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  1. Nottingham Forest v Burnley: Team newspublished at 12:59 BST

    Nottingham Forest XI: Sels, Aina, Murillo, Milenkovic, Williams, Sangare, Anderson, Hutchinson, Gibbs-White, Bakwa, Wood.

    Elliot Anderson returns to the Nottingham Forest starting line up after the sad passing of his mother Helen.

    Matz Sels and Nikola Milenkovic also return following the 1-0 Europa League win over Porto on Thursday, which booked a semi-final with Aston Villa.

    Dilane Bakwa also makes his first Premier League start for Forest since January.

    Nottingham Forest XI: Sels, Aina, Murillo, Milenkovic, Williams, Sangare, Anderson, Hutchinson, Gibbs-White, Bakwa, Wood.

    Subs: Ortega, Morato, Awoniyi, Dominguez, Igor Jesus, Yates, Cunha, McAtee, Netz.

    Kyle Walker starts for Burnley as Scott Parker makes one change for the trip to the City Ground.

    Bashir Humphreys drops to the bench while James Ward-Prowse returns to Forest, having played 10 games on loan last season.

    Defeat would leave Burnley 12 points from safety with just five games left.

    Burnley XI: Dubravka, Walker, Ekdal, Esteve, Hartman, Ward-Prowse, Florentino, Edwards, Ugochukwu, Anthony, Flemming.

    Subs: Weiss, Worrall, Bruun Larsen, Foster, Humphreys, Tchaouna, Broja, Laurent, Tresor.

    Burnley XI: Dubravka, Walker, Ekdal, Esteve, Hartman, Ward-Prowse, Florentino, Edwards, Ugochukwu, Anthony, Flemming.
  2. Sutton's predictions: Nottingham Forest v Burnleypublished at 10:05 BST

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    This is Nottingham Forest's biggest game of the season.

    It's a great chance for them to get three points, but gosh this is going to be nervy - it is going to be a very tense afternoon but they just have to find a way to win, it doesn't matter how.

    Burnley are done now, they are going down - but that might not help Forest because it could see Scott Parker's side play with more freedom.

    Sutton's prediction: 1-0

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  3. Follow Sunday's Premier League games livepublished at 10:04 BST

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    There are four games in the Premier League on Sunday and BBC Sport will bring you every moment.

    • Aston Villa v Sunderland

    • Everton v Liverpool

    • Nottingham Forest v Burnley

    • Man City v Arsenal (16:30 BST)

    Kick-off times 14:00 BST unless stated

    Follow all of the action and reaction to the early games here and the late match here

    You can also listen to today's 5 Live Premier League commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Everton v Liverpool" or "ask BBC Sounds to play Man City v Arsenal", for instance.

    Find out more about how to listen to Premier League football on BBC Sounds

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  4. Nottingham Forest v Burnley: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 13:02 BST 18 April

    Nottingham Forest's elation at reaching a first European semi-final since 1984 will be short-lived if they don't follow it by putting points on the board against second-bottom Burnley at the City Ground on Sunday (14:00 GMT).

    Forest could yet be felled

    Vitor Pereira's side set up an all-English Europa League last four clash against Aston Villa with a tense 1-0 win over Porto on Thursday – the Portuguese head coach's first home win in six attempts since he was appointed on 15 February.

    The prospect of relegation on the domestic front, however, is still a very real one. The Reds, currently 16th, could find themselves in the relegation zone by Sunday night if they lose and West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur both win.

    An impotent Forest attack has registered just 14 goals in 16 home league games this season, failing to find the net in five of their last seven. It's their lowest goals-per-game record at home (0.88) in a league season since 1996-97 (0.79).

    Elliot Anderson missed the win over Porto due to the death of his mother, Helen, and it remains to be seen if the England star will be available for selection. Pereira told reporters after the game: "We are here to help him and we will see if he can play the next game."

    The Tricky Trees, who are unbeaten in six in all competitions, could do with his industry in midfield in a game like this. Anderson has won possession 10 or more times in 10 Premier League games this season; the most in Europe's big five leagues in 2025-26 and more than three times as often as any of his opponents in this country.

    Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson has recorded 10 Premier League games with at least 10 possession recoveries during the 2025–26 season. This figure significantly leads the division, with his nearest competitors - Dominik Szoboszlai, Declan Rice, Joelinton, and Mateus Fernandes - all recording just three such games as of April 12, 2026.

