Aston Villa

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  1. Luiz rejoins Villa - have your saypublished at 18:27 GMT 28 January

    Aston Villa have your say banner
    Douglas Luiz of Aston Villa posesImage source, Getty Images

    Aston Villa have announced the re-signing of Douglas Luiz on loan from Juventus.

    The 27-year-old left Villa in the summer of 2024 to join the Italian club for a fee of £42.5m, but has spent the first half of this season on loan with Nottingham Forest.

    Luiz made 204 appearances between 2019 and 2024 for Villa, but he has played just eight Premier League games for Forest this season after suffering with a thigh problem.

    Villa boss Unai Emery was looking to bolster his midfield options, with captain John McGinn out for up to two months with a knee issue and Boubacar Kamara expected to miss the rest of the season with a knee injury.

    Another Villa midfielder, Youri Tielemans, is also set for a period on the sidelines after he came off injured at Newcastle on Sunday.

    Villa fans, what do you make of this transfer? Happy to see Luiz return and is there still more work to be done this window?

    Get in touch with your views here

  2. Garner should have been sent off against Villa - panelpublished at 16:26 GMT 28 January

    Dale Johnson
    Football issues correspondent

    Morgan Rogers of Aston Villa is challenged by Jake O'Brien and James Garner of EvertonImage source, Getty Images

    James Garner should have been sent off in Everton's 1-0 win at Aston Villa on 18 January, the Premier League's Key Match Incidents (KMI) Panel has said.

    Garner, who was already on a caution, chased Morgan Rogers from midfield and pushed the Villa player in the back as he reached the edge of the penalty area.

    Referee Tony Harrington did not award a free-kick but the KMI Panel unanimously voted that a foul should have been given and Garner shown a second yellow card.

    It said Garner's actions were "a clear two-handed push into the back" which warranted "a second caution for a clear tactical foul".

    The incident came in the 57th minute and Everton scored the only goal of the game two minutes later through Thierno Barry.

    It is the second time in a matter of weeks that Villa have lost a game where their opponents should have been reduced to 10 men.

    The KMI Panel also said that Arsenal's Mikel Merino should have received two bookings in Villa's 4-1 loss at the Emirates on 30 December.

    The decision to rule out Jake O'Brien's goal against Villa for an offside offence by Harrison Armstrong was supported, 4:1.

    Armstrong had jumped to try to head the ball but failed to make contact, with the assistant raising his flag to disallow it.

    The KMI Panel said that "Armstrong is close to the ball and clearly impacts an opponent".

  3. Emery on midfield injuries, Luiz & Salzburgpublished at 14:51 GMT 28 January

    Aston Villa boss Unai Emery has been speaking to the media before Thursday's Europa League game against RB Salzburg at Villa Park (20:00 GMT).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • Emery confirmed Youri Tielemans will be out for eight to 10 weeks, John McGinn will miss six to eight weeks and Andres Garcia has been ruled out for three weeks with a hamstring injury.

    • In describing his midfield injury crisis, and saying he believes Boubacar Kamara is unlikely to play again this season, Emery said the club is "involving with Douglas Luiz for this reason" with a loan deal to re-sign the Brazil international agreed.

    • When pushed on whether the Luiz deal is close, Emery added: "I think so."

    • Emery added Amadou Onana is "coming back", and "hopefully we can keep him consistent for the rest of the season".

    • The return of Ross Barkley will also offer a boost: "He is coming back in the next few days, he is training individually but he is so close to joining us. Hopefully he will be very important for us as well."

    • Youngster George Hemmings is training with the first-team squad: "George is a central midfielder training with us, knowing everything tactically that we need. He has huge potential and maybe in a moment he can help us. This is the reason why we are accepting the injured players because we must be ready. We need to compete and build the team and be strong."

    • Leon Bailey, who returned from his loan at Roma and Tammy Abraham, who has joined permanently from the Italian side, will not be available.

    • On what the duo can add, alongside Luiz should that deal go through, Emery said: "Leon Bailey his adaptation is so quick. Tammy knows a lot about the club, training ground and his adaptation is only tactically. But I think he's going to get it quick. And Douglas is the same - players who were here before."

