Europa League Final - My Pick
2.5% Aston Villa to Win the Europa League at 74c (good to 78c)
Good ebening.
Tonight is the Europa League final between Aston Villa, their first European final since they won the European Cup in 1982 and SC Freiburg, who have never been in a European final. Aston Villa are managed by Unai Emery, a manager who has been to five Europa League finals, winning four of them. Freiburg on the other hand are managed by Julian Schuster, who played for them most of his career and his finishing his second full season with them as a manager, having been an assistant to Christian Streich after retiring as a player. It is a clash of two clubs who have taken very different paths: Aston Villa are 1982 European Cup winners competing for their first European title since headed by an elite level European knockout manager against Freiburg, a club who built a long term vision during Christian Streich's management that has allowed them to rise with stable foundations. Tonight's game in Istanbul will test which approach will yield an edge in a major final.
I will be on Aston Villa to win the Europa league tonight. I took a futures ticket out at 3/1 (equivalent of 25c) before the last 16 so this is partially me letting is ride at a roughly equivalent present value but I also do see a deeper edge for Aston Villa and it comes from their manager Unai Emery. Emery occupies an unusual space in football in that he is an elite level manager in one off games that lends itself very welk to cup football but he is generally not favoured for roles at top level clubs. This means he often ends up in the Europa League, a competition he is peculiarly overqualified for. The distribution of player quality and variety of tactical systems means that the manager can make a very big difference in the competition.
Unai Emery's management style is unique is that he is tactically very versatile. His teams are capable of switching between different tactical styles in game to exploit opponent weaknesses. Most managers either have a specific tactical style that they try to optimise or they make adaptions to counter their opponents within their own overall tactical identity. Emery changes his tactical system to make his team's opponents as uncomfortable as possible. He generally doesn't do this in league football as there are so many games and teams are quite familiar with each other but in European football, you're often playing teams you haven't played in recent memory from leagues whose rhythms you don't encounter much. Since the stakes of winning a European competition are potentially huge, it creates an incentive to prepare meticulously for an individual opponent and game what their blind spots are. Emery has a unique edge for this as he deep dives obsessively on opponents and is able to switch tactical system in game to manage the level of chaos the opponent has to deal with. In the Champions League player quality and managerial experience can compensate for that but in the Europa League this is where that approach can be lethal.
Freiburg have a settled tactical identity, with a structured, compact unit that prioritises coherence over individual play. They are strong on set pieces and able to defend deep out of possession while advancing the ball in possession. In a one off game, they are certainly capable of beating a team like Aston Villa. I don't expect the danger for them to be too emotionally reactive. It's moreso that against a constantly changing tactical apparatus under Emery, they will have to be very decisive and make the right tweaks in game. That's very difficult to do when you haven't played in a game of quite this magnitude. A big risk for teams in finals is that as the game goes one, the nerves can increase and pressure can be felt, which in turn can cause suboptimal decision making, be it break in structure or playing too passively. This is a situation where I would expect Unai Emery's extensive experience of these situations to keep Aston Villa structured but also continuing to take the initiative in a methodical kind of a way. Freiburg's challenge is not keeping their heads, it's doing so while continuing to press the issue at the other end. For a manager of Shuster's experience, this is a very delicate tightrope, especially on a first pass.
What would Freiburg's path to victory be? Emery is not invincible in the Europa League. He lost the 2019 Europa League final to Chelsea, a game in which Maurizio Sarri made tactical adjustments at half time that helped Chelsea come out on top. It is worth bearing in mind Emery was managing Arsenal at the time, so the two teams would have been very familiar with each other. Even this year, Aston Villa's one defeat in the knockout stages so far was to Nottingham Forest, a team whose ground is a not too distant bus ride away. Emery's preferred mode of control tonight will be to control the level of in game entropy so I would project Freiburg's best chance of beating Aston Villa to be maintaining a shape that allows them to manage the variable chaos therein and to look to take advantage of their own strengths on set pieces. Even if this game goes to extra time, I would still expect Aston Villa to have an edge. Emery's Sevilla and Villarreal teams were not without their weaknesses but his tactics were able to cover for them. His Aston Villa side has a strong mix of tactical flexibility and athleticism that makes them a very well balanced unit overall so I believe they're in a very good position for this final.
