Crystal Palace v Shakhtar Donetsk: Team newspublished at 19:22 BST 7 May
19:22 BST 7 May
Crystal Palace bring back Tyrick Mitchell, Chris Richards, Adam Wharton, Ismaila Sarr and Jean-Philippe Mateta, who were all among the substitutes for the 3-0 loss at Bournemouth on Sunday.
Follow Thursday's European semi-finalspublished at 19:04 BST 7 May
19:04 BST 7 May
There are four semi-final second legs taking place in the Europa League and the Conference League on Thursday, and BBC Sport will be keeping you up to date.
You can also listen to today's 5 Live Europa League commentary on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Aston Villa v Nottingham Forest".
'Set up to be one of the greatest nights in Selhurst's history'published at 18:58 BST 6 May
18:58 BST 6 May
Ellie Killick Fan writer
Image source, Getty Images
Back in March Pep Guardiola named Selhurst Park alongside some of football's most iconic stadiums as one he will miss when he retires – and as someone who has spent almost a decade attending games there, I totally understand why.
Selhurst Park is very much the Marmite of football grounds. Some love it, while others – particularly those stuck in row Z of the Arthur Wait Stand – have differing opinions.
Despite its restricted views, there is something undeniably special about it. In an era where many stadiums are becoming more polished and corporate, Selhurst truly encapsulates traditional English football.
Come rain or shine, under the lights or in the Saturday afternoon sun, you can always count on it being full of a sea of red and blue driven by noise and passion.
Its atmosphere is famous for a reason.
Last week's outing against FC Shakhtar Donetsk puts Palace in prime position for a trip to Leipzig and returning to Selhurst with a 3-1 advantage is exactly what Oliver Glasner and his team would have wanted.
As a season-ticket holder for almost 10 years, I've experienced plenty of memorable days in SE25. I've seen everything from dramatic victories to disappointing performances, but this Thursday is set up to be one of the greatest nights in Selhurst's history.
From the moment the players step out onto the pitch with 'Glad All Over' ringing round the stands the atmosphere will no doubt be special and I cannot wait to be a part of it!
As well as this historic night, Selhurst Park will also play hosts to both Manchester City and Arsenal in the closing stages of the season. So while Guardiola will get to visit one of his favourite stadiums, it could be a destination that disrupts the title race.
There was a time not so long ago when confidence in the manager was fragile and belief around the club felt low. Now, Palace are just 90 minutes away from a first European final and I have no doubt Selhurst will deliver!
Glasner on 'electric' atmosphere, meeting fans and Uche commentspublished at 18:58 BST 6 May
18:58 BST 6 May
Lee Hawthorn BBC Sport journalist
Media caption,
Crystal Palace boss Oliver Glasner has been speaking to the media before Thursday's Uefa Conference League semi-final second leg against Shakhtar Donetsk at Selhurst Park (kick-off 20:00 BST).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Glasner confirmed the "good news" that midfielder Will Hughes "is back" and revealed Evan Guessand has "trained today [Wednesday] but just partly, so he doesn't make the squad."
The Palace boss said "nobody believes" the job is done after the 3-1 win in the first leg: "We could see how good Shakhtar is as a team and also the players. Quick players. Quick dribblers. We will need another great performance but, of course, we go, we play the game tomorrow with a lot of confidence at home."
He added, "At Selhurst Park, we know we will have fantastic support from our fans. I could feel it against Fiorentina at home. It will be a little bit more electric [on Thursday] and that's what we need."
On how the team can react to the atmosphere, he continued: "Then it's the players playing our game, giving our best. I told the players the best thing is we know what to do. We don't need to change a lot. We don't need to find something that we didn't find right now, it's just really playing at our best level and this is what we will try [in this game]."
Glasner insisted if he wasn't excited for this game he would be in the wrong job and it would be a sign to retire.
On how far the club have come: "I told the players [on Wednesday] I'm enjoying being part of this incredible group. What they've done for Palace in the last two years is just incredible. Maybe it's because I'm leaving in summer, I can recognise more and more in London. People talking to me and fans are talking to me, what they are telling me is that it's really something special."
He continued: "What these players have done in the past two years is just incredible. Premier League, great and big games, winning FA Cup, winning the [Community] Shield, a great start to the season and now being close to playing a European final. A few years ago, this has been so far away for Crystal Palace and now it's so close to grab it. This makes this exciting for all of us because we know that we can write history again. We know that we can give fans moments that will stay forever."
