Calls for Kevin MacDonald to keep Aston Villa job after instant impact

• Aston Villa players want MacDonald to replace Martin O’Neill
• Former Liverpool man gets decisions spot on in first match

When Kevin MacDonald joined Liverpool in the 1980s, his constant moaning earned him the nickname Albert Tatlock after the grumpy old man played by Jack Howarth in Coronation Street. Something has obviously changed since he hung up his boots because his presence in the Aston Villa dugout on Saturday put smiles on faces and liberated a group of players who would like nothing better than to see him named as their new manager.

Stiliyan Petrov, the Villa captain, led the calls for MacDonald to be appointed Martin O’Neill’s successor after an exhilarating performance that had the chairman, Randy Lerner, on his feet and the supporters chanting the caretaker’s name. It was that sort of day at Villa Park and if the players get their way it will be the first of many under MacDonald. “We couldn’t have a better man to step in and take charge,” said Petrov, who scored Villa’s second goal with a superb header.

“I said to him before, you try and hold on to that job. He has been at the club a long time and has done a great job with the youth. He showed with how he prepared us, and the way he wants us to play, that he wants to hold on to the job. I hope we can help him to take it. We are behind him. He knows it’s hard for him; expectations are high and people want success and talk about big names. But he is really determined to stay there.”

Lerner is now treating him as a serious contender and it is easy to see why. MacDonald’s approach to the job has been impressive ever since he stepped up from reserve-team duties last Monday. He introduced changes to training by working closely with the side that would start against West Ham, rather than keeping everyone waiting until the day of the game to find out who was playing (as was the case under O’Neill) and he got his team selection spot on.

Pundits said it was impossible to play James Milner because of the distraction of his proposed transfer to Manchester City but MacDonald’s faith in the midfielder was vindicated and his decision to include a couple of academy graduates, Ciaran Clark and Marc Albrighton, brought instant reward. But perhaps the most impressive aspect of Saturday’s display was the tactical change that allowed Villa to play as if the shackles had come off.

“Every manager has a different style and Kev has a different vision on how we can play, and we showed we can be faster and play with more freedom,” Petrov said. “We are moving the ball quicker. We try to hurt teams, not just play on the counterattack, and we created a lot of chances. It could have been a different result, not just 3-0. He gives us a new way to play, more freedom, and when you know exactly what you need to do, it makes it easier to perform.”

Nobody performed better than Albrighton. A regular under MacDonald in the reserves, the 20-year-old winger was outstanding on his full Premier League debut as he tormented West Ham with his sinuous runs and dexterous footwork on both flanks. He set up the first goal for Stewart Downing and brilliantly created the third for Milner, who left the field to a standing ovation with five minutes to goand with his name reverberating around the stadium.

“I really enjoyed every minute of it,” said Albrighton, who grew up supporting Villa and lives only a few miles from the training ground. “Kevin said go out there and enjoy it, and play the way I have the last few years. I have done it for one game of the season and have to keep my feet on the ground. As soon as I came off the pitch, James Milner said: ‘You have set a standard there, you have to keep that going for 37 games.’ He is bang on.”

West Ham will be relegated if they show the same form over the remainder of the season. Julien Faubert should have pulled a goal back after the restart but that was a rare West Ham attack on an afternoon when only John Carew’s profligacy and the woodwork spared Avram Grant’s side a hammering. “If we are not fighting against relegation, which I believe will be the case, we can develop our game and improve our football,” the West Ham manager said rather unconvincingly.

Man of the match Marc Albrighton (Aston Villa) Little wonder he stayed in to watch Match of the Day on Saturday night.

Premier LeagueAston VillaWest Ham UnitedStuart Jamesguardian.co.uk

Martin O’Neill content under Aston Villa’s quiet American Randy Lerner

• Martin O’Neill hails Randy Lerner’s stewardship
• ‘Having a stable owner takes excuses away’

Martin O’Neill will welcome West Ham United to Villa Park after another quiet week in the upper echelons of the Midlands club. While the American owners of Manchester United and Liverpool have been unleashing ­unsettling bond issues and abusive emails, the Aston Villa chairman, Randy Lerner, has been grabbing attention ­simply by not being in the country.

