Leipzig: Jean-Philippe Mateta scored the decisive second-half goal as Crystal Palace defeated Rayo Vallecano 1-0 in the UEFA Conference League final on Wednesday to secure the club's first-ever European trophy in historic fashion.
In their debut season in continental competition, Palace produced a disciplined and composed display at the Red Bull Arena to cap a remarkable campaign and hand manager Oliver Glasner a dream farewell in his final game in charge, as per ESPN.
The opening stages were tense, with both sides struggling to create clear-cut opportunities in their first European final. Palace looked the more threatening early on, with Ismaila Sarr forcing a block after controlling cleverly inside the area, while Daichi Kamada was halted cynically by Pathe Ciss during a promising breakaway.
Rayo Vallecano responded through Alexandre Alemão and Unai Lopez, both of whom sent efforts narrowly wide, but neither goalkeeper was seriously tested before halftime. Palace came closest to breaking the deadlock before the interval when Tyrick Mitchell glanced a diving header just beyond the post from Adam Wharton's inviting delivery.
The breakthrough finally arrived shortly after the restart. Wharton, influential throughout the contest, drove forward and unleashed a low shot from distance that goalkeeper Augusto Batalla could only parry into the path of Mateta, who reacted quickest to slot home from close range in the 53rd minute.
The goal sparked celebrations among the Palace supporters and shifted momentum firmly in the English club's favour. Palace nearly doubled their lead moments later when Yeremy Pino's free-kick struck both posts before the danger was eventually cleared.
Mateta continued to trouble the Spanish side's defence and was denied a second goal by a fine Batalla save, while Sarr also squandered a good chance late on. Rayo pushed forward in the closing stages in search of an equaliser, but Palace's defence held firm under pressure to seal a famous victory.
The triumph makes Crystal Palace the first club in 38 years to win a major European trophy at the first attempt, while also ensuring London clubs continue their dominance in the Conference League after successes by West Ham United and Chelsea in recent years.