Here Is How Aston Villa Can Keep Morgan Rogers: Do They Have A Squad To Withstand Without Him? | OneFootball

Here Is How Aston Villa Can Keep Morgan Rogers: Do They Have A Squad To Withstand Without Him? | OneFootball

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·10. April 2026

Here Is How Aston Villa Can Keep Morgan Rogers: Do They Have A Squad To Withstand Without Him?

Artikelbild:Here Is How Aston Villa Can Keep Morgan Rogers: Do They Have A Squad To Withstand Without Him?

Aston Villa are entering the final stretch of the 2025/26 Premier League season sitting fourth in the table. They currently hold a five-point lead over Liverpool in fifth, giving them a massive chance to secure Champions League football for next year. Under Unai Emery, the club has stayed in the top-four conversation for two seasons straight.

A recent 2-0 win over West Ham, paired with John McGinn and Youri Tielemans returning from injury, has given the squad a huge confidence boost heading into the final games. On top of that, Arsenal’s latest win confirmed the Premier League has earned an extra UEFA European Performance Spot. This means a top-five finish is now enough for Champions League qualification, which is a shift that completely changes the stakes for Villa.


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Keith Wyness Drops a Clear Warning Over Morgan Rogers

With the stakes this high, former Aston Villa CEO Keith Wyness has laid out exactly what Champions League football means for the club’s summer transfer window. Speaking on Football Insider’s Inside Track podcast, Wyness, who ran Everton between 2004 and 2009 and now advises elite clubs, warned that without top-tier European football, Villa risk losing their best creative talent. He argued that qualifying for the Champions League is the only way to prevent a Morgan Rogers sale that would otherwise be hard to avoid. While he noted that fans wouldn’t mind seeing four or five fringe players leave, losing Rogers is a different story entirely.

“If they qualify for the Champions League, then that will hopefully stop the Morgan Rogers-type sale that would have to be done.

“There are five or six players that I don’t think would be missed that much within the Villa squad. And they could still raise some value, and that would be good to freshen up the squad.

“It’s avoiding those sorts of sales like a Morgan Rogers. That is the big move for Villa. That’s why the Champions League is so important and why they keep building for the future, bringing in some younger talent and freshening up the squad.

“There could be at least four or five that could go. And I don’t think the fans would complain about any of them, and they could be replaced at a reasonable level and make Villa even better. It’s the Champions League, I’m afraid, that’s what it’s all about.”

Rogers has been clinical this season, netting eight goals in 31 Premier League appearances, with six of those coming on the road. His total goal involvements stand at 13 (goals and assists), averaging 0.42 per 90 minutes. His underlying numbers are even more impressive; a non-penalty expected goals (npxG) of 0.36 per 90 puts his total npxG at 11.03. That lands him in the top 91st percentile of all Premier League players. (Via Footystats)

Do Aston Villa Actually Have the Squad Depth to Withstand a Rebuild Without Rogers?

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND – MARCH 15: Morgan Rogers of Aston Villa looks on after the Premier League match between Manchester United and Aston Villa at Old Trafford on March 15, 2026 in Manchester, England. (Photo by Lewis Storey/Getty Images)

Wyness is right to point out that Rogers is the red line Villa cannot afford to cross. However, the bigger question is whether the club’s setup actually support long-term Champions League goals or if they are just chasing it year-to-year. Villa are navigating a tricky financial path, having spent £69.5 million this season while bringing in only £42.8 million. A gap like that suggests the club are not in a position to lose an elite-level producer without a major drop-off in performance.

The fringe players Wyness thinks they can sell might bring in decent money, but none of them can replicate the directness and creativity Rogers brings to the final third. Making the Champions League solves the immediate problem of keeping him, but Aston Villa eventually have to face a hard truth: if they only stay competitive through individual brilliance rather than overall squad depth, they will be back in this same position every summer. Keeping Rogers by finishing in the top five is the result everyone wants, but it only delays the inevitable if Emery isn’t given the consistent investment needed to back up the club’s big ambitions.

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