The real test begins.

CoymaySo far so good then for Cardiff City – without a goal in their last three pre season matches, they got seven in two wins when the competitive stuff started that ensured that the switch to their new stadium was a seamless one.

However, despite that winning start, I think it is fair at this stage to ask whether the good results are down to the strength of the City team or the weakness of the opposition? Scunthorpe looked a decent side for twenty minutes last Saturday but reacted so poorly to going 1-0 down in unlucky circumstances that some people are already writing them off and, although Dagenham and Redbridge provided a sterner test, they are, after all, two leagues below us.

That lingering doubt as to whether City have just been lucky to face two poor sides in their opening to the 2009/10 season should be resolved over the next four days though as successive away matches at the type of grounds where any sort of genuine promotion candidate should come away with something will tell us so much more about them.

Mind you, maybe I should have changed the term “come away with something” there, because coming away with something has not been the problem on our travels over the past two seasons. Forty six away matches in that time have seen us beaten only thirteen times, so in something like 70% of our away games we have “come away with a something” – the problem has been how few times that something has been three points!

That low number of away defeats is more than counter balanced by a pretty miserable nine away wins over the same period (mid table Ipswich managed that many last season!) and, for a club that keeps on telling us that their aim is promotion or, at worst, a top six place, that is just not good enough.

Ever since the three points for a win system was brought in, the old attitude that a draw away from home was always a good result has had to be reassessed – yes, of course, an away draw is a fine result at certain grounds, but at others it means that you are, in all likelihood, losing ground on the teams you are competing with. With that in mind, a total of twenty four away draws in the last two seasons sends a confused message – do they prove that we are a resilient bunch of travellers who just do not accept defeat without a real fight or do we go away from home with the attitude that not getting beat equals job done?

Actually, let me throw in a third possibility here that might apply to us – do we go into each away match with a positive attitude, but do not quite have the belief to see the job through to the end? I think there is a good chance that this could apply to last season’s side in particular.

Although it is sometimes forgotten in the light of those last four matches, we spent forty two games proving that we were one of the best four teams in last year’s Championship. As if to prove that, we went into the last quarter of an hour at Wolves, Birmingham and Burnley in the lead and we were drawing at Reading and Sheffield United. When you consider that we also took the lead at Reading very late on, that is a potential thirteen points we are talking about there and yet all we ended up with was five!

Now, going back to what I said about a draw at certain grounds being a good result, you can argue that not losing at any of last seasons top five is an outstanding achievement, but the truth is that it could and should have been so much better. In the four matches where we surrendered a lead, it was almost as if the team went into the dying stages of these matches thinking “Christ, what a result this will be, but even if they score we have still got a point” – maybe one reason that six sides finished above us is that they had the self belief that we lacked to see things through in similar situations?

Going back to the two upcoming matches. Blackpool away last season represented more of what I am talking about. We finally got something to show for our dominance when Paul Parry scored with seven minutes to go, but we then allowed a side who lost ten home matches last year to snatch a point deep into added time – would a Wolves, Birmingham or Sheffield United have done that? Only one side lost more home matches than Blackpool last season and that was Plymouth, but we were one of only seven sides to lose there with a display that was right up there amongst our worst of the campaign – in that respect, our performance at Home Park wasn’t really typical of our last two seasons because we are, almost always, competitive on our travels.

At other clubs it is usually just the new players that are on trial with supporters at the start of a season because, basically, you know what you are going to get from the players who have been at the club for a while. However, given our end to last season and that slight question mark as to whether the team quite had the level of self belief needed for a top six team in away matches prior to going to Preston, Charlton and Sheffield Wednesday, the established players have plenty to prove as well.

Hopefully, the good start can continue, but the likelihood is that the team will come under much more pressure in their next two matches than they had to endure in the first two and it is then that we will get the first signs as to whether the players who failed so badly in the run in will have learned lessons from what happened not just then, but throughout the whole of last season.

*Originally published on 15 August 2009.

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When talent turns into self indulgence.

CoymayI find Jay Bothroyd to be one of the most fascinating City players of recent times. I was not happy when he signed for us because, although I thought we were getting an undoubtedly talented player, he had under achieved throughout his career and largely wasted that ability which should have made him stand out from the norm.

For the next nine months Jay proved me wrong as he not only showed that talent, but also a work ethic which came as something of a shock to someone who had written him off from a distance. Jay became one of, if not the, most important player(s) in the team and the extent to which he had won me over was reflected by him being my choice for our Player of last season.

There is a “but” though in all of this and it comes in the way that his form faded away in the last weeks of the season when it appeared to me at least that, having spent all season showing an exemplary attitude, he began to let all of the praise he was getting go to his head somewhat (to be fair to him, I should also mention that the increasing habit of knocking the ball long to him as he became just another targetman did not help either).

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I like it when City players show arrogance – I loved watching Danny Gabbidon nutmeg Darren Huckerby a few years ago and I didn’t mind it when Danny took the occasional liberty because he proved that he was good enough and quick enough to get away with them at the level he played at with us. However, if you are going to take those liberties you need to have the ability that entitles you to do so and, just as important, you also need to know when it is the right time to take them and it’s on that latter point that I think Jay sometimes falls down.

Take the first penalty he took in last night’s 3-1 Carling Cup win over Dagenham and Redbridge for example. The length of run up he took surprised me because it suggested he was going to blast it, but when he started sauntering up to the ball I immediately thought of a penalty taken a few years back by another talented under achiever Michael Ricketts in our televised match with Ipswich in 2005. Ricketts tried to be too clever by half and, after virtually walking up to the penalty spot ended up looking foolish as his weak effort was easily saved by Lewis Price. Ricketts gave the impression that looking cool was almost as important to him as sticking the ball in the net and the same applied to Bothroyd last night – he did not deserve the second chance referee Pike gave him when an opposing player apparently encroached and you could understand Michael Chopra’s desire to get the ball off him to try to show him how it should be done.

Given Bothroyd’s personality, I was expecting his second effort to be similar to his first in an attempt to prove that his approach had been right all along, but, thankfully, common sense took over and he efficiently despatched the ball into the opposite corner of the net to his first “effort”.

The thing is though that I would never want Jay to stop expressing his talent and become a “safer” player. Most of City’s best moments (especially in the first half) last night came when he had the ball played to his feet and he used his touch and vision to put runners into space.

I suppose what I am saying is that players like Jay Bothroyd walk a fine line between skilful team player and self indulgent maverick.

For much of his pre City career I got the impression that Jay was on the wrong side of that line, but, so far at least, he seems to have mostly been the right side of it with us. However, you only have to hear Dave Jones talk about him a few times to realise that Jay is a player who needs to be worked on and chipped at constantly – would our manager have been quite as critical of another one of our players if he had missed from the spot in the same way as Bothroyd did last night? I’m not sure he would have.

However, the work that I am sure our manager and coaching staff put in with Jay has to be worthwhile when you see what he is capable of when he stays on the right side of that line – I don’t know how many of the current side would cope in the Premiership if we got there, but I am pretty sure that a Jay Bothroyd playing for the team and not himself would be able to.

*Originally published on 13/8/09.

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