SLEEPING GIANTS
Jamie Barnard on how fresh investment at Nottingham Forest and Leeds United could mean a return to happier times for both clubs...
Whisper it quietly, but 2013 is the year of an awakening. As
we edge closer towards the dawning of the 2012-13 football season, two of
English football’s sleeping giants are being shaken from their slumber.
Nottingham Forest and Leeds United, herculean in stature, swathed in history,
have both announced impending investment.
For Nottingham Forest, Kuwaiti wealth from the Al-Hasawi
family. For Leeds United, an as yet elusive benefactor. But history this rich does
not come for cheap. The pockets are sure to be deep.
After too long in the footballing doldrums, a reason to
hope. But at these two clubs if hope springs eternal, despair resides
perpetually. Recent years have leaked a blot in the history books of both
clubs, a plunge to the depths of their existences with inglorious spells in
English football’s third tier. Three years for both.
At the City Ground, investment from the Al-Hasawis is sure
to be heralded. With the premature passing of former owner Nigel Doughty last
season, so too came the end of a complex ownership structure which had long
proved obtrusive to investment. If there were too many fingers in this
Nottingham Forest pie, it was also laced with a spoiled broth.
But every cloud has a silver lining and silver is a colour
seldom seen at Forest this century.
Currently completing due diligence for the two-time European
Cup winners, Fawaz Al-Hasawi has already proclaimed that: ““future on-field and
off-field success of Nottingham Forest is at the heart of our plans”. The mist
is rolling in from the Trent and Al-Hasawi must now mull how to revitalise a
giant which has, in recent times, been brought to its knees by the weight of
crippling expectation.
It is a debilitating weight felt likewise over at Elland
Road. Two clubs, similar, yet different in so many ways. Juxtaposed by Brian
Clough, defined by the glory of their forefathers.
At Leeds United the transformation is already underway. Neil
Warnock, the old taskmaster, is, in an Olympic summer, building a British backbone;
Adam Drury and Jason Pearce, both signed. Lee Peltier, the house-warming present
awaiting his new owners as soon as the deal is concluded. Not quite the best of
British, but that bulldog spirit emanates strong.
Paddy Kenny, a man rarely seen to shy away from a fight, is
rumoured to be on his way to re-join Warnock. And Paul Green has penned a
two-year contract. A central midfielder toughened by a football ladder he has climbed
right from the very first rung of non-league football all the way up to the
highest echelon of a Euro2012 campaign with the Republic of Ireland this summer,
Green is now a dogged contender.
They say a team reflects their manager’s image. Warnock is
from the Steel City.
Irksome, irritating, Warnock can be the both. But his
passion is unquestionable, his thirst seemingly unquenched. At the age of 63
too often has he been the secondary lead, outstanding in the dress rehearsal
only to be cast aside on the main stage of the Premier League. His Leeds script
is littered with last chance.
When the due diligence is done at Nottingham Forest, provided
no surprises arise, the Al-Hasawis are sure to invest in the playing squad as a
matter of urgency. The nineteenth-placed finish that Forest scraped their way
to last season; unacceptable. The rumour is that the kitty will be £10million,
who will be handed that kitty is not so clear. But to a club which has seen player
of the year Gareth McCleary and captain Wes Morgan, unbeatable but seemingly
not un-buyable, snared by clubs with greater financial clout in the last year
alone, such rumoured riches are re-assuring. The only club pulling up any Trees
now will be Nottingham Forest.
The aim for both will be the same: promotion as a matter of
urgency. Leeds United and Nottingham Forest have overslept.
Added financial impetus will give both clubs a greater
chance of success than they have previously had. Leeds fans will hope to be
free from the clenches of the tight-fisted Ken Bates, Forest fans implored
Doughty to loosen the purse strings for years. But the path they will be hoping
to tread is not one without precedent. Queens Park Rangers took years and
numerous changes to get it right, although rather encouragingly for Leeds fans
it was eventually with Warnock that they did so. And Leicester City showed last
season that money and success share no simple relationship.
The only guarantee is that in the forthcoming season The
Championship is set to be as keenly fought as it has been for years. Forest
will have the wealth to give them a chance. Leeds United are sure to march on. Leicester
City will try again. And a resurgent Sheffield Wednesday will hope to
capitalise on the momentum which brought them back into The Championship from
League One.
This year there are several Goliaths, not so many Davids.
Leeds United and Nottingham Forest may never again reach the
heady heights of European prominence; the footballing beanstalk may not stretch
that far. But whilst these two giants of the Football League have been
languishing outside of England’s elite league, their seats at the top table of
the English game have been on loan only. Temporary custodians such as Bolton
Wanderers have recently vacated, Wigan Athletic have surely sung their swansong
too many times to remain put again. The natural order could be about to be
restored.
Fee, fi, fo, thumb, Leeds and Nottingham Forest want
promotion.
Credit image of City Ground: via Supernova3688 on Flickr
Credit image of Elland Road: via Chris Robertshaw on Flickr
Credit image of Neil Warnock: via Flickr
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