Stuttgart midfielder Orel Mangala: Stuttgart midfielder Orel Mangala is ready to become Nottingham Forest’s 12th summer acquisition; the £12.7m fee for the Belgian international brings the newly promoted club’s expenditure to £73.5m; Forest is also in talks with Real Betis left-back Alex Moreno.
Nottingham Forest has agreed on a fee of £12.7 million for Stuttgart midfielder Orel Mangala, who will become the newly promoted club’s 12th summer acquisition.
The 24-year-old will undergo his Forest medical on Tuesday, bringing Forest’s summer expenditure to £73.5 million.
Last season, the Belgian international appeared in 29 games for the German squad, scoring one goal.
Mangala also made his international debut for Belgium against Ireland in March.
Forest are also working on a deal to sign Real Betis left-back Alex Moreno, who appeared in 45 games for the La Liga club last season.
The 29-year-contract old’s with Betis, where he has spent the previous three seasons, expires in 2025.
Busy Mangala is scheduled to join Forest ahead of PL’s comeback.
Forest has been active in the transfer market thus far as they prepare for their first Premier League season in 23 years.
Mangala is set to become Steve Cooper’s newest acquisition, after the arrival of Jesse Lingard last month. Lingard is currently Forest’s highest-paid player, according to Sky Sports News, with a weekly salary of £115,000 plus incentives.
Forest has also signed Lewis O’Brien and Harry Toffolo from Huddersfield Town.
Last month, Forest paid a club record of £17.5 million for Nigerian attacker Taiwo Awoniyi, as well as £17 million for Moussa Niakhate and Neco Williams.
Brandon Aguilera, Giulian Biancone, Omar Richards, Dean Henderson, and Wayne Hennessey have joined Forest.
Six rule changes affecting Nottingham Forest this season
Six changes to the game’s rules will have an influence on Nottingham Forest this season.
The International Football Association Board (IFAB) controls football legislation, and they have verified the adjustments that will be implemented in the Premier League beginning this season. The most visible change is the installation of five replacements, which will be permanent.
It was something that Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp and Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola had advocated for years, and the regulation was initially intended to be a stopgap solution during the pandemic. Teams can only make substitutions at three different moments throughout the game, other than half-time and during an injury, stoppage to counteract the game being broken up continuously.
It was something that Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp and Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola had been advocating for years, and the regulation was initially intended to be a stopgap solution during the pandemic. To counteract the game being broken up continuously, teams can only make substitutions at three different moments throughout the game, other than half-time and during an injury stoppage.
Finally, the most unexpected change is Law 8 changing its language. The phrase’referee tosses the coin’ has been introduced to clarify who executes the coin toss; formerly, anybody might have performed the pre-kick-off ceremony.
Stuttgart midfielder Orel Mangala