'Having players like Lindelof now more important than ever'published at 12:27 BST
Hannah Gowen
Fan writer

Image source, Getty ImagesFootball has funny ways of surprising you.
On 1 September, at the end of a pretty underwhelming transfer window for Aston Villa, not many would have looked to free transfer Victor Lindelof as a potential star for the season. Among the arrivals of £30m Evann Guessand and high-profile loanees Harvey Elliott and Jadon Sancho, the signing of Lindelof felt more sensible than scintillating.
Cut to the end of March and the Sweden international has done more than make up the defensive numbers. Of the past 14 games he has started, Villa have won 10 of them. His role became critical at the end of 2025 when Pau Torres was sidelined with an injury, filling in to create a solid partnership with Ezri Konsa during what was probably Villa's best spell of the season.
Perhaps we should not be surprised by this. While some of Villa's recruitment has been questionable in recent years, Lindelof possesses many traits of a classic Unai Emery player. A disciplined professional with experience, defensively sound and tactically flexible - the latter of which demonstrated through his brief cameos in defensive midfield this season.
At the same time, stats may not paint the whole picture. More than anything, the eye test has proven Villa's number three to be a far better footballer than many would have anticipated.
The club are entering their most critical stage of the season, with just seven league games to play and the chance of European success still on the table. Having players like Lindelof in the squad is now more important than ever.
Rotation is inevitable but perhaps Victor's name should be on the starting team sheet more often. If nothing else, he has shown that sometimes the dependable early-30s centre-half signed on a free can in fact be a standout signing.
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