Seven decades of Cardiff City v Rotherham United matches.

How long has it been since Cardiff City were so widely backed to win a home game as they are being for tomorrow’s visit of a Rotherham United side without an away point so far (they were hammered 6-1 at Stoke in the League Cup as well)?

I think you probably have to go back to our Play Off season in 19/20 for the last time it happened and, possibly, it might be further still to our promotion season of 17/18. Therein lies the danger I suppose, City have been awful at home in recent years and so it’s probably true to say that it’s only Joe Ralls of the current squad who has experience of being in Cardiff sides that are expected to win on their home ground.

If Rotherham are able to get to about the hour mark with a level score or even a lead, the pressure will be very much on City. However, even with the loss of Aaron Ramsey for what many are fearing will be a lot longer than the three weeks mentioned by Erol Bulut in his press conference yesterday (City are waiting for the results of a scan on Ramseyy’s knee injury) , it’s a different, and better, sort of pressure than the sort we’ve become used to for at least two seasons.

Before we find out whether City can record a fourth straight home win though, here’s the usual quiz on our upcoming opponents – I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday.

60s. Remembered for his ability to ghost into scoring positions, the fact is that this Yorkshire born striker’s goalscoring record was not quite as impressive as I remembered it being at the time. Don’t get me wrong, just short of a hundred league goals in around three hundred and forty games is good going, but it shows that he wasn’t really the consistent twenty goals a season man I thought he was. Rotherham were his first club and five years after making his debut for them early in this decade, he crossed the Pennines to play First Division football. The fee involved was £30,000 which was fairly modest by the standards of the top clubs at the time, but it represented his new team’s first significant outlay on a player in eight years. After retirement, he would manage his second club and his son was also a professional footballer who will not remember Cardiff City with any affection, can you name father and son?

70s. What connected Liverpool, Spurs, Wolves, Southampton, Newport County and Rotherham United at the start of this decade?

80s. Peeling prep mess for midfielder. (5,6)

90s. Shelter for hand protection worker maybe?

00s. Great things were expected from this forward when he burst upon the scene while wearing hoops around the turn of the century. Capped by his country as a teenager, he was a target for top flight clubs almost from day one and his cause was helped by him scoring the fastest ever hat trick in UEFA club competitions. However, despite his dramatic entry into the game, he found it hard to break into the first team on a regular basis and he went out on loan to a couple of sides in blue. When he did leave permanently, he again wore blue at a club which was just about as far away geographically from his birthplace as any in the UK.

The truth was though that his career had already peaked and he was soon being loaned out again – as before, all of the teams he played for temporarilly wore blue. Apart from his first club, Rotherham were the first team he’d played for that did not wear blue, but his time at Millmoor was very much of the blink and you missed it variety – a strike rate of one in every three games is impressive, but it loses it’s praiseworthiness when you find out that three matches is all he played for the Millers!

A move to a capital followed, but he was soon off again to play in black and white and his above par showings at this club persuaded Rotherham to give him another try. This time, he did better to the extent that he played a few more games and scored a few more goals, but it wasn’t enough to prevent another move, this time to a ground not used for football by the sound of it, before dropping into non league football, who am I describing?

10s. Ancient beauty’s home turns muddy?

20s. Initially at least, you might say it’s an eel tripe portion for Leif Erikson! (3,7)

Answers

60s. Frank Casper played just over a hundred league games for Rotherham before moving on to Burnley, the club he is more associated with, in 1967. Casper spent nine years at Turf Moor as a player and was Burnley manager between 1989 and 1991. While his son Chris started off at Manchester United only to receive an injury following a tackle by Richard Carpenter which ended his career on Boxing Day 1999 while playing for Reading in a game at Ninian Park – a subsequent law suit issued against Carpenter was settled out of court.

