Posts Tagged ‘John Toshack’

QPR are beaten thanks to John Toshack and Terry Lewis.

Friday, April 16th, 2010

City fans of a certain age have all sorts of theories as to why we went from being promotion challengers in 70/71 to relegation scrappers for most of the following fifteen years, but the one that we never adequately replaced Brian Harris is not one of the more popular ones. One of my old school friends, who still follows City home and away, used to call Brian Harris “The Fox” and seldom was a nickname more appropriate – he was a very clever and cunning footballer! Harris, who was signed from Everton in 1966 at the age of thirty one, played over three hundred times for the Merseyside club and must have been some player in his prime because, right up until he left us five years later, he made marking Second Division forwards look easy.

When people talked about the great Bobby Moore (Brian Harris was probably one of several players who might have got an England cap if they hadn’t been unfortunate enough to have their careers coincide with Moore’s), they said that his perceived lack of pace was never exploited because his mind was so quick – much the same applied to Brian Harris at Cardiff. I don’t remember him as being that quick, but his anticipation, positioning and, mostly, clean tackling (like most defenders in Jimmy Scoular’s Cardiff sides, Harris could “mix it” when required) nearly always kept him one or two moves ahead of his opponents – also, Don Murray never quite looked the same player without Harris alongside him.

Therefore, even though he was now thirty four, news that Harris would miss the visit of top of the table Queens Park Rangers on 27 September 1969 was a huge blow for City particularly in view of the fact that the Londoners had scored twenty two goals in winning eight and drawing one of their first ten league matches. Thoughts of Queens Park Rangers goalscorers back in those days would inevitably centre on Rodney Marsh the maverick striker who would go on to play for England and earn a big money move to Manchester City, but with ex England forward Barry Bridges, one of the Clarke goalscoring brotherhood, Frank and midfield players like Mick Leach who certainly knew where the net was, in their ranks, QPR would have given City’s defence it’s hardest test of the season up to then even if Harris had been fit.

Ordinarily you would have thought Steve Derrett, a usually capable and composed defender who had made his Wales debut some  months earlier, would have stepped into the breach for Harris (he had been a regular during the previous season when Harris had a fairly long spell out with an injury), but instead Jimmy Scoular turned to Terry Lewis a nineteen year old from Newport who had made a couple of first team appearances at the back end of the 68/69 campaign. Furthermore, in what represented a great show of faith in the youngster, Jimmy Scoular gave the man marking job on Rodney Marsh (who was always marked man for man when QPR came to Ninian Park) to Lewis and not Dave Carver, the man usually designated to do the job.

With City having made a good start to the season (they were in sixth place going into the game), the combination of lovely, sunny weather and attractive opposition sent the Ninian Park crowd over the 30,000 mark for the first time in a league match since January 1962. The bumper gate of 30,083 remains the second biggest I have been in for a home league game and they certainly got their money’s worth as City turned on the style to win a six goal thriller.

City tore into their visitors from the start and were able to take advantage of the their errant offside trap and some dodgy keeping to put the game virtually beyond QPR after forty five minutes as John Toshack again confirmed that City had one of the hottest young properties in the game at that time on their books. Toshack benefited while the visitor’s backline stood around looking for a linesman’s flag which was not raised for one of his two goals and, with the consistent Peter King also finding the net, Terry Venables’ penalty in reply still left the shell shocked QPR side with a two goal deficit.

A more even second period saw Bridges get a goal back for QPR, but more poor defending enabled Toshack to score from close range to complete his first Football League hat trick as winger Frank Sharp, who was getting a rare start at the expense of Ronnie Bird, dislocated a shoulder to ensure that it was not all good news for City. However, a week later, City were to suffer a far more serious injury blow as, despite two more goals from Toshack, they were beaten at Blackpool in the game in which Barrie Jones’ career was ended by the broken leg he received in the dying minutes of the game – City were never to really replace the gifted Jones that season as their campaign tailed off in the New Year to a final position of seventh.

