Posts Tagged ‘Middlesbrough’

Johnny Vincent makes a winning start to his City career with a goal against his former club.

Friday, March 5th, 2010

After their struggles in the 1971/72 season, Jimmy Scoular largely decided to keep faith in his Cardiff City squad in the hope that they could recapture their form of the three previous seasons. The only first team regular to leave was Mel Sutton who was sold to Wrexham for £15,000 (what a poor piece of business that turned out to be) while squad player Steve Derrett joined Carlisle with reserve keeper Jim Eadie going to Bristol Rovers on a free transfer. The money received for Sutton went on defender Albert Larmour who signed from Northern Irish club Linfield, but he proved to be the only new arrival as a familiar looking City team kicked off the new campaign with a 2-1 win over Luton at Ninian Park.

The 1972/73 season was the one in which City used the legendary mauve and yellow kit featured above for a very short while, so in those early away matches where there was a colour clash that year, City got used to looking like a laughing stock and it wasn’t long before they were playing like one as well! That opening day win provided some rare cheer in an appalling sequence of results which proved beyond doubt that the struggles of 1971/72 had been anything but a one off.

Although Millwall were beaten before the end of August, eight of the next ten league matches were lost and it seems that after the sixth of these defeats (by 2-1 at Nottingham Forest), Jimmy Scoular decided to rip it up and start again. Major surgery was needed and first to go was striker Alan Warboys who had become a fans favourite when he was bought to replace John Toshack in December 1970, but had done little of note for a year or more in a City shirt. Warboys went to Sheffield United in a swap deal which saw a couple of Welsh internationals move in the opposite direction. Cardiff born striker cum winger Gil Reece began his second spell with City after being released by the club in the early sixties as a youngster, while injury prone defender Dave Powell took over from Larmour who, initially at least, had found the transition to the Football League a difficult one.

Results did not improve though and, following an abysmal 3-0 defeat in a televised match at QPR, Scoular raised funds for further team rebuilding by selling Ian Gibson and Brian Clark to ambitious AFC Bournemouth for a joint fee of £100,000. Gibson and Clark were very popular players and certainly during the difficult 71/72 campaign had been amongst only a few established players who had maintained their previous standards, but they were struggling this time around and so their sale made sense (rumours also persisted that Gibson’s “colourful” lifestyle had seen him desperate to get away from Cardiff and a large number of gambling debts!).

The old guard weren’t just being sold off though – Dave Carver, who had been a fixture in the two shirt for years was dropped for the 18 year old Phil Dwyer for the next game at Orient and the youngster did such a good job that Carver never played in the first team again. A 0-0 draw in Dwyer’s first match represented an improvement of sorts especially when it is considered that Alan “Fatty” Foggon was sent off – Foggon had been a big disappointment since his arrival in July 1971 and would soon be another departure as Middlesbrough paid £10,000 for his services.

Other youngsters such as Peter Morgan, Billy Kellock, Derek Showers, Jimmy McInch, Alan Couch, John Parsons and Nigel Rees were given their chance around this time as well, but City needed experienced players in quick with strikers especially being required. When Jimmy Scoular did spend some of the money which had been burning a hole in his pocket though, it was on someone who I suppose would have been seen as a replacement of sorts for the departed Gibson in City’s midfield.

Johnny Vincent wasn’t really the same type of player as Gibson, but he was someone who tended to favour brain over brawn – an elegant left footed player who was a good passer of the ball and had a decent goalscoring record, Vincent had not settled at Middlesbrough after moving from Birmingham in March 1971 and jumped at the chance to move from the north east when City had an offer of £35,000 accepted for him.

In the sort of coincidence that football tends to turn up regularly, Vincent’s debut on October 14 was against the very side he had left. Middlesbrough were a solid and well organised outfit in those days who would end the season in fourth place and their well established back four of Craggs, Boam, Maddren and Spraggon (they had to play for a north east side with names like that!) was amongst the meanest around. Jimmy Scoular had made a habit of using two target men strikers through much of his time in charge at Ninian Park, but, suddenly, the novice Derek Showers apart, he didn’t have any to choose from and, so when you consider City’s lack of attacking options and the quality of the defence they were up against, it was hard to see where the goals were going to come from.

