Weekly review 21 June 2024.

I started writing these weekly reviews this year about a month ago, so I reckon this is the fifth one I’ve done and, increasingly, I’m thinking why am I bothering because, confirmation that Erol Bulut will be staying apart, there’s been virtually nothing to report in that time.

We’re now about halfway between our last Championship match of 23/24 and our first one of 24/25 and there’s nothing that has happened yet to get supporters enthused for the new season.

As far as the managerial situation is concerned, I’ll say that the new manager of Fenerbache has been called the Portuguese Erol Bulut, but I’ll stick with ours being the Turkish Jose Mourinho for now.

Some may see that as something of a compliment, but I’m thinking more of the park the bus version of Mourinho as his career has declined in recent years – perhaps Erol Bulut will give me reason to eat those words once the action gets under way again, but what we saw from November onwards last season and the reputation Bulut arrived at City with makes me doubt that somehow.

Returning to my original theme of there being nothing to report in recent weeks, I’m having to row back on relatively minor stories that I’d put on here believing them to be fact. For example, this week, I’ve heard that the re appointment of James Rowberry as a coach (a very good move by the club if it happens in my opinion) is not the done deal I assumed it was. Understandably, Rowberry’s current employers, the FAW, are reluctant to let him go and it may be that City will have to look elsewhere. Similarly, the pre season training camp in Austria that I wrote about a fortnight ago has not yet been officially confirmed.

Incredibly, the only pre season match at any level I’ve seen confirmation of so far is a First Round Nathaniel MG Cup tie at Afan Lido on July 19 for our under 21s and we only know that because the draw for the opening round was made last week.

Actually, there are a couple of developments I should mention, Raheem Conte, who did surprisingly well when used as a rigth back in the first team in the closing matches of last season, has signed a one year contract with an option for another season, while Matthew Turner, who was an unused sub in around twenty first team matches following an injury to Jak Alnwick, has agreed a deal to stay with us until the summer of 2026.

I know i’ll have something to report this time next week because the fixtures for the new season will be announced on Thursday, but I’m not holding my breath on there being much else happening in the next seven days.

It was reported that Erol Bulut had met with the money men at the club on Monday to hammer out the plans for incoming transfers over the summer. To give this some context, Stoke City have announced the signing of three players already I believe, while we’re, seemingly, finally getting around to having a chat on the matter!

Again however, I’m going by “reports” because there’s been nothing in the way of rumours to suggest that the club are acting on what was decided at said meeting – always assuming it went ahead.’

Indeed, a local media desperate for something concrete from the club to write about, have been reduced to reporting that former City loan striker Sory Kaba has been told he’s free to leave his current club, Las Palmas. There’s nothing to indicate City are interested in bringing Kaba back to Cardiff City Stadium mind and, although he did pretty well in his time with us during 22/23 I can’t help thinking that we need better than him if we are to make the large improvement needed to turn us into genuine top six contenders.

I’ll end with the news that a couple of former City players have passed away in recent weeks. Trevor Edwards was a Rhondda born full back who signed for us from Charlton in 1960 and made seventy three league appearances, scoring three times, before leaving us in 1964. Edwards won a couple of senior caps for Wales and was a member of the squad for the 1958 World Cup, but that was not the end of his international recognition, he emigrated to Australia after leaving us and went on to win a B cap for the country he lived in until his death at the age of eighty seven.

I’ve just checked, and as I suspected, I never saw Trevor Edwards play for us. He was still at the club when I saw my first City match, but, as it turns out, my first game, against Northampton, was the first one he missed in the 63/64 season and he was back in the team the following week. However, Edwards soon found himself being sidelined because of the emergence of Peter Rodrigues.

