Europa League final. The date of the match and the conditions of the competition between Roma and Sevilla

The match between Sevilla and Roma may look equal on paper in Wednesday's Europa League final (23:00 UAE time), but the Andalusians' love affair with the competition could give them the advantage in Budapest.
They are the record champions with six titles, surpassing the nearest rivals, Inter and Juventus of Italy, Liverpool of England and Atletico Madrid of Spain with three titles each.
Despite their disappointing season in La Liga, Sevilla's trajectory has been consistent in the Europa League, knocking out Manchester United and then Juventus to reach their seventh final in the competition.
In the previous six finals, Sevilla had emerged victorious with the title, and captain Jesus Navas said his side had been flying from the start of the competition.
Speaking to UEFA's website last week, he said: "We're switching (in the Europa League) and it's amazing how we go out every game."
"It's a competition that has given us a lot, and the joy it gives us every time we participate pushes us to go as far as possible."
The extra goal this season is to give back to the fans for their support, after one of Sevilla's worst La Liga seasons in recent memory.
Since the team's promotion to the top flight in 2001, they have never finished in the bottom half of the table, but they currently sit in eleventh place, with only one stage of the season remaining.
The situation could have been much worse. For most of the season, they were focused on moving away from the relegation zone, sacking coaches Julen Lopetegui and Argentina's Jorge Sampaoli, before José Luis Mendelibar put the ship back on hold.
"We're a family, we've shown that, we've had some very bad moments, but the final quarter of the season was amazing," striker Rafa Mir told Dazon on Saturday.
"Now we have the final prize, we want to come back here with the cup."

Rich history

Sevilla first won the competition in 2006, with the now 37-year-old Navas, then 20, playing when he swept the team by crushing Steve McClaren's English side Middlesbrough with a clean quadruple in the final.
It was their first European title, and their first trophy in 57 years.
The late Antonio Puerta scored in extra time to help Juande Ramos' side get past Schalke in the semi-finals, a goal that is still remembered by Sevilla today.
Puerta scored from the penalty spot the following year in the final, when Sevilla beat rivals Espanyol in Glasgow on penalties, to lift the trophy again.
Just a few months later, Puerta died of a heart attack while playing for his club in La Liga.
The Andalusians needed penalties again to triumph in 2014 with Unai Emery as coach, beating Benfica to win the tournament for the third time, when Croatian Ivan Rakitic played a key role before his move to Barcelona.
Sevilla went on to win the Europa League for the next two years, first beating Ukraine's Dnipro 3-2 in a thrilling encounter in 2015, with Colombian striker Carlos Bacca scoring twice.
The following season, they beat Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool 3-1, this time full-back Koke scored twice. It could have been the German coach's first title with the English club.
Klopp said before the game: "If I win it last year, what does that mean? If I won it two years ago, what does that mean? Nothing, so it's another game." But Sevilla proved wrong and won their third consecutive title in the competition.
Sevilla clinched their sixth title under Lopetegui against Inter in another thrilling 3-2 victory, albeit in an empty stadium due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Romelu Lukaku's reverse goal sealed the game and ensured Sevilla maintained their record 100% Europa League finals.
In the new final against Roma, Jose Mourinho may be one of the most trusted coaches in world football, but he may be stunned by Sevilla's dominance of the Europa League.