Salech sorely missed for the first time as impressive Lincoln stifle City.

About a quarter of an hour into today’s top of the table clash with Lincoln City, I thought it was going to be a long, long afternoon for us. Despite changing from their usual four at the back to a three centrebacks formation, Lincoln were comfortably keeping us at arm’s length and were causing us problems with their method of play which is almost a complete opposite of ours.

Now, it should be said here that I am very much the pessimist when watching us play (I’ve always believed that the vast majority of people who watch their teams while sober are, but maybe I’m wrong there?). Very often down the years, I’ve started fearing the worst early in a match only for City to prove me wrong as they won quite easily mind, but today, I was right – Lincoln were worthy winners and, in the end, it was quite comfortable for them.

I must say Lincoln impressed me, they were very hard to play against and, for me were a much better team than they looked when they beat us at Sincil Bank just before Christmas. Although I thought the Imps just about edged it that day, there was very little between the teams and luck was against us with the own goal Alex Robertson scored to put them 1-0 up – on another day, we definitely could have got something from that match.

Today though it looked like a bunch of individuals against a proper team. Many of City’s individuals are gifted at this level and it was significant that, a frantic minute in the first half apart, the little bits of eye catching skill by the likes of the Colwill brothers and Amari Kellyman which drew eager applause from the home crowd, came to nothing as City never built up a head of steam to get the big crowd really involved. 

It helped Lincoln that whenever they attacked in open play, it was far less congested in the final third than it was when we did, but they were organized in a way that we weren’t and let’s be frank, we’ve been pretty open when we played at home all season.

Lincoln have the lowest percentage possession figures in the division, while we have the highest and the gap between the two of us only grew on an afternoon when it was 77/23 in our favour, but Lincoln were happy to let us have the play as they are so well drilled out of possession. 

I’m sure Yousef Salech would have started today if he was fit because, while they had prospered without an attacking focal point in his absence, this was a day when City really needed one – for the first time since his injury six weeks ago against Stockport. 

In straightforward terms, City needed some more height in their team against such tall opponents and, in terms of the aerial challenge, it also didn’t help that Perry Ng cried off this morning with an illness to be replaced by Ronan Kpakio – although, to be fair to the teenager, I thought he was maybe our best player on the day.

Other changes saw Will Fish replace Dylan Lawlor and Kellyman returning instead of Cian Ashford, while Lincoln’s Jack Moylan, widely regarded as their best player, was only on the bench after being an injury doubt through much of the preceding week.

Lincoln’s switch of formation may have been viewed as something of a risk, but it didn’t work out that way as City spent much of the first half an hour trying to come to terms with it – in fact, i can’t remember a single goal attempt from us during this time.

That all changed around the thirty five minute mark when Ollie Tanner, struggling to make the same impact as he does on the right as Kellyman was being used on that side of the pitch, came infield to hit a right footed effort from twenty yards that drew a fine save out of George Wickens as he pushed the ball over for a corner.

Seconds later, Wickens was less impressive as he shovelled away a Rubin Colwill effort as his brother closed in and when the ball was half cleared to Rubin his shot was this time deflected not far wide for another set piece.

City had a few more corners as they finished the half on top, but they’d had their best period of the match and the second half was to prove a disappointment as they finished second to a team who must be favourites to be Champions after they snuffed out any momentum City had.

By starting with Osho and Fish, City were arguably using the pair of centrebacks best equipped to deal with the physical challenge Lincoln posed and they both did well enough in the first half, but it proved to be different on fifty five minutes when the vicitors scored what was always going to be a vital first goal.

Osho got first contact on a long ball forward as he challenged with Rob Street, but it turned into an assist as Ben House got away from Fish and played in Street who shot home from eight yards.

Rather surprisingly, City took longer than normal to bring on substitutes as Callum Robinson and Chris Willock replaced Kellyman and Joel Colwill. The changes soon brought a second goal, but not in the right net when Tanner, now on his favoured right side, carelessly conceded possession to give Lincoln the chance to show their speed on the break. In no time at all, sub Dom Jefferies was running at Fish and he had few problems cutting in and firing in low from twelve yards.

Dylan Lawlor came on for Osho and Ashford for Tanner and maybe there could have still been something for City from the match if Rubin’s shot had found the corner rather than flying a foot or two wide. 

There was also a well struck effort from Robinson which was saved, but the closing minutes were generally comfortable for a good Lincoln side which presented City with problems they just couldn’t solve.

As I type this, the 3 o clock kick offs are coming to an end and it looks like Bolton are not taking advantage of our slip as they trail 2-0 (they ended up scoring three times after the eighty eighth minute to win 3-2, an outcome which will give them great momentum) at home to in form Wycombe who suddenly look real Play Off contenders (or maybe they don’t!). Bradford are edging to a 2-1 home win over Leyton Orient and with Stockport not playing, Huddersfield beat Rotherham this lunchtime, while Reading are winning at under achievers Luton, as are Stevenage at Burton.

There was an amazing game involving our under 18s at Watford this lunchtime where Paul Moreno and Harry Watts both scored twice and Axel Donczew and Jack Sykes weighed in with one each in a 6-4 win.

Locally, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club were hammered 7-1 at home by Pontardawe in the Ardal League South West.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , | 7 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Lincoln City matches.

