Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email
?
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
News:
Home
Help
Search
Contact
Login
Register
Heroes & Villains, the Aston Villa fanzine
»
Heroes & Villains
»
Heroes Discussion
»
Unai Emery
Please donate to help towards the costs of keeping this site going. Thank You.
Recent Topics
Summer 2025 Transfer Window - hopes, speculation, rumours etc.
by
Gareth
[
Today
at 11:10:39 PM]
Yasin Ozcan (now out on loan at Anderlecht)
by
PaulWinch again
[
Today
at 11:09:39 PM]
Pre season 2025
by
Gareth
[
Today
at 11:07:52 PM]
International Rugby
by
PaulWinch again
[
Today
at 10:35:38 PM]
The International Cricket Thread
by
PaulWinch again
[
Today
at 10:06:40 PM]
Other Games 2025-26
by
TopDeck113
[
Today
at 08:29:22 PM]
Independence: 1954-55 pt two
by
Legion
[
Today
at 07:07:16 PM]
Ollie Watkins
by
GordonCowansisthegreatest
[
Today
at 04:08:13 PM]
Recent Posts
Re: Summer 2025 Transfer Window - hopes, speculation, rumours etc.
by
Gareth
[
Today
at 11:10:39 PM]
Re: Yasin Ozcan (now out on loan at Anderlecht)
by
PaulWinch again
[
Today
at 11:09:39 PM]
Re: Pre season 2025
by
Gareth
[
Today
at 11:07:52 PM]
Re: Pre season 2025
by
john e
[
Today
at 11:07:50 PM]
Re: Pre season 2025
by
pauliewalnuts
[
Today
at 11:05:56 PM]
Re: Yasin Ozcan (now out on loan at Anderlecht)
by
pauliewalnuts
[
Today
at 10:59:38 PM]
Re: Summer 2025 Transfer Window - hopes, speculation, rumours etc.
by
Mellin
[
Today
at 10:59:08 PM]
Re: Yasin Ozcan (now out on loan at Anderlecht)
by
Steve67
[
Today
at 10:58:28 PM]
Follow us on...
« previous
next »
Print
Pages:
1
...
745
746
[
747
]
748
749
...
796
Go Down
Author
Topic: Unai Emery (Read 1230142 times)
Demitri_C
Member
Posts: 12117
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11190 on:
February 28, 2025, 06:05:12 PM »
Oh no o drearys back 😂
Logged
Louzie0
Member
Posts: 15836
Location: wrangling jellied eels in the Albert Dock
UTV: I’m retired, hurrah!
GM : 04.03.2026
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11191 on:
February 28, 2025, 10:50:03 PM »
Well done, Unai!
It’s our year!
Logged
PaulWinch again
Member
Posts: 54843
Location: winchester
GM : 25.05.2026
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11192 on:
February 28, 2025, 10:51:06 PM »
Really important solid win. Well done Unai.
Logged
jon collett
Member
Posts: 1044
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11193 on:
February 28, 2025, 10:51:53 PM »
He’s expanded his vocabulary. This is what I thought he was trying to say the other day but he mistranslated to “contenders”.
"Yes we are in the quarter-final. There are some teams favourites more than us. Manchester United, Newcastle and Manchester City and other teams. But we know this competition is a way for Wembley, a trophy and Europa League and prestige for the club."
Logged
SaddVillan
Member
Posts: 2275
Location: Saddleworth
1000 ft up in the hills gazing down on Manchester
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11194 on:
March 03, 2025, 04:36:29 PM »
From The Athletic
INSIDE UNAI EMERY’S ASTON VILLA ANALYSIS SESSIONS: DETAILED INTENSE AND INSPIRING
Analysis sessions to Unai Emery are what hairdryers were to Sir Alex Ferguson.
Or what electricity was to Benjamin Franklin, gravity to Isaac Newton.
You get the idea. In short, Emery, 53, is renowned for his meticulous analysis. Every player talks about it and every person who has witnessed the very many meetings describes their distinctiveness.
On Tuesday night, Villa return to the scene of the crime against Club Brugge, having been to Belgium once this season, delivering one of their worst performances under Emery. Analysing what went wrong will be a key part of the preparations for the Champions League last-16 tie.
“Emery’s attention to detail is the best I’ve ever seen”, says one highly experienced member of staff who has worked across several clubs.
