"He came off with a bit of a knee injury so is a major doubt at the moment," Blackburn head coach Michael O'Neill told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"He's still being assessed but he couldn't get through the game and we'll see how he goes over the next 48 hours."
Tronstad has only missed five of Rovers' 34 league games this season and is in his third campaign with the club.
"He's an experienced player and in the short space of time I've been here I've been impressed by his character and level of play so we 'll have to see how he goes over the next period of time, but he's a loss to the squad," added O'Neill.
'Bristol City defeat not a disaster for Blackburn'published at 17:17 GMT 25 February
17:17 GMT 25 February
Andy Bayes BBC Radio Lancashire sports editor
Image source, Shutterstock
Six minutes into Blackburn's clash with Bristol City, you could be forgiven for thinking that Michael O'Neill was on the way to a dream start of three wins out of three and the road to recovery was well and truly on course.
Yuki Ohashi scored against the Robins for the fourth time in three games, smashing home a cross from the right from Ryoya Morishita, but that only served to spring City into life.
It is important to give great credit to Gerhard Struber and his team. They were quicker to the ball and better on the ball. They scored twice before the interval and on another night they could have had a penalty or even two.
Food for thought for O'Neill, who was clear in his first-half assessment.
"We didn't compete, first of all, I didn't think. We didn't get pressure on the ball high enough up the pitch. We didn't win enough second balls," he told me after the game.
O'Neill also used the word "flat" to describe his side in the first 45 minutes and he was spot on.
Hayden Carter will be disappointed with his clearance which led to an equaliser from Emil Riis and Sean McLoughlin didn't cover himself in glory for the second goal scored by Scott Twine.
Riis led the line really well. His movement in the channels was intelligent, his link-up play was impressive. Horvat and Twine in the 'two number tens' roles equally showing their qualities.
You could tell Rovers were off the pace when Sondre Tronstad made way at half-time. An injury picked up two games earlier at QPR was a contributing factor.
At 2-1, the chance was always there to get back in to the game and on another night they could actually have won the game.
Ohashi and Moussa Baradji, with one of the final kicks of the game, were denied by the impressive Radek Vitek in the City goal. Subs Dion De Neve and Andri Gudjohnsen really ought to have done better with chances that came their way.
O'Neill has been keen to stress that victories won't be euphoric and defeats won't be devastating.
Draws for Leicester and West Brom mean it wasn't a disaster in terms of the Championship table. Rovers have moved a point closer to the drop zone, but earlier in the evening it was looking like it could have been more.
Next up, a trip to Derby and a reunion with former boss John Eustace and potentially up to five Rovers old boys. The Rams have lost three of their past four league games but undoubtedly will be tough opposition.
'Disappointing' first half cost Rovers - O'Neillpublished at 09:13 GMT 25 February
09:13 GMT 25 February
Media caption,
O'Neill: 'There are positives in the second half'
Blackburn Rovers boss Michael O'Neill said his side were made to pay for a "disappointing" first half in their 2-1 home defeat by Bristol City.
Rovers took an early lead through Yuki Ohashi but trailed at the break and ultimately fell to a first loss since O'Neill took charge earlier this month.
"We're disappointed with the result and we're disappointed with how we played in the first half as well," he told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"We just didn't seem to get to grips with them in the first 30-35 minutes, despite scoring a really good goal which I thought we would kick on from and we didn't.
"We didn't compete first of all, we didn't get pressure on the ball high enough up the pitch and we didn't win enough second balls and when we did we turned it over. We constantly put ourselves under pressure.
"I thought the reaction was good in the second half. We're disappointed not to take something from the game but there are positives from the second half.
"We threw everything we had available from an attacking sense on the pitch tonight but it just wasn't enough to find an equaliser."
Blackburn players have a clean sheet - O'Neillpublished at 16:18 GMT 23 February
16:18 GMT 23 February
Media caption,
'The first thing I said to the players when I came in is it's a clean slate' - O'Neill
Blackburn Rovers boss Michael O'Neill said his players will have "a clean sheet" to impress him - but not to expect too many wholesale changes.
One player benefitting under O'Neill's short reign so far is defender Harry Pickering, who has played both games under the Northern Irishman despite seeing limited game time earlier in the season.
