Meite wins it as Cardiff show signs of life.

It seems that this Cardiff City squad need to plumb the depths of ineptitude to find the formula to winning away. Was Tuesday night v Luton worse than Boxing Day at Oxford? I’d say it was just about because it was at home to a side with a truly appalling away record and the fact that the season is now more than eighty per cent over lends something of an air of finality which you can’t have when the campaign is only halfway done.

When City went to Watford and won 2-1 three days after the Oxford horror show, it was the first step on an eight game unbeaten run of four wins and four draws – how the beleaguered Omer Riza and his struggling squad must be hoping for a repeat of that run around the turn of the year following today’s victory by the same score at Blackburn!

It wasn’t just the shoreline which made City’s second league away win comparable with the first one. Just as at Vicarage Road, we scored very early on, were pulled back to 1-1 pretty quickly as the hosts took control, only for both home teams to lose their way in the second half as we held on to our lead fairly comfortably. Differences between the two games were that the decisive goal today came later than it did at Watford and that we had to come through a penalty scare in added time which would have made the furore after the one we had awarded at Coventry to rob us of a win in the ninetieth minute seem like a vicar’s tea party in comparison if the original decision to award Blackburn a spot kick had stood.

An awful Tuesday had been followed by a worse Wednesday as relegation rivals Plymouth, Stoke and Hull had all won to leave us a point above the drop zone. Furthermore, a seven minute soliloquy by Omer Riza at the start of Thursday’s press conference for today’s match which, no matter how well intentioned, only added to the sense that the wheels were coming off City’s fight for survival.

I asked earlier what was worse, Oxford 3 Cardiff 2 or Cardiff 1 Luton 2 and the decision I came to was not one I arrived at with much confidence, but I’m certain that the pressure was greater on City today than it was back in December.

As is nearly always the case these days, there were changes aplenty to the team with Andy Rinomhota, Joel Bagan, Joe Ralls, Sivert Mannsverk and Callum Robinson returning to replace Dimi Goutas, the injured Aaron Ramsey, Will Alves, Rubin Colwill and Alex Robertson.

The last named was not on the bench today which suggests he was injured (was he ever really over his hamstring injury?), but his absence was made up for by the inclusion of David Turnbull on his return from the injury suffered at Coventry in November.

I thought City lined up with a back three of Perry Ng, Will Fish and Bagan but the commentary on the stream I watched said it was a back four with Callum O’Dowda pushed forward on to the wing in a kind of 4-3-3 and they may well have been right. 

Whatever the formation was, City started not with the defensive outlook many had predicted, but on the front foot. Not surprisingly, after what happened at Sunderland, there were no short goal kicks as City went more direct with Robinson close enough to Yousef Salech to suggest we were operating with a front two for maybe the first time this season.

Another surprise was the deployment of Mannsverk on the right and there was almost immediate justification for this decision on four minutes as the Norwegian worked himself acres of space down the wing to run into and when the cross came in, it was accurate enough to find Salech about ten yards out who guided his header beyond Ashley Pears and into the corner of the net.

With new manager Valerian Ismael making a poor start and the Blackburn fans’ somewhat tempestuous relationship with club owners the Venky’s going through a bad patch as the Play off bid stalls, Ewood Park became a tough place for the home team to play at for a while after that.

City may have sensed a chance to really turn the screw on the home team, but Blackburn began to win the supporters around as they showed some of the ability to pass accurately and at pace which had been instrumental in their impressive and comfortable win at Cardiff City Stadium in the first meeting between the teams.

Last weekend at Sunderland, Perry Ng had a torrid opening to the game as he was left to virtually fend for himself against a confident winger and the same began to happen here as Rinomhota, looking some way short of 100 per cent fit, had to contend with Emmanuel Dennis who gained an early dominance oh his battle with the City midfielder turned full back as he received help from left back Ribiero to make it a two on one contest at times.

Rinomhota was about ten yards away from Dennis on sixteen minutes when he received the ball after City had lost it in sloppy fashion in the middle of the park. From there, it became quite easy for Dennis to cross to the near post where Yuki Ohashi glanced in a header from eight yards as Ethan Horvarth was beaten on his near post.

The rest of the first half was played out with Blackburn pressing City back in a manner which appeared ominous, but didn’t really result in much of a threat on their goal apart from when a close offside call went in our favour as Thyrese Dolan shot across Horvarth and in off the post and then when the keeper made a good save to deny Sondra Tronstad.

By this time, City had lost Ralls to a recurrence of his calf injury and I think that, as with Ramsey, we need to get into a mindset where we always anticipate us being without the pair of them because of their inability to stay fit for a run of games over a decent period of time these days.