Asked if those people coming up to him are asking him to stay, Glasner responded: "A few... No, most of them just want a selfie when I take the tube. Some are just saying thank you for these exciting two years we all had together. I see myself as just part of this group. I couldn't do anything alone, I could do nothing. It's really the players, they always listen, they're working so hard."
On his impressive record in cup football with multiple teams: "I don't know. It would be my personal fourth-consecutive final in four seasons. I'm just lucky I'm always managing a fantastic group of players doing the things we're telling them."
After Christantus Uche commented in an interview, external that Glanser "doesn't like me", the head coach said he didn't like to talk to players through the media and prefers to talk directly, but added Uche would be getting support from Crystal Palace because he is a player at the club.
'Glasner has helped me a lot about my mind' - Canvotpublished at 17:10 BST 6 May
17:10 BST 6 May
Image source, Getty Images
Crystal Palace centre-back Jaydee Canvot has moved to credit departing manager Oliver Glasner for his recent form but says the club's players are not overly focused on the manager's summer exit.
In Wednesday's pre-match news conference before the crucial Europa Conference League semi-final second leg against Shakhtar Donetsk, Canvot was asked about the impending departure of Glasner being a distraction on the eve of one of the biggest games in Palace's history.
"We don't talk about this," said Canvot. "You know, it's the gaffer, he chose for his future. We don't talk about this. We just stay on the moment, on the present. We don't say, 'oh, next year the gaffer is not here', no. We just stay focused on the present. He helped me a lot. He helped the team a lot. This was my first year here and I come because he was there. Every time he takes a club, he's done good before."
On his personal development, Canvot credits Glasner for helping with his mental approach to football: "It's not about football because we're all good players. I think he helped a lot about my mind, about mentality to stay focused every time. I think he's the best. The best part about a player is his mind and his mentality, so he just changed it and said, 'if you want to become a good player, you have to do this, this and this,' and after it's me. I have to do it."
Travelling fans 'well aware' of Glasner balancing actpublished at 08:53 BST 5 May
08:53 BST 5 May
Alex Pewter Fan writer
Image source, Getty Images
On Thursday evening, Crystal Palace took a massive step closer to a European final in Leipzig. On Sunday, they were humbled by AFC Bournemouth. The question in the aftermath is whether the Sunday result matters, or, in fact, whether there was likely to have been a different outcome.
Such are the competitive standards in the Premier League this season, especially against a club currently occupying sixth in the table, heavy squad rotation and seemingly pre-planned half-time substitutes were never likely to be a recipe for success – especially when the team lacks composure in possession.
If there was a time to question whether Palace should prioritise success in Europe over league position, that debate was out the window when the team reached the round of 16 in the Conference League. The club finds itself equal distance from eighth in the table, as it does 18th, and yet can't feasibly fight on both fronts.
Oliver Glasner's team has now played 54 matches across all competitions to Andoni Iraola's 37. That 17-game difference isn't an inbuilt excuse, but it speaks to the challenge faced by smaller clubs playing across multiple competitions.
The goal for now is for the squad to draw a line after a disappointing Sunday and refocus on the main prize. Thursday's encounter with Shakhtar Donetsk isn't without risk, despite a two-goal cushion from the first leg. It's likely that they will be forced to work out of possession, to contain the Ukrainian's Brazilian attacking talents, as they did the week before, and will have the chance to counter, which is ultimately where a Glasner team thrives.
The past twelve months have offered Palace fans success beyond our dreams, and if the travelling fans in Bournemouth proved anything at 3-0 down, it is that they were well aware of that, despite the scoreline.
Bournemouth 3-0 Crystal Palace - the fans' verdictpublished at 11:50 BST 4 May
11:50 BST 4 May
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We asked for your thoughts after Sunday's Premier League game between Bournemouth and Crystal Palace at Vitality Stadium.
Here are some of your comments:
Bournemouth fans
Simon: Andoni Iraola orchestrated another masterpiece and the players delivered. Rayan is showing just how menacing he can be, but he does need a lighter touch at times. Alex Scott and Alex Jimenez were the standouts. I've just checked my passport is in date, just in case!
Paul: Crystal Palace were only poor because Bournemouth never allowed them to be involved. Even Ismaila Sarr's effort that hit the post would've been ruled offside. But credit should be given to the away supporters, who never stopped cheering their side on.
