Leicester City and Aston Villa
Blog, Premier league

Early Season Panic Time: Worried About Aston Villa Suffering the Same Fate as Leicester City?

A very good ebening to all Aston Villa fans. How are you feeling? Nervous? We figured. And that’s how we’d feel, too, if we put ourselves in the shoes of an average attendee at Villa Park right now. Things don’t look too promising, and there’s a chance, a slight chance, that Villa could take the Leicester City route. A few fans have even told us they’re worried about that, and we’re here to reassure them that things aren’t quite the same. The expert tacticians are already busy talking about XGs, formations, what Unai Emery is doing wrong, and why Villa have been so dreadful in front of goal in these early weeks of the 2025/26 season. And to be fair, most of them are right. It’s been awful to watch. Villa have only three points from five games and sit 18th in the table. Recently, they also parted ways with Monchi, the President of Football Operations who was supposed to give them stability in recruitment and planning. Compare that to the fact they were facing Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League quarter finals just a few months ago, and it all feels surreal. The Leicester comparison comes up because they too overachieved in Europe, reached the UCL quarter finals, and then within a few years collapsed and went down. But here’s the key difference. Villa fans should be worried, yes. But the concern is more about the short term than the long term. We’re just spreading some early-season panic and speculating. Let us know what you think. Aston Villa have the money, for now When Aston Villa failed to qualify for the Champions League last season, they were distraught. They have a better chance of winning the UCL Lite (Europa fans, sorry), but just taking part in and reaching the knockouts of the premier European competition would get them more money. Above all, being a Champions League club has a pull. Stefan Borson of Football Insider reported that Villa may have lost up to £50 million after failing to finish in the top five of the Prem. That doesn’t sound like a lot when considering how Premier League clubs throw north of that amount for, let’s be real, average players. But money earned doesn’t just go to the transfer budget. It’s needed for clubs to function at a top level. That’s why relegation is disastrous for a club, no matter how big or small they traditionally are. When Leicester started declining around the time Brendan Rodgers’ time at the club was coming to an end, they too were losing money. After their title triumph in 2016, they started spending like a big club. They built a new training facility in Seagrave which cost £200 million, signed top players on high wages, and were, in all honesty, burning through the cash that they felt would never stop flowing. But as performances dipped, so did the money. In 2022/23, Leicester recorded pre-tax losses of £89.7 million, as they went down to the Championship. They came right back up a year later, only to go down again. Things are dire at King Power Stadium, and the board that fans once hailed as messiahs has fallen out of favor, with multiple breaches and financial irregularities reported. BREAKING! Leicester have officially been relegated from the Premier League 📉🚨 pic.twitter.com/DmOXUsE6I8 — Sky Sports Premier League (@SkySportsPL) May 28, 2023 Villa have to be smart and avoid what Leicester did. Take it slow, take it smartly. Europa League isn’t the end of the world. It shouldn’t even be the priority. The priority has to be the Premier League, and making sure they qualify for Europe again. Immediate resolves for Villa to improve If Eleventh Minute was in charge of Villa’s immediate future, the first thing we would do is take a deep breath. They’re still a big club, and there’s a lot to look forward to. In the Prem, it’s still early days, plus they have a European campaign to look forward to, in which they could call themselves one of the favorites. That said, one of the things we’d do is control spending, and not try to buy their way back into the Champions League. Control wages too. Villa lost Jacob Ramsey, Leander Dendoncker, Alex Moreno, and also on-loan players like Marco Asensio and Marcus Rashford whose moves couldn’t be made permanent. That’s a lot of turnover in one summer, and it shows. The balance of the squad doesn’t feel the same, and the replacements haven’t convinced anyone yet. And this is where Monchi’s departure stings. He was brought in to give Villa a structure that could outlast the chaos of the football calendar. His exit puts pressure on Emery and the board to get recruitment right, and fans have every right to feel uneasy. Because this is exactly how things unraveled at Leicester. They lost their core, replaced poorly, and then panicked when results turned. 🚨✅ Aston Villa get their first win of the season! pic.twitter.com/1sq4tHgGbP — EuroFoot (@eurofootcom) September 25, 2025 The comparison is fair, but not identical. Leicester spent like a top six club without the consistency to back it up. Villa, as it stands, still have the resources and the manager to pull themselves together. They just need to avoid the temptation of short-term fixes and remember what got them here in the first place. So, panic? Yes, a little bit. But it’s only September. A couple of wins, and suddenly the table looks less terrifying. The Europa League could give them confidence too. If they keep their heads and rebuild smartly after Monchi, this can be just a blip. The Leicester story is a warning, not a prophecy.