However, fans will likely not being seeing a huge shift in personnel when the side host Bristol City on Tuesday (19:45 GMT).
"The first thing I said to the players when I came in is that there is a clean sheet," O'Neill told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"I had a chat with him [Pickering] and he understands that the Championship is about churning it out, about being robust, and he's given us a lot in the two games we've had so far.
"I know the other players on the outside are desperate to do that as well but I don't know the players well enough to be able to just chop and change the team and have comfort in doing that.
"Week by week, game by game, the players will earn our trust that little bit more."
Pick of the stats: Blackburn Rovers v Bristol Citypublished at 10:00 GMT 23 February
10:00 GMT 23 February
Image source, Opta
Blackburn will seek to put more ground between themselves and the Championship relegation zone when they host Bristol City on Tuesday (19:45 GMT).
Rovers are five points clear of the drop-zone after a dramatic derby win over Preston on Friday, their second straight victory, and have lost just two of their past nine at Ewood Park, earning 13 points.
Saturday's 1-0 defeat at Swansea saw the Robins slip to 12th, though still within four points of the play-off spots in a tightly-packed table.
City have won just one of their past five away games to earn four points and failed to score in three of those.
Following their 1-0 win in November, Blackburn are looking to complete a first league double over Bristol City since 2019/20.
Bristol City have lost their past two away league games against Blackburn, last losing more consecutive visits to Ewood Park between 1957 and 1967 (4).
Blackburn have won three of their past five league games against Bristol City (L2), more than they had in their previous 13 (W2 D5 L6).
Blackburn have won just one of their past nine midweek (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday) home league games (D3 L5), though it came in their most recent encounter against Sheffield Wednesday earlier this month.
Bristol City have won just one of their past six midweek (Tues, Weds, Thurs) league games (D2 L3), beating Portsmouth 5-0 on New Year's Day.
Night to remember as Rovers edge towards safetypublished at 17:54 GMT 22 February
17:54 GMT 22 February
Lindsey Lewis Fan writer
Image source, Getty Images
What a night - the sort of night any football fan lives for. I adored everything about Friday evening.
A busy Ewood Park under the lights for a game against local rivals - it wasn't always pretty but it didn't need to be. What it was, was 11 men playing in their correct positions, working together and working hard for each other. The work rate of many of the players, including the returning Harry Pickering, was exceptional.
At this stage, and with our current league position, it is about results. That being said, as the teams went in at half-time, I uttered: "I enjoyed that" - not something I've been able to say at home often this season.
As the game wore on Preston weren't without their chances, but then again nor were Rovers. It looked like a 0-0 draw would be the outcome, but a moment of brilliance from Eiran Cashin and a wonderful header from Yuki Ohashi sent the stadium into raptures, and me somewhere between feeling like I was going to pass out or vomit.
I couldn't be more delighted for Yuki. He is everything you could want in a player and a person representing your club. He has looked exhausted recently, but the substitute appearances seem to be allowing him to get back to his best.
The celebrations at the end will live long in the memory, and I truly hope they were another boost for the team heading into the final games of the season. We are, without doubt, in a relegation scrap, but have created a little bit of distance between us and the teams below us.
In just over a week Michael O'Neill has created a sense of cohesion, anticipation and hope. He seems to understand both the assignment and the fanbase, and his tenure has got off to the perfect start. Long may that continue.
Surefooted O'Neill plots path to safety for Roverspublished at 12:53 GMT 22 February
12:53 GMT 22 February
Adam Cottier BBC Radio 5 Live reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Blackburn manager Michael O'Neill has a 100 per cent win record with Rovers
Michael O'Neill lost his footing as he celebrated, lost in the raw emotion of a last- minute winner against local rivals Preston North End.
"Messy" was the way he described his leap for joy. That was once a word that could have been attributed to this Blackburn team he has inherited. Not now.
Prior to this game - O'Neill's first home game in charge - Blackburn had lost half of their 16 home league games.
Relegation felt a distinct possibility before his arrival, but Blackburn already appear to have found their footing under this new leadership after two wins out of two.
