8. Aston Villa (My preseason prediction: 7th)
Sometimes it seems like Martin O'Neill has the entire England U-21 team out on the field when Aston Villa plays; the varying and important roles Gabriel Agbonlahor, Ashley Young, Luke Moore, Scott Carson, Craig Gardner, and Curtis Davies all have could make anyone who wants to put a limit of foreign players in the Premiership happy.
The first four young English players I just mentioned have all the potential to be future stars for both club and country, especially Ashley Young, in my opinion. Young is extremely quick, can play on both wings, take free kicks, and score goals. Agbonlahor has 5 goals in 12 Premiership games this season, and his emergence as well as that of Luke Moore, combined with the presence of John Carew, has relegated big summer signing Marlon Harewood to simply an afterthought.
Villa were eliminated at home in the 3rd Round of the Carling Cup by Championship side Leicester City, which has probably been their biggest disappointment of the year to this point. They've lost only once in their last 7 Premiership games and have suffered just 3 defeats all year (two of which came against Manchester United and Liverpool). Scott Carson's permanent move from Liverpool will really be a boost to Villa for years to come, and with him in goal along with the stable of young English talent amongst the field players, Aston Villa have a side that will be a contender sooner rather than later.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Season Summaries--8. Aston Villa
Posted by Michael at 8:01 PM 0 comments
Labels: Aston Villa, Premiership, summaries
Season Summaries--9. Everton
9. Everton (My preseason prediction: 8th)
As their record (6-2-5) indicates, Everton have had an up-and-down season. After winning their first two Premiership games of the season, the Toffees won just twice in their next 8 league games and are coming off a 1-1 draw at Chelsea. Tim Cahill's usual late-game dramatics earned Everton a point at Stamford Bridge, a game in which they were outplayed from almost beginning to end.
Everton have also won their first two group stage games in the UEFA Cup, sitting on 6 points in a group with Zenit St. Petersburg, FC Nuremberg, AZ Alkmaar, and Larissa. As the top 3 in each of the 8 groups advance to the Round of 32, Everton certainly are in good shape to move on to the knockout stages of Europe's second-most prestigious club competition.
The Toffees also are in the quarterfinals of the Carling Cup, where they'll make a trip to East London and Upton Park to take on West Ham on December 12. In a quirky coincidence, Everton will simply stay a few days in London as on the 15th, they'll play West Ham again, this time as part of the Premiership schedule.
Tim Howard has looked very good in goal this season, and Yakubu has 3 goals in 7 games since coming over from Middlesbrough. However, Joleon Lescott also has 3 goals and that's good enough for the co-team lead in goals, not a good sign for Everton if they want to finish inside the top 6 or 7 this season because the teams there right now (Portsmouth, Aston Villa, and Blackburn) can certainly score, seemingly at will sometimes.
Posted by Michael at 12:33 PM 0 comments
Labels: Everton, Premiership, summaries
Steve Bruce Joins Wigan
As reported by ESPNsoccernet, Birmingham City manager Steve Bruce has signed a four-year, $16 million US contract to become Wigan's new manager. Wigan is believed to have sent $6 million US back to Birmingham as compensation.
This really hurts Birmingham's chances of staying in the Premiership after this season as Bruce is a quality manager whose players love playing for him. The squad he'll inherit at Wigan isn't exactly on the young side, so Bruce should be able to tap into that experience and get the best out of his new team in hopes to maintain their place in the top tier of English soccer.
The problem at Birmingham for Steve Bruce was the pending new ownership under Carson Yeung and uncertainty surrounding Bruce's future at the helm of Birmingham's second-best team. Bruce hadn't been given the guarantees he sought from the incoming ownership and obviously felt the security offered to him by Wigan chairman Dave Whelan was too much to pass up.
It's uncertain who will step in and guide Birmingham, at least for the short-term, because Bruce's number two with the Blues, Eric Black, will probably step into the same role at Wigan in the very near future as assistant manager.
Posted by Michael at 12:17 PM 0 comments
Labels: Birmingham City, Steve Bruce, Wigan