    • On new signing Abraham, Emery said: "You know him because he was playing here six or seven years ago. When we let [Donyell] Malen leave we had in our mind to choose him. Abraham was one of the players we were following and to have two strikers with Ollie Watkins was our objective. We are so excited about how he can help us."

    • On the importance of beating Salzburg to avoid the play-off round: "We are trying every small detail to try and get for ourselves. One of the objectives of qualifying is to get this advantage. Not just this, we want to win the match. We must show how important this competition is to us."

    Hear more from Emery on BBC Sounds

    Follow all of Wednesday's European news conferences and the rest of the day's football news

  4. How Aston Villa's 'effective week' shows they can extend seasonpublished at 13:02 GMT 28 January

    Mike Taylor
    BBC Radio WM reporter

    Unai EmeryImage source, Getty Images

    At Newcastle on Sunday, Unai Emery delivered possibly his most Unai Emery-sounding sentence to date.

    "I want to play matches. I want to play a lot of matches! Hopefully we cannot have a lot of days to rest!"

    That desire does presuppose that there will be at least adequate numbers of players at his disposal to play all these matches, which was becoming a problem.

    Since they landed in Turkey last Wednesday, though, Villa have produced arguably the most effective week's work since Emery took over, both in terms of playing games and equipping themselves to play more - the loss of Youri Tielemans to another injury notwithstanding.

    The flat performance against Everton, which also cost John McGinn's services for a few weeks could have been the moment where Villa's hugely impressive season began to fray.

    A week with away fixtures at Fenerbahce and Newcastle might have been designed to put them under maximum strain, with long journeys to face capable sides backed by fierce home support.

    Villa showed remarkable poise to win both. Though their opponents had chances and occasionally demanded impressive saves from Marco Bizot and Emi Martinez, there was an assurance about Villa's work.

    Some of their senior leaders were missing, yet Villa remained calm and confident, apparently in no doubt that they would retain control.

    Now, we are seeing the other half of Villa's operation working equally well, to keep Emery's machine running smoothly.

    Bringing back a selection of former players may appear quirky, but each of the completed and apparently pending moves makes good sense on its own terms.

    Tammy Abraham, at the reported price, appears to meet all of the requirements to provide the support and challenge to Ollie Watkins that has been needed for so long.

    The proposed return of Douglas Luiz underlines how well Villa have adjusted since his unwanted departure. With Tielemans, McGinn and Boubacar Kamara absent for a while, they need him now.

    Even the unexpected return of Leon Bailey – showing "a huge commitment to try to get to his best," said Emery – offers a positive option. And Jadon Sancho is beginning to find the form that Villa would have been hoping for.

    In the last week, at a stressful moment, Villa have shown resilience and ingenuity to steady themselves, the qualities they will need to extend their impressive season far enough to deliver tangible prizes.

    The next few days offer more opportunities, on and off the field, to demonstrate to their rivals that they can stay on course to the end.

    Listen to full commentary of Aston Villa v Red Bull Salzburg at 20:00 GMT on Thursday on BBC Radio WM

    And tune into The West Midlands Football Phone-In from 18:00 on weeknights

    Explore Aston Villa content on BBC Sounds

  5. Emery's mood should be improved after Abraham arrivalpublished at 09:52 GMT 28 January

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Tammy Abraham Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Tammy Abraham signed a four-and-a-half year deal at Aston Villa

    Aston Villa boss Unai Emery finally got his man after Tammy Abraham joined from Besiktas on Tuesday.

    The striker, returning to the club after his successful loan spell in 2018-19, moves for £18.25m and will hopefully ease any additional pressure on Emery.

    He has appeared more frayed than usual recently, a flashpoint with Youri Tielemans at Fenerbahce last week followed his post-match interview following defeat by Everton.

    Then, he stayed silent when asked why he feels Villa are unable to compete with teams at the top of the Premier League.

    Villa are still third in the table and could end the Europa League league phase top if they beat Salzburg at Villa Park on Thursday and Lyon drop points at home to PAOK.

    So Emery should have fewer concerns but perhaps the pressures of the transfer window - including missing out on Conor Gallagher to Tottenham - have not helped.