Blackburn's fans had craved a goal like Yuki Ohashi's extraordinary last-minute winner with the stakes so high. It was vindication for sticking by their team in times of trouble amid some joyless games this season.
The celebrations that followed his header underlined what it meant - scenes not seen at Ewood Park for some time. When the goalkeeper sprints the full length of the pitch to celebrate, you know it is a seismic moment.
One fan said to me afterwards that it had felt like "the Ewood of days gone by".
Rovers had grafted and persevered against a Preston team having their best season for several years. They had looked organised, standing up to the challenge with and without the ball.
As O'Neill put it, they had had to "dig in". In winning so late, you could say they had shown the character and attitude required in a relegation fight. They may be well clear of that fight soon if they continue to show such desire and quality.
Two wins from two is a perfect start for O'Neill, but it will feel like more than that to Rovers' fans. He has so far put some sparkle into the club at a time when they so desperately needed it.
The Northern Ireland manager - in his much-talked-about dual role - will hope the good feeling continues on Tuesday at home to Bristol City.
"I know what a fantastic home crowd this can be," said O'Neill, whose wife and daughter were also in attendance on Friday night.
'Ewood Park feels like a different place'published at 11:33 GMT 21 February
11:33 GMT 21 February
Andy Bayes BBC Radio Lancashire, sport editor
Image source, Getty Images
Three wins out of four for Blackburn Rovers, two out of two for the new boss and a local derby double for the season with a winner in the final minute of added-on time. Ewood Park feels like a different place all of a sudden.
Friday's 1-0 victory saw them move six points clear of the relegation places, and it's a firm 'over to you' to the other clubs down there this weekend.
As we get ever closer to the final dozen league games of the season, it's never going to be a given that the football on show is going to always be easy on the eye.
For long periods, Blackburn and Preston slogged it out for territory with largely defences on top. Two teams occupying similar systems trying to find that moment of quality that, in the end, took one of the last moments of the match to find.
The BBC match stats confirm that both goalkeepers made two saves each over the piece. But Rovers were certainly the more proactive after half-time. It was more a case of the final ball just not being quite right, which meant this game looked destined to be a goalless draw.
The winner was a flash of inspiration from a player who has had his fair share of stick this season. Yuki Ohashi is everything a football fan wants from a player. With a tireless work rate, chasing down lost causes, he's a real team player – but far too much has been expected of him this season due to issues with other strikers.
He had been running on empty for weeks after 21 successive league starts, leading the line for a side struggling to create much.
Three substitute appearances in the past four games look like it's helping to bring the freshness back. The way he took a couple of steps back, watching a high-hanging cross to guide a header into Dai Cornell's far corner, was the mark of a striker finding his touch again. It's only his third goal since early November, but such a crucial one.
Michael O'Neill has employed a 4-4-2 and a 3-5-2 in his first two games.
There doesn't seem to be an overcomplicated plan. He's selected players in arguably their best position and it's reaped rewards. He'll know his work is far from done, but watching them, it's pretty clear to me that Rovers have a nucleus of players that, if they stay fit, I think they'll have enough to be ok.
If they can choose Toth, Alebiosu, Carter, Cashin, Tronstad, Morishita and Gudjohnsen for all or the majority of the remaining games, that's enough quality to start with. Then they can worry about how many of that select group will be part of the plan going forward.
O'Neill is only in the hotseat until the season ends, but his first two matches back as a Championship manager must have whetted his appetite to make it a more permanent arrangement.
'A great way to win the game' - O'Neillpublished at 23:15 GMT 20 February
23:15 GMT 20 February
Media caption,
Michael O'Neill saw a much improved performance from his team after half time
Blackburn Rovers boss Michael O'Neill spoke to BBC Radio Lancashire after his side's 1-0 win over Preston North End:
"I'd have loved us to play scintillating football and be 3-0 up at half-time but it was never going to be that kind of game.
"We had to dig deep and I thought [in the] second half we shaded the game, I thought probably Preston shaded the first half.
"[In the] Second half I thought we did a lot of good things. We had other opportunities we possibly could have done a little better with.
"The game did look like it was going to drift to a 0-0, but that's why you dig in and you keep doing what you do, and obviously Yuki [Ohashi] comes up with a fantastic header and it's a great way to win the game."
