Chelsea roar back to beat Real Betis in UEFA Conference League final

Chelsea's Reece James holds the trophy as he celebrates with his teammates after winning the Europa Conference League final soccer match between Real Betis and Chelsea in Wroclaw, Poland, Friday, June 7, 2019. (AP)
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Updated 29 May 2025
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Chelsea roar back to beat Real Betis in UEFA Conference League final

WROCLAW: Chelsea roared back to beat Real Betis 4-1 in the UEFA Conference League final in Wroclaw on Wednesday, becoming the first club to claim all four major European trophies.
Manuel Pellegrini’s enterprising Betis caught the favorites cold in Poland through an early goal from Abde Ezzalzouli but Enzo Maresca’s team were a changed side in the second half.
Two goals in five minutes changed the complexion of the game, with man-of-the-match Cole Palmer creating both openings for Enzo Fernandez and Nicolas Jackson.
Substitute Jadon Sancho made the game safe in the 83rd minute, finishing from an tight angle and Moises Caicedo added gloss to the scoreline.
It means Chelsea become the first club to win the full set of Champions League, Europa League, Conference League and the now-defunct Cup Winners’ Cup.
It is also the first silverware for the club since Todd Boehly’s consortium took over from former owner Roman Abramovich in 2022, following an era of unprecedented success for the club.
After a bright start from both sides, Betis broke the deadlock in the ninth minute through Ezzalzouli, who scored the goal against Fiorentina that took his side to the final.
Malo Gusto lost the ball in midfield and Betis surged forward. Captain Isco produced a clever pass to find Ezzalzouli on the edge of the box and the Moroccan drilled a left-footed shot across Filip Jorgensen.
Minutes later Marc Bartra tried his luck from distance as Betis pressed for a second, but this time Jorgensen was equal to the task, producing a flying save.
Urged on by their massed ranks of fans at Wroclaw stadium, Betis went close again when Johnny Cardoso’s shot from inside the box was deflected behind by Benoit Badiashile, with Chelsea clinging on.
The Premier League side were enjoying the bulk of possession but struggling to create meaningful chances, with Betis defending well and Isco, a five-time Champions League winner with Real Madrid, pulling the strings.
As half-time approached Betis goalkeeper Adrian raced off his line to deny Enzo Fernandez but Chelsea went in at half-time goalless.
Maresca brought on Chelsea captain Reece James for the struggling Gusto at the break.
The Betis boss was forced a change when goalscorer Ezzalzouli was forced off, with Jesus Rodriguez coming on to replace him.
Chelsea were level in the 65th minute following a fine move down the right after Cole Palmer produced a fine cross to pick out Fernandez.
The midfielder got between two defenders to head the ball down and past Adrian.
Suddenly Chelsea’s tails were up and the fans behind the goal were in full voice.
In the 70th minute Palmer produced some magic on the edge of the box before producing a delightful cross which hit Jackson’s chest and went in.
Jackson should have scored a second goal but a heavy touch allowed Adrian to gather.
But Sancho made it 3-1 when he combined with fellow substitute Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall and Caicedo added a fourth.
Victory for Chelsea breaks an astonishing cycle of wins for Spanish teams.
Taking into account World Cups, European Championships, Champions League and the UEFA Cup/Europa League, of the previous 27 men’s finals involving Spanish teams, all 27 had had Spanish winners.
Four Spanish club sides had been defeated in that time, but in all cases by fellow La Liga sides.
Earlier, the center of Wroclaw was packed with fans from both clubs, with green-and-white clad Betis fans outnumbering their English rivals.
Poland’s interior minister said police made 28 arrests after supporters clashed in the city’s market square.


Iran players focus on Asian Cup despite concern for families stuck in military conflict

Updated 10 sec ago
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Iran players focus on Asian Cup despite concern for families stuck in military conflict

  • Iran lost their opening ‌Group A game to South Korea ​3-0 on Monday and ‌face hosts Australia on Thursday at the ‌Gold Coast Stadium
Iran forward Sara Didar ‌fought back tears when journalists asked her about the escalating military conflict in her country, as coach Marziyeh Jafari ​said her players were doing their best to focus on the Women’s Asian Cup campaign despite concern for their families back home.
The conflict erupted after the US and Israel launched air strikes on Iran over the weekend, killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, after ‌which Iran launched ‌missiles at countries on ​the ‌Arabian ⁠Peninsula.
“Obviously we’re ​all concerned ⁠and sad at what has happened to Iran and our families in Iran and our loved ones, but I really hope it’s very good for our country, to have good news ahead and I hope that my country would be ⁠strongly alive,” 21-year-old Didar said on ‌Wednesday.
Iran lost their opening ‌Group A game to South Korea ​3-0 on Monday and ‌face hosts Australia on Thursday at the ‌Gold Coast Stadium.
Australia midfielder Amy Sayer earlier praised the courage of the Iranian players for competing in the continental tournament despite their homeland facing political unrest and ‌military strikes.
Coach Jafari said the Iranian team wanted to make their Iranian-Australian supporters ⁠proud.
“We have ⁠so much concern regarding our families and the people in Iran,” she said. “Nobody loves war ... but here, we are coming to play football professionally and we do our best to concentrate on our football and match ahead.”
“Iranian-Australians here support us, we are so happy to have a country that all the people are united and supportive and we really love them also ​as well and we’ll ​do our best to make them proud.”