Steve Cooper not thinking about his future as Nottingham Forest lose to Leeds

Nottingham Forest boss Steve Cooper insisted he was not worried for his future after a 2-1 defeat at Leeds extended his side’s winless run to eight matches.

Forest slumped to a fourth straight league defeat on the road and sit above the bottom three on goal difference alone after letting slip the lead against their relegation rivals at Elland Road.

Orel Mangala’s first goal for Forest gave them an early lead, but Leeds hit back with first-half strikes from Jack Harrison and Luis Sinisterra to deservedly clinch a crucial win.

Asked if he was worried about his position, Cooper said: “I respect the question and I understand it 100 per cent, but I’m not that guy that thinks like that.

“I always think of the greater good of the club, so any sort of worry, disappointment, frustration I’m feeling right now is the fact that Forest have lost a game they could have done so much better in.

“That’s just the way I’m wired. I’ve trained myself just to focus on the stuff I can control and work as hard as I can every single day, believe in my work and stay true to it. That’s just where I’m at.”

Cooper, who has retained the support of the majority of Forest fans up to now, said he still believed in himself and his players and confirmed there had been no contact from the club’s board.

“I’ll forever be grateful to the supporters and that’s why winning games feels so joyous and losing games hurts,” he added.

Steve Cooper, right, consoles defender Felipe after defeat to Leeds
Steve Cooper consoles defender Felipe after defeat to Leeds (David Davies/PA)

“That’s how I think, trying to do what’s right and good for the club. I just don’t think about myself.

“The more support I get, the more determined and paranoid I get about not letting them down.”

Leeds climbed out of the bottom three and up five places to 13th, two points above the drop zone after collecting 10 points from boss Javi Gracia’s six games in charge.

Gracia said: “I’m very pleased because the performance was really good and I think we got a good result, but first, the performance was good.

“I think we should have killed the game before. We didn’t do it and after had to suffer at the end of the game.

Leeds manager Javi Gracia gestures to his team during victory over Nottingham Forest
Leeds manager Javi Gracia gestures to his team during victory over Nottingham Forest (David Davies/PA)

Gracia has a 50 per cent win ratio after victories over Southampton, Wolves and Forest since replacing Jesse Marsch in February.

“I try to do my job,” the former Malaga, Watford and Valencia manager added.

“I try to help the players understand every single game how to manage the game and have more options to get a good result. That’s my job. But the protagonists are the players.”

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