Slideshow

O'Neill's Legacy

Martin O'Neill arrived at Aston Villa in August 2006 as part of former Chairman, Doug Ellis's final act in charge before the sale of the club to American millionaire, Randy Lerner.

His most successful buys into the club arguably came on the same day in January 2008, where Watford's Ashley Young was purchased for £9.75m and John Carew arrived in a swap deal for Milan Baros.

O'Neill's biggest win came in April 2008 when arch rivals Birmingham City succumbed to a 5-1 defeat at Villa Park, Carew scoring two.

This was one of many successful wins over the 2007-08 season that saw Villa finish sixth in the Premiership, earning an Intertoto qualification place as a result.

Gareth Barry's form as Villa captain saw his rise to the England ranks where he became a regular under Steve McClaren and now, Fabio Capello.

O'Neill spent most of this summer convincing his star midfielder to stay at the club, setting an £18m asking price to Liverpool, who Barry claimed he was "desperate" to join.

Barry ended up staying with the Villains, for now anyway, and played a crucial role in the team's opening UEFA cup group game against Dutch giants Ajax.

Barry scored the winner in front of an electric Villa Park to defeat Ajax 2-1 and set the tone for what will hopefully be a successful UEFA cup campaign.


Wednesday 12 November 2008

Tricky Times at Villa

Arsenal, Manchester United, John Carew injured and four points separating the bottom 10 teams in the league reads awkwardly for any Villa fan right now.

Arsenal at the Emirates has never really filled me with fear. We've played there twice now and come away with two points when it could easily been six barring two late Arsenal equalisers.

Playing Manchester United is basically forfeiting six points a season, we just can't beat them. I can't see next weekend being any different.

The fact we are only five points off tength place is a little worrying. Four points separates the bottom half of the table and should we fail to obtain any points against two of the top four giants we could see ourselves in a less than favourable position in the league.

John Carew being injured doesn't help, and his absence was more than noticeable in the atrocious Middlesbrough performance.

With two league defeats in a row staring us in the face we can only hope that Martin gets a performance out of the boys on Saturday against the hit and miss Arsenal, giving us some belief to really have a go at United and keep us above any unwanted danger below us in the Premiership.

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