    Clarets sinking

    With just one win in their past 23 league games – against Crystal Palace on 11 February – it has been a miserable campaign for Burnley.

    The Clarets, facing their third relegation from the top flight in five seasons, are this decade's best example of a Premier League yo-yo club; too good for the Championship but unable to cut it in the top tier.

    Unlike bottom club Wolverhampton Wanderers, 19th-placed Burnley's relegation cannot be confirmed this weekend and head coach Scott Parker has pledged that his team will "keep fighting between now and the end of the season".

    They've conceded 63 goals, the most in the division, which is perhaps no surprise when you look at some of their related defensive numbers.

    The table shows Burnley’s defensive struggles during the 2025-26 Premier League season. The specific snapshot in the graphic reflects their performance through 32 matches, at which point they had conceded 63 goals and ranked last in the league across every major defensive metric shown.

    Twinned with those defensive struggles has been a similarly tough time in front of goal. While they aren't the lowest scorers in the league – Wolves and Forest are both worse off in that regard – Burnley have managed the fewest shots of any side, with 297 (an average of 9.3 per game).

    Among teams to have played 30 or more games under a single manager since such records began in 2003-04, Scott Parker's Burnley have had the joint-fewest attempts of any team under one boss, along with Paul Clement's Swansea City and Chris Wilder's Sheffield United.

  5. 'Mentally consistent' - Pereira outlines Forest's key trait published at 15:50 BST 17 April

    Vitor Pereira shouts from the touchlineImage source, Getty Images

    Vitor Pereira says Nottingham Forest have been "mentally consistent" and the trait is proving key in them developing an unbeaten run.

    The Reds are six games without a loss in all competitions, culminating in Thursday's fine win over Porto to reach the last four of the Europa League.

    Sunday, however, brings the visit of Burnley - a crucial fixture which could haul Forest further away from the bottom three.

    They currently sit three points clear and, asked if this is a "must-win" game by BBC Radio Nottingham's Colin Fray, Pereira said: "This is not about words, speeches. It's about going there to fight, play, have confidence and have the energy of our supporters. To play together against Burnley.

    "Six games without losing means we are consistent. I am not talking tactically, as tactically we are changing a lot - players, the system - we need to change. But, in the end, we are in this moment consistent mentally. This is the most important, to be mentally consistent, to compete and compete again until the last game."

    Burnley have one win in 12 in all competitions and have no realistic margin for error if they are to pull themselves back from the relegation brink given their 12-point gap to safety.

    Pereira expects some fitness challenges for the fixture given Thursday's night's intense encounter with Porto but he insists the significance of the victory plays a role.

    "I believe that the recovery is easier when we win," he explained. "The motivation is different, the spirit is different. I will see happy players and it's easier to recover and prepare.

    "The next game will be very important for us. We need to face it with the same spirit - working hard, trying to play in our way. We know it will be tough and we will face a team that has quality."

    You can listen to Forest v Burnley here on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra

    Got a question about Forest? Get in touch here and we'll seek answers from our experts

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  6. 🎧Forest into Europa League semi-finalpublished at 13:15 BST 17 April

    Join David Jackson, Brian Laws, joyous Forest fans and manager Vitor Pereira on a special episode of Shut Up And Show More Football as Nottingham Forest reach the Europa League semi-finals with victory over Porto.

    Listen below or on BBC Sounds here - and don't forget to subscribe to get each episode into your My Sounds feed.

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    Forest are in the Europa League semi-finals

    Explore all Nottingham Forest content on BBC Sounds

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  7. 🎧 European Semi Finals lie aheadpublished at 12:39 BST 17 April

    The latest news and views on Forest in two minutes, every weekday afternoon.

    Listen below or on BBC Sounds here - and don't forget to subscribe to get each episode into your My Sounds feed.

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    Forest Daily: European Semi Finals lie ahead

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  8. 'Forest can survive and win the Europa League'published at 12:05 BST 17 April

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Vitor Pereira sits in the dugoutImage source, Getty Images

    Championship game on a Saturday, Champions League match on a Tuesday?

