It may seem a mischievous piece of scheduling, or a painful reminder of what Aston Villa briefly tasted. Eleven months ago, they also faced Bologna in European competition. But then victory took them top of the Champions League and if the table was in nascent stage rather than an accurate reflection of the continental pecking order, Villa could nevertheless cherish it.
Now they meet again in the Europa League. If the opponents are familiar, the soundtrack will be, too: Villa mistakenly played the Europa League anthem before their Champions League quarter-final against Paris Saint-Germain. Which, while they beat the competition’s eventual winners on the night and gave them an almighty scare, now has the look of an inflection point. The other was the May defeat at Old Trafford, costing Villa an immediate return to the Champions League. With every week, it feels like Villa have not recovered from either, an entire club sinking into a sulk at what they have lost.
The departure of Monchi, the president of football operations and ally of Unai Emery, compounds an underwhelming start to the season and frustrating summer in the transfer market. The Spaniard was the recruitment guru but after years of frantic and creative trading, Villa were the second lowest spenders this summer and among the lowest sellers.
It was only one of several indications that the methods that had propelled them forward had stopped working. Nine of the starting 11 against Sunderland on Sunday were at the club under Steven Gerrard. Emery accused his team that day of being lazy; perhaps a lethargy reflected their age. With players from the past, Villa have had the second oldest average starting 11 in the Premier League.
They can, and do, blame the Premier League for that. Ezri Konsa said earlier this month that PSR had “really killed” Villa by restricting their spending. There can be choruses against the league at Villa Park. The inconvenient reality, however, is that Uefa, and not the Premier League, fined Villa: some £9.5m for breaching squad cost control by spending more than 80 per cent of their income on wages.
It can be interpreted as penalising clubs with ambition who lack the turnover of the established order, or protecting them from the dangers of overspending. There was a romance to Villa’s return to the Champions League last season, to the win over Bayern Munich, to the spectacular comeback against PSG. But, by some markers, it was fashioned by unaffordable means.
Now Villa’s squad is markedly inferior to the group Emery had for their last continental clash. Because, in part, they gambled so much to get Champions League football again. The loanees Marco Asensio and Marcus Rashford’s considerable wages were part of an attempt to establish them in the elite; but their arrivals showed the confused thinking of paying £25m for Donyell Malen and then omitting him from the Champions League squad. Now Malen remains but Rashford and Asensio are gone.
Without them – and the sold Jacob Ramsey and the loaned-out Leon Bailey – Villa have lost much of their threat, particularly on the flanks, where they have often lacked pace and invention. With Ollie Watkins both out of sorts and starved of service to such an extent that he has only had two shots on target in the top flight, Villa were the last club in England’s top seven tiers to score a league goal this season; even that came from a right-back, Matty Cash, and required a goalkeeping error from Sunderland’s Robin Roefs.
Ollie Watkins has been starved of service as Aston Villa have struggled for goals (Getty Images)
Their only other goal came from the loanee Harvey Elliott in the Carabao Cup at Brentford. That was not in a victorious cause, either, with Villa still winless. Elliott, who will become a £35m buy, could become a triumph from their quiet window. But there is little pretence the late loan deal for Jadon Sancho is ideal for either him or them; once again, Villa are paying huge wages.
That Ramsey, the local who scored in their first European Cup win for four decades, had to be sacrificed and sold underlines the price Villa have paid for past spending. Their various PSR signings – Lewis Dobbin, Samuel Iling-Junior, Enzo Barrenechea – are out on loan and have provided no benefit to the team. They have paid over the odds for signings such as Ian Maatsen and Amadou Onana. They had profited in the past from Saudi Arabia, from selling Jhon Duran and Moussa Diaby, but Monchi seemed to run out of exit routes for players this summer. Emi Martinez was trapped at Villa Park.
That sense of discontent has been apparent in results and attitude. Villa have lost their feelgood factor. It is tempting to wonder if last season, topping the Champions League, scaring PSG, marked the height of the Emery project, if Monchi’s exit proves the beginning of the end.
Under other circumstances, Villa might eye up the chance of continental glory. Emery won the Europa League four times. It is a sign of the English clubs’ resources that Tottenham won the competition last season while finishing 17th in the Premier League. Villa could be the favourites. But not, surely, when they feel shrouded in such gloom.
South Africa have qualified for their first World Cup since hosting the tournament 16 years ago, although they had Nigeria partially to thank for their progress.
South Africa beat Rwanda 3-0 in Nelspruit to finish first in Group C as Benin, who had a two-point lead going into the final round of fixtures, tumbled from top place to third in the standings after being thumped 4-0 by Nigeria in Uyo.
Victor Osimhen grabbed a hat-trick to keep Nigeria’s hopes alive as they seek to advance to a playoff next month for the four best runners-up from the nine African qualifying groups.
South Africa finished on 18 points, with Nigeria runners-up ahead of Benin on goal difference as both ended with 17 points.
South Africa qualified for the World Cup with a 3-0 win over Rwanda (AP)
South Africa had three points deducted last month after being found guilty of fielding a suspended player in an earlier qualifier in March, a mistake they admitted.
But that will be largely forgotten now as South Africa qualified for the first time since they hosted the finals in 2010.
Thalente Mbatha scored after five minutes, and Oswin Appollis netted the second in the 21st minute to put South Africa on their way. Striker Evidence Makgopa made it 3-0 in the 72nd minute with a header from a corner.
