Weekly review 26/7/24.

The City party are returning to Cardiff today after a week in Austria which seems to have gone well in terms of preparedness and team bonding for the new season and results against three opponents that were, Kortrijk apart perhaps, a step up from what we’d faced beforehand were perfectly acceptable – i thought, generally speaking, performances were promising as well.

Before going on the the matches played over the past five days against Hamburg, South African multi times Champions Mamelodi Sundowns and Hertha Berlin, the only hint regarding new signings this week came from the manager himself as Erol Bulut, speaking after the Sundowns game on Tuesday, said that he was hopeful of bringing in two, possibly three, new signgings before the week was out.

I have to say that, as yet, there has been nothing to justify the manager’s optimism. However, it is being claimed on one of the City messageboards that there is a medical taking place today for Man City’s twice capped Australian international midfield player Alex Robertson who we have been linked to for the last few weeks.

I’ve seen nothing anywhere else about Robertson having a medical and so I think it’s very much take it with a pinch of salt for now, but what has become pretty clear is that there is something to these rumours of our interest in the player, hence why I’ve broken what has been a rule I’ve tried to stick to this summer (I’ve not always succeeded mind!) of not going into details about transfer rumours until they have something concrete to them.

To return to the games played in Austria, City gained what I’ll call revenge for their heart breaking Cup Winners Cup Semi Final defeat by Hamburg fifty six years ago by beating them 3-0 on Sunday.

Hamburg are very much in the fallen giants category currently as they are finding returning to the Bundesliga much tougher than they would have expected to when they were relegated in 2018, but, to be fair to them, their comprehensive defeat probably had a lot to do with them having faced Nantes, of all teams, the day before – I checked the Hamburg side which faced StPauli in the derby game in May when ex City man Robert Glatzel scored the only goal and there were two or three members of that team in from the start against us.

Glatzel was not one of them, apparently he was injured, and Hamburg did look pretty toothless without the man who has scored 63 times in 100 Hamburg league appearances. It was all pretty low key in the first half as City struggled to make chances themselves in the opening forty five minutes, but, not for the first time on the tour, the introduction of substitutes who generally tended to be younger than the players they were replacing livened things up.

Soon after the interval, Jamilu Collins, City’s best player in the eyes of many who watched the match, crossed to the far post where Ollie Tanner scored with a simple header. Once ahead, City took a degree of control and it was two of the younger substitutes who combined when Joel Bagan played a long ball out from the back (and it was a pass as opposed to a hoof) which enabled Isaak Davies to sprint clear of the last defender and shot calmly past the keeper.

It was a real reminder of what Davies might be able to give us this season – certainly, I don’t think we had anyone capable of scoring that goal last season and therefore the number of options facing anyone trying to play the ball up to our forwards was reduced.

The scoring was completed by Callum Robinson who netted from twelve yards from a half cleared corner in the closing minutes and, without creating that many chances, City had been able to add three more goals to the ten they’d scored in their previous two matches against Kortrijk and Pen y Bont.

Mamelodi Sundowns on Tuesday represented a step up in class though and, by the end, City could probably consider themselves a little fortunate to come out of a testing afternoon with a 1-1 draw. The Sundowns have been South African Champions for the last seven seasons and had a speed and effective press to them that marked them out as definitely Championship standard to me,

City went with a younger looking starting line up and, as they did in all three matches, offered little in the way of a goal threat in the first 45 minutes. The Sundowns were the team on the front foot most of the time, but, in truth, although I found it an interesting watch in many respects, there was not a great deal of goalmouth action throughout.

Joel Colwill had played at right back in the first half, but the half time introduction of Ronan Kpakio and Cian Ashford (both of whom have done themselves no harm at all in the last week I’d say) enabled him to move into his normal central midfield role for the second period and, just as against Hamburg, City had a goal to celebrate within a couple of minutes of the restart as Ashford fed Colwill who scored from fifteen yards with an assured left foot finish.

City were quite comfortable after that until around the seventy minute mark when the Sundowns seemed to step up a gear and put us under increased pressure. Ironically though, the equaliser came via a rapid counter attack after one of City’s best moves of the game – City found themselves short of cover at the back as Collins was sucked into the middle and Tashreeq Matthews was given plenty of room to run into down our left before placing a good shot from the corner of the penalty area across Ethan Horvarth, who was making his first appearance of the season and into the corner of the net.

