Posts Tagged ‘Aaron Wildig’

Time to bite the bullet and start whacking it long to Jay?

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

I’ll say straight away that I enjoyed last night’s match, I thought it was an absorbing battle between one team that, despite it’s injury and suspension problems, were still able to field a high quality side by Championship standards and another team that, because of injury and general fatigue problems, were only able to field a side which, despite having some high quality players in it’s ranks, would probably finish nearer the bottom than the top of the league if the season was starting today.

Through a combination of grit, spirit, hard work and no little skill, the weaker team were able to get a draw from the match despite long periods of territorial domination by their opponents in the first half especially and this is why I see last night as being very much a case of a point gained by City rather than two lost.

Others will disagree with that view though. For example, the anonymous hack who penned this match report was not very impressed it seems and there were plenty sat around by me last night who weren’t too enamoured with what they were seeing as well, but I would say that, in terms of Cardiff City at least, they are not recognising the new reality at the club – we are currently a pretty limited side and have to cut our cloth accordingly.

I have been setting my sights as to what the current squad can achieve in the short term and for the rest of the season lower than they had been before we were hit by the illness outbreak which went through the club last month. Now, with a number of senior squad members out with injuries that look like keeping them out for months rather than weeks, the sides we have been putting out over the past six weeks or so have had a threadbare look to them in the central midfield area in particular. However, as far as I am concerned at least, a group of players which I had been very critical of previously for their lack of “bottle” have responded to the on and off field problems at the club in marvellous style .

When you look at the respective teams last night, West Brom looked stronger to me at full back, centreback, central midfield and in goal while I wouldn’t have swapped their wide midfield players (especially while Whittingham was on) or our strikers for theirs. Our front players, consisting of four out of the five of Burke, Whittingham, McCormack, Bothroyd and Chopra, are as good as, if not better than, virtually any combination they will face in the League this season and the same would more or less apply to David Marshall in goal, but in other areas, most of our opponents will be our equals or betters.

Nowhere is this more true than in central midfield. I am sorry if I sound like a broken record here but we were not too convincing in that area when we had the likes of Ledley, McPhail, and Scimeca available, now, though I think it is inevitable that we are going to see spells of dominance of the ball by the opposition of the type that West Brom enjoyed at times in virtually every game we play. This isn’t helped of course when the opposition play three in that area compared to our two and, apart from the first ten minutes or so I thought West Brom enjoyed almost total domination in that department before the break.

Having said that, I think it would be harsh to be too critical of Gavin Rae and Aaron Wildig in particular – for a start, I would question quite how fit they both are. For me, although Rae did alright when he was defending, he struggled when he tried to expand on that by trying to run forward with the ball, shoot or try more ambitious passes. As for Wildig, I thought he made an excellent start to the game and, in the absence of Steve McPhail and Joe Ledley, looks our best option in central midfield as far as vision and range of passing is concerned, but at the moment I would say his lack of body strength is often exposed as he struggles to make an impact in the physical aspects of the game – if, as hopefully he will, Wildig “fills out” as he continues to grow over the next few years then I think he is showing that he has the basic ability to be a good player at Championship level and, possibly, higher.

With Dave Jones pointing out that Darcy Blake, who I thought did well when he came on last night, offers much the same as Rae does and Soloman Taiwo, apparently, not trusted enough yet by our manager, we don’t have the players to offer anything different in central midfield to what we saw last night until McPhail returns so, increasingly, I find myself thinking that we will have to play to our current strengths by giving up any pretence of a passing game and concentrate on getting the ball forward to Jay Bothroyd as soon as possible. While I don’t like this type of football and I would say that we are wasting Bothroyd’s talents to some degree by using him as just a target man, I would also say that needs must – as things stand it seems to me that our best chance of maintaining a top six place lies with us playing a long ball game.

However we end up playing though, it is not going to help matters at all if the division’s leading scorer is going to be out for some time (I’ve seen “several weeks” mentioned in one of the reports in this morning’s papers). The funny thing with Peter Whittingham this season is that recently I have been taking his goals a little bit for granted and  have been appreciating his long range passing and dead ball delivery more. Much of the long stuff we hit last night were basically just hoofs forward but with Whittingham it is often a perfectly delivered pass which results in a goalscoring opportunity – I don’t see anyone else currently available who is capable of doing that and the same applies to the ability to provide a quality left footed delivery at set peices.

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Pretty predictable pummelling.

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

I can’t remember where I read it, but somewhere in the four or five match reports I have looked at about last night’s match, there is a response from a Newcastle fan who says he finally has hope that, after watching his team blitz us 5-1, Newcastle can get back to the Premiership by showing a bit of flair and class. That’s fair enough, because, let’s face it, so far Newcastle have been like Birmingham were last year – effective but dull, and if I were ever lucky enough to find my club in a similar position, I would be saying the same sort of thing about City this morning.

