Sam Allardyce not getting carried away by Sunderland's victory over Aston Villa

02 January 2016 20:54

Sunderland boss Sam Allardyce insists Sunderland's Barclays Premier League plight remains "dire" despite ending their five-game losing run against basement boys Aston Villa.

Jermain Defoe's second-half double at the Stadium of Light helped to secure a 3-1 win, the Black Cats' first since November 28, and put them seven points clear of bottom-of-the-table Villa.

However, they remain four points adrift of safety and Allardyce acknowledged that was the most important factor to consider on Saturday evening.

Asked how he viewed the situation, he replied: "Dire, still, don't worry about that. We are a long way off getting safe and we are still very much a relegation-threatened side. This has given us a little bit of relief, but we must be resilient in terms of picking up points from here on in.

"We have got to go on a run of games where we are undefeated, for me, try to get draws and pick the odd win up, and if we go eight games and we have only lost one and drawn and won a couple, not losing four and five on the trot - we just can't do that.

"We can't afford, for me, to be looking at doing that sort of thing again, so we have got to try to push on and like we always say, 'if you can't win, make sure you don't lose'."

Sunderland took a 30th-minute lead against the run of play when Patrick van Aanholt's shot was deflected past goalkeeper Brad Guzan by Micah Richards.

Villa levelled courtesy of Carles Gil's stunning 63rd-minute volley, but 33-year-old Defoe struck with 18 minutes left and then again in injury-time to clinch victory after a dramatic improvement in the service coming his way.

Allardyce said: "It's about us getting him that service and as the second half went on, we got more and more of that service in to him.

"There's always been a big thing about him not being able to play up front [by himself], and perhaps we can get better and better and perhaps we can play him up front on his own if the man behind joins in a bit more, like we had with Adam Johnson, then Ola [Toivonen], and then if the two wide men support him a bit more, it may be that he can.

"He has produced two goals by playing up front on his own, so let's hope that will maybe get better and better and better."

Villa boss Remi Garde spoke to broadcast media after the game, but did not attend the post-match press conference as travelling fans gathered outside the stadium, singing "You're not fit to wear the shirt" as the players boarded the team coach.

Asked about falling short of his six-point target over Christmas, the Frenchman told radio reporters: "We had a target. We didn't achieve it, but there is still light in front of us. There are games to play.

"We only have one direction to be fair, and that is to work more and to fight to try to win games. You never know in football. I feel that the players deserve better than we have currently.

"I think we were quite close to getting a better result, to be fair. We conceded a silly first goal that we shouldn't have. I said to the players at half time we would have opportunities in the second half because I thought my team was playing quite well.

"We had some movement and we equalised, which was very important to us, but we didn't keep the score for a long enough time. We didn't play a bad game, but in our situation, this is not the most important thing - that's the result.

"It's like in every game - we're missing quality sometimes."

Source: PA