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Europa League (SEMI-FINAL)
07. May 2026. 21:00h
Aston Villa vs Nottingham Forest
Villa Park, Birmingham, UK
2026
07
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Aston Villa - Nottingham Forest, Europa League semi-final 07 May 2026 at Villa Park, Birmingham

Looking for tickets for Aston Villa - Nottingham Forest in the Europa League semi-final at Villa Park? Here you can buy tickets in time and plan your trip to Birmingham - entry checks, getting to the stadium, and what to watch for on the pitch, with Ollie Watkins and Morgan Gibbs-White in focus. Seats can disappear fast

Semi-final at Villa Park: a night that leads toward Istanbul

Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest will play the second leg of the Europa League semi-final at Villa Park on 07.05.2026 at 21:00. The stakes are clear: the winner goes to the final in Istanbul on 20.05.2026, and matches like this stay in fans’ calendars for years.

A full house is expected in Birmingham, because it’s not only a European step from the finish line, but also a clash of clubs that know each other very well from the Premier League rhythm. Tickets for this match are in demand among fans.

The first match is played on 30.04.2026 in Nottingham, and the return leg at Villa Park a week later brings that special two-leg dynamic: every detail from the first match becomes important, and nerves are often just as decisive as quality. Seats in the stands are disappearing quickly.

What is at stake for both sides

For Aston Villa, this is a chance to turn the season into a trophy story. Unai Emery at this stage of the competition knows how to prepare a team for two matches played for the result, rhythm, and control of key moments.

For Nottingham Forest, this is a historic appearance on the big European stage: they reached the semi-finals for the first time after 42 years, while also fighting their domestic battle in parallel — in the Premier League they are 16th, three points above the relegation zone, with six matches left. That combination brings both adrenaline and risk, because every injury and every rotation carries a double cost.

Form and results that brought them here

Aston Villa got past Bologna very convincingly in the quarter-finals: in the return leg at Villa Park they won 4-0 and 7-1 on aggregate. That return leg also sent clear signals about attacking sharpness — Ollie Watkins scored his 100th goal for the club, and in doing so set a club record with 10 goals in Europe this season. Nottingham Forest reached the semi-finals the harder, “results-driven” way: in the return leg against Porto they won 1-0, enough for 2-1 on aggregate. The hero of the night was Morgan Gibbs-White, and Forest also had to survive both the opponent’s pressure and situations in which the ball hit the post twice.

The clubs recently “tested” each other in the league as well: on 12.04.2026 they drew 1-1 in Nottingham. In that match Aston Villa took the lead after an own goal by Murillo, and Forest equalized through Neco Williams. It’s a good reminder of how quickly momentum can turn, especially when the match tempo is high and the game is played in transition.

Squad and absences: what we know at this moment

The most attention ahead of the two-legged tie is on Nottingham Forest’s medical bulletin. After the return leg with Porto, concerns emerged about three players who had to go off: Chris Wood, Murillo, and Callum Hudson-Odoi. According to the latest information from the club environment, Wood and Murillo should be ready for the league match against Burnley, while Hudson-Odoi is sidelined due to a muscle injury. In addition, Forest have been in a specific emotional situation in recent days: Elliot Anderson missed the return leg with Porto for private reasons, and coach Vitor Pereira spoke publicly that he is not sure whether Anderson will return already for the next match. In such circumstances, coaches often have to choose between continuity and necessary adjustment.


  • Nottingham Forest: Callum Hudson-Odoi is, according to available information, injured (muscle), while Chris Wood and Murillo are expected to be ready in the short term.

  • Elliot Anderson: after a personal situation, the club is cautious with return timelines and the coach left open whether he will be available immediately.

  • Aston Villa: ahead of the semi-final they come with strong momentum after 4-0 against Bologna, with Watkins as the most prominent attacking focal point.



