Fans abuse Bobby Madley again, but this time they’re not Cardiff City’s!

 I groaned when I learned that Bobby bloody Madley was taking charge of today’s match between Preston North End and Cardiff City at Deepdale. After all, this was the man who had controversially disallowed City goals to consign us to 1-0 defeats in the last two games of ours he’d officiated in.

Therefore, if I were to tell you that supporters were singing “2-1 to the referee” at the end of today’s match, I’m sure the thought is that we’d lost and Madley had “done” us again. Not a bit of it, this time it was City who came out on top and even I, as someone who was advocating that we ask the EFL not to let Madley referee us again after the loss at Blackburn last month, am admitting that we couldn’t have done it without him!

A Madley game wouldn’t be complete without him making some odd decisions and they were therei in plenty today, but for me, he got most of the important decisions right, even, dare I say it, when he denied us a penalty after Karlan Grant went down in the first half (I believe I’m in a minority in thinking that mind)..

Perhaps the referee’s most controversial decision came on the ninety minute mark when the figure 9 was shown on the board indicating how much extra time would be played. After the match, Erol. Bulut was of thev8ew that as much as twelve minutes added time could have been played given all of the time Preston wasted as they tried to hold on to their 1-0 lead – a lead that lasted until the ninety sixth minute!

However, my reaction when I saw what was on the board was one of surprise- I was expecting a five or six to be shown..

Preston had been gifted their lead in the forty eighth minute, but four minutes later, they were down to ten men when Robbie Brady was dismissed for a second yellow card and from then on, it became a case of attack v defence that it looked very much like Preston were going to win until, sensationally, they were rocked by goals in the ninety sixth and ninety ninth minutes.

So, for a few minutes after the final whistle, City had broken into the top six for the third time this season, but, with our midweek opponents West Brom currently 2-0 up against Ipswich, we are going to be seventh when we face them it would seem.

With Preston in fifth place themselves after flying out of the traps by winning six consecutive games very early in the season, this was a notable win for City and although luck smiled on us somewhat today, I’d say we were slightly the better side when it was eleven against eleven and s0 it could be argued that the result was just about right given that almost all of the play was towards the Preston goal in the last half an hour.

There was a surprise in Bulut’s starting eleven as Alex Runnarsson was selected in goal with Jak Alnwick on the bench. There was some message board talk about Alnwick having been ill, but there’s been nothing after the game to suggest this was true. I did see Alnwick being blamed for Norwich’s third and winning goal a fortnight ago and there was the goal he gave away against Watford quite recently, but I’m not sure that’s enough to drop a keeper that I saw rated as the sixth best in the Championship in a You Tube video which measured each club’s expected goals (xg) conced3d figure against actual goals conceded.

Perry Ng was also brought back for Mahlon Romeo after missing the Norwich game and he had to be on his defensive mettle as a Preston side that had come out of the dip they suffered after their excellent start by winning their last two matches, started confidently. City were pushed back in the first ten minutes or so, but then settled down well and Ng was close to his fourth goal of the season when his volley from twelve yards was kept out by a diving Freddie Woodman in the home goal.

Woodman had easier saves to make from Manolis Siopis and Yakou Meite, but might have been facing a penalty when Grant went down under a challenge by Brad Potts – I wasn’t convinced it was a foul and, more importantly, neither was Bobby Madley.

The referee became the centre of attention shortly afterwards when Ched Evans clattered into Jamilu Collins and the full back reacted angrily by thrusting his face towards Evans who fell dramatically to the floor.

Predictably, players came flying in from all directions and it was probably a couple of minutes before order was fully restored. The Preston fans were baying for Collins to be shown a red card, but he and Evans only saw a yellow one waved at them (Collins misses the West Brom game as a result of his fifth booking of the season mind) and the Preston fans got angrier still when they saw that Brady had also been booked (presumably for dissent?).

The set to had the effect of making City less of a goal threat, although Woodman had to hold on to a well struck Callum Robinson shot from the edge of the penalty area and, with Preston only having a couple of efforts by Evans and Lindsay that were easily dealt with by Runnarsson , City could believe they were edging things at the break.

That all changed three minutes after the restart when City had a throw in level with the Preston penalty area and went all of the way back to Mark McGuinness stood just inside his own half. City fans have become used to seeing their defenders playing more considered passes than the long ball stuff they’d been used to seeing for years and, generally speaking, the sort of errors that cost cheap goals we often see from other sides who play the same way have been conspicuous by their absence, but here, McGuinness was robbed by Montenegro international striker Milutin Osmajic who had a clear run in on goal from about forty five yards out on the right touchline.

