Aston Villa made a stylish return to the Champions League with a 3-0 win at Swiss side Young Boys on Tuesday in their first game in the tournament for 41 years. Villa boss Unai Emery had urged his team to take three points in Bern as a tribute to the club’s former striker Gary Shaw, who died on Monday aged 63 after being injured in a fall. Shaw’s tragic death carried extra poignancy as he was a key member of the Villa side that shocked Bayern Munich in the 1982 European Cup final.
A picture of Shaw celebrating Peter Withe’s winner against Bayern adorns Villa’s training ground and the players wore black armbands during their Champions League opener in memory of the local hero. Clad in the number eight shirt that Shaw made his own at Villa, it was fitting that Youri Tielemans opened the scoring against Young Boys and celebrated by pointing to his jersey.
Jacob Ramsey bagged Villa’s second goal before the interval and Amadou Onana added the third in the closing stages as Emery’s men eased to a victory four decades in the making. Villa are back in the Champions League after surprisingly finishing fourth in the Premier League last term.
Clashes with Bayern Munich and Juventus await among their remaining seven fixtures in the revamped league stage of the competition. But this cathartic victory will forever hold a special place for Villa fans given their remarkable return to relevance since Emery was hired to replace the sacked Steven Gerrard in 2022.
Just five years ago, Villa were stuck in English football’s second tier, with dreams of facing Europe’s elite reserved for only the most optimistic supporters.
Anticipation over their first Champions League tie since 1983 had been building for months and the Villa fans crammed into a corner of the Wankdorf Stadium let out a jubilant roar when the tournament anthem was played before kick-off.
Prince William, a noted Villa fan, sent Emery’s team a good luck message ahead of their “European adventure” and his team responded with a well-drilled display on the Wankdorf’s treacherous artificial pitch. The meticulous Emery changed Villa’s preparations by flying to Bern early to train at the stadium on Monday, a move that paid dividends once they survived an early Young Boys raid.
Ebrima Colley’s stinging strike forced a fine save from Emiliano Martinez, who breathed a sigh of relief when Filip Ugrinic dragged the rebound narrowly wide. Villa took the lead in the 27th minute with a clever short corner routine. Lucas Digne passed to John McGinn who lofted his cross towards the unmarked Tielemans on the far side of the area.
The Belgian midfielder took a composed touch and drilled a low shot through a crowd of players into the bottom corner from 12 yards. Austin MacPhee, Villa’s set-piece coach, punched the air in delight at his successful scheme, while Tielemans celebrated the club’s first Champions League goal since their 1983 quarter-final exit against Juventus.
Villa doubled their advantage in the 38th minute thanks to an unexpected gift from the hosts. Deep inside his own area, Mohamed Ali Camara bizarrely passed back to David von Ballmoos even though the Young Boys keeper was instantly under pressure from Watkins.
Von Ballmoos’ panicked challenge up-ended Watkins, who lay prone on the turf as Ramsey pounced on the loose ball and slotted home from close-range. Villa were largely able to cruise through the second half, with Onana capping a night to remember when the Belgian midfielder smashed a 20-yard drive past Von Ballmoos in the 86th minute.
Juventus beat PSV
Juventus beat visitors PSV Eindhoven 3-1 on their Champions League return, helped by two quick-fire goals from Kenan Yildiz and Weston McKennie in the first half in Turin. Yildiz gave Juve the lead after 21 minutes with a stunning curling shot from just inside the box, leaving goalkeeper Joel Drommel helpless as the ball went in off the inside of the post.
McKennie doubled the advantage six minutes later, netting inside the right-hand post from close range and winger Nicolas Gonzalez wrapped up the win after the break before Ismael Saibari pulled a goal back for PSV in stoppage time.
Champions League regulars Juventus have returned to Europe’s elite club competition following a one-year absence when they missed out for the first time since 2011-12 after having points docked in a case centred on the club’s transfer dealings.
They were also banned from European competition last term for breaching UEFA Club Licensing and Financial Fair Play rules, although Juve denied any wrongdoing.
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Aston Villa’s Youri Tielemans (third right) celebrates with teammates after scoring during the UEFA Champions League match against Young Boys in Bern, Switzerland. (AFP)