshakes.
The Greek appeared as if he would walk past Nuno initially, but he turned around and spoke to the Forest boss after he had finished his ineraction with Oliver Skipp, whom he worked with at Tottenham.
Marinakis began gesticulating and appeared frustrated as he spoke to Nuno in what seemed a forceful manner.
Nuno looked a bit resigned to what he was being told, and stretched out his arms in an almost shrug.
He said a few words back to boss Marinakis, who threw his arms in the air before walking away from the Portguese.
THIS IS A DEVELOPING STORY..
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
9 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Celtic coach outlines the 'hunger and desire' required for new season
In a rare interview with the club's official media channel, the 41-year-old reflected on the 2024/25 campaign and the positives of the summer break. Kennedy said: "It's nice to see everybody's face again. "It's been a good break, we've had time to reset, relax, get refreshed again, and the boys have come in this morning in pretty good shape and excited for what's ahead." He acknowledged the physical challenges associated with the game and praised the team's performance last year. Kennedy said: "There are challenges in terms of the physical aspect, the demand of the game. "We all know nowadays it's huge, the physical outputs. "Plus, the number of games that they go through. "The guys were terrific last year." Despite the team's near-miss in the final, he highlighted the positives from the season, including their performance in the league and league cup, and their Champions League efforts. "The way it finished kind of took the shine off it a little bit, but once the dust settles, and you reflect on how everything went, the guys were superb," Kennedy said. "They put everything into it, okay, just came up short in the final, but the way we performed in the league, the league cup earlier in the season, the Champions League stuff, we can look back on that and take a lot of positives. "It's good for them to reflect on that, but get a chance to switch off, let the legs recover, let the mind recover, and come in with the same hunger and desire to be successful again because that's what the club demands. There's no let-up."


The Guardian
10 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Through It All Together review – Leeds United drama tackles big themes
Leeds United fan and playwright Chris O'Connor is clearly Shankly-ian in his belief that football is more important than life or death. He lays out his argument in Through It All Together, which is at once a paean to his football club, a contention that fandom is a glue that binds with more ferocity than a Norman Hunter tackle, and an appeal for the deification of the manager who led Leeds back into the Premier League in 2020. Where Liverpool had Bill Shankly – recently given his own moment in the stage spotlight in the moving and epic Red or Dead – the Whites had Marcelo Bielsa, or El Loco as O'Connor reminds us, the nickname with which the Argentinian arrived at Elland Road. If there were any doubt as to the regard in which fans like O'Connor hold the manager, a stained glass window bearing the image of Bielsa rises above the stage of Amanda Stoodley's set. At the heart of Through It All Together are long-time married couple and Leeds season ticket holders Howard and Sue, played by Reece Dinsdale and Shobna Gulati. Howard is just about living with dementia, wife Sue is coping with it admirably, while daughter Hazel is either in denial or overcompensating when it comes to her dad's condition. The trials of having the condition, or living with a family member with it, are intertwined with the season before and the season during which Bielsa's Leeds United secured promotion – one which was plagued by Covid and lockdown. But the play never lands firmly on either story. Howard's dementia doesn't progress to its usual conclusion, leaving Dinsdale, a fine actor, with a curtailed journey, while Bielsa's two-season odyssey back to the Premier League is told in snippets that the Leeds faithful in the audience clearly loved, but the uninitiated will find have the depth of a highlight reel. Everal A Walsh and Dean Smith, in roles from podcasters to fans in the pub to club higher-ups, are uniformly hilarious in the very amusingly sketched scenes in which they appear. The play, like the club, will have its fans, but will mean most to those who are already marching on together. At Leeds Playhouse until 19 July


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Wales women eye Euro 2025 history inspired by past and future
Once again, Wales have struck gold with a men's team swept to a first major tournament appearance in 58 years in 2016, with the Together Stronger mantra helping Chris Coleman's side to ride a wave of momentum and reach the semi-finals of the European forward nine years and it is Wales' women making history, having reached a first major tournament with their own ethos: For us, for them, for the trailblazers of the women's game – for them - who forged the path for today's players is a key focus of this Wales squad, as is the recognition of the need to grow the game and make things better for the next generation – for her."The amount of sacrifice from players who have come and gone to get us into this position, it is hard to sum up with words how important they've been," vice-captain Ceri Holland says."For us it is a lot more than a slogan, it is what we try and embody," Wales captain Angharad James adds. "It really means a lot to us." For us Wales' current squad have a full-time manager, parity on pay and facilities and support staff with the men's side and their own kit, but it was not always so for a country that FAW technical director Dave Adams admits is "playing catch-up," in terms of equality of opportunity for Wales' female Wales squad contains several players – such as defender Rhiannon Roberts, midfielder Rachel Rowe and forward Kayleigh Barton – who spent the majority of their careers as amateur players, with Rowe working in a prison and Barton training to be a plumber when they began their international a series of near misses for major tournament qualification – coming within a game of qualifying for successive World Cups and within a goal of potential Euros qualification – Wales' success in reaching Euro 2025 via a play-off win over Republic of Ireland meant for the players not just a sense of pride and jubilation and a feeling of euphoria, but also one of relief."When you want to achieve something and you get to do