
Chelsea, once again, found themselves on the brink of European embarrassment. And once again, Cole Palmer said, “Not today.”
In a final that looked like it might slip away before the halftime whistle, Enzo Maresca’s Chelsea flipped the script with a stunning second-half performance to thump Real Betis 4-1 in Wroclaw, lifting the UEFA Conference League and completing a historic European treble.
Yes, that treble—Champions League? Done. Europa League? Check. Conference League? Now officially conquered. Chelsea are the first club to win all three of UEFA’s major tournaments.
A Final of Two Halves
The story of the first 45 minutes was all about Real Betis—and more specifically, Isco. The veteran midfielder rolled back the years with a vintage no-look pass to set up Abde Ezzalzouli’s early opener. Chelsea’s defense was in disarray, Malo Gusto was being run ragged, and Enzo Maresca’s tactical blueprint looked more like a crumpled sketch.
Betis, enjoying their first-ever European final, were dancing. Chelsea? Booed off at halftime.
Enter Reece James. Enter Cole Palmer. Exit Real Betis.
Maresca made the bold switch at the break, subbing in club captain Reece James for Gusto. That change alone seemed to inject urgency. But the real catalyst? Cole Palmer moving into a free-roaming role.
Palmer, the £40 million acquisition from Manchester City, delivered a reminder of why Chelsea built their team around him this season. Two magical assists in five minutes turned the match on its head.
First, he floated a delicate cross for Enzo Fernández to nod home the equalizer. Then, after twisting Betis’ makeshift left flank inside out, he delivered another cross that Nicolas Jackson bundled in—shoulder, arm, or chest, it didn’t matter. Chelsea led, and they weren’t done.
Sancho, Caicedo Put the Ribbon on It
Jadon Sancho, looking every bit like the player Manchester United thought they were signing, added a third with a curling finish after Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall’s interception and smart assist. Moises Caicedo, arguably Chelsea’s most consistent performer this season, capped the night with a clinical fourth in stoppage time.
The floodgates had burst open. Chelsea weren’t just winners—they were dominant.
Maresca: “We approached it wrong – then fixed it.”
Post-match, Maresca admitted what millions had seen: “The first half wasn’t good. I expected it, to be honest. Maybe the celebrations after the Forest game made us soft. But we corrected things, and the second half was how I want this team to play.”
It’s easy to forget this was the same Chelsea side that looked broken under the weight of expectations not long ago. And yet, they’ve now closed the season with Champions League qualification and a European trophy.
Palmer the Prodigy
If there were any lingering doubts about Palmer’s star power, they’re gone now. His fingerprints were all over this final. Betis simply couldn’t live with his movement, his touch, or his vision.
“He’s a gamechanger,” said Sky Sports’ Lewis Jones. “The bigger the game, the brighter he shines.”
Palmer might’ve cooled off in the second half of the season, but when it mattered most, he caught fire.
Betis: From Dream to Heartbreak
For Betis and manager Manuel Pellegrini, it was a tale of what could have been. Injuries to key players—including the early withdrawal of Ricardo Rodriguez and Ezzalzouli—crippled their shape and momentum.
“We were magnificent in the first half,” Pellegrini said. “But injuries hurt us. Against a team like Chelsea, you need every edge.”
Still, Betis walk away with pride. They’ve qualified for Europe next season, and their fans gave them a thunderous sendoff in Poland.
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