The second coming of Forest keeper Sels
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Matz Sels has kept nine clean sheets this season â more than anyone else in the Premier League
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A year ago Matz Sels was on the verge of a low-key move to Nottingham Forest.
The 2024 January transfer window was overshadowed by the threat of Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR), meaning spending and excitement plummeted.
There were only 17 permanent deals done by Premier League clubs.
Yet Selzâs move still did not make BBC Sportâs round-up of the âmost interestingâ transfers of an underwhelming window.
He just looked like yet another player joining a club that seemed to be in a constant cycle of chaos.
One season at Newcastle United nine years ago was his only previous experience in England but Forest spent ÂŁ5m to make Belgium goalkeeper their third No.1 of the season.
Sels accepted the gamble of leaving the relative comfort of life at Strasbourg in Ligue 1 to parachute into Forestâs relegation battle.
His debut in a 1-1 draw at Bournemouth on 4 February left his new side third bottom of the league, three points from safety.
The threat of a points deduction over PSR was also looming over Forest and they were indeed docked four points a month after he joined.
It was not an optimistic scenario, but fast forward a year and the gamble has patently paid off.
Forest go back to Vitality Stadium on Saturday in third place, just six points behind leaders Liverpool and with Sels leading the race for the Golden Glove with nine clean sheets.
He is part of the third-best defence in the division and has been a huge influence in what has been an incredible turnaround.
âI knew when I signed they were searching for a goalkeeper and I knew it was to keep the team in the league,â he tells BBC Sport.
âWhen you take a goalkeeper in January, most of the time itâs when the team is in difficulties.
âTo play in the Premier League, thatâs why I wanted to come back â to live the dream a little bit â and Iâm really happy with this season.
âEven when I came last season it was not so easy but I knew the situation when I signed. You cannot see too far forward, but you try to see if it was a good step or not.
âNobody thought it would be like we are doing now, but there is a lot of quality in the squad â I saw it when I signed.â
Selsâ impact in the year since joining is in contrast to his 2016 move to St Jamesâ Park, having been a champion in Belgium with Gent.
He made just 14 appearances for the Magpies, nine in the Championship, and when Rafael Benitezâs side returned to the Premier League in 2017 he joined Anderlecht on loan.
âWhen I came to Newcastle it was not so easy. It was my first time abroad and I was 22 years old â I donât want to say I was a child but I was still really young,â he says.
âSometimes it works out, sometimes it does not work so well. Sometimes a bad experience makes you stronger. Everyone in life has difficult periods â itâs how you cope with it. Iâm here now and Iâm really happy.â
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
Nottingham Forest travel to Bournemouth on Saturday with both sides mounting an unlikely push for European qualification
Sels is also content off the pitch, with his wife and two young children settled in England.
âMy transfer was on the deadline day and you need to turn over your whole life,â he adds.
âWe were in France for five-and-a-half years â my eldest child was in the nursery and starting to speak some French. Now my eldestâs English is better than mine!
âIf the family doesnât feel well, at one certain moment itâs going to turn because the family will want to move back to Belgium or somewhere else.
âItâs an important thing that the family are feeling well so you can play well on the pitch.â
Sels, who won the French League Cup in five-and-a-half seasons with Strasbourg, has certainly been doing that.
With quality centre-backs Murillo and Nikola Milenkovic in front of him, Forest have conceded just 22 goals in 22 games â a tally bettered only by Liverpool and Arsenal.
Selsâ save percentage is 74.4 â the best of any goalkeeper who has played more than seven games in the Premier League this season.
His excellence has been a key part of the turnaround by a Forest side that only survived, officially, on the final day of the last campaign.
The only points they have dropped in their last eight games came in a 1-1 draw against leaders Liverpool when he was outstanding, including brilliant saves to deny Diogo Jota and Mohamed Salah.
Manager Nuno Espirito Santo has so far refused to entertain any questions about qualifying for the Champions League â or the recent talk of a title challenge.
Yet Sels concedes the perspective has changed as Forest show no signs of faltering.
âWe cannot say any anymore itâs about staying in the league,â he concedes.
âWe try to do everything to aim as high as possible but if you want to be there at the top you need to keep teams like Manchester City, Aston Villa and Newcastle behind you.
âItâs still too early [to talk about the Champions League]. We cannot win all the games, we are going to concede goals, but itâs how we cope with that.
âTo speak about the title is out of the context. We are trying to achieve something great but we will see at the end of the season.â