Posts Tagged ‘Doncaster Rovers’

A real “I was there” moment.

Friday, August 20th, 2010

I always try not to be too critical of any player after their first performance in a City shirt, but it was hard to think of many positive things to say about Eddie Johnson after his debut for us against MK Dons in the League Cup after his loan signing from Fulham. He did have a shot deflected on to the crossbar by the keeper I suppose but he really should have scored and I left the game asking if this was really the player who I had made a priority signing when I was starting a new game of Football Manager around 2005!

Johnson looked a complete novice that night and over the coming weeks he went on to show that it wasn’t a case of first night nerves either as a series of ineffective substitute appearances culminated in a display against Swansea when he was given another start in a League Cup tie that was so poor that Dave Jones took the very unusual step for him of substituting a player at half time. It would be easy to say that Johnson was effected by the very intimidating atmosphere at the Liberty Stadium that night, but the truth was that he had barely showed anything more in his other appearances for City up until then and I thought it was time to conclude that we had signed a, pretty expensive, dud.

Johnson went on making brief appearances off the bench for the next few weeks but it was hard to see any improvement in him. However,  a goal for the reserves finally broke his scoring duck at Cardiff and we started to be fed the sort of “looking sharp in training” stuff that we had become used to during Robbie Fowler’s time with us so that, when Jay Bothroyd was injured, Dave Jones brought in Eddie to start at QPR in November. City lost 1-0, but no blame could be attached to Johnson really because the defeat came about via a late goal in a match in which we finished with nine men so he was given another chance the following week against Crystal Palace. That afternoon, I think City fans were given their first real sight of what Dave Jones had seen in him and why Roy Hodgson had been persuaded to pay £3 million to bring him to Fulham from Major League Soccer a few months earlier – Johnson was a real handful for the Palace defence that day as he put in a performance which made him a real candidate for City man of the match with his header providing the chance for Joe Ledley to score the winning goal.

However any hope that this was some sort of turning point fizzled out the following week when Johnson was one of the worst players in a woeful City performance in a televised defeat at Plymouth and, with Bothroyd fit again, it was back to the substitute’s bench again for the USA international striker (he had been dropped from his country’s squad by then mind, as the suspicion grew that he had been found out). All of this time though Eddie was becoming something of a cult hero amongst some City supporters and having lived through, and contributed to, the same sort of thing with “Lethal” Lynex nearly twenty years earlier, I suppose I could understand it to a degree – Steve Lynex was a good player in his time, but, when he joined us for a couple of seasons in 1988, those days were long gone by then and he eventually became quite popular in a he’s so bad he’s good type of way.

This had to be the explanation for Johnson’s popularity because there was nothing in his displays to justify the loud cries of “Eddie, Eddie” and “USA, USA” which always started up when he came off the bench during those winter months of the 08/09 campaign – it’s probably true to say that a never say die attitude and the fact that he was, by all accounts, a very decent person helped his cause, but he just didn’t look like a Championship quality footballer.

Eddie’s next starting chance came in early March when he put in a decent shift against Barnsley as City scored three for the first time that season, but, as usual, never remotely looked like scoring. With Bothroyd returning from injury, he was back on the bench again for the visit of Doncaster the following Saturday. Doncaster, whose trademark had become a fluent passing game under manager Sean O’Driscoll, were widely expected to struggle against the drop in the first season in the second tier in fifty years but were already virtually safe after a tremendous run of form which had seen them lose only once in eleven matches and win five of their last six away games.

Doncaster were one of the Championship’s form sides then, but they ended up being blown away by what may have been City’s most complete performance of that season until then. In miserable damp conditions, Michael Chopra had City ahead in ten minutes when he poked in Gavin Rae’s cross following a forceful run by the midfield player and. although the visitors  occasionally showed why they had been getting such good results, City’s overall control was reflected around the half hour mark with a superb goal from Jay Bothroyd  who controlled Roger Johnson’s long free kick on his chest before turning and firing past Sullivan with his right foot from twenty yards.