As for Terry Lewis, well, he gave a faultless performance in keeping Marsh very quiet as the visitor’s main match winner endured another frustrating visit to Ninian Park and I daresay many City fans left the ground that day thinking that they had seen the launching of a career which might rival that of Toshack or Leighton Phillips who was also emerging around this time. The reality was very different though, Lewis kept his place for the midweek European Cup Winner’s Cup visit of Norwegian’s Mjondalen (who played in brown and white!), but Brian Harris was recalled in his place for the game at Blackpool and he never featured again in the first team. Lewis was released by the club at the end of the 70/71 club having only made the four first team appearances and it goes without saying that the highlight of his short City career must have been the afternoon he barely allowed Rodney Marsh a kick in front of one of the biggest home crowds of the last half a century.

27 September 1969

Cardiff City 4 (Toshack 3, King)  Queens Park Rnagers 2 (Venables (pen), Bridges)

City; Davies; Carver, Murray, Lewis, Bell; King, Jones, Sutton, Sharp (Coldrick); Toshack, Clark

QPR; Spratley; Watson, Hunt, Hazell, Clement; Leach, Venables, Morgan; Clarke, Bridges, Marsh

HT 3-1

Att. 30,083

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The times they were a changing.

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

I got into football in the early sixties when, just like in so many other facets of life, it was going through a transfomration as the liberation and changes that has become associated with that decade in, for example, the arts and sexual and political attitudes extended into “the beautiful game”.

Although the seeds for the changes in tactical thinking that saw the domestic professional game move away the old “W” set up (essentially 2-3-5 for those of you not old enough to have  a clue what I am talking about) had been put in place before I was born with Hungary’s double demolition of England in 1953/54 and then Brazil’s World Cup win in Sweden in 1958 when I was just two, such attitudes had not found their way to Pentrebane Junior School in the mid sixties. We used to take to the field with instructions in the arts of left or right wing half play and inside right or inside left play ringing in our ears as the  middle aged, rugby loving teacher who took charge of the school team made sure that we went out to play the game in exactly the same manner as he had done thirty five years earlier!

We certainly did not reflect the changes that were going on in the game at that time as it wasn’t just how the game was played that was being transformed. For example, what players wore was changing – shorts were become daringly shorter and where they had previously just been white or black, those of clubs such as Chelsea and Liverpool were now matching the colour of their shirts as the game became more colourful both literally and metaphorically.

If there was one club outside the top flight in the mid sixties which came to encapsulate the way the game was changing on and off the field it was Coventry City. Having spent most of their time as a Football League club playing in the old regionalised Third Division, they were transformed by Chairman Derek Robbins’ money and the innovative management of Jimmy Hill. The future television pundit, who had led the PFA into a dispute which saw the old maximum wage scheme dropped in the early sixties as Fulham’s Johnny Haynes became the first£100 a week footballer, changed the club completely with his influence not just being limited to what happened on the pitch.

Under Hill, Coventry became the “Sky Blues” as their old blue and white kit was dropped for the colour blue the side still use (the shorts were also sky blue of course) and he also helped pen a club song which is still sang at games to this day, Coventry were the first club to run “football special” trains to take their fans to away matches and I am pretty sure that a Cardiff/Coventry evening match was the first ever “beamback” game which enabled supporters to go to Highfield Road to watch live pictures of the game being played at Ninian Park. Also, a Coventry City programme was a real collector’s item around then because, whereas other club’s efforts were the size of a piece of A4 paper folded in half, theirs was a “match day magazine” which was the same size of the typical programmes you get nowadays and even featured colour photos!

All of what some would describe as gimmickry would have counted for nothing of course if Coventry had not been able back up their bold approach off the pitch with the results on it, but, when they came to Ninian Park on 22 April 1967, the Sky Blues (whose squad included future City favourite Ian Gibson) were clear at the top of the table and were closing in on a first ever promotion to the top flight on the back of a very impressive unbeaten run stretching back twenty one matches.

While Cardiff City had been able to match Coventry to the extent that they had changed the colour of their shorts to blue that year, any similarity between the clubs ended there. Manager Jimmy Scoular had to sell before he could buy as the club struggled to avoid dropping out of the top two divisions for the first time in twenty years with City having started the season in dreadful fashion as they shipped goals left, right and centre. The ageing but classy Brian Harris arrived from Everton and he was eventually able to shore things up at the back, but a run of one win in ten just after the turn of the year left the team in real peril and Scoular reacted by using the money raised from the sale of young Scottish striker George Johnston to Arsenal to bring in midfielder Norman Dean from Southampton and winger Barrie Jones from Plymouth Argyle.

