Nottingham Forest vs Bournemouth Prediction, Odds & Tips
Nottingham Forest vs Bournemouth Prediction and Tips
Nottingham Forest and Bournemouth drew 1-1 at The City Ground in a Premier League fixture that saw both sides share the spoils. Our model had backed a Forest win at 38 percent probability, a pick that did not land. Both teams found the net, consistent with Bournemouth's recent form; the visitors arrived on a three-win run across their last five matches, while Forest have managed just one draw in their recent stretch. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Bournemouth vs Nottingham Forest Prediction, Odds and Betting Tips
Our AI analyses form, head-to-head records, squad news and odds to provide data-driven predictions for Bournemouth vs Nottingham Forest. All tips are for informational purposes only and do not constitute betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You must be 18 or over to gamble. Please gamble responsibly. For help, visit begambleaware.org.
Our pick
Nottingham Forest to win
Result
Nottingham Forest v Bournemouth
AI Prediction Result
Past performance does not guarantee future results. 18+ | BeGambleAware.org
Expected goals (xG)
Match xG total 3.15
Nottingham Forest vs Bournemouth Preview: Title Chasers Visit the City Ground With Everything to Play For
Rafael Mbeki · 12 May 2026
Last updated 17 May 2026. There are moments in a football season when the table stops being a collection of numbers and becomes something closer to a story, and with two games remaining in the 2025/26 Premier League campaign, the story at the top of the table is quite something to behold. Nottingham Forest sit in first position with 79 points from 36 matches, and breathing directly down their necks is Bournemouth in second, with 77 points from the same number of games. Two points separate these sides before they even set foot on the same pitch. When they do, on Sunday 24 May at the City Ground, it will be one of the most consequential Premier League fixtures in recent memory.
The Weight of the Moment
What people do not understand is that playing in a match of this magnitude is a completely different experience from any other game in the season. The air is different. The silence between passages of play carries a particular tension. I played in important matches across four different leagues, and I can tell you that the teams who handle that weight with composure, who do not allow the occasion to narrow their thinking and constrict their football, are almost always the ones who prevail. Forest, as the home side and the team currently in possession of first place, carry both the advantage of their supporters and the burden of expectation. Bournemouth arrive with the freedom, in relative terms, of having nothing to lose that they did not already stand to lose.
Forest's season has been built on a defensive excellence that is genuinely remarkable. Twenty-six goals conceded in 36 matches is a record of extraordinary discipline and collective intelligence. That is not simply a goalkeeper making saves or a centre-back winning headers. That is an entire team understanding, on every single occasion, where the danger is and how to eliminate it before it becomes real. Their goal difference of plus 42 tells you they have also been capable of producing attacking quality at the other end, 68 goals scored speaking to a team with genuine craft in the final third.
Bournemouth's Extraordinary Season
And yet, if anything, Bournemouth's numbers are even more impressive in one particular sense. They have scored 75 goals this season, more than any other side in the division, and their goal difference of plus 43 is actually superior to Forest's. Twenty-three wins, eight draws, five defeats. This is not a team that stumbled into a title race through the misfortune of others. This is a side that has played with real ambition and freedom throughout the campaign, creating and converting at a rate that demands genuine admiration.
The beauty of this fixture, then, is the tension between two different expressions of excellence. Forest have been constructed around the understanding that if you do not concede, you do not lose, and if you do not lose, you give yourself every opportunity to win. It is a philosophy I respect enormously, even if my instincts as a former striker always draw me toward the team trying to create rather than the team trying to prevent. Bournemouth have played with an openness and a generosity of spirit in attack that has been a genuine pleasure to observe this season. The collision of these two approaches on Sunday afternoon has the potential to produce something truly memorable.
