Morgan Rogers — from easy target to Aston Villa’s engine
A few months ago his name made people roll their eyes. Today he lifts an entire stadium. Morgan Rogers went from boos to Holte End anthems. That shift says more than just one player finding form. It tells the story of Aston Villa reinventing itself.
A season start that felt like a sinking ship
Villa’s 2025-26 kicked off badly. Five games, no wins, a team full of doubt and one player taking most of the blame. Rogers stayed quiet in his first seven outings and swallowed it all. Whistles. Sighs. Impatience. Villa Park was simmering — especially that European night against Bologna in late September, when the split felt permanent.
At that point, few would have backed him to drag the side up the table.
Unai Emery never gave up
This is where it matters. Emery didn’t fold. He kept him in the eleven. Gave him time. Gave him responsibility. No flashy speeches. Quiet, firm trust. Rogers took it. He worked. He waited.
When it came, the change was brutal.
Manchester United as the symbol of the turnaround
Last Sunday, against Manchester United, he played a match that sums it up. Villa win 2-1 in a tense scrap, and he’s everywhere. In the sprints, the duels, the decisions that swing games. At the end, no one questioned it: this win bears his stamp.
Aston Villa has now put together 24 consecutive wins across all competitions. A run that’s almost unreal. And crucially, Villa sit just three points behind Arsenal, the leaders. Think about that start. The trajectory is mad.

Numbers don’t tell the whole story, but they confirm it
4 143 minutes played this season. That’s not nothing. Rogers isn’t a gamble anymore. He’s a certainty. His decisive contributions have stacked up — sometimes quiet, sometimes loud. He doesn’t just score or assist. He breathes life into the game, breaks lines, forces tempo.
He’s become the player who shifts a match’s balance without hunting the spotlight.
One player, a bigger symbol
Rogers’ revival goes beyond him. It’s the DNA of this Villa. A team that takes hits, doubts, but doesn’t break. A team that clings on and then flips the board.
At his best he’s poison. A constant joker off the bench or from the start. The kind defenders hate — he appears from nowhere and turns games.
Villa aren’t underdogs anymore
Expectations have changed. So has the view from outside. Aston Villa is no longer the likeable also-ran. They’re a real threat to the big sides. And Morgan Rogers is at the heart of that shift.
The season’s long. But one thing’s obvious: Rogers isn’t a fragile promise. He’s become a leader on the pitch. If Villa keep this up, this comeback might be just the opening chapter of something much bigger.

Leave a Reply