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Fiorentina 1 – 2 West Ham


Jarrod Bowen’s last-minute goal clinched Europa Conference League glory for West Ham with a dramatic 2-1 victory over Fiorentina in the final in Prague.

Bowen latched onto Lucas Paqueta’s pass and fired home a low finish to spark delirious West Ham celebrations at the Fortuna Arena and secure the club’s first piece of major silverware in 43 years.

Earlier, Said Benrahma’s 67th-minute penalty had been cancelled out by a quickfire strike by Giacomo Bonaventura, but David Moyes’ side showed impressive resilience, withstanding heavy pressure at times during the game and then striking in the 90th minute.

The victory ends a wait of more than four decades for major silverware and means they have won a European trophy for the second time in their history following the club’s UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup triumph in 1965. It also guarantees their place in next year’s Europa League following a 14th-placed Premier League finish.

Player ratings

Fiorentina: Terracciano (6), Dodo (7), Milenkovic (7), Ranieri (6), Biraghi (7), Amrabat (7), Mandragora (7), Kouame (6), Bonaventura (8), Gonzalez (7), Jovic (6).

Subs: Cabral (7), Saponara (6), Igor (6), Barak (6)

West Ham: Areola (7), Coufal (7), Zouma (7), Aguerd (8), Emerson (7), Soucek (7), Rice (8), Paqueta (8), Bowen (8), Antonio (7), Benrahma (7).

Subs: Kehrer (7), Fornals (6), Ogbonna (6).

Player of the match: Jarrod Bowen

How West Ham made history

Victory looked unlikely at times during a one-sided first half in which Fiorentina captain Cristiano Biraghi was left bloodied and bandaged after being hit by a plastic cup thrown from the West Ham end.

That incident was a blot on the contest and, in a boisterous atmosphere at the Fortuna Arena, following an afternoon in which fighting between fans in the city centre had led to 30 arrests, West Ham initially struggled to gain a foothold in the game.

Team news

  • Fiorentina boss Vincenzo Italiano started Luka Jovic and Christian Kouame ahead of Arthur Cabral and Jonathan Ikone, while Luca Ranieri got the nod in defence.
  • West Ham manager David Moyes kept faith with his Europa League goalkeeper Alphonse Areola, who started ahead of Lukasz Fabianski, while Vladimir Coufal and Emerson Palmieri were preferred at full-back.

Declan Rice, making what is expected to be his final appearance for the club, fired narrowly wide during one rare foray forward early on, but otherwise Moyes’ side were largely pinned in their own half as Fiorentina monopolised possession.

The Italians’ first clear chance came from a corner, delivered by Biraghi, with West Ham fortunate their slack marking was not punished as Nikola Milenkovic headed wastefully over.

It was after winning a corner in the same position that Biraghi was then struck in the head as empty cups rained down on him, the Fiorentina captain sarcastically applauding the West Ham end before realising the impact had left him bleeding.

Fiorentina's Cristiano Biraghi sarcastically applauded the West Ham fans
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Fiorentina’s Cristiano Biraghi sarcastically applauded the West Ham fans

Fiorentina's Cristiano Biraghi bleeds from his head after being injured by an object thrown from the stands during the Europa Conference League final
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He then bled from his head and required treatment

Biraghi receives treatment as his Fiorentina team-mates look on
Image:
Biraghi receives treatment as his Fiorentina team-mates look on

A lengthy break in play followed as Biraghi had his head bandaged, with the stadium announcer imploring the West Ham fans to stop throwing objects before play resumed.

That warning was heeded, but the pattern of the game continued, with West Ham relieved after Luka Jovic bundled home from close range just before half-time, only for the goal to be ruled out for offside following a lengthy VAR check.

West Ham began to pose more of a threat after the break, particularly from set plays, and the breakthrough arrived when Biraghi was punished for a handball following another VAR check, with a nerveless Benrahma slamming home the resulting penalty.

West Ham's Said Benrahma celebrates scoring a penalty against Fiorentina
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West Ham’s Said Benrahma celebrates scoring his penalty against Fiorentina

Fiorentina hit back only a few minutes later, however, the excellent Bonaventura finding the far corner with a brilliantly-taken finish from Nicolas Gonzalez’s knockdown to restore parity.

Fiorentina almost completed the turnaround when Rolando Mandragora shot just wide from substitute Arthur Cabral’s pass, but the game continued toing and froing in the closing stages.

Tomas Soucek twice threatened for the Hammers, but it was Bowen who would be their hero, the 26-year-old keeping his cool to beat Fiorentina goalkeeper Pietro Terracciano from Paqueta’s through-ball and send West Ham supporters into dreamland.

West Ham’s historic feat – Opta stats

  • West Ham’s Jarrod Bowen is the first Englishman to score the winning goal in a major European final since Alan Smith for Arsenal in the 1994 Cup Winners’ Cup final against Parma.
  • West Ham have won their second-ever major European trophy, their first since lifting the Cup Winners’ Cup in 1965.
  • Said Benrahma scored his sixth goal from the penalty spot in all competitions this season, the most by a West Ham player since Mark Noble in 2011/12 (7).
  • West Ham scored their 12th goal from the penalty spot this season, only Man City and Real Madrid (both 14) have netted more in all competitions among teams in the top five European leagues in 2022/23.
  • Fiorentina have lost four of their five major European finals, losing each of their last three since their only ever such victory, against Rangers in the 1961 Cup Winners’ Cup.



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