Holte End

Holte End

Thursday 4 September 2014

Summer 2014 Transfer Roundup

With Villa the second lowest spenders in the league with a roughly £7 million outgoing, ahead only of Stoke, it would be easy to write this off as a characteristically-slow and uneventful window, but with 6 signings, there may well be much for Villains across the globe to get excited about.

Philippe Senderos (Free Transfer – Formerly from Valencia)

2014 had so far been a poor year for Senderos. Leaving soon-to-be relegated Fulham to make just 8 appearances in La Liga for Valencia, before a disappointing World Cup with Switzerland, including a horror-show in their 5-2 defeat to France, made it very understandable for Villa fans to be uneasy as to his contribution to the team, especially with the notion that he may be a replacement for Ron Vlaar, should the captain leave.

But, thankfully, Vlaar is staying put, and has formed an immense partnership with Senderos in the opening portion of the season, shipping just 1 goal in 3 premier league games. He has helped to add a much needed breath of professional-feeling air to the squad, and with his vast amount of vital tackles and last-ditch blocks, the defence is looking its strongest for at least 3 years.

Not to mention that at the age of 29, he could easily have 3 or 4 more seasons at the top level.

Kieran Richardson (Undisclosed from Fulham)

Another signing that seemed relatively uninspiring, and branded as distinctly ‘average’, Keiran has started in the same vein as Senderos; with impressively solid performances.

Expected by many to come in as a wing-back to replace our string of below-par signings in that position, instead Richardson has found himself playing in the midfield three, very much as a replacement – arguably an upgrade - for the recently departed Karim El-Ahmadi. Richardson is similarly a hardworking midfielder with good passing range, but to me is superior due to his consistency; premier-league experience; and set piece delivery, three things glaringly lacking in Karim’s game. 

He has helped give our midfield a bit more ‘fight’ with his stamina and hard-working attitude, not to mention finding himself providing the vital assist to Weimann in one of the best-worked goals I’ve seen at Villa Park for a long, long time against Hull, and to me represents a decent bit of business.

Joe Cole (Free Transfer – Formerly from West Ham)

Signing a recognised England International well past his prime with an appalling injury record understandably has put a lot of people on the fence. 

On one hand, Cole offers a lot of experience and arguably a pinch of class to the side, two things certainly lacking in the side, and he also has proven he can play effectively in the number 10 position, as a creative midfielder in the final third of the pitch, again – a theme of this article – something the side sorely needed.

I’m personally prepared to give him a good chance in a Villa shirt, and will happily accept that it will take a good wedge of time and physio work to get him fully match fit and away from the dreaded injury table we’ve populated far too much in recent memory.

What annoys me most is that plenty of fans have already completely written him off, despite only playing 62 minutes for the club, in a cup-tie that didn’t seem to be treated with the greatest of importance. Providing a pertinent example of the lack of patience and eager pessimism that the current era is producing.

At the end of the day, to me this is another free signing that will be hard to prove as bad value for money in my book.

Aly Cissokho (Undisclosed from Valencia – Estimated at £2 million)

If you asked a Liverpool fan about Aly Cissokho, and his tenure at the club while on loan last season, they’d probably tell you that while he’s a fairly decent defensively, but going forward he was about as much use as a chocolate teapot, with huge deficits in technique and composure, before assuring you in his thick, annoying accent that we shouldn’t expect him to be bombing down the touchline and delivering inch-perfect crosses.

And they would be wrong.

Cissokho looks somewhat a revelation, and a long-awaited answer to our fullback problem. Strong as an ox at the back, decisive and composed in his passing, and not to mention superb in his crossing. The Newcastle game springs to mind as a perfect example of this, where he was by far the most dangerous threat on the pitch, producing 2 or 3 crosses in the first half that a fully-fit Benteke could easily have converted into a hat-trick.

It may be early days, but in my books this might just be the signing to get the most excited about. He could be a huge player for the club.

Carlos Sanchez (Undisclosed from Elche – Estimated at £4.7 million)

Sanchez, or ‘La Roca’ (The Rock), as he had been nicknamed due to his strength, is our big money signing of the summer, and is a vital one, given he might finally be the anchor in midfield we have desperately been crying out for. (far more encouraging than the rumoured plan of training Gary Gardner for that role)

From what little we’ve seen of him, he might not be the most electrifying man in sports entertainment, but he should go on to be a perfect replacement for our glaring hole between defence and midfield. He hasn’t set the world alight, but then again players in that position aren’t supposed to. He’s displayed a great range in his passing, has a strong presence on the field, and clearly isn’t afraid of a tackle. 
As he gets used to the pace and intensity of the English game, he should fit in without too much trouble, and play a pivotal role in the success I believe we are capable of achieving this year.

Tom Cleverley (Season Long Loan from Manchester United)

It was seeming increasingly likely that Tom might be our deadline-day panic signing, and there seemed to be somewhat a feel of relief when that fell through, with £8 million on a player desperately low on form dubbed too excessive and too much of a gamble for a club trying to rebuild itself. 

The news the following day that it was the be instead a loan move instead, seems a much more reasonable and safe bit of business. We will have first option to sign Cleverley, and with his contract up at the end of the season, the gambling aspect of a permanent signing will be removed.

Another player who can be the number 10 in front of the midfield that we need, Cleverley may well go on to reproduce the form he showed at Wigan, when a team with an attack is built around him rather than him playing the role of a passenger.

United fans might claim that Ferguson saw a lot in the lad, but played him too defensively, and given the freedom to push further up the pitch, there’s definitely hope for him reaching the height of his powers with us.

Overall, It’s clear Lambert had identified the same weaknesses in the side that we had in the stands, with 2 creative midfielders, a holding anchor-man, another option at centre half and 2 players able to play at left back being brought in.


All seem capable of being first teamers for top 10 teams, and all have played for their respective countries. For a spend kept to seven digits, that’s far more than I’d hoped for, and to me at least – a good indicator of the progression the club is trying to make.