Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Aston Villa’ Category

The January transfer window closes in 3 weeks and Aston Villa are in a precarious position, hovering just above the relegation zone and having conceded 5 billion goals in their last 5 games. Even Wigan and Bradford City have hit three goals apiece past the woeful Villa defense. With the Premier League’s youngest squad seriously struggling, Paul Lambert needs the backing of Randy Lerner in this transfer window more than McLeish or O’Neill ever did previously.

Scott Sinclair aston villa manchester city everton transfer january loan swansea

The lesser spotted ‘Sinclair in a City shirt’

barry bannan aston villa

Barry Bannan – nothing like Patrick Vieira

Here’s a look at 5 (realistic) signings that could save Villa’s season.

Scott Sinclair
Club: Manchester City
Cost: Loan

Sinclair had a fine 2011/12 season with Swansea before making the brilliant career choice to go put out cones and carry bibs at Manchester City for £50,000 a week.
Having made just 4 appearances for City since his £8m move, Sinclair will be keen to get back to first team action to prove that he is worth his place in the City squad. With Villa lacking creative spark, it could be a win-win situation.

Jolean Lescott
Club: Manchester City
Cost: Loan

Despite ‘a source’ in The Mirror apparently ruling out a loan move in January, Lescott – a boyhood Villa fan – is below Kompany, Nastasic and Toure in the City pecking order and could be tempted by a chance to be a hero – at least in the short term – at Villa Park.

Moussa Sissoko
Club: Toulouse
Cost: £10m

Although Lerner might need to actually spend the Milner/Young/Downing/Barry money, a strong CM is an absolute priority. Sissoko is tall, powerful and aggressive in the tackle, drawing predictable comparisons with Patrick Vieira. He is literally the exact opposite to Barry Bannan. Need I say more?

Tim Cahill

Club: NY Red Bulls
Cost: Loan

If there’s one thing Villa are lacking this season, it’s experience. Cahill would bring this in abundance, with personality and work rate to match. Available on a three-month loan in the MLS off-season, a return to Goodison is perhaps more likely but would be guaranteed game time at Villa Park. His heading ability would also be crucial in helping Villa at set pieces at both ends of the pitch.

Martin Olsson blackburn rovers transfer west ham january transfer window donovan

Martin Olsson could finally put Joe Bennett out his misery

Martin Olsson
Club: Blackburn
Cost: £2-3m

OK, so there are many better defenders out there, but Olsson is a quick, strong full back with Premier League experience. There aren’t many defenders with these strengths for under £4m, but Lambert will need to move quickly to beat West Ham to his signature.
Lazio’s Belgian full back Luis Cavanda is also apparently a transfer target, but I’m not going to pretend I know anything about him so won’t pass judgement.

Here’s how the Villa team could look at the end of the January transfer window:

Aston Villa team 2012 2013 january transfer window guzan vlaar lowton el ahmadi benteke weimann

It’s not going to happen, is it?

Who do you want Villa to sign?
What can we expect from Lambert and Lerner this month?
Will Villa survive to fight another Premier League day?

Join the debate on Twitter: 
@soccersagacity & @giplu

About these ads

Read Full Post »

No words can describe how relieved Villa fans were on Monday when the news of Alex McLeish’s sacking broke and finally gave us something to cheer. Suffice to say that #McLeishOutParty was a popular hashtag from around 8.30am as rumours of his imminent departure circulated.

It was a glorious day to be a Villa fan, especially on Twitter. Slowly but surely information started to leak out of the club. It was finally confirmed (unofficially) by Stan Collymore at around 3pm who claimed to have spoken to McLeish via text message.

collymore twitter

Stan Collymore announced the news on Twitter yesterday

The official club line arrived shortly after and a collective Claret and Blue cheer arose.

I could happily sit here and smash out expletive after expletive on ‘Eck’s reign at Villa until my fingers become mashed into the keyboard (it would be worth the pain), but I am aware that most reading this blog will be aware of Villa fans’ feelings towards McUnt so we’ll leave it there. It’s done, we’re happy, let’s move on.

