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Relationship between fans & board starting to show cracks?
17 Comments »Posted in Aston Villa, Avillafan.comMar 9, 2012
Read more »As many of you may know. I sent an email to Paul Faulkner at Aston Villa giving my thoughts & views on not only Alex McLeish, but also the clubs direction.
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A Letter to Mr Faulkner
46 Comments »Posted in Aston Villa, Avillafan.comMar 6, 2012
Read more »As many of you already may know. I am not happy with the way the club has not only been performing but also the actions of the board & chairman behind the scenes.
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EXCLUSIVE: Photos of possible new owners??
50 Comments »Posted in Aston Villa, Avillafan.com, Transfer RumoursFeb 28, 2012
Read more »Whilst reading through Aston-Villa views article that they published early this afternoon regarding the possible takeover & sale of Aston Villa (by the way, good read Ian). I received a message from a close friend of mine who has contacts within Aston Villa.
The message I received had this to say:
Look who is standing with Spinky & Taylor
Upon opening the message I found the following
Ok, I admit, I did do a bit scream when I saw these. But, I had to ask them the question. I asked them who they was? are these the new owners or are they just some random guys from around the Birmingham area? The reply I got was:
According to staff I have spoken to they are the potential new buyers of Aston Villa
Take this as you will, but if this is the case, this puts the nail in the coffin for me.
IF THESE ARE the new owners considering to buy AVFC I would like to be the first to welcome them both whoever they maybe to Aston Villa Football Club.
Written by: Dave Beeston
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Is boycotting the answer?
25 Comments »Posted in Aston VillaFeb 27, 2012
Read more »After a very poor performance the weekend, it was only a matter of time before the fans started to make themselves heard.
Of course all those who were at the DW Stadium the weekend, made there points perfectly clear for all the watching media to see and hear, but now the support groups are starting to follow suite.
Before I publish the following statement, I will once again make it clear that we do not agree with the actions of the following groups statement, but we do agree that something must be done about the current situation at our football club.
The statement is from the same group that tried to get a protest going before the 1-0 defeat against Manchester City earlier this month.
After yet another pathetic result for McLeish’s Villa, we have to ask how much worse can it get?
After watching that today the answer is a lot worse. If Randy Lerner and Paul Faulkner have any clue about the game they will dismiss McLeish immediately. But we all know that wont happen.
So we urge all fans of Aston Villa to boycott the Fulham game, hit them in the pocket.
They have NO respect for you, they treated us like **** on their shoe when they appointed McLeish and keeping him in a job now is just taking the mick out of us all.
We deserve to go down if he remains in charge.
All Randy Lerner and Paul Faulkner care about is money, if we stop giving them ours then surely they will have to listen!
Its now 6 wins in 26 games, We are definitely in a relegation battle now.
You want him out? Then do something about it!We know how difficult it is to stay away from a game, and it is the last thing we want to do. But surely its worth it in the long term?
You can keep up to date with the latest from the ‘McLeish Out’ group over at Mcleishout.co.uk
There is also a petition that is now online that you can sign your name to give your backing to get the manager out. Sign the petition here.
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Desire?
1 Comment »Posted in Aston VillaFeb 24, 2012
Read more »After writing the post ‘The Good, The Bad and The Ugly’ I read through the comments and one said about playing the younger players. A while back I wrote this and only posted it on my own blog yet I thought it may be the right time to share it. As I’ve said before some points you may agree with, others you may not.
Aston Villa boast one fine academy, a positive in all this negativity, which receives high and well deserved praise on many fronts. The likes of Gabby Agbonlahor, our speed demon, Marc Albrighton, Ciaran Clark, who’s hasn’t been given a chance yet however contributed to some classy goals last season and Barry Bannan; have all worked their way through to the first team.
Having been shining lights, except Gabby, in the gloom overshadowing Villa Park and deepening injury crisis’ in a difficult Gérard Houllier reign, they now vow to be part of a ultra-defensive Villa XI.
Not only do they express an enormous amount of talent, yet they also come with bundles of desire. Desire to do well, desire to play for the team that most of them support and love and desire to make Villa a major force in the Premier League again.
In most Premier League teams, home grown players are of the minority and teams don’t see the benefits of them. What it brings to the club are passionate youngsters that are willing to improve to become a player that will be recognised by little children for years to come. Even if they lack in experience, they definitely make up for it in emotion.
