Cardiff City had never lost eight consecutive league matches or six successive home matches in their history before today, they have now and, watching today’s lunchtime 2-0 loss to Middlesbrough, you have to think that these miserable new club records can be stretched a lot further yet.
After the Swansea loss last weekend, I said we’d looked like a relegation team in three of our last four matches. Since then, we’ve been beaten at Fulham where we weren’t great, yet there was a degree of improvement, but today it became four out of six matches where we’ve looked set for the drop – so, when a team gives the distinct impression that they are relegation fodder over a stretch of games that amount to getting towards fifteen per cent of their season, it becomes reasonable to start believing that they’ll be in the bottom three at the end of the season.
The truly worrying and depressing thing though is that I’m not really addressing the reality of our current situation by wording my last paragraph as I did, because there was a context behind this latest game that has to be considered when assessing how serious the position is now.
It seems to me that it was the West Brom match when things really started getting awkward for Mick McCarthy – as soon as that team was announced with its back five consisting entirely of centrebacks, his relationship with significant numbers of City fans changed.
A different outcome that night may have ensured that the damage caused to our manager’s standing was not terminal, but we conceded a goal virtually straight away and ended up getting thrashed – there were many on social media after that game taking it for granted that he was, indeed, going to be sacked in the morning.
McCarthy held on though, only to repeat the decision which so annoyed supporters in the derby with Swansea where the extent of our ambitions seemed to be to hang on for a 0-0 draw, instead we lost 3-0 with barely a whimper.
If people thought the manager being sacked was inevitable after West Brom, you could multiply that by ten after Swansea as the simple question “has he gone yet?” was asked repeatedly on messageboards and sites like Twitter.
Sunday dragged into Monday though with no announcement of a managerial departure, but what did emerge was a story from a local journalist, who I suspect has a direct line to the club Boardroom, that Mick McCarthy was being given the games against Fulham and Middlesbrough to save his job.
Of course, the strong probability was that in reality this was just one game because the midweek match on the ground of one of the strongest sides in the division was the biggest of home bankers on paper and this duly proved to be the case.
So, if the story from earlier in the week was correct, today was the day for McCarthy – lose and the strong likelihood was that he was out, his job was on the line.
With that in mind, what was the response from the City team as they stared down the possibility of two club record losing runs being set and the manager losing his job? Well, apart from about a ten minute spell just after half time, I would say that, in a season which has already produced it’s fair share of truly dreadful Cardiff performances, this was the worst one of the lot.
The coverage on Sky was bigging up Middlesbrough as possible top six finishers and, credit to them, they did look impressive, but I think that people really should hold fire on the praise for our opponents, because, to put it brutally, they had absolutely nothing to beat.
An illustration of how badly things were going for our manager was how it had become a different formation every game as he shuffled the cards constantly, but always came up with the sort of hand which leads to a quick fold.
Today we got good old 4-4-2 for what I believe was the first time under this manager, with Ciaron Brown in for the injured Joel Bagan in the back four, Ryan Giles and Rubin Colwill either side of Marlon Pack and Will Vaulks and, weirdly, James Collins and Mark Harris as the front two – as Danny Gabbidon said when discussing this selection, what Keiffer Moore must have felt like as, after weeks of being completely isolated up front, he was dropped to the bench for the game when we go with two up top can only be imagined!
Actually, this points to what happened to Keiffer at Ipswich under Mick McCarthy. While McCarthy signed him, a record of eleven games and no goals suggests that he was fairly reluctant to play his new striker and Moore only began the transformation in his career which saw him go from lower league journeyman to Welsh international and Premier League club target when he was loaned out to Rotherham and then sold to Barnsley. On the face of it, McCarthy did not play a big part in the Moore transformation and leaving a twenty goal striker on the bench as much he did this season suggests he still wasn’t wholly convinced about him.
There’s a slight change of emphasis and tense in that last paragraph, because, as I type this, the news has come through that Mick McCarthy and his assistant Terry Connor have left City by mutual consent and Under 23 coach Steve Morison and age group coach Tom Ramasut will be caretaker bosses for the next three matches apparently which would then take us up to the next international break.
Chairman Mehmet Dalman was there today to witness the toxic atmosphere at the ground first hand, but he had plenty to say about the possibility of Morison becoming manager and the club’s disturbing financial position beforehand.
Not for the first time, you wonder about the decision making and media approach of the club when the club Chairman writes off the chances of someone becoming manager and then appoints him as temporary boss a few hours later! I appreciate of course that permanent and caretaker boss are two completely different jobs, but it would appear that even if Morison and Ramasut were to take nine points from the next three matches, their chances of being anything more than fill ins are virtually nil.
So, Mick McCarthy’s reign, which got off to a spectacularly good start, ends with results having started to take a downward turn as soon as he signed the two year deal the club I think we can now say for definite, foolishly, offered him back in March when the original plan had been for him to stay for the rest of the 20/21 season and then take things from there.
It’s always sad to see a manager leave because of bad results and I do have a degree of sympathy for Mick McCarthy because he was given nowhere near the sort of funds that all City managers have had under Vincent Tan with possible exception of Russell Slade, but he had to go.
Neil Harris was sacked after a run of six straight defeats if you include the FA Cup loss to Nottingham Forest, but apart from a 2-0 defeat at eventual Champions Norwich (who we played twice in those six games) all of the losses were by single goal margins.
Contrast that to the current run where we’ve scored once and conceded nineteen in those eight games – I thought Harris had to go in the end, but can’t remember thinking I was watching a possible relegation side in action in the same way I have while watching McCarthy’s team in recent weeks.
With this turn of events, I’ll not waste much time on or be as scathing as I was going to be about today’s game. Instead, here’s just a few observations from what was as bad a City performance as I’ve seen in some time.
First, we looked like a team who were out of practice at playing 4-4-2 because there were disconcerting gaps appearing all over the place in the areas which are called between the lines these days. Middlesbrough really could have scored a hatful today against a team whose confidence was shot and were showing a reaction to playing three games in a week that their opponents weren’t.
Collins and Harris were willing runners, but we did nothing up front until McCarthy ditched the 4-4-2 in favour of what looked like 3-4-3 at the break by bringing on Moore for Perry Ng and moving Brown back to left centre back.
Although I thought Moore was as poor as I’ve seen him in a City shirt when he came on, his arrival did coincide with a big improvement which could not be sustained for anywhere near long enough, but, with Colwill again showing he has a bit of X factor about him, visiting keeper Lumley made a good save from Collins, who still awaits his first Cardiff goal, and Aden Flint headed a Giles corner down into the ground and up onto the underside of the crossbar, but that was meagre fare indeed compared to the number of escapes the City goal had through the afternoon.
That said, Middlesbrough needed a very, very dubious penalty award by Jeremy Simpson to make their superiority into something tangible ten minutes before half time as the official penalised Mark McGuiness for a handball when the ball clearly hit him with his arms by his sides in the manner recommended to ensure a penalty isn’t given.
The penalty award was a part of something of a chastening afternoon for the ex Arsenal man who has been playing well lately, but here he was well off the pace and error prone, like most of his teammates, and should really have been sent off after two dodgy tackles following his booking for the penalty incident (the Sky pundits were adamant as well that Pack should have gone for a first half tackle which saw him kick an opponent as he followed through in a tackle – I thought there wasn’t much in that one, but the pros know better than me).
This season is shaping up like 04/05 when City, beset by financial problems, faced their only real Championship relegation scrap since their promotion in 2003. That year we were reliant on youth to some degree with plenty of Academy products being given a first team opportunity – two of them in particular in Joe Ledley and Cameron Jerome grasped their chance and were important members of the team by end of that season, while it was a breakthrough campaign for the slightly older James Collins as well who earned himself a move to West Ham in the summer.
With the senior pros being so poor in most cases this season, I think we might have to be looking at three of the current crop of youngsters having to be able to make a similar impact this season if we are to survive. That’s a very big ask, but now there is a new factor involved, the prospect of a new manager possibly being able to bring about a transformation in fortunes – although, given the club’s record over the past decade when it comes to managerial appointments, I won’t be getting my hopes up too much.
Just a few words as well to congratulate Isaak Davies and Eli King who became the latest Academy graduates to make a debut for the first team when they came on for Harris and Vaulks late on. Like all of them who have featured so far, you wish their debuts could have been under better circumstances, but at least they can now say that they are a first team footballer for Cardiff City.
