Aston Villa are European champions. Unai Emery’s side produced a composed, clinical performance at Tupras Stadyumu in Istanbul on Wednesday, beating SC Freiburg 3-0 to lift the UEFA Europa League trophy. Youri Tielemans, Emiliano Buendia, and Morgan Rogers all scored as Villa led 2-0 at halftime and never looked threatened, finishing a tournament in which they went unbeaten through eight league phase matches. Freiburg, seventh in the league phase standings going into the final, were overrun in every attacking metric and never tested Emiliano Martinez.

Key Moments
- 5′, Philipp Treu picked up the first yellow card of the final for a holding foul, setting a cautious tone early for Freiburg.
- 41′, Youri Tielemans opened the scoring late in the first half, giving Villa a lead they would never relinquish.
- 45′, Emiliano Buendia doubled the advantage in first-half stoppage time to put the game beyond Freiburg heading into the break.
- 58′, Morgan Rogers added a third early in the second half, completing the rout and ending any lingering doubt about the destination of the trophy.
- 61′, Freiburg made a double substitution, bringing off Lienhart and Hofler as Julian Schuster attempted to reshape his side.
Tactical Breakdown
The stats told a clear story. Villa generated 2.08 xG against Freiburg’s 0.22, fired 17 shots to Freiburg’s four, and won eight corners to one. In a final, those numbers represent total control. Both teams lined up in a 4-2-3-1 and held possession almost evenly (Villa 49%, Freiburg 51%), but that surface-level balance masked a massive difference in threat. Villa attacked with precision through the channels, with Rogers and Buendia combining effectively to exploit space behind Freiburg’s midfield block. Tielemans screened intelligently and carried into the final third, while Ollie Watkins kept Freiburg’s center-backs occupied.
Emery’s key adjustment came not with a substitution but in how Villa managed the second half after Rogers made it 3-0 just past the hour. Rather than chasing more, Villa managed the game intelligently, brought on Victor Lindelof in the 66th minute to shore up the midfield, and allowed Freiburg to retain the ball in non-threatening areas. Freiburg’s five offsides registered across 90 minutes reflect how disconnected their forward line became from the rest of the team.
Freiburg simply lacked the tools to hurt Villa. Only two shots on target all game, a goalkeeper who faced just three genuine saves, and an xG of 0.22: Julian Schuster’s side were outclassed rather than just outscored. Their double substitution at the hour mark (Lienhart and Hofler off) came too late to change the structure, and removing Grifo and Kübler in the 73rd minute felt like Schuster accepting the outcome and managing minutes rather than chasing the game.
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Verdict
Aston Villa’s UEFA Europa League title is the club’s first European trophy since their 1982 European Cup win and represents the high point of the Unai Emery era at Villa Park. Going into the final as second seeds in the league phase standings with 21 points from seven wins, Villa were the form team of the competition, and they confirmed that status emphatically. For Freiburg, a runners-up finish in a European final is a remarkable achievement for a club of their size, even if Wednesday night was not their evening.