By Our Man at Villa Park
UNAI EMERY might need a lie-down and a stiff drink after his Champions League-chasing Villans turned a Sunday stroll into a heart-stopping rollercoaster.
In a game that had more twists than a bag of pretzels, Tammy Abraham proved the ultimate super-sub, stabbing home a 94th-minute winner just as Sunderland thought they’d pulled off the heist of the century.
For 85 minutes, Villa Park was rocking to the tune of a routine victory. Ollie Watkins—back to his predatory best—had bagged a clinical first-half brace, and when Morgan Rogers slotted a third just after the break, the Holte End was already checking flights to Madrid and Munich.
But someone forgot to tell the Black Cats they were beaten. In a bizarre second-half cameo to forget, substitute Jadon Sancho became the villain of the piece.
The Man Utd loanee was caught napping twice in under a minute. First, Trai Hume robbed him to smash home a lifeline in the 85th minute. Then, straight from the restart, Sancho surrendered possession again, allowing Wilson Isidor to sweep past a helpless Emi Martinez.
From 3-1 to 3-3 in the blink of an eye. The stadium went from a party to a morgue.
It nearly got worse. With Villa reeling, Sunderland’s Habib Diarra raced through one-on-one. The away end held its breath as he tried a cheeky dink, but “Dibu” Martinez showed why he’s the world’s No.1, clawing the ball away to keep the dream alive.
That save proved to be the platform for the final act of defiance. Deep into stoppage time, Lucas Digne—who had been a tireless engine all afternoon—whipped in a devilish, deep cross.
Tammy Abraham, showing the movement that has made him a fan favorite, got there first. A deft flick, a bulging net, and absolute bedlam in the stands.

