Aston Villa F.C. Under-21s and Academy

The Aston Villa Under-21s, formerly known as Aston Villa Reserves and Aston Villa Under-23s, are the most senior youth development team of Aston Villa and compete in Premier League 2, the Premier League Cup, and the EFL Trophy in the 2023–24 season. The team plays its home games at Aston Villa's training ground, Bodymoor Heath and occasionally Villa Park. Aston Villa also have an academy side that competes in the Under-18 division of the Professional Development League, the U18 Premier League Cup and the FA Youth Cup annually, most recently winning the latter trophy in the 2020-21 season. They also field a youth side in the Birmingham Senior Cup annually.

Aston Villa Under-21
Full nameAston Villa Football Club Under-21s & Academy
Nickname(s)Villans, The Villa, The Lions, The Claret & Blue Army
Short nameVilla, AVFC
Founded21 November 1874; 149 years ago (1874-11-21)[1]
GroundBodymoor Heath Training Ground
Capacity500[2]
Owner(s)Nassef Sawiris
Wesley Edens
ChairmanNassef Sawiris[3]
ManagerJosep Gombau
LeaguePremier League 2
2022–23Premier League 2, Division 2, 5th (play-off semi-finalists)
WebsiteClub website

The team were part of the FA Premier Reserve League since its foundation in 1999 and were winners of the 2011-12 Premier Reserve League South title, the last in that format. The side has been successful in recent decades, as well as becoming national champions in the 2003–04 and 2009–10 seasons, the team also won four out of five Southern Championships between 2007 and 2012, before the format changed to the Professional Development League. The side also won the NextGen Series in 2013, a Europe-wide tournament for elite academies.

Current senior squad players Jacob Ramsey, Tim Iroegbunam, Filip Marschall, Tommi O'Reilly and Omari Kellyman all came through the youth system at the club. Notable former players to have come through the Villa academy include Jack Grealish, Brian Little, Gabriel Agbonlahor, Ciaran Clark, Gary Cahill, Gareth Barry, Thomas Hitzlsperger, Darius Vassell, Marc Albrighton, Andreas Weimann, Brian McClair, and Steven Davis among many others. The U21 team is made up of players under the age of 21, although five over-age outfield players and an over-age goalkeeper may be named in a Premier League 2 match squad, these may include fringe first-team players and senior players recovering from injury.

History edit

Reserve sides of Aston Villa had played unofficial matches since the formation of the club in 1874, while formal competition for a reserve side began in 1892, when Aston Villa Reserves joined the Birmingham & District League.[citation needed] After finishing in the runners-up position twice in the first 2 seasons of the competition, Villa finally won their first trophy in the 1894–95 season, winning 26 out of 30 league games and losing just once all season. Several titles followed after this achievement, including a run of 8 consecutive titles between 1902 and 1910. When Villa finally left the Birmingham & District League in 1915, they had accumulated a total of 12 league titles and 6 runners-up finishes.[citation needed]

During the Second World War, TIME Magazine reported that the Villa reserve team, all captured at Dunkirk, thrashed their captor SS guards.[4] TIME issued an apology for erroneously placing Aston in the city of Liverpool: "TIME hastily restores Aston Villa (soccer) to Birmingham where it belongs".[5]

After that, the reserve team played in the Central League for many years, becoming champions in 1929–30, 1963–64 and 1992–93.

In 1999–2000, the FA Premier Reserve League was set up, Villa were one of the founding members, and were split into the Northern section of the league. Three disappointing seasons followed, however in the 2003–04 season, inspired by brothers Stefan Moore and Luke Moore, Villa eased to their first title. In the two seasons which followed (2004–05 and 2005–06), Villa agonisingly finished both campaigns as runners-up, both times to Manchester United. In the 2006–07 season, for the first time since its introduction, the FA Premier Reserve League excluded Coca-Cola Championship teams from playing in the league, with the 20 senior English Premiership teams parallelling the teams involved in the FA Premier League. This also meant that due to geographical circumstances, Aston Villa Reserves were switched from the Northern Division, to the Southern equivalent, for the first time since the start of the original format in 1999. Villa eventually finished 4th - winning 9 out of their 18 games, with Luke Moore the top goalscorer, with 7. The season saw the impressive development of several youngsters, most notably including Zoltán Stieber, Shane Lowry and Stephen O'Halloran, all of which were rewarded with first-team opportunities in the pre-season fixtures, prior to the 2007–08 season.

