Heroes & Villains, the Aston Villa fanzine
Heroes & Villains => Villa Memories => Topic started by: Chico Hamilton III on March 08, 2016, 03:15:25 PM
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What a fantastic awayday this was. Nearly 30 years ago, Jesus!
March 6 1988, Sunday
Football: Villa silence doubts
BYLINE: STEVE TONGUE
Bournemouth ........... 1
Aston Villa ........... 2
NINE games to go and Aston Villa are looking good. On a bracing south-coast afternoon, they reasserted themselves with a confidence which suggested last month's defeats at Blackburn and Middlesbrough have had no serious effect on their promotion bid.
If there was a fault yesterday it was in not killing off more quickly and cleanly a team now anxiously scanning the bottom half of the League table.
Villa manager, Graham Taylor, used a more vivid but unprintable metaphor which recalled Paul Gascoigne's recent fate at the hands of Wimbledon's Vinnie Jones.
Certainly, Andy Gray's headed own-goal, three minutes from time, would have proved acutely embarrassing had it not been for Platt's measured chip at the other end just beforehand.
As with many of Villa's visits to more humble surroundings this season, the occasion was more cup-tie than Second Division, featuring an all-ticket crowd packed into small stands and urging the home team to 'get stuck in' before the big boys could settle down.
In fact, as their astonishing away record suggests, Villa are now immune to this sort of culture shock. While the old sweats relegated a year ago might not have fancied it at all, Taylor's eager young men went purposefully about their work, and the thousands down from Birmingham had a goal to celebrate after only 15 minutes.
It was scored with considerable style by Daley, the graceful former England Youth international now filling Mark Walters's position on the left. He gained possession, after play was restarted with a dropped ball in midfield, then drifted inside two defenders to beat Peyton off the far post.
It was odd that Bournemouth, having lost O'Driscoll and the new record signing Close with first-half injuries, should then begin to look more dangerous. Abandoning the sweeper system, they tested Villa's defensive resolve, but Aylott's low drive, pushed round a post by Spink, was their only scoring opportunity. Only, that is, until Gray's unfortunate header.
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Weather: cold. Ground: soft.
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Goals: Daley (15min) 0-1: Platt (83min)
0-2; A Gray (og 87min) 1-2.
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Bournemouth
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(1-4-2-3): Peyton: Newson;
Langan, Williams, Whitlock, Morrell;
Brooks, O'Driscoll (sub: Armstrong
20min); Crooke, Close (sub: O'Connor
45min), Aylott.
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Aston Villa
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(4-3-3): Spink; Gage, Evans,
Keown, Gallacher; Birch, A Gray, S Gray;
Platt, Thompson, Daley.
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Referee: J Moules (Dagenham).
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We had a few more twists and turns (like losing at home to Oldham) before promotion was achieved - by virtue of goals scored at Swindon on that unforgettable day in May 1988.
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Central TV had the highlights on the Monday afterwards, great away result like so many that season and in the all white kit too.
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Brilliant day out
5 of us hired a brand new rover for the week end ended up in a pub in Bournemouth and got tanked
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We had a few more twists and turns (like losing at home to Oldham) before promotion was achieved - by virtue of goals scored at Swindon on that unforgettable day in May 1988.
Missed probably two homes games that season, last year at junior school. The Swindon game was my first away, my brother had been to a few and talked my Dad into letting me go, I think we got tickets simply by booking through the club travel.
Heady days for me, I loved the second division because after being bought up on recent legend only to witness shite with my own eyes, I got to see a side that could win and compete, and to experience the ground full (the Liverpool game) and the tension, joy and noise of the Bradford and Swindon games.
I hope that the younger fans that have suffered the last few seasons get to experience the sense of togetherness and pride when the club starts fighting back.