Ed Aarons at the Amex Stadium 

Roberto De Zerbi rues Brighton’s lack of experience after AEK Athens defeat

Roberto De Zerbi admitted that Brighton’s lack of experience cost them dearly as their European debut ended in a surprise 3-2 defeat to AEK Athens
  
  

Ezequiel Ponce celebrates scoring AEK Athens’ winner against Brighton
Ezequiel Ponce celebrates scoring AEK Athens’ winner against Brighton. Photograph: Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images

Roberto De Zerbi admitted that Brighton’s lack of experience cost them dearly as their European debut ended in a surprise 3-2 defeat at home to AEK Athens.

A late goal from the substitute Ezequiel Ponce sealed victory for the Greek champions in the Europa League group stages after João Pedro equalised twice from the penalty spot for the hosts, who were missing the defensive talisman Lewis Dunk through injury. But with a trip to face Marseille up next before Brighton face a double header against the four-time European champions Ajax, De Zerbi acknowledged they must adapt quickly to their new surroundings.

“We can learn and we have to learn,” said the Brighton manager. “We can improve but it’s difficult to accept this defeat. We showed not the right experience. Maybe not the same experience of AEK but for the rest we played with personality and the right attitude and controlled the game, dominated the game and we are sad for the result. Sad because we couldn’t make our fans happy, our club happy. But we can learn if we want to make another upgrade we have to know before the game the situation where we can concede goals.”

Dunk and the teenage forward Evan Ferguson, who was left out of the match-day squad after falling ill, are both expected to return for Sunday’s Premier League visit of Bournemouth. But after making seven changes from the side that defeated Manchester United 3-1 at Old Trafford, De Zerbi refused to criticise his players. “I can’t be happy when we win at Old Trafford and sad today if performances are both good,” he added.

The AEK Athens manager, Matías Almeyda, admitted he was pleased that his side had proved the doubters wrong after their surprise win. “I believe a lot in the work we do on a daily basis,” said the former Argentina midfielder. “The opposition on a number of occasions forced us to play another kind of game. But it is the fighting spirit of the team and we earned some respect.

Unai Emery (pictured) insists Aston Villa must learn how to handle European football and refused to blame his changes after their sloppy 3-2 defeat at Legia Warsaw.

Ernest Muci's second-half winner clinched a deserved victory for the hosts to ruin Villa's Europa Conference League debut. Jhon Durán and Lucas Digne twice levelled for the underwhelming visitors in the first half after Pawel Wszolek and Muci scored for Legia.

It ranked as one of the worst performances in Emery's 11 months in charge, with the manager making five changes, including giving a debut to Barcelona loanee Clément Lenglet.

He said: "I believe in our squad and our players and we could have lost this game with other players on the pitch. Every match away in Europe is difficult and this is a new step where we have to learn. We still have the possibility to react again, we are going to play another five matches. It's not a good result but we have to learn and have to understand how we're going to face the next matches and this competition.

"We have to build the squad who will play a lot of matches and we will need players in the squad to give them opportunities to play, to use their qualities. In the second half we started well but in one click, we concede another opportunity and they score a goal. They had a plan, they did good and we couldn't stop them in some moments."

Legia struck after just two minutes in the Group E opener when Wszolek converted Patryk Kun's cross. Durán levelled four minutes later, though, nodding in after Kacper Tobiasz turned Nicolò Zaniolo's drive onto the bar.

It should have given Villa a platform but a shoddy, slow, performance continued to undermine their tag as one of the tournament favourites.

Livewire Muci punished them again after 26 minutes when Villa were left floundering on the flanks and he fired in Wszolek's centre. But Villa came back, however undeserved, and Digne's deflected volley ensured they went into the break level.

Parity did not last long, though, when Muci went sent running at Ezri Konsa and Calum Chambers, made fools of them both and found the net off a post.

This time there was no way back and Marc Gual almost added a fourth when Emi Martínez parried Bartosz Slisz's shot and Chambers cleared. Jacob Ramsey, Moussa Diaby and Youri Tielemans tried to find an unlikely leveller but victorious Legia held on.

"You should not underestimate the underdogs, Mostar will also be a hot game, a Balkan team with a lot of emotions," said manager Kosta Runjaic, after Mostar beat AZ Alkmaar 4-3 in the other group game.

"It's surprise for me but it's also a surprise we won against Aston Villa, I'm happy about it, this three points in the first game are very important for us. We were lucky in some moments but you need luck. We will see how we do in the next game, we will face a very ugly Alkmaar in a couple of weeks." PA Media

“There were two journalists here yesterday – when I mentioned we were here to win, one of them laughed. He’s not here today. We don’t want to be underestimated by anyone. We knew the greatness of this team. They play a fantastic kind of football but we stood tall.”

 

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