As it was, City, with Showers and John Parsons up front, turned in their best performance of the campaign so far as Boro were brushed aside 2-0 with Vincent capping a fine debut with a left footed shot at the Grange End from around ten yards out that put City a goal ahead in the first half and full back Gary Bell consolidateding his position as top scorer by firing home his fifth penalty of the season to double the lead around the hour mark.

Although a 3-0 defeat at eventual champions Burnley the following week showed that there was still a long way to go before Scoular’s rebuilding job was complete, the target man City so required was in place for the visit of Preston on October 28 as QPR’s Andy McCulloch was signed for a club record fee of £45,000. Like Vincent, McCulloch opened his City goalscoring account on his debut as Preston were beaten 3-0 and the impact they both had during the early stages of their City careers could be gauged by the fact that those wins over Middlesbrough and Preston signaled the start of a spell of eight league victories in nine home matches  - while McCulloch’s fine goalscoring record (he got fourteen from twenty six league starts that year) tended to take the headlines, Vincent’s clever prompting played a big part in transforming City during one of the few times when the tag “Fortress Ninian” was actually justified.

Such a run of results should have been enough to lift the team clear of the drop zone, but City were having to pick up virtually all of their points at home as they never won away in those days- that’s not your typical Internet exaggeration either, City gained only seven points from twenty one away games that year and were in the middle of a winless run of away league fixtures which would stretch from October 1971 to December 1973!

Another club record signing in the shape of winger Willie Anderson from Aston Villa for £60,000 was needed before City were to win their fight against the drop and it was hoped that the new side Jimmy Scoular had put together could see us climbing the table again, but it didn’t happen – just over a year after signing Vincent, Scoular was gone as City struggled again and the players who had helped transform the side failed to find their previous form.

Johnny Vincent in particular was not the same player as he struggled with injury and seemed to be adversely affected by Scoular’s sacking – although he would occasionally remind everyone of his innate ability, Vincent never regained his form of 72/73 and after the team’s relegation in 1975 quit full time football at the age of 28 to return to his native West Midlands where he worked in the licensed trade before passing away at the age of just 59 in December 2006.

14 October 1972

City 2 (Vincent, Bell pen) Middlesbrough 0

City Irwin; Dwyer, Murray, Powell, Bell (1); Kellock, Phillips, Vincent (1), Reece; Parsons (J), Showers; sub (not used) Larmour

HT 1-0

Att. 10,407

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City benefitting from going “back to basics”?

Monday, December 14th, 2009

CoymayWhen the fixtures for this season came out back in June, I looked at a sequence of matches which started with a home game against the team that pipped us for a Play Off spot which was then followed by visits to two of the relegated sides and thought it represented our toughest week of the upcoming season. Bearing that in mind, I have two things to say to anyone who tells me that, beforehand, they really thought we would end with nine points from the spell of three games in eight days that we have just completed and the first is I don’t believe you!

The second is that if you did genuinely think that we would win all three matches, then I’d be willing to bet a lot of money that you didn’t have us  down as doing it with a goal tally of four to nil – given what had happened in the first four months of the campaign, something like eight for and five against would have been more likely.

After we ended our run of three consecutive defeats by beating Preston, I am fairly sure that I wasn’t the only person to say that we had done it by “going back to basics”, but, looking at it now, I don’t think I fully grasped just how true that was. What I had meant was that City ended their losing streak by concentrating fully on getting the job done any way they could, but, when you also look at what has happened in our last two games, I think it goes further than that.

For example, is it just a coincidence that we have three consecutive clean sheets at a time when we have played a central midfielder who, possibly because his body no longer allows him to make the forward runs we used to see from him, has just plonked himself in front of the back four to give them added protection in Ricky Scimeca (there also has to be the possibility that Joe Ledley’s problem with his hips meant that he couldn’t get forward as much yesterday as he would have)?

article-1235518-079638E2000005DC-380_468x286More than though, have we gone back to basics in selecting full backs whose main attributes are defensive ones as opposed to the two previous ones we had whose strengths lie more in other aspects of the game? In Kevin McNaughton and Paul Quinn, we now have a pair of full backs who see themselves first and foremost as defenders – their first responsibility is to stop the opposition and then, once that is done, they then might start to show what else they can offer the team.

