Honours even, but satisfaction at derby outcome shows how much expectations have dropped this season.

In my piece on yesterday’s Academy game I said that Cardiff City were a club in need of something good happening to them on the pitch. Well, in as far as the first team gave the sort of committed performance so lacking at the Liberty Stadium in October and, in doing so, they avoided the ignominy of becoming the first team to have suffered a league double against them in the history of the Cardiff v Swansea fixture, City succeeded to the extent that they left the field to applause when, with a different outcome, it could have been so much worse for them.

So, I suppose this could be construed as something good. However, an alternative view, which I can understand up to a point, would be that the effort, intensity and desire on display from Cardiff would be the minimum expectation for a match that the large majority of the club’s supporters would say was against their greatest rivals.

I feel it would also be fair to say that, rather like the game against Reading in May 2018 when we clinched promotion, it was the occasion that made the match memorable, if indeed today’s match does live in the memory, as opposed to the football.

True, even if had not been the pulsating affair I heard it described as by Radio Wales, the first half especially was watchable stuff. However, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that if it had been, say, Newport v Grimsby in front of a crowd of 4,000 and it had panned out in exactly the same way as today’s game did, then the reaction to an encounter that finished 0-0 and was certainly low on goalmouth incident would have been a lot different.

While I’m in full glass half empty mode, I’d also point out that it’s now one point and no goals from three derby matches this season for City and our pretty pathetic record in terms of points gained and goals scored in televised games in 19/20 continues.

However, I feel it is both wrong and unfair not to acknowledge that there were positives to come out of today’s match – especially when you look at it from a starting point which had us having performed miserably in our last two home league games, losing 6-1 on New Year’s Day and drawing 2-2 at Cardiff City Stadium in the FA Cup against a Carlisle team beaten 3-0 at home by Plymouth yesterday who are certainly still possibilities to lose their Football League status come May.

Given that background, what we have seen from the team so far this season and the jacks’ fine away record, I think you have to be realistic and say that the only way City were going to win today was by getting in Swansea’s faces, making the game a battle and eking out a 1-0 win with a goal that would, more than likely, come from a set piece.

For that scenario to occur, City would need to defend far, far better than they had been doing recently and there would need to be an improvement on the general level of defending over the course of the season.

Truthfully, I’d say we got all of those things apart from the goal to win us the game.

By making Curtis Nelson the only survivor out of the goalkeeper and back five that started at Loftus Road, Neil Harris left no doubt as to what he thought was the main reason for our humiliation there.

Neil Etheridge, again linked with West Ham following the falling through of a deal to take Middlesbrough’s Darren Randolph there, paid for poor distribution and a level of goalkeeping which has not reached the heights of his first two seasons here, Leandro Bacuna moved into his usual central midfield role at the expense of Will Vaulks, Aden Flint and Jazz Richards were demoted to the bench and Sol Bamba dropped out of the squad completely.

In came Alex Smithies, Lee Peltier, Sean Morrison and Joe Bennett, while Gavin Whyte made his first start in a while as the man who got in via the switch from five defenders to four.

City weren’t faultless defensively. For example, Nelson made a right mess of his attempted headed clearance of a not particularly testing Connor Roberts long throw and presented Wayne Routledge with a chance inside the first ten minutes which he might have done more with than hook over the bar from about eight yards out. Then, after around half an hour, Marlon Pack, Whyte and Lee Tomlin somehow conspired between them to turn what should have been comfortable and promising Cardiff possession into a three on three Swansea break which ended with Bersant Celina side footing a shot from the corner off the penalty area on to the inside of a post before bouncing to safety.

Swansea goals from either of those incidents would have been entirely self inflicted wounds, but, that apart, City were at 17/18 levels of defending which ensured that Smithies’ reintroduction to League football was a pretty gentle one. Peltier was just like you’d expect him to be in such a game and,that early slip apart, Nelson was solid and reliable.

The two other members of the back four have not played better all season. Morrison made exactly the sort of early challenge on the much hyped debutante Rhian Brewster to let him know he was around which managers love to see and made an impact at the other end of the pitch with a cross which may have provided a goal for, say, a John Toshack or Andy Carroll, but Robert Glatzel is not in their class when it comes to heading the ball and so a chance that certainly wasn’t easy was glanced wide.

Maybe if City had earned the number of corners and free kicks in dangerous areas that Swansea did, Morrison may have helped provide that goal which gave them the 1-0 win I talked about earlier, but he was very good at his “day job” and, for me, was a strong candidate for City Man of the Match.

