Martin O’Neill vows to fight to keep James Milner at Aston Villa

• Manager says he will resist Manchester City’s interest
• ‘England player key to Villa’s future progress’

Martin O’Neill last night vowed to resist any bids for James Milner as Manchester City prepare to test Aston Villa’s resolve in the summer. The manager claimed that the club are under no pressure to sell any of their most valuable assets and believes that keeping Milner, who has been in outstanding form this season and is certain to go to the World Cup finals with England, is crucial if Villa are to continue to progress.

City’s interest in him has added to the growing uncertainty at Villa Park in the wake of O’Neill suggesting this month that he would consider his own position in the summer. Manchester United have also been monitoring the midfielder after being impressed by his progress this season. O’Neill, however, has no intention of allowing Milner to leave without a fight.

“It would be very, very important to keep him,” he said. “I don’t think it’s in the interest of Aston Villa football club to try and sell our players.

“I would like to keep players as long as possible; some others you have to let go. [But] that’s not the case with the players we have here. No one here has asked to leave the football club and the progress we have made here this season suggests that, not only themselves, but the club is going in the right direction.”

O’Neill was unable to keep Gareth Barry last summer, when a long-running transfer saga involving the former Villa captain ended with him joining Manchester City rather than Liverpool. The Villa manager believes, however, that the circumstances are very different with Milner. “Gareth Barry wanted to go for a year and a bit. Now, somewhere along the line, if a player wants to go, then you maybe have to decide that’s the time.

“He only had one year left on his contract and, to be fair to Gareth Barry, he had given his years here so I’m not knocking that. If anybody at the football club at the time had earned the right to say, ‘I wouldn’t mind going’ – I think Gareth Barry had done. [But] James Milner has not asked [to leave].

“We haven’t had the chance to sit down [with him to discuss a new contract]. I said I would leave it to the summer. Not just [with] James – but a host of people who have got two years left on their contracts.”

O’Neill claimed City have yet to make any contact with Villa regarding Milner but accepted that the absence of an official approach carries little significance in an era when transfer market rules have changed. “It used to be manager to manager years ago,” he said. “Wasn’t David Moyes’s annoyance with Mark Hughes [over Joleon Lescott's transfer from Everton to Manchester City] that he never had a call in that time?”

O’Neill also angrily dismissed a report that suggested he was going to quit the club at the end of the season and take a break from football. He stopped short of confirming he would still be the Villa manager at the start of next season, but he did claim that he deserves to be in charge. “You ask me a question about whether I will be here next season? The answer is I would really hope to be here,” said O’Neill. “I’d think I would have earned the right to be here.”

Villa, meanwhile, head to struggling Hull City tonight for a match they must win to keep alive their hopes of finishing fourth. “There is no room for error,” added the manager. “I still think that for us to have any chance at all we would have to win the last four matches. That’s asking a lot, but we’re going in with that mentality.”

Aston VillaMartin O’NeillManchester CityPremier LeagueStuart Jamesguardian.co.uk

Martin O’Neill plays down talk of James Milner leaving Aston Villa

• Manager dismisses speculation midfielder may leave
• ‘We want the best players to stay’

Aston Villa’s manager Martin O’Neill has dismissed speculation linking the England midfielder James Milner with a £24m summer move to Manchester City. Milner, who has two years left on his Villa contract, has also been tipped as a target for Manchester United.

Villa, who paid £12m to sign Milner from Newcastle United two years ago, plan to open contract talks with him at the end of the season.

“It is irksome at this stage of the season,” said O’Neill. “It doesn’t do anyone any favours particularly because the player has had a fantastic time and is enjoying his football immensely here.

“He has had a really brilliant time, particularly since moving into the middle of midfield and I am delighted for him. James is still under contract with us and it’s a case of dampening fires that weren’t there in the first place.

“We want the best players to stay here at Aston Villa so we can keep the momentum going. But I have kind of accepted it now. If it is not James it will be Ashley Young and if it is not Ashley it might be Richard Dunne and then someone else the following week.”

