
In Omer Riza’s first game in charge of Cardiff City, the ailing team went to Hull and were beaten 4-1. Yet, in a way, there were promising signs in that while it might be an exaggeration to say City showed more attacking intent and ability in that single game than they had done in the previous six under the baleful influence of Erol Bulut, they were certainly much improved going forward.
In Riza’s third match in charge, City went to Ashton Gate and, when you look at Bristol City’s current position, you’d say they returned with a creditable 1-1 draw – the truth was something different though.
Riza’s reign as manager came to an end yesterday after thirty seven league games and nearly seven months in charge (quite long by the recent standards of this shambles of a club), but, in truth, we learned virtually all there was to know about him in those two of his first trio of matches in charge which I mentioned above.
Riza was described as an attack coach when he first came to the club last summer and that Hull match suggested that he could make a big difference in that area of the game if given the freedom to do so. That impression only grew when Riza’s team scored five in beating Plymouth in his second home game in charge and they could have scored as many in his third one, against Portsmouth, three days later.
City went on to have a strange goalscoring record under Riza. For long spells, it was very unusual for us not to score, but, once the initial flurry of goals subsided, it was only against Swansea that we scored more than two in a league game. Too often though it was only the one goal we scored and now, with none scored in three of our last four matches, even that’s stopped happening.
The other tell tale sign from the first match of the Riza era was that a Hull team that have struggled for home wins and goals all season long managed to score four. Now, for a very short while, Riza offered the hope that he was capable of solving our problems at both ends of the pitch because in the six matches after Hull, we kept four clean sheets as we went unbeaten through October.
It couldn’t last though and it soon became business as usual at the back culminating in the 7-0 embarrassment at Elland Road early in the New Year. Back in late October, City drew 0-0 at West Brom and since then we’ve stopped the opposition scoring in a league game on just three occasions.
Now I go on to the 1-1 draw at Bristol City. After a pretty nondescript first half, City got right on top early in the second period and scored a fine goal through Ollie Tanner – there were good chances missed to add at least two more as well, but it didn’t seem to matter because we were tearing the wurzels’ defence apart and it seemed that a win was ours for the taking as we went into the final quarter of the game.
However, it was then that Riza made what were, essentially, three defensive substitutions as he opted to sit on the 1-0 lead we had. To the surprise of very few City fans, we soon conceded an equaliser and spent much of the rest of the game defending desperately at times to the extent that it felt like we’d escaped with a point from a match we’d been totally dominating twenty odd minutes earlier.
So that was Riza’s football philosophy laid bare in his first three games as City boss. The “attack coach” became more concerned with shoring things up at the other end of the pitch (understandable to an extent, given our defensive record) and, despite making a definite difference when it came to the attacking side of the game, there was always the desire to tighten things up and try to hold on to leads – in my view, this happened far too early in games, what we saw at Bristol wasn’t an isolated incident.
In basic terms, Riza soon stopped doing the things he had shown himself to be pretty effective at as he tinkered with selections, formations and approach to try and resolve a malady in his side he never came close to curing – we couldn’t stop conceding goals.
The approach, home and away, became more cautious and players such as Joel Bagan and Cian Ashford, who were generally having good seasons when given the chance, disappeared from the team for weeks on end with, as far as I could see, no justification for their absences.
Far from curing our defensive woes, selections and formations at the back seemed to be adding to them by the end as Riza made it clear that he had little idea what his best team was.
From my point of view, I probably placed too much faith in the attacking play we saw for that brief period in October. That made me more supportive of Riza than most fans, but in the last month, even I had to change my mind about him as his team drifted towards relegation with barely a whimper and he was powerless to do anything to stop it.
Things came to a head in the last few days as Riza accused sections of the club’s support of being “clueless” and there was a post game interview at Bramall Lane where he became snappy at the line of questioning he was getting from a journalist (must admit I had sympathy with him here mind because the questions were the sort of asinine rubbish that gives journalism a bad name).
Having said that, you have to wonder about the timing of the sacking for all sorts of reasons. The honest truth is that Riza felt very close to the sack for probably 90% cent of his time in the job and I don’t think many supporters believed that the job was definitely his until May when it was announced he’d be manager until the end of the season back in December.
