James Milner Aston Villa

One thing I've learned from being an avid Villa supporter, is that they need the opposition to attack for their strategies to play out. Arsenal is famously a very attack-focused side. Wenger recently said something along the lines of "Defence? I'm perfectly happy with us scoring more goals than the other team", so we can expect an extremely fast-paced, exciting game.

Arsenal have consecutive matches against the "big-four" in matches after this, so I assume Villa will try to spread play and attack very often in order to soften up the Gunners for their next few fixtures.

A tendency to falter midway through the league season is not the only unpleasant trend that Aston Villa have learned to buck, as they proved at Prestfields on Sunday when two James Milner goals propelled them to the fourth round of the Cup for only the second time in eight seasons. Gillingham left seething at the perceived injustice of the decisive penalty but Martin O’Neill was relieved simply to lead his Villa players away triumphant, and relatively unscarred, from a battle he described as “blood and thunder”.

Milner, scoring twice on his 23rd birthday, provided Villa with their reprieve after Simeon Jackson had equalised for the League Two side with a finish suggesting all the polish of a Premier League striker. Rather than contemplating a glamorous replay at Villa Park, the more prosaic reality that Jackson faced was a league match against Aldershot next weekend for his next assignment. And all that Gillingham captain Adam Miller could cling to was the shirt given to him by Villa’s Ashey Young – ironic, given that the winger had, just minutes earlier, found himself the focus of his opponents’ ire.


It was Miller who had sent Young sprawling theatrically in the box to concede the penalty and, starstruck though he was by the sight of the shirt, he was not about to shelve his grievances. “Everybody saw that it was soft and believe me, it was soft,” he said. Young was barracked from all sides on this numbingly cold Kent afternoon and Mark Stimson, the Gillingham manager, was inclined to sympathise with the chastened home supporters. “Having seen it, I think it was harsh but it’s a lesson to learn,” he said. “But if you’re going to go for the ball, you’ve got to be 100 per cent sure, otherwise you give the decision over to the referee and sometimes they do get them wrong.”


O’Neill professed to have had no view of the same incident and spoke only of his satisfaction that Villa had surmounted a “very difficult” test. Gillingham had torn into their more exalted opponents with abandon, Miller reflecting ruefully that their impressive if brief exposure on lunchtime television was “over too quickly”. O’Neill said: “If the players didn't know beforehand they were in some game, after about 10 minutes they did. We got a great goal and it settled us down a little but I never felt comfortable all afternoon. I thought that Gillingham were always in the game – it was in the balance.”

The balance was tipped, ultimately, by Milner’s acute eye for goal; the midfielder having stepped admirably into the breach left by Gabriel Agbonlahor, who had called in sick. The most innocuous errors cost Gillingham, as was illustrated after 13 minutes when Miller lost possession on the edge of the area only to find Milner, combining clinically with Stiliyan Petrov, ready to pounce with an elegant curling strike. But Villa were not uniformly convincing, the teenager Nathan Delfouneso unsteady in attack and Curtis Davies culpable for a clutch of botched clearances at the back.

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