Hudson inching towards permanent job following good win at Sunderland.

In his pre-game media briefing for today’s match at Sunderland, Mark Hudson said that he would be meeting with the club’s hierarchy during the coming week to discuss his job situation. The man with the job title interim manager also informed the hacks involved that the club was not actively looking for anyone to come in from outside to replace him.

When you also factor in the appointment of Hudson pick Dean Whitehead as a first team coach, it seems clear that the permanent manager job is Mark’s to lose.

That feeling was only strengthened today with a 1-0 win at the Stadium of Light which reduced the thirty seven thousand plus crowd to near silence at times. For fifty minutes, City we’re as good as they’ve been all season, but, once they had the seriously overdue goal to finally provide some tangible reward for their superiority, the attractive attacking approach was shelved. Deep defence gradually took over, but, to be fair, we performed that aspect of the game well and Ryan Allsop had a quiet afternoon of it.

About six weeks ago, City travelled up to the north east and led 3-0 at Middlesbrough at half time. Today, on the longer trip to Sunderland, it was goalless at the break, but I’d say we had been more dominant in the opening forty five minutes than we had been at the Riverside Stadium.

Of course, like all football fans, I was fearing the worst after having seen my team fail to turn their superiority into goals. However, this time, this goal shy team were able to come up with what was a slightly fortunate goal on one or, possibly, two fronts.

A satisfying victory then that means we have come through Callum Robinson’s three match ban with six points and three goals scored – that’s about three more points and two more goals than I was expecting.

All of this means that we are.in fourteenth place some seven points off sixth. However, if that means we can still entertain optimistic thoughts of a play off place, the crazy nature of the 22/23 Championship means that, realistically, we have to accept that relegation is more likely.

The received wisdom was that you needed fifty points to be safe in the Championship’s forty six game season, but that’s changed in recent years when you’ve tended to be safe with a point a game.

Similarly, eighty points has been the figure to aim for to secure a top six place, but the way things are shaping up this time around, something quite considerably less will be enough to take the final Play Off place.

Tonight’s table shows that only Huddersfield are averaging less than a point a game as we approach the twenty match mark. Therefore, it seems that we could be in for final standings something like those from our title winning season ten years ago. In 12/13, Crystal Palace finished with seventy two points, but that was enough to make sixth place and an eventual promotion that has led to an unbroken decade in the top flight for the south London side.

Furthermore, Wolves and Peterborough were relegated with fifty one and fifty four points respectively. So, you had a situation whereby eighteen points covered teams that were two divisions apart in 13/14. Based upon that and how tight the division is currently, I’d say it’s possible that the gap between sixth and twenty second positions at the end of this season could be something like twenty points, say seventy to fifty.

So, although we currently have six points more than we did after nineteen matches last season, we’re still in a similar position as far as points above the drop zone goes. All of this makes getting the decision about the managerial situation right all the more important, but the truth is that Mark Hudson could be made permanent manager, do reasonably well and we could still end up being relegated if the table stays as tight as it is now.

Returning to today’s game, I was surprised by the starting selection in what was a pretty attacking 4-2-3-1 formation as Jaden Philogene, Sheyi Ojo and Callum O’Dowda lined up behind Mark Harris. This set up placed a lot of emphasis on Ryan Wintle and Joe Ralls as the two “sitters” because it was difficult to see them getting a great deal of defensive help from those in front of them.

I made a messageboard prediction that we could end up being overrun in midfield, but this proved to be a long way wide of the mark. Looking at it now, I think Tony Mowbray’s Sunderland selection helped us as he went in with an inexperienced midfield pairing as Corey Evans and Alex Pritchard were left on the bench and Wintle and Ralls proved to be too streetwise and cute for their direct opponents.

In fact, I’d say this was a scenario repeated in most areas of the pitch. Whatever you may think of our squad, it does have a strong nucleus of players with a lot of Championship experience, Sunderland didn’t have that today in their starting eleven and I thought it showed.

Using an effective high press, City made the Sunderland defence look slow and suspect early on. First Mark Harris robbed Bailey Wright to instigate a counter attack that saw Ojo shoot wide when he should have scored. Soon afterwards, Wright was harried into an errant back pass and Danny Batth held Philogene back as he closed in on the ball to concede what was a clear penalty with just twelve minutes played.