it with some of your very closest friends, there's really no comparison to what that feeling is, like at all," Wales' record appearance-maker and goalscorer Jess Fishlock reflects, having been a Wales international for over 20 years."With how many players we have that have been here for so long that have been there together, sometimes you just feel like you play with your mates. It was definitely a different type of feeling for sure so because of everything that you've been through, all the battles… all the near misses, when the moment finally arrived was it as good as you'd built it up in your head to be? I think honestly, yes." For them The path to progress has been far from smooth for Welsh women's in the 2020s in terms of attendances, Wales are nowhere near the levels of 100 years ago, when women's international matches regularly attracted crowds of 30-40, Football Association banned women's football for 50 years, with Wales women not having an international side again until 1973, though it was not affiliated to the FAW and was run by volunteers. It was not until 1993, after a campaign from some of the Wales players, that the women's side played their first 'official' say women's football was not the priority of the FAW would be an 2003, Wales were drawn to play Belarus, Israel, Estonia and Kazakhstan in qualifying for Euro 2005 and rather than face the cost of arranging the trips, the FAW withdrew Wales from qualifying, because it was cheaper to pay a fine of 50,000 Swiss the history of what has come before has been something of a burden to the players, according to one of the architects of their status as a legitimate team, former Wales captain and Uefa executive committee member Laura McAllister."When you haven't qualified that's a huge weight on your shoulders for everybody," she told BBC Sport Wales."Those players really feel it because they're so emotionally connected and they know what it means because the careers of almost all of them with the exception of the very young players in the squad has been a battle."All of those girls know what we went through to get the team started and to play against teams that were a much better resourced than us. But we had to start somewhere, and they feel a great debt to that, which they want to repay."But I know they feel that emotionally. And I guess that's an added pressure, isn't it? When you know you're not doing it just for yourself and your family and your friends and the fans, you're doing it for the generations who came before as well. And all credit to the girls for thinking like that."When Wales finally achieved major tournament qualification, many of those trailblazers, such as cap centurion Helen Ward, were in the room celebrating with the players in Dublin."It was brilliant. Such a great night. One of the best ever," Ward recalls."I think it was about four o'clock in the morning before I got into my bed in our hotel. The FAW, fair play to them. They opened it up to friends and family, so all the girls had their family there. They were all still in full kit. The drinks were flowing, the music was on, everybody singing, having a great time."And I was just really, really fortunate to have been invited to be part of that and spend some time with the girls that obviously I spent so many years playing with and to sort of feel a little small part of it and just enjoy in their success, like celebrate with them and celebrate them for what they've achieved."And that's why this is such a special story because everyone who's played for the team going over three decades and more you've always been that close and everyone's been in on that journey. To finally achieve qualification after all those years that's why it's so amazing, isn't it?"The FAW recently presented 'lost caps' to 70 players who were awarded caps retrospectively from the period of 1973 to 1993 when Wales' international games were unrecognised by the association. For her There is no debating that growing the game for the next generation remains a priority for the staff of the FAW and for the current Wales launching a strategy to improve female participation in football in 2021, participation has increased by 45%, with 15,898 women and girls participating in football during the 2023-24 FAW say investment in women's and girls football in Wales has increased by over 250% in the past four years, while the average attendance of the national side has increased from 1,800 to 5, while the progress has been tangible, there is still a frustration that crowd sizes are still not close to approaching those that Wales men attract, with sold-out signs at the Cardiff City Stadium for every men's discrepancy is so large that it has caused Wales women's manager Rhian Wilkinson to suggest that Wales is 'culturally behind,' with fewer than 500 Wales fans in Dublin to see Wales make having sold one of the biggest ticket allocations for Euro 2025, the hope is that many Wales fans will develop into fully-fledged supporters of the women's team on the back on their first major final appearance."I think we need to recognise that the profile of women's football in Wales and in Europe isn't where it should be," McAllister said."We know that the crowds that turn up for the women's games are nowhere near the crowds that turn up for the men's games. And all credit to Rhian Wilkinson for making the point that I think Welsh fans have to have a look at themselves as well. You know, we're either the Red Wall that support Cymru whenever and wherever they're playing, or we're not."And, you know, I think fans need to just ask themselves why they're not coming to the stadium necessarily to support the women's team. We need to look at how we attract male fans and different fans to the stadiums because we're attracting lots of children and families, but we want the fan base to be bigger and broader than that."While everyone would welcome increased numbers supporting the Wales women's team, there is no doubting the passion of the sometimes dozens, sometimes hundereds of fans who have followed Wales all over Europe and beyond in recent Evans, founder of FE Wales, for female Welsh fans, says numbers are improving and hopes the Euros will ensure some fans become lifelong supporters."I remember our first trip around six years ago to Italy, it was myself, my partner and Megan Wynne's (Wales midfielder) parents… things have come a long way since then."Our home attendance is nowhere near where it should be, if we are going to be brutally honest about things. Hopefully the Euros is the catalyst for improvement."Hopefully this will be the moment."