For me, there have been two seismic losses within the last six weeks or so which have allowed the belief that we’re going down to take a hold within the fanbase. The second came with the loss to Stoke eight days ago and I just don’t get why, if there was a desire to get rid of Riza among those at the top of the club at that time why they let him stagger on for another week, and another loss in a match they were always likely to lose. Riza should have gone this time last week surely?
In fact, given that the Board did not stick to their decision to let Riza stay for the season, you have to ask why a change was not made straight after the first of the two shattering defeats I referred to earlier against Luton?
On a personal level, nearly everybody says Omer Riza is a good bloke and you have to remember that he’s only recently gone through the trauma of losing a father that we’re told he was very close to. Certainly, it looked like the strain was getting to him in recent weeks and no one should blame him if it was – he’s probably best off out of it (especially at a basket case of club like this one) and I wish him well in whatever he does in the future.
The statement from the club announcing Riza’s departure is similar to some other recent ones from them in that it appears to be written as if there is the same sort of restriction on the number of characters that can be used like you get on things like Twitter. It tells us that Gavin Ward will remain part of the first team training team, so the non appearance in there of Tom Ramasut, Darren Purse and Richard Shaw suggests that they will not.
Not making the situation clear will lead to speculation, so let me indulge in some by saying that the almost complete disappearance of the first team training regime is suggestive of a breakdown in relations between staff and players and, if that is the case, then the “new broom” as represented by Messrs Ramsey, Ralls, Gunter, Bloxham etc appears to be a sensible way to go.
In a squad often accused of lacking natural leaders, it’s a shame that both Aaron Ramsey and Joe Ralls are at a stage in their playing careers where their places in the team cannot be taken for granted in the way they once would have been. I don’t think either of them fall into the tub thumping type of leader as represented by some of those former captains of the club who attended the Stoke game. However, they both lead by example and, in the case of Ramsey, perhaps the biggest thing he’s got in his favour is the respect gained through what he’s achieved in his career.
Chris Gunter was clearly a very influential presence in the Wales dressing room and the desire to get him involved in a role with the FAW is confirmation that this remains the case. Like Ramsey and Ralls, he surely has the best interests of the club at heart and, all in all, having made the the change, the club have probably done as well as they could have in this appointment once it became clear that they were not bringing in an experienced firefighter type manager like a Warnock or an Allardyce.
Avoiding the drop still seems like a long shot to me, but, generally speaking, the change seems to have been well received and at least there should be a better and more positive atmosphere in the ground tomorrow for the first of our remaining games against Oxford.
Finally, there is the chance for the three former City players now involved in the management/coaching side to further enhance their standing with supporters by pulling us clear of the bottom three. However, in the likely event that they do not do this, they can feel safe in the knowledge that only the most idiotic would start blaming them for us going down.If we do get to the position where blame is being apportioned after relegation, then I think the overwhelming majority of fans know where to look first.

You are correct Paul in highlighting the defensive substitutions in that early game in Riza’s reign at Ashton Gate. But I submit that there was an even more telling factor in that game.
Your MAYA readership will recall O’Dowda – out to show his former Robins fans of his footballing skills they were now missing – tried playing fancy football deep down by our left touchline, instead of putting it up the touchline or even in Row Z… and our opponents got an undeserved equaliser as a direct result.
Riza never learned from that… and neither did Mehmet… him wanting to give the Turkish-Cypriot diaspora a manager in the upper echelons of the EFL that they could be proud of.
Riza should never have been given the job – his perversity in excluding Bagan and persistence in playing the talented O’Dowda out of position, being just one of many lingering sores as far as I was concerned – and as for him being a ‘nice guy’… well, I never saw it.
No ‘nice guy’ behaves in the shameful way he did against the Swans. He should have had a six game ban for those silly histrionics, I reckon*… and the breathtaking way he allowed the ‘strain following the death of his dear dad a few days before’, to be an excuse.