However, the American billionaire has resolved the issues with his American football franchise, the Cleveland Browns, and is prepared to spend more time tending to his Premier League club, who sit sixth in the table.

Not, says O’Neill, that Lerner is likely to announce his return with any grand gestures before the close of the transfer window. “No, he’s not [reckless],” said the Villa manager. “He’s still very enthusiastic about it all, he’s still got some plans for Villa Park as well, which will be great if they happen, but overall his view is not one where he will be reckless.”

Since completing his £62.6m takeover just days after O’Neill was hired by the former chairman Doug Ellis, in August 2006, Lerner has backed the ­Northern Irishman’s patient team-building, with Ashley Young, James Milner, Stewart Downing and the former Hammer James Collins joining the club. “The owner put in a substantial amount of money in the third year which has been good and given us a springboard to keep momentum going,” said O’Neill.

“But ours has never been a case of going out and throwing lots of money at the whole scenario for a short-term fix. It’s great if that materialises but you have to look at the overall structure.”

O’Neill admitted his squad could still be stronger and despite offers – “some tentative, some stronger” – is ­reluctant to sell any of his current players, with a gaggle of clubs linked with the midfielder Nigel Reo-Coker. The right to retain ­players might be denied his opposite number and Gianfranco Zola admitted on Friday that the takeover talk surrounding West Ham is ­”affecting ­everybody”. O’Neill concurred that off-field uncertainty can filter onto the pitch.

“If you have a bit of turmoil in the background I’ve often felt it gives ­players excuses because something is not right,” he said, before admitting it did not take something like the collapse of the ­Icelandic economy to distract him in his playing days. “There’s nobody had greater excuses for playing badly than myself.

“I had an excuse for everything, my shoes weren’t tight, breakfast was poor, I even blamed John Robertson for not giving me the ball. Having a stable owner takes one set of excuses away.”

Premier LeagueAston VillaMartin O’NeillWest Ham UnitedMikey Staffordguardian.co.uk

Squad sheets: Aston Villa v West Ham United

West Ham won 2-1 at home back in November but without a senior striker to call upon and with four points from six games, the chances of a double in tomorrow’s early game are unlikely. Guillermo Franco was injured in training so Freddie Sears may get a first Premier League start since being recalled from Palace while Scott Parker and Mark Noble look to be over hamstring problems. Villa will make at least one change to the side that saw off Blackburn in the Carling Cup as Brad Friedel returns for Brad Guzan. Mark Tallentire

Venue Villa Park Tickets £19-£40 (0800 612 0970) Last season Aston Villa 1 West Ham 1 Referee M Jones

This season’s matches 10 Y36, R1, 3.70 cards per game

sportingbet odds Aston Villa 1-2 West Ham 11-2 Draw 13-5

Aston Villa

Subs from Guzan, Collins, Sidwell, Carew, Delph, Reo-Coker, Beye, Albrighton, Delfouneso

Doubtful None

Injured Davies (shoulder, 20 Jan), Bouma (ankle, 27 Jan)

Suspended None

Form guide LLWWWW

Disciplinary record Y38 R2

Leading scorer Agbonlahor 8

West Ham United

Subs from Kurucz, Stanislas, Daprela, Nouble, Da Costa, Jímenez, N’Gala

Doubtful Parker (hamstring)

Injured Ilunga (hamstring, 23 Jan), Gabbidon (hamstring, 23 Jan), Noble (hamstring, 23 Jan), Cole (knee, 26 Jan), Hines (knee, 26 Jan), Boa Morte (knee, Feb), Franco (hamstring, Feb), Davenport (legs, indef), Dyer (hamstring, indef)

Form guide LWDLLL Disciplinary record Y41 R3

Leading scorer Cole 7

Match pointers

• Only one team have managed to score more than once at Villa Park in the 13 league matches played there this season – Wigan on the opening day

• West Ham have won none of their last nine league away matches and lost the last three in a row

• Aston Villa have conceded just one headed goal, fewer than any other team

• West Ham have won three of their last 20 league games against Villa

• Eleven of the last 19 league meetings between these teams have ended in a draw

Aston VillaWest Ham UnitedPremier Leagueguardian.co.uk