What We Learned After Garde Exit, Chelsea Whipping, Little Return

As weeks go, this was a pretty eventful one – hopefully one that will be seen as the start of better days (Chelsea performance and result aside). What did Aston Villa fans learn as the Garde era ended and the ground work for a long-view was laid?

AU REVOIR

Rémi Garde was a gamble. For all those fans who heralded him as the long-term future if only he was given money and time – sorry it didn’t happen. He wasn’t given either and once the players stopped trying for him, the writing was on to wall. Five months and 24 games were wasted in total, for whatever reason. Blame whoever you want – the players, the board, Garde himself.

It was a costly experiment by a group who came up with the idea of an untested foreign coach, then decided to stop funding the experiment midway through, and executed by a team of players who could only play so well and only tried so hard.

Writing the wrongs is easy when everything was wrong, but Garde will be remembered as the manager who took the team down from the Premiership for the first time. The whys and wherefores will only account for so much of the blame.

LITTLE GOES A LONG WAY

Brian Little couldn’t be more associated with Aston Villa. A legend as a player and the last Aston Villa manager to bring home a trophy, his appointment to the board is not just ceremonial and is the kind of appointment fans have been screaming out for since the suits took over assuming their business acumen would somehow reflect what was happening on the pitch.

Will Brian Little be content with a former Blues manager taking over at Villa Park? You wouldn’t think so, unless he was very, very sure he was the right man. Can you see Little welcoming someone like Stan Collymore – a player he signed for the club – back with open arms and an open mind? There’s every chance.

 

Did Little take the horrible performance against Chelsea with the same disgust as the fans? One would hope so. Little truly is “one of our own” and his influence will hopefully prevent some of the ridiculous moves the club has pulled (see McLeish, Alex) ever happening again.

BACUNA BOOS

This column is no fan of Leandro Bacuna, for sure. Not his footballing ability, not his attitude and not the fact he is given so much playing time.

But did he deserve to be singled out in the Chelsea game? Maybe. Richards, Lescott and Guzan also took some heat according to press reports, but Bacuna’s every touch was booed linked in part to an interview where he talked about leaving Villa – and maybe English football – at the end of his contract. Also there were probably some fans upset as his Instagram posts where he was relaxing at a time when the last thing fans want to see is anyone associated with the club not pulling their weight.

But read the quote. When he was asked where he could see himself moving back to the Dutch Eredivisie he said: “That would just be to Ajax or PSV, I think. They play Champions League football almost every year. If I have a chance to go there, why not?” That’s not really saying he would only move for CL football, nor saying he feels like he deserves that move. He’s seems to be saying IF he was to move back to the Netherlands, he would only consider the bigger clubs.

This isn’t some “why can’t be all just get along?” plea, but really, isn’t there enough booing for everyone to get some?

… CHELSEA, 4

What was the worst part of the defeat?

The empty seats that got emptier as the game went on? Guus Huddink’s barely even celebratory celebrations as the first goal went in? The fact Chelsea brought two full Brazilian internationals off their bench with plenty of game to go while Villa didn’t make any subs at all until 0-4 down at home, finally bringing on a U21 player for 10 minutes at the end – expecting what, exactly? The protests? The paper flying on to the pitch? The ironic cheers when the team managed to string some passes together? The not-ironic boos? The seventh straight defeat – for the second time this season? The no goals scored – again?

All of the above?

UTV

Follow Adam Keeble on Twitter @keebo00

Help reward our writers and more by becoming a MOMS patron click here

4 COMMENTS

  1. Why so angry Clive? I was on the witton Road end the day we hit the bottom of the second divison the first time, before Tommy Docherty arrived and finally dropped us into division 3. There were 12,500 spectators in a stadium that could take 62,500 and did on December 23rd 1979 – Villa 2, Man U 1. The great nights can come back.

    But I don’t blame 50 000 people for not turning up 1965- 1969. It was rubbish, so why should people pay to see rubbish? If people stay away, the message will finally get through. LErner has been deluded that the crowds still turn up.

    I want to see people stay with the Villa, but its inevitable that when we go down the season ticket sales will collapse and the real attendance figures will be revealed.

    However if people walk away, that is not a cause for anger. Loyalty has only gone upwards in the LErner era and I won’t criticise poeple who have had enough> Lets try to get them back making villa a good place to go to

    Its not been that for many years.

    Trevor Fisher.

  2. People still don’t get it ,rotten crap team even more rotten individual players ,bad manager ,inept trainers and staff ,deluded board (l know some sh-t has been well payed off for their efforts ) and as for our saviour owner enough has already been said Muppet ,so the Aston Villa fans seem to have finally twigged we’re doomed all a bit late to moan now I thinks ,us old gits who tasted relegation in the 60/70ies have tried and tried to explain how it feels but you chose not to listen now we will see who the true and loyal Villa are ,so to all you who feel your can no longer follow Villa we’ll see you again so pi- – of till then , so become Brummie reds or noses I for one will stay true to myself keep the faith and remain Villa till I die

  3. agree with Pershorvilla. The big news is however off the field. Hollis is not a man to take fools lightly, so it will be a case of putting the axe to rotten wood.

    Lerner has no choice but to back him. No one will buy this club in the state it is in

    Trevor Fisher

  4. I think that the differences between ourselves and Chelsea are highlighted admirably in your post. Realistically our place is in the Championship and it will remain so whilst Mr Lerner is associated with our club. We all hope that things will change but let’s take a reality check we are a club without a manager and without a team, next season we start from scratch and it will be an achievement to remain in the Championship.

Comments are closed.