The Post

Manager blasts Villa for giving up

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UNDER-PRESSURE Aston Villa manager Paul Lambert accused his struggling side of throwing in the towel during a 5-0 thrashing at Arsenal in the Premier League yesterday.

A resounding defeat at the Emirates Stadium consigned Villa to their third consecutiv­e league loss and left them two places and three points above the relegation zone.

To compound their misery it was the sixth straight league match in which Lambert’s team have failed to score.

Club management has backed the Scottish manager to arrest the team’s alarming slump this week but after taking only 12 points from their last 18 league games, the pressure is mounting at Villa Park.

Lambert, though, is willing to fight for his job and the club’s Premier League survival and called on his players to do the same.

‘‘You probably can’t print the things I’m feeling. Negatives, yes, I don’t like being in this position, we’ve been in this position for too long,’’ Lambert told a news conference.

‘‘Since I’ve been here it’s always been fight, fight, but you’ve got to keep going, you don’t throw the towel in, you keep going. There’s going to be twists and turns throughout the season.

‘‘I thought for 60 minutes of that game we were well in it, the disappoint­ing thing for me was the acceptance to lose more goals.

‘‘It was a strange game, I didn’t think it was a 5-0 game, but it was and you have to take it. It wasn’t good enough for us to lose by that margin.’’

Villa are 16th in the table with 22 points and host leaders Chelsea on Sunday. THE celebratio­n seemed muted, maybe because these Patriots had gone through so much just to have a chance to win.

They milled about midfield as the confetti streamed down, while Seahawk fans who just a few minutes earlier were sure this was their Super Bowl filed out of the University of Phoenix stadium in shocked silence.

If anyone was worried about legacies and deflated footballs, the frenetic end to this game yesterday surely went a long way to settle that.

If anyone was worried that the New England Patriots couldn’t overcome both controvers­y and recent history, well, the Lombardi trophy was going back east once again after the Patriots somehow escaped with a 28-24 win.

For those keeping score at home, that’s four Super Bowl wins in 14 years for the powerhouse under Tom Brady and Bill Belichick. But the last one was a decade ago, and the pressure had been building long before the pressure was taken out of the balls in the AFC title game.

‘‘I never thought another trophy would feel this good, but this absolutely does,’’ owner Robert Kraft said. ‘‘Any true Patriot fan understand­s that.’’

Yes, Russell Wilson tossed this one away with one terribly illadvised throw on what began as an ill-advised play call. No team with Marshawn Lynch in the backfield should throw the ball on the one-yard-line with the Super Bowl on the line.

Indeed, by all measures, the Seahawks should have been the ones celebratin­g. They should have had their second straight Super Bowl win, and the talk should have been about the dynasty Pete Carroll was building in the Pacific Northwest.

But now Brady has his fourth ring, and is in the conversati­on again when it comes to great Super Bowl quarterbac­ks. Now the talk can begin again about the great Patriot dynasty that was quieted with losses in New England’s last two Super Bowls.

Give the owner a rare assist on that. Kraft stepped forward upon the Patriots arrival in Arizona with a handwritte­n speech blasting everyone – including the NFL – who thought the team might have been cheating by deflating the balls in the AFC game against Indianapol­is.

He wanted to take the pressure off his team, and he did. The questions about deflated balls became questions about football instead.

And when it came time actual football to be played, for the Patriots were more than ready. Brady was better than Wilson despite throwing two picks of his own, and no-one panicked when the Seahawks rolled to a 24-14 lead in the third quarter.

Surprising­ly enough, the New England defence was also better than the vaunted Seattle unit behind Richard Sherman, especially when cornerback Malcom Butler made the play of his life by intercepti­ng Wilson at the goal line with 20 seconds left.

‘‘It’s not the way we drew it up,’’ Brady said, ‘‘but this team has never given up the entire year.’’ They didn’t give up because they were profession­al football players, and they both played and acted like it. The Seahawks played pretty well, too, but the contrast in styles couldn’t have been more evident.

On the sidelines in the second half, Sherman smiled for the cameras. After scoring the touchdown that put his team up 10 points, receiver Doug Baldwin was flagged for a celebratio­n that looked like something he might do in the bathroom, not on the field.

And in the final seconds, Seattle linebacker Bruce Irvin was ejected after starting a fight.

None of that would go on under Belichick, of course, though style doesn’t always win games. Neither, for that matter, do 37-year-old quarterbac­ks who hear the whispers after going a decade between big wins yet somehow rise to win both the game and the MVP award.

Brady was 8-for-8 on the final drive to put the Patriots ahead – all with balls that had been checked and rechecked by the best security people the NFL could hire.

‘‘I don’t think about that,’’ Brady said when asked if it would be his signature drive.

‘‘It’s a team effort. There’s never one player. It took the whole team.’’

 ?? Photo: REUTERS ?? Thrashed: Aston Villa’s Kieran Richardson reacts after losing 5-0 to Arsenal in their English Premier League football match at the Emirates Stadium yesterday.
Photo: REUTERS Thrashed: Aston Villa’s Kieran Richardson reacts after losing 5-0 to Arsenal in their English Premier League football match at the Emirates Stadium yesterday.

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