The Spaniard is known to hold team meetings for up to 90 minutes and even have two to three on the day of the game to drill the players’ responsibilities into them. As well as individual unit meetings, one session specifically focuses on set plays. Players stay in a hotel the night before home and away games, regardless of when kick-off is. They have a set schedule for when they are expected to arrive if they are travelling there themselves, enabling Emery time for each meeting to take place.
He leans on analysis sessions for a multitude of reasons, not just to prepare for opponents or intricately explain the nuances of his system. One player has said Emery’s intense attitude towards preparation came as a shock and had to adjust.
“There were two meetings today,” Morgan Rogers said after Aston Villa’s victory against Bayern Munich. “We are used to it. That’s why we win games — we go through everything. We know what every player’s traits are.”
Emery’s lengthy presentations are partly designed to test players’ concentration but there remains total buy-in. Since Emery’s arrival, recruits must be viewed as psychologically robust in order to cope with Emery’s intensity.
“We don’t have to do meetings because we are together all day,” Monchi, president of football operations, told Movistar in November. “We meet for breakfast, for lunch, we live here, we are here all day, we spend 12 or 13 hours practically together.”
Typically, Emery holds three pre-match meetings in the lead-up to a matchday. The first is to reflect on a previous fixture, showing players where they did well and areas of improvement. The next meeting then drills into the opponent’s tendencies and traits, instilling what solutions can be sought to combat their strengths. During this, Emery explains each player’s responsibility and key functions.
Finally, the last meeting is used as a motivational tool, designed to spark his squad for the match. It will be the closing message and tap into a personal side, wanting to inspire players and remind them of how good they are and can be.
Emery’s exhaustive methodology meant early results were integral in getting senior players onside after his appointment in October 2022. The difference in preparation between him and his predecessor Steven Gerrard was vast, with players and staff now being asked to sit through long meetings before games.
Regardless, towards the end of 2024, Emery recognised the importance of lessening his intense approach, helping to offset player burnout. Emery has made efforts to ease the pressures on players, giving extra days off in the week leading into games and citing the importance of rest. He has held individual talks to gauge players’ mood.
On matchdays, Emery brings his own whiteboard which he lays out in the changing room. Before presentations, he will invariably write out ‘REST’ in capital letters on the whiteboard.
The reliance on analysis has swelled this season. Less time to train has meant more days spent indoors recovering, with analysis forming an increasing part of the schedule. Work on the pitch has often been reduced to walkthroughs, where players are stationed in the shape Villa will deploy in the next match. Emery has held meetings in the gymnasium, with players sitting on mats and gym boxes.
The Villa manager does his analysis on top of what his six analysts do in preparation for games, before then comparing notes. Often, he will watch footage of upcoming opposition on the treadmill or a static bike, more preferably.
Last season, one source joked how Emery would work past 8pm on Fridays, which would eat into his staff’s weekend plans. On another occasion, one signing arrived late into the night at Bodymoor Heath to finalise paperwork and could see Emery upstairs, in his office, looking at his tactics board.
“He is just so driven,” said midfielder John McGinn after Villa’s 2-0 Champions League win against Bologna in October. “I have never met anyone like him. He has said a few times he was an OK footballer but he wishes he had the determination and work rate he has as a manager. No one can question what he puts in, the effort — everything that comes his way and our way is on the back of hard work. You feed off your leader. He is our leader and we feed off that.”
Emery has altered the way Villa analysts work this season. Instead of half of the analysis team working on the game ahead — three staff members focusing on the next game, with the other three preparing the one after — this term, they all gravitate towards the next game, but divide duties.
Some of the analysts, for example, concentrate on goalkeeper analysis, others then drill dead-ball situations, who then, in turn, feed into set-piece coach Austin MacPhee’s own analyst, Jose Rodriguez Calvo. The rest concentrate on the opposition, identifying how they press, team shape and detectable build-up patterns.
There have been instances throughout the season where each analyst has been at Bodymoor Heath on a Sunday, the day after a match. This time is spent preparing the relevant video clips for Emery to study the next day, in time for an upcoming Champions League fixture, such as the one against Club Brugge.
The overall process tends to work in a chain-like manner, with the footage compiled being sent to Victor Manas, Emery’s long-serving analyst. Manas will then refine the analysis, adding his observations and creating an opposition report for the next 90-minute meeting. Together, he and Emery watch each opponent at least five times before imparting information to players.
