Cardiff “brushed aside” by functional West Brom.

At the moment the final whistle blew, the commentator said that West Bromwich Albion had “brushed aside” Cardiff City at the Hawthorns by two goals to nil and straight away it struck as a very accurate way of encapsulating the game in a few words.

There were times during the ninety minutes when I thought we were doing well and we had the Baggies on the run, but, looking back at it now, nothing came of the too brief periods when we were on the front foot.

To be honest, West Brom won rather as they did at Cardiff City Stadium a few months ago – they weren’t overly impressive and struck me as being a little dull to watch, but tonight the two goal winning margin didn’t flatter them and I’m sure their fans will be seeing it as the kind of routine win over a lower half of the table team that top six finishes are built on.

This latest defeat only helps to accelerate the gradual decline of the team since October and the defeats are beginning to come too frequently now as we find ourselves eight points from the top six and eleven from the bottom three – with Huddersfield and QPR both due to play tomorrow it’s conceivable that we could be equidistant from the Play Offs and relegation places in twenty four hours time.

For me, that would still be better than we merit because we’ve looked more like a bottom third side than a middle third one since December at least.

The resident statistician on the message board I use posted something a couple of days ago saying that if you compared Mark Hudson’s record as manager over eighteen games I think it was with Erol Bulut’s last eighteen games in charge, the current manager is only a couple of points better off and now there’s another defeat to go on top of that. Despite this, I’d be surprised if there’s much pressure on Bulut from within the club, but, one way or another, it strikes me that he’s not going to be our manager next season.

For the first time in the league, Bulut changed from a flat back four to a three centre back formation and there was a debutant in goal. Given the way things have been going lately, It was an appropriate and succinct summing up of how things are with the team that we conceded a goal after twenty nine seconds!

Now, it may be that West Brom got an inkling of our change of formation by watching our pre match warm up, but if Carlos Corboran was able to identify a potential problem in hat time which West Brom went on to fully exploit both for that first minute goal and the eighty nine which followed, then he’s a tactical genius worth every penny he’s being paid!

City made five changes with Ethan Horvarth coming in for his first appearance in place of the injured Jak Alnwick,, Josh Wilson-Esbrand selected to play left wing back as Jamilu Collins dropped into the back three alongside Dimitri Goutas and Nat Phillips, Ruben Colwill stepping into midfield for Manolis Siopis and Yakou Meite joining Famara Diedhiou to form our first striking partnership, as opposed to a lone target man, of the league campaign.

Collins was on the left of the back three and soon was put to the test as a ball was knocked into the space between him and the slightly pushed forward Wilson-Esbrand as Tom Fellows exploited the situation to get beyond Collins and cross low to where Mikey Johnston touched the ball home from close range.

I cannot believe that there was a deliberate plan to play on an identified weakness in the City defence. More likely it was just something that was thought to be worth a try as there always will be that relatively small area of about twenty five yards outwards from the corner flag where a judgment has to be made as to who out of the right or left sided centre back or the appropriate wing back should take anyone from the opposition who enters that area?

City, or to be more precise, Collins and Wilson-Esbrand never really worked out the answer to that question, consequently, nearly all of West Brom’s most dangerous attacks came down our left.

City’s response to conceding so early was quite impressive as they spent the next quarter of an hour or so doing a fair bit of attacking, but, in truth, there was little to inconvenience the home defence too much apart from the odd minor scramble from a set piece.

Gradually, West Brom began to dominate possession and generally dictate the flow of the game, but Corbaran strikes me as a defensively minded manager who is perfectly happy to win games 1-0 rather than go for the opposition’s jugular and so his teams tend to be a bit dreary to watch – there’ll always be a job waiting for him at Cardiff if he leaves the Hawthorns!

So it was that, although the home side were generally in charge in the first half, there was little to suggest City were going to concede a second goal.

The pattern continued through the second half until Siopis, Aaron Ramsey and Kion Etete were introduced for Meite, David Turnbull and Diedhiou.

I suspect it was City’s unexpected deployment of Ramsey as a target man that foxed Albion for a while – I’m not being serious there, but it was quite a surprise to see him winning three headers beyond the far post. If nothing else, it served to show that Rambo has the ability to find space in the opposition penalty area that too many of our attacking players alack and with the last of his headers, he served up a chance for Etete that he, falling backwards, was unable to keep down from just eight yards out – it was a poor miss and grist to the mill for the young sriker’s growing number of critics.

For about three months now, City have been a team where you can count the number of times the opposition goal comes under serious threat in any game on the fingers of one hand. So it was here as Etete spurned the only real chance we had to score all night and the effect on the team was akin to the air escaping from a balloon, it was as if they knew their chance had gone.

This was proved to be the case about ten minutes later when a couple of subs combined in the scoring of West Brom’s second goal.