For Nigeria, Osimhen opened his account in the third minute from Samuel Chukwueze’s through pass and the same player then crossed for the striker to head home a second in the 37th minute.
He completed his hat-trick soon after halftime, heading home a chipped pass from Moses Simon, but the best goal was the last — thrashed in on the volley by Frank Onyeka.
Algeria secured qualification last week and were hoping to celebrate in front of their fans in Tizi Ouzou on Tuesday, but made heavy weather of it and needed two late penalties from Mohammed Amoura to beat Uganda 2-1.
Amoura went top of the scoring charts in the African qualifiers with 10 goals as Algeria finished their Group G campaign with 25 points.
They handed a debut in goal to Luca Zidane, the son of France World Cup winner Zinedine Zidane, but he was beaten after six minutes as Steven Mukwala gave Uganda a shock lead.
Heimir Hallgrimsson admits the Republic of Ireland may need to do something special against Portugal next month if they are to make it to next summer’s World Cup finals.
Ireland’s relief at a hard-fought 1-0 Group F victory over 10-man Armenia was tempered by the news of Hungary’s late equaliser which means they will have to at least deny Cristiano Ronaldo and company at the Aviva Stadium next month before targeting victory in Budapest three days later.
Asked if the 2-2 draw in Lisbon had changed anything, Hallgrimsson said: “Not really, it doesn’t change anything. We always knew that we needed to go to Hungary and have a win there.
“This looks like we need a point against Portugal, or Armenia to do us a favour in Yerevan. We all see that this Armenian team is no roll-over. There’s a big heart, there’s aggression and a spirit that is noticeable.”
Evan Ferguson’s 70th-minute header – his fourth goal in five competitive games for his country – ultimately sealed a vital win at the Aviva Stadium which could, and perhaps should, have been more comfortable after Armenia skipper Tigran Barseghyan’s 52nd-minute dismissal for a headbutt on Finn Azaz.
Ireland were largely passive and uninspired during a lukewarm first half but, aided and abetted by Barseghyan’s premature exit, forced their way across the finishing line to fulfil their head coach’s pre-match prophesy.
Hallgrimsson said: “Listen, we said before this camp we would take a scrappy 1-0 win and it probably was kind of a scrappy 1-0 win, so we can’t be unhappy.
“We’ve been complaining about the second game syndrome – we must be happy that we won the second game; we’ve been complaining about conceding early – we didn’t concede early, we didn’t concede at all, so we kept a clean sheet, that’s a good step.
“We’ll take the positives and carry on to the next window. It’s just a new dawn, it’s a new day next window – this result today doesn’t matter at all.
“We just needed the three points to be alive and have a chance, that’s number one, so we cannot be reading too much into that performance today.
“It was always going to be a tough match for us – we needed to win – and again it’s going to be tough, just a different opponent, players playing higher quality next time.”
Armenia boss Yegishe Melikyan admitted Barseghyan’s rush of blood had cost his side dear, but refused to condemn his indiscipline.
Melikyan said: “Of course, the red card changed the game. It was a mistake.
“He took responsibility. He said sorry to the whole dressing room. But, if a player makes a mistake, it is also my mistake and for that I apologise.
“If there was no red card and we played 11 v 11, I think we could have got a good result. I thought we could have won, but we must go forward and I think we can get good results in the near future.”
Wales’ record goalscorer Jess Fishlock has announced her retirement from international football after next week’s friendly against Australia.
The 38-year-old Seattle Reign midfielder, who has scored 48 goals for her country, will play her 166th and final international match against the Matildas at Cardiff City Stadium on 25 October.
Fishlock said: “After 19 years and the most incredible journey of proudly representing my country, I have made the decision that the match against Australia will be my last one in the red of Cymru.
“From kicking my first ball with my brothers in Llanrumney, football has been in my blood.
“When I had my debut against Switzerland in Kloten in 2006, never did I imagine I would have the honour of representing my Cymru more than 150 times. Every minute was a pleasure, a privilege, and an honour.”
Having made her senior international debut against Switzerland in 2006, Fishlock became the first male or female footballer to make 100 appearances for Wales, against Northern Ireland in 2017 and marked her milestone by scoring in a 3-1 win.
She became her country’s leading international scorer in July 2024, notching her 45th goal in a 2-0 European Championship qualifying win against Kosovo.
After helping Wales qualify for their first major women’s tournament at the 2025 European Championship, Fishlock became the oldest-ever scorer in the women’s competition against France, aged 38 years and 176 days.
“The Euros was the pinnacle of my football career, seeing the dragon on the world stage for the first time will be a memory that will stay with me for a lifetime,” she said.
“To all the players and staff, past and present, diolch (thanks). It has been an incredible journey. The team has always felt like a family and after all the good and bad times, we finally achieved what we always dreamed of.”
Fishlock, who began her career at hometown club Cardiff and has had spells at Glasgow City, Melbourne Victory, Frankfurt and Lyon among others, also thanked her wife, former Seattle team-mate Tziarra King, friends and family for their support.
She added: “I love you all. Without the support you have all shown, without you getting me through the difficult moments, I never would have achieved what I achieved.
“To my Mum, a woman whose love and guidance allowed me to chase and reach my dreams. You believed in me before I believed in myself.
“To my wife Tziarra, for learning about our beautiful country and always supporting me and us. Thank you.”