Aston Villa 1-0 Everton | Premier League match report

At least Kevin MacDonald can go into his meeting with Randy Lerner with a smile on his face. Whether MacDonald wants to take over as manager or, perhaps more to the point, whether the Villa owner is interested in appointing him, remains to be seen, but three points here have gone some way towards repairing the damage inflicted after a chastening week that included a 6-0 thumping at Newcastle and elimination from Europe.

Everton were the more accomplished side and laid siege to the Villa goal at times but Luke Young’s splendid early strike, when he curled a left-footed shot beyond Tim Howard, proved the difference. The relief at the final whistle was tangible and not only among the Villa supporters. MacDonald, who has been in charge on a caretaker basis since Martin O’Neill walked out five days before the start of the season, looked emotionally drained.

Lerner made a visit to the home dressing room afterwards to congratulate MacDonald and the players. The Villa chairman will start interviewing for a successor to O’Neill during the international break and he has told MacDonald he will need to know whether he wishes to be considered for the position by tomorrow morning at the latest. The 50-year-old is comfortable with that timetable, although he remains none the wiser about whether to throw his name forward.

“Mr Lerner came in to say well done to the players,” MacDonald said. “He also passed on a comment to say well done to myself and Tony [McAndrew, MacDonald's assistant], because he knows the emotions we had been going through [on the touchline].

“He said: ‘Take your time and enjoy your evening, think about what we have said before and speak to him tomorrow evening or at the latest Tuesday morning.’ But he didn’t put any pressure on me, which I was pleased about.

“I still don’t know whether it’s for me or not. I have thoughts where I want to do it and I’ve had other thoughts that this isn’t what my life is about. I have also got to believe that I am going to be good enough myself. That’s something that I think about deeply. I’ve got to believe that I am good enough to make sure Aston Villa stays where it is and, hopefully, progresses, whether that’s with some more younger players or whatever.”

The Villa caretaker, who was more animated on the touchline than in previous matches, would have been breathing more easily if his side had taken one of the opportunities they spurned on the counterattack. Tim Howard, the Everton goalkeeper, thwarted John Carew and Ashley Young on a couple of occasions but the most inviting chance for Villa to double their lead fell to Marc Albrighton. With Howard stranded, the young winger blazed horribly over from six yards out.

Everton left the pitch crestfallen and well they might. David Moyes’s side played like the home team, taking the game to Villa and doing everything but score. The statistics said it all: Everton controlled 68% of possession and had 18 corners to Villa’s four. It was as much as Villa could do to get out of their half at times and, in the closing stages, they were hanging on for dear life. Deep into injury time, Brad Friedel denied Louis Saha with two fine saves.

Plenty of Everton chances had also come and gone before the frantic finale. Steven Pienaar struck the crossbar in the 18th minute with a brilliant curling shot while Saha, whose arrival for the ineffective Jermaine Beckford gave Everton some much-needed thrust up front, drew a smart reflex save from Friedel on the hour. Three minutes later Jack Rodwell found space in the Villa penalty area but his glancing header from Mikel Arteta’s free-kick flashed inches wide.

All of which was of little consolation to Moyes, who has presided over Everton’s worst start to a league season in 11 years. “If that’s the case, it’s another milestone I’ve achieved,” said Everton’s manager, who admitted his team were guilty of over-elaborating at times. “When you don’t feel as though you are scoring freely, you try and be over-precise. But we did enough to come away with something, if not more than one point.”

Premier LeagueAston VillaEvertonStuart Jamesguardian.co.uk

Martin O’Neill – the charming dictator who finally lost patience | Paul Hayward

Aston Villa have succeeded in driving away their most important asset

It was a febrile day at Aston Villa’s Bodymoor Heath training ground and you could feel a rift coming. In the aftermath of his team’s 7-1 hammering at Chelsea, Martin O’Neill was trying to pull off the hard PR trick of affirming passion for the job while also using a large media gathering to warn the club’s owner his fidelity to the claret and blue was finite.