Rubin Colwill came on to play in the deeper role he filled against Villa and while he wasn’t as impressive this time around, you could not fault the effort he put in. Most of what Colwill did  in the early stages of the second half was on the defensive side of things as the game continued along the path of Blackburn being in a slight ascendancy which had me fearing the worst.

However, the introduction of pace in the form of Alves and Isaak Davies for Salech,who must have been carrying some sort of slight injury surely, and Rinomhota signalled a change in approach by City as they switched to a 4-2-3-1 with Colwill pushed further forward that saw the balance began to shift. 

The next changes saw like for like replacements as Turnbull came on for Mannsverk and, more surprisingly, Yakou Meite for Robinson as attack leader. The overall effect of the second half substitutions was that City were operating in a more attacking way and Meite, who may well go through his two year contract with City without scoring a single home goal, responding to Riza’s show of faith in him, by netting his fourth, and certainly most important, City goal within a minute of coming on. 

It was a fine goal as well as O’Dowda beat a couple of opponents in a strong run down the left before finding Alves whose early cross was nodded firmly in from twelve yards by Meite as he got across the front of his marker.

Again, the atmosphere turned ugly among the Ewood Park faithful and it was City who had the best opportunity to score the game’s fourth goal as Meite, contributing one of those intermittent effective appearances off the bench which remind you what a handful he was for defenders when he was at Reading pre injury, sent Alves clear. At first, it looked like the winger, who had earlier shot just wide from twenty yards, had been over indulgent and held on to the ball too long as he cut around the keeper and beat a defender, but replays showed that, in fact, Pears had denied him with a very good save. The rebound from that save fell into Meite’s path, but he was denied his second goal as a defender cleared off the line.

Six minutes added time was shown and in the first of them, it looked like City had suffered heartbreak to match that at Coventry and Stoke where they lost 2-1 leads late on, when O’Dowda contested a cross to the far post with Makhtar Gueye and referee Adam Herczeg pointed to the penalty spot for what appeared to be a handball by the Irishman. However, replays backed up my initial impression that it was Gueye who had handled the ball. In fact, he came close to catching it in two hands, and, after consulting with one of his linesmen, the referee changed his mind and awarded City a free kick.

All of the hooha around the penalty call meant that the six minutes became closer to nine in reality, but City held on to record a win that became more important when confirmation was received that Derby had won at Plymouth to keep themselves within a point of us. Elsewhere, Luton drew 0-0 at home to Middlesbrough, so are now four points behind us, with Plymouth six adrift. Only Stoke’s superior goal difference is keeping them above us after a penalty in added time saw them lose 1-0 at Millwall, Hull continue to get good away results with a 1-1 draw at West Brom, while Oxford beat Watford 1-0 thanks to a late goal and I suppose Portsmouth aren’t clear of trouble yet following their defeat at Preston – maybe the same applies to the jacks as well after they were beaten 2-0 at home by Burnley. 

Once again, the under 18s, under 21s and senior team all played on the same day. The under 18s were beaten 2-1 at Watford and there was another disappointing result for the under 21s as they were held to a 1-1 draw by bottom of the table Colchester – Adeteye Gbadehan scoring the goal.

In local football, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club recovered from last weekend’s thrashing to maintain their safe, mid table position by beating Ynysygerwn 3-2 at home Pride of place has to go to Ton Pentre though who, at the eighteenth time of asking, finally have a league win to their name as they went to Pencoed and came out on top by 3-2. Ton Pentre are still seven points adrift at the bottom of the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division and it would take a miracle for them to stay up, but I’m pleased for all of those who are working so hard to keep a great old club going, best of luck to them for the rest of the season.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Blackburn Rovers matches.

Cardiff City’s gradual decline under Vincent Tan can be measured by our recent record against teams like Hull (we may have beaten them recently, but they’d done the double over us in each of the past three seasons), Luton, QPR, Preston and Blackburn.

Time was, we’d beat these teams fairly often (and we still do in the case of Preston, but barely ever at home). Now though, they’ve all overtaken us in recent years and, surely, go into games with City expecting to win.

Back in December 2012, the City team that won the Championship title went to Ewood Park and won in front of the Sky cameras, Now, history has judged our 12/13 team to be effective, but not great to watch – that’s probably a fair assessment, it was generally a team which got the job done, but, certainly from around November onwards, I wouldn’t say entertainment was a high priority.

However, that night in Blackburn, City sent out a statement to the rest of the division in the second half in particular as they scored three times to secure a 4-1 win which was as impressive as it sounds.