McGuinness had not been given the best of passes by Grant, but, nevertheless, this was down to the centreback who has been one of our most consistent players so far this season. For his part, Runnarsson had come out to play the sweeper keeper role, but now decided, probably rightly (having seen a few replays of the goal since writing, I no longer believe that), to sprint back towards his goal, rather than confront Osmajic about thirty yards out. Unfortunately, the Icelandic keeper had lost his bearings somewhat when he turned to face up to Osmajic about ten yards from goal and all he did was present the Preston striker with a much bigger target than he should have done and, as a result, he was beaten very easily.

Four minutes later, Meite was leading a break out from a defensive corner when he was brought down by Brady and so the Republic of Ireland international had to trudge off after a second booking. It wasn’t a bad foul by Brady, but he’d cut across Meite and I’m sure he knew what he was doing – once again, I must say the ref got it right.

So, we now had something like forty minutes with a man advantage to turn the deficit around and forty minutes went by with little sign of an equaliser. Preston deserve a lot of credit for this as they defended superbly with a series of penalty area blocks by defenders willing to put their bodies on the line. For me, City were too laboured with their passing during this phase, but maybe it did have the desired effect of tiring Preston out because the extra last six or seven minutes of playing time they had to face saw the gaps appearing in the home defence where previously there’d been none.

Grant came as close as anyone to an equaliser with a shot which went no more than a foot wide and there was some promise in the way the two young subs Rubin Colwill and Ollie Tanner combined down the right to keep City fans hoping.

Colwill and Tanner combined to force another corner, but the latter’s flag kick looked weak and underhit, like too many other dead ball deliveries from City as the minutes flew by, but it may have been deliberate as Colwill flicked the ball back towards Grant  whose shot from ten yards bobbled in at the near post past Woodman and two or three defenders.

What was impressive now from City was the way they chased the win in the three minutes that remained and two more subs combined for the unlikely winner when Ryan Wintle flighted in City’s best cross of the game and Ike Ugbo found the space to guide his header beyond Woodman for what seems like a big win in the context of our season.

The under 18s have been on a winning run in recent weeks and it came to end this lunchtime in a 2-2 draw at Bournemouth in a League Cup tie – no details of scorers I’m afraid.

Finally, just a quick word regarding the blog. I’ve mentioned before that I’m no longer in the position where financial help from readers is needed to ensure its survival, but, if anyone is still minded to show their support for my scribbles, they are very welcome to do so – payments are accepted by bank transfer, PayPal, cheque and through Patreon, contact me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further information.

A big thank you to all of you who support Mauve and Yellow Army with your donations and to everyone who has done so in the past when help was really needed.

This entry was posted in Out on the pitch, The kids. and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Fans abuse Bobby Madley again, but this time they’re not Cardiff City’s!

  1. Dai Woosnam says:

    Thanks Paul,
    You may vindicate Bobby, but I remain sceptical about both the Huddersfield refereeing brothers.

    And very sceptical about the reason for playing the Icelandic keeper. So Erol says he was chosen because he is ‘better with his feet’ than Jak… ‘for playing out from the back’.

    Oh dear, my heart sinks when I hear such modish drivel… another coach who is a Pep wannabe.

    Get it in your head Erol, in Jak you have a fantastic keeper with his feet… the man I rate the most accurate since the far distant days of Maurice Swan… who to me was nonpareil as a kicker.

    It’s my view that we played the wrong keeper most of last season… a view reinforced by the howlers Mr Allsop seems to regularly commit for the Tigers… the latest just yesterday at The Liberty*…

    And one thing for sure…
    Alnwick would never have shown such naïve positioning as Runnarsson did for the PNE goal yesterday.

    But it looks like Jak is to lose out this season yet again, to quite unfair discrimination… I don’t think we are deserving of a keeper of his quality.

    One correction Paul to your otherwise fine comments… it was not Collins (17) who you say played that stupid back pass to the already covered McGuinness… but Grant (16).

    McGuinness has wrongly taken the rap for the Grant stupidity. Football is a game best played forwards. Only play the ball backwards IN EXTREMIS…

    *yes, I know that the naming rights have changed… but it will always be The Liberty to me…
    TTFN,
    Dai.