Inspired by Swedish striker Tobias Mikaelsson, Aston Villa Reserves clinched the 2007–08 Southern title, their second regional success since the inception of the league in 1999. However, they were beaten 3–0 in the Play-Off Final by Northern champions Liverpool.

In the 2008–09 season, the team went one better by securing their second consecutive Southern title, and then defeating Sunderland to claim their first ever national title, with goals from Nathan Delfouneso, James Collins and Shane Lowry.

Andreas Weimann netted nine goals, to help Villa keep up their trend of securing the Southern title - their third consecutively - in the 2009–10 season. This included a remarkable 15-game unbeaten streak, running from the opening game of the campaign, all the way through to the last game of the season against Portsmouth. However, the club were denied a second consecutive national title, as they were beaten on penalties by Manchester United, after a 3–3 draw at Old Trafford.

The 2010–11 season saw changes to the standard format of the league. Only 16 clubs competed, which meant a split between the top heavy Northern league. Undoubtedly the highlight of the season, was a 10–1 home victory over Arsenal at the Greene King Stadium, en route to finishing third in the league.

Following changes arrived in the 2011–12 season. Three leagues were abolished, returning to two, whilst each team played the teams in their own league home and away. They also played each team in the regional league once, with home and away games split evenly. More success followed however, as Villa picked up another Southern title, with Andreas Weimann scoring nine times during the course of the season. It was a case of deja vu however, as they were again beaten on penalties by Manchester United at Old Trafford.

The Premier Reserve League was abolished during the summer of 2012, to make way for the Professional Development League 1. Aston Villa were one of 22 clubs to take part in the inaugural season, participating in Group 2 of the competition.

During the 13-year tenure of the original Reserve system, Aston Villa were the second most successful club - behind Manchester United - with five regional titles and one national title. The youth sides currently play their home matches at Villa Park and Bodymoor Heath. From 2019, having been promoted back to the Premier League, Aston Villa began fielding an under-21 side in the EFL Trophy against League One and League Two opposition.

In January 2021, after a COVID-19 outbreak in the first team, the youth team was used for a first team game against Liverpool in the FA cup 3rd round.[6]

After a successful 2022–23 season with the senior side, Jacob Ramsey was recognised by the Premier League with the 2022/23 Premier League Academy Graduate award.[7]

Aston Villa Under-21s edit

Squad edit

As of 8 September 2023. Players under 21 who have made their senior league debut, or are named in the official senior squad list, are listed in the senior squad.[8]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
64 GK   ENG James Wright
52 DF   NED Lamare Bogarde
61 DF   ENG Frankie Ealing
29 DF   ENG Kaine Kesler Hayden
69 DF   ENG Finley Munroe
60 DF   IRL Aaron O'Reilly
50 DF   NED Sil Swinkels
62 MF   ENG Chisom Afoka
74 MF   ENG Todd Alcock
67 MF   ENG Mikell Barnes
No. Pos. Nation Player
57 MF   BER Ajani Burchall
53 MF   ENG Taylor-Jay Hart
71 MF   ENG Omari Kellyman
70 MF   ENG Kyrie Pierre
72 MF   ENG Kadan Young
80 FW   ENG Charlie Lutz
68 FW   ENG Kobei Moore
66 FW   ENG Travis Patterson
TBC GK   ESP Lander Emery
TBC FW   EGY Omar Khedr

Out on loan edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
48 GK   POL Oliwier Zych (at Puszcza Niepołomice until 30 June 2024)
45 DF   ENG Ben Chrisene (at Blackburn Rovers until 30 June 2024)
59 DF   ENG Josh Feeney (at Real Unión until 30 June 2024)
63 DF   SCO Kerr Smith (at St Johnstone until 30 June 2024)
56 DF   ENG Sebastian Revan (at Rotherham United until 30 June 2024)
58 MF   ENG Tommi O'Reilly (at Real Unión until 30 June 2024)
46 MF   ENG Rico Richards (at Stockport County until 30 June 2024)
51 MF   ENG Edward Rowe (at Gloucester City until 30 June 2024)
35 FW   ENG Louie Barry (at Stockport County until 30 June 2024)

Reserve, U21 & U23 Honours edit

Birmingham & District League

  • Winners:
    • 1894/95, 1895/96, 1899/1900, 1902/03, 1903/04, 1904/05, 1905/06, 1906/07, 1907/08, 1908/09, 1909/10, 1911/12,[9] 1959-60 (Division Two).[10]
  • Runners-Up:
    • 1892/93, 1893/94, 1897/98, 1898/99, 1900/01, 1910/11.