Bothroyd had aggravated his earlier injury in scoring though and was soon limping off to be replaced by Eddie to the usual ear splitting welcome and a quarter of an hour into the second half it happened – Johnson scored and what a good goal it was too! It came about when Eddie took a pass from Whittingham out on the right cut inside and…… look, rather than have me babble on about it, have  a look at it here. It’s hard to remember when a City goal was last greeted by such an outpouring of joy and this video gives a clue as to the din which followed as Eddie ran to the home dug out in front of a crowd all of whom seemed to be on their feet shouting “Eddie, Eddie”.

Everything was an anti climax after that and City coasted to a 3-0 win with the remaining minutes being most notable for a song dedicated to another erratic loan signing, goalkeeper Dimi Konstantopoulos, whose Swansea connection was mocked as he was serenaded, to the tune of Karma Chameleon, about how he had swam away to Cardiff Bay.

As for Eddie Johnson, well he didn’t go blasting in goals from left, right and centre after that in a fairy tale end to his time at Cardiff, but he did show doubters like me that he did have something to offer as he became a more important member of the squad. In particular, he turned what looked like a defeat at Ashton Gate into a draw with a strong run and shot which drew an error from home keeper Basso that allowed Ross McCormack to equalise and he hit a second good goal in the 4-1 canter against Derby (he followed it with a farcical own goal in true Johnson style mind).

If you have been supporting City for the last ten years, there should be some dates which are seared into your brain  like 6 January 2002, 25 May 2003 and 17 May 2008 – I think 7 March 2009 can be added to that list in honour of one of the most popular City players of recent times.

7 March 2009

Cardiff City 3 Doncaster Rovers 0

City  Konstantopoulos; Blake, Johnson R, Gyepes, Kennedy (Comminges); Whittingham, Rae, Ledley, Parry; Bothroyd (1) (Johnson E 1), Chopra (1) (McCormack) subs; Quincy, Scimeca

Doncaster Sullivan; Chambers. Mills, Hird, Roberts; Woods, Spicer, Stock (Wilson), Wellens, Coppinger (Hayter); Price (Shiels) subs; Letheren, Lockwood

HT 2-0

Att. 17,821

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Ninian Park’s greatest ever goal?

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Right, so you know about football? In that case, how would you rate Darren Utley? What do you mean, you’ve never heard of him – you must remember him! Truth be told, I had to look him up as well this morning to find out that he was that Doncaster left back who scored a wonder goal against us back in March 1997.

After two of the worst seasons in the club’s history, the City side of 1996/97 offered some hope that better days were on the way as they spent most of the campaign in the top ten of what is now called League Two. After a summer clear out that had seen many of a squad which were ranked the ninetieth best in the ninety two team league system leave the club, Manager Phil Neal started virtually from scratch as he put together a team that, on it’s day, was capable of beating the best in the division.

The signing of the talented Jason Fowler from Bristol City added creativity and some flair to the midfield, while the versatile fans favourite Jeff Eckhardt, who arrived from Stockport for a a fee of £15,000, scored a fine goal on his debut to secure a first win of the season by 1-0 at home to Brighton. With Carl Dale not having the best of seasons, the main goal threat came from veteran Steve White and the emerging youngster Simon Haworth who impressed bigger clubs with a skill and elegance that you would not normally associate with a six foot plus lower league striker.

Although they were never really in contention for automatic promotion and lost more matches than most of the teams around them, City’s total of only  nine league draws was the joint lowest in the division (the following season saw them draw an incredible twenty three times!) and so, by picking up so many wins, City were always in contention for one of the Play Off places.

The departure of Phil Neal to become Steve Coppell’s assistant manager at Manchester City saw him replaced by a returning Kenny Hibbitt and former England centreback Russell Osman who effectively became joint managers, but it did not have too much an effect on results as City went into November on a run of one defeat in nine matches. However, seven losses in their next eight games saw them plunge to thirteenth position only for a fantastic 4-1 win at top of the table Fulham in televised game to kickstart another fine run that had them climbing the table as quickly as they had been falling down it a few weeks earlier.