    He faces the media on Wednesday afternoon and his mood will be interesting, especially with Villa closing in on Douglas Luiz.

  6. 'Shrewd business' to bring in 'top player' - fan views on Abraham returnpublished at 08:56 GMT 28 January

    Your Aston Villa opinions banner
    Tammy Abraham poses for a picture at Bodymoor Heath training ground after signing for Aston VillaImage source, Getty Images

    We asked for your views on the deal to bring Tammy Abraham back to Aston Villa in an £18.25m deal.

    Abraham helped Villa win promotion via the Championship play-offs in 2018-19 and has since played for Roma, AC Milan and Besiktas.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Richard: Tammy at that price is an excellent acquisition. Proven goal scorer in three European leagues and obviously wanted to be part of Emery's Villa project. I look at the vast amounts of money the so called big six have spent on strikers last summer that haven't exactly worked out and have to smile at Villa's shrewd business partly thanks to spending/wage restrictions. The icing on the cake is getting Luiz back on loan.

    Chris: Great bit of business for Villa and competition for Watkins. Could do them both good in terms of the England squad.

    Mike: This is a brilliant signing. Knows the league, knows the club, and has bundles of fan goodwill after his previous stint with Villa. And if part of his thinking is to get back into the England conversation ahead of the World Cup, that's a direct challenge to Ollie Watkins' place on the plane.

    Kevin: I absolutely love this situation, loved Tammy when he was with us before and never wanted him to leave, really excited about the rest of the season.

    Prit: Delighted. Really happy that Tammy Abraham has returned, I really do feel Aston Villa is his team. Had we not been in such a precarious financial position when we got promoted, we would have signed him, so it's good business to get him in now. From a football perspective, we desperately we need more fire power up front and share the load from Watkins.

    Anthony: I loved Tammy the first time around. He's clever with his runs and knows how to finish. I've kept an eye on him always hoping one day he would return… now he has. What a great signing.

    Guy: This could be a really good signing and would hopefully allow Emery to play two strikers, taking a bit of pressure of the front line while giving a rotation option. I really hope Tammy hits the ground running and helps with the second half of the season. Welcome home Tammy!

    Paul: He is a top player who has scored goals wherever he has played. He is hungry to win with us and Unai will make him the best he can be.

  7. 'We have to push for every competition we're in' - Abrahampublished at 19:22 GMT 27 January

    Tammy AbrahamImage source, Getty Images

    Tammy Abraham thinks Aston Villa are positioned to "push for every competition we're in" after putting pen to paper on a four-and-a-half year deal.

    The striker played for Villa back in the 2018-19 season and has since featured for Roma, Ac Milan and Besiktas.

    On returning to England in an £18.25m deal, he told the club's website: "It still doesn't feel real.

    "Since this first time I arrived here, I fell in love with the club. Ever since I left this club, I've pretty much watched every game, so I've been keeping track."

    Abraham - who helped Villa to promotion via the Championship play-offs in 2018-19 - said he will be "emotional" to run back out at Villa Park.

    "I feel like I left here as a boy and I'm definitely coming back as a man," he added.

    "I'd like to bring my experience to help the team as much as possible and achieve something with this club.

    "I've played against most of the boys here, and I know a few of them also, so they've helped me settle in quickly.

    "I just can't wait to get out there on the pitch with them and make more memories.

    "Right now, the world's our oyster. We've got a good team, a good squad. I don't think it's out of reach to say we can push for every competition we're in.

    "I'm here and I want to win. I want to win trophies, so we have to push for every competition we're in. I'm excited, I just can't wait."

    How do you feel about this deal? Tell us

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  8. 'Abraham has taken a wage cut' - analysispublished at 18:02 GMT 27 January

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Tammy Abraham poses for a picture in Aston Villa coloursImage source, Getty Images

    It is not the first time Villa have tried to re-sign Tammy Abraham - they remained interested in him and were at the table when the striker previously moved.

    However, in 2021, when Abraham opted to join Roma, Villa were not the club they have since been transformed into by Emery.

    Abraham also turned down Arsenal on that occasion, as he viewed Roma's project under Mourinho as the ideal platform to progress - and the forward's time in Serie A should be viewed as a success.