The tour ended with another 1-1 draw yesterday. Although not quite the historical force that Hamburg have been in German football, Hertha are a side that I always tend to associate with the Bundesliga, but they did no better than a mid table finish in Germany’s second tier last season after being relegated in 22/23.

Like Hamburg, Hertha had the excuse of having played a game not long before this one. Indeed, they’d been beaten 2-1 by Huddersfield at a different venue in the area only a few hours later – this would explain why yesterday’s match was watch by Cardiff and Hertha fans, plus a small number from Yorkshire!

Therefore, once again, we were probably faced by something which was some way short of Hertha’s strongest team, just as had been the case against Hamburg, but that was counterbalanced to an extent by the fact that the Bundesliga 2 season starts next weekend, so both Hamburg and Hertha were probably quite a bit further down the fitness path than we are currently,

That said, it was noticeable yesterday how we finished the match much stronger than Hertha and, if we had been somewhat fortunate to draw with the Sundowns, the same applied in reverse to Hertha – it certainly felt like a game we were going to win if it had lasted for an extra ten minutes.

As it turned out, City were behind for about ninety per cent of the match. However, it was us who threatened first as Davies and Aaron Rmasey combined well and the Hertha keeper had to turn the former’s shot over the bar.

Within minutes, the Germans had the lead as a corner was half cleared, Tanner was beaten too easily out on the left and the resultant cross was headed in firmly from eight yards by Linus Gechter.

The goal apart, there was little between the sides and the next hour or so passed with chances at a premium, but with a feeling that City were, gradually, taking a measure of control. In saying that, they would have been two down midway through the second half were it not for a fine clearance off the line by Mark McGuinness.

By then, both of our summer signings had come on for their first action in City colours. Calum Chambers came on for the last half an hour and made an impression by moving into midfield twice as City looked to develop attacks, while Chris Willock had a promising twenty minutes as he was instrumental in gaining a string of corners as City stepped up the pressure.

Rubin Colwill made a difference as well in the final quarter of an hour or so as he became an influential performer in the middle of the park, but it was on the flanks where he proved most dangerous as his cross led to a header by McGuinness which was turned over the bar by the keeper and then from the result corner, Colwill eventually crossed and David Turnbull’s shot was blocked into the path of Robinson who jabbed in from six yards with a minute to go.

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Weekly review 19/7/24.

Last weekend it seemed very likely that I would have a third new signing ro talk about in this piece, but there’s been nothing yet and, with the first team squad flying out today for their week in Austria, it seems likely that we may have to wait a while longer for the players I feel we need to match, let alone improve on, last seasons mid table finish.

There have been a few names given as possible targets of ours, but I’ll not mention them at this stage because there’s nothing that has happened yet to make them anything but speculation.

It does look as if there has been a bid of £5 million from an unnamed club for Mark McGuinness which has, thankfully, been rejected by City for not being enough. Some messageboard fans were adamant City should be accepting a bid of that size, but that was to ignore a CV for a young centreback with quite a lot of experience at this level now who we’d probably by saying was being sold on the cheap if another Championship club was willing to sell someone with a similar career path to McGuinness’ for £5 million.

Bristol City are, apparently, trying to sign Sinclair Armstrong, QPR’s non scoring striker who usually looks so good when he plays against us, but, clearly, does not repeat that level of performance consistently against other sides, and I’ve seen the fee involved being described as in the region of 2 to 2.5 million pounds.

I mention this only to give a broad idea of the market we’re in when we say we’re looking for one or, maybe, two new strikers. Based on what I’ve seen of Armstrong in a couple of games against us, he looks a real handful with the potential to be a fine player at this level, but, it’s an undeniable fact that his scoring record for QPR (four in sixty four appearances in all competitions) is not impressive.

By way of comparison, Kion Etete has scored nine times in sixty two appearances for City and he’s now been written off as not good enough by many – I agree, that Etete’s goalscoring figures aren’t good, but he’s scored more than twice as many in fewer appearances than someone who is, seemingly, on the market for over £2 million.

