Seven decades of Cardiff City v Leyton Orient matches.

Well, one thing I think I can say with certainty after the completion of the Christmas/New Year holiday period is that, having gone past the traditional cut off point for relegation of 50 points, we won’t be going down this season! Also, given the gap that has grown between the top three and the rest, I think it’s okay to assume that Lincoln and Bradford are safe as well.

However, there was a time around November when the division was so tight that I thought that, say, a continuation of the run of consecutive defeats at Bolton and then Blackpool could have us thinking more of relegation than promotion within a month or so. As it is, fourth placed Huddersfield are still only twelve points above Burton occupying the last relegation place having played a game more than the Brewers.

Leyton Orient, our opponents on Saturday, are a classic case in point of how the division can have potential Play Off candidates looking anxiously over their shoulder with two or three poor results. Clearly, they’re missing the injured Aaron Connolly, who was named in half season League One select team I saw this week (as were Ronan Kpakio, Dylan Lawlor and Yousef Salech), but Orient’s position one place above the bottom four is a mystery to me having seen them play here in October – Bradford have to be the best team to have visited Cardiff City Stadium so far this season, but I’d rate Orient as the second best.

I say it’s a mystery why they’re so low in the table, but, on further reflection, the reason is pretty clear – they are equal with the other team we’ve beaten 4-3 this season, Doncaster, when it comes to the dubious honour of having the worst defensive record in League One. Although their goals have dried up to an extent in Connolly’s absence, their thirty five scored represents the fourth highest in the division, but it’s more than offset by the forty one let in at the other end of the pitch.

Orient’s last game was a poor 3-1 home loss to a Wimbledon side without a win in nine on New Years Day and this makes it one win in seven in all competitions for them now. Nevertheless, the fact that the sole win came against Bradford as they turned a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 victory should tell City that they can take nothing for granted in two days time.

No problems getting seven questions for the quiz this time and I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday.

60s. It’s fairly well known that John Toshack made his debut in senior football when he came on as a sub in a game against Leyton Orient during this decade. In doing so, Tosh became City’s youngest ever player at the age of sixteen years and two hundred and thirty six days, but who was the seventeen year old who could well have been marking him that day?

70s. Sounds like Orient may have used the Sicilian defence when he was playing!

80’s. Chav paid by shortened editor turns out to be a loser at Ninian Park. (5,5)

90s. Ilford born defender and manager you would have thought was from NW4.

00s. Sounds like a decline of the nondescript!

10s. Leyton Orient and Cardiff are two of fifteen clubs (one being from Iceland) this player has represented. He has played most for very recent opponents of ours, then it’s his current, Championship, club, then us despite him only being a Cardiff player for one season. A rare example in recent years of a player we made a transfer market profit on, he signed for the O’s from his Icelandic club during this decade and played for us in the 2020’s. Last season he was named in a divisional team of the year, but who is he?

20.s He’s had spells with Spurs, Liverpool and Everton without playing a senior game for any of them. He’s done this while winning five international caps for a country over 7,000 miles away from south Wales. Leyton Orient are the side he’s played most for followed by Swindon and I’ve seen it said that his performance in a losing cause in Sunday’s game for his current, Championship, club was his best in his season and a half with them. He won’t remember his last visit to Cardiff City Stadium with any affection, but can you name him?

Answers.

60s. Former City player Paul Went had become Orient’s youngest ever player when he made his debut for them as a sixteen year old and he’d only turned seventeen a month earlier when John Toshack came on and scored in a game City won 3-1 at Ninian Park on 13 November 1965.

70s. Bobby Fisher played over three hundred games for Orient, mostly at right back. Bobby Fischer was a temperamental and somewhat eccentric chess Grand Master who lost a Chess World Championship with Russian Boris Spasky which I can remember being on the front pages far more than any other game of its type before or since.

80s. David Peach.

90s. Ian Hendon played more than one hundred and thirty league games for Leyton Orient and also managed the club during 15/16.

00s. Wayne Gray.

10s.  Ryan Allsop played twenty times in the league for Leyton Orient after signing for them from the Icelandic side Hottur in 2012. Allsop played nearly one hundred and twenty times for Wycombe during his two spells with them and was named in the League One team of the Year last season as his Birmingham team won the league with a record number of points.

20s. Swansea goalkeeper Lawrence Vigouroux has won five caps for Chile and started his career with Spurs, he also had a spells with Liverpool and Chilean team Everton de Vina Del Mar. without playing a game for any of them. Vigouroux played over one hundred and forty games for Leyton Orient in his three seasons with them and signed for the jacks from Burnley.

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Ninety minutes of attack v defence as City pass the fifty point mark.

The number and range of post game statistics you get these days makes it impossible to say for certain that today’s game with Wigan at Cardiff City Stadium was the most one sided statically in our favour we’ve played in the sixteen and a half year existence of this blog, because you didn’t get the volume of stats you get now back in 2009.

