Aston Villa secured a 2-0 victory over Maccabi Tel Aviv in the Europa League at Villa Park, with goals from Ian Maatsen and Donyell Malen. The match proceeded without major incidents despite a ban on Maccabi fans and heightened police presence due to potential protests. Unai Emery praised his team's solid performance, moving Villa to sixth in the 36-team table with three wins from four games.
The Europa League clash on Thursday at Villa Park was marked by off-field concerns, including a blanket ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans to prevent clashes with pro-Palestine supporters over the Gaza situation. A coalition of six pro-Palestinian organizations planned protests, leading to more than 700 police officers lining the streets. West Midlands Police confirmed six arrests before kick-off, three for racially aggravated public order offenses, one for failing to comply with an order to remove a face mask, one for breaching a dispersal order, and one for breach of the peace. Some Birmingham schools closed early due to fears of unrest.
On the pitch, Aston Villa started sluggishly. Maccabi nearly scored when captain Dor Peretz set up Osher Davida, whose shot deflected past Emi Martinez's post. Villa improved, with Morgan Rogers drawing a save from Roei Mishpati after beating three defenders. Maccabi wasted a chance six minutes before halftime when Roy Revivo squared to Peretz, who shot straight at Martinez from close range.
Villa took the lead shortly after, as Rogers, Jadon Sancho, and Ian Maatsen combined on the left. Maatsen squeezed the ball in off the crossbar from a tight angle. Early in the second half, Maatsen's long-range drive was saved by Mishpati, with Malen poking the rebound wide. On the hour mark, Donyell Malen converted a penalty after Ezri Konsa went down under contact from Elad Madmon, giving Villa breathing room.
Malen nearly added a third with 15 minutes left, racing onto a Youri Tielemans through ball but saved by Mishpati. The game ended peacefully, with Villa dominating despite not being at their best.
Unai Emery told TNT Sports: “Focus and respecting the Europa League and the teams. How we performed in 90 minutes, not being brilliant we played solid and serious.” He added: “We had to accept the opponents needed to get something here and they played very, very focussed. But, overall we dominated and overall we were patient and created chances.” Emery also drew on past European home defeats for motivation, emphasizing resilience after the first half.
One Villa fan, Mike Earp, described the atmosphere to the Birmingham Mail: “I did feel apprehension about what might unfold. The atmosphere around the ground is nothing like it usually is. I haven’t seen anything like this since 1970s, when hooliganism was quite rife.” Villa's next match is against Bournemouth in the Premier League on Sunday.