    One of the key factors behind his decision to return to the Premier League is a desire for an England recall, with this summer's World Cup looming.

    Abraham has not played for his country since starting against Italy in the Nations League in 2022 - and would have remained on the periphery if he stayed in Turkey.

    Dominic Calvert-Lewin has rediscovered his form in the Premier League for Leeds -so if Abraham can hit the ground running under Emery it could put him back in the selection conversation, almost four years since his last cap.

    Abraham also has two young children and the lure to return home for personal reasons was strong.

    Chelsea had a buy-back option, but with the change of ownership at Stamford Bridge that was never on the cards.

    He has taken a wage cut to join Villa, underlining his commitment, and having won the Champions League and Conference League he has the chance to complete a European hat-trick in the Europa League with his new club this season.

    The return to Villa Park is seen as perfect timing, even if it has come sooner than expected and just six months into a spell at Besiktas.

    But Emery's plan and vision for the striker convinced him - not that he needed much persuading.

    Abraham enjoyed his time in Turkey but the opportunity to return to the Premier League - and Villa - was ultimately too good to refuse.

    We want you to have your say on Tammy Abraham returning to the Premier League to rejoin Aston Villa.

    Do you think this is a good deal for Villa? Will Abraham have an instant impact?

    Get in touch with your views here

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  9. Emery 'refuses to let any obstacles dim his ambition'published at 08:09 GMT 27 January

    David Michael
    Fan writer

    Aston Villa fan's voice banner
    Unai Emery pointingImage source, Getty Images

    A week ago, Unai Emery was visibly irritated in his post-match interviews following Aston Villa's 1-0 defeat by Everton. While many assumed his frustration was directed solely at the result, it was the bigger picture that appeared to trigger him: the financial handcuffs placed on the club in the transfer window and a midfield stretched increasingly thin.

    The long-term loss of John McGinn had bitten, compounded by another season-ending injury for Boubacar Kamara, a player who has averaged 22 Premier League games in each of his four seasons since joining Villa.

    Villa's midfield is its core asset and, at that point, it was also without Amadou Onana and Ross Barkley. Interest in Conor Gallagher hinted that Emery was seeking an additional insurance policy to sustain the team's progress and ambition. Two daunting away trips to the hothouses of Fenerbahce and St James' Park, where Villa had not won for two decades, threatened to compound his frustration and put the club back in its place.

    Instead, Villa responded with two away victories that underlined the clarity of roles and organisation within the squad. There is a structure that players understand and can execute, even when key personnel are missing. This is far from the beginning of the end for Emery's side.

    Behind the scenes, Villa have been working whatever transfer leverage they can within the constraints of their Uefa arrangements, which prevent them from running at a loss during a window. Donyell Malen's exit was largely shaped by that reality, creating room for potential incomings.

    Villa have had to get creative and, judging the most recent matchday squad, compromise has been unavoidable. Leon Bailey appears to be getting one last roll of the dice to see whether he can rediscover the form he showed in the 2023-24 season, while Harvey Elliott's unexpected return to the matchday squad and publicly stating he would not play for Charlotte FC in the MLS, raises questions about a possible reworking of his loan clause between Villa and Liverpool.

    Emery certainly is not feeling sorry for himself and refuses to let any obstacles dim his ambition for the season.

    Find more from David Michael at My Old Man Said, external

  10. Villa skipper McGinn could miss up to two months published at 12:12 GMT 26 January

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    John McGinn comes off against EvertonImage source, Getty Images

    Captain John McGinn could be out for up to two months in a further injury blow to Aston Villa.

    The midfielder was forced off early in last week's defeat by Everton with a knee injury.

    It means the Scotland international could miss up to nine games as third-placed Villa try to maintain their Premier League title push and Europe League hopes.

    "Normally, he is going to be out for some weeks, maybe even one or two months. But I want to wait for the doctor's opinion on it," boss Unai Emery said.

    McGinn's injury comes with Boubacar Kamara expected to miss the rest of the season with a serious knee injury he suffered in the FA Cup win at Tottenham this month.

    Youri Tielemans also came off in Sunday's win at Newcastle leaving Villa with a midfield injury problem.