O’Neill also denied he knew of any contact from City about the prospect of Milner moving to Eastlands in the summer. “It has got ridiculous now and I can categorically say that I have not heard anything from Manchester City,” he said. “I spoke to my chief executive late yesterday evening and he never mentioned it so I assume they have not been in touch with him either.

“You almost get the impression that stories are put in there to kind of upset you at this stage of the season. It was interesting to hear Arsène Wenger talking about Barcelona and having to rebuff stories about someone who was under contract at Arsenal. They are having to get Barcelona to make statements about them not coming after a player.”

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Portsmouth 1-2 Aston Villa | Premier League match report

Thank goodness for Nathan Delfouneso. Had the 19-year-old Aston Villa substitute not popped up with his first goal in the Premier League, to keep his club’s slim hopes of gate-crashing the top four alive, it is a safe bet that Martin O’Neill would have descended into apoplexy.

Villa have not had much luck with penalties since the turn of the year and the manager has found himself at his wits’ end with frustration. He still cannot believe how his team did not get a decision against Chelsea in the FA Cup semi-final and here he was left bemused as the referee Lee Probert ignored two stonewall appeals, by Gabriel Agbonlahor in the first half and the captain Stilian Petrov in the second.

There was also irony in that when Villa did get a penalty, just before the interval, John Carew had his kick saved by David James. The Norwegian went for power but James, in front of the watching England manager Fabio Capello, got a firm hand on the ball to palm it away.

O’Neill, though, could reflect on two decisions that helped to spirit the points to Villa Park. He sent on the strikers Emile Heskey and Delfouneso late in the second half and he watched the two combine for the winning goal. James Milner’s cross was glanced on by Heskey and Delfouneso, with his first touch, snapped up the chance from close range.

Portsmouth continue to bask in the Wembley feelgood factor from their FA Cup semi-final victory over Tottenham Hotspur and the spirit of their players has been irrepressible. Their form, since the nine-point deduction for entering administration, has been as good as any of the clubs towards the foot of the table while the collective will to contribute was illustrated by Kevin-Prince Boateng.

The midfielder had been given leave to return to Germany after the semi-final with Tottenham only for the Icelandic volcano eruption and the grounding of flights to leave him stranded. Portsmouth could add natural disasters to the list of obstacles they have faced. Boateng, however, wended his way back by car and ferry.

He was involved in the opening goal, moments after he had been denied by Brad Friedel at close quarters, with Kanu being foiled by James Collins’s saving challenge on the rebound. Anthony Vanden Borre got the better of Stephen Warnock to pull an astute ball back from the by-line and, with Boateng’s step-over helping to freeze Friedel, Michael Brown arrived to curl in his first goal since Boxing Day 2004.

Villa roused themselves. Carew ought to have scored from point-blank range, rather than side-foot straight at James, following Agbonlahor’s cross yet he finished emphatically moments later when he was afforded the freedom of Fratton Park to power on to Warnock’s long ball. He was played onside by Lenny Sowah, the full Portsmouth debutant, who holds the curious distinction of being the first player born after the formation of the Premier League to play in it.

Villa ought to have led by the interval. Ashley Young’s cross was touched onto his own post by Marc Wilson while Carew saw his penalty, awarded for a foolish trip on him by Papa Bouba Diop, beaten away by James. Villa should have had a penalty earlier but Probert was the only person inside the ground who did not think that Vanden Borre had leaned into Agbonlahor and then dragged him down. Probert gave a free-kick the other way against Agbonlahor.

Although Portsmouth played pleasingly in patches, there was the feeling that the game was there for Villa to take and that they would kick themselves all the way back to the Midlands if they failed to do so.

Agbonlahor headed an excellent chance on 55 minutes too close to James while Young implored Probert to award another penalty after he felt he was caught by Vanden Borre. If that was difficult to call, then there was little doubt in the 79th minute that James made contact with Petrov, after the midfielder had gone around him in the area. O’Neill raged on the touchline but Delfouneso ensured that he would remember the game for happier reasons.

Premier LeaguePortsmouthAston VillaDavid Hytnerguardian.co.uk