70s. The six clubs listed were the Finalists in a “Kop Choir” competition run by the Football League Review which was covered by the BBC’s Sportnight with (David) Coleman programme in April 1970. A panel consisting of Dickensian referee Roger Kirkpatrick, Arsenal goalkeeper Bob Wilson and Football League misery guts Alan Hardaker decided that Rotherham were the team with the best Kop Choir out of the ninety two clubs!

80s. Nigel Pepper.

90s. Lee Glover.

00s. Mark Burchill started off with Celtic and was soon winning caps for Scotland and breaking records in European competitions. Loaned out to Birmingham and Ipswich, he eventually signed for Portsmouth, but was never a regular first choice and further loans followed to Dundee, Wigan and Sheffield Wednesday. Rotherham first signed him in 2004, but he was soon on his travels again, this time to Hearts and then Dunfermline where he enjoyed his best spell since his time with Celtic. Rotherham brought Burchill back, but, again, he didn’t prosper in Yorkshire and so he returned to Scotland to play at Rugby Park for Kilmarnock.

10s. Troy Brown.

20s. Lee Peltier.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Rotherham United matches.

Bulut’s three at the back with one central defender doesn’t work quite as well second time around!

From nowhere, Erol Bulut came up with a three at the back formation featuring a full back and a central midfielder which worked like a dream as a shadow side really impressed in winning their Second Round League Cup tie at Birmingham by 3-1.

It wasn’t surprising therefore to see a repeat tonight at Blackburn in Round Three, but this time it ended up like many would have feared when they saw the team and formation for the Birmingham match – a 5-2 loss which, by the sound of the commentary I listened to (no pictures still in League Cup games this season) sounded like a fair reflection of the differences between the teams as City gave as good as they got in a very exciting sounding first half which ended 2-2 before Blackburn, who’ve now scored seventeen goals in their three games in the competition, ran away with things after half time.

The City team was, if anything, even more experimental than the one which faced Birmingham as Erol Bulut made eleven changes from Sunday’s win at Sunderland. Alex Runnarsson was in goal, Ebou Adams and Mahlon Romeo were in the back three again with Jonathan Panzo making a first start since signing on loan from Forest. At wing back were Ollie Tanner and Keiron Evans, Romaine Sawyers captained the team and had Andy Rinomhota alongside him in central midfield and Callum Robinson and Rubin Colwill were on the flanks just behind attack leader Kion Etete.

It was on the bench though that City really emphasised the experimental theme. Vontae Campbell was the most experienced player of the nine subs, with only Joel Colwill and Cian Ashford having tasted first team action out of the remaking eight. If goalkeeper Matthew Turner, new signing for the under 21 side from Spurs, Malachi Fagan-Walcott (he’s a centreback), defender Luey Giles, left sided player Josh Beecher, strikerJames Crole and attacking midfielder Cody Twose came on, it would be for their senior debuts,

In the event, Beecher and Crole got their chance and they were joined by the younger Colwill and Ashford who had featured in the earlier rounds of the competition.

I’ve not seen the fifth goal (Sky Sports News showed the other six), but three of Blackburn’s first four goals were gifts from a City defence that sounded distinctly creaky all night. Despite giving away a penalty, it sounded like Ebou Adams was the best of the bck three and maybe he has done enough to convince Bulut that he can be used there in the league if injury or suspension cause two out of McGuinness, Goutas and Panzo to miss out.

City had threatened once or twice before the home side took the lead on thirteen minutes as a straightforward looking ball played from the halfway line sent Jake Garrett racing through and he was easily able to beat Runnarsson from just inside the penalty area,

City were level within five minutes with a fine goal as some lovely footwork by the elder Colwill set up Robinson who drilled a low shot into the corner of the net from twenty five yards.

It was heartening to hear that it was three young players with time to develop further were at the heart of most of the good things City did in the first period as Colwill, Tanner and Etete sounded like they were making a case for inclusion against Rotherham on Saturday.

