What it’ll Need for Aston Villa to be Optimistic Ahead of Next Season

Sinking Feeling

Aston Villa may appear to be going down without any sign of a fight, with the latest defeat at Manchester City symbolic of the lethargic performances that players who do not deserve to wear the shirt continue to produce on a weekly basis.

Losing at the Etihad Stadium against one of the teams challenging for the Premier League title may have come as no surprise to anyone, but all the hard work (and an element of luck) that went into keeping it 0-0 at half time was merely thrown away by an insipid second half showing that turned the game into a cat toying with a feeble mouse that had no intention of going toe-to-toe. We should consider ourselves fortunate that Manchester City decided to be lenient and take their foot off the gas as it could have been double figures, such was the manner in which our heads went down after the first goal went in.

The latest defeat has pushed Villa further towards a trapdoor that is becoming increasingly inevitable, but while playing the blame game may be the only way for fans to get the frustration and anger off their chest, there has to be hope that there is a potential chink of light at the end of a long and dark tunnel.

Relegation will hopefully bring a strong reality check for the Villa board to realise the considerable shortcomings that have seen us go from a team challenging for a top six finish to four consecutive battles against the drop. Bookies.com have already wrote off our chances of surviving this time around, as have many fans and pundits who have witnessed Villa’s demise and impending slide into the Championship, but instead of being in the doldrums, it is best to look at ways in which the club could make changes on and off the pitch that create a brighter future (improving things for supporters would be a start).

Can it get any worse?

Dropping into the Championship may be our worst nightmare come true, but there are always examples of other clubs that have fallen much heavier than Aston Villa. It remains to be seen how we will be respond to relegation, but looking at how far the likes of Portsmouth and Bradford have fallen should be used as motivation to prevent the same predicament from happening to us.

Garde, if he sticks around, may find it even more difficult than he did in January to bring players of the quality he desires to the club, although the likely departure of a number of players on high wages should provide enough finances to build a team that is capable of bouncing back at the first attempt.

 

More importantly, building a team that restore an element of pride and commitment back into the club may help to get the fans, who have become sick and tired at what they have witnessed on and off the pitch over the last few years, back on board in order to get more bums on seats at Villa Park.

Keeping players who are willing to fight for the cause and adding more in place of the likes of Gabby and N’Zogbia who play like they do not care would encourage us to check Bookies.com for the best place to back Aston Villa next season, and while it may not seem like it right now, it is those sort of changes that allow us to re-energise and come back stronger as a result.

Major changes

Remi Garde might deserve criticism for his tactics and inability to transform the club’s fortunes around since he arrived in November, but he should not be held solely accountable for the predicament that he walked into. Many of the players have to be held accountable for the lack of fight, effort and desire to perform when pulling on the shirt which may suggest that they want Garde sacked, but they themselves must look in the mirror as professional footballers and ask themselves if they have done all they could for the cause.

Sadly, the reality is that only Jordan Ayew, Jordan Amavi and perhaps Idrissa Gueye can hold their heads up high; there will be no shortage of players leaving the club if Aston Villa do succumb to the dreaded drop after three previous years of surviving by the skin of our teeth. The axe must be wielded to get rid of players who clearly do not have the stomach to get Aston Villa out of their current predicament.

Takeover Limbo

Years of poor recruitment have finally caught up with Aston Villa, but the problems at the club run so much deeper than merely being a million miles behind the rest of the league.

A number of people must be held accountable for the inability to produce a team that possesses the required Premier League quality at both ends of the pitch; it seems a lifetime ago when Villa were able to compete against the very best when now they are able to run riot without breaking a sweat.

Garde must also be held accountable for his unwillingness to have a go in fear of being turned over, which is happening anyway.  He may be let down by the level of mismanagement that has left us with a squad packed with players who just aren’t good enough, but his tactics are deserving of considerable blame placed at his door.

 

However, the big problem is at boardroom level with the sale of the club still in limbo. New chairman Steven Hollis is believed to be wielding the axe at boardroom level to remove those that he feels have failed in their respective roles, but there appears no sign of Lerner letting up on his asking price despite the protests for him to do what is best for the club.

A club with Aston Villa’s pedigree and history has been run through the mud thanks to substantial mismanagement at every level, but more importantly deserves an owner that cares about the club’s wellbeing and status. Relegation might persuade Lerner to accept lower bids for the club and provide fans with the best news they have received for a long time; a good spring clean at boardroom and management level would be in the best interests of everyone concerned, as it can’t get much worse at the moment.

Changes

New board director Mervyn King said on Radio Five today that the club are “reviewing every aspect of the club and in due course, not after too long I hope, we will have some announcements to make.”

The only announcement Villa supporters want is one for a new owner of the club. On the playing side of matters, whether Garde remains the man to take care if it, King reckons is Garde’s decision to make, but if he did want to stay, surely he would insist on employing his own backroom staff and to build a fresh team on funds generated through a squad cull that is long overdue.

Relegation will trigger massive change at the club and it is vitally important that the club finally get things right.

UTV

Follow MOMS on Twitter – @oldmansaid

3 COMMENTS

  1. Hi, I’m a Man city fan, I don’t think you can put even a tiny bit of blame on Garde, he took over what was already a relegated team it seems in respect of your players attitudes.

    In the short term Sherwood left the the club in a mess on the playing side, the greatest English manager of all time I believe he was supposed to be wasn’t he or you would of thought so the way people raved about him but he had achieved nothing, a man whose ego and looking like he was tough came before anything else.

    Obviously there is the situation with selling the club but I don’t think he has been the worse owner I the world just not the best, ultimately the reason this season under Garde at least is because the players are not fighting.

    There are players that aren’t good enough but let’s face it the likes of Phil Neville were no world beaters but he gave 120% and performed, your lot aren’t giving you 50%, Garde was far to worried about not being hammered by us but can you blame him when he sees that rubbish train every day, it’s damage limitations I think he’s trying to protect the club particularly from finishing on lowest points ever.

    It’s a shame because I don’t think villas squad is worthy of their position on paper I don’t think it’s a terrible squad, but if they don’t try then what’s the point.

    Really sad to see it makes me want to pull a villa shirt on watching it, hope things start to look up for you in the future.

    • Thanks for the comment. We might give you a call later in the week, if you fancy a game against Spurs this weekend?!

  2. Remi Garde is not the man for this job, Old head and experience much required. Pearson for me. As to the three dead beats sat in the boardroom should only take an hour to review their success. Sack the lot now and see if they have the nerve to sue for wrongful dismissal.

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