One final thought on Mick McCarthy. Whatever you may think of him, I believe he was regarded as a “safe pair of hands” in Championship terms at least throughout his managerial career before he came to Cardiff.
What has happened to Ipswich since McCarthy left them is testament to how he managed to keep a cash strapped club alive and competitive at this level over a number of seasons and yet it has to be said that, by the end, he had utterly failed at Cardiff.
Did this “safe pair of hands” suffer from the self doubt that, in my experience, becomes more of a consideration when you reach his age or were all of the aspects of his psyche which made him a respected second tier manager not enough to save him at Cardiff because it has become a virtually impossible job? There’s no way of knowing the answer to that for sure at this stage, but whoever his replacement turns out to be, they face a hell of a challenge to keep us up.
Away from the travails of the first team, things are currently going swimmingly for the age group sides. The under 18s may have made a stuttering start to their league campaign, but they’re on fire when it comes to the PDL Cup, as they followed up their 5-0 win at Bristol City last weekend with a 4-0 triumph over Watford at Leckwith at lunchtime – Cian Ashford, Jac Clay, Caleb Hughes and James Crole got the goals.
In local football, Blaenrhondda FC’s winning run came to an end in Cardiff on Friday evening when they went down 2-1 to Llanrumney United, while Treherbert Boys and Girls Club and Ton Pentre were without games this weekend.
It’s the time of year again when I ask readers of Mauve and Yellow Army to make a contribution towards its running costs. Before I go into detail about this, I should, once again, offer my sincere thanks to all of you who have helped ensure the future of the blog over the past three years through a mixture of monthly payments via Patreon, monthly Standing Orders into my bank account and once a year payments via bank transfer, PayPal, cheque and cash.
The first time I made this request for assistance, it was prompted by a need for funds to pay for three yearly web hosting costs which, frankly, I was in no position to meet following my move of house a few months earlier. However, I’m pleased to say that, this time around, the web hosting bill was settled back in June with none of the problems there were back in 2018.
Therefore, any monies received this year will go towards other running costs and, although it’s too early yet to make any formal commitments despite so many of the pandemic restrictions in Wales being lifted recently, I am minded to do another review of a season from the past book to follow on from “Real Madrid and all that” which looked back on the 1970/71 campaign. At the moment 1975/76, the first promotion season I experienced, looks to be favourite for the book treatment, which would mean a lot more trips back and forth to Cardiff than my finances have become used to over the past year and a half – hopefully, the majority of them will not have to be made via Radyr Cheyne!
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.
Finally, as mentioned earlier, 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.
As always an insightful piece but I have a few questions:
From the end of last season Harry Wilson is the only main starter missing as MM did not tend to start Ojo, Hoillett or Glatzel but we have a situation where many of the senior players are well short of the level we know they can play, we are seeing too many mistakes and players not being 100% committed to the cause. Are the players not playing for manager or are they ‘not playing for the club’ given the expectation that contracts will either not be renewed or at a reduced level leading to many moving on as the club tries to reduce it’s wage bill ?
Based on past experience are the Board likely to make the right appointment to take us forward or will they go for the cheapest available option (Slade, Harris and MM) ?
Like most fans I fear for the future but I hope I am proved wrong but it is Cardiff City we are talking about
P.S. Joe Ralls previously a key player in our midfield – what has happened to him, is he now too injury prone ?
A few weeks ago you concluded that someone up there doesn’t like Cardiff City and after a first 60 minutes where sides were fairly well matched apart from dubious* penalty and our forwards being low on confidence I think that question can be asked again.
(*If yesterday wasn’t all about Mick and Warnock then more would be said about the ref who was absolutely shocking).
You could also conclude that it wasn’t just someone up there as fans in Canton were ready to turn on the manager and team as soon as we conceded, even cheering the opposition manager who had big hand in creating so many of our longer term problems.
I just can’t believe it’s taken so long for Mick to go, writing on the wall after the Reading result, and yet board are asking for more time to find the next manager – that lack of longer term thinking allowed Warnock to behave at his worst and is one of the prevailing criticisms to make over the past decade.
