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Date: Tuesday 2nd April 2002,
7.45pm. Venue:
Villa Park
Conditions: Spitting
on the way in,
turned into a downpour second half.
Some of us left spitting on the way
out as well....
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Aston Villa |
1
- 1 |
Newcastle
United |
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Teams |
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3 mins Dyer broke down the right
and sent over a decent cross that Staunton nodded as far as Robert. The
Frenchman has hit cleaner shots but his effort bobbled past Schmeichel and
hit the post at the Holte end, falling invitingly for Shearer to tap in from close range.
25 mins A simple enough cross from
the left but the delivery was good and Dabizas' marking poor, allowing
Crouch to steer a decent header past Given. Similar scenarios earlier in
the game had seen the big beanpole duck, so it was a shock to see such a
good connection.
Half time:
Aston Villa 1 Newcastle 1
Full time: Aston Villa 1 Newcastle 1
A not-too-disappointed Uncle
Bobby said:
"We always try and win and would
have liked all three points but this was a valuable one in the
circumstances.
"It is better than nothing in our
quest to get into Europe and to be three points in front of Chelsea with a
game in hand is still a good position for us.
"We don't want to slip up but it
keeps us on course. Our destiny is still in our own hands.
"Villa caused problems in the
first half with three midfielders against our two but we levelled that up
in the second period and the game became less attractive.
"Shay Given made a couple of
great saves for us but in the last minute Kieron Dyer could have won it
for us so things levelled out."
On Crouch:
"I was pleased when he came off
with 15 minutes to go. He scored a wonderful goal and caused us problems."
Graham Taylor uttered:
"That was a bit closer to what I
am looking for and Newcastle changed their formation more to stop us
playing in the second half.
"That is credit to our players
and the first 45 minutes is how I would like us to play - home and away if
possible.
"Crouch did very well. People
will be looking at his height but if you put the ball in the right areas
he will cause problems.
"He has got to be assessed on how
good a player he is - and not whether he is 5foot 6inches tall or 6ft 6in
tall.
Shearer came closer to his 200th
Premiership goal, now just one away. 87 of those 199 have been for the black and whites from a current Premiership total of 539
scored by the whole club.
Aaron Hughes didn't have the best of
nights on his 100th Premiership start, notably failing to find Dyer
with the last kick of the first half. Great effort for the run though....
We're still inching towards our best-ever Premiership away
record:
1993/94: 31 points from 21 matches (9 wins, 4 draws, 8 defeats)
1994/95: 24 points from 21 matches (6 wins, 6 draws, 9 defeats)
1995/96: 26 points from 19 matches (7 wins, 5 draws, 7 defeats)
1996/97: 26 points from 19 matches (6 wins, 8 draws, 5 defeats)
1997/98: 15 points from 19 matches (3 wins, 6 draws, 10 defeats)
1998/99: 19 points from 19 matches (4 wins, 7 draws, 8 defeats)
1999/00: 17 points from 19 matches (4 wins, 5 draws, 10 defeats)
2000/01: 17 points from 19 matches (4 wins, 5 draws, 10 defeats)
2001/02: 28 points from 16 matches (8 wins, 4 draws, 4
defeats)***
*** 3 away matches remaining
And as for Premiership goalscoring:
1993/94: 82 from 42 matches (51 home, 31 away, failed to score in 5
matches)
1994/95: 67 from 42 matches (46 home, 21 away, failed to score in 11
matches)
1995/96: 66 from 38 matches (38 home, 28 away, failed to score in 6
matches)
1996/97: 73 from 38 matches (54 home, 19 away, failed to score in 7
matches)
1997/98: 35 from 38 matches (22 home, 13 away, failed to score in
14 matches)
1998/99: 48 from 38 matches (26 home, 22 away, failed to score in
12 matches)
1999/00: 63 from 38 matches (42 home, 21 away, failed to score in 8
matches)
2000/01: 44 from 38 matches (26 home, 18 away, failed to score in
13 matches)
2001/02: 61 from 32 matches (33 home, 28 away, failed to score
in 6 matches)***
*** 6 matches remaining
Villa continues to be our most rewarding Premiership trip, but on a
points-per-trip basis, it's those super soaraway smoggies who are the most
generous hosts:
Villa away: 9 games, 16 points.