Malcolm: From solid defending to three high-pressing forwards, it was more than comfortable in the first half. Crystal Palace didn't turn up until the second half and they had a mountain to climb. The penalty was soft, but who wouldn't take it? Adrien Truffert is excellent, he had another top performance, as did Marcus Tavernier. The dizzy heights of sixth in the Premier League, should I pinch myself?
Stewart: Well I don't have a lot to say, just that I would love to beat Man City for Arsenal and for my long gone Grandad. That would also help to put my beloved Cherries in Europe, whatever the competition! Please stay Kroupi and Rayan. Have some fun boys!
Palace fans
Steve: The line-ups suggested Palace wouldn't get much out of this game, yet it was still hugely disappointing how poorly they played. The first half was, quite frankly, awful. There was no shape and no quality, Bournemouth had far more skill and pace. Palace have put all their eggs in the Conference League basket, yet they are still not mathematically safe from the drop. Let's hope it pays off and Glasner is not left to rue his team selections.
J: We are well and truly in a battle to avoid relegation now. We've thrown away far too many points all season. This Palace side need a new direction.
Andy: Our possession was amiss plus our passing in terms of both general play and free kicks was abysmal. Yeremy Pino was one of the main culprits, he needs to be rested for Thursday's game.
Dave: It was clear from this performance what the priority is for Palace. I can't blame them for having one eye on Thursday's game, with the chance to reach a major European final, but the manner of the performance from the rotated squad players didn't sit well with me. The first half display was easily the worst of the season. There were a lot of lacklustre performances. It was almost like this game really wasn't wanted and they had given up before a ball was kicked. Silver lining though, we had no new injuries! On to Thursday for the big game.
Gossip: Eagles make Iraola top targetpublished at 06:50 BST 4 May
06:50 BST 4 May
Crystal Palace view Andoni Iraola as the top target to become their next manager after the Spaniard announced he would be leaving Bournemouth at the end of the season - but Chelsea are also interested. (Football Insider, external)
Analysis: A day to forget for Crystal Palacepublished at 16:49 BST 3 May
16:49 BST 3 May
Adwaidh Rajan BBC Sport journalist
Image source, Getty Images
Crystal Palace's team news against Bournemouth hinted that their priority had shifted from the Premier League to the Conference League.
And if confirmation was necessary, it came in the manner of their performance in the 3-0 defeat at Vitality Stadium.
They are tantalisingly close to a first major European final after their commanding 3-1 win at Shakhtar Donetsk in the first leg of their Conference League semi-final tie.
With one eye on Thursday's second leg, Oliver Glasner made five changes to his side as Adam Wharton, top scorer Ismaila Sarr and Jean-Philippe Mateta all dropped to the bench.
A disjointed Palace failed to register a shot in the first half, compared to Bournemouth's 10.
The second half was an improvement after Glasner threw on the influential trio, with Sarr's 89th-minute effort off a post the closest Palace came to scoring.
But even at 3-0 down their supporters were undeterred and sung "We're going to Leipzig", signalling a potential Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano or Strasbourg at Red Bull Arena on 27 May.
And Glasner will hope this defeat will be quickly forgotten if he can help the Eagles move one step closer to a continental trophy in a few days' time.
Bournemouth 3-0 Crystal Palace: What Glasner saidpublished at 16:29 BST 3 May
16:29 BST 3 May
Media caption,
Palace 'tank was empty' after Europa win on Thursday - Glasner
Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner has been speaking to Sky Sports following the heavy defeat: "The tank was empty, we could see it. The players tried and in the second half we were much better, it was a game on the same level. In the first half, it was too much and we couldn't get the turnaround from Thursday evening.
"The players tried, but I could see it at the set plays and in the easy mistakes we made. It's not to blame anyone. It was just really overwhelming for us, this match and the win against Shakhtar Donetsk. Overall, Bournemouth were much better.
"The three substitutes [at half-time] were planned before. We wanted the attackers who played on Thursday to not play more than 45 minutes. Normally Will Hughes would've started, but he was ill.
"The message at half-time was that the first half wasn't us and it's time to show in the second half that we can do better and play more in front. We had 50% possession in the first half but no shots. Against a team that presses like Bournemouth, playing square passes around their box doesn't make sense - but that's what we did.
"We made too many mistakes. It's not that we wanted to do this, but we have to accept it. Now we will recover and prepare for Thursday. It is maybe the biggest match in the club's history.
