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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Another one of those not seven decades quizzes.

Barring an unwanted Play Off game against one of two sides still in with a chance of finishing in the top six, this will be the last of quizzes where I’ve been unable to set seven questions in the normal format for a club.

With Burton and Stevenage I used their second names so to speak to set questions for the return matches, but, this time, I don’t fancy basing the quiz on the word Wanderers because there’s two letters in there which I’d have to set two questions for, so I’m going to use another nine letter word – their nickname, Chairboys.

Ten days ago, Wycombe were looking strong contenders to come through and take a Play Off spot, especially when they were then leading 2-0 at Bolton in the eighty eighth minute. That was the point when it all started to go wrong for Michael Duff’s team, they ended up losing 3-2 and on Saturday, they became the side that allowed Luton to end their long run without an away won by conceding two identical goals from corners as they ended up with a rare home defeat which leaves them in ninth place still only three points away from the top six, but their Bolton experience must have been a traumatic, possibly season defining, one.

Wycombe’s recent defensive woes do not disguise the fact that they still possess one of the division’s better goals against records and only seven away defeats from eighteen games is a stat you’d associate with a top six side,. However, with only three of them having been won, you then get a big clue as to why they’ve struggled to repeat last season’s performance where they made it a three way fight with Birmingham and Wrexham for the two automatic promotion places before fading somewhat late in the season to leave themselves in the Play Offs.

Wycombe’s low number of away defeats suggests tonight won’t be as straightforward as some are saying it will be and I wouldn’t rule out a draw, but, although I’m not that bothered about winning the title, it is definitely a game we need to be winning if we are to have a chance of overhauling Lincoln.

I’ll post the answers to the quiz on here tomorrow morning.

C. This former City player made his senior debut in his one and only appearance for the club, in 1959, which bore the name of the city of his birth. Later in his career a club he eventually signed for was charged with making an illegal approach for him and when he did eventually sign for them, the manager of the selling club said he was “an over-aggressive and slow midfielder who couldn’t keep his mouth shut”. His time at City was relatively brief, but could be called a success because the object of the exercise when he signed was achieved, can you name the player being described?

H. Signed on loan from a team we encountered fairly recently, he played just the one match for us (which was lost) during a promotion season in what became something of a problem position during the campaign. He also played a couple of matches for another Welsh club that was, coincidentally, the team he played against in his single appearance for us, who is he?

A. Capped thirty nine (the same number of league appearances he made for City) times for Wales, he made his debut for them in Riyadh, name him.

I. His two international goals were scored in Berrechid and Fez, he scored three times for us during his brief stay, do you know who he is?

R. China Crisis meet two Beatles Doctors perhaps!

B. Bored on nut diet possibly? (4,6)

O. A tough one this, as I didn’t recognise the name before I came across it this morning. He was a midfield player from North Wales whose sole appearance for the club came in a game which was won 3-2 by City at Ninian Park in front of a crowd of 832 – our scorers were Nugent, O’Sullivan and Middleton. Apparently, he was highly rated by the club, but a broken leg shortly after his debut scuppered his career almost before it had started. Do you know who I’m describing?

Y. According to Wikipedia, there are three players with a surname beginning with a Y who’ve made first team appearances for us, can you name them and as a bonus point, can you say who the son of one of them was who played for us at under 21 level?

S. A defender won four caps for Wales, playing against the three home Nations and Norway and had two spells with City, scoring against Exeter, Newport and Huddersfield. Name him.

Answers.

C. Willie Carlin played once for Liverpool before going on to have a long career mostly spent at clubs that were challenging for promotion from the old Second Division. While he was at Carlisle, Carlin was the subject of an illegal approach to sign him by Brian Clough who was manager of Derby at the time. After Carlin moved on to Sheffield United, Clough eventually got his man to leave Blades manager telling the press he’d “got one over” on Clough because he’d signed someone who was, essentially, slow and stroppy! Carlin joined City half way through the 73/74 season tasked with helping to keep the club in the second tier, something which was, just about, achieved in the “Villars match” which sent Crystal Palace, rather than us, down. That was the last game of Carlin’s career as he called it a day after that at the age of 33.

H. Steve Humphries made one appearance, in a 2-1 home defeat by Wrexham on the opening day of the 82/83 season, while on loan from Doncaster. He was the first of five goalkeepers used during that season which ended with us finishing second in the old Third Division.

A. Mark Aizelwood.

I. Uche Ikpeazu scored twice in six appearances for Uganda, he scored three times for us after signing on loan during the January transfer window in 2022.

R. Christian Roberts – Christian was a single released in 1983 by China Crisis and the Beatles track Doctor Robert is supposedly about a medical man who provided drugs to some of the best known British bands of the mid sixties.

B. Deon Burton.

O. Bangor born Phillip Owen’s sole appearance for City came in an FAW Premier Cup game with Rhyl on 10 February 1999.

Y. Scott Young, Eddie Youds and Josh Yorwerth. Scott Young’s son, Connor was also on the club’s books as a youngster.

S. Nigel Stevenson.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023, Out on the pitch, The Premier League | Tagged | 1 Comment