What the Model Tells Us
The probability model assigns Nottingham Forest a 38.4 per cent chance of winning this match, which reflects, I think, the competitive reality of what is a genuinely balanced contest. The home advantage is real but not decisive against a Bournemouth side of this quality. A draw, which would be a result that suits neither side particularly, or a Bournemouth victory, which would send them to the top of the table, represent the outcomes the model considers collectively more likely than a Forest win. I do not place enormous weight on probabilities alone, because football has a way of making a mockery of all of them, but the numbers do reflect what the eye tells you, which is that this is an extraordinarily close contest between two sides who have both earned the right to be where they are.
Odds for this fixture have not yet been published at the time of writing, and the injury list carries no confirmed absences for either side, which means we must wait for team news closer to the weekend before drawing any firm conclusions about selection. Both managers will be aware that this is the kind of match where a single moment of individual brilliance can settle everything. You cannot coach that. You can prepare all week, organise your shape, rehearse your set-pieces, study your opponent, and then one player does something in the fifty-eighth minute that nobody in the stadium or the dugout anticipated, and the entire conversation changes.
The Broader Context
What gives this fixture an additional layer of intrigue is the way the rest of the table has shaped up. Third place sits on 65 points with two games to play, meaning the top two are already separated from the chasing pack by a considerable distance. This is not a match where either side can afford to think about goal difference or points tallies relative to those below them. This is a match where the Premier League title itself could, in real terms, be decided. A Forest win would almost certainly end the conversation. A Bournemouth win would put them in the position of favourites heading into the final day. A draw would leave everything unresolved and deliver an extraordinary final weekend.
In my time as a player, I learned that the matches which feel the largest before they are played can sometimes produce the most cautious, tentative football, as both sides retreat into fear of making the decisive error. I hope that is not what happens at the City Ground on Sunday. I hope both teams remember that they have reached this moment by playing with courage and conviction, and that the occasion demands they continue to do so. The beautiful game does not always reward the beautiful team. But when it does, on an afternoon as charged as this one promises to be, it is something to treasure.
Verdict and Prediction
This is a match I find genuinely difficult to call, which is itself a kind of compliment to both sides. Forest's defensive record gives them a structural advantage that is difficult to overstate, and the City Ground crowd will be extraordinary on a day of this importance. Bournemouth's attacking quality, however, is the finest in the division this season by the numbers, and they will not travel to Nottingham simply to defend and hope. My sense is that this match will be decided by the narrowest of margins, if it is decided at all. I lean, with considerable hesitation, toward a Forest home win. Their defensive solidity at this stage of the season, combined with home advantage in the most important match of the campaign, gives them a platform that Bournemouth will find very difficult to dismantle. But I would not be surprised by any outcome, and I mean that with complete sincerity.
Read full preview
Last updated 17 May 2026. There are moments in a football season when the table stops being a collection of numbers and becomes something closer to a story, and with two games remaining in the 2025/26 Premier League campaign, the story at the top of the table is quite something to behold. Nottingham Forest sit in first position with 79 points from 36 matches, and breathing directly down their necks is Bournemouth in second, with 77 points from the same number of games. Two points separate these sides before they even set foot on the same pitch. When they do, on Sunday 24 May at the City Ground, it will be one of the most consequential Premier League fixtures in recent memory.
The Weight of the Moment
What people do not understand is that playing in a match of this magnitude is a completely different experience from any other game in the season. The air is different. The silence between passages of play carries a particular tension. I played in important matches across four different leagues, and I can tell you that the teams who handle that weight with composure, who do not allow the occasion to narrow their thinking and constrict their football, are almost always the ones who prevail. Forest, as the home side and the team currently in possession of first place, carry both the advantage of their supporters and the burden of expectation. Bournemouth arrive with the freedom, in relative terms, of having nothing to lose that they did not already stand to lose.
Forest's season has been built on a defensive excellence that is genuinely remarkable. Twenty-six goals conceded in 36 matches is a record of extraordinary discipline and collective intelligence. That is not simply a goalkeeper making saves or a centre-back winning headers. That is an entire team understanding, on every single occasion, where the danger is and how to eliminate it before it becomes real. Their goal difference of plus 42 tells you they have also been capable of producing attacking quality at the other end, 68 goals scored speaking to a team with genuine craft in the final third.
