Weekly review 12/7/24.

Finally, some transfer news to convey with City, seemingly, on the brink of announcing the arrival of two players, both of whom I’d rate at a higher level than I was expecting from us this summer.

The first one to emerge was QPR forward Chris Willock who was strongly linked with City on Wednesday. The rumour gathered pace an hour or two later when QPR confirmed that Willock had left the club after his contract had expired and talks about him renewing his deal had failed to reach a positive conclusion.

After that, the links with City only grew stronger and major outlets like the BBC were soon reporting that it was, to all intents and purposes, a done deal. Given that Erol Bulut has also talked about what he thought Willock can bring to his team, it’s clear that the deal is definitely on, but, surprisingly, it hasn’t been confirmed yet.

Willock is twenty six and can play on both wings or as an attacking central midfielder. As is the case with most signings City, as a Championship club, make, there is an element of risk involved in the transfer. Willock has a patchy fitness record and his figures in terms of goals scored and created have not been as good as they were in the first half of his four years with the Shepherd’s Bush club.

However, this drop in output came from a very high peak. In 21/22, Willock scored seven times and provided an assist for another eleven in his thirty five appearances for QPR and he and Ilias Chair were regarded as being among the Championship’s most creative attacking midfield pairings.

Willock started his career with Arsenal and gained some first team experience with them when playing in the League Cup – also making an impression on Arsene Wenger to the extent that the former Gunners manager described him as a “very interesting” player. Willock signed for Benfica after leaving Arsenal, but played only B team football for the Portuguese team over the next three seasons, while also being kept waiting for a first team start while with West Brom on loan. Ironically, when Willock did play some senior football during another loan spell, at Huddersfield, one of the two goals he scored for the Yorkshire team came against the Baggies.

Willock signed for QPR for a reported fee of £750,000 in October 2020 and his first goal came against us in a 1-0 win for QPR at Cardiff City Stadium three months later in what was Neil Harris’ last game as City manager. Willock played a total of 144 games for QPR (40 of them as a sub) in all competitions and scored 20 times for them.

The obligatory highlights video for Willock is impressive and, notwithstanding that injury record and his drop in output recently, I think it’s fair to say that, this time at least, the talk that City have beaten a few other interested clubs to capture a player’s signature has some truth in it.

Back in 2014, Calum Chambers was 19 years old and winning his 3 England caps while also earning a big money move from Southampton to Arsenal. Obviously, the fact that he looks to be signing for a Championship side before he has turned 30 suggests that things have not quite gone as predicted for Chambers since then, but, if he does sign for us (he was reportedly taking a medical yesterday), it will be the first time he has played outside the Premier League in his career.

Chambers started out with Southampton, but only played just over twenty matches for them before signing for Arsenal where he played around 120 times in all competitions over a period of eight years. There were a couple of loan moves for him during this time, both for seasons with sides that ended up being relegated -Middlesbrough in 17/18 and then he spent the next season at Fulham.

It was during his spell at Craven Cottage that the game i remember most from his career was played. Chambers started at right back at Cardiff City Stadium in October 2018 and Josh Murphy gave him a very torrid afternoon in a match which we ended up winning 4-2 – I say a torrid afternoon, but in. fact it only lasted twenty six minutes for him as he was withdrawn. The early change was described as being down to injury at the time, but there were plenty present that day, who will always believe that it was down to Fulham throwing the towel in so to speak in that particular contest.

I should say here that, even if Chambers’ withdrawal that afternoon was tactical, he recovered to the extent that, while best known for playing centreback or right back, his switch to a central midfield role for the rest of that season saw him winning Fulham’s Player of the Season award for a side that finished below as both teams dropped back into the Championship.

Chambers left Arsenal in January 2022 to sign for Aston Villa on a free transfer and had played for them thirty times by the end of 23/24. Back in January, Villa manager Unai Emery said Chambers was free to leave the club and, apparently, we were interested in taking him on then, only for him to opt to stay and fight for a first team place – an injury crisis meant that Chambers was able to get back into first team contention at Villa for the closing games of the season.