So it was then that City went into their home game with lowly Doncaster Rovers on Friday 14 March 1997 in the last play off position (i.e. seventh) on the back of a run which had seen them claim nineteen points from eight matches. With Doncaster languishing in twenty third place and having conceded fifteen goals in losing their previous five away games, it was a fixture which had home win written all over it, but then that’s just what we all thought when we played Plymouth a month ago!

To be honest, the only thing I remember now about the game is Doncaster’s second goal – an early goal by Darren Moore put the visitors ahead so, given that Moore, who went on to become a Premiership player at Portsmouth, West Brom and Derby, is an absolute giant of a man, I’ll assume it was a header, but the truth is that I don’t have a clue whether it was or not.

Doncaster went in 1-0 up at the break and then put the game beyond City around the hour mark with a goal that has to be the highlight of Darren Utley’s short professional career. I tended to sit in the Bob Bank at the Canton Stand end of the ground in those days and had the sort of perfect view that you get sometimes when you know that the ball is going in as soon as it leaves the player’s foot. What made this goal so special though was that Utley was out on the Bob Bank touchline not far inside the City half when he hit his shot (and it was definitely a shot not the sort of mishit centre that you can occasionally end up in the net).

City’s keeper that night was Tony Elliott who certainly wouldn’t feature in any list of best goalies I have seen at the club didn’t have a chance of saving Utley’s shot, but neither would the likes of Marshall, Alexander, Dibble and Healey as the ball arrowed into the top corner of the Grange End net. Sadly, I am pretty sure that there is no video footage of the goal (I couldn’t find anything on You Tube) and, of course, there is always a tendency to exaggerate these things as the years go by, but I would be very surprised if he wasn’t forty yards from goal when he hit his shot.

Utley played twenty two times for Doncaster that season but then was released after featuring only four times the following season in what was an awful Donny team that finished fifteen points adrift at the bottom of the table when the season ended – they were so bad that even Andy Saville managed to score twice in a 7-1 City win at Ninian Park a year to the day after Utley’s scorcher!

Actually, Donny’s transformation from Conference nobodies to Championship somebodies has to be one of the footballing success stories of the decade just ended and when you consider that they have achieved this by playing quality passing football under one of the most under rated managers around, then I think that if City couldn’t get promoted, Doncaster would be the side I would like to see go up in our place.

As for City, defeats like this one highlighted the inconsistency the side showed throughout the season. Their record against the top sides, especially away from home, was superb as they followed up  that win at eventual runners up Fulham with a win at Champions Wigan courtesy of a Haworth goal on Easter Monday and by doing the double over third placed Carlisle. Mixed in with that though, there were four defeats against the bottom five sides which goes a long way towards explaining why the last day of the season saw City needing a draw at Darlington to definitely seal the last Play Off place by finishing seventh when five sides they had beaten finished above them.

As it turned out, City did make it into the Play Offs, but only because of the failings of others as their 2-1 defeat at Darlington counted for little as rivals Lincoln and Cambridge United both lost at home. City then faced Northampton in the Play Off Semi Finals who were, at that time, something of a bogey team for us. Northampton won 1-0 in the First Leg in front of an 11,000 plus crowd at Ninian Park before a 3-2 win in a fiery return at Sixfields which saw a player from both sides dismissed booked them a Wembley date against Swansea in the final which they won with a last minute goal.

14 March 1997

Cardiff City 0 Doncaster Rovers 2 (Moore, Utley)

City Elliott; Jarman, Perry, Davies, Lloyd; Fowler, Middleton, Stoker, Partridge (Dale); White, Haworth Subs (not used) Rollo, Philliskirk

Doncaster Williams; Cunningham, Moore (1), Gore, Utley (1); Schofield, Esdaille, McDonald, Ireland;  Mike, Cramb (Larmour)

HT 0-1

Att. 5,347

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