Definitely a point gained, rather than two dropped, as City Under 18s stay top of the league.

The league fixture list for Cardiff City’s Under 18 team this season is truly barmy. Having started with a preponderance of home matches, they finally returned home for the first time in more than two months yesterday when they entertained a Millwall side which went into the encounter in second place in the table.

They are scheduled to play at Leckwith on the next two Saturdays. Although, in saying that, the club website has them playing Ipswich at 11 o clock and Hull away in the Youth Cup at 7 in the evening on the 15 December. Presumably, either the league match will be cancelled or the date shown for the cup match is wrong – flying up to Hull in the afternoon straight after the first match is a possibility I suppose, but you’d have to question how seriously we were taking the Youth Cup if that happened!

Anyway, back to the league fixture list. After three scheduled home matches on successive Saturdays, the Under 18s are then on the road again until late January, so for those of us (and I doubt it if there are many) who go along to youth team games to support the team rather than to watch relatives or acquaintances of theirs play, it’s hard to have any sense of continuity to the season. This is a shame, because the first half of 18/19 has been as successful a start to a campaign as the youth side have had since gaining Academy status in 04/05.

Based on yesterday’s 1-1 draw with opponents who had not lost in six matches going into the game, all of those weeks of playing away games has had a bit of a detrimental effect on the team, because they did not play to the standards I saw earlier in the season. Although they came close to winning the match late on when they hit the post, a City win would have been very harsh on a Millwall side which generally had the better of things for long spells in the game.

The first thing to say about the match is that the excellent new pitch at Leckwith made my pre match fears that I’d travel down on the train from Treherbert only to find that the game had been postponed because of a waterlogged pitch look pretty stupid – it played perfectly.

The pitch was a help in producing a good first half which I thought City just shaded – they were definitely playing the better football, but a bigger visiting team (the physical difference between the sides became more pronounced as the game went on as the three substitutes City brought on were all on the small side) were able to impose themselves on proceedings and the longer the game went on, the harder it got for City to maintain the standards shown in the early stages.

Although there were opportunities for Millwall in the first half, the ability of City midfielders, and sometimes defenders, to thread passes through inside the full backs to put colleagues into space was a feature of the first half an hour or so. Unfortunately, they were never able to capitalise on these opportunities because of a combination of poor technique or wrong options taken when it came to playing the pass or shot which should have at least resulted in an effort on the Millwall goal. As it was, Fanshawe in the Millwall goal was only really tested by an Isaak Davies effort after being set up by a fine Ryan Reynolds ball.

The first half did not get the goal it deserved, but one was not long in coming after the break as the visitors took the lead three minutes in from a corner with the ball being diverted to the far post where, not for the first time, there was an overload of Millwall players that caught City on the hop and O’Brien was able to score easily from close range.

City’s response was not long in coming as Sam Bowen played a free kick into the “corridor of uncertainty”, but before anything could come of that situation, the referee was blowing for a penalty, presumably given for a holding offence against one of the home players attempting to exploit what looked like a very dangerous dead ball delivery.

Tellingly, there were very few Milwall protests at the award and Dan Griffiths, scorer of two penalties on his way to a hat trick in the 11-0 Welsh Youth Cup romp at Taff’s Well last weekend, opted for power down the middle from the spot as Fanshawe dived out of the way.

Nothing to do with yesterday’s game, but I’m grateful to Michael Morris of the Cardiff City Mad website for this superb photo of Aron Gunnarsson’s goal on Friday night – he called it “Guard of Honour”!

At 1-1 with the second period less than ten minutes old, the match was set up to go either way, but it has to be said that from then on, Millwall generally had the better of things. As mentioned earlier, the visitors greater power became more of a factor, but it would be unfair to put Millwall’s superiority solely down to this – they were generally brighter and quicker than their opponents in the game’s final half an hour.

This was reflected in a series of goal attempts which flew not far high or wide with home keeper George Ratcliffe looking as if he would have struggled to reach them if they had been on target. Ratcliffe did excel straight after our equaliser as he made his best save of the game, but I suppose that if I was critical of some of City’s finishing before the break, the same had to apply to Millwall after it.

City had little to offer in response as they looked like a team that was seriously missing their most influential player, Sion Spence, who is still out with an injury picked up on Wales duty in September. Spence scored thirty times last season, but also provided creativity from the number ten position and support for a striker who did not tend to get as isolated as he looked yesterday.

Griffiths was forced to fend for himself more and more as the game went on yesterday and, after he was withdrawn, the same applied to Davies who moved into the middle to replace him. These two players were named in the Wales Under 19 squad which qualified for the Elite Round of the European Championships for the first time since 2014 (Davies had to miss out through injury) recently along with Ratcliffe, Reynolds, who captained the side, and Bowen.

How Wales would have deployed Griffiths and Davies if they had started a game together would have been interesting- would they have used them as a two through the middle or like City do with Griffiths through the middle and Davies wide on the right? With us sitting top of the league, it must be said that their our can hardly be called a failure, but yesterday Davies, who I’ve seen play so well as a centre forward in the past, looked wasted out wide and Griffiths was too often left on his own.