I want to help Blackburn - O'Neillpublished at 15:29 GMT 19 February
15:29 GMT 19 February
Media caption,
'Every win is not euphoric and every defeat's not a disaster' - O'Neill
Blackburn Rovers and Northern Ireland boss Michael O'Neill has reassured fans of both teams that taking the dual role will not affect his performance.
O'Neill took on a short-term deal at relegation-threatened Blackburn on Friday, leading many to question how it would work alongside his responsibilities of international management.
"A lot of people have an opinion but a lot of people have not been in my shoes as an international manager," O'Neill told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"I have the opportunity here to come work with players on a daily basis on the training ground, which I love doing. I want to help this club.
"Given the time of the season, it's feasible for me to devote the same level of care and preparation that I would do to any job.
"So, to give people reassurance, I don't think either Blackburn Rovers fans or Northern Ireland fans should have any concerns."
Rovers will be without defender Lewis Miller in their upcoming game against Preston North End on Saturday (20:00 GMT) after the Australian sustained an Achilles injury.
Having undergone surgery, the 25-year-old will miss the remainder of the season as well as the World Cup.
"Football can be a cruel game at times and there is nothing more cruel than a player being denied that opportunity," O'Neill added.
"But he's still young. He'll get future opportunities, I'm sure of that."
Rainbow ball back in EFL anti-homophobia campaignpublished at 11:36 GMT 19 February
11:36 GMT 19 February
Image source, EFL
Image caption,
This is the third year the EFL have used the rainbow ball campaign
Puma's Rainbow ball will return to the English Football League as part of an on-going campaign against discrimination and homophobia.
The special edition rainbow ball was introduced in 2024 to mark LGBTQ+ History Month and will be used at every EFL game from 20 February until 1 March.
Manufacturers Puma will make a donation to Football v Homophobia for every goal scored with their rainbow ball across the Championship, League One and League Two.
The donations will help support education against homophobia and promote inclusion across the season.
The EFL have released a video, external to coincide with the campaign which features a Preston North End fan who was charged with a hate crime following homophobic chanting during an FA Cup fixture against Chelsea.
The rainbow ball will also feature in EFL partner EA Sports' FC 26 video game.
"The rainbow ball is a powerful symbol of the values we uphold across the EFL all season long," EFL chief executive officer Trevor Birch said.
"It not only reflects our longstanding commitment to ensuring the League is representative of all its diverse communities, but also reminds us that we all have a role to play in creating an environment in which everyone feels they truly belong."
Pick of the stats: Blackburn Rovers v Preston North Endpublished at 09:32 GMT 19 February
09:32 GMT 19 February
Blackburn Rovers have the chance to move six points clear of the Championship's relegation zone on Friday before their rivals play on Saturday.
Victory over Preston would also give them a league double over their Lancashire neighbours.
Preston know a win would push them back into the play-off places.
Following their 2-1 win in this season's reverse fixture (November 2025), Blackburn will be aiming to record a league double over Preston for just the third time since the turn of the millennium (also in 2000-01 and 2021-22).
Preston have only lost two of their past nine away league games against Blackburn (W5 D2), although one of those defeats did come in this exact fixture last season, losing in January 2025 (2-1).
Blackburn have won two of their past three league games (L1), as many as they did across the previous 16 matches. Following their 3-1 win at QPR last time out, Blackburn will be looking to win consecutive Championship games for the first time since early November.
Preston North End have won just one of their past five away league games (D2 L2), a 2-0 win over Bristol City in January.
Only bottom-placed Sheffield Wednesday (4) have earned fewer points at home in the Championship this season than Blackburn's 14 (W3 D5 L8), though Rovers won their most recent home league match (1-0 vs Sheffield Wednesday).
New manager bounce in full force at Roverspublished at 10:08 GMT 16 February
10:08 GMT 16 February
Andy Bayes Sports editor, BBC Radio Lancashire
Image source, Getty Images
If there's such a thing as a 'new manager bounce', this was as good an example as you're likely to see.
This was a meeting of a side harbouring play-off ambitions against one that was struggling to lift the ever-increasing gloom, to create chances, never mind goals. The result – an away win, the visitors scoring three times in a game for only the second time this season.
