CHRIS WOOD’S SECOND-half penalty gave Nottingham Forest the advantage in their all-English Europa League semi-final with Aston Villa.
The New Zealand striker emphatically converted from 12 yards to put Forest just 90 minutes away from a first European final in 46 years as they took a 1-0 first-leg lead.
But they will know there is still work to do if they want to try and follow in the footsteps of Brian Clough’s side which won back-to-back European Cups in 1979 and 1980.
Vitor Pereira has some way to go before reaching Clough’s status, but he has masterminded a stark turnaround of Forest’s fortunes as they are now nine games unbeaten in all competitions.
It will be a tough task to defend the slender lead in next week’s second leg and Villa are by no means out of the tie.
A nine-game Europa League winning run came to an end at the City Ground, but nobody knows their way around a Europa League semi-final quite like Unai Emery and a fifth title for the Spaniard is not out of his reach just yet, with Villa notoriously strong at Villa Park.
Villa were assured in early possession and fashioned the first chance of the match in the ninth minute, when Youri Tielemans fired a 20-yard effort that Stefan Ortega palmed away.
The German goalkeeper was again called into action just before the half-hour mark as he clawed away Morgan Rogers’ effort from a quick counter-attack.
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Forest had grown into the game and were almost in front, only for a miraculous stop from Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez in the 33rd minute.
The net was about to bulge after Igor Jesus had made good contact from Morgan Gibbs-White’s cross after Elliot Anderson’s clever pass had played him in, but the Argentinian somehow managed to stick a hand out and then had the presence of mind to scoop the ball into his grasp before it went over the line.
It was Ortega’s turn to make a big save 10 minutes after the restart as he kept it level.
Rogers’ shot took a deflection and went to Ollie Watkins, who stuck out a foot and his effort went straight to the Forest goalkeeper who made an instinctive stop.
The decisive moment of the game came with 20 minutes left as Forest were awarded a penalty.
Gibbs-White’s cross floated through to the far post and appeared to be out of play when Omari Hutchinson hooked it back into the outstretched arms of Villa defender Lucas Digne.
After a lengthy check Portuguese VAR Tiago Martins ruled the ball had not gone out and sent his compatriot Joao Pinheiro to the pitchside monitor.
The decision was a formality and Wood dispatched the spot-kick in commanding style, lashing past Martinez.
Forest seemed content to hold on to their lead, while Villa were not exactly throwing bodies forward in search of a leveller.
Their big chance came in the 90th minute when a quick breakaway saw Tielemans close in on goal, but he uncharacteristically fired over.
In the other semi-final, Braga will take a slender advantage to Germany for their return leg after Mario Dorgeles scored in injury-time to give the hosts a 2-1 win over Freiburg in the first leg on Thursday.
Demir Ege Tiknaz opened the scoring early for the hosts, before Vincenzo Grifo quickly levelled for Freiburg.
Despite being forced into numerous changes due to injuries, Carlos Vicens’ Braga made a roaring start in their first European semi-final for 15 years.
Turkey midfielder Tiknaz slid in to finish from close range on eight minutes at their Estadio Municipal.
The lead only lasted eight minutes as Freiburg playmaker Grifo applied a cool finish to Jan-Niklas Beste’s pinpoint cross.
After a frantic opening quarter-hour, the match calmed down until one minute before the interval as VAR intervened to award a penalty to Braga after Philipp Lienhart fouled Gustaf Lagerbielke.
However, German shotstopper Noah Atubolu plunged to his right to tip Rodrigo Zalazar’s effort from 12 yards to safety.
Braga boss Vicens made attacking changes in the second period.
The breakthrough came for Braga two minutes into added time as Atubolu spilled Vitor Carvalho’s effort and Dorgeles was on hand to squeeze the ball home from close range.
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Chris Wood penalty gives Nottingham Forest slender lead over Aston Villa
CHRIS WOOD’S SECOND-half penalty gave Nottingham Forest the advantage in their all-English Europa League semi-final with Aston Villa.
The New Zealand striker emphatically converted from 12 yards to put Forest just 90 minutes away from a first European final in 46 years as they took a 1-0 first-leg lead.
But they will know there is still work to do if they want to try and follow in the footsteps of Brian Clough’s side which won back-to-back European Cups in 1979 and 1980.
Vitor Pereira has some way to go before reaching Clough’s status, but he has masterminded a stark turnaround of Forest’s fortunes as they are now nine games unbeaten in all competitions.
It will be a tough task to defend the slender lead in next week’s second leg and Villa are by no means out of the tie.
A nine-game Europa League winning run came to an end at the City Ground, but nobody knows their way around a Europa League semi-final quite like Unai Emery and a fifth title for the Spaniard is not out of his reach just yet, with Villa notoriously strong at Villa Park.
Villa were assured in early possession and fashioned the first chance of the match in the ninth minute, when Youri Tielemans fired a 20-yard effort that Stefan Ortega palmed away.
The German goalkeeper was again called into action just before the half-hour mark as he clawed away Morgan Rogers’ effort from a quick counter-attack.
Forest had grown into the game and were almost in front, only for a miraculous stop from Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez in the 33rd minute.
The net was about to bulge after Igor Jesus had made good contact from Morgan Gibbs-White’s cross after Elliot Anderson’s clever pass had played him in, but the Argentinian somehow managed to stick a hand out and then had the presence of mind to scoop the ball into his grasp before it went over the line.
It was Ortega’s turn to make a big save 10 minutes after the restart as he kept it level.
Rogers’ shot took a deflection and went to Ollie Watkins, who stuck out a foot and his effort went straight to the Forest goalkeeper who made an instinctive stop.
The decisive moment of the game came with 20 minutes left as Forest were awarded a penalty.
Gibbs-White’s cross floated through to the far post and appeared to be out of play when Omari Hutchinson hooked it back into the outstretched arms of Villa defender Lucas Digne.
After a lengthy check Portuguese VAR Tiago Martins ruled the ball had not gone out and sent his compatriot Joao Pinheiro to the pitchside monitor.
The decision was a formality and Wood dispatched the spot-kick in commanding style, lashing past Martinez.
Forest seemed content to hold on to their lead, while Villa were not exactly throwing bodies forward in search of a leveller.
Their big chance came in the 90th minute when a quick breakaway saw Tielemans close in on goal, but he uncharacteristically fired over.
In the other semi-final, Braga will take a slender advantage to Germany for their return leg after Mario Dorgeles scored in injury-time to give the hosts a 2-1 win over Freiburg in the first leg on Thursday.
Demir Ege Tiknaz opened the scoring early for the hosts, before Vincenzo Grifo quickly levelled for Freiburg.
Despite being forced into numerous changes due to injuries, Carlos Vicens’ Braga made a roaring start in their first European semi-final for 15 years.
Turkey midfielder Tiknaz slid in to finish from close range on eight minutes at their Estadio Municipal.
The lead only lasted eight minutes as Freiburg playmaker Grifo applied a cool finish to Jan-Niklas Beste’s pinpoint cross.
After a frantic opening quarter-hour, the match calmed down until one minute before the interval as VAR intervened to award a penalty to Braga after Philipp Lienhart fouled Gustaf Lagerbielke.
However, German shotstopper Noah Atubolu plunged to his right to tip Rodrigo Zalazar’s effort from 12 yards to safety.
Braga boss Vicens made attacking changes in the second period.
The breakthrough came for Braga two minutes into added time as Atubolu spilled Vitor Carvalho’s effort and Dorgeles was on hand to squeeze the ball home from close range.
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