Europa League: Aina pulls through with Forest into semi final
Forest booked their place in the UEFA Europa League semi-finals after grinding out a 2-1 aggregate victory over FC Porto in a quarter-final contest that demanded discipline across both legs
by Gbemidepo Popoola · Premium TimesThere are nights in Europe when progress is not about flair, but resolve. Not about dominance, but survival.
At the City Ground, Ola Aina and Nottingham Forest leaned into that reality, and came out stronger.
A tie decided by fine margins
Forest booked their place in the UEFA Europa League semi-finals after grinding out a 2-1 aggregate victory over FC Porto in a quarter-final contest that demanded discipline across both legs.
The first meeting in Portugal ended 1-1; tight, balanced, unresolved. The second leg followed the same script.
Only this time, Forest found the moment that mattered.
The decisive strike
It came through Morgan Gibbs-White. After an unfortunate red card for ex-Southampton man Jan Bednarek in the 8th min reduced his side to 10 men.
A first-half effort in the 12th min; deflected, imperfect, but decisive, cut through the tension and handed Forest a 1-0 win on the night.
In ties like this, perfection is optional.
Impact is everything.
That single moment proved enough to tilt the balance and carry Forest into the last four.
Nigeria on both sides
Across the pitch, the Nigerian presence added another layer to the contest.
Porto started both Terem Moffi and Zaidu Sanusi, two players tasked with breaking down a defence that refused to bend.
But while Porto searched for answers, Aina delivered assurance.
Built on resistance
This was not a night for open football.
It was a test of structure, concentration, and patience.
Aina played a key role in Forest’s defensive organisation, positionally disciplined, alert under pressure, and part of a back line that understood exactly what the game required.
Porto pushed. Repeatedly.
They probed for spaces, chased moments, and tried to force a breakthrough that would have changed everything.
But Forest held.
Clear chances were limited. Angles were closed. The game was managed, minute by minute, with control replacing chaos.
Porto’s frustration
For Porto, the quality was there, in flashes. The intent was clear. The urgency undeniable.
But at this level, intent without incision is not enough.
Despite the presence of Moffi and Sanusi, and sustained attacking pressure, the Portuguese side could not find the cutting edge required to shift the tie.
And in knockout football, missed moments do not return.
A step closer
For Forest, this is more than qualification.
It is validation.
A team balancing domestic pressure in the Premier League has found clarity in Europe, eliminating one of the continent’s seasoned competitors through discipline and belief.
For Aina, it is another statement; quiet, controlled, but significant.
In other games on the night, Aston Villa thrashed Bologna 4-0 on home soil, as the Villains progressed 7-1 on aggregate to the Semi-finals, while Real Betis and Celta Vigo lost at home 2-4 (3-5), and 1-3 (1-6) to Sc Braga and Freiburg respectively.
What comes next
The semi-finals await.
Nottingham vs Aston Villa, and SC Braga vs Freiburg.
Bigger tests. Higher stakes. Less margin for error.
But if this tie proved anything, it is that Forest are willing to suffer for progression, and built to endure when it matters most.
Because in Europe, sometimes one goal is enough.
And sometimes, standing firm is the real victory.