
EPL Index
·28 de mayo de 2025
Aston Villa Must Sell Stars After Champions League Disappointment

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·28 de mayo de 2025
When Aston Villa fell to a 2-0 defeat at Old Trafford on the final day of the Premier League season, the loss reverberated far beyond the result itself. That afternoon against Manchester United marked not just the end of a campaign, but potentially the beginning of a difficult summer in the transfer market.
Villa missed out on Champions League qualification by goal difference, a marginal miss with major consequences. Speaking on The Athletic FC Podcast, Villa reporter Jacob Tanswell laid it out clearly: “Villa managed to total £100million from this season’s Champions League participation… not having that is going to leave a hole in the budget.”
Unai Emery’s side now faces a complex transfer window — one where departures may outweigh arrivals, and where financial caution must replace recent ambition. Villa’s climb has been impressive, but to stay within Profit and Sustainability Regulations (PSR), the club must sell.
Photo IMAGO
Villa are not short on attractive players, which may be both blessing and curse. Boubacar Kamara’s contract situation is unresolved, with talks ongoing. Tanswell revealed the midfielder “was waiting to see if Villa got into the Champions League” before making a decision. That outcome now complicates his future.
Lucas Digne, another likely departure, remains valuable but is considered surplus due to financial constraints. As Tanswell noted: “Villa don’t feel like they can stockpile in certain areas… they haven’t got the finances for it.”
Leon Bailey has interest from Saudi Arabia, while Jacob Ramsey and Ollie Watkins are attracting enquiries. None are certain to leave, but the possibility of multiple exits is very real — and deeply unsettling for fans.
Emery made clear his preference: “If I could have the same squad next year, I would sleep far better.”
But that stability looks increasingly unlikely.
Supporters have grown used to seeing major names leave. From Douglas Luiz and Moussa Diaby to Jhon Duran, Villa have already conducted significant player sales. The club’s hierarchy, though keen to invest, is restricted by Premier League rules — something broadcaster Dan Bardell described as a major challenge.
“The rules are pretty harsh on an upwardly mobile team like Villa… owners want to put money in but are hamstrung by the rules.”
Photo: IMAGO
The need to sell and buy simultaneously is a tightrope walk. Villa’s good form late in the season — winning eight of their last ten league games — showed the squad’s potential. But with exits expected, particularly if Kamara, Martinez, or Watkins are sold, replicating that form could be a far greater task.
What complicates matters further is that Emery’s vision remains ambitious. He wants to build, to challenge at the top, and to improve every season. Yet he may have to do so without several of his most trusted players.
Bardell underlined the impact: “You can’t underestimate how big not qualifying for the Champions League is for Villa… there’s going to be even more flux.”
Europa League success and a strong Premier League showing could offer Villa another route to Europe’s top table. But to start from a stable base, the club must navigate a summer of uncertainty, comply with regulations, and attempt to refresh the squad without weakening it.
That’s the task that lies ahead — complex, costly, and critical to the club’s immediate future.