Posts Tagged ‘Newcastle United’

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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February 1979 – a time when we did have some cash to splash.

Friday, February 5th, 2010

One similarity between the 1978/79 season and the current one is that they both saw a cold snap which started around Christmas and continued well into the New Year. This time around, City have been luckier than many others in that they only lost the one home fixture throughout the recent freeze – we weren’t so lucky in 78/79 though as a more severe cold snap saw us go more than two months without playing a home league match.

On 23 December 1978, goals from Tony Evans and Dave Roberts had been enough to secure a 2-0 win over Fulham at Ninian Park, but, when you consider that the previous eight matches had seen a return of just two points (gained from home draws with Crystal Palace and Sunderland), then it shouldn’t come as a surprise to learn that this was yet another season from that era which saw us involved in a relegation battle at the foot of the old Second Division.

Things were looking really bad for City at that time. Jimmy Andrews had been given what was big money to spend by City standards in the summer, but his two £70,000 plus signings had not been successes – striker Mickey Burns came from Newcastle but lasted just six matches in which he looked nothing like the player who had starred for the Geordies, before he returned to the North East with Middlesbrough, while Wales International defender Dave Roberts arrival  from Hull saw him look the part when he got on the pitch but frequent injuries meant that little was being seen of him.

Instead, it was gangling striker Gary Stevens and left sided midfielder John Lewis, each signed for very small fees from non league football, that made far more of an impact in the team than the pair of expensive newcomers, as City suggested for a while that they could put right yet another miserable start to a season, but successive three goal defeats, at Newcastle and at home to Charlton, saw Andrews sacked and replaced on a caretaker basis by long serving centre half Richie Morgan who was eventually given the job on a permanent basis.

That win over Fulham was Morgan’s first as a manager and was enough to lift City off the bottom of the league, but the three away games that we were able to play before facing Orient at Ninian Park on 24 February showed the enormity of the task our apprentice boss faced. While a goalless draw at mid table Burnley on 30 December was a decent result, it was sandwiched by two thrashings which could be added to a number of heavy away defeats the team suffered that season. Losing 5-0 at promotion hopefuls Brighton on Boxing Day was bad enough, but when City conceded five second half goals in going down by the same score at lowly Cambridge United in mid January, the alarm bells were really ringing.

However, Richie Morgan was given the funds to try and improve his squad – while the sale of David Giles and Brian Attley to Wrexham and Swansea City respectively for a combined fee of £50,000 helped balance the books somewhat, the truth is that £10,000 more than that was spent on Norwich left back Colin Sullivan before the prolific lower league striker Ronnie Moore became Cardiff City’s first six figure singing when joining from Tranmere Rovers for £100,000.

Both of the newcomers made their first starts in that game with Orient and they were joined by 17 year old youth product Linden Jones who slotted in at right back on his City debut. With the influential Alan Campbell also back after a spell out through injury and Phil Dwyer moving to centreback to displace Albert Larmour, it was a much changed, but more solid looking outfit that recorded a vital 1-0 win courtesy of John Buchanan’s goal.

It was on their travels though that City had really struggled that season as thirteen games had only produced one win (at Wrexham) and two draws so far, but at snowy Blackburn, City came good in a big way against one of their rivals at the bottom of the table as they made light of Linden Jones’ red card to win 4-1 with Ronnie Moore amongst the scorers. Three days later, things got even better as the team turned around a 1-0 half time lead for hosts Leicester through goals by Dwyer and Stevens.

Three successive wins had lifted City out of the relegation zone as they surveyed things from the relatively lofty heights of eighteenth position in the twenty two team Second Division and this was reflected in the first ten thousand plus gate of the season for the visit of Newcastle United. With a squad that included  Peter Withe, Terry Hibbitt and internationals Mick Martin and John Connolly, Newcastle had some big name players in their ranks, but they were second best in most departments on the day to a City side that was playing with a confidence which would have been unimaginable only a few weeks earlier.

The big crowd, by the standards of that time at least, saw City get the reward their first half control deserved when Ray Bishop put them in front. Bishop was a small but quick striker who was often compared to the more celebrated Tony Evans – he was signed for a nominal fee from Cheltenham Town (who were a non league outfit at the time) in 1977 and proved to be good value for money as he scored thirty one times in hundred and twenty seven appearances in all competitions for City. Bishop stayed with the club for four years before being sold, allegedly for disciplinary reasons, to Newport County for £10,000 and, from there, moved on to Torquay for whom he played for a year or so before dropping out of league football in 1983.

A more even second half saw the visitors level things up when their Scottish former Everton winger John Connolly netted, but Gary Stevens, who was to score a superb volley when the same opponents visited Ninian Park a year later, popped up with a close range goal that ensured a fourth straight victory.

Although the 1975/76 team twice had runs of four successive league victories (both coming as part six game winning runs in all competitions),it had not been done at this level since 1970/71. An injury time Buchanan equaliser at Charlton to secure a 1-1 draw at least kept the unbeaten run going for a fifth game, but then three successive defeats threatened to undone all of the good work. However City, with Jones proving a gritty competitor, Sullivan a calming influence and Moore a hard working team player whose lack of goals didn’t cause anywhere near the comment it did the following season, were to finish the campaign in fine style as an unbeaten run of eleven matches saw them finish in the dizzy heights of ninth – being given all that money to spend obviously helped, but Richie Morgan deserved a lot of praise for a very good first season as a manager.

In saying that, in my opinion, the 78/79 team weren’t a patch on the current team, but neither were the Newcastle side back then compared to the one we will face at their place tonight. However, the team from thirty one years ago was transformed because the manager had the chance to spend money just when he most needed to- despite all the talk beforehand, the current manager has been denied that opportunity. Our goalscoring power, especially away from home, still gives us hope that we can get something tonight, but, if we do, it will be with what, on paper at least, looks the weakest central midfield we have fielded in ages – in 1979 City were able to secure a fourth straight win in a pretty straightforward manner over an ordinary Newcastle outfit, if we are to go one better than that tonight, then I think we will have pulled off our best league result in decades.

March 10 1979

Cardiff City 2 (Bishop, Stevens) Newcastle United 1 (Connolly)

City Healey; Jones, Pontin, Dwyer, Sullivan; Grapes, Campbell, Buchanan; Bishop (1), Stevens (1), Moore sub (not used) Evans

Newcastle Hardwick; Brownlie, Barton, Nattrass, Mitchell; Walker (sub Suggett), Martin, Hibbitt, Connolly (1); Withe, Shoulder

HT 1-0

Att. 11,116

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