Aston Villa were beaten 4-2 by Olympiakos in the first leg of their Europa Conference League semi-final as Ayoub El Kaabi’s hat-trick stunned Villa Park.
Unai Emery’s side had started the game as favourites to win their first European trophy since 1982 but El Kaabi proved too good as the Greek side raced into a two-goal lead and though Ollie Watkins and Moussa Diaby dragged Villa level, the striker was not done.
He scored his third from the penalty spot after Douglas Luiz was adjudged to have handballed inside the box before Santiago Hezze’s shot made it four when it deflected off the back of Ezri Konsa and Robin Olsen was unable to keep the ball out.
There was even the frustration of Douglas Luiz missing a late chance to reduce the deficit from the penalty spot before next week’s return leg.
Tottenham’s Premier League defeat to Chelsea means Champions League football is likely to come to Villa Park next season. But these supporters were dreaming of a trophy later this month. There is a lot of work to do in Greece if that dream is to become a reality.
What went wrong for Villa?
Olsen was deputising for the suspended Emiliano Martinez in Aston Villa’s goal and the temptation would be to blame the back-up goalkeeper for the early uncertainty but he saved from the offside Vicente Iborra early on and was left exposed for the first two goals.
Matty Cash’s trailing leg played El Kaabi onside for what turned out to the opener, overturned following a VAR check. The striker was then through again, Villa’s defence unlocked as a result of a clever pass by on-loan Wolves man Daniel Podence.
This time it was Lucas Digne failing to track the run with Clement Lenglet, included ahead of Pau Torres, unable to cover. It left the expectant home support at Villa Park in a state of shock with Emery continually preaching calm to his panicking players.
A response was required and while Villa continued to be too open for comfort, the chances did come. Leon Bailey thought he had won a penalty only for the referee to wave away his claims but there was no denying Watkins, finishing well following a slick move.
Villa’s supporters booed the officials off at half-time, having also been denied an early goal because a soft foul by Lenglet on Iborra had been spotted, but the onus was on the team to turn it around. The timing of Watkins’ goal at least brought momentum and belief.
When Diaby’s attempt snuck past goalkeeper Kostas Tzolakis from a narrow angle, Villa were dreaming of that first-leg lead but their night unravelled once more. Douglas Luiz threw an arm up inside the box and El Kaabi completed his hat-trick from the spot.
Worse was to follow and on this occasion Olsen was culpable. Hezze’s shot was deflected off the back of Konsa and although the goalkeeper was wrong-footed, he got a hand to the ball and agonisingly failed to keep it out. Villa had lost the game twice.
The ignominy, in front of the watching Prince William, was not yet over. David Carmo’s foul on Jhon Duran presented Douglas Luiz with the chance to score from the spot but his kick struck the outside of the post. Not their night. Perhaps not their trophy now.
Aston Villa’s remaining fixtures
May 5: Brighton (A) – Premier League, kick-off 2pm
May 9: Olympiakos (A) – Europa Conference League semi-final second leg, kick-off 8pm
May 13: Liverpool (H) – Premier League, kick-off 8pm
May 19: Crystal Palace (A) – Premier League, kick-off 4pm
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