Bournemouth's Extraordinary Season
And yet, if anything, Bournemouth's numbers are even more impressive in one particular sense. They have scored 75 goals this season, more than any other side in the division, and their goal difference of plus 43 is actually superior to Forest's. Twenty-three wins, eight draws, five defeats. This is not a team that stumbled into a title race through the misfortune of others. This is a side that has played with real ambition and freedom throughout the campaign, creating and converting at a rate that demands genuine admiration.
The beauty of this fixture, then, is the tension between two different expressions of excellence. Forest have been constructed around the understanding that if you do not concede, you do not lose, and if you do not lose, you give yourself every opportunity to win. It is a philosophy I respect enormously, even if my instincts as a former striker always draw me toward the team trying to create rather than the team trying to prevent. Bournemouth have played with an openness and a generosity of spirit in attack that has been a genuine pleasure to observe this season. The collision of these two approaches on Sunday afternoon has the potential to produce something truly memorable.
What the Model Tells Us
The probability model assigns Nottingham Forest a 38.4 per cent chance of winning this match, which reflects, I think, the competitive reality of what is a genuinely balanced contest. The home advantage is real but not decisive against a Bournemouth side of this quality. A draw, which would be a result that suits neither side particularly, or a Bournemouth victory, which would send them to the top of the table, represent the outcomes the model considers collectively more likely than a Forest win. I do not place enormous weight on probabilities alone, because football has a way of making a mockery of all of them, but the numbers do reflect what the eye tells you, which is that this is an extraordinarily close contest between two sides who have both earned the right to be where they are.
Odds for this fixture have not yet been published at the time of writing, and the injury list carries no confirmed absences for either side, which means we must wait for team news closer to the weekend before drawing any firm conclusions about selection. Both managers will be aware that this is the kind of match where a single moment of individual brilliance can settle everything. You cannot coach that. You can prepare all week, organise your shape, rehearse your set-pieces, study your opponent, and then one player does something in the fifty-eighth minute that nobody in the stadium or the dugout anticipated, and the entire conversation changes.
The Broader Context
What gives this fixture an additional layer of intrigue is the way the rest of the table has shaped up. Third place sits on 65 points with two games to play, meaning the top two are already separated from the chasing pack by a considerable distance. This is not a match where either side can afford to think about goal difference or points tallies relative to those below them. This is a match where the Premier League title itself could, in real terms, be decided. A Forest win would almost certainly end the conversation. A Bournemouth win would put them in the position of favourites heading into the final day. A draw would leave everything unresolved and deliver an extraordinary final weekend.
In my time as a player, I learned that the matches which feel the largest before they are played can sometimes produce the most cautious, tentative football, as both sides retreat into fear of making the decisive error. I hope that is not what happens at the City Ground on Sunday. I hope both teams remember that they have reached this moment by playing with courage and conviction, and that the occasion demands they continue to do so. The beautiful game does not always reward the beautiful team. But when it does, on an afternoon as charged as this one promises to be, it is something to treasure.
Verdict and Prediction
This is a match I find genuinely difficult to call, which is itself a kind of compliment to both sides. Forest's defensive record gives them a structural advantage that is difficult to overstate, and the City Ground crowd will be extraordinary on a day of this importance. Bournemouth's attacking quality, however, is the finest in the division this season by the numbers, and they will not travel to Nottingham simply to defend and hope. My sense is that this match will be decided by the narrowest of margins, if it is decided at all. I lean, with considerable hesitation, toward a Forest home win. Their defensive solidity at this stage of the season, combined with home advantage in the most important match of the campaign, gives them a platform that Bournemouth will find very difficult to dismantle. But I would not be surprised by any outcome, and I mean that with complete sincerity.
