Premier League 25-man squad lists: Aston Villa leave three slots empty

• Villa name 22 players for first half of the season
• Club leave door open for emerging young talent

Aston Villa have only named a 22-man squad for the first half of the Premier League season.

Each club can name up to 25 players, eight of whom must be homegrown, who will be eligible to represent the club until the transfer window reopens in January.

They can be supplemented by an unlimited number of homegrown under-21 players, and Villa have left the door open for emerging stars like Marc Albrighton, Nathan Delfouneso, Ciaran Clark and Fabian Delph.

Stephen Ireland is Villa’s only new signing while reserve-team regulars Eric Lichaj, Isaiah Osbourne and Jonathan Hogg all make the cut.

Villa’s 22-man squad

Brad Friedel, Brad Guzan, James Collins, Carlos Cuellar, Curtis Davies, Habib Beye, Richard Dunne, Eric Lichaj, Stephen Warnock, Luke Young, Stewart Downing, Jonathan Hogg, Stephen Ireland, Isaiah Osbourne, Stiliyan Petrov, Nigel Reo-Coker, Moustapha Salifou, Steve Sidwell, Ashley Young, Gabriel Agbonlahor, John Carew, Emile Heskey.

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Kevin MacDonald heads five-man shortlist for Aston Villa manager’s job

• Caretaker has players’ support as club begins interviews
• Timing of Fulham appointment counts against Mark Hughes

Aston Villa have compiled a five-man shortlist as they strive to identify Martin O’Neill’s successor. It includes Kevin MacDonald, currently serving as caretaker manager, who today confirmed he wanted a chance to fill the post created by O’Neill’s shock resignation. Indeed, Villa’s owner, Randy Lerner, is considering MacDonald’s candidature so seriously that he can probably be regarded as the current favourite.

The other contenders all possess greater Premier League experience but, after 15 years working in various coaching capacities at Villa Park, MacDonald boasts some significant supporters inside the club, including key players.

His cause is helped by a dearth of high-calibre managers available to take over a club that challenged for Champions League qualification last season.

Despite the recruitment difficulties, one candidate was interviewed yesterday by a panel headed by Lerner and Villa’s chief executive, Paul Faulkner. The club hopes the process will be concluded swiftly, with O’Neill’s successor installed by the end of the international break.

Although Villa’s board discussed the possibility of hiring Mark Hughes when there were fears O’Neill might quit at the end of last season, the Welshman joined Fulham just before the Northern Irishman left Villa Park.

Much as Hughes and Villa might privately wish their timing had been different, extricating the former Blackburn and Manchester City manager from Craven Cottage now would prove extremely tricky – not to mention expensive.

Removing Alex McLeish from Birmingham might be cheaper – it is thought Villa’s closest rivals would demand around £1m in compensation – but would be politically sensitive.

While David Moyes fits the profile of the sort of manager Villa are seeking, Everton have received no approach for his services and it is understood he is committed to remaining at Goodison Park. For Moyes, Villa would represent something of a sideways move, particularly as transfer funds seem almost as tight at the Midlands club as on Merseyside.

Elsewhere, Martin Jol is thought likely to remain at Ajax, where the former Tottenham manager can look forward to Champions League football, while Gareth Southgate’s career as an ITV pundit is proving so enjoyable the former Middlesbrough manager and Villa defender may harbour mixed feelings about returning to the dugout.

Sam Allardyce, currently impressing in charge of Blackburn Rovers, could be another potential candidate, but his reputation was damaged by a previous disappointing stint at Newcastle United, and his football philosophy remains an acquired taste.

It seems MacDonald’s mixed results – he has presided over two Premier League wins either side of a 6-0 defeat at Newcastle while also proving powerless to prevent Villa losing a vital Europa League qualifier against Rapid Vienna – will not count against him.

Even so, Villa’s landscape would look very different were Hughes a free agent.

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Bob Bradley out of running for Aston Villa job after agreeing US deal

• Bradley agrees contract extension with US until 2014
• Villa looking for candidates with Premier League experience

Bob Bradley appears to be out of the running for the Aston Villa manager’s job after signing an extension to his contract as coach of the United States national team.

The 52-year-old has agreed a new deal with the US Soccer Federation which runs until the end of 2014. Reports had suggested that Villa’s American owner, Randy Lerner, may be prepared to offer him the chance to manage in the Premier League.

Under Bradley, the US were knocked out of the World Cup at the last 16 stage by Ghana. Three years ago he guided the US to the Concacaf Gold Cup and then, in 2009, to the final of the Confederations Cup in South Africa, where the they lost to Brazil.

Villa have been without a manager since Martin O’Neill resigned earlier this month. Kevin MacDonald has been working with the first team in a caretaker capacity since the Northern Irishman’s departure.

Bradley became an outsider for the Villa job when the club’s chief executive, Paul Faulkner, issued a statement on Sunday describing previous Premier League managerial experience as one of the key criteria in the recruitment process, something which the American does not have.

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