    While Nottingham Forest bask in the glory of Thursday's victory over Porto in the Europa League quarter-finals, their position in the Premier League means their short and medium-term future remains somewhat complicated.

    Forest's battling 1-0 win to secure a 2-1 victory on aggregate means they will play Aston Villa in their first European semi-final for 42 years.

    The winners of that all-English tie will head to Istanbul for the final on 20 May - against either Freiburg or Braga - as favourites.

    And victory in Turkey will not only earn silverware but a spot in next season's Champions League.

    Before that, however, Forest face crucial league fixtures against Burnley and Sunderland. If results in those games and elsewhere go against them, they could be in the relegation zone by the time that last-four tie with Villa arrives.

    Winning the Europa League was a target for Forest at the start of the season, having spent about £180m on new players.

    Owner Evangelos Marinakis was looking to build on last season's seventh-place finish, when Forest missed out on the Champions League on the final day.

    Four managers - Nuno Espirito Santo, Ange Postecoglou, Sean Dyche and now Vitor Pereira - later and it remains realistic despite the self-inflicted chaos this season.

    Postecoglou lifted the Europa League with Tottenham last May and told his Forest players he wanted to defend the trophy after he replaced Nuno in September.

    During his 39 days in charge, Forest drew their opener 2-2 at Real Betis before a damaging 3-2 home defeat by Midtjylland saw fans turn on the Australian, who was sacked after eight winless games.

    Dyche fared little better, although he at least guided Forest out of the Europa League group phase, but the turbulent nature of the season means Pereira must now balance domestic and European goals into May.

    "They can do both [win the Europa League and stay up]," former England international Karen Carney told TNT Sports.

    "The point against Aston Villa in the Premier League, this moment tonight finding themselves in the Europa League semi-finals, Burnley on Sunday... this could be a turning point for them this week."

    Read more on Forest's juggling act

  9. Nottingham Forest 1-0 Porto - the fans' verdictpublished at 11:04 BST 17 April

    Your opinions graphic
    Nottingham Forest's Morgan Gibbs-White celebratesImage source, Getty Images

    We asked for your thoughts after Nottingham Forest reached the Europa League semi-finals by beating Porto.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Nottingham Forest fans

    Martin: The last time Forest were in a European semi-final - 1984 Uefa Cup - I was at both matches, home and away to Anderlecht. 2-0 up from the first leg after goals from Peter Davenport, Forest lost the second leg 3-0 after controversial decisions by a referee who, it turned out retrospectively, had been bribed by the Belgian team. Forest have a chance to heal some 42-year-old scars but face a very tough semi-final against Aston Villa. Good Luck Forest.

    John: Strong, exciting and skilful performance all round. Great to watch in the first half, particularly. Despite some really impressive, creative football, we still can't seem to get the sharpness in front of goal that would take pressure off. The effort, work rate, understanding and skill is all there but we've got to find a way of taking the scoring chances we're creating. This squad deserves massive credit for trying to salvage a season badly affected by decisions outside their control.

    Luke: An incredible night, made sweeter by the fact that we haven't had much to celebrate in our own stadium. This season has the potential to be the best for 46 years, or the worst in 27. And I'm still not sure which way is the more likely.

    Austin: Very fortunate. Terrible performance against 10 men. Forest wingers awful. Never got behind the defence all night. Credit to Porto second half. They looked more dangerous than us. Forest clueless in the final third as they so often are I'm afraid.

    Sean: Classic Forest, had some really good moments going forward and had to rely on some luck as well. A definite red card for Bednarek certainly helped us. Definitely some nervous moments too in the second half, with Porto hitting the bar twice. We managed the game really well and deserve the reward for it. Aston Villa in the semi, bring it on!

    Ian: A gritty performance but I thought we were lucky over the two legs to be honest - having said that the supporters carried us over the line and more of a concern is the injury to Wood, which could be career-ending. Heartfelt sympathy for Elliot Anderson, who missed the game due to a family bereavement I understand - football achievements are insignificant when tragedy strikes Well done Mr Pereira, for at least uniting this team.

    Tony: A win - but not a convincing one. Forest are hard to watch sometimes and tonight was no exception - just hope that we can muster a decent side for Sunday.

    Stephen: That was tough to watch, but the lads got through. Good to get to the semi-finals for Elliot. Now to focus on Sunday and Burnley. Three points is a must.

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