Dean’s main impact in a City shirt came a year later when he played a leading role in our run to the Semi Final of the European Cup Winners Cup, but the skilful Jones began to recapture the form which had seen him become the highest priced winger in the domestic game when Plymouth paid Swansea Town £45,000 for him in 1964 almost immediately and, at half the price Plymouth paid for him, he became a real bargain signing for City.

Despite three goals from Jones in his first six games, a defeat at bottom of the table Bury meant that City found themselves just one place above the relegation places going into the game with Coventry and if much of what I have written so far shows how the game was changing forty three years ago, then what follows is proof of how much football, and society, has changed since then.

For a start, there is the fact that, at the age of eleven, I had already been going to City matches without my dad taking me for three years. Usually I would go along with friends of my own age, but I had already started going to the occasional match by myself and I was certainly by myself when the incident that I really remember this game for occurred. Although I usually tended to watch matches from the boy’s enclosure at the front of the Grange End back then, going to Ninian Park was a huge adventure for someone so young and so, especially if the game wasn’t up too much, exploring different parts of what seemed a huge arena at that time offered an attractive alternative to what was happening on the pitch.

Now, apart from the one incident, my recollection of what happened that afternoon is pretty hazy so perhaps someone who remembers it better can correct me if I have this wrong, but it seems to me that boredom with the football cannot be the reason I went wandering from my usual spot that afternoon because I am fairly sure City were turning in a good performance – I seem to remember Coventry scoring quite early on, but then City responding really well with an equaliser from Bobby Brown.

Anyway, for some reason, I found myself alone at the back of the Grange End as City attacked that end in the second half and, being as much of a relative shortarse then as I am now, I was only able to see the top half of the player’s bodies as they got close to the Coventry goal. Although I could have moved and found a better view, I was happy to stay where I was because the supporters around me were creating a great atmosphere and, with City doing surprisingly well, I was really enjoying it.

All of a sudden and with City attacking, one of our players went down in the penalty area and, although the large group closest to me seemed to be a bit quiet about it, bedlam broke out as the referee pointed to the spot. With the departed Johnston having been City’s penalty taker that year, it was the eighteen year old John Toshack (whose season had been disrupted after an injury picked moving a piano at home over Christmas!) who stepped up to take the penalty which could have secured a tremendous win for us.

From my less than perfect view, I saw Toshack put the ball to Coventry keeper Bill Glazier’s right as he dived left and then lost sight of it, but it seemed obvious that it was going to be a goal and so I started jumping about and celebrating with the group around me who had gone absolutely nuts. Eventually, I cast a glance towards the pitch and, to my amazement, noticed that the game had started with a goal kick – it was only after a few more seconds that the penny dropped that the group of fifty or sixty people that I had attached myself to were Coventry supporters!

Back in those pre crowd segregation days, it wasn’t too unusual to have pockets of away supporters in the Grange End. I suppose that in my usual place close to the pitch, I wouldn’t have seen much of any trouble if it had occurred – I can remember Birmingham and Portsmouth fans standing close by without there being any bother, but there were Coventry fans everywhere that day as the game finished at 1-1, a result which probably pleased both teams.

A few days later Coventry virtually ensured promotion by beating eventual runners up Wolves in a match watched by a crowd of 51,455 which remains a record attendance for them and they then stayed in the top flight for a very impressive thirty four years before their relegation in 2001. As for City, they took heart from their battling draw to beat Birmingham as a couple first half goals from Brown and another from Jones gave them a comfortable 3-0 win in their next home game. That was enough to see them stay up at the expense of Northampton and Bury and was the catalyst for four good years at club which saw European success being followed by three promotion challenges.

22 April 1967

Cardiff City 1 (Brown) Coventry City 1 ( N/A)

City Wilson; Coldrick, Murray, Harris, Ferguson; Jones, Williams, King, Bird; Brown (1) sub (not used) Derrett

Coventry N/A

Att. 19,739

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