David Tong – Cardiff City goal machine!

CoymayCardiff City’s bid for promotion from the old Third Division in the 1982/83 season was in danger of fading. With just fourteen points from their last twelve matches and one win from their last seven, top of the league in mid February had become fourth in the table by 9 April when Doncaster Rovers came to Ninian Park.

Increasingly, it was beginning to look like a case of if there was to be a team from South Wales that would be going up into the Second Division, then it was going to be Newport County. Five days earlier on Easter Monday, a crowd of 16,052 at Somerton Park had seen a dubious goal by John Aldridge gave County a 1-0 win over us in a controversial match in which referee Lewis had also disallowed two valid looking City goals.

Looking at it now, it’s amazing to think that we had managed to sustain a promotion challenge at all that season because as well as having a team made up almost entirely of cast offs from other clubs, we had no recognised senior keeper (if you thought last season’s four keepers was too many, we used five that year – seven if you include Phil Dwyer and Linden Jones both having a go between the sticks in a defeat at Bradford City!) and one of our better players, Keith Pontin, mysteriously decided to retire from the game a month into the campaign at the age of twenty six.

Therefore, Manager Len Ashurst deserved great credit for some inspired free transfer signings like striker Jeff Hemmerman (who got 26 goals that year), influential veteran Bob Hatton, left back Paul Bodin and midfielders Roger Gibbins, who went on to be such a great servant to the club and David Tong.

The last named of those players was, I suppose, a holding midfielder to use the modern parlance and, if I had to use one word to describe him it would be “steady”. Tong had good technique, but never used it to any spectacular effect really and he was one of those players who you would never hear people complaining about for having an absolute stinker, but you would hardly ever hear his name being mentioned in any man of the match discussions either.

pic1982-83I say “hardly ever” there because when City really needed a hero on that afternoon twenty six years ago, it was David Tong who stepped forward and delivered! If I had to compare Tong with a current player, I suppose it would be Steve McPhail (that’s not a particualrly good comparison mind!), but McPhail’s three goals in 2007/08 was positively Lampardesque by David Tong’s standards – it wasn’t just that he never scored, it was that he hardly ever had a shot and, anyway, he had already scored his goal for that season when he rescued us from humiliation by scoring at non league Wokingham in the First Round of the FA Cup as we trailed 1-0 well into the second half. No, if City were going to end their barren run of three goals in seven matches, they would have to look elsewhere – David Tong just didn’t do goals or at least he didn’t unless the date was 9 April 1983!

Doncaster were ideal opponents that afternoon given City’s low level of confidence in front of goal – they were fighting an ultimately unsuccessful battle against relegation and had conceded seventy six goals in their thirty eight matches. It didn’t take long to see why they had such a poor defensive record either as chances came along on a regular basis virtually from the start of the game. However with Hemmerman having scored just once in seven matches and Hatton once in ten and with Dave Bennett, bafflingly, not brought back after being left out at Newport, City were again showing their recent lack of firepower until Tong decided to take a hand.

Tong’s goal when it arrived was nothing spectacular – an easy, close range finish as I remember it, but it was from a position that he never usually found himself in. However, cometh the hour and all that and, once the ball hit the net, the game, and City’s season, was transformed. Roger Gibbins quickly added his twelfth goal of the season and we went into the break with a 2-0 lead that was always going to be enough to see off such limited opponents.

Tong had already done his bit then, but he then topped his first half effort with another goal – if his first goal had been a routine one, his second involved a run in on goal and a good finish which asked why he was not a more regular scorer (he only ever scored one other goal for us).

The game finished 3-0 and, although it had been a pretty routine affair in which we hadn’t played too well, we never looked back after that as four wins and two draws from our last six games saw us finish as runners up to Portsmouth with Huddersfield taking the third promotion spot as County blew up in spectacular style by taking just four points from their final seven matches, five of which were lost.

9 April 1983

Cardiff City 3 Doncaster Rovers 0

City

Steele; Jones, Dwyer, Bennett (G), Mullen; Micallef, Tong (2), Gibbins (1), Lewis (Bodin); Hemmerman, Hatton

Donny

Peacock; Mann, Humphries, Lister, Johnson; Mell (Liddell), Snodin (I), Snodin (G), Robertson; Walker, Douglas

HT 2-0

Att. 5,456

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Cardiff City 3 Bristol Rovers 1 at Fortress Cardiff City Stadium!

CoymayLast March we beat Barnsley 3-1 at Ninian Park on a Tuesday and then followed it up with a 3-0 win over Doncaster the following Saturday – these matches represented the first times that we had scored more than twice in a game in the 08/09 campaign which was pretty remarkable considering the sort of season we had been having. There was though another, perhaps more surprising, stat arising from those two matches that passed pretty much unnoticed at the time in that they represented only the second time since Dave Jones took over in May 2005 that we had won successive midweek/weekend or weekend/midweek home games!