Once again, it was the left hand side where the problem came from as Jed Wallace put over a low cross that Horvarth maybe should have dealt with and Andreas Weimann slid the ball into the empty net from fifteen yards out.

Before leaving the game, a word about Rebecca Welch who was, frankly, pretty hopeless in her first appearance in charge of a City game (the 3-2 home loss to Norwich in November), but I’d use that old chestnut about a ref being good if you don’t notice them to describe her second one last night – on that evidence, it makes more sense that she has been given Premier League games to take charge of.

A few hours earlier City’s Under 21s came out on top by 2-1 at Bristol City thanks to a couple of Cian Ashford goals – you know Ashford, he was one of the two youngsters (the other being Joel Colwill) who were on our bench for the first team in a couple of recent Championship games just to make up the numbers up.

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6 Responses to Cardiff “brushed aside” by functional West Brom.

  1. Dai Woosnam says:

    A nice piece Paul that perfectly sums up the sense of ennui that Bulutball brings. Will we get enough points to avoid the drop? Who knows? One thing for sure, Bulut cannot get a tune out of his attackers… oh and also a second realisation: Collins cannot really defend.
    Glad to see you join me in the Rebecca Welch fanclub: I stood up for her after you slated her performance in the Norwich game. I thought she made two errors… although the clear mistake in not granting us a penalty was not a ‘mistake’ at all if we accept that a referee can only give what they see… and as I said at the time, from her angle she could not be sure if our boy had dived after feeling contact behind him. Alas her linesman did not help. A clear case for VAR in the EFL methinks.
    If we can stay up by one point, Mr Bulut can go, and Rambo take over in his place.
    DW.
    PS … did you see who was chosen as the January Championship Player of the Month? And no Paul… don’t worry… I am not looking smug. I know full well that the boy may have a shocking rest of the season…!!

  2. Dai Woosnam says:

    Oops I forgot to say… how is it that all other MAYA contributors have a blank avatar but mine has a picture of me from about 8 years ago?
    I mean to say… I must be the least photogenic MAYAn out there…!! It is a mystery eh? And you needn’t wonder if it is any technical thing I have done… you know that I am a total dunce when it comes to internet technology.
    How can I get a blank avatar like everyone else?
    TTFN,
    Dai.

  3. Mike Hope says:

    Already filled in and sent

  4. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Dai, I can remember Mark Clattenburg having an absolute nightmare when we played Leeds at Ninian Park in 2007. It didn’t help that all of the big decisions went against City, but for someone who had a big reputation even at that time, he was hopeless in that game. I was never a huge fan of Clattenburg because he always came over to me as being full of himself, but I had to grudgingly accept that he was a good referee – except he wasn’t on that afternoon in February 2007. Therefore, Rebecca Welch may be a very good ref (I thought she did well on Tuesday and her introduction to the Premier League seems to have gone well), but I still don’t think City v Norwich was her finest hour and I wouldn’t be surprised if she felt the same way.
    I had a look at your avatar to see if there was an easy way of getting rid of it, but I couldn’t find one. My knowledge of computing is basic, but I have been known to be able to work my way through some software to do the sort of thing you ask for. However, WordPress has a mind of its own sometimes as proven by the fact that, for no reason I can detect, I’ve had to start formally approving even my own messages in the last month and I’m now in the position where I need to go though all of the Spam the blog attracts to find out if there’s been any feedback from readers. WordPress used to be able to differentiate between advertising crap and responses from readers and would put the latter into a separate section, but now everything goes into the same place and I’ve not been able to find any explanation as to why on the WordPress site.

  5. Dai Woosnam says:

    Thanks Paul.
    Re Clattenburg… his biggest crime was leaving a stadium in a rush after a game and breaking the golden rule that all match officials must leave together for reasons of personal security.
    He was, if my memory serves correct, severely reprimanded by the authorities. And quite right too.
    And the reason for him rushing off? Some family crisis?
    No… he wanted to get to an Ed Sheeran concert…!!
    Oh Mark… standards, dear boy… standards.
    DW

  6. Dai Woosnam says:

    Thanks for doing what you could with my avatar, Paul… but whilst I wanted it to disappear, I did not want my words to vanish…!!
    Where is the comment I posted a good 24 hours ago on Mark Clattenburg? I cannot recall what I said exactly, but one point I made was the fact that his most serious crime for me was rushing off after a game and thus breaking the rule that all matchday officials should leave in a group, for reasons of personal security.
    And why did Clattenburg dash off? Was it some family crisis? If so, it would have been excusable.
    But no. It was an Ed Sheeran concert…!! Oh Mark… thou canst not have been serious…

    And I think I ended by channeling Harold Macmillan… ‘standards dear boy, standards’…
    DW

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