However, a word of warning to that Geordie fan, no doubt you are headed back to the top flight, but I would not build up your hopes that you are going to do so on the back of an orgy of thrills and goals just because you beat Cardiff City 5-1 last night. People will look at our league position and draw conclusions which are wrong because they pay no heed to the reality of our current situation which is that we have an injury decimated squad (which is way too small anyway) – the truth is that I doubt very much whether Newcastle have faced a weaker central midfield all season than they did last night and I can’t see them facing a weaker one in the next three months either.

If that sounds very critical of Darcy Blake and Steve McPhail, then it isn’t really meant to be. Blake has got things to offer and I have always believed that he has deserved more of a chance than Dave Jones has been prepared to give him (to be fair to our manager, his recent comments regarding the player’s off field conduct may offer the reason for this). However, for me Blake’s lack of previous experience means that, at this stage in his career, he isn’t ready to make a significant impact on an occasion like last night.

Of more importance though is the case of Steve McPhail. Now, my opinion is that, after a couple of poorish seasons, McPhail has been our best central midfielder this time around and, even after yesterday’s hiding, the stats back that view up – we have won eight and drawn two of the eleven matches he has featured in and have taken twenty out of a possible twenty seven points in the league matches he has played. Having McPhail back so quickly is definitely good news and I am sure he will become more of an influence as he gets games under his belt. That said though, when you consider what he has been through physically and emotionally in the last six months, surely we need to be patient with him – ideally he would be eased back into contention (as I am pretty sure he would be at nearly every other club in the Championship), but we don’t have that luxury.

Now people can say that we are so weak in central midfield because we are having bad luck in that area of the pitch with injuries, but that is to ignore the fact that our tiny squad has meant that Joe Ledley has had to play on for months despite needing an operation and our manager has admitted that Gavin Rae’s current injury has come about  because he had been turning out for the team despite carrying knocks which meant that he shouldn’t really have been playing (much the same applies to Mark Hudson as well). Central midfield has been a relatively weak area for us for some time now and so when you consider that last night we went to the league leaders with a novice (who Dave Jones says is a full back anyway) and someone who was thrown straight back into the fray on his return from injury and very serious illness, I can’t see how any City fan can claim to be totally surprised as to how things turned out.

There was another crumb of comfort though in central midfield – Aaron Wildig’s first goal for the senior side showed that he can carry the ability to get forward into the box from the middle of the park, which he showed at youth team level, into the first team and we could do with someone who can provide that because our other players from that area don’t do it often enough. Credit to Wildig, he has done better in the first team so far than I thought he would and, although he is never going to be a quick fix to our problems in his position, I think he can be a useful option for us over the coming months.

No, I’m not going to be too critical of the fact that we couldn’t live with Newcastle in an area of the pitch where we would struggle against them even if we had every one fit, but, I don’t think our full backs and especially our central defenders can escape so lightly. Adam Matthews was withdrawn at half time and recent months have shown that, although he looks the real deal when in possession, he is still learning his trade when it comes to the defensive side of things while Kevin McNaughton (who, as with Jay Bothroyd, I often find myself wondering just how fit he is) had the misfortune to run into Wayne Routledge when he was in the mood to play (Routledge really has a chance to move up a level in his career at Newcastle – the Geordies will love him if he plays to his potential, but I still think he will struggle to make an impact in the Premiership).

I am sure Matthews will improve defensively with experience and McNaughton has proved himself to be a good Championship level full back over the last four seasons, so I don’t find their problems last night as concerning as the way our central defenders struggled. Years of watching Danny Gabbidon turning out for us has me always wishing that we had more pace in our team in the central defensive positions, but it was the way Gerrard and Gyepes struggled in an area in which they should be pretty good that was worrying – Newcastle enjoyed an awful lot of success from high crosses into our penalty area last night and poor defending from them is not something that you often associate Dave Jones’ Cardiff City sides with.

I took Dave Jones’ after match comment about seeing “no light at the end of the tunnel” concerning his chances of getting some sort of transfer budget in the coming weeks as a general opinion on our current financial problems rather than anything more sinister that hasn’t got into the public domain yet. Therefore, it looks as if we have to soldier on with what we have got for some time yet. That being the case then, it seems to me that, always assuming we don’t get docked ten points or more, the Play Offs are still on for us because the match winners we have in attacking positions will always get us a few wins along the way. However,  leaving Newcastle aside for now, the manner in which Leicester and Doncaster enjoyed almost total dominance for spells in the last two home games suggests that there will be a fair few losses to come to add to a figure which is already very high for a team in our position.

That though is the reality of the position we find ourselves in. The manager and players did so well against all the odds in January, but, unless the Malaysians come forward later this month with the investment that is being vaguely hinted at on messageboards, they are going to have do the same again in February, March and April. Our manager, many of the team and most supporters have all said we need more players in our squad, but it’s just not going to happen under the current regime – after all, Mr Ridsdale and his cronies do have to be paid.

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