Wednesday 15 June 2011

Want to commit football suicide? Hire Alex McLeish...

After last night's statement released on avfc.co.uk I felt I had to dig the blog out for another post.

I was actually having quite a pleasant start of the week, until this:

"The Club understands that Alex McLeish is a free agent. We therefore intend to interview him imminently in order to make a decision regarding his candidacy to become Villa manager.

We would, however, like to emphasise that in deciding to interview Alex McLeish, the Board has taken his tenure at our local rivals and the strong emotions associated with this very seriously.

We are determined, still, not to allow that three-and-a-half year post to disqualify him should he be the best candidate for the role of Aston Villa manager."


I just don't understand the motive.

Why on earth would a club of Aston Villa's stature look at appointing Alex McLeish? It's not even the fact he used to manage Birmingham City. It's not the fact we supposedly 'tapped them up'. It's the fact that he's not what we need. He's a negative manager who has a tendancy to implement negative tactics including a 4-5-1 at home. Aston Villa are renowned for exciting counter-attacking football, not defensive tactics. We'd be the complete opposite under McLeish, infact. We'd be going backwards and quite frankly we're currently a laughing stock.

I cannot think of any positive points to raise from this, but believe me I can raise a lot of negatives:
  • Alienation of 99% of fans - once you've done that there is no way back
  • There would be riots
  • We would have to pay £5.2 MILLION compensation to Birmingham City FC
  • Further protests
  • Massive decrease in season ticket renewals
  • <25,000 attendances
  • No time to string results together - will be hounded out after one loss
  • Poor transfer track record
  • Flirting with relegation
You could say this is a result of Villa fans being fickle and I could see where you were coming from. But this is a far bigger matter than not turning up because the manager is not liked.

Last season us as fans had to put up with poor results for the whole season and we were even in the bottom three at one point. Fans still came to games, albeit not as many, but fans still did. For a club the size of Villa, we should not have to put up with that.

At the start of Gerard Houllier's tenure, quite a large number of fans were not happy with the appointment. But there was still a small number of support. Even with that small number of support, against Sunderland at home chants of "You don't know what you're doing" and "Sacked in the morning" echoed around Villa Park as we lost 1-0. Alex McLeish has NO support. I'm yet to speak to a fan who is im support of the former Blues boss taking the move across the city.

If Houllier can warrant abuse on all levels from a home crowd with support, albeit dwindling, just imagine what the atmosphere will be like if we lose under McLeish at home.

And then of course there is always the threat that he might try and bring some Birmingham players with him - Ferguson, Bowyer, Carr et al. Simply not good enough. Old, past it and typical McLeish signings. Of course he may bring the likes of Foster, Dann and Johnson but is it really worth it for the sake of less than a handful of decent players? You could also argue the fact that he may be something different with a board actually backing him but judging by the way the fans have reacted it is simply not worth the risk.

I can't help but think that this is a way of Lerner and Faulkner saying "Listen, we pick the manager, not you, we will interview who we like whether you like it or not." Which is true. It is frankly embarrassing that so called "fans" vandalise our own training ground with the message "Bluenose scum not welcome" and plan protests for every manager we are linked with as they are "Not good enough for Aston Villa". At the end of the day Villa fans, we are not what we used to be. The days of challenging for the league and European Cups are long gone - we are merely, on average, a top-eight side who will sometimes challenge for the top four/six. Still a big club based on fanbase, stadium, history, squad etc. yes, but what gives us the right to demand Ancelotti? Why would he be interested in a vacant position at a club like Aston Villa when the fans behave the way they do?

And then there's the squad. Will players like Stewart Downing and Darren Bent really stay at the club if McLeish is appointed? It doesn't exactly show them that we mean business does it? Brad Friedel has already gone. Ashley Young is going. We've already released ten players including Nigel Reo Coker and John Carew.

