Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.Aston Villa paid a high price for slapdash defending as the unheralded Croats of Varteks secured the best win in their history at Villa Park last night. Sasa Bjelanovic, reputedly being watched by Internazionale, scored his second goal of this Uefa Cup first round, first leg match with just four minutes remaining.
Juan Pablo Angel had twice restored parity as Villa, impoverished during the first half, accentuated the positive after the break. The Colombian, who has only one Premiership goal to his name since a club-record £9.5m move from Argentina, thus added to his brace in the Intertoto Cup final.
Not for the first time, however, Bjelanovic converted a pass by Devis Mukaj, restoring a lead Varteks deserved. Although Peter Schmeichel joined a late siege, even managing a shot, John Gregory's side trudged off knowing they must score twice in Varazdin next Thursday to have any chance of progressing.
Gregory acknowledged later that his decision to rest his captain, Paul Merson, as well as Lee Hendrie and Dion Dublin, would provoke criticism. "Gérard Houllier left out Michael Owen and they blamed him when we won at Liverpool," the Villa manager said. "I expect the same will happen to me. But hindsight is a wonderful thing, and you find out more about your team in defeat than in victory."
The low turn-out of 27,132 was as mystifying as the fallibility of Villa's hitherto rock-like central-defensive duo of Olof Mellberg and Alpay Ozalan. All three home matches in the out-of-season Intertoto drew bigger crowds. Villa again applied a cut-price ticket deal, but this time the atmosphere was as cool as the autumnal evening. Varteks, from the industrial north of the former Yugoslav republic, brought all of a dozen fans, whose banners occupied more seats than they did.
Even a head injury in the opening five minutes to their goalkeeper, Danijel Madaric, failed to unsettle the technically gifted and well organised visitors. With forehead bandaged, he soon demonstrated unimpaired shot-stopping powers by blocking Darius Vassell's close-range effort.
Cleverly prompted by Miljenko Mumlek, Varteks struck first in the 44th minute. Mukaj, taking possession just inside Villa's half, advanced unchallenged before releasing Bjelanovic, who stroked the ball nonchalantly between Schmeichel's legs as he hurtled off his line.
Ten minutes after the interval, with Villa showing greater urgency, Madaric's eventful night took a fresh twist. A fine cross-field pass by George Boateng prompted a rare first-time cross by Kachloul. The ball broke to the right, whereupon Steve Stone's miscued shot was diverted in by Angel via the keeper's hands.
But Villa were again found wanting in the 65th minute. Zoran Kastel ran at them unchecked and, with Mellberg backing off and Mark Delaney sucked out of position, he slipped the ball to Veldin Karic. Sporting a classic 'mullet' hairstyle, Karic mustered a left-footed drive to match which fairly tore into the net.
Villa's second riposte, on 70 minutes, again stemmed from Kachloul, whose centre was met by a sharp downward header by Angel. Varteks, though, remained undaunted and unsated. Alpay stood off Bjelanovic as Mukaj's pass found him near the penalty spot, allowing him to steer the winner beyond the flat-footed Dane and send 12 of the crowd home happy.
Aston Villa (4-4-2): Schmeichel; Delaney, Mellberg, Alpay, Wright; Stone (Ginola, 66), Hadji, Boateng, Kachloul (Barry, 77); Angel, Vassell. Substitutes not used: Staunton, Balaban, Moore, Samuel, Enckelman (gk).
NK Varteks (3-4-1-2): Madaric; Kristic, Granic, Rezic; Sabolcki, Kastel, Mukaj, Hrman (Balajic, 90); Mumlek; Karic, Bjelanovic. Substitutes not used: Andricevic, Borovic, Sklepic, Safaric, Drobne, Rumbak (gk).
Referee: P Gomes Costa (Portugal).
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments