TL;DR Sunderland suffered a heavy 5-0 defeat to Nottingham Forest at the Stadium of Light, conceding four goals in the first half. Despite a strong start, Sunderland's inability to capitalize on chances led to a disappointing performance.
Regis Le Bris, manager of AFC Sunderland, looks on as his team concedes four goals during the first half of the Premier League match between Sunderland and Nottingham Forest at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland, United Kingdom, on April 24, 2026. (Photo by Scott Llewellyn/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images
Regis Le Bris, manager of AFC Sunderland , looks on as his team concedes four goals during the first half of the Premier League match between Sunderland and Nottingham Forest at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland, United Kingdom, on April 24, 2026. (Photo by Scott Llewellyn/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images
I hate the automation; the robotic and soulless droid-like phrasing, but AI was invented to write about games like that â simply to spare Sunderland-supporting writers from reliving the sheer gutlessness of it all.
RĂ©gis Le Brisâ sides have never heard of the word âcapitulationâ. Indeed, âThere isnât a direct translation for it in French,â I wrote, before discovering that there actually is, and itâs literally like-for-like: âla capitulationâ.
Regardless, the point remains. Le Brisâ sides rarely get walked over and our success both this term and last has been built on principled discipline, rigid strategy and undying belief.
Is that thirty-minute showing what dropping a monumental bollock feels like? Itâs been so long that Iâd forgotten the sensation, as had thousands of others as we collectively headed to the bars for a premature half-time pint.
I think we took the phrase *Welcome to Sunderland* a little too literally. âHere, lads. Hereâs four goals â three of which will come in a quicfire six minutes. Make yourselves at home, feel free to walk around naked, eat our food and maybe invite your mates over.â
Paradoxically, for the most part, we werenât as poor as the scoreline suggested. But we were also spanked 5-0, and made a string of calamitous errors. Football, eh?
For the opening fifteen minutes, we were brilliant, and the fluidity in our build-up was some of the best itâs been this season, with intricate flicks and neat interplay between , Enzo Le FĂ©e and . also got in on the act with a marauding run that resulted in an âalmostâ.
That was a microcosm of our display; the story of our evening, and our profligacy came back to bite us on the arse.
While we failed to take our chances, typically, Nottingham Forest were clinical with every sight of goal. Six shots on target, five goals. There was a fragility to Sunderland after that opener, and Vitor Pereiraâs side sensed that.
After their midweek rendezvous in Europe last Thursday, the Europa League semi-finalists hadnât lost sight of the precariousness of their domestic situation as they looked to create further breathing room between themselves and the perils of the Championship.
They played with urgency and every time they got forward, there was a genuine threat through , (who was excellent, by the way), and Igor Jesus.
A special mention to the Forest fans, who brought with them arguably the best chant any set of away supporters this season: *âHe walks on the Trent, he walks on the TrentâŠIgor Jesus, he walks on the Trent!â*
Weâve come to believe in miracles of our own on Wearside in recent times, so credit where credit is due.
After half time, our fans embodied what it means to be a Sunderland supporter. Following last weekâs comeback, and the âTil the endâ mentality thatâs become such a staple of our identity of late, we still managed to instil a semblance of belief in a team that was up against it.
Unfortunately, âs disallowed goal, which took an age for a VAR review, was enough to suck the life out of the place, and âs stoppage time goal was just a reminder that it wasnât our day.
These results happen. Itâs how we respond thatâll teach us more about this squad â as well as Le Brisâ and âs leadership.