Cardiff break most points in a season record with big win.

In my preamble to the seven decades quiz for today’s game with Northampton, I said that a 5-0 City win would mean that, after God knows how many seasons of us struggling to average one goal a game at home, we’d scored half a century of league goals at Cardiff City Stadium in 25/26.

Needless to say, my wish did not come true, but only because I’d discounted the possibility of Northampton scoring – actually, they did manage a goal and it was the best finish of the six in a match we won 5-1!

So, after scoring four in a league game on seven occasions, we exceeded it in our penultimate match of the campaign. Their defeat probably condemns Northampton to a bottom of the table finish and, on this occasion, they looked a side destined to end up twenty fourth out of twenty four – even though they gave us a really tough game at Sixfields back in November when the 3-1 victory margin flattered us somewhat.

Northampton have had a disastrous time of it since Boxing Day – today’s loss was their sixteenth out of their last twenty two League One matches and only one of them has been won.

After a misleadingly positive first five minutes in which Harry Tyrer on his debut for the club was called on to make three saves, two of them good ones, Northampton were like a team looking to be put out of their collective misery for the remaining eighty five minutes..

Our opponents weren’t helped by City being in the mood today after Wednesday’s flat affair with Port Vale – when we went 4-0 up in the fifty fourth minute, I was convinced we were going to get five and a fair few more, but, whereas the substitutions BBM has made around the hour mark have been game changing in a positive way so often, this time our performance declined after them.

That’s not to blame those who came on as the party mood that was present from the start (in contrast to Wednesday) made for an atmosphere which almost demanded self indulgence and, with the match clearly over as a contest, this probably more than any other this season was a time when the players could be self indulgent.

Therefore, there was just a goal from either side in the final thirty five minutes of a match that only had one additional minute tacked on at the end despite there having been eight substitutions made during the second half.

That decision by referee Edward Duckworth was not out of place in a game that was competitive because there were league points at stage, but, for much of the time it had the air of a practice match or a game of attack v defence in training. By ending the match when he did, Mr Duckworth was taking pity on Northampton and I don’t think there were many, if any, City fans who were complaining about his decision.

Yet it didn’t feel like we were heading for such a one sided affair in those opening minutes when Tyrer was given the opportunity to make a good first impression with City fans. 

City lined up with Ronan Kpakio, Will Fish, Dylan Lawlor and Joel Bagan in front of Tyrer, with David Turnbull in the number six role and the Colwill brothers in front of him with Rubin almost playing as a striker at times. After Wednesday’s narrow four man midfield, it was back to wingers today with Ollie Tanner and Chis Willock included as Callum Robinson led the line.

Veteran Sam Hoskins ensured that Tyler’s first save came within seconds of kick off with a well struck half volley from distance which was dealt with efficiently by the keeper. Next, Tyrer tipped over Cameron McGeehan’s twenty yarder and then the keeper did well to block Jon Guthrie’s close range header from the resultant corner.

Up the other end, Willock had already been causing problems and on nine minutes he was able to get by his man and cross to the far post where Tanner took a touch before finishing crisply from twelve yards via a post for his second goal of the season.

This early goal set the tone for the game with the likes of Willock and Rubin Colwill given the time and space to show off their talents to best effect.

Referee Duckworth had an easy game and generally did pretty well, but I thought he was wrong to disallow a goal for a foul on Northampton goalkeeper Lee Burge when it seemed like it was one of his own defenders that made him drop a corner.

It mattered little though as another fluent move down the left gave Bagan enough room to cross to Rubin Colwill and he picked out his brother who was left with a simple finish from five yards out to make it 2-0 on nineteen minutes.

City seemed to be disrupted  by a collision between Bagan and Lawlor which resulted in the usual halfway through the first half injury break/time out. However, striker, Jack Vale, who once scored a hat trick for Wales Under 21s, provided an assist with an errant back pass to Robinson who was stood yards offside and the striker cashed in on the gift to easily beat Burge.

