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Why the FA Cup weekend provides a big opportunity for Aston Villa

It was the best of times. It was the worst of the times. It was panic mode. It was ‘don’t worry’. It was December. A month, for Aston Vill🤡a, that does not bring many gifts.

In the twelfth month of the year, it is usually the time of the football season where you ca﷽n expect Villa’s hopes to collapse. Of course, the club have ironically lead league tables before November eroded into Decembe🐻r. After Christmas the club is usually lucky to have a hand on the top half of the table!

And again, that’s almost how it went for Aston Vil😼la in 2017. A blown two goal lead, a draw, a defeat and another loss. Steve Bruce’s reign at Villa has been defined by streaks. A stint of winning, coldly sandwiched between two barren spells.

After a Boxing Day bashing by promising coach Dean Smith and his plucky Brentford s🏅ide the tide seemed to be turning against Steve Bruce for the final time. Booed off rather viciously by an angry pack of away fans at Griffin Park, the 57-year-old head coach was quick to defend himself.

He was even quicker to do so when he escaped Middlesb🐠rough with three points a few days afꦛter, and by the dawn of the new year – after taking six points against two very good sides, including a resounding 5-0 win against Bristol City – he was more than happy to take the plaudits.

Now, after a barrage of cold surf, Villa’s manager now seems to be riding a waves of optimism into 20✱18.

Villa’s first match post New Year’s Day is a FA Cup 3rd round tie against League One outfit Peterborough United. These matches are usually dismissed by t📖hose who are too quick to get down to the business of thꦏe league.

However, while the FA Cup might not offer glory, it certainly offers opportunity to teams like Aston Villa, who would do well not to turn their nose up at Eng🌟land’s oldest club football competition.

The FA Cup? For Villa, it’s an opportunity for rebirth. It is not a throwaway fixture at Villa Park in any sense of the world. Why? It allows the team to experimentꦛ, rotate and try out new things that they may be too scared to implement in a league fixture.

It also allows them to give extremely talented youngsters like Jake Doyle-Hayes, Easah Suliman and Callum O’Hare some valuable first-team game time. What is more, it allows an erratic side to settle ℱinto form, with a big chance for a win on o💖ffer.

Scott Hogan will likely be allowed a full ninety minutes of football to continue his decent spell, and a few goals wi📖ll do nothing but help him along.

Among other things, it also gives Villa a look at a ಌdecent League One side. Many clubs are chasing Jack Marriott, who leads th🤪e line for the Posh. ꦏSeeing a ready-made replacement for any departing striker can do the Bruce’s team no harm🔯. Well, as long as he doesn’t bang a few goals past Jed🅘 Steer.

The flip side of this? It is also a good way for the Birmingham side to put second-stringers and reserve players in a shop window. Especially considering it is very much a ‘sell-to-buy’ situation f𒊎or the club this January.

Villa and Steve෴ Bruce would be wise to pay close attention to Saturday’s fixture, as it represents a ma꧅ssive chance for this side to grow and really galvanise their season.

It has been a stop-start cam♔paign so far and a good win against a talented Peterborough side in the FA Cup certainly won’t hurt Villa. In truth, it could be a really g🔯ood opportunity to learn a lot more about Bruce’s current squad.

Villa won’t win the FA Cup, but a good run will o🌺nly boost their season. Ignoring fixture congestion and other intangibles of which we cannot measure the impact, any match where a loss is not of huge detriment can only help one of the Championship’s most exciting, talented and erratic teams grow.