Birmingham Senior Cup

  • Winners:
    • 1879/80, 1881/82, 1882/83, 1883/84, 1884/85, 1887/88, 1888/89, 1889/90, 1890/91, 1895/96, 1898/99, 1902/03, 1903/04, 1905/06, 1907/08, 1908/09, 1909/10, 1911/12, 1984/85.
  • Runners-Up:
    • 1875/76, 1880/81, 1892/93, 1894/95, 1900/01, 1901/02, 1923/24, 1982/83, 1994/95, 1995/96.

FA Premier Reserve League North

  • Winners:
    • 2003/04.
  • Runners-Up:
    • 2004/05, 2005/06.

FA Premier Reserve League South

  • Winners:
    • 2007/08, 2008/09, 2009/10, 2011/12

FA Premier League Cup

FA Premier Reserve League

  • Winners:
    • 2008/09.
  • Runners-Up:
    • 2007/08, 2009/10, 2011/12.

Aston Villa Academy edit

Aston Villa Academy is the youth development side of Premier League team Aston Villa, it fields an under-18s team in the U18 Professional Development League 1 (South Division). Until 2012 the team competed in Group B of the now defunct FA Premier Academy League.[citation needed]

In the 2009/10 season Villa clinched top spot in Group B of the Premier Academy League, impressively notching the most wins (22), most points (68) and most goals (84) of all 41 clubs involved. Villa's youngsters were drawn against Group A winners Arsenal in the semi-final, which was won via a single strike from [Leon Naylor]. This subsequently meant a final against FA Youth Cup winners Manchester City, which was comprehensively won 2–0, with goals from James Collins and Chris Herd. The top scorers for the season were English striker [Leon Naylor](footballer born 1991)|[28]Austrian striker Andreas Weimann (16) and English striker Nathan Delfouneso (15).The 2008/09 season was less fruitful for Villa's youngsters, as they finished 3rd in Group B, and were knocked out of the FA Youth Cup at the first hurdle, losing in the Third Round to eventual champions Arsenal.[citation needed]

Villa's youth team has a strong history in the FA Youth Cup with wins in 1972, 1980, 2002 and 2021. Villa also reached the semi-finals of the FA Youth Cup in 2004, eventually being knocked out by eventual runners-up Chelsea.[citation needed]

The team train at Bodymoor Heath in North Warwickshire and also play their home matches there on weekends.

Invitational Tournaments edit

Hong Kong Soccer Sevens edit

The annual invitational seven-a-side Hong Kong Soccer Sevens tournament brings together academy sides from around the world, and has brought notable success to Aston Villa's academy between since 1999. Villa have won the main tournament seven times, more than any other team.

Villa won the third HK Soccer Sevens tournament in 2002, defeating Arsenal in the final, they went on to defend their title in 2004 (as the 2003 competition was cancelled due to the SARS outbreak), inspired by Stephen Cooke and Steven Foley they clinched the trophy in the final against Manchester United. Striker Gabriel Agbonlahor captained Villa to the semi-final in 2006 - losing to the eventual winners Urawa Red Diamonds - and also received the 'Player of the Tournament' accolade. Villa won the competition again in May 2010, beating Central Coast Mariners of Australia in the final.[11] In the in 2019 tournament, Villa won the secondary 'plate' trophy; players including Akos Onodi, Lewis Brunt and Cameron Archer featured.[12] After a four year hiatus due to COVID-19 and the Hong Kong protests the tournament returned in May 2023. At the tournament Villa extended their record of victories to seven, defeating Tai Po FC in the final, Omari Kellyman was named player of the tournament and was also topscorer with five goals overall.[13]

