After the excitement brought about by the appointment of our new manager, it’s been another quiet week for Cardiff City although there were a few developments on Friday after most of the seven days had been taken up speculating as to the identity of the player the club had agreed to sign before the appointment of Erol Bulut was confirmed.
Mr Bulut met the media for the first time on Monday and I thought he created a pretty good impression- I was particularly pleased to hear our new manager single out our poor home form as something he wants to see an improvement in.
However, the star of the show for me was Chairman Mehmet Dalman who was as impressive as I’ve ever seen him as he did his bit to counteract the common charge from the likes of me that the top dogs at the club do not understand the game.
I’d remarked after previous meetings he’d appeared at that our Chairman was surprisingly frank in his opinion of the club’s owner at times and that continued here. In particular, the moment when he said that Mr Tan really did know about football which was accompanied, with very good timing, by a knowing look which drew laughter from the assembled hacks drew plenty of comment – the implication that he did not mean what he had just said seemed obvious.
I say “seemed”, because there has to be the chance that the relationship between owner and Chairman is so strong that it can survive some pretty direct, to put it mildly, sounding comments from one towards the other. Maybe it was all a joke, but I know what is the more likely option to me.
CEO Ken Choo was also present and he and the Chairman were asked how many season tickets were on sale this summer. It seems there was some sort of misunderstanding at this stage because both men sought clarification from other club employees and the answer 18,000 was given (the club’s on line ticket feature indicates that figure is nearer the twenty to twenty one thousand mark).
Mr Choo was then asked how many did he expect to be sold. At the time, the tickets sold figure was just over 11,000 (a better figure than I was expecting to be sold all summer if I’m being honest) and he replied 14,000 – the Chairman was more bullish and went for 18,000 with a comment that some things he and Erol Bulut would be saying during the summer would excite fans.
Mr Dalman had also said that agreement had been reached regarding a transfer and he appeared to be on the brink of identifying the player concerned when he told to keep it quiet for now by Mr Choo.
People have taken this exchange as meaning that the player we’ve, apparently, signed is someone who will help carry the season tickets sold figure to the 18,000 mark mentioned by Mr Dalman. The fact that Mr Choo must, surely, know who the mystery player is and was still predicting only 14,000 sold suggests that our new man will not be a star name that will send those season ticket sold figures soaring.
However, with the current ticket sold figure now close to 13,000, I’d say that there’s only one player who might be available to us, with our transfer embargo, capable of persuading around 5,000 to purchase a season ticket and he is an illustrious old boy of ours.
I was a little surprised to learn that Aaron Ramsey had started most of his current team Nice’s post World Cup games despite the tournament not going well for the man who is now Wales’ captain. Ramsey had been a sub for most of the pre World Cup matches he’d been fit enough to be part of for his club, but he had enough appearances overall to trigger a clause which meant he’d automatically be offered another contract by Nice.
Although Nice’s retained list showed that Ramsey had not been released by the club, there have been media stories claiming that the midfielder wants a two year contract, while Nice are only prepared to offer a one year deal.
If this was true, then it may open the door to City coming in with a two year contract offer of their own and then the prospect of Ramsey coming here starts to look a possibility.
After the Gareth Bale saga of last summer however, I’m going to leave it at that unless or until Ramsey has signed for us – I wasted my time last week typing a thousand words plus welcoming a manager who never turned up, so that’s me finished on Ramsey until next week’s Wales games at least!
Any other transfer speculation I’ve seen seems half hearted to me and with the manager settling in, you get the feeling things are on hold for what is hopefully a short while.
That’s what happened with City’s pre season preparations. Apparently, a series of practice games and a training trip to the Algarve were pencilled in to be announced at Monday’s media conference, but Erol Bulut wanted to give them the once over before okaying the proposals. Since then, there has been confirmation of one game – City will be the opposition for Wycombe Wanderers in Joe Jacobson’s well deserved Testimonial game at Adams Park on 29 July. The under 21 team’s pre season programme has also been announced and features games against the equivalent teams of Premier League sides Villa and Luton.
