Aston Villa reached the Europa League semi-finals with a 4-0 victory over Bologna at Villa Park, completing a 7-1 aggregate success. The result confirmed an all-Premier League tie with Nottingham Forest, as Unai Emery's team dominated the second leg and controlled the key moments, especially before the interval, to move within one round of the final.
The opening goal underlined Villa's sharp attacking play. After 16 minutes, Lucas Digne, Emiliano Buendia and Morgan Rogers combined down the left. Rogers then squared the ball across goal for Ollie Watkins, who finished from close range to claim a 100th Aston Villa goal and settle any early nerves around the stadium.
Villa's advantage could have grown even sooner from the penalty spot. In the 25th
minute, Martin Vitik was penalised for handball, handing Rogers a chance from twelve yards. Federico Ravaglia guessed correctly to save the effort, yet Bologna had no time to build on that lift as Villa immediately struck again from a long throw-in.
Within a minute of the penalty miss, Digne delivered a powerful throw into the area. Buendia collected the ball inside the box and struck low past Ravaglia to double the lead on the night. Bologna struggled to deal with Villa's pressure and movement, and the Italian side repeatedly allowed dangerous spaces around their own penalty area.
Rogers then added Villa's third before half-time, completing a standout 45 minutes. John McGinn picked out Rogers on the left side of the area, and the forward took a steady touch before beating Ravaglia at the near post. Villa went into the break three goals ahead, with Bologna facing an almost impossible task to rescue the tie.
The second half featured fewer clear chances, yet Villa maintained control and limited Bologna's threat. The hosts stayed compact, protected the clean sheet and managed the tempo. Bologna forced some efforts from distance, but Aston Villa continued to look more composed, and the game drifted towards a comfortable home win and safe passage.
Ezri Konsa completed the scoring late on. In the 89th minute, Bologna failed to clear a corner properly and the ball dropped inside the area. Konsa reacted first, swivelling to connect with a controlled volley that flew into the net, rounding off a one-sided scoreline and confirming a 4-0 result on the night.
SEMI-FINAL BOUND #UEL pic.twitter.com/koF06n5idgAston Villa (@AVFCOfficial) April 16, 2026
Match data underlined Villa's authority, particularly before the interval. Aston Villa finished with 2.42 expected goals from 13 attempts. Bologna produced 0.96 expected goals from 11 shots. Of Villa's total xG, 2.15 came in the first half, reflecting the pressure that effectively decided the tie before the players returned for the second period.
Villa's first-half shot volume also matched their recent European record. The side registered 10 shots before half-time, the first time they reached double figures in the opening period of a major European knockout match since the 2023-24 Europa Conference League semi-final against Olympiacos, when Villa recorded 11 efforts before the break.
The scoreline at the interval also carried historical weight for the club. Aston Villa led by three goals at half-time in a major European fixture for only the third occasion. The previous instances came in the European Cup against Valur in September 1981 and versus Besiktas in September 1982, underlining the scale of this latest performance.
Rogers' individual numbers stood out during that dominant spell. Rogers became the first player to have four or more shots and create three or more chances in the first half of a Europa League game this season. With Watkins, Buendia and Konsa also on the scoresheet, Villa produced a complete display that sends Emery's side into the Nottingham Forest semi-final with confidence.












