Milner's strike puts Villa in sight of Spurs' fourth spot

ENGLIHS PREMIER LEAGUE: Wigan Athletic 1 Aston Villa 2 WHEN ASTON Villa were comprehensively beaten at home by Wigan on the …

ENGLIHS PREMIER LEAGUE: Wigan Athletic 1 Aston Villa 2WHEN ASTON Villa were comprehensively beaten at home by Wigan on the first day of the season, the notion the English midlands club would be competing for a Champions League place would have been met with ridicule.

Seven months later, however, and those ambitions are very much alive after James Milner’s 10th goal of the season moved Villa to within three points of fourth-placed Spurs with a game in hand.

For Wigan the table makes much more depressing reading. Roberto Martinez’s side, who looked anything but relegation candidates at Villa Park in August, remain four points adrift of safety.

The home team more than played their part in an absorbing contest last night but their frailties were once again exposed on a night when James McCarthy put through his net in farcical fashion and Chris Kirkland blundered for the second Villa goal.

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Villa and Wigan tore at each other from the outset, contributing to a highly entertaining match that yielded numerous chances at either end. The only surprise was that come the interval each team only had a goal to show for their efforts.

Villa looked particularly menacing on the counter-attack, although their breakthrough owed everything to good fortune. There seemed little danger when John Carew headed Stewart Downing’s centre across goal towards the far post, but McCarthy, evidently oblivious to the absence of Villa shirts nearby, stuck out a boot only to toe-poke the ball into his net.

The visitors’ jubilation, however, proved ephemeral as Wigan drew level within two minutes with a goal that had Martin O’Neill cursing on the touchline, after Gary Caldwell eluded Richard Dunne and glanced home Charles N’Zogbia’s inswinging free-kick.

Villa finished the first half the stronger and three chances in the space of six minutes should have delivered a second. Twice Carew came close, the Norwegian backheeling wide at the near post before shooting against Kirkland’s legs following Ashley Young’s meandering run. In between those two efforts, Young hammered the ball over from no more than six yards after Collins’s flick on.

The high-tempo of the game was still evident after the restart. Within seconds Marcelo Moreno went agonisingly close to putting Wigan in front with a low, curling shot that slipped inches wide of an upright. Back came Villa, Stephen Warnock seizing possession on the left flank and flighting an inviting cross towards the corner of the six-yard box that Young glanced narrowly over the angle.

Villa were, however, beginning to crank up the pressure and in the 63rd minute Wigan buckled. Young’s floated corner ought to have been dealt with by Kirkland but the goalkeeper flapped and Mohamed Diame could only help the ball on to edge of the area, where Milner waited with intent. One swing of the right boot later and the ball had travelled through a clutch of players inside the stranded goalkeeper’s near post.

Wigan rallied and Rodallega had reasonable claims for a penalty when Carlos Cuellar bundled into him from behind. Wigan continued to probe but the Premier League’s most parsimonious defence held firm in the face of a barrage.

GuardianService

WIGAN: Kirkland, Boyce (Scotland 90), Caldwell, Bramble, Figueroa, Thomas, McCarthy (Scharner 71), Diame, N'Zogbia (Moses 56), Moreno, Rodallega. Subs Not Used: Stojkovic, Amaya, Gomez, Sinclair. Booked: Bramble, Rodallega. Goals: Caldwell 27.

ASTON VILLA: Friedel, Cuellar, Dunne, Collins, Warnock, Downing, Milner, Petrov, Ashley Young, Agbonlahor (Sidwell 81), Carew (Heskey 81). Subs Not Used: Guzan, Luke Young, Delfouneso, Delph, Beye. Booked: Dunne. Goals: McCarthy 25 og, Milner 63.

Referee: Steve Bennett (Kent).