We’re definitely into the stage where it’s becoming very hard to find anything to write about in Cardiff City games now. After becoming mathematically safe a fortnight ago, we’ve had three defeats by a single goal margin where, in reality, we’ve offered very little as an attacking force and today, in our 1-0 loss at Sheffield United, it was, in some ways, a return to the bad old days of autumn.
To be fair, we did pretty well in the first half, but, after a strong first quarter of an hour or so, the writing was on the wall somewhat at half time as the home side had gradually taken control.
City weren’t helped by having to make a couple changes at half time due to an injury to Cody Drameh and yet another one, or maybe it was the same one, to captain Joe Ralls.
Of course, the necessary introduction of two defensive minded players in Mark McGuinness and Will Vaulks was followed within a minute with the home side scoring the only goal of the game and so Steve Morison was only able to make one attacking change as he tried to find a way to get us back on terms.
To be frank though, our manager could have had all three subs available to him after going one down and it wouldn’t have made much difference – apart from that opening spell, City we’re exactly the sort of nothing to play for, mentally on the beach, opponents a team chasing Play Off points like Sheffield United would wish for at this stage of the season.
Since the game at Reading fourteen days ago, Steve Morison has alternated between playing a flat back four and his normal back three. So, today it was a return to the back three we saw at Hull, but the displays were a complete mirror image of each other – a disastrous start on Good Friday, followed by a so, so period and then a better second half, but today, well, we’ve been a second half team all season, so this was the exception which proves that rule I suppose!
Whether playing two or three centrebacks, Perry Ng and Curtis Nelson have been in the team lately and today they were joined by Ollie Denham. Also, with the injured Alfie Doughty back at Stoke now, Joel Bagan looks set to be the left wing back/full back until the end of the season.
Ralls returned to the midfield alongside Ryan Wintle and Tommy Doyle and the surprise was provided by Max Watters accompanying Jordan Hugill up front.
The former Crawley striker had played in the under 23 team’s midweek 6-1 thrashing at Charlton to get some game time after a couple of months out with injury and he was right at the heart of a misleadingly encouraging start which had Drameh swinging over a threatening cross within seconds of the kick off that home keeper Wes Fotheringham was able to grab just in front the onrushing Hugill.
Within a few minutes, the front two combined effectively as Hugill fed Watters who showed pace and skill to get clear of the last defender. Having done well to work the chance for himself, I was confident that Watters would score because he’s shown throughout his career at various levels of the game that he can finish. However, Fotheringham was able to make a fairly easy save as the striker tried to shoot across him.
The same two players were involved again with the game barely ten minutes old as the keeper made a mess of a clearance and presented the ball to Watters about twenty five yards out. However, in a sequence which encapsulates the way Cardiff City have played the game for too long, Watters chose to play a pass that was not quite good enough to Drameh whose first touch wasn’t quite good enough and a chance that I’d say the majority of sides in the Championship would have taken, just fizzled out.
“Just fizzled out” is an apt description of our attacking play after that. Apart from a McGuinness header from a Vaulks long throw that Fotheringham was able to claw away as Hugill closed in, we offered nothing after that – as is happening too often recently, our cause was not helped by wasteful dead ball delivery either.
With an injury crisis among their strikers, Sheffield only had Billy Sharp available and, as he was making his way back from a knock himself, he was only fit enough for the bench. Therefore, on loan attacking midfielder Morgan Gibbs-White spearheaded an attacking approach based on trying to work openings through intricate short passing moves in the final third.
Understandably, it took them a while to come to terms with this, but as the home team did, they helped make Dillon Phillips City’s Man of the Match as he came up with a trio of fine first half saves.
The first of these owed little to the host’s short passing though as wing back Ben Osborn let fly from twenty five yards with the ball appearing to gain pace off the pitch, something which only made Phillips’ plunging save to his left all the more impressive.
The other two saves were from Norwegian international Sander Berge, the first came from a jabbed shot after a lovely first touch from the midfielder, the best save of the trio was the last one as Berge turned Ryan Wintle and connected well with his shot from the corner of the six yards box, but Phillips reacted superbly to turn the ball away for a corner.
At half time though City had done pretty well and had actually played out nicely from the back at times – you could imagine there being chances for them to break on a home team that would be getting more nervous the longer it stayed 0-0.
Any such sort of optimistic thinking evaporated with the second half barely a minute old however and the frustrating thing was that the goal came in a manner that really should never have happened given the lack of an aerial threat the home team posed in open play. At the start of it all though, Joel Bagan, one of a few of our younger players who have looked to be running on empty after a long season lately, ran into trouble and lost the ball in the middle of the field. Sheffield immediately attacked down the vacant left flank and eventually Gibbs-White fizzed over a fine cross that was firmly headed in from ten yards by Iliman Ndiaye, but where was the marking?
