aston villa

Aston Villa overturned their one-goal deficit from the first leg with a controlled, clinical display at Villa Park. Ollie Watkins levelled the tie before half-time, Emiliano Buendía’s penalty early in the second half put Villa in command, and John McGinn’s quickfire brace late on sealed a 4–0 win and a 4–1 aggregate victory. The result is straightforward, as is the reward, Villa are through to the Europa League final in Istanbul.

Aston Villa with clinical win

Villa set the tone by attacking the Holte End and forcing Forest onto the back foot from the first minute. Buendía’s movement and creativity unlocked the defence; his run and pass created the opening for Watkins to nod home and erase Forest’s slender lead from the first leg, the second half began with a VAR-checked penalty after a shirt pull on Pau Torres; Buendía converted to make it 2–0 and swing the tie firmly Villa’s way.

Forest, hampered by injuries and limited options from the bench, struggled to regain a foothold. Manager Vítor Pereira’s attempts to inject energy, including bringing on Ryan Yates, which failed to change the momentum. As Forest pushed forward, Villa exploited the spaces left behind, enabling Morgan Rogers’ deliveries and McGinn’s timely finishing proved decisive, the Villa captain finished twice in quick succession to complete the rout.

Key performers

For Aston Villa it is important to recognise that the whole team working so well but there were some standout performances.

Emiliano Buendía, was the creative engine, his skill produced the assist for the opener, and he calmly converted the penalty that put Villa in control.

Ollie Watkins generally, is always a threat in the box; but his link up and movement were on point especially for his opener, which was perfectly timed and clinical.

Villa captain John McGinn, returned from absence to score a brace, showing composure and a knack for finishing in the corners. It was a true captain’s display, courageous, leading from the front, really putting that pressure on Nottingham Forest.

Victor Lindelöf, his normal position is playing in the back line, a surprise midfield pick who provided solidity and control in the middle of the park, he did not for any part of the game look like he was out of place.

Nottingham Forest’s bench was notably weakened by injuries, Morgan Gibbs-White was an unused substitute, that lack of depth showed as the game progressed and Villa’s intensity did not drop.

Unai Emery set Villa up to press high and move the ball quickly into the channels. Buendía’s role between the lines created overloads, while Watkins and McGinn timed their runs to exploit Forest’s defensive gaps. Forest attempted to sit in and absorb pressure early on, but once the penalty went against them, they were forced to chase the game, and that opened them up to Villa’s counter-attacking threats. Emery’s side managed the game tempo well, switching between patient possession and sudden bursts of forward play.

Istanbul beckons

Villa will face Freiburg in the Europa League final on May 20 in Istanbul. For Unai Emery, this is another step toward a competition he has dominated in recent years; he now heads into a final with a team that looks comfortable in big European nights. For Forest, the defeat compounds a season of near-misses in cup competitions and highlights the impact of injuries on a squad fighting on multiple fronts.

In the build up there was talk of the potential outcomes, yet on the night there were no theatrics, no late drama, Villa were simply better across both legs. They neutralised Forest’s first-leg advantage, controlled the second match, and finished with a convincing scoreline. The result underlines Emery’s European pedigree and leaves Villa one game from continental silverware.

Featured image via YouTube screenshot/TNT Sports Football

By Faz Ali


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