This was the Championship at its unpredictable best in all its glory.
After 11 days searching for a new head coach, Rovers settled on Michael O'Neill and his unique way of being able to job share club and country management. Add in the return of Phil Jones to the club where he made his name and Steven Davis, another up-and-coming young coach, and things felt immediately different at Loftus Road. Like a dark cloud had been lifted.
The assumption was that O'Neill might take a watching brief. It couldn't have been further from the truth. He was quick to rightly heap praise on coach Damien Johnson for the groundwork, which included a change of formation to select two strikers and bring back that familiar old friend, 4-4-2.
After the initial scruffy start, the goals scored at Loftus Road were of the highest order.
January capture Mathias Jorgensen helped himself to a first-half brace; the creation of the first was sensational. The quality of the ball in from the right by Ryoya Morishita was exquisite. Steered to perfection in between the defenders and the goalkeeper, the sort of service that strikers crave.
After a well-taken leveller from Koki Saito, the character will have been tested. Would Rovers go into their shell and feel sorry for themselves, or would they take the bull by the horns?
Sondre Tronstad is the type who would tackle a bull; in this case, it was actually Saito who he dispossessed before sending Jorgensen through for a little dink past Joe Walsh. How they go about replacing Tronstad when he leaves the club in the summer is anyone's guess. He's been the heartbeat of the team.
Without being overly greedy, the first half could have been even better. Referee Stephen Martin deemed Walsh's challenge on Andri Gudjohnsen to be a fair one and turned down a penalty appeal. Whether it's 'soft' or not, or he was playing for it, I thought they had a case.
Rangers' Isaac Hayden was also more than a shade fortunate to only see yellow for a late lunge on Tronstad.
O'Neill and his new-look staff made a half-time change with Lewis Miller on at right-back. Within five minutes he was involved in the build-up for Tronstad to cross for a totally unmarked Morishita to head home, but within four minutes Miller hit the deck, off the ball. Replays showed it was an Achilles tendon injury.
In World Cup year, you cross your fingers for the best for the big Aussie. If it's a rupture, he's looking at a worst-case scenario of a year in rehab.
So three points in the bag, the new boss off to a flier. The bottom three a distant memory, but one swallow doesn't make a summer. This has to be the springboard for a sustained upturn in fortunes.
It's also no coincidence that the spine of the team being close to full tilt again can only serve to improve matters further. Hayden Carter's been immense since his return. The full 101 minutes played by him is a breakthrough moment.
With a couple more slices of luck on the injury front, Rovers could be heading for happier times.
O'Neill concerned about Miller achilles injurypublished at 18:30 GMT 15 February
18:30 GMT 15 February
Image source, Getty Images
New Blackburn Rovers head coach Michael O'Neill says he is concerned about the injury suffered by Lewis Miller in his side's win at Queens Park Rangers.
Australia defender Miller was stretched off early into the second half, just minutes after coming on in the 3-1 victory.
It appears that the 25-year-old, who has played every game since his arrival from Hibernian, has damaged his achilles.
"It does look like a serious injury and he's in a boot, so we can only wish that it's not as serious as it looks," O'Neill told the club's website, external.
"He's in a lot of pain and had to be stretchered off despite nobody being near him. It looks like an achilles situation and we hope that there's good news and it's not as severe as maybe we fear."
O'Neill pleased with Rovers' desire in win at QPRpublished at 18:24 GMT 14 February
18:24 GMT 14 February
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Blackburn celebrate Ryoya Morishita's goal in their 3-1 win at QPR
New Blackburn boss Michael O'Neill praised his players' desire after they marked his arrival with a 3-1 victory at QPR to clamber out of the bottom three.
O'Neill's new side recorded an away victory for the first time since November, with Mathias Jorgensen's first-half double sandwiching Koki Saito's response for the home side before Ryoya Morishita sealed the points with a header early in the second period.
"It was a great result for us – this is a difficult place to come," O'Neill told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"The work was done by (caretaker manager) Damien Johnson, he prepared the team and picked the team and did a fantastic job. The credit really lies with him.