After the break, another slick passing movement unpicked Northampton down their right and when Burge got a slight touch on Bagan’s low cross from the bye line, the ball fell to Tanner who finished well past the covering defenders on the goal line.

Shortly after this, the Colwill brothers made way for Alex Robertson and Yousef Salech and ten minutes later Tanner and Willock were replaced by Omari Kellyman and Isaak Davies who was returning after more than two months out with various injuries. The final substitution saw Turnbull, who I thought was very good playing in more of a quarterback tole than Ryan Wintle does, taken off to give Robert Tankiewicz a few minutes of league action and the sixteen year old was able to play a few impressive passes in the short time he was on.

It was another teenager who scored the game’s fifth goal, but seventeen year old Jake Evans was wearing a pink Northampton shirt, not a blue City one and the Leicester loanee gave Tyrer no chance with a low shot from twenty odd yards.

City’s final goal,had an element of luck to it as Turnbull’s mishit shot fell into the path of Robinson who unselfishly presented Salech with a tap in.This gave City their sixty third league goal (out of a total of eighty six) scored from open play this season – that’s an amazing nineteen more than the next highest in the division with Lincoln somewhere around mid table. There’s no doubting that Lincoln are worthy Champions, but a stat like that encapsulates why, as a neutral, I’d have enjoyed a season watching the team which finished second a lot more than I would have done watching the one that won the league.

Although I’m fairly sure the 1946/47 side would have ended up with the most points if it had been three points for a win throughout the club’s history, as it is, the current side’s ninety one points is one more than Neil Warnock’s 17/18 team and is a club record with three more points still to play for – I’d be happy enough with a draw next weekend at Mansfield which would mean we’d averaged two points a game throughout.

The under 18s also had a four goal winning margin today as Mannie Barton with two, Hayden Allmark, Jack Sykes, Leo Papirnyk also with two all found the net as Huddersfield were routed 6-2 at Leckwith.

I’d assumed all hope of a top two finish, and qualification for the end of season Play Offs had ended with our recent 5-1 loss at Champions Charlton. However, it seems this is not the case. City are in a four way battle with Bournemouth, Brentford and Millwall for second place (I’m assuming here that this table

https://www.premierleague.com/en/tables/u18/u18-professional-development-league/2025-26?round=L_1

is up to date).

City’s last two games are away, with a vital trip to south London to face Millwall in midweek and then we go to Sheffield United, halfway up the Northern section, next weekend.

Unfortunately, the news wasn’t so good for the under 16s as they went down 3-1 at Portsmouth in their age group’s PDL Cup Final with Axel Donczew scoring our goal from the penalty spot.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Northampton Town matches.

On 28 February, Northampton drew 1-1 at home to Peterborough to end a run of three straight losses. At the time they were in the bottom four, but only a couple of points from the team in twentieth place, but the end to their losing run did not save manager Kevin Nolan from the sack and Colin Calderwood, who had been manager of the Cobblers around twenty years ago and has a couple of promotions on his managerial CV, took over as interim manager.

Eight games later and Calderwood is still there, but, with all eight matches played since Nolan’s sacking lost, Northampton will have been down for a fortnight and are four points adrift at the bottom of the table by the time they face us tomorrow.

On the face of it then, sacking Nolan has not worked, but it’s not as straightforward as that. After losing to us at Sixfields on 22 November, Northampton were in seventeenth position, four points above the bottom four, but since then their record reads;

P. 27 W 3 D 6 L 18

More damningly, since Boxing Day, they’ve won just once in twenty one matches with only five of them being drawn.

So, the bigger picture says that really, when Calderwood took over a month and more after the January transfer window closed, the only chance he had was if he could improve about half of his squad as players in a very short period of time with that improvement able to be sustained over a period of at least two months – that’s a talent only the very best in his profession possess.

I don’t watch such podcasts religiously, but I often do catch those which predict the score in the weekend’s upcoming League One fixtures and someone has City winning by 5-0 tomorrow which I’m fairly sure is the biggest predicted winning margin on such a video all season.