Again, there are questions which arise with a signing like this, because it seems pretty clear now that Chambers will never hit the sort of heights that were being predicted for him a decade ago, but I go back to that stat about him having played all of his career in the Premier League – for me, it’s a compelling argument when it comes to this signing. While the fact Chambers only made five appearances for Villa last season suggests that now is the right time fot that proud record to end, you’d like to think that, even if he is not the player he once was, he would still fall into the category of a good Championship performer.

It seems that there could be a third newcomer announced in the next day ro two, but, sticking with the two that would appear to be signing for us, a common connection between them is Arsenal – Aaron Ramsey may not have had the hoped for impact on the pitch last season and, at the moment, it’s hard to see him doing so in 24/25 either, but I wonder if he has played a part in attracting Chris Willock and Calum Chambers to the club?

Meanwhile, the first team have begun their warm up games. Bath City were beaten 5-1 in a behind closed doors game last Saturday with Kion Etete (2), Yakou Meite, David Turnbull with a penalty and Dimitri Goutas scoring the goals, but there was a 1-0 defeat at Leckwith to Kidderminster Harriers in the first open to the public match on Wednesday evening.

Ramsey (who was at Wimbledon), Horvarth, Ng, Romeo, Collins, O’Dowda, King and Etete were among the players missing for various reasons from the Kidderminster game which, like so many early pre season friendly encounters, was in reality two matches of forty five minutes with both teams making eleven changes at half time.

In many ways, the game(s) was like so many we’ve seen at Cardiff City Stadium in the last four years with the away side scoring before half time and then hanging on to their 1-0 lead in the face of not very effective Cardiff pressure through the second period. City had their best attacking moments while it was still 0-0, but, Isaak Davies missed the sort of chance I’d back him to score from 8 times out of 10 because of a poor first touch after being put through by Rubin Colwill and it was the full Wales international who came closest to scoring with a shot from 18 yards which hit the upright.

The only goal came in the minute before half time when Jak Alnwick made a good save to keep out a close range Kidderminster header and the ball then rebounded off Joel Colwill (who made a decent first of playing at right back overall) and trickled into the net.

On the balance of play, City were unlucky to lose. They probably deserved to win actually and I’m not going to get too worked up about the outcome, but what I would say is that, no matter what the excuses, we should really be beating a team from four levels below ua and the lack of an any real sort of end product for the vast majority of the ninety minutes was disappointing given who we were playing against.

I’ll finish by noting that there are two more matches being played on the trip to Austria which will start in just under a week’s time – on 25 July we’ll be playing another Bundesliga 2 team in Hertha Berlin and two days before that, we’ll face Mamelodi Sundowns, the South African Champions on the 23rd.

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6 Responses to Weekly review 12/7/24.

  1. Dai Woosnam says:

    Paul,
    I am going to Kidderminster soon, for a 4 night holiday there. I won’t congratulate their fans on their win… as I fear we will be a pushover for a great many teams this coming season.
    A few nights ago, I misread a ‘Moore deal done’ headline in WalesOnline… I exclaimed to my wife ‘Ah, great… he will save us from relegation… though he might need Ryan Giles signed as well, to put the ball on his bonce!’
    But then my face fell when I realised the deal had indeed been done… alas not with Cardiff City, but with HULL City.
    Just like we bought the wrong Bacuna brother, so we have done likewise with Willock.
    Younger bro Joe would have been the better choice… but we have not the dosh.
    Chris is another Callum Robinson, methinks.
    If we avoid ending in the bottom six this coming season, I will be astonished.
    DW

  2. Dai Woosnam says:

    Buongiorno, Paul…
    When I was a kid, I used to fantasise of winning Littlewoods and buying Cardiff City. And pitting our club against the Welsh national team in a friendly… and whipping them.

    Fast-forward to today, and Craig Bellamy’s new appointment as Wales boss.