Bhutan vs Montserrat
Blog, Our Picks

FIFA, Let’s Make ‘The Other Final’ a Permanent Fixture

We’re taking a trip back to 2002, a period of football that would have today’s ‘nostalgia merchants’ drooling, insisting that the beautiful game was truly beautiful back then and not the soft circus it has supposedly become. Sorry to burst your bubble, but we’re shedding light on a different type of beautiful football. It’s FIFA rank 202 vs 203. “The Other Final” was the brainchild of two Dutchmen who wanted to rival the 2002 World Cup Final. Their idea was simple: pit two of the worst teams on the planet against each other. Bhutan and Montserrat, bottom of the FIFA rankings at the time, were chosen for the occasion. The date was set for the very same day as Brazil vs Germany, 30 June. And it wasn’t just a desperate grab for attention. There was genuine interest, with Premier League referee Steve Bennett even volunteering to officiate. 🇧🇹 Bhutan https://t.co/k8Ofdn3Ixt pic.twitter.com/jy4JWVUjIR — Far Away Football (@FarAwayFootball) July 1, 2025 Johann Kramer and Matthijs de Jongh were the two friends behind this idea. From a room in Amsterdam, they contacted the federations of Bhutan and Montserrat in December of the previous year. Within three weeks, both had said yes. Thimphu was chosen as the venue, a city nestled in the Himalayas where serene silence meets unmatched mountain views. For both sets of players, it was a rare chance to simply play. Both Bhutan and Montserrat were new to FIFA, and they were not exactly at the top of anyone’s friendly list. Before “The Other Final,” Bhutan had lost 3-0 to Nepal, 20-0 to Kuwait, and 11-2 to Yemen. Montserrat had barely played at all. For the tiny Caribbean nation, the journey was even tougher. To reach Bhutan, they traveled from Montserrat to Antigua to Curaçao to Amsterdam to Bangkok to Kolkata and finally to Thimphu. It was a 21,000 km trip during which nine players went down with food poisoning. Most of them had no idea where Bhutan even was. So it is hardly surprising when you read the final scoreline. Bhutan won 4-0, with three goals from Wangyal Dorji and one from Dinesh Chhetri. Bennett, who oversaw the match, later told The Set Pieces: “Bhutan was, by far, the stronger team and far more professional. Montserrat struggled a little bit, they had a few injuries, but the sportsmanship and some of the challenges were, at times, not what you would’ve expected. In all, the game came to a safe conclusion, but Montserrat did find it more difficult than Bhutan.” Still, it was an event to remember. Reports confirmed 20,000 people packed into a stadium that, until then, had only ever hosted archery. VIPs attended, and many in Bhutan watched football live for the very first time and fell in love with the game we all cherish. Some might scoff at two of the world’s weakest nations playing each other. But was it really an insult to football? Hardly. For everyone involved, except perhaps Bennett, it was the first time