Since then it’s as if that night we used up all of the Cardiff feelgood factor for when they visit Blackburn for the next decade and more. There’s been the occasional draw, but, generally, it’s been miserable and deserved defeats in which City showed little to excite travelling fans. In the main, defeats have been by 1-0, but we’ve now let in five in two of our last four visits to Ewood Park, so, even though Rovers aren’t in the best of form, the potential is there for another defensive collapse from Cardiff.

In his somewhat bizarre press conference yesterday, Omer Riza singled out Blackburn at home as one of three very disappointing defeats during his time in charge (the others were Leeds and Oxford – has he forgotten Tuesday already?). However, whereas Leeds and Oxford saw miserable City performances, Blackburn was a little different in that I’d say, there’s been quite a few games we’ve played worse in, but that day we were outplayed by a side with a record which doesn’t really merit the quality of performance they came up with that day.

In fact, I’d say Blackburn are probably the best team to have visited Cardiff City Stadium this season – certainly, they cut us to ribbons that day. Given how low we sank on Tuesday, Blackburn will only have to play a fraction as well as they did in Cardiff to beat us with a bit to spare tomorrow.

The only thing i can cling on to is that the last time I felt this downbeat about our survival chances (after the Oxford loss on Boxing Day), we went to Watford, with their unbeaten home record, and won 2-1. So, there’s still hope, but the truth is that anything other than a fifth straight defeat would come as a very pleasant surprise.

On to the quiz then, I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday.

60s. I’m not sure this Scottish winger’s surname was greeted with the same hilarity as it would be twenty years later, but, looking at his career now, the only time he ventured away from a club in the north of England, he won the one promotion in what was a thirteen year career. For the rest of the time, there were a couple of relegations, but, generally, he seemed to specialise in mid table mediocrity, often for sides that had seen better days. Starting off at Blackburn, he moved to another club with a unique kit (they do these days anyway) to experience that promotion, before a return to Lancashire to wear blue in the third tier. There was then a short move to play for nomads with a ground that no longer exists for a season before a longer stay in a place with an unusual spire. His last four clubs all saw him staying with them for just a season, the first were a county set from the Manchester suburbs, the second played at a ground that is traditionally viewed as one of the coldest in the country, then it was back to Lancashire to play in white, before he finished off in Yorkshire with a club which, historically, would probably be the biggest he played for, but they were arguably at their lowest ebb when he spent his last season in the game with them, can you name the player being described?

70s. Strangely, this striker shares his surname with a place associated with a foodstuff that was once banned by Oliver Cromwell for it’s association with raucous celebrations! The place in question was, for someone born in Yorkshire, on the other side of the tracks so to speak and he started his career off with the red rose at Blackburn where he was something of.a back up for the four years he was with them. A move to the east Midlands to play in yellow boosted his career though as his goals over a three years spell attracted the attention of one time treble winners from his home county. However, he was hardly prolific with them and, after an equally arid time of it in Greece, he turned up at a Crescent where he found goals easier to come by, before finishing his career at what became known as the Theatre of Chips, who is he?

80s. Did he have a keen voice and, perhaps, an iron will? (5,6)

90s. Sounds like a dull Boz.

00s. Possible name for the person to sing an amalgam of I’m in the mood for Dancing and something else?

10s. Number 10 stabbing?

20s. Definitely the oldest man by the sound of it.

Answers

60s. Malcolm Darling (Captain Darling was a character in the fourth series of Blackadder whose name prompted an obvious, but funny, running joke through all six episodes) played on the wing for Blackburn from 1965 to 1970 before a move to Norwich as that club were promoted in 71/72. Darling next signed for Rochdale before spending the 73/74 season at Bolton, next there were three seasons at Chesterfield before shortish stays at Stockport, Hartlepool, Bury and Sheffield Wednesday.

70s. I’d rate Eccles cakes as a take ‘em or leave ‘em food, but Oliver Cromwell clearly wasn’t a fan. Moving on, Terry Eccles played just under fifty league games for Blackburn, before prospering at Mansfield, then struggling at Huddersfield (the first club to win the First Division title in three consecutive seasons). The goals didn’t come for him at Ethnikos Piraeus either, but he did better at Bootham Crescent, York, before finishing up at what became the McCain Stadium, home of Scarborough.

80s. Vince O’Keefe.

90s. Matt Dickins.

00s. Eddie Cochran sang the original version of Something Else and I’m in the mood for Dancing was the Nolan Sisters’ biggest hit – Eddie Nolan played three times for the Republic of Ireland and made 350 league appearances in a seventeen year career, but the only first team football be played for Blackburn in his time there between 2006 and 2009 came in the UEFA Cup.

10s. Jay (the tenth letter of the alphabet) Spearing.

20s. Adam Forshaw.

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