In September 2005 Leicester and Crystal Palace had both been beaten 1-0 courtesy of first half goals by Michael Ricketts in a Tuesday/Saturday combination of home games, but that was it until this season as far as our current manager goes and it was even worse under Lennie Lawrence as we didn’t manage to do it once in our two seasons in the Championship when he was in charge!

Therefore, up until three weeks ago, two home games in four or five days very rarely equalled two wins for Cardiff City – even at a ground renowned for it’s intimidating atmosphere. How can it be explained then that at our new “antiseptic” and “characterless” stadium, where the critics thought that not being able to stand would see it lose all of the atmosphere that used to be generated at Ninian Park, we have twice managed to win back to back games played within the space of four days in the only four competitive matches that have been played there so far?

Perhaps it has something to do with a pitch that suits the way we are trying to play, but, up until last season, the Ninian Park pitch was often praised for being one of the best at this level, so I am at a loss really to explain why the move to the Cardiff City Stadium has been such a seamless and successful one in terms of results. However, it is obvious that, for whatever reason, the new ground is bringing the best out of the players both individually and collectively.

When you consider all the negativity that was around amongst supporters (myself included) as the season started, it is incredible to think that as I watched us pick the Rovers defence apart for the umpteenth time in the first half last night, I was beginning to get a bit blase about the whole thing – after all, as Cardiff City fans, we are all so used to watching such attractive pass and move football aren’t we!

City looked a very good side in the first forty five minutes last night, but I suppose an argument could be put forward for saying that they had nothing to beat – for a team on a four match winning run, Bristol Rovers looked a very ordinary side and, for much of the night, their support, which put their City rivals from Sunday to shame in terms of numbers and noise made, was the most impressive thing about them.

However, the way Rovers were able to put together some neat passing movements when they got back to 2-1 (including a flowing passage of quality passing which ended with a great chance to equalise being wildly missed by their captain Campbell) suggests to me that we were, indeed, up against a decent team who, for the first seventy minutes or so, were just not allowed to play by an ultra confident City team that was a long way short of the strongest eleven we could have fielded.

Six competitive games in, it is now getting to the stage where realistic judgements can be made on new players and I thought two of our summer signings had strong games last night. Anthony Gerrard is building on the good initial impression he made and I thought there were a few occasions when a slightly rusty looking Gabor Gyepes had reason to be grateful for his partner’s anticipation and no nonsense defending. Paul Quinn also looked more comfortable after being restored to his “proper” side of the pitch and, although I think there are still some question marks against him in one on one defensive situations, he, again, showed that he has more to offer going forward than some of his full back rivals at the club. What Gerrard and Quinn also have is an ability to pass the ball well and the early indications are that in most matches, we are going to have at least two and probably three defenders who are above average at Championship level when it comes to passing the ball out from the back – this can only help the way we are trying to play.

Although he hasn’t been here as long as Gerrard and Quinn and so it is harder to predict with any certainty how good or bad he will be for us over the course of a season, the way Kelvin Etuhu gave the Rovers defence such a torrid evening as they struggled to cope with his power and pace certainly suggested that he would be a major force at League One level. However, there were plenty of reasons to be optimistic that he will be able to be pretty effective in the Championship over the coming months – an early impression I gain of him is that he is not the most natural of finishers, so, maybe, we shouldn’t expect too much from him in terms of goals – even if I do turn out to be right though, it looks like there is plenty he can offer to make up for that.

Also a word on someone else who is a newcomer in first team terms anyway. Well done to Josh Magennis for his first goal for us. Dave Jones gets a lot of stick (often justified in my view) for the way he handles young players, but I reckon he is getting things just right with Magennis who is very raw and needs careful handling if his potential is to come to fruition – like a few others on our staff, I think he would really benefit from a loan move to a lower league club sometime in the next few months._46274373_chops_goal_huw

It is a testimony to how well we are playing that we have so many realistic candidates for the man of the match award these days and, besides those I have already mentioned, players like Chopra and Burke were possibilities, but I’ll go for Peter Whittingham who looked the player we know he can be last night – if he can keep on showing the same consistency and attitude to go with his Premiership standard natural talent, then it will almost be like having a new £2 million midfielder on our books!

I started with a stat so I’ll finish with the one about how Dave Jones’ City sides are not good at coming back to win after conceding the first goal in games – we’ve only done it five times in his four seasons with us. To date though, it’s impossible to know whether we will see more of the same from the 09/10 team because, 540 minutes into the season, we have not been behind in a game once yet let alone conceded the first goal – Dave Jones and the team are proving to an old misery guts like me who spent most of the summer moaning at them, that, actually, this isn’t too bad a time to be a Cardiff City fan!

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