Peter Ridsdale’s meeting with supporters on Monday night (30/11/09)

CoymayCity Chairman Peter Ridsdale met with supporters for the second time this season when he appeared in a question and answer session at the Municipal Club, City Road on Monday night. I didn’t attend the meeting so, if you want a detailed breakdown of what was said, I would recommend that you visit here (unfortunately you have to register on this site before you can view the messageboard) or here.

Having read the reports and listened to the debates which followed the meeting, I think it is fair to say that it was business as usual from our Chairman when it comes to what he has to say in any forum where he has contact with supporters – if you take what he says at face value then everything is fine, Peter Ridsdale is a consummate professional on occasions like this. Speaking as someone who has experienced his gift of being able to get audiences eating out of the palm of his hand at first hand, it’s only when you stop and think in the cold light of day a few hours later, that you start to question some of the things you heard.

Speaking for myself, I must admit to being concerned by a revelation which does not appear in either of the reports I posted links to. That is that Dato Chan Tien Ghee (TG), our new director who has already put “millions” into the club according to our Chairman, was unaware of the fact that we had appeared in court over unpaid tax debts on the day he was confirmed as a Board member (apparently he admitted as much in an exchange of e-mails with a supporter after the club, probably mistakenly,  put TG’s address on the official site). Peter Ridsdale’s answer to this point is not clear because I have seen two quite different versions on message boards over the past couple of days – one claims that he said”Well, they didn’t actually ask me that so I didn’t volunteer it”, while the other has it that he said he has never asked me any of these questions, he just asks me for sets of documents to be sent to those completing the due diligence process on behalf of the investors”.

Hopefully, the second version is the correct one because, although it still strikes me that not informing TG of the court proceedings against the club could put the deal for future investment in jeopardy, at least the Malaysians would have been made aware of our tax debt through the papers filed with them as part of the due diligence process.

Mention of due diligence raises the prospect that major investment (which, increasingly, it seems the club is in desperate need of) may be not too far away and, with Mr Ridsdale confirming that billionaire Vincent Tan is one of the interested parties, it has to be said that, if the club could seal this deal, then the future would start looking an awful lot brighter.

However, in true Cardiff City style, more information gained only raises more questions and so I suppose everyone is going to have to wait for a while yet before they discover whether the outlook is as rosy as Mr Ridsdale claims it is. With our Chairman stating, not for the first time mind, that a formal agreement with Langston over the loan notes debt is only days away, that wait shouldn’t be a long one – all should be an awful lot clearer by the end of this month.

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And the defeats just keep on coming.

CoymayRather than read my ramblings on last night’s FA Youth Cup home defeat at the first hurdle by a limited but hard working and well disciplined Barnsley team, subscribers to Cardiff City World might just want to watch Neil Ardley’s post match reaction on the official site (which can be seen here) because that is a very accurate summing up of the game as far as I am concerned.

For those who aren’t subscribers to the official site though, here are my thoughts on the game;

City must have had about 60/65% of the possession in the first half but used it to no great effect. The youngsters are brought up on a philosophy which strongly follows the mantra “let the ball do the work” so they pass, pass and then pass again. Now I don’t have that much of a problem with that philosophy as long as there is a recognition that it is sometimes worth playing the percentages and somebody takes on the responsibility of making something happen rather than passing it on to a colleague.

That’s what Barnsley did with their two first half goals, as players took on their opponents in one on one situations and gambled on winning the dual. For the first goal, Barnsley’s right winger did left back Jon Meades up like a kipper as he breezed past him on the touchline, but you have to ask where was the cover from our left sided midfielder and also why the Barnsley player was allowed to run about twenty five yards without someone coming out to meet him as he cut infield and got to the byeline to knock over a low cross that was easily tapped in. In the one minute added time before the interval, Reuben Noble-Lazarus, who is the youngest player in Football League history having made his first appearance for Barnsley last season at the age of 15 years and forty five days, brushed off a weak challenge from Alex Evans to fire a fine shot over keeper Ottley to give City a mountain to climb after the break.

All of City’s possession had seen them only threaten twice in the first half when the under used Billy Taylor’s shot was headed off the line and when Luke Cummings’ fine long range effort was spectacularly turned over by Dean the visitor’s impressive keeper.

City, with Leigh Smith and  Adam Davies on for Steffan Jones and the disappointing Mamadou Diallo, were better after the break as Ibby Farah pulled a goal back with about quarter of an hour to go but when you consider that Barnsley players were dropping like flies in the last twenty five minutes as more than half their side suffered from cramp, then that isn’t really saying much. Dean was kept busy towards the end as he made good saves from Taylor, Nat Jarvis and Farah and Evans and Jarvis missed decent chances, but, despite this, it was the visitors who came closest to scoring when Ottley made a tremendous save from a close range header and then did even better to arch back and stop the ball from crossing the line as the Barnsley players and bench started to celebrate a goal.

An unmarked Jarvis had a good chance to equalise deep into added time, but he was unable to keep down a cross which came into him at an awkward angle and so Barnsley ended up winners and, by playing to their strengths better than City did,  they probably just about deserved their victory.

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