Seven decades of Cardiff City v Blackpool matches.

Blackpool were in the bottom four of League One even after beating us 3-1 on 8 November to make it seven points from the last nine under the recently appointed Ian Evatt. However such was the nature of their win, we could easily have ended up conceding more than the five we let in recently at Plymouth, I fully expected Blackpool to be well clear of the drop zone when the two sides met again in the return fixture.

Well, Blackpool come here tomorrow still in the bottom four, although they will have the absolutely crucial win over bottom of the table Port Vale on Tuesday when they were twice behind, but eventually came out on top by 3-2 to boost them.

Before that, Blackpool had taken just two points from five matches and, after a good December run when they won five out of six in all competitions, they fell away to such effect after a 5-1 loss at Port Vale when they were reduced to ten men, that they only have three wins from their last fifteen games (sixteen, if you include an FA Cup defeat at Ipswich).

Conceding five against the team that has been bottom of the league for most of the season offers a clue as to why, despite having a squad that is generally reckoned to be a lot better than bottom four standard, the season has turned into a relegation battle for Blackpool. They have the division’s worst defensive record with sixty three goals conceded in their thirty eight matches. For all that, they could have scored a hatful against us at Bloomfield Road, we should have got far more than the one we did score as a combination of some fine saves by Bailey Peacock-Farrell and poor finishing meant we never cashed in on the dominance we had in the first half in particular.

Blackpool have conceded four or more on six occasions in all competitions this season. Furthermore, with us being the division’s leading scorers having netted four times in seven of our matches, while lying second in the table, you’d have thought we should be on for a comfortable win tomorrow.

However, Blackpool will take heart from a couple of things going into the game, first, the fact that they’ve already played well in beating us and, second, our patchy results since the aforesaid loss at Plymouth. I said in my Wycombe reaction piece that I don’t think we lose the game without Gabe Osho’s red card, but the result is there in the record books. It’s now three defeats in our last six with our previously impregnable home form having disappeared with of couple of successive defeats and many saying we looked out our feet against Wycombe. While that’s not a view I necessarily agree with, it’s hard to avoid a feeling that the latest international break can’t come soon enough for us as we should have our two injured strikers back when fixtures resume over Easter.

Onto the quiz, the answers to which will be posted on Sunday.

60s. After leaving Blackpool, he played for Preston, Wrexham, Bradford Park Avenue and Morecambe – when asked whether he felt bitter about only winning a single international cap, he replied “No, I thought I might have been given another chance. But I was not surprised when I was dropped. I just could not get into the match. I think four of the five forwards were making their first, and last, appearances.”. Who is he?

70s. Born in Blackpool, this winger featured pretty regularly for them over a three year period without really establishing himself and so it wasn’t too surprising to see him loaned out to another Lancastrian outfit beginning with the letter B. Eventually released by the Tangerines, he joined another coastal side with sandy beaches close by. Moving on after a couple of seasons he turned up another side on the coast not too far away, but this one had mud flats, as opposed to tourist trap beaches, close by! Here he prospered to the extent that he has been inducted into the club’s Hall of Fame as he was a regular in one of the best teams in the their history. He was loaned out to a landlocked town sixty miles along the motorway towards the end of his career, but can you name him?

80s. Hating law at the start of the Regency, but eventually turning up in Cardiff for a short while. (4,6)

90s. Operator from Cumbria by the sound of it!

00s. Ghost’s aural meeting with the family of former Tory Minister perhaps!

10s. He played for us in the Premier League and was the subject of something of a dispute between City and Blackpool during the following season, who is he?

00s. A meeting between the title character of an old musical and the title character of an ancient medical drama maybe!



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Cardiff’s inconsistent form continues as sending off changes the game.

A moments rashness by Gabriel Osho cost Cardiff City at least two points tonight as his lunge on Ewan Henderson saw him given a straight red card and this rime there was to be no repeat of their stroll to victory at Rotherham with ten men as they went down to a second successive 2-0 home defeat against Wycombe Wanderers.

If Osho stays on I don’t see us losing the game, maybe we end up with a 0-0 because Wycombe had defended pretty well for the first forty minutes and we didn’t have our shooting boots on, but that one act by a player who I’m afraid has shown himself to be prone to occasional lapses of judgment which have a habit of costing us changed the game completely.

Was it a justified red card? Looking at the message boards, opinions are mixed, but, for me, the key phrase here in the way that the modern game is officiated is “out of control”. Having now seen a replay of the tackle, it doesn’t look as bad as it did at the first time of asking. Seeing it live, I thought it was a definite sending off, but a second, closer look makes me understand why some are saying a yellow card would have been sufficient punishment.

However, I come back to the words out of control and I’m afraid that Osho was definitely that when he launched into his tackle and that’s why, if City are tempted to appeal the decision, I think they’ll probably lose.

