There’s been so many Cup games involving City at this time of year that have seen sides containing a mixture of seniors who couldn’t give a toss and juniors who’d never make the step up to our league team bow out of the League Cup in humiliating fashion that they all tend to merge into one grey mess of nothingness.
Tonight’s Second Round tie with a much changed Southampton side from the one beaten in the Premier League on the weekend will not be one of them though – it was a burst of vibrant colour, full of marvellous goals and attacking intent. The outcome may have been the same as in most of those drab League Cup ties over the past dozen years, but more games like Cardiff 3 Southampton 5 and they will need to open more than three blocks of the Ninian Stand for future ties in the early rounds of the League and FA Cups to house the home support!
Yet it felt like it was going to be a long and, possibly, embarrassing night for City when I saw the two teams. Southampton may have made eleven changes, but they had an experienced goalkeeper and back four and it wouldn’t surprise me if they had over a thousand EFL appearances between them. In midfield, there was less experience, but there was a player signed from Sporting Lisbon this summer for £15 million and youngsters with Premier League games behind them. Cameron Archer led the attack and they had Adam Lallana on the bench.
By contrast, City rested all of those who played a part on Sunday at Swansea apart from Alex Robertson who came on for the second half and Rubin Colwill who played for the first hour or so. With most of the youngsters who featured against Bristol Rovers in the First Round included, Adeteye Ghabadian making his debut and a bench which featured six players who would be making a senior team debut if they had come on, City looked to be there for the taking, but, especially in a stirring second half, it didn’t work out that way.
With a schedule reading Sunday afternoon game, Wednesday night game and then one at lunchtime on Saturday, you could understand why Erol Bulut decided not to involve thirteen of the fifteen who featured in the south Wales derby, but why was Colwill, one of the three City players that changed the course of the Swansea match, not only included, but also in from the start?
With Colwill left out of Craig Bellamy’s first Wales squad and the way he was singled out for different treatment by Erol Bulut to so many other first teamers, it was no wonder that he started the game a bit skittishly with a ridiculous shot from a free kick about thirty five yards out from almost on the touch line and shortly afterwards he was booked for slamming the ball to the ground in frustration at a refereeing decision. It was a most unColwill like reaction, but, in between times he scored the best goal of a game full of great goals and made a compelling case for inclusion from the start against Middlesbrough with what I see is being called by some his best performance so far for City. However, I doubt it if it has done the trick for Rubin because our manager is a stubborn man who I think would have been thinking that there was no way he was going to pick any player as a starter against Middlesbrough who started tonight.
For the third straight game, City conceded in the ninth minute when the £15 million one time Sporting Lisbon player, Mateus Fernandes stepped neatly inside a challenge to net from the edge of the penalty area.
The feeling that it was the first of many goals we’d concede increased over the next ten minutes or so until Michael Reindorf ran down something of a blind alley of defenders only for the former Norwich man then to roll the ball into the path of Colwill who produced an amazing shot from twenty five yards out that had the visiting goalkeeper taking a few steps in the wrong direction because of the tremendous swerve he got on the ball – the shot then bounced down and over the line from the under side of the crossbar to add further dramatic effect to the situation.
Remarkably, City then conceded again within another nine minutes -if Colwill’s was the best goal of the lot, then the best team goal was Southampton’s second one which featured a couple of nifty back heals before the ball was laid into the path of Sam Amo Ameyaw who cooly placed his shot beyond Jak Alnwick from twenty yards.
There was a flurry of further goals at the start of the second period as Raheem Conte got to the bye line on the right and put over a cross which keeper Joe Lumley weakly punched on to his team mate Joe Edwards and the ball rolled into the net off the unfortunate defender.
This time it was only seven minutes before City conceded again as Archer was left with too much room by Dimi Goutas and he hammered home from twelve yards. Within what seemed just seconds though, Colwill’s fine left to right cross found the head of Conte who directed the ball back perfectly for Robertson, a half time sub for Ghabadean to volley in from twelve yards out.
City had tended to stand off Southampton through the first half, but now they pressed the Saints into mistakes and I think it’s fair to say that we had the better of the game during the remainder of it played in regulation time despite the fact that the influential Colwill had been replaced by another debutant in Cody Twose with half an hour le (Isaac Jefferies was the only other sub to come on as he also made a first senior appearance when he replaced Ronan Kpakio as Conte switched back to right back)..
With Robertson having by far his best game so far for City driving them forward, they could easily have hit the front for the first time when Cian Ashford raced through on goal after a good advantage played by ref Tom Nield, only for Lumley to make up to some degree for his blunder with City’s second goal by turning the shot away for a corner. Shortly after that, Twose almost made himself a hero with a fierce twenty yarder that had Lumley very worried as the ball flashed about a foot wide of his goal. There were also decent headed opportunities for Goutas and Reindorf that cleared the bar as many of the youngsters involved gave the distinct impression they were enjoying the occasion.
