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New Nottingham Forest chairman chases £18.3m boost, £10m agreement already sealed

Nottingham Forest’s new chairman Nicholas Randall has one major task at hand following his appointment earlier this week.

Randa🍸ll is embarking on h💎is second stint as chairman at the City Ground just 13 months after being replaced by Tom Cartledge.

Cartledge is now stepping down to focus on his family business, the design firm Benoy who have worked closely with Forest on their stadium plans.

Photo by Jon Hobley/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Photo by Jon Hobley/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Benoy and Cartled꧃ge had been central to the proposal to build a new stadium to replace th꧋e City Group in Toton. He will remain on the board of directors.

Like Cartledge, Randall also remained on the board at Forest following Evangelos Marinakis’s decision to remove him from his postꦛ in August last year.

Forest have enjoyed a steady start to the season under Nuno Espirito Santo, taking nine points from their openin🥂g six fixtures.

But while performance🧸s on the pitch are the priority in the immediate future, Randall will oversee a task behind the scenes the legacy of which will endure for decades in NG2.

The value of Nottingham Forest’s planned stadium rebuild

Forest have long harboured ambitions to ❀accommodate the enormous demand for tickets among their꧟ supporters.

The City Ground’s value to fans goes well beyond its financial utility, but it is one of the least lucrative stadiuꦜms in the Premier League in terms of the cash it generates per head.

Forest earned £11.1m in matchday income in 2022-23, their first campaign back in the top fliಞght for over two decades and the last for which fu꧋ll financial data is available.

Th🌸at figure will have risen in 2023-24, reflecting increased ticket prices.

That trend wil♓l continue in 2024-25, with another steep ticket prices being heavily criticised by supporter group but also likely to prove lucrative for the club.

In July, Forest agreed a deal in principle to buy the freehold on whic🌊h⭕ the City Ground stands in order to facilitate plans to expand the stadium.

Forest have said they want to take the City Ground from a capacity of approxiꦰmately 30,000 to 42,000.

But in a recent interview, Marinakis said that ✃long-term plan is to go🀅 beyond that figure to 50,000.

“We have a lot of supporters and a huge waiting list for season tickets and I’m sure a 50,000-seat stadium will be full watching our team and our passion,” he told .

“That [the City Ground] is where the team belongs and where the tradition is.

“It’s most important for the town of Nottingham and this is something I want to be able to finalise and for the years to come to have one of the best stadiums in England.

“This is my prime target right now.”

Based on their matchday income ♉in 2022-23, that capacity would guarantee them £18.4m per season, drawing them🌸 level with the likes of Aston Villa, Southampton, Wolves.

In reality, however, the true figure would be far higher. Not only does that crude estimate not factor i🌄n the new pricing structure at the City Ground, but it also does not a✱ccount for commercial opportunities.

The expansion is likely to focus on corporꦗate hospitality and create other sponsorship opportunities, which industry estimates suggest could take the total value of the expansion per season to around £40m.

The City Ground and Forest’s PSR situation

Forest posted losses of £69m in๊ the last recorded finanical year and became only the second club to🐻 be punished for PSR breaches last season.

Under the current system, Premier League clubs are allowed to lose £105m over a rol🔥ling three-year period, but a next model is expected to be introduced from nextᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ season.

The new system will see🐻 spending on 📖wages, transfers and agent fees capped at around 85 per cent of annual turnover.

For Forest to be able to spend more and not be forced into selling their best🎶 players, raising revenue is therefore essential.

Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images
Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images

Expanding the City Ground will give them a platform to do exactly that, not just through ticket sales but their comm😼ercial appeal too.

One only needs to look at the example of Tottenham to see how successful this sܫtrategy can be – thꦉeir commercial and matchday income have both trebled since the move to the new stadium in 2019.