I always used to say that I never had a great deal of confidence in Joe Ralls’ penalty taking, but down the years he’s proved to be pretty reliable from the spot. So, I was pretty confident he’d score.

However, just as with Callum Robinson at Huddersfield, Ralls’ penalty was a poor one which was always going to be saved if Anthony Patterson dived the right way. Robinson went right and Ralls left, but the result was the same and so the Championship’s lowest scoring team has a nought from two penalty record now with no standout candidates to take the next one we get as far as I can see.

City reacted to Robinson’s miss around the twenty minute mark in poor fashion at Huddersfield and never really looked like scoring after that. However, they were impressive here as Cedric Kipre’s low cross flew across the six yard box with no one in blue able to get a decisive touch. Soon afterwards, Neils Nkounkou slid Mark Harris in with one of two very good passes he played in the first half only for the Wales World Cup squad candidate to get his bearings all wrong and shoot well wide from a good position.

All Sunderland could offer in reply was a Jack Clarke shot deflected wide by Perry Ng and the former Crewe man also got in a fine block to deny Amad Diallo.

City were unable to repeat their attacking fluency of the first period after the break, but took the lead four minutes into the second period when Mahlon Romeo hit what looked to be a shot that was heading wide of the far post to me into the path of Harris who calmly steered the ball in from eight yards out.

There was a suspicion of offside about the goal and my immediate reaction was that it was a good job there’s no VAR in the Championship. That said, if the old interpretation of any benefit of the doubt in an offside decision going to the attacker is still appropriate in the Championship (it isn’t any more in the Premier League), it could well be that the linesman got it right.

At Wigan in Mark Hudson other away win as interim manager, we kept a counter attacking threat even after we’d gone ahead and our speed was a threat to the home defence right through to the end of the game. Today was different, Ojo, O’Dowda and Philogene were all withdrawn with the last named being the first to make way along with Harris, for Romaine Sawyers and Max Watters. This was a strange decision as Philogene continued his recent much improved form and had caused the home defence more problems than either Ojo or O’Dowda.

Fifteen minutes later, Ojo and O’Dowda were replaced by Curtis Nelson and Andy Rinomhota and so that pace which inconvenienced the Wigan back line was no longer present. All of which left a disinterested looking Watters with the thankless task of playing as a lone striker with very little support from his team mates. When Watters did not make a success of that role, he was “hooked” after coming on himself to complete another embarrassing substitution for him following his withdrawal in the first half of a game last season.

For the last fifteen to twenty minutes, apart from one or two isolated incidents, play was exclusively in and around the City penalty area. Sunderland had responded by bringing on Evans and Pritchard and there were a few hairy moments for us as we sought to hold on to our lead — notably when Ellis Simms (a summer target of ours allegedly) headed on to the roof of our net and Kipre put in a great tackle to deny Diallo.

The game ended with an off the ball bust up which saw Kipre pick up a fifth booking that means he’ll be suspended for Tuesday’s rearranged game with Hull  – a win there and I think Mark Hudson will be able to drop the word “interim” from his job title.

Not such good news for the under 18s who were beaten 1-0 at Leckwith this lunchtime by Shrewsbury in the PDL Cup.

Another hammering for AFC Porth in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League I’m afraid, this time by 7-1 at Pencoed Athletic and there was a 2-2 draw for Treherbert Boys and Girls Club in Division One at Clwb Cymric.

As mentioned this time last year, I decided to do another review of a season to follow on from Real Madrid and all that which was about 1970/71. This one is about the 1975/76 season and will be called Tony Evans walks on water. I finished writing the book over the weekend and now it’s a question of tidying it up, proof reading, inserting a few photos and designing a cover  before sending it off for printing.

As always, the blog will still be free to read for anyone who chooses not to make a donation towards its running costs and, apart from the one in the top right hand corner which is to do with Google Ads, you will never have to bother about installing an ad blocker to read this site because there will never be any.

Donations can be made through Patreon, PayPal, by bank transfer, cheque, Standing Order/Direct Debit and cash, e-mail me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further payment details.

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This entry was posted in Down in the dugout, Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The Championship, The kids. and tagged , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Hudson inching towards permanent job following good win at Sunderland.

