Remember that football folksong of a decade
or two ago? … ‘Coming home… Coming home…’?
But the thought of being home has officially been declared anathema by
the Villa manager – he wants to play away. I’m beginning to wonder whether the
Villa’s owner might do a Wimbledon and settle
the club somewhere else in the country. Wimbledon
became MK Dons; perhaps Aston Villa could become Cirencester Villa, a name that
might appeal to the owner’s interest in history. But that’s the only way Villa’s owner is ever
going to get close to Mr. Roman Ivanovic!
But let’s be serious; never in the field of
football conflict have things ever been so serious as the lack of form at Villa Park .
Poor home results as we have experienced these last 3 seasons have never before been
sustained over such a long period in Villa’s history, and the way the current
season is going, the home results are going in even a worse direction than over
the previous two seasons. The number of
home defeats may end as being worse, as also the number of goals against
column. We’ve already conceded 21 goals at home and failed to score in more
than half of the matches. Yet somehow we’ve scored 3 and 4 against Man City and
Albion . Take those two matches away and we’ve
scored 5 goals in 11 home matches this season.
In contrast, the away form is keeping Aston
Villa in with a chance of staying out of the relegation zone, but it’s not that
many of us that have time or money to travel to see those games. The ordinary
(home) supporter has not been fairly treated for a long time now, and the
club’s management seems not to care – anyone vociferously complaining is deemed
to have a screw loose, or at least that’s the impression given by the
management. The ordinary supporter is now regarded as purely a consumer. But
when buying any other product and it doesn’t work properly, you have protected
rights to ensure that the matter is fixed. So as supporters are nor refunded
after poor performances by the team we can’t actually be consumers in the legal
sense at all. It’s our footballing emotions that have been hijacked – we’re
made to feel guilty if we’re not entirely supporting ‘them’.
What a club to be a member of. Except we
can no longer be members. So it’s not a club.
I usually have my glass half-full, and I do
feel that (a) there will be no relegation and (b) the situation will improve
for next season – perhaps sufficiently for the owner to sell his hobby to some
entity that can (at last) make a difference.
But if Mr. Lerner does not sell very soon
then I would say that despite his fine commitment to local charities, the
club’s owner is very close to ‘losing’ the club’s supporters. If Paul Lambert
is made the scapegoat, I can only see the next manager getting bogged down in
exactly the same way. So no difference to the Doug Ellis era really (in fact,
it’s probably worse) – then, each manager had three years at the helm and then
found he couldn’t get any further.
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