Dango Ouattara sees off Aston Villa as Brentford give Keith Andrews first win

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Two concerned sets of fans descended on west London on Saturday after what they had witnessed from their respective teams on the opening day of the season. Now there is one.

Never before had Brentford played a competitive match at the Gtech Community Stadium without Thomas Frank at the helm, and there are bound to be doubts over his unlikely successor Keith Andrews. This lion-hearted win over European-standard opposition deserves to allay a fair portion of them.

Any neutral may well have identified Aston Villa as the better footballing team for large periods of the match. The visitors dominated possession by a considerable margin (76% to 24%), and the game was overwhelmingly played to their tune. But the best team does not necessarily win, and Brentford were fully deserving of all three points, which came courtesy of club-record signing Dango Ouattara on his debut. Indeed, it could – and perhaps should – have been more comfortable were it not for a debatable disallowed goal.

Villa’s problems are evident. Unai Emery has admitted there is “still work to do” in the transfer window and this defeat will only have strengthened his desperation to bolster his attacking ranks.

How he will have wished he had any of Jacob Ramsey, Leon Bailey, Marcus Rashford or Marco Asensio to bring on. All four have departed since the end of last season, and no amount of huff or puff came vaguely close to blowing Brentford’s defence down.

For all that Villa looked worryingly blunt, Brentford’s well-drilled performance was a testament to Andrews, a man taking the first baby steps of his managerial career.

Convention suggests his team may find themselves in a relegation scrap after losing their inspirational manager, captain and best player, while Yoane Wissa continues to be excluded from the squad as he does all he can to force a move away.

View image in fullscreen Jordan Henderson dominated in midfield on his first start for Brentford. Photograph: Rob Newell/CameraSport/Getty Images

A pitiful opening-day defeat at Nottingham Forest adhered to that narrative, but four changes to the starting XI yielded significant improvement. If this was what Brentford will look like this season then they should be all right.

Battling for everything on his first start, there is an unmistakable sense that Jordan Henderson will be instrumental to all they do, hurrying, harrying and bellowing his way to midfield dominance. Add to that the hugely influential attacking duo of Mikkel Damsgaard, absent from their first game for the birth of his child, and debutant Ouattara. Both had the ball in the net in the opening half, albeit only one goal stood.

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Ouattara’s opener was route-one perfection, started from the boot of Caoimhín Kelleher, helped on by Igor Thiago’s halfway-line header, and completed by the former Bournemouth man after beating Pau Torres in a foot race. The returning Emi Martínez managed to keep out his first effort, but the ball ricocheted off Matty Cash and back into Ouattara’s path to slot home at the second attempt.

Damsgaard was denied what would have been a wonderful goal just before half-time, when his thunderous finish into the roof of the net from 15 yards was ruled out for a foul on a flapping Martínez – under minimal pressure from Nathan Collins – in the buildup.

Having mustered just three shots in their drab goalless draw with Newcastle last weekend, Villa did at least threaten more here, at least numerically, with 17 attempts. Brentford retreated deeper with each passing minute, but Kelleher was scarcely troubled. Two shots on target from the visitors told the story.

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