Emery will study footage wherever he is inside Bodymoor, sometimes watching opponents while cycling or running. He uses his own software, which can be quite limited compared to more modern analytical programming others use, though it works for him.
On that software, Emery annotates Manas’ clips, putting notes over the top of his analysis on how Villa can combat an opponent’s system. To the untrained eye, the presentation can look messy, yet players understand what he wants. There are no other words on the presentations, just annotations overlapping.
The fact he does his own analysis, on top of his six staff, is an extra workload, but Emery is always diligent in comparing notes.
When he arrived, some sources felt Emery was potentially humouring them and their efforts, given he does a lot of their work himself. However, they swiftly realised that Emery prefers a second opinion on what he sees and often tests their observations. This includes who they predict will be in the opposition’s XI. He tends to go into their room a couple of days before matches and initiate discussions.
Emery doubles down on his principles and work ethic when on a bad run of form, such as the present downward trajectory away from home, with eight defeats in 10 matches. He will be more studious than ever, watch more clips and be more introspective in finding solutions.
A prominent part of his managerial success is how he can transfer his messages onto players. It is a formula built up through decades of coaching and will have to be leaned on before Villa’s rematch in Bruges.
Logged
Brazilian Villain
Member
Posts: 47292
GM : 25.07.2026
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11195 on:
March 03, 2025, 05:21:41 PM »
He's quite mad with his obsessive attention to detail, but I love him!
Thanks for posting the article, SV.
Logged
Drummond
Member
Posts: 32849
Location: Everywhere, and nowhere.
GM : 11.10.2025
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11196 on:
March 03, 2025, 05:32:11 PM »
Waste of time. They just need to roll their sleeves up. run faster and tackle harder.
Logged
eamonn
Member
Posts: 33690
Location: Stay in sight of the mainland
GM : 26.07.2020
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11197 on:
March 03, 2025, 06:26:21 PM »
I wonder does he doubt himself when we're on shite runs especially like away from home currently.
Logged
Footy-Vill
Member
Posts: 9380
GM : 01.11.2024
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11198 on:
March 03, 2025, 08:21:44 PM »
Thanks this a great read .
it’s interesting Emery is prepared to use not up to date software.
this would be one concern that he should bring himself into present use if only he could missing out on key data
Logged
Footy-Vill
Member
Posts: 9380
GM : 01.11.2024
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11199 on:
March 03, 2025, 08:24:21 PM »
I do really like his attention to detail and it’s been said he has Head teacher vibes about him. Those players who aren’t willing or so aligned in learning would be at a disadvantage though so there obviously needs to be the right fit of player who willing to go to the lesson and tutorials of El professor Unai!
It takes professionalism to another level though as work on theory and practice is clearly a brilliant mind
Can see the players that buy into it - amazing really.
Up the Villa !
Logged
dcdavecollett
Member
Posts: 3611
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11200 on:
March 04, 2025, 01:53:20 AM »
I agree with Drummond.
Just stick wer heads on it and we'll be fine.
Logged
Dante Lavelli
Member
Posts: 10743
GM : 25.05.2023
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11201 on:
March 04, 2025, 06:42:48 AM »
Quote from: Drummond on March 03, 2025, 05:32:11 PM
Waste of time. They just need to roll their sleeves up. run faster and tackle harder.
Don’t look at the Manager’s eye, look in them.
Logged
PeterWithesShin
Member
Posts: 75694
GM : 17.03.2015
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11202 on:
March 04, 2025, 05:11:04 PM »
Logged
DB
Member
Posts: 5537
Location: Absolute zero
GM : 11.01.2021
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11203 on:
March 04, 2025, 07:55:46 PM »
I was just thinking watching the Brugge match, that it’s great having things to play for in March. So often our season has been over in Jan…thank you Unai.
Logged
PeterWithesShin
Member
Posts: 75694
GM : 17.03.2015
Re: Unai Emery
«
Reply #11204 on:
March 04, 2025, 08:00:30 PM »
I miss going into March hoping Wigan lose.
Logged
Print
Pages:
1
...
745
746
[
747
]
748
749
...
796
Go Up
« previous
next »
Heroes & Villains, the Aston Villa fanzine
»
Heroes & Villains
»
Heroes Discussion
»
Unai Emery
SimplePortal 2.3.6 © 2008-2014, SimplePortal