Another young attacker seemed to be finding it hard going in his unfamiliar left wing back role and Blackburn exploited a gap where Evans should have been to score an easy second after Sawyers had lost the ball cheaply – Andrew Moran got to the bye line and pulled a low cross back for Arnor Sigurdsson to side foot in.

That effort looked like sending City in at half time a goal down, but Etete receiving a pass from Sawyers flicked the ball up a couple of times to tee himself up for a shot into the net from about fifteen yards – another very good City goal which means that Etete has already beaten the figure of three goals he scored last season.

The game was beautifully poised at halftime, but a sleepy start to the second period saw two goals conceded in the first nine minutes to effectively end the game as a contest. It certainly sounded like Panzo was looking as rusty as you might expect someone who has played so little football so far this season to do and he was culpable as he gave the ball away twenty yards from goal to leave Moran with a clear run in on Runnarsson and he scored easily.

Four minutes later, Moran was brought down by Adams for what sounded like a penalty which didn’t need multiple views by VAR to convince the authorities as to its validity. Runnarsson, diving to his right saved his fellow country man Sigurdsson’s penalty, but the respite was temporary as the resultant corner was half cleared to Moran who was given time to shoot past a goalkeeper who, with eight conceded in the two games he’s played so far, has every reason to wonder about some of the defending in front of him at Ipswich and now Blackburn.

The seventeen year old Beecher was brought on for the last half an hour (the youngest City player to make a first team debut since Adam Matthews nearly fifteen years ago?) and it was a mixture of defensive fallibility and attacking quality from him it seems- it sounded like he was at fault with the fifth goal as Markanday steered in a Moran cross, but also knocked over two or three very nice looking crosses.

Crole also got half an hour and came as close as anyone in maroon/plum in the second half with a shot from twenty yards o to the top of the Blackburn net, while Ashford and Colwill junior played for the last fifteen minutes or so.

So, it’s five conceded on two of our last three visits to Elwood Park and we go there again next month -with their scoring record in this competition and twelve scored in the league so far, Blackburn are finding goals easy to come by this season, so we’re going to need something a lot better from our defence if we are to avoid another disappointment there in a few weeks time.

On Tuesday, the under 21s (actually, the team selected was almost completely, an under 18 one) were beaten 1-0 at Leckwith by a Millwall side which have yet to lose so far this season.

The most influential moment in the game came after around a quarter of an hour when Alyas Debono, a first year scholar, was sent off for a lunging tackle after the ball had got away from him around the halfway line. It was probably the right decision if you go by the way the game is being refereed at Premier and EFL levels these days, but it seemed a harsh call by a ref who didn’t impress me much and only showed a yellow card to a visiting player for a foul which looked no better than Debono’s.

Once it became eleven against ten, City were reduced to trying to get to the half time interval without conceding, it was a little like the first team’s game at Sunderland with the difference being that he under 18s conceded when Leahy glanced in a header around the thirty five minute mark.

However, City came out with a much more positive outlook after the break and spent most of the second half on he front foot.

In the eighty ninth minute, it looked like City had got a deserved reward for their second half efforts when Tanatswa Nyakuwha was hauled down in the penalty area. It was a nice piece of play from Nyakuwha to win the penalty and he stepped forward to take the spot kick. The problem was that for the fifteen minutes or so before the penalty incident, Nyakuwha had looked out on his feet to me and so it was that much of a shock to see the spot  kick saved by Millwall goalkeeper Wady as Fin Johnson stabbed the rebound from the save just wide.

A really good effort in the end by a very young City team (possibly the youngest one we’ve fielded at this level), but particularly worthy of praise for me was Kyle Kenniford in midfield and another first year scholar in Dakarai Mafico playing at left back which I understand was an unfamiliar position for him.

Finally, if the person calling themselves Bluebirds over Pembrokeshire is reading this, I belatedly received your message in the Feedback section this morning and have just replied to it.  

Posted in Out on the pitch, The stiffs | Tagged , | 2 Comments