    "It was his ankle. Hopefully not a lot, but we must check him with the doctor and wait. I can't say anything more," Emery added following the victory at St James' Park.

    Villa missed out on Conor Gallagher this month after the midfielder opted to join Tottenham from Atletico Madrid for £35m instead.

  11. Newcastle 0-2 Aston Villa - the fans' verdictpublished at 09:04 GMT 26 January

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    We asked for your thoughts after Sunday's Premier League game between Newcastle United and Aston Villa.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Newcastle fans

    Barry: Frustrating game. Score line flatters Villa, but Martinez was player of the match by a country mile. We've got to start being more direct - no point in high press if you waste it by constantly passing across midfield.

    Paul: It's all well winning in Europe against teams from lesser leagues but as soon as we play good quality Prem teams we aren't up to it! Can't help but feel we squandered our money in the summer transfer window and this has affected our ability to compete at the top level.

    Leon: I think Howe's time has come. He has done great things for the club but his tactics are outdated and conservative, befitting of a relegation threatened team. It lacks ambition and never seems to use the squad to its fullest. And hey, change seemed to work for United and Chelsea.

    Trevor: Poor performance today, some poor crosses in from out wide. Eddie needs to look at his tactics because Premier League teams have worked out our current way of playing.

    Villa fans

    Colin: Outstanding performance when you consider how thin our squad is and after playing a tough game Thursday. Emery is a genius!

    Andrew: Great win. Great performance. Thought Ollie Watkins was a personification of what Villa are all about. They are showing a resilience/bouncebackability that wasn't there before (under Emery). Believe boys. Just believe. See where it takes you.

    Mark: Great professional display today by everyone in a claret and blue shirt. Unai has done amazing things with the means he has. A few more signings and some money and he could elevate us to places that all Villa fans dream off. Come on you Lions UTV.

    Anthony: Great game of football from two teams. Villa wanted the win more. Martinez comfortable saves. Outstanding goals from Watkins and Buendia. Aston Villa are outstanding.

  12. Missed Old Trafford move leaves questions for Martinez published at 09:04 GMT 26 January

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Emiliano MartinezImage source, Getty Images

    Emiliano Martinez is arguably not as imperious as he once was. But it is difficult to pinpoint exactly why.

    A World Cup winner with Argentina in 2022, having joined Villa for £17m in 2020, he has been one of the club's best performers.

    This season, though, the cracks have begun to show - for which it is easy to blame his failed move to Manchester United.

    An emotional Martinez appeared to be saying goodbye after Villa's final home game of last season, against Tottenham Hotspur in May.

    Villa were open to letting him leave, looking at Brentford's Mark Flekken among others, but then United manager Ruben Amorim lost the battle to bring him to Old Trafford.

    United's data suggested Senne Lammens was going to be one of Europe's best; although he was not as good as Martinez now, signing the Belgian made more sense, financially and for the future.

    They wanted to spend money in attacking areas - signing Matheus Cunha, Benjamin Sesko and Bryan Mbeumo - with Amorim overruled on a move for Martinez as Lammens joined from Royal Antwerp instead.

    On 31 August, the day before the transfer deadline, Martinez was left out for a 3-0 home defeat by Crystal Palace. When asked about Martinez's whereabouts, head coach Unai Emery repeated the name of stand-in keeper Marco Bizot several times.

    He returned after the international break for a 0-0 draw at Everton on 13 September - with Emery calling him "the best goalkeeper in the world", and one who had a "massive" commitment to Villa.

    But has Martinez been as consistent this season?

    There has been more than one late withdrawal from a game - including two following the warm-ups before matches against Brighton and Feyenoord.

    He has saved 76.1% of the shots he has faced this season - the most in the league - and is fifth on Opta's 'goals prevented' stats list with 17.

    He has made 55 saves - the 12th-highest total of any Premier League goalkeeper this season. His 'expected goals on target conceded' tally - which measures the likelihood of an on-target shot resulting in a goal - is 20.85.

    Villa have conceded 25 this season, but eight of those have been with Bizot in goal so Martinez's stats should not be worrying.

    It is the three mistakes leading to a goal - the highest in the league - which will gnaw away, though.