Hopefully the next manager leaves us better than where they found us. Mick, Harris and Warnock all took over sides looking at risk of going down from the Championship and left us back in that position, Slade robbed the passion from the crowd, Ole spent all the money and Malky and DJ left us ruing their off-the-field lack of professionalism – DJ leaving us with very few players and money and Malky’s off-the-field behaviour embarrassing us on international scale. Compare to a Chris Wilder who took Sheffield United from League One and left them as one of the favourites to get promoted back to Premier League with much deeper squad!
Thanks both for your replies, BBIF, good to hear from you again and you mention something that I brought up in the other piece I put out yesterday – in essence, I think the same as you although with Mehmet Dalman having given a further interview to Wales Online which was published yesterday, it may be that you’re right when you talk about reduced terms offers to some of the out of contract as opposed to my conclusion that no contracts will be offered.
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/were-under-siege-mehmet-dalman-21950687
DJ, I’ve read that Vincent Tan appears to be favouring gong for a younger manager this time and I must admit that as details of the financial situation emerge and it becomes clearer that, at best, any manager will be looking to wheel and deal in the free transfer/out of contract market in the summer unless we’re able to sell someone for big money (seems to me we’re talking about Keiffer Moore or one of the youngsters coming good there), I’d say that will impact on the type of applicants we get – I’d be pleasantly surprised if someone like Chris Wilder was genuinely interested in the job.
For the overwhelming majority of City fans the Middlesbro (h) game in October 2021 will be remembered as the one that Mick McCarthy and Terry Connor were finally shown the door by Tan, Dalman & Choo. It was not a game too soon. Many thought it was more than a game too late. The football under McCarthy, I use the term advisedly, was getting more dire by the game whilst some formations bordered on the bizarre. It could be argued, against Boro’s two attackers this could well have been a game for City to play the sweeper system. However for a team so wedded to that formation this season we simply did not have the players to play it. All thoughts of such talk was a non starter for City’s lopsided and not fit for purpose squad. Last Saturday 442 v 442 it was. Normal service was resumed, a 0-2 defeat, the eighth on the trot, and it was good-bye Mick and TC.
For me, October 23rd 2021 will also be remembered for another reason. It was at the 2012 Semi-Final Play/Off defeat at WHU, when news of Tan’s ludicrous rebrand was made public. That summer I was within one day of of stopping watching Cardiff City, so repugnant was the prospect of seeing City, cruelly ditch a near 100 years of history. It was at Coffee #1, near Cardiff General railway station that I met up with another City fan that summer to discuss the matter. We came to the conclusion how dare our Far Eastern owner drive us from our beloved team, even if they were to look like Barnsley Reserves.
For me my first recollection of a City game was April 1960, a 1-0 win over Aston Villa. I witnessed that by my Father’s side on the Grange End perimeter wall near the the Bob Bank corner flag. That game secured promotion to the old First Division.
Now 9 years after the news at that WHU game, unless things change, after over 60 years of watching the Bluebirds I will now have seen my last City game. I was not present at the Middlesbro game as WAG regulations now prevent me from attending matches. The Reading home game on Oct 2nd being my last. It is indeed strange that English teams in the same competition, even with bigger attendances have no such restrictions.
While I dont seek crocodile tears or even understanding in this personal decision I can do no other. In fact I have not changed, rather conditions of entry to games in Wales have changed. Yet there were players on show at CCS that those fans watched against Middlesbro who had no such restrictions imposed on them. Surreal.
It is indeed strange that these restrictions coincided with City’s worst ever losing run and the worst football I can ever remember in any of our 2nd tier campaigns.
Knowing that this situation was inching ever closer, it was for this reason I have been disciplined and refrained from posting on MaYa this season … a weaning away, if you like, from things Cardiff City.
It has been a real pleasure these last seasons to read your excellent posts, Paul, and the thoughtful posts from others, whom I have grown to, ‘know.’ You will not begin to grasp the enjoyment this blog has been to me as the football has been getting less like football with each passing game.
During these last 6 plus decades Cardiff City has afforded me the means to make many friends. Arthur, who I first stood next to as we leant on a crash barrier behind the Grangetown goals in the late 1960’s is still a friend. We still used to meet up at games and have our weekly phone-chat after each game. Their was the poet Dannie Abse who I had the privilege of sitting next to for many years in the Grandstand at Ninian Park. And so I could go on.