1993/94 |
2-0 |
Allen (pen), Cole |
1994/95 |
2-0 |
Lee, Cole |
1995/96 |
1-1 |
Ferdinand |
1996/97 |
2-2 |
Shearer, Clark |
1997/98 |
1-0 |
Batty |
1998/99 |
0-1 |
No Scorer |
1999/00 |
1-0 |
Ferguson |
2000/01 |
1-1 |
Solano |
2001/02 |
1-1 |
Shearer |
Boro away: 6 games, 14
points.
1993/94 |
- |
no league game |
1994/95 |
- |
no league
game |
1995/96 |
2-1 |
Watson, Ferdinand |
1996/97 |
1-0 |
Ferdinand |
1997/98 |
- |
no league
game |
1998/99 |
2-2 |
Charvet, Dabizas |
1999/00 |
2-2 |
Speed,
Pistone |
2000/01 |
3-1 |
Shearer,
Goma, Dyer |
2001/02 |
4-1 |
Shearer
2, Dabizas, Robert |
Speaking as an eternal pessimist, I'm usually pretty optimistic going to Villa Park.
We've had a few hiccups there recently - the Hendrie penalty and the Vassell
cup ko with his knee - but otherwise there have been a number of cracking results
and performances in this part of the West Midlands.
Given that, I fancied us to get a good result and put on a decent display against a side who are genuinely struggling under their new
manager to find anything like a bit of form. Our thumping of the Toffees hadn't seen us hit the heights but it had certainly been comprehensive
against a side not dissimilar to Villa, especially after they too recently
acquired a tall centre-forward - the frighteningly gangly Peter Crouch.
I haven't seen much of the lad on the telly despite having ITV Digital (most
of us daft enough to have it still don't watch much Nationwide...) but let
me tell you, in the flesh this bloke is an absolute freak of nature. He was
warming up when we got in and despite being 70 yards away you couldn't help
but notice that he is one very tall individual.
Now, Big Dunc is no dwarf but at least he's got some meat on him. I wouldn't be surprised if the Villa man was the lightest player on the pitch.
He can't possibly be a footballer. I know what I'm talking about here, I'm
reasonably tall myself and although bits wobble nowadays, as a teenager I had a similar build. All limbs and ney backside.
I was never the most gifted player in the world but good enough for Gosforth West Middle School.
However, once the hormones kicked in and growth became upwards not outwards
the coordination cruelly deserted me. Gangle is without doubt the enemy of
skill and close control.
A low centre of gravity is worth its weight in goals on the football pitch
and when you look like Peter Crouch your centre of gravity is actually somewhere above your head. It's like one of those weird focal points of
mirrors which is somewhere behind the wall.... Basically this man can not be
a footballer. It's impossible.
Ian Ormondroyd, George Reilly, Kevin Francis and Carlton Palmer were able to
kid people for a while that they were worth paying silly money for, and fair
play to all four for making the most of their God-given but we all knew they
couldn't really play the game.
No, to be a footballer you need to be one of those nimble, quick-footed, well-balanced, lean people who is also sickeningly good at cross-country
running.
So why then did this bloke, who could easily have been in with the bearded
women at the Hoppings, do so much damage to our hopes of another victory in
Brum? I have absolutely no idea.
He got off to a poor start, ducking under a couple of great crosses and looking like he was playing on stilts. By that time we'd already taken the
lead and looked reasonably comfortable against a side who were definitely lacking in confidence.
