Thoughts and issues regarding the past and present of a great football club by "The Chronicler".

Monday 11 April 2016

The Thread By Which We Hang Will Soon Break

What a year for the underdog! With Leicester in the footballing ascendancy we now have the previously unknown Danny Willett as the Masters’ champion at his first attempt. I now look forward to Durham winning the County Cricket championship and Laura Robson becoming the Ladies Champion at Wimbledon!

For the old European Champions Aston Villa, however, it’s all over bar the shouting now. Maybe it’s time to sit down in my favourite chair and just take a swig of sarsaparilla (some might choose something stronger!) – and reflect: there’s not much else to do now.

There’s something about the fan that wants to cling on to some vague hope, but after the Liverpool debacle I knew in reality that the season had been sealed and that we might just as well shut up shop and finish playing. In fact that’s just what the team has been doing these past eight games.

But what else to reflect on now, especially in the light that we’ve already dissected, masticated and unloaded our views on about every event since 2010.

Well, to rub salt into the wound it appears that Leicester are already guaranteed Champions League football next season, and the thought immediately comes to mind “Just how, then, did O’Neill find it so difficult to find a side that could finish above sixth when presented with the cash he had available?” Leicester – by comparison – are a pauper’s team, and as discussed in the last leader, Villa helped them to fill a vacant slot; and he at a pauper’s price.

All the talk about “needing money” and “the game has all changed since Man City got rich” is mostly, therefore, hogwash, as Leicester have demonstrated. It can be said that even though Lerner pulled in the financial reins in 2011, more could have been achieved based mainly on a simple ethic: the will to win. That and the added ingredient of being able to sniff out players of value, such as the unlikely Vardy; and Mahrez and Albrighton. Plus the revelation from a Villa fan about the quality of their sports science department.

No, I am not saying that Villa would necessarily have won a Championship League place with the application of those simple ingredients, but Leicester’s achievement has made it abundantly clear that Villa did not need to be marooned in the bottom places for the last five years. West Ham and Stoke have also made their presence felt: just what has been going on at Villa Park since 2010?

We are all convinced, I think, about the past mismanagement at our club, but with the revelation that success can be achieved without so much cash as people inferred, Lerner’s faulty actions lie solely but importantly with his CEO appointments, Faulkner and Fox, and the damage that they seem to have perpetrated: mainly by Fox, who seems to have missed the point by a mile. “Pay people more money and you will get results”, seems to have been his primary style as demonstrated in those deeply questioned contracts to Lambert and Gabby. However his now clearly strange management methods and appointments went far beyond those matters.

Whatever the problems were at the club in 1987 (the last relegation) there was still an identifiable link between the youth set up and the senior squad. Players of the ilk of Walters and Dorigo and then Daley, Birch and Olney found their niche with comfort, but in the very recent past the supply of effective youngsters has mostly dried up, though perhaps we are seeing the awakening of a new dawn in that respect. In addition, Graham Taylor (in 1987-90) had the ability that Leicester have shown in being able to pick up highly-capable bargains: McInally, Platt, McGrath and Yorke and the return of Cowans were a great credit to Taylor. It’s interesting that when Taylor took over for a second spell in charge that he acquired the young and gangly Peter Crouch and declared, “He’ll play for England”. Well, he did, but not before he was ruthlessly and cheaply discarded by Taylor’s replacement and yet went on to play well for Liverpool and Spurs, with Southampton making a hefty profit on him in-between Villa and his later clubs.

Yes, mismanagement at Villa has been going on for a long time. It’s such a tragedy that the club’s flag got lowered so much before the penny dropped and the lion’s claws were made to re-grow. But with the club stating it is no longer “Prepared”, what’s to happen now?

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