NextGen Series edit

The Aston Villa Academy played in both seasons of the now defunct NextGen Series, a tournament for Europe's elite football academies between 2011 and 2013. The team was composed of under-18s with up to three under-19s in each matchday squad. Having made the quarter-finals in the 2011-12 Series, the academy side captained by Samir Carruthers won the final of the 2012-13 tournament on 1 April 2013 beating Chelsea 2–0, at the Stadio Giuseppe Sinigaglia, in Como, Italy.[14]

CEE Cup edit

Aston Villa sent an under-19 side to the invitational CEE Cup in the Czech Republic for the first time in 2022, competing against the youth sides of elite sides from around the world including Palmeiras, Tigres UANL and Dynamo Kiev.[15] Villa narrowly lost all three of their matches, finishing 6th in the overall rankings, Kerr Smith and Todd Alcock scored for Villa during the competition.[16]

Academy squad edit

As of 9 January 2024.[17] Players not listed in the official squad are referenced individually, some players under-18 have been promoted to the under-21 and senior sides.

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   ENG Alex Hammond
GK   ENG Sam Lewis
78 GK   ENG Sam Proctor
54 DF   ENG Jayden Barber
DF   ENG Max Asante-Boakye
DF   ENG Archie Duerden
79 DF   WAL Thierry Katsukunya
DF   ENG Jack McDowell
DF   ENG Ashton McWilliams
DF   NIR Calum Moreland
81 DF   ENG Nile Timson
73 DF   ENG Triston Rowe
77 MF   SCO Aidan Borland
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   ENG George Hemmings [18]
MF   ENG TJ Carroll
MF   NIR Cole Brannigan
MF   ENG I-lani Edwards
MF   ENG Max Lott
80 MF   ENG Luka Lynch
MF   ENG Dylan Mitchell
MF   ENG Trai-Varn Mulley
MF   ENG Abube Onuchukwu
MF   SCO Ewan Simpson
75 FW   ENG Ben Broggio
76 FW   ENG Charlie Pavey
65 FW   SCO Rory Wilson

Academy honours edit

FA Youth Cup

NextGen Series

FA Premier Academy League U17s

  • Winners:
    • 2003–04

FA Premier Academy League U18s: Group B

  • Winners:
    • 2007–08
    • 2010–11

FA Premier Academy League U18s: Play-Offs

  • Winners:
    • 2007–08
  • Runners-Up:
    • 2007

Premier League Under-16 National Tournament

HKFC International Soccer Sevens

  • Main Tournament Winners:
  • Plate Winners

Non-playing staff edit

Corporate hierarchy edit

Source:[20]
Position Name
Executive Chairman Nassef Sawiris
Co-chairman Wes Edens
President of Business Operations Chris Heck[21][22]
President of Football Operations Monchi[23]

Management hierarchy edit

Position Name
Global Director of Football Development

and International Academies

Matthew Kidson[24]
Academy Manager Mark Harrison
Head of Coach Development Ryan Maye
Assistant Academy Manager Sean Verity
Assistant Head of Coach Development
Emerging Talent Programme Manager Tony Carss[25]
Under-21 Head Coach Josep Gombau[25]
Under-21 Coach Peter Gilbert
Under-21 Coach Dan Green
Under-21 Goalkeeping Coach Mark Naylor
Under-21 Sport Scientist Dan Lothian
Under-21 Physiotherapist Jon Whitney
Under-21 Performance Analyst Adam McGuinness
Under-18 Lead Coach Gerard Nash
Under-18 Professional Development Coach Adem Atay
Under-18 Professional Development Coach Karl Hopper
Under-18 Goalkeeping Coach Michael Pearce
Under-18 Sport Scientist Peter Sharp
Under-18 Physiotherapist Cian McCaffrey
Under-18 Performance Analyst Phil Truran
Academy Doctor Dr M Sahni and Dr F Hassan
Head of Sports Medicine Jazz Sodhi

Notable Academy graduates edit

The following players have all been members of the Aston Villa academy before their professional debut and have either made at least one appearance for the Villa first team in professional competition, have gone on to play in a fully professional league, or have represented their national team. Players in bold are still contracted to the club.