Therefore, you have to think that a striker who would get fans thinking that he will score the goals that the likes of Etete, Meite, Harris, Diedhiou, Wickham etc could not is going to cost us a lot of money.

It seems to me that, to get a striker who will make a difference for us, we will need to sell at least one current squad member for the sort of fee we’ve not been in the habit of getting since Kieffer Moore was sold.

If this is true, then it wouldn’t surprise me at all if McGuinness does leave in the coming weeks. If we are serious about signing a striker who’ll be a step up from what we’ve got, you’d think that there would need to be a balancing of the books and, when you think of the players who could get us the sort of fee which would help in that regard, you’re talking about McGuinness and the likes of Parry Ng, Rubin Colwill, Callum Robinson and maybe Ryan Wintle.

There has been some balancing of the books already taking place this week with the predicted transfer of Ebou Adams to Derby for a fee which would appear to be anything between £500 thousand and a £1 million involved.

This is quite a strange transfer in that it’s entirely possible that the fans of both clubs will be thinking they’ve definitely got the best end of the deal! Certainly, I think it’s fair to say that City fans never saw anything from Adams to make us think he was worth a possible seven figure fee, but it’s equally fair to say that the freak injury which saw him miss virtually all of the 22/23 campaign hardly helped his cause.

As for pre season games played this week, Chris Willock and Calum Chambers were both missing from the squads which took on Kortrijk and Pen y Bont at Leckwith on Saturday and Tuesday respectively.

Although the cry is always that the result doesn’t matter in pre season matches, losing to National League North team Kidderminster Harriers at home with a performance which could definitely be described as uninspiring was hardly likely to fire anyone’s enthusiasm for the new season, so it’s good to record that the two games played since then have been much more encouraging.

Vincent Tan’s “other” side, Kortrijk came here having just about retained their position in Belgium’s top flight by scraping through the relegation Play Offs thanks in no small part to the goals of the on loan Isaak Davies and it was the Aberdare born forward who equalised for us from the penalty spot a minute or so after the visitors had hit us on the break with a fluent counter attack.

There were the usual wholesale changes at half time which came with the sides level at 1-1 and, after dominating possession in the opening forty five minutes, City saw less of the ball after the break, but carried the greater cutting edge. Jamilu Collins put us in front with a close range finish as we showed we still have the capability of scoring from set pieces and an effective break out in the closing minutes saw Rubin Colwill score the goal which gave us a 3-1 win that probably flattered us in terms of the margin of victory.

Three days later, a Pen Y Bont team that, from memory, we only beat 2-0 last season were despatched by 7-1. Yes, it was only Cymru Premier opposition, but I had to agree with the commentator on the club’s stream of the match when he said that it was so encouraging to see how many players City were getting into the opposition penalty box when they broke forward.

Of course, there are dangers involved in doing the same thing at Championship level, but we’re definitely going to score more if we show something like the same level of ambition once the proper stuff starts – as in most things, it’s a question of getting the balance right and it was obvious that, for most of last season, we didn’t do that.

Callum Robinson reminded everyone that he was still around with an early goal following a great run by Callum O’Dowda and the same player got the second goal with an easier close range finish around the half hour mark, with O’Dowda quickly adding a third from about two yards out.

City, with plenty of young forwards on as replacements made a fast start to the second half as Raheem Conte and Keiron Evans took it to 5-0, before the visitors got a goal back with a Venables header from a free kick.

In the last ten minutes, it was Cian Ashford who pulled back another cross from the right for Joel Colwill to score and Ashford completed the scoring with a first time finish from an Oliie Tanner cut back.

Before leaving this match, I must single out seventeen year old Ronan Kpakio, who played, faultlessly, for the opening half and provided assists for the second and third goals. As someone who is often left mystified by talk of inverted full backs and underlapping runs, I would recommend that you watch Kpakio’s performance on Tuesday because it explained what thousands of words, in my case anyway, cannot!

Eight goals scored on the night in all then and the Under 21s are dealing exclusively in eight goal thrillers so far as they’ve found themselves on the wring end of 5-3 scorelines against Potter’s Bar and Barry.

Finally, a dozen new apprenticeship deals have been signed up for the coming season with our under 18s – details can be found here

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