Historical Context
2026
2026 Senate
House 2026
Around around she goes; we she ends, nobody knows. Only truly beatable infinity, unless you believe in luck So The Good Thief lead character explains as he sees the ball chase around the roulette wheel. But it wasn't luck that lost me last night; it was failing to follow my own methodologies for the best decision making in the world of prediction markets.
Many of my assumptions held (Mamdani bets cashed to a profit, the Democratic sweep happened, and Morris County flipped to Sherrill, while closest race was the Virginia Attorney General), but a big one didn't -- that 2025 would not bring a record-setting Democratic wave. The wave crested like a tsunami, felt coast to coast, from the northeast to the southwest, from the midatlantic to the mountains, from the industrial midwest to the southern countryside, effecting small town mayoral races in Pennsylvania to Public Service Commission statewide gigs in Georgia, from legislative districts with 36 year incumbents in ruby red Virginia heartland to the most revolutionary Mayor ever elected in New York City since Henry George's failed effort signaled the rise of Populism a century+ ago. Candidate quality did not matter. Candidate spending did not matter. Incumbency did not matter. Job approval did not matter. Scandals did not matter enough or did not matter at all. Get out the vote efforts did not matter. This was an angry electorate seeking vengance, and finding its expression wherever they could.
That was my first mistake, and it was a mistake, rather than bad luck. I assessed the wave risk at 10%, when it was manifestly much higher. All I needed to do was listen to....myself. I went back and watched my last episode w/ Baris and an episode a few months ago with the Duran, the latter where I previewed a collapse in GOP support if Trump didn't escape the foreign focus & wars, delivering only to the donor class. I spoke often of the new MAGA that began to build in 2023 -- young, working class, often minority, deeply unhappy with the political direction of an elder class they are rebelling against, as easily tempted by left populism as right populism, and as easily susceptible to political apathy and agnosticism as engagement & activism. The shutdown was actually a negative tipping factor for these voters, as the SNAP issue played poorly with them, while enraging part of the Democratic base otherwise unenthused up to that point. I made two errors in methodology & one error in psychology I detail below.
The second error was bankroll percentage. It was a single race in a single state; as such, keeping it closer to 5% made more sense than expending it to 34%, especially if more cognizant of the risk. It also shifted my stronger risk appetite onto others, and that was en error I usually well avoid. If I had listed every major election pick this year at 5%, we'd be in the black; even last night, splitting 5% bets amidst the 3 elections, would have only been a modest loss, given certain underdog bets hit with Mamdani. As I often say, but forgot here to practice -- bankroll discipline is the most important aspect of successful trading in the markets, sports or politics.
The psychological error was getting attached to a pick, and not relooking at it from scratch anytime new information arives. A natural tendency is to stay committed to something merely because of prior committment rather than look at it completely anew, and being afraid of taking a loss when once vested in so much hope of a win.
Areas to improve:
Truth is, losses teach you more than wins. Despite as much as I try to track the underlying assumptions of winning picks, the stay-up-top-3-am reearching and obsessing motivation comes from tough losses. In addition, I learn the values of patience, forbearance, discipline, emotional equilibrium, self-belief, as well as better improving a sound methodological approach through "putting my money where mouth is" and sharing it with the world for public accountability and transparency improving decision-making skill over time, maintaining humility when the trap of hubris would otherwise ensnare.
After three decades of successful US elections, my setback in 2022 dramatically improved my analysis for 2024, proving fantastically profitable. Thanks to everyone for participating, hope you continue to partake in the community, and if I were a betting man, and I am, I would wager we will be profitable again, in matters of pocketbook, principle and politics very soon.