But then like a bolt from the blue came a great cross from Gareth Barry and
a damn fine header from the Stretch-Armstrong lookalike. OK, Dabizas was floundering again but credit where credit's due it was a good goal. Even his
celebration looked all wrong, flailing limbs and awkward long-finger pointing - totally at odds with his ecstatic colleagues.
From then on we disintegrated and the stick-insect and his teammates grew in
stature (only metaphorically thankfully for Crouch). Happily for us, Shay
Given again proved that he's a leading candidate for player of the year
with three more good stops.
As my co-collaborator pointed out after the game, a midfield of Dyer, Jenas,
Robert and Solano just might not work away from home. You can get Distin and
Hughes to come forward all you like and even ask Cort to drop back a bit but
that midfield foursome just looks to be too lightweight to compete on foreign soil.
Shame, because despite all four not being at their best they still created
some good openings and we really should have nicked it when sub Bernard had the chance to put Dyer through on goal.
This mirrored a first half chance in added time, when Hughes wriggled clear and
hurried down the right touchline needing only to hit a half-decent cross to find Dyer bursting through the middle.
However the ball was played way too deep and Aaron walked the 75 yards
back towards the tunnel apologising to Dyer.
Add to that another great chance for our England "left-sided" player (is it
just me or does anyone else wonder where the collective wisdom for Dyer to
be played on the left comes from?) and we could still have gone in at the break in the lead.
The second half was a shambles.
Villa pressed home their advantage in the middle of the park, they always seemed half a yard quicker and
to have acres more room in which to play than us. To be honest, our players looked absolutely knackered which begs the
question how they would have faired with a Saturday-Monday Easter
programme like most other Premiership footballers.
We seemed to lack ambition. Our most-used attacking option was a 40 yard ball back to our man in yellow to hoof up to Shearer who was forever
outjumped. When Al did get a flick (and wasn't blown up for it) Cort was
nowhere to be seen, presumably playing to team orders, and rather odd
orders they must have been - "stand forlornly out on the right, do
not approach the number 9".
Inevitably one or two of our following took exception to Cort's display
and grumbles were evident, which should really have been directed towards
the away dugout. Cort couldn't have been less effective playing infield,
while Solano by contrast would surely have achieved more on the flank, or
been taken off if he reprised his non-existent first half performance.
Robert also seemed to annoy some with his display, but once again claimed
an assist for our goal and was even seen tackling back to good effect on
our own byline - I don't recall Ginola doing that too often for either of
the two sides playing here tonight.
We were definitely on the ropes and a better team than Villa should have beaten us. But we still had three great chances to please the "Magpies
Steal..." headline writers.
Solano was gifted the ball and should have done better with only Schmeichel to beat. The big Dane saved it (ah, perhaps
Crouch could be a keeper - he even looks a bit like Van der Sar...) and Dyer
bizarrely appealed for something against Schmeichel - handball against the
keeper well inside his own box would definitely have been a harsh decision....even
if he once played for Man Utd.
Dyer himself put a header just over the bar and then Bernard had the chance
to put Kieron in the clear in the last few minutes but made a hash of his pass.
Had that gone in, the ever-more saturating rainstorm would have mattered
as much as the luckiness of our consequent victory to the large toon
contingent behind Schmeichel's goal, but it wasn't to be.
So not a bad result and not the worst display I've ever seen, but it felt like a defeat walking away from the ground. I think the Crouch thing
had unduly bothered me. The very fundamentals of life itself (gangly blurks
cannot play foota) had been shaken and the chance to steal a march on chasing Chelsea had been
missed, apparently through our own lack of adventure.
Had that attitude prevailed in other away games this season we'd not have
taken three points at White Hart Lane to mention just one fixture when we
took the initiative and reaped a reward.
While everyone clamours for the return of Bellamy I wonder whether the Premiership's most experienced midfielder might be more use to us at the
moment? Get well soon Gary.
Niall MacKenzie
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