they received international coverage of any kind. Media giants like BBC and Gazzetta dello Sport traveled all the way to Thimphu to cover it. For Montserrat’s players, it was a complete change of scenery and an experience they would never forget. Why we think FIFA should make this fixture permanent No, we are not talking about an annual Bhutan vs Montserrat fixture. Bhutan have risen steadily in the FIFA rankings since 2002 and now sit at 186. Montserrat are doing even better at 178. Technically, they are no longer the worst teams in the world. What we at Eleventh Minute are advocating for is the concept of “The Other Final.” Let the two lowest-ranked nations face each other on the same day the best do. Not to mock them, but to give them the attention and spotlight they rarely receive. Because let’s be honest, BBC does not fly halfway across the world to cover Anguilla or the British Virgin Islands. But if the event is organized, publicized, and given importance, it suddenly becomes a platform. A stage for players who would otherwise never be seen. And the truth is, the only way they can properly showcase their abilities is by playing against teams closer to their own level. Take San Marino as an example. They only earned their first competitive win in 2024 and are currently ranked 210, bottom of FIFA’s table. Yet every year they enter European qualifiers, facing sides from a continent where the level is far higher. Most of the time, it ends with a 7-0 or 8-0 scoreline. And yes, that is brave and commendable. But surely we can cut them some slack and let them face other smaller nations, at least in friendlies. 𝐁𝐎𝐓𝐓𝐎𝐌 𝐎𝐅 𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐅𝐈𝐅𝐀 𝐑𝐀𝐍𝐊𝐈𝐍𝐆 𝐒𝐀𝐍 𝐌𝐀𝐑𝐈𝐍𝐎 𝐖𝐈𝐍 𝐓𝐇𝐄𝐈𝐑 𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓 𝐎𝐅𝐅𝐈𝐂𝐈𝐀𝐋 𝐈𝐍𝐓𝐄𝐑𝐍𝐀𝐓𝐈𝐎𝐍𝐀𝐋 𝐆𝐀𝐌𝐄 𝐀𝐍𝐃 𝐓𝐇𝐄𝐈𝐑 𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓 𝐌𝐀𝐓𝐂𝐇 𝐈𝐍 𝟐𝟎 𝐘𝐄𝐀𝐑𝐒 🇸🇲🇸🇲🇸🇲🇸🇲🇸🇲🇸🇲 pic.twitter.com/426cI3B83t — 433 (@433) September 5, 2024 Just imagine the scenes After the Bhutan vs Montserrat game, both sets of players celebrated. And that is what it should all be about. They were not playing for World Cup glory like Brazil or Germany were that same day (Brazil won, by the way). They were simply having fun, showing the world that they too love the game and deserve their place in it. Bennett, after the final whistle, recalled: “All the players and VIPs came on the field of play and did this traditional dance. I don’t think I’ll ever see that again. It was very unique to the occasion. It was another side of football. The stadium itself was very different compared to stadiums in Europe. There was a temple on one side where the VIPs sat close to it, and another side where many of the fans gathered. It was a remarkable occasion for many reasons.” That evening, the Bhutanese and Montserratian players sat together to watch the World Cup Final, sharing laughs and creating memories for a lifetime. Football does not get much more wholesome than this. And in

