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Club Brugge 1 – 0 Aston Villa

Club Brugge 1 – 0 Aston Villa
Club Brugge 1 – 0 Aston Villa


Aston Villa’s perfect Champions League start came to an end after a bizarre penalty award saw Club Brugge beat the Premier League side 1-0.

Referee Robias Stieler pointed to the spot after Tyrone Mings, making his debut in the competition, was caught unawares, picking up an Emi Martinez pass inside his own area with his hands.

Hans Vanaken stepped up to convert from the spot and end his side’s 14-game run without victory against English opposition.

“His mistake is completely strange,” said Villa boss Unai Emery. “It’s the biggest mistake I witnessed in my career.”

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Sky Sports’ Steve Sidwell talks through the shocking opener in Aston Villa’s tie against Club Brugge

The penalty decision followed an underwhelming first half from Villa, who were subject to an onslaught from the Belgian champions. Brugge had seen an effort from Vanaken pushed onto the post before Martinez reacted quickly to the follow-up to keep out the ball in what was a busy first 45 minutes for the goalkeeper.

Despite Villa dominating the early possession statistics, Brugge had dominated the chances, with Unai Emery’s Villans only managing a single effort on target before the interval compared to five from the home side.

The only opportunities for Villa before the break came as John McGinn headed over a Boubacar Kamara cross from close range and a wayward strike from the edge of the Brugge area from Ollie Watkins whistled wide.

Player ratings:

Home Team: Mignolet (6); Seys (7), Ordonez (7), Mechele (7), De Cuyper (7); Nielsen (6), Vanaken (9) , Jashari (7); Skov Olsen (7), Jutgla (7), Tzolis (7).

Subs: Tabli (6), Vetlesen (6), Meijer (6), Vermant (6)

Away Team: Martinez (5); Diego Carlos (4), Konsa (6), Mings (1), Maatsen (5); Kamara (6), Tielemans (6); McGinn (4), Rogers (6), Bailey (4); Watkins (4)

Subs: Duran (6), Ramsey (5), Torres (6), Nedeljkovic (n/a), Buendia (n/a)

Player of the Match: Hans Venaken

Emery called on intervention from the bench with Jhon Duran introduced hoping to add to his tally of two vital goals in the competition thus far but the striker failed to make an impact.

Defeat for Villa means Liverpool remain the only side with a 100-per-cent record in the competition. Emery’s side have now gone four consecutive games without victory in all competitions, losing all of their last three.

Are problems brewing for Emery’s Villa?

Aston Villa's head coach Unai Emery
Image:
Emery oversaw defeat to Club Brugge on the day that marked two years since his first game in charge

Villa’s defeat at Club Brugge marked the anniversary of Unai Emery’s first match in charge two years ago. His first Villa game saw him comprehensivly beat Manchester United in a performance that was driven by a rampan Villa park atmosphere. Villa’s showing two years on was a far cry from that.

The freak penalty decision that fed into a nightmare Champions League debut for Mings will dominate the headlines but Villa were outfought by Brugge throughout the 90 minutes. There was a predictability about Villa’s display, runs were reluctant and the Belgian Champions were mostly comfortable.

It’s a third loss on the spin for Emery’s side and he’s at risk of letting some of the solid foundations he’s built over the course of the last 24 months unravel. Villa’s display during their Carabao Cup defeat against Crystal Palace, while disappointing, could have been tolerable had they not turned up at Tottenham and underwhelmed once again.

Their first campaign in Europe for over 40 years comes with very little expectation and they exceeded anyone’s predictions by being top of the competition in the first place but the worry for Emery will be the manner of their recent run of defeats.

Emery: The mistake changed everything

Aston Villa boss Unai Emery speaking to TNT Sports:

“We played a very good first half. We created chances but didn’t score. We conceded one chance from them. The match was more or less under our control. In the second half the mistake changed everything.

“Playing against them, they were defensively strong and very focused in playing in their idea to stop us and play in transition [where] they were better than us. But the key was the first half and the mistake we made.”

Speaking in his press conference, Emery added: “His mistake is completely strange. It’s the biggest mistake I
witnessed in my career.

“We can make a mistake in the build up, we work to try and control the games through keeping possession and trying to stop the possession and we did that in the first half fantastic.

“We lost one or two balls, but we were always in the position to recover, but this mistake is very, very strange.

“It’s not for Mings or Martinez, it’s one mistake that’s strange. It’s only happened one time in all my life.”

Story of the match in stats…

What’s coming up in the Champions League?

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