"I trust these players completely. They have shown they can play better and I know they will find the focus.
"It's not an excuse, but we travelled back to London on Friday and then travelled to Bournemouth yesterday. It's a lot at the end of a long season. None of our players have ever experienced anything like this."
Did you know?
Crystal Palace failed to take a single shot in the first-half of this match for the first time in a Premier League game since August 2021 against Chelsea.
The Eagles faced their seventh penalty in the Premier League this season, their most-ever in a single campaign and the joint-most of any team in the 2025-26 season.
Oliver Glasner makes five changes to his Crystal Palace side after their 3-1 win against Shakhtar Donetsk in the first leg of their Europa Conference League semi-final on Thursday night.
Chris Richards, Adam Wharton, Tyrick Mitchell, Ismaila Sarr and Jean-Philippe Mateta move to the bench.
In come Chadi Riad, Justin Devenny, Jefferson Lerma, Brennan Johnson and Jorgen Strand Larsen.
You can also listen to today's 5 Live Premier League commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Bournemouth v Crystal Palace" or "ask BBC Sounds to play Man Utd v Liverpool".
Sutton's predictions: Bournemouth v Crystal Palace published at 10:02 BST 3 May
10:02 BST 3 May
Bournemouth are unbeaten in 14 league games and have only lost twice at home all season. Their fans must be wondering whether life will be as good when Marco Rose replaces Andoni Iraola next season.
This is probably a good time to play Crystal Palace, whose minds will be on their Europa Conference League semi-final with Shakhtar Donetsk.
It will be close but I am going for Eli Junior Kroupi and co to edge this.
Bournemouth v Crystal Palace: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 13:12 BST 2 May
13:12 BST 2 May
Sophie Brown BBC Sport journalist
Bournemouth and Crystal Palace, two teams with Europe on their minds, meet at Vitality Stadium on Sunday.
The Andoni Iraola farewell party continues with the Cherries seeking to go unbeaten for a 15th consecutive Premier League match, the longest current such run in the top flight.
They are firmly on course for a European debut next season. Only two teams have had a 14-plus game unbeaten run within a season and finished outside the top six: that was Wimbledon in 1996-97 and Chelsea – who have been linked with a move for Iraola - in 2015-16.
If Bournemouth fans have a complaint, it could be the number of draws – seven in their past 10 league games – with the past five matches at Vitality Stadium ending in a stalemate.
But they will be expecting to keep up their unbeaten run against Palace, who might have one eye on their Conference League semi-final, and who have not beaten Bournemouth in any of their past five Premier League meetings (L2, D3).
Like Bournemouth head coach Iraola, Palace boss Oliver Glasner will also be leaving at the end of the season.
While Iraola's parting gift is set to be getting the Cherries into Europe for the first time, Glasner has moved Palace a step further on and is hoping to bring home major continental silverware for the first time.
The visit to the south coast is sandwiched between the two Conference League semi-final games against Shakhtar Donetsk, with Palace in great shape to progress after winning the away leg 3-1 on Thursday.
It was also a welcome win away from home, after back-to-back defeats on the road, including at Liverpool last weekend, where Palace had more shots and more shots on targets that their hosts but came home without any points in a 3-1 defeat.
In fact, the Eagles have lost seven of their past 13 Premier League away games, as many defeats on the road as in their first 28 matches under Oliver Glasner.
They have mainly defended well at Bournemouth in recent times, keeping a clean sheet in five of their eight Premier League games there.
Even so, the overall head-to-head record has tipped in the Cherries' favour, with Palace failing to win any of their past five matches against them.
Strand Larsen pushing for start at Bournemouthpublished at 18:09 BST 1 May
18:09 BST 1 May
Image source, Getty Images
Crystal Palace will be hoping to carry their winning momentum into the weekend when they face Bournemouth, after Thursday's 3-1 win at Shakhtar Donetsk in the first leg of their Conference League semi-final.
Speaking after the game, striker Jorgen Strand Larsen - who scored the Eagles' third goal from the penalty spot - said: "Let's take it one day at a time, one game at a time. Now we are getting ready for Sunday.
"We want to finish off well in the Premier League as well, so we have got loads of games to look forward to."
Palace boss Oliver Glasner could make some changes following their successful night in Europe.
Yeremy Pino started in Poland, with Brennan Johnson dropping to the bench, with Strand Larsen pushing for a recall after being a substitute on Thursday.
Sunday's hosts Bournemouth start the weekend in seventh, six points ahead of 14th-placed Palace and on a 13-game unbeaten run.
Shakhtar Donetsk 1-3 Crystal Palace - the fans' verdictpublished at 09:26 BST 1 May
09:26 BST 1 May
Image source, Getty Images
We asked for your views on Crystal Palace's 3-1 win over Shakhtar Donetsk in the first leg of their Conference League semi-final.
Here are some of your comments:
Steve: A strong performance where Kamada and Wharton bossed the middle of the park. Now to finish the job next week and then Leipzig here we come. A dream almost coming true. I never thought I would witness Palace playing in a European competition let alone getting to a final! COYP.
Dale: Fabulous performance! Away leg, I'd have been happy with a draw and wouldn't have been devastated with a one goal deficit. A 3-1 lead is dreamland. It's by no means certain yet, but surely one foot is in the final now.
JHC: That's our season in a nutshell - we create enough chances and last night we took them. So often we don't! Job only half done, but coming back to Selhurst with a two goal lead is a dream.
Redders: Typical Palace, never do it easy. Miraculous start, followed by 60 minutes of dross. We then switch on again and finish it off. Please, please, please, recreate minute one and 65-90 again next week.
Dave: What a fantastic result and what a great performance away from home. I was speaking to one of the player's agents on the way to the home game against Newcastle United. He asked me what I thought about Daichi Kamada and I've got to admit I said I wasn't sure but how wrong was I. He was amazing tonight with his goal and assist. He commanded the middle of midfield with Wharton at his side but there were many heroes in the team. We are close now to the final. Go for it Palace.
Al: The same vibe as last season with a sense of something special in the air. The defence is getting meaner and players are stepping up. There's a strong collective desire for more success. The European dream remains alive.
'If that was Harry Kane...'published at 08:22 BST 1 May
08:22 BST 1 May
Gary Rose BBC Sport journalist
Image source, Getty Images
Being a club's record signing brings with it a certain pressure. Some players rise to deal with it and others struggle.
For Jorgen Strand Larsen, it seemed for a while it was a case of the latter.
The Norwegian striker joined Crystal Palace from Wolverhampton Wanderers on 2 February in a deal worth up to £48m, but managed just three Premier League goals in 14 games for the Eagles before Thursday's Conference League semi-final first leg.
However, his fourth goal could arguably be his most important as he produced a moment of magic to give Palace a 3-1 lead against Shakhtar Donetsk in the Polish city of Krakow.
Substitute Strand Larsen raced on to a pass by Daichi Kamada in the 84th minute, broke into the area and showed excellent composure to sidestep a sliding challenge and then clip in a neat finish over the advancing Shakhtar keeper Dmytro Riznyk.
The delightful strike gave Oliver Glasner's side a two-goal cushion going into the second leg at Selhurst Park on Thursday, 7 May, and they surely have one foot in a first major European final.
"We were not sure if he had had a touch and that is what is impressive, the calmness and then to dink it into the corner," said former Tottenham and England midfielder Glenn Hoddle on TNT Sports.
"If that was Harry Kane scoring that goal we would all be saying 'wow what a beautiful goal'."
Analysis: Palace step uppublished at 22:50 BST 30 April
22:50 BST 30 April
Gary Rose BBC Sport journalist
Image source, Getty Images
Oliver Glasner's time as Crystal Palace coach will be over at the end of the season, but he has already given Eagles fans memories of a lifetime by leading them to last season's FA Cup triumph.
And he could finish with more silverware as the Conference League pre-season favourites put themselves in the perfect position to reach the showpiece on 27 May in Leipzig.
Crucial to Palace's run in the competition has been key players stepping up, and Ismaila Sarr continued his superb streak with an eighth goal, making him the joint top scorer this term, and taking his season's tally to 18 in all competitions.
Six of those strikes have come in the knockouts, proving his ability to rise to the big occasion.
But Sarr has not been alone in doing that, with Jean Philippe Mateta a handful for the Shakhtar defence before his replacement Jorgen Strand Larsen claimed a decisive goal to give Palace a two-goal cushion.
The Norwegian was Palace's record signing in the January transfer window following a deal worth up to £48m, but has struggled to live up to his price tag, having scored just three Premier League goals.
But Strand Larsen showed what he is capable of with his fine finish - his first in Europe and one that could not have come at a more important time for him and his club.