The other former Bluebird to pass away was Kevin Campbell at the age of just fifty one. Campbell spent his final season as a player with City in 2006/07, but did little to be remembered by in his season with us and it’s probably fair to say that he was a bigger influence off the pitch than on it while at Cardiff,

However, the club’s fans were never going to see the best of Kevin Campbell in a City shirt because the simple fact is that he was much too good for us for all but the very end of his career. Campbell was a powerful and clever centre forward who was unlucky not to win a cap for England during a twenty year career which, apart from a spell with Trabzonspor, was almost exclusively spent in the English First Division/Premier League with the likes of Arsenal, Forest, Everton and West Brom.

Occasionally, when someone in the public domain passes away, the warmth and generosity of the tributes paid to the person are lifted above the norm – nearly all tributes paid to the recently deceased make them out to be someone special when the real truth is that, no matter how worthy they were, they weren’t really that. However, it seems to me that when it comes to Kevin Campbell, the nature of the tributes I’ve heard and read suggest very strongly that he was, indeed, something out of the ordinary – maybe not in terms of how good a footballer he was, but in terms of the type of person he was away from the game.

RIP to Trevor Edwards and Kevin Campbell.

Posted in Out on the pitch, R.I.P. | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Weekly review 13/6/24.

Nothing much to report on the City front this week apart from the news that it looks like they’ll be having a pre season training camp in Austria and there are some names to mention of the transfer speculation front,

Firstly, there was something online about us and Luton being interested in Southampton’s Ross Stewart. The Scottish international striker is a twenty seven year old target man striker who was something of a late developer as he only moved into the professional game at the age of twenty with Albion Rovers (actually, that’s not really true, because Albion are only a part time club).

Stewart did enough in his first season to persuade St. Mirren to sign him, but he did little of note at the Paisley club and left them without scoring a league goal. Before that though, he was loaned to Alloa Athletic where a return of seven goals from nineteen games suggests he did pretty well at what was a low level competition by the standards of the EFL. Stewart’s next move took him to Ross County where he was hardly prolific with fifteen goals in sixty three league appearances, but, despite his fairly mundane stats up to then, he was able to attract the attention of bigger clubs and his next move took him into England and Sunderland in particular.

Sunderland were in League One and, after quiet time of it at the back end of 20/21, the next season saw Stewart scoring twenty four times in forty eight league appearances as his team were promoted through the Play offs. Stewart then scored ten times in thirteen games at the start of the following season at the higher level, but has barely played since an achilles injury sustained in an FA Cup tie at Fulham.

Despite the injury causing him to miss the start of last season, Southampton were still prepared to pay a big fee for Stewart towards the end of the last summer’s transfer window, but it wasn’t until November that he was able to make his debut for Russell Martin’s club and a fortnight later, he suffered a hamstring injury which was expected to keep him out for the rest of the season. However, he was able to return with a substitute’s appearance in the Saints final match of the regular season and two more in their successful Play Off campaign.

In essence then, Stewart’s multi million pound move to the south coast club and his two Scottish caps can be put down to a prolific season and a bit with Sunderland in the second and third tiers.

There are three question marks i’d place on any move to Cardiff by Ross Stewart, the first, and most obvious one, is would Southampton be willing to let him go? Given the fee, rumoured to be not far short of £10 million, they paid for him, it seems very unlikely, but there may be some doubts as to whether he is good enough for the Premier League, especially given his recent injury record and this, together with the fact that he hasn’t been able to prove yet that he is fully recovered after having barely played at all in a season and a half could mean the Saints would see a spell in the Championship as the right move for a player who they still feel can do well for them in the longer term..

That injury record brings me on to the thought that, surely, from our perspective, any move for Stewart by City would havc to be on the basis that he’ll be loaned to us . The move to Southampton whule recovering from a long term injury was something of a gamble and what has happened to Stewart since then means that any club willing to sign him permanently at the moment would be taking a huge punt which could see them losing millions while getting little or nothing back from the player.

If Southampton were prepared to let Stewart out on laon for the forthcoming season, I think it could prove to be a shrewd move by City as long as the player remained mostly injury free, but something similar applied to Aaron Ramsey at this time last year and, given how that worked out last season, I’m doubtful if there’s much in this rumour.