Joe Bennett would rival him mind. There was an ill advised lunge on Roberts after the Wales full back had miscontrolled the ball to give away one of those aforesaid free kicks in dangerous areas, but the reason Swansea’s best player, Andre Ayew, was not the influence he had been at the Liberty was that Bennett dictated his contest with him, by, firstly, fulfilling his defensive duties well and, secondly, turning in the best attacking full back display I’ve seen from a City player in years.

Until Josh Murphy put over one beauty and another good one in a promising substitute appearance, all of the quality Cardiff crosses had come from Bennett, who showed an insatiable appetite for getting as close to the Swansea bye line as he could throughout the ninety minutes.

While it would be churlish to be too critical of Neil Warnock’s attitude towards full back play because I feel he did make Bennett a better defender, today offered a view of the type of player we could have seen over the past three seasons with a manager who gave him more of a license to attack.

Bennett’s marauding was one of the reasons why that City goal may have come even though there was a lack of those set piece opportunities I mentioned. Another was that, embarrassingly for a side with Swansea’s reputation for playing football “the right way”, City managed to share possession 50/50 with them, so a goal from open play could not be ruled out.

Okay, our passing is still too laboured to cause too many problems to the best teams, but we are improving slowly under Neil Harris and there were times today when passing in open play helped create situations where the ball was loose in front of the Swansea goal when you felt an Earnie or a Chopra would have instinctively known where it was going to land and would have earned themselves a tap in goal.

That said, I do not feel that the criticism Glatzel has got in some quarters today was justified. I thought he had one of his better home games today and the only thing I’d have an issue with would be the way he snatched at a good chance he created for himself in the first half.

Glatzel is the latest in a long line of Cardiff City centre forwards since about 2011 to be criticised for his lack of goals, but the thing which unites all of them since the time we stopped playing with two strikers at least is that their team mates, almost without exception, don’t get close enough to them.

City have been a one striker and two wingers side for much of the past decade, but unlike many other teams that use such a system, our wingers have tended to not want to stray infield too much to assist our striker.

Maybe if our wingers were knocking over a stream of crosses which resulted in chances for our striker the stick Glatzel, Zohore, Niasse etc have got would be justified but they haven’t – the preferred method of attack for our wide men appears to be to cut in from the touch line on to their more natural foot so they can try a pot shot which tends to be of the high, wide and not too handsome variety.

That is why I used the word “encouraging” to describe Josh Murphy’s appearance today. Seeing him take on, and beat, Roberts on the outside on a couple of occasions was a throwback to what he did in the first few months of his City career.

The first time Murphy got by Roberts he produced the sort of cross which would merit criticism of our centre forward if the goals still weren’t coming. I rated Callum Paterson as the best attacking header of the ball out of our centre forwards even when Gary Madine was still here, so I’d say that he will be disappointed that he could only direct his far post header on to the crossbar from Murphy’s fine cross.

As with the earlier Glatzel miss, I don’t feel it was the easiest of headers, but, by the standards of this game, it was a good chance – certainly the best of a second half that compared badly with a first period that had the crowd involved throughout.

Maybe if Tomlin could have shown his pre Christmas form, he may have fashioned something also, but, although, as the team’s main (some might say only!) creator he deserves a degree of sympathy, he has to do more in games like this.

So, for those who look at us and feel that we have no chance of getting into the Play Offs, I repeat something I said on a messageboard this week – enjoy the fact that the jacks did not secure that elusive first double because it could well turn out to the highlight of our season. For those of us who look at the table and think we can still make the top six, I think we have to accept that we’re drawing too many games at the moment for that to become a reality.

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5 Responses to Honours even, but satisfaction at derby outcome shows how much expectations have dropped this season.

  1. Anthony O'brien says:

    Paul,

    Your Reportexcellent

    Bennett did all right — except when he comes in field from the left he can only pass the ball in the direction his left foot ids pointing i.e. backwards more often than not

  2. Colin Phillips says:

    Thanks for yet another astute post, Paul.

    Surprised that I am the first to comment.

    I enjoyed the first half but we really needed to score during that portion of the game where we seemed to have their defence in a bit of a muddle. As you say it was a bit like “after the Lord Mayor’s show” in the second half.

