Bundesliga
Eintracht Frankfurt will contest their first major European final since 1980 after the Eagles completed their UEFA Europa League semi-final mission against the ten men of West Ham United, Rafael Borre scoring the second-leg match winner to set up a Seville showdown with Glasgow Rangers.
Eintracht Frankfurt 1-0 West Ham United (agg: 3-1)
Goals: 1-0 Borre 26' (assist: Knauff)
Boasting a 2-1 lead from last week's first leg in London, Eintracht were greeted by a spectacular welcome from the home fans at Deutsche Bank Park. In an opening half that would provide those supporters with plenty to celebrate, there was first some early disappointment with Martin Hinteregger limping out of the contest with a hamstring injury after just eight minutes. Further drama would soon follow. Chasing a long ball over the top, Jens Petter Hauge felt himself being grappled to the floor by Aaron Cresswell. With the Eintracht man down, the hosts protested furiously. Hauge would have been through on goals with a scoring opportunity but for the foul. The referee raced across to check his monitor, and sprinted back just as quickly to raise a red card for the West Ham man. Suddenly finding themselves playing with a man advantage, Frankfurt then had a goal advantage on the night too, Borre sweeping home Ansgar Knauff's cutback to increase the Eagles' aggregate lead to 3-1.
Despite their numerical disadvantage, a second-half onslaught still might have been expected from the visiting team. Perhaps put off by a thunderous atmosphere inside the ground, it didn't arrive. Borre had a shot that was fielded by Alphonse Areola as the hosts looked to pull away. When the visitors did attack, Evan Ndicka was there to clear a glancing header off the line. Michail Antonio menaced for the Hammers but Frankfurt remained comfortable, with substitute Goncalo Paciencia getting into a good position late on before volleying wide. West Ham would see coach David Moyes red carded in frustration before the end while Tomas Soucek headed his team's last chance off target. It all means Eintracht banish the memories of 2019's Europa League last four defeat against Chelsea to set up a May 18 meeting with Rangers - conquerers of Leipzig in the night's other semi-final - at Seville's Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán stadium.
Teams
Frankfurt: Trapp - Tuta, Hinteregger (Toure 8'), Ndicka - Knauff, Sow, Rode (c) (Jakic 76'), Kostic - Hauge (Hrustic 82'), Kamada - Borre (Paciencia 82')
Unused subs: Grahl, Lammers, Hasebe, Ache, Chandler, Da Costa, Lenz, Barkok
Out: Durm (ineligible), Ilsanker (ineligible), Lindstrom (hamstring), Ramaj (knee)
Coach: Oliver Glasner
West Ham: Areola - Coufal (Yarmolenko 870), Dawson, Zouma, Cresswell - Soucek, Rice (c) - Bowen, Lanzini, Fornals (Benrahma 74') - Antonio
Unused subs: Fabianski, Randolph, Vlasic, Noble, Diop, Fredericks, Masauku, Johnson, Kral, Alese
Out: Ogbonna (knee)
Coach: David Moyes
As it happened!
Eintracht Frankfurt have reached their first European final since 1980, and the crowd go wild. A first half goal from Borre sealed the deal, with the hosts advancing 1-0 on the night and 3-1 on aggregate !
Tomas Soucek heads off target from close range and that is most likely that for the visitors.
The West Ham player tries a low drive at goal but it's easy for Trapp to gather.
David Moyes is sent off for lashing out at someone down on the touchline.
Antonio - on the right this time - drills a low cross into the mixer. Trapp gets down to palm that one out.
Decent build up from the hosts and Kostic's cross is eventually cleared out to Kamada, whose shot from inside the area rolls wide of the post.
Rode upends Bowen and goes into the referee's notebook.
Antonio crosses from the left and Dawson powers a header into the floor. Trapp is there to catch that with relative ease.
West Ham build down the right. Bowen sends one across the face of goal but Toure is there to whack clear.
Knauff sprints down the right and gets into the area but a a challenge from Fornals puts the Eintracht man off and West Ham clear.
Borre sends a shot goalwards from distance but Areola is there to make the save. Good effort from the Colombian.
West Ham get us back underway in the second half. Eintracht have one foot in the final.
The referee brings the first half to a close and what a half it's been for the hosts. West Ham were reduced to ten men after Cresswell - as the last man - brought down Hauge who would have been through on goals. Eintracht subsequently took the lead through Borre and are in command of this second leg.
West Ham threaten from the set piece and the ball is glanced goalwards. Rode gets a touch on it before N'dicka clears off the line!
N'dicka downs Antonio out on the right and the Eintracht defender is shown a yellow card.
Eintracht have had 58% of the possession so far tonight.
The Eintracht attacker races onto a through ball and goes down in the West Ham area. The ref waves that one away.
Eintracht comfortably deal with a brief West Ham fightback, the hosts keeping the Premier League side at bay in front of the area.
A scintillating move from the hosts has their opponents at sixes and sevens. The pull back from Knauff for Borre is met by the Colombian in confident fashion, his low finish flying in to give the hosts the lead.
Visiting coach, David Moyes, is calling several of his players over as he tries to reshuffle his ten men. What an opportunity Eintracht have here, facing the ten-man visitors at home and leading on aggregate.
Eintracht's No.10 smashes the free kick from just outside the area narrowly wide of the upright.
Cresswell is off. The referee looked like he was going to give a yellow after the West Ham defender hauled down Hauge, but then raced over to check his monitor. After reviewing the situation, the official shows Cresswell a straight red.
Cresswell pulls down Hauge who was on his way through on goals. There was nobody else around ... could this be a red card?
Kostic and Hauge play a short corner, the latter sends a cross towards the far post but the ball drifts out harmlessly.
Hinteregger can't continue. A hamstring injury has put paid to the defender's night early on. Almamy Toure is on for the hosts.
Antonio looks to race onto a through ball but Trapp is out at the edge of his area to claim.
Hinteregger is down holding his hamstring. The defender has signalled to the bench that he might not be able to continue. This would be a big blow to the hosts.
The visitors win a corner inside two minutes. It comes to nothing. Eintracht's supporters are making incredible noise, shrill whistles greeting every West Ham touch.
Eintracht - all in black - get us underway ...
Deutsche Bank Park is ROCKING ! The teams are lined up and we're all set ....
Eintracht's coach has given his final thoughts ahead of this huge second leg. “We’re expecting opponents who will try everything to reach the final. Our approach is clear, though: we want to cause problems for their defence. Our strategy is to get forward and constantly keep them busy. We’ll play to win from the get-go with our fans behind us."
Johnson replacing Coufal in defence is the Hammers' only change to the side that started the first leg in London last week.
Coach Oliver Glasner also has Martin Hinteregger and Sebastian Rode available after the pair missed the meeting with Bayer Leverkusen on Monday night.
Behind forward Borre, Kamada is joined by Jens Petter Hauge after Jesper Lindstrom was withdrawn through injury after an hour at the London Stadium, while Filip Kostic operates from the opposite flank to Knauff. Defender Evan Ndicka and midfielder Kristijan Jakic have served their European suspensions, the former coming into the starting XI while the latter is on the bench.