The thought occurs Paul that my comments on MAYA immediately he was sacked, will not have been seen by the mass of your readership… being overtaken by two new page postings by you in quick succession… so I beg your permission for me to refer readers to them via this link… as they are directly relevant to this…
https://tinyurl.com/37tf3yxr
(Thanks as ever for keeping us ‘au courant’ with events at CCS.)
*and allowing others at the club to use as a mitigating factor ‘the strain of close family bereavement’… when you are 44 years old. Well, it just won’t wash with me… someone who lost my own Porth Rhondda dad to King Coal when I was just ten years and three months… and that dear reader is when you really need a dad more than ever… (not when you are 44 and have landed temporary top manager status… and are doubtless more successful financially than most of the kids in your school team 30 years previously).
No, Riza should have grown a pair there and then after that Swansea game and ‘fessed up as follows… ‘I will not my recent bereavement be an excuse for my inability to control myself in the local derby’.
How I would have respected him for that. But no, Riza has plenty of brass neck. Exemplified by this breathtaking comment of his just released:
‘…
“I would like to thank TanSri and the board for the opportunity given to me to steer Cardiff City away from relegation.
“Although not quite there yet I firmly believe we will survive”.
‘…
folks… just zero-in on 4 words and roll these words round in the inside of your mouths like the fully flavoursome chutzpah-coated Maltesers that they are…
‘…
not quite there yet
…’
Eh?
That is priceless, and overtakes Dave Jones’ infamous insult to City fans after he had failed to get the vital 2 points out of the final 12 to make the playoffs… and losing one of those games by 6-0… thus allowing the victor to pinch our play-off place on goal difference. ‘What do Cardiff fans want? We only missed out on goal difference and they are lambasting me.’ (not quite verbatim but that was the gist of the quote made that close season following).
And later in Riza’s parting statement, he again talks about the death of his dad, Josh.
OMG.
Bereavement happens to us all, Omer. Get over it. You don’t need your claque of sympathetic journalists and supporters using it as an excuse for your failings.
‘Ycha fi’. ‘Pass the sickbag, Alice’.
TTFN,
Dai
Thanks for your thoughts Dai. One thing I should say though is that all of the talk from people close to the club who claim to be “in the know” I hear is that Omer Riza was very much Vincent Tan’s pick, not Mehmet Dalman’s. In fact, it was widely reported that the alleged attempt to bring Neil Warnock back to take over until the end of the season only failed because Vincent Tan wouldn’t sanction it after all of the preparatory work had been undertaken by others at the club – the word was that Mr Tan wanted to keep Riza in place.
Of course, there is the possibility that this is all rubbish and you’re right about Dalman favouring Riza, but it’s a theory I’ve not heard or read about anywhere else. My rough and ready guide as to whether a manager is a Tan or Dalman pick is that they have alternative goes at it because there is always the need for a “fresh start” after their latest choice messes up.
I don’t think my theory is faultless by any means, but Erol Bulut was definitely a Dalman pick and I’ve never had any reason to doubt Omer Riza was a Tan pick until I read your message.
Regarding Aaron Ramsey, I think we’ll get a good idea about his suitability for management from the reaction of the players today. This squad (or elements within it) seemed to stop playing for Erol Bulut around the mid point of last season in my opinion and my feeling that Omer Riza got worse at the job the longer he stayed in it probably has something to do with an impression that he stopped getting a reaction from the players for the last six weeks or so.
Based on what we saw in Riza’s first few games, I’d like to think we’ll see an improved performance today, but I know what you mean about Ramsey’s persona in front of the TV cameras – I do think mind that there are quite a few sportsmen and women who present a bland exterior to the media and you only get to see their real personality in a working or private environment. Nevertheless, it does seem that any leadership and/or inspirational abilities that Aaron Ramsey has are of the ‘leads by example” type
Finally on Omer Riza, I’ve more sympathy for how he behaved at the time of his father’s death than you it seems. I was 34 when my father died and it was the first time such a close relative or friend had passed away in my life – I got through it, but it was as if I was on automatic pilot much of the time and I occasionally had a feeling that i was watching someone else dealing with all of the things that arise when someone so close to you dies. We’re all different and I find it hard to be too judgmental on anyone who has to cope with the loss of a parent, brother, sister etc.