Take Ciaran Clark for instance; properly making his first team breakthrough under Gérard Houllier last season, he proved not only to be a proven stopper in front of goal, he also became a goalscorer down the other end of the pitch. The versatile star, brings character to the field of play – a natural born leader, captaining both the reserve team and the youth England side - and also a sense of calmness. Clark brings composure into the heart of defence, a broad intimidating stature and an aerial threat.
This season he has only made just three apps, being overlooked by Alex McLeish. The two centre-halves standing in his way, appear as James Collins and Richard Dunne; two defenders with 563 Premier League appearances between them. It seems with those two ahead of him, only injuries will allow him to creep into the side.
As much as I am an admirer of James Collins, some of his performances this season have been of a poor standard. So why has McLeish still kept him in the squad when you have a player like Ciaran Clark waiting in the wings?
There’s not only Ciaran Clark that has made his way into first team contention, there are other’s that have excelled in the position of being able to play week in, week out. Chris Herd, the Australian born “utility player,” was never one that many Villa fans knew about before this season. He played a few games last season, however particularly burst through the scenes when Luke Young left this summer. Needed at right back, Herd stepped into the position perfectly; gelling into the team as if he’d been playing with them for years. Throughout the season, he’s been used at the centre of midfield, acting as an anchor to support with both the defence and attack, allowing skipper Stiliyan Petrov to play in his more natural position.
Another graduate of the Aston Villa academy, he shows a huge amount of passion in whatever position he plays. Showing it when going in to whatever challenge, tackle or pass he makes, Herd boasts the sort of attitude all players should admire. You don’t often find players like Chris Herd, a player that doesn’t moan, puts his head down and gets on with the job in hand. A credit to the club, in my opinion. Offering composure, the ability to tackle without fear, threat in the air and the desire to do everything he does well, he is a player that shouldn’t be missed off the team sheet.
One of the oldest, that still lasts from the academy, striker Gabby Agbonlahor has been one of the success stories that has peeped out from Bodymoor Heath. Now playing in what I would call the best form of his career, assisting and scoring goals left, right and centre; we have a demon on our hands. A speed demon.
He is currently the longest serving player at Villa Park, after joining the youth academy at 1994 and then playing professionally at 2005. In addition to this, he is also Aston Villa’s second highest Premier League goalscorer, just behind Dwight Yorke who score 60 goals.
When he burst onto the Villa’s first team radar in the 2006/07 season under Martin O’Neill, he started on the right wing in a new look Aston Villa side which faced Arsenal at the Emirates. Now, the rest is history.
Gabby Agbonlahor plays for the badge, not for the name on the back of his shirt. He doesn’t go for glory and he plays with his heart on his sleeve. Bringing a natural winning instinct and an a massive amount of passion to the team, he shows them what Aston Villa is all about. Thanks to him being from Birmingham and knowing the club inside out, it reaps in the rewards. The fans love him and he knows what it takes to be a hero and not an enemy.
Just like Gabby, Marc Albrighton lives, breathes and bleeds claret and blue. Making appearances in the Premier League under Martin O’Neill, he made his proper breakthrough along with Ciaran Clark last season. You have to say this was all down to Kevin MacDonald who put his faith into Marc when needed.
You can never question Albrighton’s work ethic as he always runs his little legs off, wherever, whenever. Neither can you question his desire to be part of the team and return it to its former glory.
“I know things had not been great but I am a Villa boy and I can’t think of anything worse than leaving the club that’s given me all my games and all my happy moments.”
It is Marc Albrighton’s passion that for me has led to me to love him as a player. Even though he has had a tough season this year and hasn’t performed well when asked to, he still has the courage and bravery to go out on the pitch when needed and give his all. Whether that just be to run and run and run and run, he will do it and he will do it with pride. He will do it for Aston Villa Football Club.
This amount of sheer hard work was explained by both captain and manager alike after the Bolton game in December. “I am delighted for Marc,” said Stiliyan Petrov. “He’s had a real tough time. Before the season started, all the expectations were really high for Marc. Everyone was looking to him to be a replacement for Stewart or Ashley when they left. It wasn’t the best start for him, but the one thing you saw was how hard he was working. He was upset. He’s that sort of player. He wants to learn. He wants to improve and if things don’t go his way on the pitch, he is not happy to just accept it, he wants to put it right.”
There are many others; Barry Bannan and Gary Gardner spring to mind, yet I didn’t want to bore you with my waffle. Is the academy graduates who will perhaps save us from McLeish’s offensive tactics?