For me, referee Carl Brook was inconsistent in his decision making – not for the first time, I find myself baffled as to how City end up with more cards than opponents who committed at least as many cynical fouls as we did and yet too often the ref decided that no offense had been taken place when the perpetrator was wearing Wycombe’s yellow..

That being said, to borrow the term which VAR was supposed to be restricted to, did Mr Brook make a clear and obvious error when he showed the red card to Osho? The answer has to be no – to use pundit speak for a while, Osho gave the ref the chance to get his red card out and he duly took it.

The next obvious question is was BBM’s response to having to play for close to an hour with ten men the right one? With the Rotherham example to go by, it didn’t come as a shock that our manager kept on attacking by moving Ryan Wintle  back to play as a kind of centreback cum sitting midfielder which meant that the four attacking players were allowed to stay in the roles they were fulfilling when it was eleven v eleven even if they probably dropped a few yards deeper.

I must say I liked and admired the attacking attitude and it so nearly worked as City spent pretty long periods of the second half pinning the opposition back in the manner supporters have become used to this season.

However, when you look at how the all important first goal was scored with just over ten minutes to go, you do have to question how it was that the makeshift defender Wintle was faced with having responsibility for defending the red side of the pitch with Perry Ng miles up the park in pursuit of the breakthrough goal. 

Given that Wycombe’s opener was a typical counter attack strike with a long ball into space which stretched an undermanned defence, you could be forgiven for thinking they were the team with ten men looking for some relief from the pressure they’d been under by playing a long ball into space for a forward to run on to.

Wycombe’s second goal was irrelevant really, it owed quite a bit to luck and to another dubious decision by Mr Brook to award a free kick against Joel Colwill and then, mystifyingly, showing him a yellow card. However, the goal that really counted could probably be put down to us looking for the three points late in the game having not made the type of substitution that nine managers out of ten would have done (i.e. bring on Calum Chambers or Will Fish within minutes of the red card being shown).

Therefore, the honest answer is yes, BBM got it wrong by reacting to going down to ten men like he did, but I’m not going to be too critical of him because I’m liking so much the type of team we are under him and it stands to reason that there are going to be mistakes made when playing in such a bold manner – if BBM was responsible for tonight’s defeat, then there are plenty of wins and goals scored which can be put down to his attacking approach..

Perhaps uniquely for this season, BBM named the same starting eleven and seven subs as the previous game and, in many ways, City played the first half in the same way as they did for most of the Exeter match. The difference was that, although Rubin Colwill, fresh from signing his new contract, was largely bright and accurate with his passing, the other attacking players were not quite as sharp as they’d been three days earlier.

The clearest example of this came when Omari Kellyman, who hasn’t looked quite right since returning from his groin injury, couldn’t sort his feet out when presented with a great opportunity within the six yard box. Colwill forced goalkeeper Will Norris into a diving save and Ollie Tanner was not too far wide with his shot after a lovely quick passing movement, but too many promising situations were wasted by an errant final pass or wayward shooting. 

Wycombe had posed some threat on the break, but it was mainly a holding operation until the sending off – in fact that didn’t change much until about the hour mark when Wycombe began to show the first signs that they could cash in on their one man advantage as Nathan Trott was called upon to make some good saves with sub Junior Quitrina also firing narrowly wide. 

However, Cian Ashford’s searing break which gave a lie to those who say he lacks pace, led to the best chance of the second period as he closed in on goal. The fact he was running with the ball so quickly made the chance that bit more difficult, but after his shot flew across goal and the wrong side of the post you couldn’t help thinking that he’d done the hardest bit already.

City had plenty of pressure after that and Wycombe definitely rode their luck at times, but, for the first time, it began to look as if the visitors might get the decisive first goal and it arrived when a long pass by Morley freed the sub Andre Vidigal who held off Wintle and calmly steered in his first goal in almost two years.

The second goal soon arrived as the harshly awarded free kick against the younger Colwill mentioned earlier was crossed in and after a couple of rebounds favoured the visitors, another sub, Cauley Woodrow headed in from close range.

Elsewhere, it looked like Lincoln’s long unbeaten run was coming to an end when they went down 2-0 early on at Huddersfield, but a goal in added time allowed them to salvage a 2-2 draw. City’s slip was hardly taken advantage of though by the only two teams who, realistically, could still catch us as they both could only draw at home – Bolton had a goalless stalemate with Doncaster and Bradford were held 1-1 by Mansfield.

A few hours earlier, the under 21s made it four games unbeaten as they came through a scrappy encounter at Leckwith against Fleetwood with a 2-1 win. After falling behind early on, headed goals by Alyas Debono and Charlie O’Brien from corners either side of half time gave us the points, but a fairly strong wind and what seemed like a lively pitch made for little in the way of quality football.

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