This was no easy mission. Realising his threat to leave was a bit too stark, O’Neill later issued a statement restating his loyalty to Randy Lerner’s philanthropic mission. But there was no mistaking the Villa manager’s agitation later in a private conversation as he contemplated the possibility that Gareth Barry’s sale to Manchester City the previous summer had started a trend that would turn Lerner’s parish into a dispenser rather than an acquirer of talent.

James Milner’s move to one of the Manchester monsters was already being touted and the talk around Villa Park was of Lerner being spooked by the rise of Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur and how few rungs an £80m investment in players raised a club on the Premier League’s greased ladder. The word was that the Quiet American had looked at the financial crash and decided English football was merely a bonfire for his bucks.

O’Neill turned his thoughts to the possibility that Milner, Ashley Young and others might be auctioned off along with Villa’s recently restored ambitions. “If that situation did develop that wouldn’t necessarily mean I would go and down tools and say, ‘Well, listen, we can’t go any further,’” he said. “What you would do is see if you can come up with some other ways, maybe through the scheme here with the younger players coming through, maybe with a bit of trading here and there, maybe taking a risk with a major player to be transferred [out] to sort things out. You wouldn’t just down tools. It’s not been in my nature to do that.

“I couldn’t envisage that sort of scene – just throwing the toys out of the pram. I feel maybe I should have a say in my career as much as anyone else – that was the point I was trying to make [in his earlier press conference]. Actually I didn’t make it too cleverly, but it doesn’t really matter.”

Five days before the start of a new Premier League campaign, O’Neill’s willingness to compromise expired, with dire implications for Villa and not especially good ones for him. At 58, he has at least one top appointment left in him but in the last few weeks two major boats have sailed without him. Fabio Capello’s survival as England manager was one puff of receding smoke and Roy Hodgson’s elevation from Fulham to Liverpool shut down another ideal vacancy.

Spend proper time with O’Neill and you see that his main managerial quality is a superhuman talent for motivation, for making journeymen feel like royalty, for unlocking football’s spirit in players who may have been more used to making up the numbers. This sounds a good antidote to the malaise of England’s low self‑esteem and to the moroseness that settled over Anfield before Hodgson arrived to blow it away. The saddest note in O’Neill’s sudden resignation is that none of the elite managerial jobs in Britain look to be heading his way any time soon unless Sir Alex Ferguson stands down and Manchester United turn from Scotland to Northern Ireland for their inspiration.

Mourinho-esque career plotting has never been O’Neill’s style. He was employed at Villa on a rolling one-year contract and calls himself a “typical Irishman without a long-term plan”. On that tense day at Bodymoor Heath, he was plainly wounded by a surge in hostility from some Villa fans and bloggers in the wake of the collapse at Stamford Bridge on 27

Football Weekly podcast: Portsmouth reach the FA Cup final

James Richardson and the Football Weekly crew return to analyse Portsmouth’s triumph in the FA Cup. Administrators permiting, they’ll meet Chelsea in the final, but what now for beaten semi-finalists Tottenham Hotspur and Aston Villa? Meanwhile, Barry Glendenning points green fingers as he explains why Wembley stadium – which didn’t leave much change from a billion quid, remember – has such a terrible pitch.

Turning our attention to the Premier League, Owen Gibson gives his thoughts on the title race, the relegation battle between Hull City and Burnley, and that potential dry run of the European final between Liverpool and Fulham.

Finally, Paolo Bandini muses on a momentus weekend in Serie A, with Roma knocking Internazionale off the top, while Sid Lowe reflects on a super Clásico that was neither super nor classic, but saw Barcelona humiliate Real Madrid all the same. For entertainment, he urges you to look at this goal instead.

Have a listen and give us your thoughts on the blog below. Remember to find us on Twitter and Facebook, and get your daily dose of the Fiver too

James RichardsonBen GreenSean IngleBarry GlendenningOwen GibsonPaolo BandiniSid Lowe