Aston Villa produced a dramatic Europa League turnaround, beating Salzburg 3-2 at Villa Park after trailing 2-0, with Jamaldeen Jimoh-Aloba’s first goal for the club deciding the match and ensuring Villa finished
second in the league phase, protecting home advantage in future knockout second legs.
The result also extended Villa’s strong European form at Villa Park, as the team recorded a seventh straight home win in major UEFA competitions, the longest such streak in the club’s history, while Salzburg’s defeat confirmed elimination despite a strong overall display.
Salzburg controlled large parts of the first half and punished a major error from Tyrone Mings on 33 minutes, when a loose back pass aimed at Emiliano Martinez was seized upon by Edmund Baidoo, whose square ball allowed Karim Konate to finish, with Victor Lindelof’s attempted goal-line clearance only diverting the shot into the net.
Four minutes after the interval Salzburg doubled the advantage, as half-time substitute Moussa Yeo met Kerim Alajbegovic’s low cross at the near post and flicked past Martinez, leaving Villa 2-0 down and dealing with the added concern of Ollie Watkins, who had trudged off injured during the first half.
Villa’s revival began on 65 minutes when Watkins’ replacement Morgan Rogers produced a calm near-post strike to halve the deficit, and the pressure told again with 14 minutes remaining as Mings powered a firm header from Matty Cash’s deep delivery into the net to level the contest at 2-2.
Nineteen-year-old Jamaldeen Jimoh-Aloba, introduced as Villa chased a winner, brought energy in the final stages and, in the 87th minute, applied a composed close-range finish to a cross from fellow substitute Kadan Young in front of the Holte End, sealing a memorable 3-2 victory.
La Bodymoor Heath pic.twitter.com/nkEJlHcvvDAston Villa (@AVFCOfficial) January 29, 2026
Aston Villa Europa League data debrief and home dominance
The statistics underlined how hard Villa had to work, as both sides finished with 14 attempts, Villa registering nine shots on target compared with Salzburg’s eight, while the visitors led the expected goals measure by 2.37 xG to 1.94, yet still exited the competition.
Villa’s victory ensured the team avoided slipping below second place in the league phase standings, which would have removed the advantage of hosting the second leg in all upcoming knockout ties, and the seven-match home winning run in European competition now stands as a new club record.
The match highlighted Villa’s resilience after early setbacks, with key contributions from replacements Rogers, Young and Jimoh-Aloba offsetting Mings’ first-half mistake and Watkins’ injury, while Salzburg’s strong attacking numbers and early control brought no reward as the Europa League campaign ended.