Tactical picture: where the match can break

Aston Villa under Emery in these two-legged ties usually looks for control: tempo, positional attack when they need to “calm” the match, and quick execution when space opens up. In the return leg against Bologna, that was visible through an early goal, then a series of strikes that dismantled the opponent’s plan before halftime. Watkins is a key name in that story — not only as a scorer, but also as a reference point that forces the defense into constant decisions. Nottingham Forest against Porto showed two things that can be decisive in Birmingham as well: patience in defense and the ability to survive periods when it doesn’t look “pretty,” but it looks solid. Gibbs-White is a player who can decide a match with one move, and in this two-legged tie it is especially important for Forest to be efficient in the moments when a chance comes, because an opponent who quickly “latches” onto the result can change the entire structure of the tie.

The expectation for the return leg at Villa Park is classic for this stage of the competition: Aston Villa will want to impose the tempo and force the opponent to run toward their own goal, while Forest will look for moments when it can “steal” space and make the home side cautious. In such a scenario, set pieces, the second ball, and concentration after losing the ball in midfield often decide it.

Villa Park: what to know before arriving

Villa Park is a classic English stage for European nights. According to Premier League data, the stadium opened in 1897 and has a capacity of 42,918 seats, with the address Villa Park, Trinity Road, Birmingham, B6 6HE. It is a large enough stadium for the pressure to be felt, but also compact enough for the stands to “step into” the pitch when the tempo rises. Aston Villa on their fan pages emphasizes trip and parking planning, and has separate instructions by arrival category (on foot/bicycle, by car, by bus, by coach, by train, and by plane), with a note about a traffic restriction zone on event days. If you’re coming from outside the city, it’s smart to factor in congestion on the approaches and arrive earlier than you would for a regular league match.

Ticket sales for this match are ongoing. For European return legs like this, it’s worth considering logistics as well: entrances, checks, and movement around the stadium can take longer than in a standard kickoff slot.

Birmingham as host: a short guide for fans passing through

Birmingham is a city where football is lived through neighborhoods and tradition, but it is also large and “busy” enough to offer visiting fans plenty of options for travel and accommodation. For away fans, the key is simple math: the closer you are to the stadium in the last two hours before kickoff, the less you will deal with traffic and queues. If you’re coming by car, plan the route earlier and expect that the traffic regime around the stadium can change on match day. If you’re coming by public transport, the goal is to reach the wider Birmingham area with enough time for the last part of the trip toward Villa Park. It’s worth securing tickets on time, but it’s also worth securing time for arrival.

How fans can “read” the match from the stands

A return leg like this often has two matches in one: the first 15–20 minutes where nervousness is felt and the first signal is sought, and then a phase where plans open up or close down depending on the score. If Aston Villa get a big chance early, the stadium will react like a wave — and that can lift the home side, but also speed up decisions.

Forest, on the other hand, will be ready to live without the ball and wait for moments when it can attack space. This is the type of match where one mistake in playing out from the back or one poorly set press can look like a small thing — and actually decide the entire tie. In the stands you usually recognize that by how often the direction of attack changes in three or four passes. Tickets for this match are in demand among fans, and the reason is simple: a semi-final is the closest you can get to a final without traveling, and the winner goes to Istanbul for the final act.

Sources:
- Official Europa League website - confirmation of the semi-final pairings and dates (incl. 30.04. and 07.05. and the final on 20.05.2026 in Istanbul)
- The Guardian - reports on Aston Villa - Bologna (4-0, 7-1 on aggregate; Watkins’ 100th goal for the club and club record 10 goals in Europe) and Nottingham Forest - Porto (1-0; historic qualification after 42 years; league context: match on 12.04.2026 ended 1-1)
- Sky Sports - confirmation of results and context of both quarter-finals (Aston Villa - Bologna; Nottingham Forest - Porto)
- talkSPORT and Yahoo Sports - information on the condition of the Nottingham Forest squad (Hudson-Odoi injury; expectations for Wood and Murillo; Elliot Anderson status)
- Premier League (official website) - Villa Park stadium data (capacity 42,918; opening year 1897; address)
- Aston Villa (official website) - travel and parking on match day (arrival categories and note about traffic restrictions)

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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