Nottingham Forest
Nottingham Forest drew 1-1 at home, extending their winless run to 4 matches. They conceded 5 goals across their last 5 outings yet managed a clean sheet probability of 0% this period. The draw marked their second consecutive 1-1 result, suggesting defensive instability despite holding Bournemouth; their 16th-place position reflects broader struggles, though the point halted immediate momentum loss.
Bournemouth
Bournemouth secured a 1-1 draw away, maintaining their strong form with 3 wins and 2 draws across 5 matches. They generated 1.20 xG and have scored 6 goals in their last 5 games while conceding just 3. The clean sheet percentage of 40% held firm here; their 6th-place standing underscores consistency, though dropping points on the road prevented a climb.
Run-in & context
The draw leaves Nottingham Forest 16th with mounting pressure; their defensive frailty and single win in 5 games suggests relegation-form trajectory. Bournemouth, now 6th, slipped 2 points from a potential win but remain in contention for European qualification. Our model indicated Bournemouth's superior form would likely prevail; the stalemate represented a missed opportunity for the visitors to consolidate their position.
Injury impact
Nottingham Forest are missing 8 players. Impact rating: 20/100.
Bournemouth have a near-full squad available.
Venue
The City Ground
Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England
Weather
Weather data unavailable for this venue.
Set pieces
- Nottingham ForestUnavailable
- Bournemouth1.0 corners / g
Match Probabilities
Full-Time Result
Both Teams to Score
Over/Under 2.5 Goals
Goals Markets
More Markets
Double Chance
Half-Time Result
BTTS in Both Halves
Probabilities are model estimates, not guarantees. Past performance does not guarantee future results. 18+ | BeGambleAware.org
Match Centre
Lineups, live stats, full odds comparison, and in-depth match data for Bournemouth vs Nottingham Forest.
SSR Ratings
| Metric | ||
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 1532 | 1470 |
| Attack | 1665 | 1514 |
| Defence | 1361 | 1417 |
| Goals Index | 1513 | 1504 |
| BTTS Index | 1571 | 1470 |
📝 Match Preview
Nottingham Forest vs Bournemouth Preview: Title Chasers Visit the City Ground With Everything to Play For
With the Premier League title race entering its final stretch, Nottingham Forest host a Bournemouth side just two points behind them at the top of the table. Rafa Mbeki delivers his assessment of what...
Form Guide (Last 5)
Head-to-Head
2 meetings| Market | Count | Rate | Streak |
|---|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes) | 1/2 | 50% | 1 |
| Over 2.5 | 0/2 | 0% | - |
| Over 1.5 | 2/2 | 100% | - |
| Under 2.5 | 2/2 | 100% | 2 |
| Bournemouth Clean Sheet | 1/2 | 50% | - |
| Nottingham Forest Clean Sheet | 0/2 | 0% | - |
Match History
Match facts at a glance
- Kickoff
- Venue
- The City Ground, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire · capacity 30,576
- Competition
- Premier League
- Last meeting
- Nottingham Forest 1-1 Bournemouth (24 May 2026)
- Head-to-head record
- Nottingham Forest 0W · 0D · 1L Bournemouth (1 meetings)
- Top scorer · Nottingham Forest
- Chris Wood (2 goals)
- Top scorer · Bournemouth
- Enes Ünal (1 goal)
- Most yellows · Nottingham Forest
- Dilane Bakwa (9 YC)
- Most yellows · Bournemouth
- Enes Ünal (6 YC)
- BTTS this season · Nottingham Forest
- 80%
- BTTS this season · Bournemouth
- 60%
- Our prediction
- Nottingham Forest to win (38%)
- Our value pick
- Nottingham Forest Win (+9.7% edge vs market)
Frequently Asked Questions
Curious how this prediction was produced? See our methodology.
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All predictions and analysis on this page are provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Odds displayed are sourced from third-party bookmakers and are subject to change. SportSignals may receive commission from bookmaker links on this page.
Last updated 27 minutes ago ·


