Nottingham Forest host FC Porto at the City Ground on Thursday evening in the second leg of their UEFA Europa League knockout tie, with the quarter-final race finely balanced after a 1-1 draw in Portugal last week. For Forest, this is the chance to turn a decent first leg into something bigger. For Porto, it’s about protecting their status and finishing the job away from home, where the margin for error is always a little thinner.
There’s proper tension here, too. A place in the next round is on the line, and both sides have already shown they can live with the pressure. Forest went to Estadio do Dragão and came away level after a disciplined performance, while Porto arrive in England on the back of an 8-match unbeaten run and with plenty of recent momentum. That won’t bother Vitor Pereira’s side, though. They’ve been sturdy enough lately, and the City Ground should give them a lift.
What makes this tie so delicately poised is that neither side has fully taken control. Forest have been tough to beat, Porto have been hard to stop, and the first leg reflected that balance. One more big European night and someone’s season takes another turn.
Nottingham Forest Form & Analysis
Forest come into this one with a mixed but promising run behind them. The 1-1 draw at home to Aston Villa on 12 April was a solid enough response to a demanding first leg in Porto, even if it wasn’t a night where they tore up trees. Murillo’s own goal put them behind, Neco Williams levelled before the break, and the final numbers were fairly even: 1.20 xG to 0.98, five shots on target each, and no real gulf between the sides. It was the sort of match that tells you Forest are still competitive, but not quite clean and clinical enough to take full control.
Before that, they’d already done the hard work in Europe and on the road. The 1-1 draw with Porto in midweek followed a superb 3-0 win at Tottenham, a result that showed exactly what Forest can do when they play with conviction and break quickly. Their Europa League progress was built earlier with a 2-1 win at FC Midtjylland after a narrow 1-0 home loss to the same opponents, and the draw at Fulham sat in the middle of that sequence as another reminder that they don’t give much away. Four of those six matches have been draws or narrow wins. Nothing dramatic. Just steady.
At home this season, Forest’s record has been respectable without being intimidating: wins, draws and losses are not supplied in full here, but the scoring pattern is clear enough. They’ve managed 1.54 goals per home game on average across the season benchmark, with 1.60 xG and 1.55 xGOT at their ground, while their shot volume and box presence are also healthy. That says they can create. The problem is turning decent territory into a result that kills a tie. Against Porto, that matters. They’ll need to be sharper in both boxes, because the one thing they can’t afford is to get dragged into a slow, measured game where Porto dictate the tempo.
Still, Forest have one thing going for them: they’re unbeaten in five. That’s a useful run to carry into a knockout second leg, especially after taking something from the first leg away from home. The flip side? Their home games don’t tend to explode into chaos, and that could suit Porto just fine if Forest aren’t brave enough in the final third.
FC Porto Form & Analysis
Porto arrive in Nottingham with a far more eye-catching recent run. Their last six have brought three wins and three draws, and they haven’t lost in eight. That’s the sort of streak that gives a team a proper edge in knockout football. They were also sharp enough last weekend to go to Estoril Praia and win 3-1, with Pepê striking early, an own goal helping them on their way, and Victor Froholdt plus Yanis Begraoui finishing the job. The xG read was excellent too: 2.69 created, only 0.36 conceded. That wasn’t a scrape. That was control.
The first leg against Forest was more measured, but Porto still looked like a side with ideas. The 1-1 draw at home was followed by that impressive win in Portugal, and before that they’d handled Famalicão 2-2, beaten Sporting Braga 2-1 away, and taken care of VfB Stuttgart 2-0 in Europe. The 3-0 win over Moreirense is part of the same pattern. They score, they keep going, and they rarely let one setback spiral into another. That’s a good habit to have in April.
Away from home, Porto have been dangerous. The 3-1 success at Estoril was their latest road win, and they’d already won at Sporting Braga in a tougher league test. Their overall away benchmark isn’t loaded into full match-by-match numbers here, but the shape is obvious: they’re comfortable travelling, they score regularly, and they’ve got the kind of control in possession that can mute the home crowd if Forest start slowly. Porto have also found the net in four straight matches without keeping a clean sheet, which tells its own story. They’re not watertight. They don’t need to be if they keep creating at this level.
That slight defensive looseness is the one part Forest can target. Porto aren’t impenetrable, and they’ve shown a habit of giving the other side a route into games. But their attack is carrying them. Their away xG benchmark of 1.25 is solid rather than spectacular, and at this stage of a European tie that usually means patience, not panic. Farioli will fancy Porto’s ability to stay in the contest and strike when the opening appears. They won’t need to be glorious. They just need to be good enough. Right now, they are.
Head-to-Head
The recent meetings between these sides already tell a simple story. Porto and Forest drew 1-1 in Portugal on 9 April, with neither side able to land the decisive blow. Before that, Forest won 2-0 at home on 23 October 2025. That’s the only home result in the short sample, and it matters. The City Ground has already been a happy place for Forest in this fixture, and that’s the one thing Porto can’t ignore.
Even so, the broader picture feels balanced rather than one-sided. One win apiece and a draw in the last two competitive meetings leaves this tie exactly where it started: live, tense, and waiting for a moment of quality. Porto know they can score against Forest. Forest know they can keep Porto quiet for long stretches. The next chapter depends on which side handles the pressure better.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 4/7 looks the strongest play here. Porto have gone eight without defeat, they’ve been much more convincing in recent weeks, and they come into the second leg after a sharp away win at Estoril and a controlled first-leg display against Forest. That unbeaten run matters. So does their habit of finding goals on the road.
Forest aren’t being dismissed. They’ve got a five-match unbeaten run of their own and they’ve already shown they can live with Porto. Still, Porto feel the more reliable side right now, especially with their attacking output and Forest’s tendency to leave games hanging rather than closing them out. A 1-2 away win is the call, with Porto’s extra efficiency just about tipping a tight tie. If you want a slightly bolder angle, Porto to score first is worth a look too — they’ve made a habit of starting on the front foot.