2020s edit

Player DOB Position First-Team Debut First-Team Appearances First-Team Goals Current Team
  Tommi O'Reilly 15 December 2003 Midfielder 14 December 2023 (vs Zrinjski Mostar) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Filip Marschall 24 April 2003 Goalkeeper 14 December 2023 (vs Zrinjski Mostar) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Omari Kellyman 25 September 2005 Forward 31 August 2023 (vs Hibernian) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Tim Iroegbunam 30 June 2003 Midfielder 26 February 2022 (vs Brighton & Hove Albion) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Lewis Brunt 6 November 2000 Defender 8 January 2022 (FA Cup for Leicester City) 0 0 Leicester City
  Sebastian Revan 14 July 2003 Defender 31 August 2021 (National League for Grimsby Town) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Aaron Ramsey 21 January 2003 Midfielder 24 August 2021 (vs Barrow) 4 1 Burnley
  Jaden Philogene 8 February 2002 Midfielder 19 May 2021 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) 6 0 Hull City
  Carney Chukwuemeka 20 October 2003 Midfielder 19 May 2021 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) 15 0 Chelsea
  Tyreik Wright 22 September 2001 Midfielder 23 January 2021 (League Two with Walsall) 5 0 Plymouth Argyle
  Mungo Bridge 12 September 2000 Defender 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0 Daventry Town
  Ákos Onódi 2 September 2001 Goalkeeper 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0   Akritas Chlorakas
  Dominic Revan 19 September 2000 Defender 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0 Barnet
  Jake Walker 3 November 2000 Defender 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0   Newtown
  Callum Rowe 2 September 1999 Defender 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0 Stourbridge
  Harrison Sohna 1 July 2002 Midfielder 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0 Unattached
  Louie Barry 21 June 2003 Forward 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Kaine Kesler-Hayden 23 October 2002 Defender 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Arjan Raikhy 20 October 2002 Midfielder 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0 Leicester City
  Brad Young 6 January 2003 Forward 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0   The New Saints
  Mamadou Sylla 12 August 2002 Midfielder 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 1 0   Almería
  Lamare Bogarde 5 January 2004 Midfielder 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Hayden Lindley 2 September 2002 Midfielder 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) 2 0 Darlington
  Sil Swinkels 6 January 2004 Defender 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Edward Rowe 17 October 2003 Midfielder 8 January 2021 (vs Liverpool) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Aaron Pressley 7 November 2001 Forward 1 December 2020 (Championship with Brentford) 0 0 Stevenage
  Viktor Johansson 14 September 1998 Goalkeeper 7 November 2020 (Championship with Rotherham United) 0 0 Rotherham United
  Dimitri Sea 20 August 2001 Defender 3 November 2020 (League Two with Barrow) 0 0 Unattached
  Viljami Sinisalo 11 October 2001 Goalkeeper 6 October 2020 (Scottish Championship with Ayr United) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Indiana Vassilev 16 February 2001 Forward 4 January 2020 (vs Fulham) 8 1   St. Louis City