It was Peter Sinfield, lyricist for King Crimson who wrote these words in 1969:
“I’m on the outside looking inside
What do I see
Much confusion, disillusion
All around me.”
The situation at CF11 seems confusion in the extreme. Choo’s inexplicably unprofessional words on a supporters’ bus and Dalman’s calculated 45 minutes before the usual inner group of hand-picked fans have revealed that. That these fans are afforded far more privileges than even Shareholders of Cardiff City I find scandalous, Mr Tan.
So, unless things change that’s it for me watching my beloved Cardiff City, a journey of more downs than ups that my Father set me off on in the late 1950’s.
To Paul and contributors to this blog may I thank-you for the many happy hours your writing has given me.
Hi! Steve, that’s very sad, but understandable, news.
I enjoyed your company for those couple of seasons in the Ninian Stand.
I am pretty sure that I have seen my last Cardiff City match live. My health and the reluctance of Covid-19 to go away makes it “too risky”.
Good luck to you and Jen, it’s been a pleasure knowing you both.
Hi Colin,
Ta for your good wishes. It was a pleasure to sit with you and your daughter those last few seasons. I really enjoyed our chats before, during and after games. Trusting watching City on tv will not be as traumatic as recently for you and your health improves.
Steve.
Good morning and thanks for the contributions. Simon, I find my reactions vary from game to game ranging from very annoyed against Swansea, philosophical against Fulham and resigned against Middlesbrough. My relationship with the club, and team, is as low as I can remember it being since the mid eighties at the moment and yet I find I’m still looking forward to finding out how the Under 23s get on at Ipswich this lunchtime – in a way, that only adds to the sadness because, as i mentioned in my piece on the Under 23s last week, I look forward to Tuesday’s lunchtimes far more than three o clock Saturday these days. Increasingly, I find myself feeling like you do about Keiffer Moore, perhaps a new manager will get him playing a bit, but then if his attitude was to improve and he was more up for it, we know that we still struggle so much to get the ball to him. I’d add the words “and a little inspiration” to your request for hard graft and, sadly, I don’t see that coming from the senior pros in the squad, Colwill? Possibly, I’d say the same about Keiron Evans and I’d have Bowen in central midfield every week now.
Steve, it’s really good to hear from you again, but the circumstances you set out are another example of what is a really bleak period for City fans. It’s soul destroying that a relationship of over sixty years with your football club should end in such a manner, but, although I’d put forward the 74/75 and 84/85 relegation sides as being possibly worse than this team, it’s completely understandable and I’d also add that this side still has a nucleus of players that cost a fortune to assemble whereas the two sides I mention were very much bargain basement stuff.
Thank you for your kind words about the blog and I’m sure that I’m not the only one who will miss your always readable contributions – although it seems like you want to make a clean break from City, you’ll always be welcome here if you ever want to contribute again.
Sorry to see you go Steve and, once again, thanks for some great posts down the years.
Colin, “the reluctance of Covid to go away” is just another among many reasons why trips to Cardiff City Stadium are not a worthwhile option for many these days – I hope your health allows you make the occasional visit in the future, but you don’t need me to tell you that you’re missing absolutely nothing worth watching these days.
In terms of the lack of form and commitment and mistakes from many of our senior players this season my thoughts went back to Gary Nelson’s (Charlton) book in the 80’s Left Foot Forward when he highlighted the life of professional footballers worrying would they get a new contract and if not how would they pay their mortgage, would they have to move their family etc. Maybe the announcements by the club that they wanted to reduce our wage bill and bring in younger players is impacting on the minds and form of our senior players who are out of contract next summer ? I hope Steve Morison can get the team playing again but wonder how he can get the senior players back on board with the ’cause’ if they don’t think they will be there next season ?
I think I agree with BBIF. You would think that if the problem is the non renewal of contracts or offers which include reductions in wages, then a change of manager would not make much difference.Conversely, if McCarthy was the problem (which it looked like he was if you take the Middlesbrough match as an example, but not if you consider Reading and Fulham), then you would hope for an improvement – for myself, I’d make the first option the more likely one,