
Cardiff City kept their first away clean sheet in close to six months at Queens Park Rangers today and, given that they had only failed to score in one league match in 2025, you would have hoped that this would have signalled one of the two or three wins they will probably need to secure their Championship future.
Instead, we got only our second goalless draw of the season and with Plymouth, Hull and Oxford all winning while Luton and Stoke picked up decent draws, it has to be true to say that if you thought we were going down before today’s game, you surely feel a bit more certain about our fate after today – put it this way, I can’t see how anyone has become more convinced that we’re staying up after watching today’s match.
Last week i said that our draw with Sheffield Wednesday was a pretty good game of football made frustrating by our failure to react to Wednesday’s half time substitutions quickly or effectively enough and our poor defending for their equaliser. This time around, you could make no positive claims about the quality of the game, it was poor fare throughout and, for a team that now appears to have a range of decent options up front, our finishing was pretty awful.
The positive aspect of the afternoon was that rare clean sheet and, although Ethan Horvarth had one of his periodic nervy games and was unconvincing in dealing with set pieces, the outfield players helped ensure that he was never seriously troubled by them as we dealt well with free kicks and corners by and large.
The fact that City’s better players were defenders like Andy Rinomhota, who came through the ordeal of playing so soon after the tragic death of his brother last weekend with flying colours, and Will Fish showed what kind of game it was. It’s so typical of a struggling side that they cannot perform well at both ends of the pitch in the same match as the front four who did well last weekend all struggled to get close to their standard of seven days ago – two of them didn’t make it past half time.
Omer Riza’s team selection got people excited pre game as last week’s front four of Alves, Ashford, Davies and Salech were joined by Rubin Colwill playing in the deeper midfield role he filled in the FA Cup tie at Villa Park.
Truth was though, that Colwill almost certainly wouldn’t have started were it not for a pre match injury to Calum Chambers which meant that we were only able to field eight substitutes. That said, I would have thought one of David Turnbull or Alex Robertson would have been a more likely replacement for Chambers, so it was a show of faith in Colwill by the manager to see him start.
Indeed, with Fish and Joel Bagan paired at centreback, it was probably the youngest starting eleven fielded by City in a league game this season. Unfortunately for those of us who advocate more trust being shown in younger players, three changes made at half time tells you that the original selection did not work.
QPR, as you would expect from a team with eight losses in their last eleven games, were no great shakes themselves, but they were winning most of the fifty/fifties and while it would be harsh to say City were playing as if they were on the beach already, you wouldn’t have thought they were the side in the bottom three who were supposed to be fighting for their lives.
Rangers looked the sharper and if they were hardly peppering our goal with shots, they would have definitely gone in at the break thinking they should have been ahead. Winger Paul Smyth, who gave Callum O’Dowda an awkward afternoon, came closest to scoring when he burst past weak tackles from Mannsverk and Colwill to fire a shot from twenty yards that Horvarth made a bit of a meal of as the ball seemed to swerve just before it reached him.
Rangers also claimed a penalty when Alfie Lloyd went down under a challenge by Mannsverk which I thought fell into the “I’ve seen them given “ category, but there was an offside flag up at the time, so it may have been that this accounted for a penalty not being given. Lloyd also shot across goal with no one able to get a touch, while all City had to offer in return was a shot from twenty yards by Colwill that flew narrowly wide.
Riza clearly wasn’t happy with what his team had produced and Davies, Alvez and Bagan, who didn’t seem fully fit to me, made way for Callum Robinson, Ollie Tanner and Jesper Daland.
Three half time changes for Cardiff City wasn’t as effective as Wednesday’s last week, but they did improve us a little and I would say we shaded the second period. Nevertheless, it was probably Smyth who came closest to breaking the deadlock again as Horvarth made the best save of the game to turn his fifteen yard effort aside for a corner. Apart from Horvarth’s worries from corners though, there wasn’t much else from the home side to suggest they could break the deadlock.
In truth, there wasn’t much from City either, but you couldn’t help thinking there should have been. Too often though, players chose to shoot from unlikely angles and positions when they had team mates better placed. Salech was guilty of this, but he also hit a shot just over from a promising position and also might have won a penalty when he went down as he appeared to be grabbed by Ronnie Edwards, but referee Dean Whitestone was a bit of a homer all afternoon and it was no surprise to see him wave play on.
However, City’s best chances were from a couple of late headers, the first of which fell to Robinson from a good cross by Fish and the second to Yakou Meite, on for Ashford, from an O’Dowda corner, but on both occasions they could only head over.
So, yet another draw then and I can’t help feeling that our failure to turn some of them into wins is going to cost us (only Plymouth have won less games than us now). 0-0 was a fair outcome today, but some pretty ordinary City sides of the recent past would have found a way to win it 1-0 – frustratingly, two single goal wins in forty attempts tells me that this team finds such victories almost impossible.