So, who next for Villa? Who will be lured by the promise of impatient fans? Who will be tempted by the sky-high expectations which our revenues can’t match?

If you believe some Villa fans (do so at your peril) we ‘must’ be looking towards Andre Villas-Boas (possibly slightly over-qualified, I’d argue) or someone of that calibre. Yeah…right. Anyway, here are the bookies favourites as it stands.

The ‘Big’ Three

paul lambert villa

Lambert – the bookies favourite

Paul Lambert (15/8 favourite)

After a successful season guiding the league’s most inoffensive team (barring the hideous kit) to a comfortable 12th place finish in their return to the Premier League, including a final day 2-0 win over Villa, Paul Lambert is the bookies (and fans) choice to succeed McLeish. Known for developing players who look shite on paper into an organised and attacking outfit, Lambert seems the perfect fit for Villa. He may feel he has taken Norwich as far as he can and might bail out before Delia hits the Vodka during a relegation-battling ‘difficult second season’.

Mick McCarthy (2/1)

A surge of betting on the former Wolves boss pushed him to 2nd favourite on Tuesday. He seems to have all the credentials to be Randy Lerner’s next appointment – angry, tactically useless, blissfully unaware of the aesthetic merits of the game, and (effectively if not technically) condemned his team to relegation this season. I will literally soil myself if he is appointed, and not in a good way.

Roberto Martinez (11/4)

roberto martinez villa

Martinez – would he refuse for a 2nd consecutive year?

A spirited end to the season saw Wigan climb above Villa to finish 15th, eventually a lofty 7 points clear of relegation. The charming Spaniard plays attacking football which the Villa fans would enjoy (at least for a few games until the novelty wears off). However, he has flirted dangerously with relegation for two seasons running and is far from a proven performer in the upper echelons of management – not that this is something Villa have to worry about for the moment. In fact, two consecutive relegation escapes makes him a very attractive prospect.

Some Outsiders

Gus Poyet (20/1)

The man utterly incapable of pronouncing consonants (“Aayy soo wha di yoo thin abow da game?”) is building a solid reputation in the Championship with Brighton. After winning the League One title in 2011, they had a good shot at the playoffs but eventually fell away. However, with a seemingly cushy job on the south coast assured (new stadium, solid fanbase and good financial backing), it is unlikely that he will be enticed into the lion’s den at Villa without having one more shot at getting Albion into the big time.

Rafael Benitez (16/1)

I personally can’t see this happening – ‘Rafa’ is suggested for every major job in every major league in Europe. Essentially, his name is in the mix because he has managed in England before, and he is currently unemployed. However, a career path which follows Tenerife, Valencia, Liverpool and Inter Milan with Aston Villa doesn’t seem right. Many expect Benitez to bide his time for a top La Liga role or, potentially, another stint in England. Don’t rule out a return to Liverpool when Dalglish finally gets found out.

Avram Grant (25/1)

avram grant lookalike face

Grant – too much skin for a human

The human scrotum has never enjoyed a particularly fruitful relationship with the English media (due to having the charisma of a discarded, crusty tissue) and I can’t imagine him impressing in an interview with Randy Lerner. Having said that – McLeish managed to convince him so you never know what might happen.

Dion Dublin (66/1)

Oh God, please let this happen, just for comedy value. If he were to bring Steve Stone, Ian Taylor and Boško Balaban as his backroom staff it would just be wonderful. Actually, I hope I have one of those super-realistic dreams about this so I can experience the hilarity without it actually happening.

On first glance, my preference would be Paul Lambert, and all signs point to this being Lerner’s first choice. However, should he turn the offer I think I have an alternative. My preference, in this scenario, would be Vincenzo Montella.

vincenzo montella villa manager

Montella – could he be the surprise appointment?

Now just 37, Montella was a legend at AS Roma and joined their staff as youth coach after he retired. He was promoted to First Team coach to undo the mistakes made by the batty Claudio Ranieri. However, his career there was cut short when new American ownership decided to install their very own mini-Guardiola (Luis Enrique) instead.