I’m not knocking City here, because they had little left to play for on Wednesday and so there was always going to be some sort of drop of from what has become their norm over the course of this season. However, if they go into tomorrow’s game with the same level of intensity as they had against Port Vale, then Northampton could end their losing run at what they would consider to be an unlikely venue.

Whatever the outcome, it’s already clear that, while we’ve not been infallible this season at home, we’ve been on a different planet compared to what had become the norm at Cardiff City Stadium in recent years. The recent dry spell of three goals scored in five games has damaged our record to some extent, but if we were to get that 5-0 win tomorrow, it would mean that we’d finish up with fifty goals scored at Cardiff City Stadium in our twenty three league games.

Anyway, on to the quiz which has seven Northampton related questions, the answers to which will be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. A cursory look at this Scot’s Wikipedia page tells the fairly mundane story of a typical lower league journeyman with the huge majority of bis four hundred plus Football League appearances coming in the lower divisions, but dig a little deeper and you find he was, in fact, a unique footballer! Starting in the First Division as back up to someone who achieved legendary status in an FA Cup Final, he played in Kent and Hampshire before earning a move back to the top flight when Wolves paid what was a club record fee for the selling club at the time for his services. He only got to play the one game in Division One though before returning to the lower leagues to play first for Northampton and then in the capital for the team he played most matches for and the one where his career was ended in freakish, unique, circumstances. Besides that though, he was quite badly injured once after being hit on his knee by a stone thrown by someone in the crowd and, on another occasion, he found what turned out to be a fake hand grenade in the goalmouth he was defending! Can you name the player concerned?

70s. Another scot, this small, nippy forward with a surname which even his mother would say flattered him somewhat, had a so, so record with Northampton in his first period with them when he was a squad member of the outfit which climbed from Division Four to One in the sixties. He really found his feet after moving south to a club which, very unusually for that time, had moved into a newly built ground in the fifties. He became a prolific scorer at his new club and had more than a hundred league goals for them before returning to Northampton after five years. Initially, his goals continued to come at a good rate, but, as they began to dry up, he dropped back, first into midfield and then, interestingly because he was only five foot seven, to central defence. Who am I describing?

80s. During one season in this decade, Northampton had two players who shared a surname which, while being fairly common was hardly a Jones, Smith etc. One of the players concerned was a former shinty player who had played for City and the other one had begun his career at a club much in the news this week, making his first appearance for them at just 16, can you name the two players concerned?

90s. Midfielder who sounds like an unusual alliance between the Antichrist and an Apostle.

00s. No AI masts at Northampton. (3,6)

10s. Currently involved in the race for a Championship Play Off place, in his one full season with Northampton, he scored the quickest goal ever seen at the Sixfields Stadium (twenty one seconds) and received three of six red cards he’s been given in his career – he’s also been booked 111 times, who is he?

20s. The Last Dance meets Different Strokes?

Answers

60s. Chic Brodie started his career off as Bert Trautmann’s back up at Manchester City before signing for Gillingham and then Aldershot. Wolves paid the Shots a club record of £9,000 fee for his services in 1961, but, after playing just the once for them, he left for Northampton a few months later before spending eight years at Brentford. In November 1970, he played at Colchester in a game which was covered by Anglia television and a dog that had strayed on to the pitch ran into his knee as he bent down to pick up the ball. The incident was treated as something of a joke at the time, but Brodie was out injured for months and when he came back, he only played five more games before the decision was made that he had not sufficiently recovered from the injuries caused by the dog and he only ever played in non league football after that.

70s. Billy Best scored 106 Football League goals for Southend United in 226 appearances and either side of that he played for Northampton.

80s. John and David Buchanan – David made his league debut for Leicester as a 16 year old.

90s. Damian Matthew.

00s. Sam Aiston

10s. Matt Crooks, currently of Hull City, had a very eventful time of it in 17/18, his one full season with Northampton.

20s. Jordan Willis.

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