Jack Sykes is a name I wasn’t familiar with among City’s army of youth players, but I will be from now on after his trick secured a 3-3 draw for our under 18s at Leckwith this morning against Wigan.
In local football, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club drew 1-1 at home to table topping Cardiff Draconians in the Ardal Leagues South West, but there was no follow up to Ton Pentre’s first win of the season in the their last match as they crashed 8-0 at Port Talbot Town to remain bottom of the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League.

“Literally the worst game of football I’ve ever seen”
Not my words on this occasion.
I still have occasional painful flashbacks to watching City in the mid to late 1980’s in front of 2,500 fans at Ninian Park.
It was the only time when one of the people I used to regularly watch the games with turned to me and said – “I don’t know if I can take much more of this. How about we make a monthly trip to Villa Park and start supporting them for a while instead?”
It wasn’t only the football that was pretty dreadful at that time, but from memory our pitch was pretty awful too.
This also came to mind as I was sitting in the away stand at Loftus Rd/Prince Kiyan/Matrade before and during the game, when I noticed that the sprinklers on the pitch were only being turned on for the half of the pitch that City would be attacking in.
Was this an attempt to slow down any possible quick counter attacks from us?
If so, it worked a treat……
Back to those opening words. They were actually spoken by a young QPR fan who was being met by someone after the game, in response to the question ‘How did it go?’
To be fair I thought we started the game really well and for the first 10 minutes were on the front foot, and QPR looked wobbly.
However after then, QPR came back into it, and we seemed to become more cautious and defensive, probably mindful of our need to stop conceding early goals in away games. This resulted in QPR winning more of the first and second balls in midfield.
Part way through the first half I got a text saying that our very young and seemingly attacking starting 11 was partly due to Calum Chambers being a late withdrawal due to injury, and so Rubin starting instead.
Salech had our best chance in the second half and really should have done better with his left foot shot from the edge of the area, which beat the keeper but was just too high.
I agree that the ref was a ‘homer’ and certainly seemed content to see Salech manhandled all afternoon.
One other disappointing aspect of the game from our viewpoint was the quality of our set-piece delivery. Without Rambo, Ralls and Robertson, and with Rubin having wasted too many previous, it’s fallen to O’Dowda to take corners and free-kicks.
This time he either over hit our free-kicks, missing everyone, or when we had an attacking free kick at the death with everyone in their box, he just floated a ball too close to their keeper, making it easy for him to collect.
Finally back to that opening comment again. I think that fan and others may feel similar emotions again for the final part of the season.
I see the BBC report for the Swansea v Derby game described it as ‘dire’.
I don’t have much hope for a high quality game away to Preston this Tuesday either, although a horrible scruffy mid 1980’s style win will do for me this time.
Thanks Paul and BB for getting me up to speed with what happened at Loftus Road. I intend to deliberately take a back seat for the rest of the season, as it gives me no pleasure in trying to prove myself right… this being the first season since I joined the MAYA community when I pessimistically predicted relegation within a month of the season starting.
I will just make these observations…
The biggest lesson our fans must learn is to NEVER AGAIN put pressure on the Board to make a caretaker manager’s position a permanent one. If Omer Riza was still wondering whether he’d get a year’s contract, I betcha he’d not be making such perverse decisions as persevering with Callum O’Dowda as a left back… when Joel Bagan and Luey Giles are available. Callum will never be a defender.
I noticed Paul that you gave your blessing very late to Riza getting the job for the rest of the season… and I fell into line with you immediately after… in my case though, because I was genuinely afeard that we were going to appoint Slaven Bili?… and I have always been of the opinion that our Cardiff City should be managed by a chap with some moral substance. (I recall gentle arguments with my late brother Graham, when he laughably admitted that if we could become Champions of Europe, he’d be happy to accept a team managed by Adolf Hitler and with Pol Pot as his fitness coach…!!)
I decided that City would be destined for relegation this season after seeing the quality of our squad… and especially of our hopeless close season acquisitions.
And I think of the players we have dispensed with in the past two or three years, like Will Vaulks and Josh Murphy.
Murphy irritates the heck out of me… playing out of his skin for Oxford and Pompey after leaving us… yet he rarely broke into a sweat for us in his 4 years.
So I could well see us not wanting to give him a new contract at his fancy wages.
But Vaulks is a different case. He always struck me as a player with lots of things going for him, but without the vital ingredient of consistency.
He had the ability to see a pass, and could be lethal within 30 yards of the opposition’s goal with his John Buchanan-like shooting.
None of the midfielders (like Turnbull, Robertson, etc) we have signed since he left, are quite up to his standard. And vitally, we have lost his long throw.
Sure, O’Dowda has a longish throw in him, but it is not anything like as potent as the Vaulks weapon.
And yes, the tiki-taka religious sect might be scornful of the long throw, but if they looked at the EFL highlights on Saturday night, they would count a phenomenal thirteen goals resulting directly from long throws.
TTFN,
Dai.