The City Ground sits on the banks of the River Trent, the home of Nottingham Forest since 1898. Its riverside setting, directly across the water from Nottingham County's Meadow Lane, gives it one of the most picturesque locations in English football. The compact, tightly-raked stands keep fans close to the pitch and generate a strong, traditional match-day atmosphere. Forest's return to the Premier League in 2022 has brought a fresh wave of energy to a ground steeped in European pedigree.
The City Ground officially opened on 3 September 1898, and from here Brian Clough's Forest pulled off one of football's greatest feats — back-to-back European Cups in 1979 and 1980, beating Malmö and Hamburg in the finals after a dramatic semi-final win over 1. FC Köln. The Executive Stand, built in 1980, was funded largely by proceeds from that trophy-laden era of consecutive League Cups and a league title. Decades later the ground has become a Premier League fixture again following Forest's 2022 promotion, reconnecting the club's storied European past with a new competitive present.
Source: RateGame editorial