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Date: Wednesday
17th April 2002, 7pm
Venue:
Villa Park. £2 admission.
Conditions: Rainy
in second half
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Half time: Villa 0 Newcastle Reserves 0
80 mins
Marcelino's loss of possession just outside our area led to confusion in
the defence, McGrath played the ball in and Quinn was fooled by Balaban's feint before he drove home from 10 yards out.
It was tough luck on Collin, who had handled and distributed the ball well
throughout the night and only been rarely tested with shots from the home
side. 0-1
Full time:
Villa 1 Newcastle Reserves 0
Tommy
Craig commented:
"In the first-half we missed a few chances and we paid the price for that.We gave the ball
away on the edge of the box and it's been crossed over and the lad's stuck
it in.
"Now we've got
to rely on other people and that's disappointing.
"On the night
the performance was ordinary relative to our recent standards.We didn't do
enough to win the game. It was a game that was there to be won.
"I didn't think
we were going to lose it and in any case the league's still going to go to
the final game."
About Guy and Zola:
"They look quite a good pair. It was a difficult test for them
as it was away."
United's
stand-in strike force of U17 forwards Calvin Zola-Makongo and Lewis
Guy gave it their best shot, but couldn't make the vital breakthrough
that our possession deserved.
In front of a small Villa Park audience including many
Toon sympathisers, Zola peppered the home goal with three early shots in a
five minute spell but didn't seriously test Myhill between the posts.
However the second half was a different story, as a surging run into the
area from the Congo-born youngster saw him shoot strongly on goal. Myhill
was grateful to turn that one round his post for a corner.
Then with 12 minutes remaining and the teams still deadlocked, it was Zola
again in the thick of things, going down in the box under challenge. The
referee waved play on, to the relief of the home side.
Within two minutes Villa found a way past Collin in the United goal and
Balaban's close-range shot was to prove the difference between the two
sides.
So our championship challenge faltered at a crucial time, and the absence
of more experienced forward players ultimately cost us dear - no
reflection on the effort of the young 'uns though, who would have no doubt
been subbed had there been any attacking options on the bench.
If anything, it was the likes of McClen who weren't really on their game,
while the contribution of Dimas was forgettable to say the least.
Brian Kerr's powerful runs through the centre of midfield were our main
threat, and he was probably our best performer.
Biffa
Reports
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