I think anyone who has watched Kevin McNaughton on a regular basis over the previous three seasons knew that we would improve defensively when he came back from injury – he is one of the best full backs I have seen at the club and is, arguably, the best defender we have currently. A few weeks ago I, quite cruelly, described Paul Quinn as the best third choice right back in the Championship. I did so to emphasise the point that, with money tight and Adam Matthews emerging this season, maybe spending around £300,000 on another full back wasn’t really what we needed last summer, but, fair play to Quinn, after letting no one down at Barnsley when he came on, he has seized his chance well in the past three matches by offering solid, no frills defending when, probably, that was what we were most in need of at that time.

Mark Kennedy’s past incarnations as a winger and central midfield player show when he is in possession when playing left back and we benefit because, having played in the positions previously, he instinctively knows the type of service those playing in front of him want, but the down side to him playing in the back four is you get the impression that he is, in some ways, still learning to play there.

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Similarly, for all the good things he gives us going forward, Adam Matthews’ inexperience at this level was sometimes costing us defensively (an obvious example of that being Nathan Dyer’s goal at the Liberty Stadium) and I can’t help thinking that Dave Jones’ timing was spot on when he chose to give our exciting, and very talented, teenager a rest for a while after the Ipswich match.

Matthews got his chance yesterday when he replaced McNaughton (who, worryingly, is looking increasingly injury prone) and it was good to see that we didn’t lose anything defensively when he came on. Although he joined McNaughton in the Championship full backs who have been skinned by Adam Johnson club (it’s a club with a very large membership!), Matthews showed great defensive awareness to get himself in exactly the right place to clear Leroy Lita’s header off the line in the tremendous goalmouth scramble which represented the only time when Boro posed a real threat to our goal in the second half.

The thing is though that, because they are playing in the second tier, all of our players tend to have at least one weakness to their game and so it is with McNaughton and Quinn – in the first half especially yesterday, both of them were guilty of giving the ball away too easily when in possession and the down side of having a pair of defensive full backs who are not so comfortable further up the pitch is that our attacking threat is reduced. This showed in the first half against Preston as well as yesterday when we posed very few problems to the opposing defence and we are lucky that Chris Burke has stepped up to the plate in the goalscoring stakes in the past  three matches.

article-1235518-07963F7A000005DC-474_468x286I thought Burke was excellent yesterday and, although unlike his goals against Preston and West Brom, his matchwinner had an element of luck about it, the confidence he gained from it, showed as he caused Boro no end of problems as they pushed forward looking for an equaliser. Dave Jones remarked after last Tuesday’s match that West Brom were always wary of pushing too many men forward in the second half because of the threat posed by our attacking players and Burke’s work after he scored, along with a few almost but not quite moments when Bothroyd and Chopra linked up, showed that the baggies were right to be concerned about what we could do – however, very welcome though they are, I don’t think we can keep on relying on Burke to come up with that vital goal for us and we need more from others in the team to start making a contribution.

Despite the momentum and confidence the team has gained from our last three games, it can be argued that all that is happening is that we are continuing the good month/bad month sequence that has characterised our season so far. While I think the fact that we have discovered the knack of being able to win when not playing too well, allied to our new found defensive solidarity, offers genuine hope that we aren’t going to start losing as soon we go into January, who could have foreseen our awful November after we had won 4-3 at Sheffield United?

Because of this, I can’t help thinking that the time is ripe for another burst of scoring from Michael Chopra. To be fair to him, he worked really hard yesterday for little tangible reward as another game passed by with him barely having a sight of goal, but I still find myself thinking that a club record signing who is almost certainly our highest wage earner, should have more to offer than unstinting effort and some good movement. The thing is though that Chopra has shown in the past that it does not take much for him to switch from famine to feast mode and, if that happened, then we could well be back at the stage where he can again show that ability he has to almost carry the whole team along with him in his slipstream – if his next hot spell could start in three games time, then I would almost guarantee that the good month/bad month cycle would be ended!

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