Camp Nou under construction, Barcelona
FC Barcelona, Our Picks

How It Feels to Be a Barcelona Fan With No Home – “We Have to Trust Laporta”

Alright, Barcelona fans, you may have Lamine Yamal, but do you have a stadium? Use this the next time someone claims the 18-year-old prodigy makes Barca the best in the world. It’s a time-sensitive dig, or at least, that’s what we hope so. Because seeing Barcelona away from the Camp Nou for over two years has been tough. As neutrals, watching Culers fill 99,000 seats was always a sight to behold. Since 2023, Barcelona have been forced to play at the Lluis Companys Olympic Stadium in Montjuic, 7km from the Camp Nou. But before the 2025-26 season kicked off, that ground was dropped from the plans, too. Joan Laporta, President of the defending La Liga champions, has promised a Camp Nou return countless times since work began. Each time, though, delays followed, frustrating sponsors and disappointing fans. At Eleventh Minute, where we aim to make every fan’s voice heard, we reached out to one of our earliest followers, Arnesh Ghosh, a Barcelona fan since 2010. Back when the ‘Vuvuzelas’ of the South Africa World Cup blasted through his old TV, he watched what he still calls a Barcelona-dominated Spanish team. A random La Liga weekend, a few weeks later, gave him a glimpse of Messi, scoring alien-like numbers as if it were a joke. For 13 years since, he’s tuned in to hear the iconic ‘Cant de Barça’ echo around the Camp Nou. So, when it was announced in 2022 that the iconic ground would be partially demolished and rebuilt into a futuristic marvel, he was cautiously excited. The last game at the old stadium, on May 28, 2023, against Mallorca, was an emotional watch. “I knew it was going to be the same stadium, but for some reason, it felt like a part of Barcelona was changing forever on that day. I’m not saying I wasn’t happy for the future,” Arnesh said. Renovated stadiums look incredible. Ask Villareal fans about La Ceramica, or Real Madrid fans about the Santiago Bernabeu. They’ll claim it’s the best. But it never quite feels the same. The New Camp Nou (fine, Spotify Camp Nou, just once, for the sponsors) promises plenty. Expanded capacity from 99,000 to 105,000, a full roof, a 360-degree screen, new hospitality lounges, and tourist attractions. Laporta couldn’t wait to show it off. Demolition began in May 2023, with the re-opening set for November 9, 2024, Barcelona’s 125th anniversary. “I knew it was not going to happen; it felt too early,” Arnesh admitted. “But at the same time, we had to believe what Laporta said. It’s not easy to speed up a project as big as this, but they were trying.” Meanwhile, Barcelona was killing it on the field. Lewandowski, Raphinha, and Yamal were scoring goals for fun, while an Inigo Martinez-led backline trolled attackers with a ridiculous offside trap. The 4-0 win at the Bernabeu and seven-goal routings against Valladolid and Valencia brought back the echoes of the Messi era. Except, of course, it was happening at a municipal stadium that never quite felt like home. 🏁 @realmadriden 0-4 @FCBarcelona ⚽️ 54′ Lewandowski ⚽ 56′ Lewandowski ⚽ 77′ Lamine Yamal ⚽️ 84′ Raphinha#ElClásico | @emirates pic.twitter.com/OXJAqgcfCO — Real Madrid C.F. 🇬🇧🇺🇸 (@realmadriden) October 26, 2024 Asked about Montujic, Arnesh said bluntly, “It was good. Not bad, but the emotions weren’t the same. You keep telling yourself that yes, we’re returning to Camp Nou soon.” Laporta understood the frustration, which is probably why he declared the Champions League knockouts would return to the Camp Nou, even if it meant opening the stands partially, like Madrid’s Bernabeu during construction. But once again, deadlines passed. The broken promises piled up. First, the 2025 Joan Gamper Trophy in August was meant to be the reopening. Then, a La Liga match against Valencia. Both ended up being played at the Estadi Johan Cruyff, home to Barca’s women’s team, which has a capacity of 6,000. As things stand, Barca look set to spend the 2025-26 season there, unless Montujic opens its doors again. Right now, scheduling conflicts and an expired deal prevent them from playing at the 55,000-capacity ground. “We have to believe what Laporta tells us,” Arnesh said. And most Barcelona fans do. After Bartomeu’s chaotic reign and humiliations like Eintracht Frankfurt fans ‘hijacking’ seats at the Camp Nou by scalping season tickets in a Europa League fixture, there is finally hope again. Between 2019 and 2024, Barca won the La Liga just once, saw Messi leave for PSG, and endured multiple European exits. To bounce back as Spain’s best team by some margin feels like a revival. “To come from that and become the best team in Spain again was brilliant. Laporta got Flick, sold levers, and got us out of the immediate financial mess. What if he doesn’t deliver the stadium? We’ll get there at one point or another.” pic.twitter.com/sTOb8M2XeB — CampNou Updates Live (@Obras_Camp_nou) September 15, 2025 Rumors are now circling around an October 2 return to the Camp Nou for Barca’s first UCL home fixture of the season against PSG. And footage from inside the ground seems to suggest that there’s good progress, at-least for a chunk of 25-30,000 fans to make their way into the game. Will that be the case, or are we about to see a gargantuan European clash played in front of just a few thousand fans? “I just want us to win,” concluded Arnesh when asked that question.

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