Hooligan Soccer
·26 maggio 2026
UEFA Conference League Final: Crystal Palace

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Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·26 maggio 2026

What has been a rollercoaster of a season at Crystal Palace is set to end in glory when they take on Rayo Vallecano in the Europa Conference League Final on Wednesday night.
First was the euphoria of winning the FA Cup at the end of last season, then the Community Shield at the start of this. In between Palace were kicked out of the Europa league and demoted to the Conference. Then a war of words between manager Oliver Glasner and the Board over key players being sold threatened to tear the season apart. A relegation scrap briefly loomed as results collapsed.
Yet now here we are, back full circle at season end to potential euphoria. Premier League survival assured and the club’s first ever European final. It’s Glasner’s last game in a stunning two-year spell. The Disney execs could have a field day with this soap opera.
The season started so well. At one stage the Eagles were fourth in the Premier League after 15 games. But the storm clouds were already gathering. Glasner had, with some justification, expected the Board to back him after winning Palace’s first ever major trophies.
Instead, star man Eberechi Eze was sold to Arsenal. When Marc Guéhi looked like he was going to Liverpool, Glasner reportedly threatened to quit. Already angry about a lack of investment in the playing squad, he was concerned that so late in the window no replacements had been lined up. The Board relented and Guéhi remained a Palace player.
Come January though and it was clear, with his contract due to expire this summer, Palace wanted to cash in and Guéhi was sold to Manchester City.
Glasner announced at the same time he was leaving as well. Jean Philip Mateta, the Eagles’ top scorer, forced a move to AC Milan which fell through because he had a knee injury.
By now Palace’s form had collapsed, not helped by injuries to key players and losing Senegal attacker Ismaïla Sarr to the African Cup of Nations for the duration of the competition. Morale had sunk.
But back came Sarr, then Daniel Muñoz from injury, then Mateta. Things settled down with Glasner, the wins kept on coming in Europe and just in time for the end of season nearly everyone was fit again.
Palace’s first foray into European football has been a great success, winning eight and drawing four of their 14 games so far. They weren’t meant to be in the conference, let’s not forget. Having won the FA Cup they were placed in the Europa League. But Nottingham Forest complained they had breached multi-club ownership rules and Palace were demoted to the Conference league. Forest, who had qualified for the Conference, took their place.
After a strong start to the Group, Palace secured their place in the knockouts but only just. Having won three games, they wobbled in line with the rest of their season and lost to Larnaca and Strasbourg. An embarrassing 2–2 draw to Finland’s KuPS Kuopio left them needing a play-off win to secure a place in the knockout rounds.
A 3-1 aggregate victory against Zrinjski Mostar saw them through and they have gone from strength to strength, again mirroring their Premier League season, finishing strongly with convincing wins over Fiorentina (4-2) and Shakhtar Donetsk (5-2).
Palace have broken records along the way. Their eight wins in the main part of the tournament (not including qualifying) is the most victories achieved by a team in their debut season in a UEFA competition.
They have scored more goals than anyone (25) and have the highest xG with 31.3.
Ismaïla Sarr has been the star of their campaign, with nine goals in 14 games.
Europa League, you say? Nah. We’re ok where we are, thanks.
“I think the best way to put it is that we’ve had a lifetime’s worth of memories in the space of the year,” Ollie Thomas of TalkCPFC, one of Palace’s most prominent fan voices, told ESPN.
Certainly this time just over a year ago, as the Eagles prepared to face Manchester City in the FA Cup final, there is not a single Palace fan out there who would crystal ball gaze and say in 12 months they would have won their first ever domestic trophy, then their second, and then be in a European final. It really is the stuff of dreams.
In amongst of course the chaos of losing their best two players, nearly their third, and the manager announcing mid-season he was leaving.
Opta have a Palace win at 51.2% chance, with Rayo 23.2%, making the Selhurst Park outfit the clear favourites. But Rayo will be no pushover.
Team selection will depend on the fitness of defender Chris Richards and midfielder Adam Wharton. Richards has torn two ligaments in his ankle but Glasner is hoping he can be patched up enough. Wharton gave Palace fans a scare at the weekend when he suffered an ankle injury against Arsenal but is expected to be fit.
Predicted line up (3-4-2-1): HendersonCanvot | Lacroix | Richards/RiadMuñoz | Wharton | Kamada | MitchellSarr | PinoMateta
If Palace turn up and play to their potential, they should have enough to win the midfield battle and exploit Rayo’s high backline. Mateta has hit peak form just at the right time, with three goals in his last six games having returned from injury.
Henderson has been selected as England’s number 2 for the World Cup while Sarr is the Conference League’s top scorer.







