Subsequently, Montella has taken over at Catania and surpassed expectations at the Sicilian club. Widely touted as relegation candidates, Montella led the team to a comfortable mid-table finish. In fact, only a couple of sloppy end-of-season results prevent the Sicilians making a challenge on the Europa League qualification spots.

At a time when Villa need a charismatic, inspiring manager to rejuvenate both the players and the fans, the sharply-dressed Montella could be that man. It is certainly the trend to have young managers who can relate to the players (see Guardiola, Di Matteo, AVB to some extent) and I’d love to have the slick Italian at Villa Park. It is possible that his English isn’t good enough to manage in the Premier League at the moment, but that didn’t stop the F.A. taking on Fabio Capello. On second thoughts, maybe that isn’t the best example…

Follow me on Twitter @SoccerSagacity

Odds courtesy of SkyBet.com via OddsChecker.com

Read Full Post »

Sunday will see Aston Villa fans stage a mass protest against persona non grata Alex McLeish in an attempt to persuade the board that he is not the man for the job (if any further evidence was needed).

mcleish out flyer aston villa protest spurs

‘McLeish Out’ flyer to be handed out on Sunday

With 2 games remaining, Villa look to have done enough to secure Premier League status for next season. Blackburn are all-but consigned to relegation, and it seems that it will be one of either Bolton or QPR joining them. Somewhat fortunately, Villa have a vastly superior goal difference to the teams below them (with a comparatively triumphant -14, compared to Wigan’s -22, QPR’s -23 and Bolton’s -31).

barclays premier league relegation zone

The bottom of the Barclays Premier League – sorry viewing for Villa fans

It says a lot for the work of McLeish that I’m even talking in these terms. Comparing Villa to the dross of the Premier League is embarrassing and depressing.

We’re two places and seven points behind Stoke City. STOKE CITY! This is a team who employs two of my most hated players – Robert Huth and Ryan Shawcross – and whose kingpin is the only man ever to wear a baseball cap on the sidelines at Wembley and champion of The Ugly Game, Tony Pulis.

Under Martin O’Neill, Villa finished sixth for three seasons in a row. Now, we sit 15th and – in terms of points –  are over nine times further from the European places than we are from the relegation zone.

You can argue that McLeish inherited a worse group of players than MO’N, and that O’Neill’s elaborate spending is partly to blame for this shameful season. I can now only dream of an all-England midfield of Downing (as much as I loathe him), Barry, Milner, and Young. Such a team was only sustainable for a certain length of time given the club’s moderate revenues. However, there are many reasons why McLeish has himself to blame and why, indeed, we Villa fans hate him oh so much. [I was going to say ‘have grown to hate him’ but there really was no ‘growing’ period].

aston villa mcleish welcome protest

Welcome to Aston Villa – the day McLeish arrived

Firstly, the appointment was always the wrong one. I don’t know a single Villa fan that was happy with McLeish joining from relegated rivals Small Heath. Even the widely maligned Steve McLaren would have divided option if appointed, but McLeish drew no support. I remember the day I found out about it; it’s what psychologists call a Flashbulb Memory – a vivid and deeply embedded memory due to a heightened state of emotional and neurological arousal (in this case, rage).

I was on holiday in Cyprus and a beautiful 35°c day was ruined when I picked up an English paper at a local shop, turned to the back cover and saw the ginger haired Scot holding up the claret and blue ‘1’ shirt. I felt physically sick. My girlfriend looked confused as I slammed the paper down in disgust. There is no way you can explain this kind of feeling to someone who doesn’t care about football.

To clarify, it’s not that he managed the scum down the road – it’s that he got them relegated TWICE playing the kind of football that wouldn’t look out of place in amateur Sunday league matches. I was laughed at by Birmingham fans (yes you, Dan Marsh) when he was appointed. I’m pretty sure I was told “you can look forward to the dullest football you’ve ever seen”. They couldn’t believe their luck that we had paid £3m compensation for him. To quote another Birmingham fan, “he was our third biggest source of income that summer”.

