Aston Villa manager Martin O'Neill has confirmed that midfielder Gareth Barry's transfer to Liverpool could still be on.
Villa had hoped the Barry saga was over on Wednesday when Liverpool missed an agreed deadline to make an acceptable offer for the England international.
But after a further meeting with the player and his agent, O'Neill has reluctantly accepted that the player's proposed switch to Anfield could now go ahead.
O'Neill said: 'We had a meeting last Monday with Gareth and his agent at which we all agreed we would have a 5pm deadline on Wednesday and if Liverpool had not proved they had the wherewithal to proceed with the transfer then we would all leave that aside and go on with it.
'I was hoping that would be the case and this was not a matter of Liverpool missing a deadline by 15 minutes, as seems to have been reported.
'Liverpool first showed their interest in signing Gareth Barry almost four months ago, so this is not a case of missing the deadline by 15 minutes - that's simply not true.
'The following morning we were upbeat on the strength of what had happened on Wednesday evening. We were very buoyant and optimistic that everything could come back to normal again.
'That wasn't to be though. On Thursday there was a meeting between Gareth's agent, myself and the player.
'They still felt that even though the deadline had passed they still felt Liverpool were going to come in and do the deal. Obviously I was disappointed to hear that. Gareth's head is a bit all over the place at the moment and they asked for some more time.'
He continued: 'I listened to what they've said and I'll go with it - reluctantly but I'll go with it.
'There will be no deadline and Liverpool have all the time in the world now to sign Gareth Barry. They've got up to the normal window, which is the 31st of this month.'
Barry, 27, had made it clear at the end of last season that he wanted to make the switch to Anfield to experience playing Champions League football and link up with his close friend Steven Gerrard, who was 'desperate' for the move to materialise.
The player was subsequently booed by a section of the Villa support in their pre-season friendly at Walsall but received a standing ovation in their Intertoto Cup match against Odense.
O'Neill had hoped on Wednesday that after Liverpool failed to meet the deadline that the issue was 'closed' but it appears Barry's camp have forced his hand.
The Villa manager has accepted that he does not want a player at the club whose heart is elsewhere and has decided to let the saga come to a conclusion by allowing the transfer to proceed.
'I have a football club to run and I really do want people who want to play for us,' O'Neill said.
'Really it is up to them, Gareth and his agent to sort it out. I've decided this is the only way forward for us really.
'If Liverpool at their end of it all do not come up with the money, that's no-one else's fault but their own.
'I'd be delighted if that was the case and Gareth stayed. But I would doubt that very much. The ball is very much in their court.'