2010s edit

Player DOB Position First-Team Debut First-Team Appearances First-Team Goals Current Team
  Cameron Archer 21 July 2001 Forward 27 August 2019 (vs Crewe Alexandra) 14 4 Sheffield United
  Harvey Knibbs 26 April 1999 Forward 13 August 2019 (EFL Cup for Cambridge United) 0 0 Reading
  Osagi Bascome 17 April 1998 Forward 30 March 2019 (National League North with Darlington) 0 0 Deceased, 18 December 2021.[26]
  Jacob Ramsey 28 May 2001 Midfielder 19 February 2019 (vs West Bromwich Albion) Ongoing Ongoing Aston Villa
  Kelsey Mooney 5 February 1999 Forward 1 September 2018 (League Two with Cheltenham Town) 0 0 Boston United
  Matija Sarkic 23 July 1997 Goalkeeper 24 October 2017 (EFL Trophy with Wigan Athletic) 0 0 Millwall
  Mitch Clark 13 March 1999 Defender 22 August 2017 (vs Wigan Athletic) 1 0 Port Vale
  Easah Suliman 26 January 1998 Defender 22 August 2017 (vs Wigan Athletic) 3 0   Sumgayit & Pakistan
  Jake Doyle-Hayes 30 December 1998 Midfielder 22 August 2017 (vs Wigan Athletic) 3 0   Hibernian
  Callum O'Hare 1 May 1998 Midfielder 9 August 2017 (vs Colchester United) 9 0 Coventry City
  Corey Blackett-Taylor 23 September 1997 Midfielder 7 March 2017 (vs Huddersfield Town) 2 0 Charlton Athletic
  Keinan Davis 13 February 1998 Forward 8 January 2017 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) 87 7   Udinese
  Jordan Lyden 30 January 1996 Midfielder 24 September 2016 (League Two with Stevenage) 8 0 Unattached
  Henry Cowans 6 September 1995 Midfielder 31 August 2016 (EFL Trophy with Stevenage) 0 0   Newtown
  Niall Mason 10 January 1997 Defender 6 August 2016 (League Two with Doncaster Rovers) 0 0   Al Shahaniya
  Kevin Toner 18 July 1996 Defender 23 April 2016 (vs Southampton) 4 0   La Nucía
  Jerell Sellars 11 December 1995 Forward 2 April 2016 (League Two with Wycombe Wanderers) 0 0 Redditch United
  Andre Green 26 July 1998 Forward 13 March 2016 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) 48 2 Rotherham United
  Harry McKirdy 29 March 1997 Forward 9 January 2016 (vs Wycombe Wanderers) 6 0   Hibernian
  Riccardo Calder 26 January 1996 Midfielder 12 September 2015 (Scottish Premiership with Dundee) 0 0 Brackley Town
  Daniel Crowley 3 August 1997 Midfielder 9 August 2015 (League One with Barnsley) 0 0 Notts County
  Lewis Kinsella 2 February 1994 Defender 28 March 2015 (League Two with Luton Town) 0 0 Maidenhead United
  Rushian Hepburn-Murphy 24 August 1998 Forward 14 March 2015 (vs Sunderland) 17 0 Swindon Town
  András Stieber 8 October 1991 Midfielder 27 September 2014 (Nemzeti Bajnokság I with Győri ETO) 0 0   FC Andau
  Janoi Donacien 3 November 1993 Defender 30 August 2014 (League Two with Tranmere Rovers) 0 0 Ipswich Town & Saint Lucia
  Jack Grealish 10 September 1995 Midfielder 7 May 2014 (vs Manchester City) 212 33 Manchester City & England
  Benjamin Siegrist 31 January 1992 Goalkeeper 26 March 2014 (Conference Premier with Cambridge United) 0 0   Celtic
  Michael Drennan 2 September 1994 Forward 18 January 2014 (League One with Carlisle United) 0 0 Unattached
  Jordan Graham 5 March 1995 Midfielder 7 December 2013 (Championship with Ipswich Town) 0 0 Leyton Orient
  Umit Eminoglu 14 September 1994 Midfielder 25 September 2013 (Turkish Cup with Gençlerbirliği) 0 0 Retired
  Callum Robinson 2 February 1995 Forward 24 September 2013 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) 5 0   Cardiff City
  Reece Caira 7 January 1993 Defender 27 December 2012 (A-League with Western Sydney Wanderers) 0 0   Berkeley Vale Wombats
  Derrick Williams 17 January 1993 Defender 1 December 2012 (vs QPR) 1 0   D.C. United
  Daniel Johnson 8 October 1992 Midfielder 23 October 2012 (League One with Yeovil Town) 0 0 Stoke City & Jamaica
  Graham Burke 21 September 1993 Forward 28 August 2012 (vs Tranmere Rovers) 0 0   Shamrock Rovers & Republic of Ireland
  Samir Carruthers 4 April 1993 Midfielder 7 April 2012 (vs Liverpool) 3 0 Chelmsford City
  Gary Gardner 29 June 1992 Midfielder 31 December 2011 (vs Chelsea) 33 1 Birmingham City
  Nathan Baker 23 April 1991 Defender 25 January 2011 (vs Wigan Athletic) 122 1 Retired
  Chris Herd 4 April 1989 Midfielder 13 November 2010 (vs Manchester United) 42 2 Retired
  Jonathan Hogg 6 December 1988 Midfielder 13 November 2010 (vs Manchester United) 7 0 Huddersfield Town
  Harry Forrester 2 January 1991 Midfielder 11 September 2010 (Scottish Premier League with Kilmarnock) 0 0 Retired
  Eric Lichaj 17 November 1988 Defender 19 August 2010 (vs Rapid Vienna) 42 2 Retired
  Andreas Weimann 5 August 1991 Forward 14 August 2010 (vs West Ham United) 113 17 Bristol City & Austria

