Aston Villa should be considering Ipswich boss Mick McCarthy to lead them in Sky Bet Championship, according to Ian Holloway.McCarthy has a proven track record in the Championship, leading both Sunderland and Wolves to promotion and getting Ipswich into the play-offs last season on one of the smaller budgets in the division.Aston Villa, who have been an ever-present Premier League club before this seasons pending relegation, sacked Remi Garde in March. Mick McCarthy should be on the shortlist for the next Aston Villa job, without a shadow of a doubt, Holloway told Sky Sports. A play-off before the play-offs? We look at the permutations in a thrilling Championship promotion race I think Ipswich will do well to hold onto McCarthy this summer. Someone with his credibility and know-how will be hot property.A big rebuilding job will be required at Villa Park next season on and off the pitch. Villa must go for someone who knows the Championship and have seen it and done it before. Holloway on Villa Their relegation from the Premier League was followed by the immediate resignation of directors David Bernstein and Mervyn King, who were in the middle of a wholesale review of what had gone so desperately wrong this season.Holloway believes in order for Villa to come back stronger they must hire a manager who knows how to negotiate his way through the slog of a Championship season. Villa must go for someone who knows the Championship and have seen it and done it before, Holloway said. Mick McCarthy (L) and Ian Holloway (R) have enjoyed many battles over the years Its going to take someone with real experience to clean up that mess. Its going to take down to earth talking. A straight talking person will need to lead and make the players believe again. That man will need to get the overpaid players who dont care out of the door. It will take someone with great skill to achieve that. Its massive job and someone has a huge job on their hands. Theyll be a long queue of people whod want that job - its a belting gig, but its one hell of a project. Get Sky Sports Alerts Breaking news, line ups and goal alerts from your football club - direct to your mobileAlso See:Villa fixturesVilla statsGet a £10 free bet!LOS ANGELES --?UCLA?defensive coordinator Tom Bradley issued his first public comments since testimony unsealed in July by another former Penn State assistant, Mike McQueary, that alleged Bradley was aware of sexual abuse by Jerry Sandusky at?Penn State?dating to the 1980s.First of all, Ive been deposed, Ive been vetted. Ive issued a statement, said Bradley, a former Penn State assistant coach, following UCLA practice Wednesday. All of that speaks for itself.The previous statement released by his representative, Brett Senior, denied allegations made in testimony from McQueary, who testified that Bradley said he knew of some things about Sandusky dating to the 1980s.At no time did Tom Bradley ever witness any inappropriate behavior, the statement read. Nor did he have any knowledge of alleged incidents in the 80s and 90s. He has consistently testified as such. Any assertions to the contrary are false. When he became aware of the 2001 incident it had already beenn reported to the University administration years earlier.ddddddddddddBradley left Penn State after serving as the interim coach in 2011 and spent the 2014 season as an assistant at West Virginia. He was hired as the defensive coordinator at UCLA before the 2015 season.Before being hired at UCLA, Bradley went through an extensive vetting process, according to UCLA coach Jim Mora.I know this about Tom: He is a man of integrity, Mora told ESPN.com at Pac-12 media days on July 14. Hes been vetted by a number of different people as well as UCLA -- very, very thoroughly. It took us a long time to hire him because our university takes these things very seriously. So we went through the process of vetting his background and his stories and he made a statement and he stands by that statement and I stand by him. I feel comfortable with that. ' ' '