I must say I disagree with the pretty common suggestion I’ve seen that Saturday’s match with Lincoln is a League One title decider. After all, the biggest gap there can possibly be between the clubs after the game is if we win to go four points clear with a slightly better goal difference than the Imps.

A victory would put us on seventy five points and although I note that some bookies have stopped taking bets on finishing in the top two, there is no way that a side will be going up automatically with that number of points.

Okay, I accept that it is very, very unlikely to happen, but it’s not impossible for a feeling that, having beaten your biggest challengers, the job in hand has been done when, in truth, it hasn’t. In fact, it’s nowhere near done. In such circumstances, setbacks would inevitably follow and, having lost that intensity which you need to mount a successful promotion challenge, it would become very hard to get it back.

The same applies even more so to Lincoln who would go a couple of points clear with that slightly better goal difference if they were to win, but is that really an insurmountable gap for us when there are still thirty three points left to play for?

As for what will happen, what I would say is that Saturday’s four goal win means that we’re currently averaging exactly two goals scored per league game and I can’t help thinking that, if we are to win, we need to at least maintain that average.

WhoScored,com’s stats show that we are, by some distance, bottom of the League One table for winning aerial challenges (Lincoln are fourth best) and although our goals conceded from set pieces figure is better than I expected (we’re eleventh lowest), Lincoln are top of the scoring charts from free kicks, corners and throw ins.

The thing is, I’m haunted by how easy Lincoln’s winning goal in the first meeting between the teams looked and so I can’t see us being able to keep a clean sheet on Saturday – especially when we’re likely to be missing Yousef Salech’s aerial ability in defending near post corners again.

The funny thing is that although a draw is the result the chasing pack will probably most want, I wouldn’t be surprised at all if City and Lincoln both took a point each today if it were offered to them. Although only fourteen matches out of the sixty eight the two teams have played between them have finished all square, I wouldn’t be that shocked if it finished level on the weekend.

On to the quiz with it’s seven questions which I’ll publish the answers to on Sunday.

60s. Lincoln, a little like Cardiff, are a side that, in my experience, have played a lot of long ball football, so, being mischievous, I’ll suggest that this player’s surname was quite appropriate! Although he only played league football for Lincoln, and then it was less than a hundred times, his Wikipedia page is an interesting read.

While on a youth contract with the club representing his birthplace, he played in the First Leg of the Youth Cup Final against the famed Busby Babes which was lost 7-1. Injury ruled him out of the return game and so he was never presented with a loser’s medal until he wrote to the FA some fifty six years later because he thought it would be “something nice to show his grandchildren” and they agreed to his request. While at this club, he was also selected as a guinea pig for an experiment which never got off the ground. It was during the early days of floodlit matches and, as a winger, he was selected to wear a fluorescent shirt because it was figured he would be close to the touchline (I would have thought it would be better to have someone who played through the middle of the pitch wearing it!).

His senior career began with a team which although it is very close to Lincoln in one sense, they very rarely, if ever, came up against in league football. Freed without playing a game, he then joined Lincoln where goals came at a decent rate for him in his eighty or so appearances. His one encounter with City did not go well and upon his release by Lincoln in 1964, he dropped into non league football to represent whites who were close to a border. One other unusual feature was that he only ever played semi professional football for Lincoln as he kept his “day job” as a draughtsman, can you name him?

70s. Another player with a surname that is unique in the game since I became a follower of it in the sixties, this full back began his career playing for a team from the city he was born in during this decade, but it was in the 80s that he represented Lincoln. His first club was used to much grander surroundings, but his one league appearance for them came in a losing cause at Saltergate, Chesterfield. Released at the age of nineteen, he dropped into non league football to represent a team of journeymen, and women, which would go on to experience league football in the future and his form was impressive enough for him to be offered a route back into the full time game with a team which won one of the more famous FA Cup Finals. Playing under a World Cup winner for a while, he did well enough for this club to earn a move to Lincoln for a modest fee in 1982 and he was a regular in the team which probably came closest to regaining Lincoln’s place in the top two divisions until the current side. Moving on six years later, he joined a nearby non league threesome which had briefly played league football a long, long time earlier. Who is he?

80s. Puppet show villain at the back for Lincoln for a short while during this decade – he would be given a testimonial game by his parent club a year later.

90s. Raving goon dressed initially in amber for the Tigers. (5,6)

00s. Simple sewer now found in spa town.

10s. Evangelist with a cataract?

20s. Award a headache?

Answers

60s. Brian Punter had a long wait to get his Youth Cup Final loser’s medal after his Wolves team had been beaten by Manchester United. Wolves were pioneers of  floodlit football back in the 50s and he was the model for a shirt that it was thought would be of benefit to watching spectators. Released by Wolves, Punter signed for Leicester (next to Lincoln on an alphabetical league clubs I believe), but never got to play a game for them before joining Lincoln in 1959 and he was in their side that was beaten 6-2 at Ninian Park early in 1960. After leaving league football, Punter signed for Hereford United.

70s. Gordon Simmonite played for Sheffield Wednesday, Boston United, Blackpool (during Alan Ball’s time as player manager), Lincoln and Gainsborough Trinity.

80s. Derek Hood (the hood was a recurring character in the 60s puppet series Thunderbirds) was loaned to Lincoln by York City in during the 86/87 season.

90s. Gavin Gordon.

00s. Simon Weaver who currently manages Harrogate Town.

10s. Luke Waterfall.

20s. Oscar Thorn.

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