The only reason I can think of for Lerner being interested is that McLeish is similar to O'Neill. He knows how to work to a budget, he knows how to sort a defence out, he knows how to grind out results - and he is stern so will probably be able to sort out the wage bill with the likes of Warnock and Beye sitting on at least £40k a week each.

All I will say to Randy is think about it. Is it worth losing millions of matchday revenue and having thousands of fans taking a back seat on the club whilst you appoint a manager with a poor Premier League record, overseeing two relegations? Yes he led Birmingham City to a Carling Cup win last season. But if you are appointing him based on that, you have a lot to learn about football. There are plenty more managers I would rather see at the helm. I think I would even rather see Alan Curbishley.

And a message to those fans demanding world class managers - we're not Barcelona, we are Aston Villa. We will not be able to attract a manager to the calibre of those mentioned (Ancelotti, Rijkard, etc.) so grow up and support the team whatever happens.

I will continue to support the club and give McLeish a chance if he is the manager but it does not make sense from both a financial sense and a footballing sense. But just a thought. Mark Hughes is a free agent at the end of the month, why not wait for him and approach him in a professional manner?

There are over 15,000 fans in the Facebook group stating that Villa fans do not want McLeish.

We have either lowered our ambitions or the board simply do not care anymore. Neither is any better than the other.

Want to commit football suicide? Hire Alex McLeish.

Thursday 6 January 2011

What a difference four days make

Jesus, after that performance at Chelsea I think almost everyone went into the Sunderland game with renewed hope that we were about to turn things around, well that was proved wrong.

We didn't play good at all tonight. Heskey was the only one who looked bothered - but then he got sent off for a push in the face to a Sunderland player.

I've had a bit of time to reflect after the game and sit down with a cup of tea so these are my perspective views.

It's too easy to sit back and say "Houllier Out!" looking at the league table, the results and the performances, but it is evident there are underlying problems at the club. We are in a BIG mess at the minute, and Houllier is clearing up the mess left by Martin O'Neill and doing what should have been a long time ago - i.e. making some of the players who travel to and from places such as London and Manchester every day, move local. The players aren't happy, but surely it needs to be done.

Martin O'Neill bought a team of players who could play to the strengths he wanted to use them for. Houllier has not yet had this chance. Houllier has tried to play O'Neill's team of players to the way he wants the team to play. It has obviously not worked. How many managers come in and stick to the ways of a previous manager? Almost every manager, if not all, try to get the team to play the way they want to. Every team goes through a bad run, some longer than others, but teams usually tend to come out of them. I know I shouldn't be comparing us to them but look at West Brom. They were on a great run at the start of the season and have now lost five games in a row and just about outside of the relegation zone. If that's a bad example look at Chelsea, and if that's a bad one look at Everton.

I guess what I'm trying to say is trying to do your job with someone elses tools isn't easy until you can buy your own, which Houllier WILL be given the chance to do. He won't be sacked tonight, tomorrow morning, or at the weekend. The only way he will be sacked is if we get relegated or he no longer wants the job and agrees to leave.

Until then, Gerard Houllier is our manager, and I think we will turn this around. Probably later rather than sooner but we will just about dodge relegation in my opinion. Our fixture list once we get past Man City at home is a lot easier than the games we've had to play under him.

Oh and some more on O'Neill - of course he has to take some of the blame, not all, but some, considering he left his group of players in the lurch and walked out on us so close to the season starting. He knew this would happen this season due to player revolt and high wage bill (when he found it difficult to make it any lower) so left at the first opportunity. He has a decent CV and doesn't want to tarnish it by a relegation battling season at Aston Villa when he could much rather take a year out and look at options.

Have faith, I know it's difficult at the minute and 99.9% of Villa fans want Houllier out and I know no one will agree with me but the board see something in him, and this is why we don't own a football club and they do.

Oh and the chanting during the game tonight of "Sacked in the morning" by the same fans who were chanting "Houllier's claret and blue army" five minutes before was completely uncalled for and probably something the media will have a field day on, so well done.

Up the Villa