The match went into added time with a penalty shoot out looking a certainty as James Bree’s tremendous twenty five yarder following a half cleared corner flew over Alnwick and into the net with Twose regretting his decision to try and play a short pass rather than looking for Row Z as Bree nipped in to get his shot away.
There was still time for Archer to fire low past Alnwick, who was blameless with all five goals he conceded, to wrap the game up as City had to settle for just complimentary words from the media relating to how they’d given Southampton a real tough game.
I’d back that up because we really did have a go in the second half especially- Southampton probably deserved their win on the overall balance of play, but City’s youngsters showed that they have attacking flair (besides Colwill, Ashford, Conte and Robertson could all be pleased with their performances, while I thought Joel Bagan did well at left back), albeit in an encounter where both defences didn’t seem to place that much of a priority on keeping the ball out of their net.
With so many younger players involved tonight, it was a really inexperienced under 21 team that took on Fleetwood at Cardiff City Stadium yesterday afternoon. City, a lot smaller in stature than their opponents were made to work hard for what was a notable win considering it was more like an under 18 side they were fielding.
Morgan Wigley is a name I’ve not mentioned much lately because he was out for a long spell last season with injury, but he was the difference between the teams here as he scored the first goal and then laid one on for Baylin Johnson to record a second straight win to follow on from their defeat against Sheffield Wednesday
Finally, I’m grateful to blog reader Mark Adams who provided a bit more information about the rise of Treherbert Boys and Girls Club FC, the travails of Ton Pentre and Rhondda valley football in general.
Mark put me right about my statement in the Swansea piece that Treherbert had not played a game yet in their new, higher, division – they’ve played five in fact and are in mid table with six points. He also confirmed that Ton Pentre are in serious trouble and pointed out that the current day structure can place once established clubs into freefall once a decline sets in – he used the examples of AFC Porth (who dropped out of the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division early last season) and Dinas Powys as recent examples of this and provided this brief analysis of Rhondda football;-
“The football landscape of the Rhondda has changed greatly over the last two decades. Thirty years ago, the top teams were Ton Pentre, pursued by AFC Porth with Blaenrhondda* starting to wane. Cambrian were then on the up while Ynyshir Albion and Treherbert were still playing in the Rhondda League.’
Like Porth, Blaenrhondda folded while in the top division of the Highadmit League.
TOBW – Should Rubin Colwill seek a move away for his future development ? Russell Martin has said “It was a moment of brilliance for their first goal from a player I have admired for a long time (Rubin Colwill), ” It is a shame Southampton are in the PL as I don’t think he would be in a position to take on a Colwill project. I hate to say it but I strongly believe that many of our good younger players would get more game time and develop away from Cardiff City – I thought that about Isaac Davies and I definitely think that about Rubin Colwill. I am frustrated that Eli King has been sent out on loan again. Mark Harris is currently showing there is life away from the Bluebirds although I think Colwill has the potential to reach greater heights.
Hi Paul – Thanks for the report, an enjoyable watch for once even if the added time capers proved disappointing.
I have been wondering about Rubin Colwill for some time. He has more natural talent than any other City player, apart from Ramsey whose best days are behind him sadly, but somehow our current managerial team do not seem to be able to harness this talent for 90 minutes. There seems to be a fitness issue, for watching the match from the comfort of my living chair there were far too many moments when having lost the ball, he made no great effort to retrieve the situation. And why is he so bad at heading?
I believe he would benefit from a loan move away and come under the wing of someone who could perhaps improve both of these “weaknesses” – the Ipswich boss comes to mind.
Thanks both for your replies. I was pleased to see that Rubin Colwill has been called up into the Welsh squad, but I could, in a way, understand, his omision from the squad in the first place – it’s his treatment by City that I don’t get. I’ve always fought Colwill’s corner, but, even last season, I recognised is wasn’t really as straightforward as I liked to make it, as Brian says, there are parts of his game that could do with improving and he isn’t as good as us flair starved City fans make him out to be.
However, who is there in our squad which struggled from about game 15 last season and find themselves bottom of the table this time around that we can look at and not find weaknesses and faults? it’s hardly as if we’ve not got others with much more wrong with their game than there is with Colwill’s.
Despite the farce that was our search for a striker over the past few days, we’ve spent a lot of money on new players this summer with some of them charged with providing the creativity and x factor that it’s said we lacked last season, yet who, by head and shoulders, is showing more of those qualities than anyone else? It’s the home grown City fan who our manager seems determined not to pick in the starting eleven.
It’s hard to disagree with BBIF when he says Colwill would be better off elsewhere, but I’m hoping that Wednesday convinced even Erol Bulut that City need Colwill involved more than he has been so far this season – the difference between the team which starts league games and how we looked in the last twenty minutes last Sunday and the first hour on Wednesday is eye catching when ot comes to the qualities which score you goals We need a change of attitude in the dug out whereby the first sixty minutes, especially at home, is not taken up by “trying to stay in the game”.