The other Friday announcement was the revelation of the club’s retained list (it looks like we are going to have to get used to waiting until we’re well into June to see them from now on). To be honest, it was a bit of a non event with no real surprises at senior level – I’m glad to see that Mark Harris, Joel Bagan and Eli King have all been offered contracts mind. Of the younger players, Owen Pritchard, Aidan MacNamara and Taylor Jones can all feel a little unlucky with the first named in particular being unfortunate given that he was injured for much of last season.
One last thing, Erol Bulut said on Monday that he expected to bring in three members of staff he’s worked with previously , while current coach Dean Whitehead is expected to join Watford shortly. As for Sol Bamba, there will be discussions as to whether the man brought in to be Sabri Lamouchi’s Assistant will be staying with City – as it seems like one of the newcomers the manager wants to bring in would work as his assistant, Sol would probably have a new job title if he were to stay.
We all love Sol but we have to go with the new manager’s choice of management team, with or without Sol. That’s the nature of the beast- ask Alan Curtis as he knows all about the realities of football loyalty or the lack of it to be more precise.
I have a strong “ new dawn” feeling about the City atm. This won’t be confirmed, of course, until the season gets under way, but I am optimistic. I vowed never to renew my season ticket when Mad Mick was with us and we got stuffed by West Brom 4-0 , but here I am, back on level 4 next season with my two grandchildren, all wearing the latest kit and planning an away day at Adams Park for Joe Jacobson’s testimonial.
I guess there’s a few thousand of us out there. We all have the same disease?.
Hello Paul and others – I actually advised the Sales team at the CCS in May that I would not be renewing my season ticket, but like Alan I had a change of heart and so mid-week having established that my seat was still secure on Level 4, took the plunge once again.
A better season ahead – I’m beginning to think so.
Thanks both for your replies and welcome Alun after what I believe is your first message on here.
I listened to the Second Tier podcast yesterday, it’s presented by a couple of guys in their twenties I believe, ones a Derby fan and I don’t know who the other one supports. Anyway, through last summer, the Derby fan was making optimistic noises about what the coming season held for us, while the other one never wavered froo his opinion that our signings weren’t impressive and that we were going to struggle. Naturally, I took a dislike to him, but he was proved right and this time around he says we look the weakest of the twenty four teams at the moment. Much as I don’t like hearing that, I can’t get too annoyed because logically, the three sides that came up look stronger than us, the three that came down definitely are and as none of the other seventeen finished below us, so we have to be don’t we?
However, both of your messages encapsulate perfectly the fact that the summer is a time for optimism for the supporters of all football teams in the UK – we may have lost some of our best players from last season and none of us know much about our new manager, but I agree that there is a more optimistic feel around the place and the very good season tickets sold figures confirm that it’s shared by many.
We need a good transfer window, no doubt about that, but on the plus side, I’d say that the fact that all three loan players last season did well while they were here and that Cody Drameh, Tommy Doyle and Alfie Doughty all seem to have gained from their time with us will make clubs more prepared to send players here on loan than they might have been in the past. With us unable to buy players or pay loan fees, I think how we use the loan market could be crucial when it comes to our chances of survival and more.
Paul, and your compadres,
Yes, there is curiously cause for optimism… based on nothing more than a strong sense of belief in our new Turkish boss. The last City boss who so impressed me with the cut of his jib, was Malky Mackay. Malky was a class act who unfortunately was to blot his copybook by briefing against Vincent… the true saviour of our club.
And before I sign off, a word from me re your response to the comments here.
It seems to me that your greatest quality is perfectly encapsulated in the brilliant logic of the final sentence of your second paragraph. It is the quality of yours that I most would love to come my way by some sort of osmosis.
And it is this…
… viz… your ‘analytical cast of mind’. Me? I am entirely fuelled by emotion, alas.
Hello Dai, thanks for your reply. It’s hard to put a finger on why, but Bulut does give me confidence – I suppose that might change once we start to sign the sort of signings he’s making. One thing I would say mind following last night’s game is that the prospect of Aaron Ramsey returning to City does nor look as attractive as it once did.