2000s edit

Player DOB Position First-Team Debut First-Team Appearances First-Team Goals Current Team
  James Collins 1 December 1990 Forward 24 October 2009 (League Two with Darlington F.C.) 0 0 Derby County
  Ciaran Clark 26 September 1989 Defender 30 August 2009 (vs Fulham) 159 10 Unattached & Republic of Ireland
  Shane Lowry 12 June 1989 Defender 20 August 2009 (vs Rapid Vienna) 3 0   Johor Darul Ta'zim
  Marc Albrighton 18 November 1989 Midfielder 26 February 2009 (vs CSKA Moscow) 101 9 Leicester City
  Barry Bannan 1 December 1989 Midfielder 17 December 2008 (vs Hamburger SV) 83 2 Sheffield Wednesday & Scotland
  Nathan Delfouneso 2 February 1991 Forward 14 August 2008 (vs FH) 50 9 AFC Fylde
  Tobias Mikaelsson 17 November 1988 Forward 19 January 2008 (League One with Port Vale) 0 0   Kongahälla
  Bobby Olejnik 26 November 1986 Goalkeeper 24 November 2007 (Scottish Premier League with Falkirk) 0 0 Retired
  Zoltán Stieber 16 October 1988 Midfielder 24 November 2007 (League Two with Yeovil Town F.C.) 0 0   MTK Budapest & Hungary
  Daniel Sturridge 1 September 1989 Forward 3 February 2007 (Premier League with Manchester City) 0 0 Unattached & England
  Stephen O'Halloran 29 November 1987 Defender 31 October 2006 (League Two with Wycombe Wanderers) 0 0 Retired
  Isaiah Osbourne 15 November 1987 Midfielder 21 October 2006 (vs Fulham) 30 0 Nuneaton Borough
  Gary Cahill 19 December 1985 Defender 1 April 2006 (vs Arsenal) 31 1 Retired
  Gabriel Agbonlahor 13 October 1986 Forward 18 March 2006 (vs Everton) 391 86 Retired
  Jamie Ward 12 May 1986 Forward 7 March 2006 (League Two with Stockport County F.C.) 0 0 Unattached & Northern Ireland
  Craig Gardner 25 November 1986 Midfielder 26 December 2005 (vs Everton) 80 6 Retired
  Steven Davis 1 January 1985 Midfielder 18 September 2004 (vs Norwich City) 102 9   Rangers & Northern Ireland
  James O'Connor 25 November 1986 Defender 4 September 2004 (League One with Port Vale F.C.) 0 0 Retired
  Wayne Henderson 16 September 1983 Goalkeeper 13 March 2004 (Conference Premier with Tamworth F.C.) 0 0 Retired
  Luke Moore 13 February 1986 Forward 22 February 2004 (vs Birmingham City) 98 14 Retired
  Peter Whittingham 8 September 1984 Midfielder 23 April 2003 (vs Newcastle United) 66 2 Deceased, 19 March 2020
  Liam Ridgewell 21 July 1984 Defender 4 January 2003 (vs Blackburn Rovers) 93 7 Retired
  Rob Edwards 25 December 1982 Defender 28 December 2002 (vs Middlesbrough) 9 0 Retired
  Boaz Myhill 9 November 1982 Goalkeeper 30 November 2002 (Division One with Bradford City F.C.) 0 0 Retired
  Stefan Moore 28 September 1983 Forward 11 September 2002 (vs Charlton Athletic) 30 2 Retired
  Thomas Hitzlsperger 5 April 1982 Midfielder 13 January 2001 (vs Liverpool) 114 12 Retired
  Stephen Cooke 15 February 1982 Midfielder 2 August 2000 (vs Celta de Vigo) 4 0 Retired
  Jonathan Bewers 10 September 1982 Defender 15 April 2000 (vs Tottenham Hotspur) 1 0 Retired

