Tackle these five issues and Aston Villa CAN win the Premier League

Improve the away form, cope without Ollie Watkins and keep hold of Douglas Luiz… tackle these five issues and Aston Villa CAN win the Premier League title after huge Arsenal win

  • The five issues Aston Villa need to tackle if they want to win Premier League title
  • Unai Emery’s men beat Arsenal 1-0 on Saturday thanks to John McGinn winner 
  • IAN LADYMAN reveals the GREATEST weapon a manager has against a journalist – Listen to It’s All Kicking Off 

Aston Villa founder members of the Football League who have not lifted the title since 1981, are starting to believe.

And after wins over Manchester City and Arsenal, the wider football public has cottoned on to what Villa watchers have known for some time: Unai Emery’s men are the real deal and in this form will take some stopping.

Here Mail Sport looks at five questions Villa must answer to show they can stay in this race until the end.

Can they improve their away form?

It is not just the heavy defeats at Newcastle and Liverpool early in the season that stand out. Two points from a potential nine at Nottingham Forest, Wolves and Bournemouth is not good enough for a team who aspire to stay in the title race until the end — and Emery has often highlighted the gap between their displays at home and away.

There have been impressive performances on the road, particularly the victories at Tottenham and Chelsea. Yet Villa falter a little when asked to break down teams who are happy to play conservatively in front of their own fans — as Wolves and Forest did. Sunday’s game at Brentford will be an excellent test in that respect, as Thomas Frank’s team are in poor form and are unlikely to take many risks against Villa.

Unai Emery has taken Aston Villa from relegations strugglers to title contenders since arriving

Would Villa be able to cope if they were without Ollie Watkins for a prolonged period of time

Could they cope without Ollie Watkins?

Villa are now in the Catch-22 situation that Tottenham had to handle for so many years with Harry Kane. They need quality back-up for Watkins, who is a top-line Premier League centre forward.

But how many players of that calibre would be happy to join Villa when they know they are unlikely to start a lot of matches?

At the moment, Emery has teenager Jhon Duran, who is talented but very raw, and Bertrand Traore, who Emery does not trust and is not really an orthodox central striker anyway.

Emery has also thought about using Nicolo Zaniolo in that role. The on-loan Italian has not settled at Villa Park but has the attributes to lead the line effectively in this team.

Perhaps such a positional switch could be the making of his Villa career.

What if January bids unsettle key midfielder Douglas Luiz?

Villa are under no financial pressure to sell their midfield linchpin, who is admired by Arsenal, and co-owner Nassef Sawiris would not get out of bed for less than £100million, while there is not believed to be a specific release clause in his deal.

If Moises Caicedo, Declan Rice and Enzo Fernandez are worth more than that sum, then Villa will reason so is Luiz. The 25-year-old also signed a long-term deal just 14 months ago.

Arsenal have shown an interest in Douglas Luiz and could be back in for the Brazilian in January

The unknown, however, is Luiz himself. The Brazilian said he was ‘very happy’ to see the stories linking him with the Gunners, despite adding the usual caveat that his ‘head is here at Aston Villa’. 

And that is the crux. Luiz is crucial to the way Villa play and they would suffer if he were distracted by offers from rivals and his performances affected as a result. Emery must ensure his man’s mind is on the task at hand.

How will they handle the pressure?

Emery has been happy to stay under the radar this term, insisting his team are not even among the top seven in the Premier League. Wins over Manchester City and Arsenal in the space of four days mean everyone is talking about Villa now, though, and Emery’s claim that ‘We are not contenders’ is looking more questionable by the week.

Villa are suddenly the talk of the Premier League and every club will be studying them to try to find holes in Emery’s plan.

This is where Villa will rely even more on their manager, who has collected 11 trophies in a stellar career, and senior players such as goalkeeper Emi Martinez.

At the highest level, there is no pressure quite like the sharp end of a major competition. Martinez proved he could cope by helping Argentina win the World Cup and he has the personality to thrive in a title race.

There’s nothing like having a World Cup winner in your team to help handle the title pressure 

What do they do about Europe?

Until now, Emery’s priority has been clear: the Premier League for his key men, the Europa Conference League to rotate them and give playing time to the second string.

It has worked so far, with Villa qualifying for the knockout stages in Europe with a game to spare, and Emery will surely make several changes for Thursday’s final group game against Zrinjski Mostar in Bosnia.

But if Villa make more progress, Emery will be tempted to use his best players all the time, as the chance to win Villa a first major trophy since 1996 draws closer.

Villa have a strong squad, and their bench on Saturday looked more powerful than Arsenal’s. Whether it is strong enough to compete to the end on two fronts is another matter.

As painful as it may be for a four-time winner of the Europa League, Emery may have to let Europe go if Villa look like they can go the distance in the Premier League title race.

Our tactics king Keown called it! 

Arsenal cannot say they weren’t warned, as Martin Keown’s tactical column for Mail Sport on Saturday told them how Aston Villa would frustrate them in the same way they tormented Manchester City in midweek by players constantly switching positions.

John McGinn’s winning goal after seven minutes was precisely as detailed in Keown’s analysis. 

In the build-up, Leon Bailey was the furthest player forward after pushing up alongside Ollie Watkins; McGinn was no longer on the left wing but in a central position from which he scored; Youri Tielemans had dropped deep from the front line as he found Bailey for his burst in behind; left back Lucas Digne pushed up into the space vacated by McGinn, while holding midfielders Boubacar Kamara and Douglas Luiz were parallel and behind Tielemans and McGinn. 

The same blueprint which beat City also defeated Arsenal and, as Keown wrote, Villa must be taken seriously as title contenders.

Expert eye: our man’s analysis in Mail Sport on Saturday 


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