However, it’s hard to believe there has been one that was more one sided – I struggle to come up with any realistic candidates. 

Here’s the BBC’s stats for the game

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/live/ce3k1030dqpt#MatchStats

Those are remarkable figures, I know I say that possession statistics are not as important as I once thought they were, but when you consider that for about ninety per cent of Mauve and Yellow Army’s existence, we never placed that high a priority on possession, 82 per cent possession is something I never thought I’d see from a Cardiff City team – even one which wants to be on the ball as much as this one does.

There’s been a claim on the message board I use that Calum Chambers played more passes today than the whole of the Wigan side did. I’m not sure about that because the figure given for Wigan passes in the message making this claim was lower than the one on the BBC site, but the fact such claims are being made and are not being dismissed as rubbish tells its own story.

Whether Wigan set out to be so passive and defensively minded is a matter for debate. For the first quarter of the game they were like recent visitors Exeter and Stevenage but even more defensive in their attitude. For a while, it seemed that away sides came to Cardiff with the attitude that as they always gave you a chance because of the way they play at home, we may as well have a go at them. Hence we had two 4-3s, a 3-2 and a 2-1 where Reading the visitors had 26 goal attempts in quick succession. Now we’ve had three sides come here with a plan to stifle us – it’s not made a different to the outcome of games (we’re still winning them), but the consequence of restricting our attacking intentions by almost doing away with any of their own is that Exeter, Stevenage and Wigan have scored once between them.

Wigan were like Exeter and Stevenage times five though. Even after going behind in the twenty fourth minute, nothing changed with their approach – it was still like one of those games of attack v defence you played as a kid.

The thought occurred to me that Wigan were playing like they were because they were knackered after a taxing holiday period that always gets managers complaining about too many fixtures. However, if that was the case, you have to praise City because they were always relentlessly pressing their opponents on the rare occasions they had any worthwhile possession.

I also wondered whether Wigan’s plan was to keep the score down until the last ten or twenty minutes and then give it a right go, but, if it was, it was foiled to a large extent by us just keeping possession comfortably for most of that time, so, again, you have to praise City’s fitness levels for being able to do that after four games in nine days.

City therefore go past the fifty point mark with just over half the season played – if they were to keep that rate of progress up for the next twenty two matches they’d probably end up a point or two short of the century mark.

Lincoln won impressively by 5-2 against an in form Peterborough and Bradford recovered from their mauling at Mansfield by winning 2-1 at Blackpool,  so they can both still think realistically of a top two finish at our expense, but below that, the gap we have on the teams in fourth place downwards is big and got bigger today as Huddersfield dropped home points in a 2-2 draw with Exeter, Bolton played out a goalless draw against visitors Northampton and Stockport were beaten by a late goal at Reading.

I said today’s game was one of the most one sided statistically I’d seen, but it wasn’t just one way traffic according to the stats, it was possibly the most one sided one we’ve had this season, so the obvious question arises, why did we only win 1-0?

Others may disagree, but I thought that after letting our standards drop somewhat on New Years Day, we were spot on today and I also didn’t see too many easy chances being missed by us.

I reckon it was one of those days when the ball just wouldn’t go in for us apart from the superb twenty five yarder rifled in by Calum Chambers after he’d come close with an effort from a similar distance inside the opening two minutes. Chambers reminded the media after the match that it was a year to the day since his goal gave us a 1-1 draw at Middlesbrough and the captain was probably City’s man of the match on a day when many in the side played well.

Another reason we were restricted to one was Wigan goalkeeper Sam Tickle who has his admirers in the Championship and maybe even higher. He made a string of saves to deny us the second goal including an amazing one to keep out a deflection off Wigan captain James Carragher during a period when opposition defenders looked like they were trying to show us how to put the ball in their net!

I could try to catalogue all of our close misses, but I wouldn’t do us justice because there were so many of them – it was a frustrating afternoon in many ways, but I think we played well and I’m confident about how the season will end if we can maintain the standard we showed today.

An apology next as I barely ever mention City’s women’s team these days. It doesn’t justify my failure to do so, but the fact that virtually all of their games are played on a Sunday means that I’ve posted my piece on the weekend’s senior men’s team game a few hours before the women kick off and, especially when we don’t have. a midweek match, it seems a bit pointless posting something about a game that had been played seven days earlier.

No such problems this week though with City playing on a Sunday, so a few words to finish about the women’s game at Leckwith this evening against a Wrexham team that went into the match with a five point lead at the top of the table (although they had played a gamer more than City).

Wrexham were unbeaten in the last four matches between the teams and looked good to extend that run as the game went into added time with the score 1-1, only for City to get a winner well past the ninety minute mark which puts them in charge of their own destiny again – win all of their remaining games and they’ll be Champions for the fourth successive time.

City, who hit the woodwork three times in the first half, led at the break through an own goal by Wrexham’s Erin Lovett but they equalised early in a more even second half through Faye Hillier-Knox only for sub Fiona Barry to win it for City at the death.

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