1990s edit

Player DOB Position First-Team Debut First-Team Appearances First-Team Goals Current Team
  Aaron Lescott 2 December 1978 Defender 2 January 1999 (vs Hull City) 1 0 Retired
  Adam Rachel 10 December 1976 Goalkeeper 26 December 1998 (vs Blackburn Rovers) 1 0 Retired
  Tommy Jaszczun 16 September 1977 Defender 28 October 1998 (vs Chelsea) 1 0 Retired
  Darius Vassell 13 June 1980 Forward 23 August 1998 (vs Middlesbrough) 201 45 Retired
  Gareth Barry 23 February 1981 Midfielder 2 May 1998 (vs Sheffield Wednesday) 441 52 Retired
  Darren Byfield 29 September 1979 Forward 28 December 1997 (vs Leeds United) 10 0 Retired
  Richard Walker 8 November 1977 Forward 28 December 1997 (vs Leeds United) 10 2 Retired
  Lee Hendrie 18 May 1977 Midfielder 23 December 1995 (vs Queens Park Rangers) 308 32 Retired
  Gareth Farrelly 28 August 1975 Midfielder 20 September 1995 (vs Peterborough United) 8 0 Retired
  Riccardo Scimeca 13 June 1975 Defender 19 August 1995 (vs Manchester United) 88 2 Retired

References edit

  1. ^ "Aston Villa Football Club information". BBC Sport. 1 January 2010. Archived from the original on 22 June 2007. Retrieved 26 June 2007.
  2. ^ Preece, Ashley (9 December 2019). "The new Aston Villa training ground complex giving fans their fix". BirminghamLive. Retrieved 20 May 2022.
  3. ^ "Aston Villa: Wes Edens & Nassef Sawiris to make 'significant investment' in club". BBC Sport. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  4. ^ Game Called. TIME Magazine, 0040781X, 1/13/1941, Vol. 37, Issue 2
  5. ^ LETTERS. TIME Magazine, 0040781X, 2/10/1941, Vol. 37, Issue 6
  6. ^ "Louie Barry: Aston Villa teenager revels in scoring against Liverpool". BBC Sport. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  7. ^ "Jacob Ramsey wins Premier League Academy Graduate Award". Aston Villa Football Club. 23 May 2023. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  8. ^ "Under 21 Squad". Aston Villa F.C. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  9. ^ Robinson, Michael. Non-League Football Tables 1889–2005. pp. 96–102.
  10. ^ Robinson, Michael. Non-League Football Tables 1889–2005. pp. 103–105.
  11. ^ "Jones: I'll never forget Gabby's performances in Hong Kong Sevens". Aston Villa F.C. Official Website. June 2012. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  12. ^ "2019 Plate Winners - Aston Villa". Facebook.
  13. ^ "English Premier League still rules Hong Kong as Aston Villa win Soccer Sevens". South China Morning Post. 28 May 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2023.
  14. ^ "Chelsea 0-2 Aston Villa | NextGen Series final match report". TheGuardian.com. April 2013.
  15. ^ "CEE Cup 2022: The Ultimate Guide". Goal.com. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  16. ^ "Match schedule CEE Cup 2022". CEE Cup. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  17. ^ "Under-18 Squad". Aston Villa F.C. Retrieved 22 January 2024.
  18. ^ Seelochan, Isaac (9 January 2024). "Forest transfer exit as Aston Villa confirm academy signing". Nottinghamshire Live. Retrieved 22 January 2024.
  19. ^ "Aston Villa win PL Under-16 National Tournament". www.premierleague.com. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  20. ^ "Who's who". Aston Villa F.C. Archived from the original on 15 July 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
  21. ^ "V Sports and Aston Villa announce Chris Heck appointment". Aston Villa Football Club. 17 May 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  22. ^ Evans, Gregg (12 June 2023). "Villa CEO Purslow leaves club". The Athletic. Retrieved 12 June 2023.
  23. ^ "Monchi appointed President of Football Operations". Aston Villa Football Club. 16 June 2023. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  24. ^ "Youth Development and International Academies update". Aston Villa Football Club. 9 October 2023. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  25. ^ a b "Aston Villa appoint Inigo Idiakez as U21s coach". Aston Villa Football Club. 20 July 2023. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  26. ^ Thompson, Colin (20 December 2021). "Sporting community in pain after Osagi Bascome killing". www.royalgazette.com. Retrieved 27 February 2023.