A more likely possibility for me is that we may make a move for Marc Leonard, a Scottish under 21 international midfielder who is on Brighton’s books. Twenty two year old Leonard has spent the last two seasons on loan at Northampton playing in the fourth and then third tiers and it seems to be generally accepted that he has looked a good prospect at those levels.

City were first linked with Leonard in January and it appears that, although he still has a season left on his Brighton contract, they would be prepared to sell him for a fee of around £300,000. It’s been reported that Leonard has already had discussions with Preston about a move there, but it seems that nothing more will be coming of that link and now, after earlier links with other Championship clubs, the latest report has Cardiff, newly promoted Oxford and the team they are replacing, Birmingham all chasing the midfielder who I must confess to not knowing much about.

However, I think a strong season with a Northampton side which probably performed better than anticipated in finishing halfway up the table is suggestive of someone who could become a Championship footballer – Leonard doesn’t have a good goalscoring record, but if he is capable of being the box to box type midfielder we lack, then I think he is someone worth pursuing.

Moving on to international football, if the 0-0 draw with Gibraltar a week ago created something of air of crisis in the Welsh senior team, then Sunday’s 4-0 hiding by Slovakia did nothing to dispel it.

I’ll not say much about the game itself. For about half an hour there was enough in the Welsh performance to make you think we were seeing a reaction. to what had happened seventy two hours earlier, but Slovakia gradually got on top and took the lead in added time before the interval with a long range shot that left me questioning goalkeeper Danny Ward who has played so little football this season.

After that, I’m afraid we just folded in a manner which would have you questioning whether the manager concerned had much time left in the job if it had happened in club football. Two goals early in the second half put us on course for a bigger thrashing than 4-0, but Slovakia were only able to add one more late goal.

The home side didn’t look anything special, but it was exactly the sort of nice, gentle warm up for the Euros that they would have wanted. It should also be said that, although there were quite a few first choice Welsh players missing for one reason or another, it was the strongest team Wales could field and the fact that Rob Page only used three subs means that the excuse that this was an experimental line up could not be used.

Sorry for mentioning the election, but it’s only to say that I don’t watch last night’s Q and A from Grimsby with the leaders of the two main parties, but I’ve seem it reported in various sources that Rishi Sunak looked like a “broken man”.

Once again, I’ve not seen the video in question, but it would appear that for Rishi Sunak in Grimsby on Thursday, read Rob Page in Trnava on Sunday. I’ve seen and heard that same term “broken man” applied to the Welsh manager, but the word that has appeared most often to describe his mood is “resigned” – as in resigned to his fate.

Usually, a couple of end of season friendlies which mean nothing in the grand scheme of things do not end up with the manager concerned clinging on to his job. However, the performances and results were so bad against Gibraltar and Slovakia that, put together with what happened in the World Cup, the home humiliation by Armenia (as I mentioned last week, that’s the game which made me feel most strongly about sacking Page) and our failure to beat the worst Polish team of recent times, then the pressure will be ramped up several notches.

Before these last two games it had been said that a poor start to our Nations League campaign in September may see the manager sacked, but there must be a doubt now if Page makes it that far.

In saying that, the thing which could save him is the four year contract given to him back in 2022 which has I’m afraid become more ludicrous looking with every passing game – can the FAW pay up on a contract which still has more than two years left to run?

In between the Gibraltar and Slovakia matches Welsh players appeared before the media to defend the manager against what they saw as unjustified booing of him . To be fair to Wes Burns and Tom King, the former played little part in the Slovakia game and the latter none at all. However, certainly in the last forty fiver minutes on Sunday, there was nothing in the Welsh performance to suggest that this was a group of players fighting to keep their manager in his job – quite the opposite actually.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The Premier League, Wales | Tagged | 5 Comments