Aston Villa Reach Europa League Final After 4-1 Aggregate Win Over Nottingham Forest

Aston Villa are through to the Europa League final.
The club confirmed on 7 May 2026 that they had eliminated Nottingham Forest over two legs, securing a 4-1 aggregate victory in an all-Premier League semi-final. Villa will now contest the final of European club football's second-tier competition, with their opponent to be determined by the remaining semi-final fixture.
The result marks a significant moment for a club whose last major European final appearance came decades ago. Reaching a continental showpiece represents a genuine achievement, particularly against a Forest side that finished the season strongly in domestic competition. The 4-1 aggregate margin reflects Villa's dominance across both legs, though the sources do not provide a leg-by-leg breakdown of how that advantage was accumulated.
What the semi-final delivered
The two Telegram dispatches from The Athletic, both dated 7 May 2026, confirm the outcome in clear terms. Villa's progression was not in doubt by the time the second leg concluded; the aggregate margin of four goals indicates a commanding performance across both meetings. Both posts frame the result as a substantive achievement, with the earlier dispatch noting the competitive nature of an all-Premier League semi-final before the aggregate was confirmed.
What the sources do not specify is which leg produced what margin, who the goal scorers were, or whether Villa held the advantage throughout both matches or built it across the two games. The semi-final, for readers relying solely on these dispatches, resolves into a single outcome: Villa advance, Forest are eliminated, four goals separated the two clubs over 180 minutes of football.
Premier League concentration in European competition
The all-Premier League semi-final represents something worth examining on its own terms. Two clubs from the same domestic league occupying both last-four spots in a European competition is not unprecedented, but it is not routine either. The Premier League's financial structure — its broadcast revenue, its wage bills, its ability to attract and retain talent — creates conditions in which multiple clubs can compete seriously across multiple fronts simultaneously.
For Villa, the run to the final reflects a trajectory that has seen the club invest significantly since their return to the upper reaches of English football. For Forest, the semi-final exit ends what had been a campaign with European promise. Both clubs competed in the same domestic league, shared broadly similar resources compared to the very top tier, and produced two performances sufficient to determine which would advance.
The prize at stake
A Europa League final offers more than symbolic satisfaction. The winner gains automatic entry to the following season's Champions League — a prize worth significant revenue in broadcast income, commercial partnerships, and the prestige that attracts further recruitment. For Villa, a club rebuilding its European identity after a long period away from continental competition, reaching the final represents both a financial opportunity and a statement of intent.
The identity of Villa's opponent in the final remains open based on the sources reviewed. The remaining semi-final will determine whether Villa face another Premier League side, a club from another European league, or a side whose domestic campaign has followed a different rhythm entirely. That variable shapes how Villa approach the final weeks of their season — whether they enter as favourites, as underdogs, or as something in between.
Looking ahead
Villa's immediate challenge is managing the fixture congestion that accompanies a deep European run combined with domestic obligations. The sources do not detail Villa's league position or remaining fixtures, but balancing the two competitions is a structural reality for any club that advances this far in May. Whether Unai Emery's side can sustain their form across both fronts, or whether the domestic schedule will force rotation and risk, is not answered by the dispatches on hand.
What is confirmed is that Villa are in the final. That fact alone justifies the coverage. The granular details — goal scorers, match dates, tactical analysis — will arrive with subsequent wire reporting. For now, the story is straightforward: a Premier League club has reached a European final, and they earned the right to be there.
This article was written from two Telegram dispatches from The Athletic's official channel, both dated 7 May 2026, confirming Aston Villa's 4-1 aggregate victory over Nottingham Forest in an all-Premier League Europa League semi-final. Neither dispatch contained goal scorers, leg-by-leg scores, match dates, or the identity of Villa's final opponent. Additional wire reporting from the semi-final's second leg and the remaining last-four fixture will fill those gaps when available.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/