Gerard Houllier: Man City loss in December was the lowest point of my career

02 March 2011 12:34
Aston Villa manager Gerard Houllier admits the 4-0 defeat by Manchester City in December was 'the lowest point of my career' ahead of Wednesday's FA Cup clash between the clubs at Eastlands.[LNB]Villa reached rock bottom with that drubbing in the Barclays Premier League with Houllier accusing his players of giving up without a fight.[LNB]But it proved to be a turning point with Villa having lost only two of their 11 league and cup matches since that day of humiliation.[LNB] Lowest point: Gerard Houllier believes Aston Villa have turned a corner since their loss to Man City in December[LNB] Houllier said: 'It was the poorest performance of any team I have had in my life.[LNB]'There was no soul, no attitude. In sport, you can be beaten but you never give up.[LNB]'It was the low point of my career. I never in my life, never, had a team that has given up so quickly.[LNB]'We looked resigned to things rather than trying to fight to get back into the game.[LNB]'We hit rock bottom there.'[LNB] Down and out: City celebrate scoring their fourth on December 28 as Villa players look dejected[LNB] Houllier never doubted he would be able to revive Villa's fortunes with the support of club owner Randy Lerner and chief executive Paul Faulkner.[LNB]He said: 'I knew I would turn things around, because I had the faith of the chairman and the chief executive. We work closely together.[LNB]'It was just that I was too soft in trusting players too long. That is probably what happened.[LNB]'We recovered after that. We have only lost twice since that, home against Sunderland when we were down to 10 men and away to Manchester United away when we played well.[LNB]'Ever since that Manchester City game, we've started to build and improve.'[LNB] Hat-trick: Mario Balotelli celebrates the first of his three goals on that day as Villa players look on[LNB] Houllier points to a 1-0 home success over City in January as the springboard for Villa's upturn in fortunes.[LNB]He said: 'We were a bit lucky. Honestly they were better than us. We managed to get an early goal and we hung on.[LNB]Watershed: Darren Bent celebrates scoring the winner for Villa against City in January[LNB] 'We had a couple of chances but they were superior to us.[LNB]'But that performance was the starting base because the team stuck together more and held on for the result.[LNB]'We have improved physically and mentally. We have improved as a team. [LNB]'The squad lives together better. They realise it is not just 11 players and the rest.[LNB]'We have quality everywhere. We also improved in the ball retention, passing and movement.'[LNB]Houllierbelieves his players now have the hunger and desire to win as they lookto try and emulate the Carling Cup success of local rivals Birmingham.[LNB]He said: 'When I was at Liverpool, the success of Manchester United did give me a bit of a boost to win things there as well.[LNB]'What players remember on their last bed is their joy and their records and their medals won, their success.[LNB]'This is what our players have got to be aware of and it creates a unique bonding between them.[LNB]'Money can't buy the success we're talking about or what to achieve. Forget about that.[LNB]'What matters in your sporting life unless you are not passionate is you have done everything to win things.[LNB]'We now have the quality to win things.'[LNB]  Manchester City v ASTON VILLA: Teenage defender Baker misses outManchester City boss Mancini admits defeat in Premier League title race All the latest Aston Villa news, features and opinionAll the latest Man City news, features and opinion[LNB]  Explore more:People: Gerard Houllier Places: Birmingham, Liverpool

Source: Daily_Mail