I was slightly encouraged when McLeish signed Charles N’Zogbia to replace Ashley Young, as I’ve always rated N’Zogbia. However, his complete inability to play N’Zogbia in the right style of play/position brings me onto my next point – tactical incompetency.

When Villa are drawing or losing, the Ginge brings off experienced players like N’Zogbia, Agbonlahor and Ireland and throws on inexperienced youngsters like Weimann, Bannan and Carruthers. To their credit, these youngsters have done a solid job of making the step up to the senior team, but the pressure to score at any cost and salvage a point can’t do their confidence any good, let alone benefit the team.

aston villa protest banner bolton

The fans make their voices heard during the game against Bolton

McLeish is utterly incapable of getting the best out of players. O’Neill was a great motivator and managed to drain every last drop of potential out of average players like Stewart Downing.
McLeish insists on tinkering with players’ positions. Heskey – possibly the most useless player I’ve ever seen hold down a first team place at Villa – has been employed more regularly as a wide midfielder than a CF. If there is one player in history that is not a wide midfielder, it’s Emile Heskey. Hutton too has been used in a midfield capacity. Odd, considering the man has the technical ability of a drunk Pascal Cygan.

Agbonlahor is another who has been completely misused by McChump. Agbonlahor thrives on through balls in behind the defence; balls that divide the full backs from the centre backs and give slower players like Carragher and even Vidic nightmares.  Instead, Villa have played short, slow football which inevitably results in a desperate long ball when the team run out of ideas.

I can imagine this team under O’Neill; it would have deployed N’Zogbia and Agbonlahor either side of Bent, both players left to ‘get chalk on their boots’ and with a remit to provide Bent with 25+ goals a season, plus chipping in 5-15 each themselves.

miserable aston villa mcleish

McLeish – as miserable as the fans at Villa

There are many other reasons why the fans have long had enough of McLeish’s dreary ways, a few of which are worth noting briefly.

Firstly, the perennial excuses are tiresome and many fans would applaud a bit of honesty rather than blaming the injuries, the lack of experience or the bad fortune.

Also, any manager worth his salt can motivate a team when relegation is looming. Look at the way Martinez has changed Wigan’s fortunes, winning 5 of their last 10, losing just 3. Villa, on the other hand, have won just one game in 10 – only rock-bottom Wolves are on a worse run.

Then there is the lack of squad harmony. N’Zogbia has tweeted about not enjoying his football, whilst Bent has been seen out shopping whilst Villa are playing. This week, 3 players were fined for a brawl outside a nightclub less than a week before the penultimate game of the season. Whilst the players must take some responsibility, ultimately McLeish has lost control over his squad and commands little respect amongst those associated with the club.

And so the season draws to a close in what has been one of the worst in the club’s recent history. Relegation is still a possibility, and although Bolton’s late surge of 3 wins from 4 games seems to have given them hope of survival, QPR should provide Villa with a safety net (hopefully). It sums up the atmosphere at Villa that I expect no points from these final two desperate games at home to Spurs and away at Norwich.

Some of the many frustrated Villa fans have arranged a protest before and during the game at home to Spurs on Sunday. The protest is due to begin at 13:00 outside Trinity Road Stand near the McGregor statue. Flyers will be distributed around the ground and I would strongly encourage fans to participate if they agree with the view that McLeish should leave for the good of the football club. The flyers are to be held aloft as McTwonk walks from the tunnel to the dugout, and frankly at every opportunity.

Personally, I’d like to see a mass protest inside the stadium for a really dramatic effect. The best idea I’ve come up with would involve everyone turning their back to the pitch for 2 minutes of play and standing in silence. At the end of the silence, everyone turns back around and starts chanting “We want Alex out, we want Alex out”. However, football fans are difficult to coordinate so let’s start with the flyers and see how we get on.

To support the protests, follow @SoccerSagacity and @McLeish_Out on Twitter.

sack mcleish aston villa

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 365 other followers

%d bloggers like this: