Forty-four years after beating Bayern Munich to lift the European Cup, Aston Villa have triumphed on the continent once again, and they have Unai Emery to thank for it.
The 54-year-old head coach is as close to a guarantee as you could hope to find in this competition -- the Europa League master has now won the tournament five times with three different teams.
Eye-catching goals from Youri Tielemans and Emi BuendÃa were added to by a third from Morgan Rogers as the Premier League side blew Freiburg away in a one-sided final in Istanbul.
Villa's first major trophy since their League Cup win over Leeds United in 1996 completes their resurgence from an ignominious Premier League relegation in 2016, to what is the high-water mark of the club's modern history.
Villa heroes deliver crowning moment
Seven years after helping Villa restore their Premier League status with victory over Derby County in the Championship playoff final, the ever-reliable John McGinn has been rewarded for a career of consistent improvement by lifting the Europa League trophy above his head as captain.
The image of McGinn celebrating among his teammates is the crowning moment for a Villa squad made up of players who have taken the club from midweek matches in Preston to nights like this in Istanbul.
Some of them, like Tyrone Mings and Tammy Abraham, were with McGinn on that day at Wembley in 2019, and others, such as Ezri Konsa, Emi MartÃnez, Ollie Watkins and Matty Cash arrived during the following 12 months.
Together, they have formed the nucleus of a Villa team that has often been denied its moment in the sun. They have threatened to deliver the statement success the club has craved, but have previously fallen short in the Conference League semifinals in 2024 and the Champions League quarterfinals last year where they were beaten by eventual winners Paris Saint-Germain.
In the Turkish capital, Villa put into practice everything they'd learned on the long road that has led them to this point, keeping Freiburg at arm's length and delivering three knockout blows in a nerveless performance.
In blowing away an admittedly below-par Freiburg on Wednesday and ending the club's 30-year trophy drought in spectacular fashion, these players have indelibly woven their names into the tapestry of Villa folklore alongside the likes of Paul McGrath and Peter Withe.
With his fifth title, Emery is Europa League royalty
In the build-up to Chelsea's Super Cup win over Emery's Villarreal in 2021, current England boss Thomas Tuchel remarked that UEFA "can call the [Europa League] trophy the Unai Emery trophy soon", such is his penchant for winning the tournament.
With Wednesday's triumph on the banks of the Bosphorus, the Spaniard has lifted the hefty 47kg trophy five times with four different clubs. As far as major European tournaments go, only Carlo Ancelotti (five Champions Leagues) has won a major European competition as many times as Emery has the Europa League.
The former Paris Saint-Germain and Arsenal boss, though, is the first to have done so with three different teams -- Sevilla (3), Villarreal (1) and now Villa.
He said on Tuesday that he is not the "king" of this tournament, but to the 11,000 supporters in the claret and blue end of Besiktas Park -- who counted an actual future king in Villa fan Prince William among their number -- Emery, who in four years has taken the club from 17th in the league to trophy winners, is a figurehead deserving of near-total devotion.
Emery may have also claimed that his past successes would have no bearing on this final, but he delivered a gameplan that served to emphasise his team's physical and technical superiority over their opponents and the result was in little doubt following Tielemans' thumping opener.
It's easy to forget that Villa didn't win any of their first four matches this season and had to wait until the end of September for their first goal, and so recovering to guide the team to the Champions League places and deliver a major European trophy, Emery has underlined his status as a modern coaching great.
Direct Villa win final via Tielemans, BuendÃa stunners
The first 40 minutes of Wednesday's contest offered few hints that Villa would produce two moments of immaculate quality to ensure they would head into the break two goals to the good.
Both sides struggled to impose themselves on the match in the opening stages, with regular fouls interrupting the flow of the game. It seemed as if Villa were struggling to get going, but the longer it went on, the more it became clear that Emery had planned for his side to skip the Freiburg press altogether as long balls were repeatedly fired up towards Watkins.
It was a tough watch until a moment of excellence from Tielemans -- via the cunning mind of Villa's set-piece coach Austin MacPhee -- put Emery's side in front. Lucas Digne's short corner caught the Freiburg defence napping, allowing Rogers to study his angles and float the ball towards a space just inside the penalty area for Tielemans to meet with a thudding volley that flew past the stunned Noah Atubolu.
Whether by fortune or design, Villa have had a penchant for the spectacular all season, with their goal returns consistently outstripping their underlying attacking numbers. And so it proved again when BeundÃa whipped a shot into the top corner with his weaker left foot from the edge of the box.
Watching the ball arc around Atubolu's clawing hand and into the side netting was a delight, and referee François Letexier saw fit for it to bring the curtain down on the opening 45 minutes as he promptly blew for half-time.
Rogers' third, though sharp, was not quite as eye-catching, but perhaps the twin first-half strikes made up for last year's final between Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United being decided by arguably the most unsatisfyingly scrappy final-winning goal in recent memory.
- Report: Dominant Villa cruise past Freiburg to Europa League title
- Prince William visited Villa before Europa League win - McGinn
Key stats
John McGinn is the first Scotsman to captain a side in a major European final since Barry Ferguson for Rangers in the 2008 UEFA Cup, and the first for an English side since Graeme Souness for Liverpool in the 1984 European Cup
Aston Villa's 44-year gap between major European finals is the third-biggest of any club, behind Manchester City (51, 1970-2021) and West Ham United (47, 1976-2023)
The last three Europa League finals with a two-goal halftime lead have ended 3-0 (Atlético Madrid vs. Athletic Club in 2012, Atalanta vs. Bayer Leverkusen in 2024, Aston Villa vs. Freiburg in 2026)
Morgan Rogers (23y 298d) is the youngest Englishman player to score in a major UEFA final since Steven Gerrard for Liverpool vs. Alavés in the 2001 UEFA Cup final (20y 351d)
With Spurs' Europa League title last year, it is the first time that English clubs have won the Europa League/UEFA Cup in consecutive seasons since the first two editions of the UEFA Cup in 1971-72 (Spurs) and 1972-73 (Liverpool)
Aston Villa's Jadon Sancho is the first player to play in the final of three different major European competitions in three consecutive seasons (2023-24 Champions League, 2024-25 Conference League, 2025-26 Europa League)
Freiburg covered 2.5km more as a team than Aston Villa (102.9km to 100.4km)
