The Football League Paper

ROBBIE EYEING TOP-SIX FINISH

- By Andrew Lawton

ROBERTO Di MATTEO is confident Aston Villa will finish the season in the top six – despite a miserable September that saw his side go winless.

Despite shelling out more than £50m on nine new players over the summer, the Villans’ only win of the season heading into this weekend had come against basement battlers Rotherham United on August 13.

New-look strike force Jonathan Kodjia and Ross McCormack accounted for nearly half of their transfer window outlay, but they had mustered just three goals between them through September.

However, Di Matteo, who insists he maintains the full support of new chairman Tony Xia, is in no doubt there will soon be an upturn in form.

“We are only seven points behind sixth place. I believe this team will be in the top six at the end of the season,” he said pre-weekend. “That is the confidence I have, the team has, that we will be up there. Who knows where, but we will be up in the top six.

“Everybody at the club is in full support of the team, myself and the management team because we all want the same.

“I don’t feel under pressure from the chairman or the club at all. I feel the pressure of delivering results and so do the players.”

ANDY Hessenthal­er was first, Warren Feeney next, then Tony Mowbray accepted the inevitable. That’s three Football League managers gone in a week. There will be many, many more before the season’s out as impatient owners with no real understand­ing of team-building demand impossible, immediate, results.

Among those in the line of fire, according to reports by usually well-informed journalist­s, is Roberto Di Matteo at Aston Villa. The Italian took charge of only his 12th match yesterday, but after Villa spent a net £35m in the summer, bringing in nine players, the first 11 matches were expected to yield more than one league win and an EFL Cup exit to League Two opposition.

Experience

Villa’s new owner and chairman, Dr Tony Xia, dismissed reports via twitter, his preferred method of communicat­ion. “As always, the medias knew something I would do that even I myself don’t know” he wrote, the mangled English proof that he writes his own tweets, rather than have a spin doctor doing it for him (and that is not intended as a dig at Xia’s command of English, which is a lot better than my Chinese).

A couple of days later, Xia followed up with: “It always takes longer than predicted, needs harder work than expected 2succeed in everything! But it’ll come. It’s my experience &philosophy.”

This sounds encouragin­g for Di Matteo, even if his request that Xia record a video for the players seems an odd, slightly desperate move.

Questioned by a fan as to the logic of his home movie, Xia tweeted: “I think once we win, more wins will follow .... ”. This may prove the case. Reports suggest Villa have played better than results indicate and the injection of confidence a win will deliver would lift the dressing room, boardroom and stadium.

However, it is equally possible that Villa will win one, draw one, win one, lose one, and so on. This is a club that has got used to losing, and turning it around is akin to reversing an oil tanker.

Turning

Villa’s last winning season was 2009-10, Martin O’Neill’s final campaign. Then, Randy Lerner turned off the money tap, O’Neill quit and results dived. In the last five seasons Villa have won 40 matches and lost 84. Last season, they won three and lost 27. The final 13 matches produced one draw and 12 defeats, a third of them by four goals or more. The results ticker looks like the L key got stuck.

Since O’Neill left, Villa have had six managers, as many transfer and playing philosophi­es, and continual squad turnover. The club that Xia and Di Matteo walked into this summer was a mess, lacking direction and belief, with the fans and players at odds. A club like that cannot be transforme­d overnight. Indeed, anyone who has coached at any level will know how difficult it is to institute a new method of playing and to blend in new players. Even a manager as successful as Jose Mourinho said rewiring the circuitry built by Louis van Gaal would take time.

It is possible for new manager to produce immediate results, but the circumstan­ces have to be right. At Manchester City, Pep Guardiola inherited an outstandin­g squad who are used to winning. At Everton, Ronald Koeman found talented players who just needed the restoratio­n of profession­al and defensive rigour. The playing squads of Newcastle and Bolton include many who should be at a higher level and they are quickly proving it.

In most cases, however, a manager needs time, a commodity which is increasing­ly rare. Yet look at Huddersfie­ld, the most unlikely of promotion contenders. David Wagner admittedly arrived only in November with the club in 19th place, but there are chairmen out there who would have looked at last season’s run-in, when the Terriers won one of the last eight, at the finishing position of 19th and at Wagner’s record of 14 defeats and nine wins, before deciding to twist again. Dean Hoyle decided to stick and has been rewarded.

Time will tell whether Dr Xia is as patient an owner as he claims. It may be Di Matteo is the wrong man. But Xia chose him and needs to give him a proper chance to succeed. Villa crave an immediate return but they have three

seasons in which parachute payments will confer a huge competitiv­e advantage. If they do not get back by the time they expire, Villa will be in trouble, but it is far too early to panic.

They may need to start winning, but, like so many clubs, they also need stability.

 ??  ?? UPBEAT: Roberto Di Matteo
UPBEAT: Roberto Di Matteo
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 ??  ?? THE WELL-RESPECTED WRITER IS OUR GUEST COLUMNIST
THE WELL-RESPECTED WRITER IS OUR GUEST COLUMNIST

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