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Season 1998-99 Aston Villa (h) Premiership |
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4 mins:
Stephen Glass's superb centre from the left was headed home from six
yards out at the Leazes End by Alan Shearer 1-0 61 mins: Paul Merson
reduced the arrears with a volley from 20 yards out 1-1
Ruud Gullit said:
John
Gregory (who was without striker pair Stan Collymore and Dion Dublin):
Guardian match report: On Saturday, after a hectic few days that included Stan
Collymore checking into a clinic and Juninho appearing uncertain whether to
swap Madrid for Birmingham, Aston Villa delivered one of the least convincing
performances from supposed title contenders in many a season. The previous weekend they had been ushered out of the FA
Cup by Second Division Fulham. Here, in becoming the first team in the top six
to lose to Newcastle United this season, they passed up the chance to go back
to the top of the Premiership. Newcastle, in the news themselves last week with the
return of Kevin Keegan to Tyneside for a benefit match coinciding with alleged
disharmony between Ruud Gullit and Alan Shearer, played as well as anyone could
remember, but this felt like a defining defeat for Villa. Only three Saturdays before, Chelsea had come to Tyneside,
weathered a first-half battering and strolled away with victory pocketed.
Chelsea had shown determination in defence, danger on the break and had
surmounted the loss of Pierluigi Casiraghi and Gustavo Poyet. In contrast, Villa's defence was run ragged by Shearer;
and, Paul Merson's splendid goal apart, he and Julian Joachim were isolated in
attack. John Gregory's most telling comment concerned the depth of his squad:
"We had YTS boys on the bench today." The manager added, "We could have done with
Stan," a fact illustrated when Alan Wright slung in a high cross after 35
minutes and saw Joachim, 5ft 6in, competing with Steve Howey, 6ft 2in. Everyone
knows that it should have been Collymore challenging for that ball and the
nature of his temporary exile is beginning to have a debilitating effect on the
Midlands club. "We had a press conference the other day," said
Gregory wearily, "and I talked about Stan for about an hour and then
Juninho for about 40 minutes." Understandably he wanted to change the
subject but was forced to confirm that Collymore will be in the clinic until
Friday and that the Juninho deal "is still bubbling under". Gregory
hopes for an update today or tomorrow. The sideshow is distracting and it will be some
achievement if Villa's reaction to this defeat is equal to the seven-match
unbeaten run they put together after their last, at Chelsea on December 9.
Gullit spelled out the scale of the task facing Villa now. "The pressure
on them is enormous because it is so new to them to be in a title challenge.
Can they cope?" Gullit also said a difference between Villa and Chelsea is
that the Londoners are getting results when playing badly. He mentioned
"resilience" in this context. That, of course, is a quality he
himself will require as he fights to establish control at St James'. Success dissipates dissension and after witnessing the
cold shoulders between Gullit and Shearer before the Bradford City game it was
remarkable to see the huge smiles exchanged between them at the end of this
match. Gullit had waited for Shearer, the last Newcastle player to come off,
and said of him: "I think he's the best striker there is." Shearer had offered evidence for that statement with a
stirring personal display. He scored his first Premiership goal since September
with a forceful fourth-minute header - a cynic might say it was the first
decent cross he has had since September - and supplied the pass from which
Stephen Glass teed up Temuri Ketsbaia 25 minutes later. Afterwards Shearer was chirpy, said he wanted Villa to win
the league and that he would have a couple of days off as he is suspended for
the team's next game, against Leeds. What the rest of the week holds for Messrs
Shearer, Gullit and Gregory, who knows? |
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