Looking back now, there was really only a shot against the post by Berge to strongly suggest a second goal in the game after that, but, such was the home side’s complete control of the last forty odd minutes, it didn’t matter – I daresay their fans were nervous in the last few minutes with such a narrow lead, but by then we had nothing to offer as this almost exclusively miserable season dribbles to a miserable finale.
I mentioned the 6-1 defeat in midweek for the under 23s and the under 18s also lost 2-0 at home to Sheffield Wednesday this lunchtime, so, just as the season tickets go on sale for 22/23, I think most City fans are thinking this one can’t end soon enough.
The bleak results continued in the Ardals Leagues South West with Ton Pentre losing 2-0 at high riding Ynyshir Albions and AFC Porth losing 2-1 at home to another struggling team, Cwmamman United. In the Highadmit Premier League, Blaenrhondda are finishing their mid table season in underwhelming style as they lost their latest match 5-0 at home to a Porthcawl Town Athletic side some way below them in the table. As has been the case too often this season, it was left to Treherbert Boys and Girls Club of the teams this blog follows to provide some cheer as the team that has romped away with the Second Division title edged it 4-3 at home to a lowly Llantwit Fardre side.
A defeat by one goal was a fair result given the excellence of Phillips’ shot-stopping and how much it was needed, but what a disappointing goal to concede in the end: Bagan runs into traffic, Nelson leaves his man to Denham(?) so no pressure on the cross and NG left to mark two men at the back post with one of those beating him the air to score.
Nelson is currently our best defender at dealing with crosses so I wonder if our tactics are to get him back into the center as quickly as possible? A clear mistake by senior player not adapting the tactics if true. Still, I think a mid-season McGuinness and Bagan stop that goal and both players having a dip in form which is to be expected as young players develop, especially within 120 seconds of change in positioning and personal.
More disappointing than that goal was the performance and injury for Ralls. We’re about to go into a summer where comparisons have been made to Malky’s first window in how tight and busy money is expected to be and there are big risks both to making Ralls our most expensive player when he’s now missing games too often and to letting him leave when he’s (usually) our best midfielder when present. How much is this the heavier load of not being helped enough this year and how much the signs of where his career is trending?
Morison made comment midweek about not playing Bacuna as a right-back going forward (not cramming square pegs into round holes) but we’re now one injury/suspension away from that happening again. There’s a lot to be hopeful for going into this summer but I still find it bizarre that Morison, Dalman and others are so uncensored in their speaking to the extent that it’s a club actively not wanting to charm fans back to their seats. Compounded with so far a miserable end to a largely miserable season, I’m not yet sure why anyone is renewing their season ticket.
Thanks, Paul.
Yes, it can’t be easy coming up with something different to say. it says a lot for your dedication that you even keep watching the “football” City are providing us with alone writing a blog about it.
One hopes that the new season will bring with it some glimmer of light and some watchable football.
Keep up the good work and thank you again.
Thanks both for your replies. The waiting for this season to end is probably more pronounced on my part because of the sense of anticipation I have regarding the summer months because the situation reminds me of the summers of 2005 and 2011 when Dave Jones and Malky Mackay faced big rebuilding jobs and produced teams that were a pleasant surprise for supporters as we put together an unlikely play off challenge inspired by Jason Koumas in the first instance and finished in the top six as well as reaching a Wembley Final in the second. In many ways, the challenge for Steve Morison is greater because his squad is weaker than what Mackay inherited in particular, but there is a promising nucleus of younger players who you’d like to think could prosper more in an environment where there is a bit more confidence around.
For now though DJ’s question about who’ll buy season tickets seems an appropriate one. A 1-0 defeat to, possibly, the best visiting team at Cardiff City Stadium this season when we’ve nothing to play for doesn’t look too bad, but, Saturday was a game where the score didn’t tell the full story – such was the home team’s dominance in the second half, I reckon they’d have come up with a second goal pretty quickly in the unlikely event of us equalising. I also share DJ’s concerns regarding Joe Ralls – he didn’t look right while he was on and I can remember another promising first half situation “fizzling out” because he took so long to attempt what was a pretty obvious pass – it was as if something which would come naturally to him normally was a real effort.
Thank you Colin, I saw a few hopeful signs in the first half on Saturday in that, although we struggled to make it come to anything further up the pitch, we were better than I expected at playing out from the back – youngsters like Denham and Connolly were good at that part of the game for the under 23s earlier in the season and in his senior team games, Denham has not struggled with the step up when it comes to that part of the game while there have been good reports about Connolly when it comes to that part of the game during his successful loan spell at Bristol Rovers. With the right recruitment, I believe that if Steve Morison genuinely wants to change the way we play away from Warnockball (I believe he is more dedicated to that than Neil Harris and Mick McCarthy were), it may not be as hard as some make it sound – one down side to that we’re currently seeing is that our et piece attacking has been woeful lately, but I’d say that is more to do with dreadful delivery that anything else.