    I wasn’t particularly impressed with our West Walian friends, Ayew could be decent if he stayed on his feet instead of collapsing to the ground. Thought our defence was rather naive by being sucked into his tactics, they gave the ref no option at times. Again, I thought the standard of officiating was poor. In the build-up to the shot of theirs that hit the post (I thought it would go in off that post) the referee and his assistant completely missed an obvious shirt-pull on Pack. Referee also duped by Conor Roberts and Junior Hoilett. I know it’s not an easy job but surely there needs to be a better standard.

    Back five played at a higher level than we’ve seen so far this season but why is Joe Bennett allowed to take set-piece kicks, he’s not very good in dead ball situations. Didn’t think that Pack, Tomlin and Bacuna were at their best and our forwards always lack composure.

    What you say about us being satisfied (or not) with a draw does say a lot about our present expectation. Hope of getting near top six is gradually disappearing but I was cheered up by the thought that “Leeds, Leeds might be falling apart again”.

  3. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Tbanks both, as I said in the e-mail I sent you, I cannot argue with you regarding Bennett’s one-footedness I enjoyed us getting around the outside of Swansea’s full backs at times, but it’s hard to see Bennett offering a great deal once teams start showing him inside.Colin, I’ve been thinking that the Swansea fans being critical of the way they’re playing were being harsh on Cooper, but I can understand a bit more what they mean now that was some way short of the sort of stuff which Swansea founded their recent reputation on. The pack, well Brentford at least, appear to be making up ground on West Brom and Leeda – I see the latter are at a QPR side capable of beating anyone on their day on Saturday, could be interesting!

  4. BJA says:

    Paul – Is it Wednesday already – can’t think why I should be so impolite in responding so late to yet another accurate summary of the City’s proceedings. this time against the “enemy”. I confess that I do not have the same hatred that others have against the men in white from the West, but I do express surprise and a little disgust at the antics of one of their former players acting in the guise of a supporter. That action will not endear me to them in the future. I know our supporters are hardly angels, but for a current Premiership player to be caught up in objectionable bile is sad.
    That off my chest, I enjoyed the game and was so delighted that we did not lose as I had distinct uneasy thoughts about the result at kick off. The applause for our recently departed duo was special. I remember Alan Harrington with great affection for he really epitomised British football in the ’50s. Local boy made good, and some. Where are all our locals now – one, a nineteen year old playing for Swansea! How did that happen. But back to the football. a better performance and hopefully our New Year’s Day massacre will not be repeated.
    There’s a word that keeps coming to mind when our attackers have scoring opportunities – composure. Or more accurately, lack of. I like Glatzel a lot, but his first half effort which I think was heading more in your direction than the goal was a perfect demonstration of that. As was Patterson’s header onto the crossbar, and Bennett’s volley. There is much to be done on the training field in this area.
    And that brings me on sadly to our defeat last night in the FA Youth Cup against Bournemouth. I managed to watch most of the second half and quite how we didn’t score was a complete mystery except that perhaps it wasn’t because our youngsters also displayed the same “lack of” as their piers. Attackers, when put under pressure by opponents, must learn how to manage such situations. Conditions last night were wretched, but with a more savvy approach, we really could have progressed to the next round.
    And speaking of the next round, I trust our first XI will do the business tonight.

  5. The other Bob Wilson says:

    I must be honest BJA and say I can’t too worked up about McBurnie. Good point about Cabango who was many people’s man of the match – I thought he looked a definite Wales player in the making. I’d forgotten about that volley by Bennett who would have been one of the players in the team I would have wanted a chance like that to drop to, but, as someone who is usually on his side in arguments about Glatzel, it was disheartening to see what a mess he made of that chance which he did well to create for himself. Glatzel is still to score a goal for us at home and I wonder if this is preying on his mind at all?
    The lack of attacking composure you mention, the fact that four of the worst five defenders in the Championship when it comes to passing stats are Cardiff players and that we seem to have such a problem in putting passages of play together, all hint at a low level of technique in a squad which cost a lot more to put together than many in the Championship – we compare poorly to other sides in this division when it comes to things like technical ability, ball retention and attacking composure and it’s hard to come to any other conclusion than Neil Warnock gave these qualities a low rating when signing players in the last four transfer windows.
    I watched the second half of the Youth Cup game as well and, as someone who always tries to emphasise the positives when it comes to our young players, I must say I saw little to get encouraged about. You have done a good job in listing the reasons why that should be – to me it was a game we could, and should, have won based on what I watched.

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