  1. DJ says:

    We have 11th best record in division over Mark Hudson’s 9 games in charge and 1.44 points per game compared to 1.1 points per game under Steve Morison this season. During those 9 games, we’ve played 3 of the current top 6, 5 of the current top 10 and a Coventry who have been bang in form during that time. We’re still a side that struggles to score at home and concedes far too many away (including set-pieces) but there are small signs of improvement.

    Not meant to be criticism of Morison, I think he did a very good (not great) job of building a squad in short space of time and there were always going to be wide range of how effective the players brought in would be because of how many we needed. Think back to Malky’s first summer window for hits and misses but it was done from lower starting point (we weren’t a side coming off play-offs and doing it with less experienced manager) and far more rushed due to shorter off-season which meant it needed more time to see it come together. However, if we had continued to average 1.1 points per game, we’d now be 21st place which suggests the move was probably the right one at the right time.

    I still think we need another director in board room with focus on Cardiff City to tie the good things together and offer better communication to the fans – c’mon Tan, you recently gave us one for 4 weeks so even you can see there’s a gap – but there is some reason for hope.

    Props to Hudson for recognising 4-3-3 isn’t always best formation if you’re missing an Aaron Ramsey figure to play in the 3 and props to Mark Harris who has already matched his best league goal-scoring season with more to come.

    I do find Harris a frustrating player mind, it’s like he can do anything you want a striker to do (left foot goals, right foot goal, score from inside and outside box, work hard for team off the ball) but still has too many moments where he can’t do anything right at all. In this game we saw his pressing contribute to us winning a penalty, an okay not great pass making Ojo’s chance much more difficult and a really well taken goal. He should probably be on 6 goals this season (up there with Pukki, Sarr and Gyokeres) but instead has goal conversion rate of just 16% and probably has left himself too much improvement needed for player soon to be 24 years old. He is getting better and hopefully we can see 10 league goals from him this year.

    Stil believe that Harris, Robinson, Etete, Watters would prefer to play in a front pair (such a bizarre move to move to 4-3-3 with that in mind) and feel sorry for Watters who struggles most as a lone forward yet that’s the only position we try him in despite, at times, playing with two up top. It hasn’t worked for Watters here and move to League 1 asap would do him world of good.

    Big, big game against Hull to come and then more or less a free hit against really good Sheffield United before international break. Can we have a) 1+ points and b) at least one game of 4-2-3-1 with Robinson behind Harris before the break please?

  2. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Thanks DJ, I’d take issue with you about the timing of Morison’s sacking. As I think I mentioned in my reaction piece to his dismissal, I would have had no problem with getting rid of him during the summer or even after the Swansea game in April, but I will never understand the logic of giving him the money to spend on Robinson (money most City fans had become reconciled to us not having) and then sacking him two games later – it struck me as ludicrous at the time and still does now.
    Agree about a Director of Football or whatever you want to call it, but I’ve given up on it happening – Tan is not in favour of it apparently. Also, given the current levels of engagement with the club of Messrs Tan, Dalman and Choo, I think there’s a good chance that anyone appointed to the role would be working with one hand tied behind their back if it did happen.
    As for Mark Harris, I know what you mean, I reckon he’s like a lot of forward players in that he is not too good at finishing when he has time to think about it or when he’s expected to score (e.g. the chance he got completely wrong in the first half on Saturday). On the other hand, give him a chance which requires a quick, accurate shot in the fifteen to twenty yards range and he finishes well. Encouragingly, his winner on Saturday was a good, striker’s goal which may help him in terms of confidence and composure for the “simpler” chances – I think ten goals isn’t out of the question for him this season unless we we bring in another forward in January who’ll be in front of him in the pecking order.
    We’re singing from the same hymn sheet when it comes to playing with two strikers – although Philogene’s recent form is strengthening the argument for two wingers.
    Apparently Wintle’s suspended for tomorrow as well as Kipre, so you’d expect Rinomhota to come in and play deeper with Ralls. The easy option would be to play Sawyers in the role Ojo had on Saturday, but I like your suggestion of Robinson playing behind Harris – unfortunately, it seems we signed Sawyers a year or so too late.

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