  2. Blue Bayou says:

    I’ve seen the Grant incident a few times, and for me, Grant clearly gets clipped by the defender, who doesn’t make contact with the ball, so should have been a penalty. The only reason why it wasn’t given imo was it took a while for Grant to fall.
    Regarding the Evans & JC incident, Evans challenge is high and from behind so would deserve an orange card from me (if it existed). Without the benefit of hindsight, and with Evans clearly throwing himself on the floor theatrically, the ref gave a reasonable compromise of 2 yellows plus one for Brady who must have said or done something, but he was clearly aware he’d been booked.
    Preston came out for the 2nd half with more energy which we didn’t seem to be expecting, so led to our giving away a calamitous goal. Many Preston fans were unhappy with Brady’s stupid challenge on Meite – a more obvious yellow card you’re unlikely to see, which meant red for him.
    Like many others though I thought Preston defended magnificently with 10 men, keeping their shape and putting bodies on the line. Going into added on time I’d pretty much resigned myself to us not scoring, although seeing 9 minutes added, I thought we may fashion one decent chance.
    One thing I’d say was that we didn’t panic and kept moving the ball back and for, looking for an opening, and we did well to win the ball back if we lost it. I think that starts to take its toll, physically and mentally, on the team having to defend so continually, and PNE just stayed back and hoofed the ball clear where we picked it up again..
    I’m still not sure how the Grant goal squirmed past 3 defenders and keeper and went in. I noticed though how a few Preston defenders looked devastated and had their head in their hands when it did.
    A couple of things I’d say about our winner:
    Firstly the cross from Wintle (admittedly with plenty of time and space), was one of the few decent crosses we made in the second half.
    Secondly I saw Goutas appear in the 6 yard box, which unsettled the Preston defenders. I’m sure Goutas would have been identified beforehand as a danger in the box from set plays. I can only think that’s why the Preston defender (Storey I think), left Ugbo and moved to be an extra defender marking Goutas. Whether tiredness played a part in Storey’s thinking or not, it meant Ugbo was left completely unmarked, so when Wintle’s superb cross found Ugbo, he had time and space to magnificently despatch his header beyond Woodman.
    An incredible turnaround, proving how football can be cruel and exhilarating. Coming after the Norwich game that we lost when we looked like we were going to win, it’s heartening to see that this team can also win a game it looks like we’re going to lose!

  3. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Thanks both for a couple of very contrasting replies. Dai, I’m not sure I vindicated Madley, I just thought he did a bit better than normal and, overall the wrong decisions he made (there were still quite a few of them) didn’t have a major outcome on the game.
    I’ve only just seen the goals Allsop let in on Saturday – second one, definitely his fault and while I wouldn’t blame him for the first one, it was on his near post. However, the thing with Alnwick last season was that, when he was given a chance, he never really took it. Moving on to this season, Alnwick probably wouldn’t have been so far off the line originally for the goal, so would have naturally been in a better position than Runnarson ever got himself into and had a better view of what was happening than the man picked in front of him ever did.
    I said that Runnarson was probably right to concentrate on getting back into position rather than going towards the ball, but, having seen the goal a few more times now, I’ve changed my mind. Osmajic knocked the ball twenty yards in front of himself with one of his touches and, a better positioned keeper, like Alnwick possibly, would have seen that and decided he could have come for ball, but Runnarson didn’t ever really get in a position whereby he could do that.
    Thanks for the correction regarding Grant, someone mentioned it on Sunday, so I’d changed it already.
    Blue Bayou, some great points raised. As I mentioned, I thought we were too labourious with our passing during the ninety minutes at 1-0 down, but, as you observe, Preston were out on their feet by the end and I agree that what we were good at was getting the ball back quickly when we lost it.
    Regarding the decisions you mention, sill not convinced that Grant was fouled, but, as I mentioned, I think this is a minority view among City fans, I agree with you over the Evans/Collins incident, but ‘d also say that our player was a little lucky not to have been sent off.
    It took me a few watches of Grant’s goal to appreciate what happened – given it was a rebound that somehow managed to find it’s way in on a very heavily populated near post, I’d say City fans should forget about bemoaning their team’s luck any time this side of Christmas!
    Agree with you about the winner which was down to a combination of tiredness and loss of concentration on Preston’s part – Goutas’ presence did help City, but, essentially, two of their players performed the basics perfectly when they both knew this was their only chance of winning the game in the seconds that remained.

Comments are closed.