    The most obvious was his error at Anfield in November, gifting the ball to Mohamed Salah to score, and giving Liverpool a platform for a 2-0 win.

    Yet, Villa went on to win their next 11 games, before losing 4-1 to Arsenal on 30 December, when Martinez again faced scrutiny.

    He spilled the ball under pressure from Gabriel from a corner, allowing the defender to score, although Villa argued the goal should have been disallowed for a high elbow by the Arsenal man.

    Last Sunday's mistake, failing to catch or clear Dwight McNeil's shot, contributed to Thierno Barry's winner for Everton.

    He missed Thursday's 1-0 Europa League win at Fenerbahce with a calf injury, with Bizot keeping his fifth clean sheet in 11 games this season.

    Dutchman Bizot, signed from Brest in the summer, is 34 and not a long-term replacement for Martinez.

    But the Argentine is being linked with Inter Milan, and Villa are expected to assess his future in the summer.

    Read the full piece here

  13. Analysis: The perfect blend of goals for Villapublished at 17:14 GMT 25 January

    Ciaran Kelly
    Football reporter

    Villa players celebrateImage source, Getty Images

    Have Aston Villa cracked the code?

    In an era where xG is so prevalent, Unai Emery's clinical team have scored 13 goals from outside the penalty area in the Premier League this season – the most of any side in the competition.

    Emiliano Buendia's opener was the latest in a long line of sensational strikes.

    The forward collected the ball, following a deft lay-off from Morgan Rogers, and Newcastle players stood off him, almost imploring him to shoot from distance, which always felt a risky strategy given his record.

    Buendia certainly did not need a second invitation.

    He had the split second he needed to look up, pick his spot and fire his side in front as the Villa supporters up in the gods repeatedly sang his name.

    But Villa also hurt Newcastle from inside the box.

    Ollie Watkins will soon have increased competition from striker Tammy Abraham, who is set to complete a move from Besiktas, and you suspect he will relish that challenge.

    Nick Pope may have foiled him twice previously, but Watkins eventually found a way through to power a bullet header past the Newcastle goalkeeper.

    Villa are capable of scoring all types of goals - and that's what makes them so dangerous as they responded in style after losing in the Premier League at home to Everton last week.

  14. Newcastle 0-2 Aston Villa: What Emery and Buendia saidpublished at 16:44 GMT 25 January

    Media caption,

    Aston Villa boss Unai Emery, spoke to BBC Match of the Day after his side's victory at Newcastle: "I am so, so happy. The players were extraordinary. We spoke about this match and the difficulties some teams have with their level here. It is the highest level we can face this season and the players respond fantastic.

    "The commitment to the fans... being so disciplined individually and collectively got us through it. We can only helped the players tactically. Out on the field they need to show the attitude and commitment to work to the game plan and they did it.

    "Emiliano Martinez played a fantastic match. He focused on the match and his character, skills and commitment...because we need every player...really fantastic.

    "Last week we lost and we were so disappointed, but we can be calm again and have confidence. We were comfortable in what we were doing."

    Villa's first goalscorer Emiliano Buendia, also spoke to BBC Match of the Day: "I think mainly really to compete well, be strong and fight in every duel for the ball. We haven't had success in this stadium for a while and we knew how difficult they make it for opponents. We fought for every ball and had the patience with the ball.

    "It's a tough schedule for us but it is what we want to do, play in European competitions and fight for these places in the Premier League so we have to adapt, fight and play and recover and go again.

    "I am really proud of this team. we made a huge effort on Thursday and again today.

    "We have to look to be there and fight until the end. We know what we want to achieve, fighting for the Champions League spots. To score is always a nice feeling but the main thing is to help the team. To open the game with that kind of goal helps the momentum of the game turn in our favour.

    "I am really happy and we deserved the three points"

    Did you know?

    • Thanks to Buendia's opener, Villa led at half-time in an away Premier League game for the first time this season - with only Burnley and Wolves now failing to complete that feat in 2025-26.

    • Villa have netted 13 goals from outside the penalty area in the Premier League this campaign which is the most of any side in the competition and their most as a club in the top-flight since 2007-08 (16).