CSKA Moscow put Aston Villa's Uefa Cup aspirations to bed

26 February 2009 19:27
Aston Villa's 'reserves' did not disgrace themselves after being exposed to the bitter Moscow cold and manager Martin O'Neill's ambitions. [LNB]But this was always going to be a bridge too far for a makeshift side in the wake of eight first-team regulars controversially being left at home, and so it proved in the return leg of this last-32 tie. [LNB] Related ArticlesMan City 2 FC Copenhagen 1[LNB]Top 10 football superstitions[LNB]Premier League team news[LNB]Uefa Cup placed second on Aston Villa manager's priority list[LNB]English TV abandons coverage of Aston Villa Uefa Cup tie[LNB]Aston Villa prove too strong for Doncaster in the FA Cup replay[LNB]On the plastic pitch at CSKA's Luzhniki Stadium it required second-half strikes from Yuri Zhirkov on the hour and Vagner Love in the third minute of stoppage time to break Villa's resistance. [LNB]Everyone had known in advance O'Neill would field a weakened side, but even when he confirmed the squad on Tuesday it took people by surprise. [LNB]The fact O'Neill kept so many stars behind said it all, making it clear his over-riding priority this season is to qualify for the Champions League. [LNB]With no Gareth Barry, Brad Friedel, Emile Heskey, James Milner, Ashley Young, Gabriel Agbonlahor, Carlos Cuellar and Stiliyan Petrov, there was every danger Villa would be like sitting ducks in a shooting gallery. [LNB]O'Neill had certainly made no apology in advance for his decision, one he described as his hardest since his arrival at the club. [LNB]The Northern Irishman was left hoping the Villa fans - in particular the 300 that had paid hard-earned cash to trek to Moscow - would understand the logic behind his thinking. [LNB]Standing in sub-zero temperatures for two hours is hardly anybody's idea of fun, but those hardy souls were at least offered a glimpse of the future, if nothing else. [LNB]That was due to O'Neill springing another surprise with his line-up by handing full debuts to 19-year-olds Marc Albrighton and Barry Bannan, who operated on the left and right-wings respectively. [LNB]Both could have folded under the pressure, but instead the teenage duo grabbed their chances with both hands as they gave accomplished displays, suggesting they may be at the club for the long term. [LNB]As for the remainder of the line-up, at least there was strength in defence in stand-in captain Luke Young, Zat Knight, Curtis Davies and Nicky Shorey - the only regular first-teamers on view. [LNB]They certainly played their part in keeping CSKA at bay, with the Russian side playing their first home game of their campaign, and with a new boss in Brazilian legend Zico. [LNB]In fairness, CSKA barely moved out of first gear, seemingly happy Villa's 'second string' would have little to offer, and so it proved. [LNB]The chances that came in the first half all fell the way of the home side, but then not once was Brad Guzan called on to make a save. [LNB]There were two headers from Vasily Berezutskiy that threatened, one a bullet effort from a Zhirkov corner that ended narrowly over the bar, and the second from a Milos Krasic delivery that finished inches wide of the right-hand post. [LNB]There was also Alan Dzagoev curling a 25-yard right-footed free-kick fractionally wide of the same upright, whilst Vagner Love dragged a drive wide of the left-hand post following a fine run. [LNB]What proved to be Villa's only worthwhile effort of the game came in the 14th minute when the lively Albrighton's cross found fellow 19-year-old Nathan Delfouneso for a sidefoot volley comfortably taken by Igor Akinfeev. [LNB]At least O'Neill took a positive stance at the start of the second half, abandoning his ineffective 4-5-1 line-up and switching to a 4-4-2 by replacing Salifou with Marlon Harewood. [LNB]That, though, only gave CSKA the space they had lacked in the first half, underlined by two gilt-edged chances that went begging in the opening 10 minutes. [LNB]Initially, Krasic, linked with Real Madrid, skirted Davies' tackle, but with a clear sight of goal flashed a right-foot drive across the six-yard box and marginally wide of the right-hand post. [LNB]A minute later Krasic played in an onside Zhirkov, but after racing into the area and with only Guzan to beat, the American stood tall and bravely blocked with his body, much to Zico's frustration. [LNB]But the Brazilian was soon back on his feet, this time leading the celebrations after watching Zhirkov rifle home the opener on the hour. [LNB]Another Davies tackle on Krasic on the right-hand corner of the area resulted in German referee Felix Brych harshly punishing the centre-back. [LNB]That allowed Dzagoev to tee up Zhirkov for a thunderous drive from the edge of the area that flew through a crowd of players and inside Guzan's left-hand post. [LNB]Other opportunities followed, with Guzan twice denying Zhirkov again, before CSKA gained their reward with virtually the last kick of the game via Vagner Love's 10th goal of the competition and 26th in 42 European games overall. [LNB]Call off O'Neill criticism or he may well remind you on the phoneBy Henry Winter [LNB]Finishing in the top four dominates Martin O'Neill's thoughts so those Aston Villa fans who dared question his decision to field an under-strength team in the Uefa Cup should: 1) be ashamed of themselves, and 2) stand by their phones. [LNB]History reveals why. During his early travails at Leicester City, O'Neill was pilloried by supporters. He received dozens of, "You don't know what you're doing'' letters from Furious of Filbert Street. O'Neill read them, kept them and, after Leicester ended the season dramatically reaching the Premiership via Wembley, he dug out the most toxic missives. [LNB]Late one evening, he rang the startled correspondents to inquire whether they still wanted him out. The moral? Trust in O'Neill – or turn your phone off. [LNB] 

Source: Telegraph