Yet, for all that City were not at their best, they came the closest to getting that winning goal when sub Ntazana Mayembe hit the post with two minutes of normal time left.

City stay at the top of their league with twenty five points, while Millwall are one of six teams chasing them who are within half of dozen points of that, but all of these sides have played at least two games more than them, so I think it’s fair to say that they should be happy with a point from a game they may well have lost because it does them little harm when you look at the bigger picture.

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5 Responses to Definitely a point gained, rather than two dropped, as City Under 18s stay top of the league.

  1. Colin Phillips says:

    Thanks, Paul, I think everyone has been caught out by the Friday night game, why else are there no comments.

    Once again a fair and accurate report on the game.

    I must say the result gave me DEEP JOY!!

    Didn’t get to the game but watched the whole match on Sky in the company of my daughter.

    I think most people were surprised by Warnock’s team selection, based on his post match comments I think he was as well.

    The result suggests that he got the selection right but will he ever go with that formation with the same personnel again?

    We have three good central defenders but they all lack for pace and I will always feel a little uncomfortable with that back three.

    Three minor miracles Friday night, we got a Cardiff-friendly referee (what are drinking Monsieur Mariner?), we only committed THREE fouls (BBC site stats) and Harry Arter didn’t receive a card!

    Did we really only commit three fouls? It’s a bit hard to believe!

    From the same BBC stats we almost achieved parity with Wolvesalona in the possession stakes. Having watched a few Wolves matches recently they are certainly not averse to giving it some “wellie” and not just when they are under pressure. I didn’t see much of their vaunted Portuguese mid-field in this game, if they don’t fancy Cardiff on a wet Friday night, how the hell are they going to manage Stoke on a wet Tuesday?! Watching the build-up to the game, when the line-ups came up on the screen my daughter asked me what flag was next to some of the Wolves players, my reply of Portugal was met by why have they so many Portuguese players in their side.

    I’ve read that Goonersson (as Alan Parry insisted on calling him) has assumed responsibility for the first goal, I think he is being a little hard on himself, OK got a yard and on the wrong side of him but he was very quick to react to Etheridge’s save(a very good one) and if Arter (on the post) had reacted as quickly, he probably would have blocked the shot and again if Doherty hadn’t hit it into the top of the net and if my Auntie had test……..!

    Talking more generally about the game we watch; have the officials given up trying to sort out the chaos that takes place at just about every set-piece? Watch quite a lot of the Championship games on TV yesterday and the mayhem that takes place is incredible, arms around necks and strangulation by shirt (perhaps a shirt can be designed that will easily if pulled!). Not blaming the referees, they only have one pair of eyes, but they need help from somewhere.

    I was discussing cricket on a forum I visit and said that Test cricket was leaving me behind, run rates of 3.5 – 4 an over, shots being played that have no place in my idea of the test match game, I’m afraid I’m getting as out of touch with football. Paul, you already know my views on how the ‘obstruction law” is not implemented these days, so I had a look online to see if it has been changed in any way, it has it seems, but after reading the explanation “I haven’t got a clue!”. But on my reading of it, I don’t think Paterson fouled their keeper for our first.

  2. Colin Phillips says:

    Oops, spot my deliberate mistake……..sorry, Paul.

  3. Lindsay Davies says:

    Lovely report, Paul – spot on…thanks.
    Great win – but, wasn’t it precisely because we “went for it” from the beginning?
    More of that, and we’ll win a few more…let’s be bold.

  4. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Hello Colin, maybe the lack of replies is down to the fact that we won – generally speaking, I think people seem to be more inclined to send something after defeats than they are following victories.

    I don’t expect us to play with that formation tomorrow or at least not with the same wing backs. I think maybe Bennett will come back in and one of Hoilett or Murphy will be left out.

    I’m not so sure you should be surprised about the low number of fouls we committed, because there were only seven by us against Brighton and six at Liverpool – I’ve not checked this, but I think we’re giving away less free kicks per game in the Premier League than we were in the Championship.

    I think Wolves should be okay this season, but I struck me that they might be a side with problems in the dressing room when I saw them against Huddersfield and there wasn’t anything in what I saw on Friday to make me think I was definitely wrong in thinking that – there is a lot of stuff on Wolves messageboards about how they need to play with three central midfielders rather than two and I think they might have a point.

    My understanding is that the obstruction law no longer exists. If Paterson was guilty of anything, it was obstruction, but when you consider the sort of goings on in the penalty area at corners, free kicks and long throw ins that you mention, it all seemed very mild to me – the alleged foul by Paterson is diverting attention away from what was the big problem for Wolves with that goal, indecisive goalkeeping.

  5. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Hello Lindsay, I see Southampton have just sacked Mark Hughes which may mean that we will see a different approach from us, but I would expect us to be pretty positive on Saturday. On the other hand, I’m certainly not expecting three centrebacks and attacking wing backs tomorrow – if we go with Morrison, Manga and Bamba in the middle, I’d expect Bennett and, maybe, Peltier on the flanks.

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