"We got a great response from the players and I thought the level of performance merited three points. Our reaction to going level was good and the desire was the biggest thing.
"It's a positive step but we have to make sure we take another positive step next week against Preston."
Georgia v Northern Ireland to be behind closed doorspublished at 22:30 GMT 13 February
22:30 GMT 13 February
Andy Gray BBC Sport NI Journalist
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Northern Ireland were promoted to League B for the upcoming campaign
Northern Ireland's opening Nations League game in Georgia in September will be played behind closed doors.
Northern Ireland were drawn with Hungary, Ukraine and Georgia in League B2.
NI will start their campaign in Georgia on 25 September, however it will be played without supports after the Georgian FA were hit with sanctions after multiple breaches of Uefa regulations and crowd disorder from a game against Armenia last year.
Patrick Nelson, the chief executive at the Irish FA, said it was "naturally disappointing".
"We will be liaising closely with all relevant stakeholders in the lead-up to the game," he said.
"While it is naturally disappointing that our supporters will be unable to attend and back the team in person, the priority remains the safety and security of everyone involved."
Northern Ireland fans spokesperson Gary McAllister said they were only informed of the issue by Football Supporters Europe, and a number of fans had booked flights to Georgia when the fixtures were released in the morning because they did not know the game would likely be behind closed doors.
"Our criticism of this would be that no one advised us of this," McAllister said.
"I know that some fans have already booked their travel for Georgia. I think there has to be better processes in place to advise people, but I would also argue that punishing the innocent because of the guilty is entirely wrong.
"Northern Ireland fans are being punished for the actions of Georgian fans. I think that is an issue that needs to be revisited by Uefa."
When contacted by BBC Sport, and Irish FA spokesperson said: "We recognise our fans' frustration on this matter.
"We were not informed about this ahead of the fixtures being announced and have raised the matter with Uefa."
'It's such a risk' - Rovers fans react to O'Neill appointmentpublished at 17:01 GMT 13 February
17:01 GMT 13 February
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Michael O'Neill also held a dual managerial role while in charge of Stoke City
Michael O'Neill is the new Blackburn Rovers head coach after being appointed on a short-term deal until the end of the season.
The 56-year-old will continue to lead Northern Ireland for their World Cup play-off tie against Italy next month while also trying to steer Blackburn away from the Championship relegation zone.
Is this the right appointment and will O'Neill's dual role work?
We asked Rovers fans for their views and here are some of their opinions:
Luke: Really unsure about this dual role as a manager. I feel in the current situation, deep in a relegation battle, we need all his focus on just Rovers.
Simon: What concerns me is if you give a manager a contract to the season end, what incentive is there for him to keep them up? I like the look of the backroom team.
Steven: This is how far as a club we have sunk. No disrespect to Michael but come on a part-time appointment? We can no longer attract top people to our club because the investment from the owners is minimal and their communication is non-existent. All we can hope for is that soon they will sell us to someone who will care.
Neil: He did the same at Stoke and kept them up and even took them to the top end of the table. The part-time moniker sounds like he's only going to be there three days out of seven, which is far from the truth. All it means is during international breaks he'll be with Northern Ireland when we wouldn't have a game anyway and that's where his coaching staff take over.
Roverite95: Which club would appoint a part-time manager in the midst of a relegation battle? Shambles!!!
Lesley: Keeping us up is the main priority, sort out the defence on set-plays and get the respect of the players, and stress the importance of game management, especially in the last 15 minutes.
Ed: Pep Guardiola wouldn't keep Rovers up. Apparently the Rovers job is part-time now.
Chris: We'll only be able to judge at the end of the season but we've got to get behind him and his backroom staff for the rest of the season. Bringing Phil Jones on board could be a masterstoke.
Iain: This is such a risk to have someone with a split focus in charge as we battle to beat the drop, but I am somewhat encouraged by the new first-team coaches joining as well. I don't think fans are surprised though and we have all had enough of the ownership now. No decision surprises us anymore.
Finley: It's definitely a 50/50 appointment, especially with the Northern Ireland job as well. But to be honest I think he can definitely do the job and I'm sure he'll keep us up and we can progress and, who knows, play-offs next season?