    I think by keeping the underwhelming Bulut, we also dodged a true bullet at CCFC… since ‘Bellars’ would have been the architect of a myriad cock-ups stemming from rolling out from the back to defenders who are not Roberto Carlos or Franz Beckenbauer… and whose second touch is invariably…
    … a tackle…!!

    https://www.theguardian.com/football/article/2024/jul/13/wales-manager-craig-bellamy-admits-he-was-naive-to-cheer-against-england

  3. Dai Woosnam says:

    I have just read on WOL that several clubs are sniffing around the star in our crown, Mark McGuinness. Betcha one is Sheffield Wednesday where he is revered.
    Apparently one bid is of seven figures,
    Eh? When you think if the 12 million NW wasted on Josh Murphy, any bids for Mark should start at EIGHT figures, not seven.
    Journeymen players like Phillips and Chalmers are not fit to lace his boots. This boy is a future captain of his country, and is the only worthwhile legacy that Mick McCarthy left us.
    But I am not surprised that this manager clearly does not rate him: but then he does not rate our next two quality players… Alnwick and Tanner. And yes… I know Perry Ng should be in the quality pantheon too… incidentally, he was supposed to be leaving us for a bigger club. What happened?.
    If Bulut sells McGuinness, then it is a shameful day for our club. It will be a sign for me to down tools and take up transcendental meditation.
    TTFN,
    Dai.

  4. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Just to say Dai that I did a long reply to your three messages which has somehow been lost by my computer (it was probably my fault, but I can’t begin to understand why), so I’ll have another go at answering them tomorrow!

  5. Dai Woosnam says:

    Commiserations Paul on your words disappearing into the ether. It is an event that I have experienced many times in my 25 years online.

    Another unfortunate arrival at my door has been my development since I passed 75, of acute aphasia. Now I know the reason why my hospital consultant wife asks confused elderly patients the standard question… if they know the name of our Prime Minister*…!!

    * I jokingly tell her that is quite a tough question… especially given the events post 2017…!!

    But since I developed this affliction, I have gone to pot on names. So apols that I got Chambers wrong… I have the late Len Chalmers hobbling through the 1961 Cup Final, and now working overtime in my subconscious.
    DW

  6. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Here’s a few thoughts on some of the subjects you raised Dai. Kieffer Moore’s gone to Sheffield United now, I would have been pleased to see him sign for us last season, but not as bothered now. He’s thirty two in less than a month’s time and, although I’d rate him as a “young” 32 because he came to the pro game later than most, I think he’s getting to an age now where he could start to decline quickly.

    I’d have prefered the other Willock as well, but I’m more hopeful about Chris than you. He was very good at this level a few years ago and he’s at an age where we could have him for the years when he is at his peak. Although he’s had his injury problems in recent yeqrs, he was available for most of last season and any doubts I have about hin are more to do with the mental side of things.

    Agree with you about McGuinness – lots of people rated Nat Phillips when he was here including myself, but our defensive record was better when we had a McGuinness/Goutas partnership than it was when we had Phillips and Goutas playing together. People were saying on the messageboard yesterday that we should have accepted a £5 million bid because there was no way McGuinness was worth that – I disagree, I wouldn’t hesitate to reject any bid under £7 million – I think McGuinness will eventually go though because we appear to be in the same sort of position as we were under Peter Ridsdale, that is looking to be quite ambitious when it comes to new players, but needing at least one major sale a summer to pay for them. We were trying to sell Perry Ng back in the spring, but there doesn’t seem to be any interest in him, so I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re in a position where one out of McGuinness and Rubin Colwill will be leaving.

    I’m pleased with the Bellamy appointment, but I wouldn’t be too surprised if he ends us regretting his play out from the back policy. i think I’ve said on here before that the only way a play out from the back policy can be seen to be a success or failure is to measure goals scored as a result of it against goals conceded at the end of a season or year – I reckon if this check is done honestly and accurately, most managers in the professional game would have to admit they’d lost more goals through playing out from the back than they’ve gained, can’t see Bellamy changing his approach though, even if he ends up heavily in the minus category.

    Finishing with Calum Chambers, the problem I have with him is that I cannot forget the player he was ten years ago when he looked an outstanding prospect. However, he’s played very little first team football under Emery at Villa and the question becomes is that down to one manager not fancying him or is he on a sort of decline which would see him soon losing his place in the City side? As someone who has known nothing else but the Premier League in what is now a long career, I’d like to think that Chambers would cope well with the second tier, but I wouldn’t want to see McGuinness losing his first team place because of Chambers’ arrival, maybe Bulut is thinking about playing three at the back?

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