A freakish game perhaps, but it’s clear Cardiff’s awful form of late 23/24 is continuing.

Team A has forty nine per cent possession, team B has fifty one percent of the ball, team A has nine goal attempts, team B eleven, both of them end up with four efforts on target, team B has eighteen touches in the opposition penalty area to ream A’s nine and Team B wins the corner count five to two – what would you predict the outcome of the match to be?

My answer would be a draw, probably 1-1, with team B possibly edging a win by a single goal margin, but I’d be spectacularly wrong, because team A was Burnley and team B Cardiff in this afternoon’s match at Turf Moor which ended in a 5-0 win for the home side!

That’s a freakish outcome and, to a degree, it was a freakish result. Scott Parker, who I really liked and rated as a player, has two promotions from the Championship to his name as a manager and he could well get a third one this season, but he’s not revered at Fulham or Bournemouth for taking them to promotion and I can understand why – Parkerball always strikes me as efficient and bland with little to get you out of your seat as his teams get the job done without showing the full extent of their collective ability.

For 90 minutes, today’s game was typical Parker fare, his team honestly weren’t great in building up a 3-0 lead which had more to do with the extreme generosity of their opponents than anything spectacular on their part. However, two great shots from distance in added time did add that spectacular element and six points from two games with a goal difference of 9-1 means Parker and his team have hit the ground running.

I accept this will sound mad if you did not watch the game, but City were, by some way, the better side in the first half. Actually, maybe I should qualify that to we were better than them in the middle third, but a propensity towards sometimes chaotic individual errors ensured that this was never going to be reflected in the score line which saw us two down against opponents that had just one on target effort in the opening forty five minutes.

City had made a decent, untroubled start to proceedings when Dimi Goutas rolled a back pass to Ethan Horvarth on nine minutes. Having now seen it plenty of times from all sorts of angles, the pass was maybe very slightly overhit, but that was the only slight thing which may have inconvenienced the keeper.  The ball certainly didn’t bobble on its way to him, but Horvarth, under no real pressure from Burnley forwards, got his foot into a strange position to my mind and the ball rolled under his foot, then trundled over the line with the keeper scrambling it out before it hit the back of the net. There was no doubt though that it was a goal though and the only surprise for me was to see the farcical goal recorded as an og against Horvarth and not Goutas. Sadly, it was a goal that felt like it had been coming for months as Hovarth has never been that convincing with the ball at his feet. 

I’ve said once or twice that we’re going to concede the odd soft goal in the coming weeks through playing out from the back, but this wasn’t one of them, this was a big standard back pass to the keeper of the kind we’re too keen on playing as a matter of course.

City responded by taking charge of the midfield with the veterans Siopis, Ramsey and Ralls combining effectively. Within a few minutes, Ramsey had sent Yakou Meite clear in a one on one against the keeper. Around half an hour later, Burnley captain Josh Brownhill found himself in a similar position and you just knew he was going to make it 3-0, just as you knew that Meite would not make it 1-1 because City first team players do not score from positions like that. Meite’s shot crashed against the post and out as the lack of a natural finisher on the club’s books was keenly felt yet again.

There are hopes that Wilfried Kanga can prove to be that instinctive finisher we’ve lacked since Sory Kaba’s loan spell and he put a simple finish away with the minimum of fuss when keeper Hladky pushed a Callum Chambers header out into his path. Kanga was clearly offside though and the goal was rightly disallowed. 

There was a much more marginal offside given against Kanga when an impressive first time pass by Chambers found him unmarked on the edge of the penalty area, but the Ivory Coast international’s response to a glorious pass by Ralls that put him in on goal was disappointing as he seemed to lack the confidence to drive forward with the ball as he allowed home defenders to catch up with him and then crowd him out.

It felt like a goal was coming though, but when it did, on thirty one minutes, it was down to another Cardiff defensive implosion.

I didn’t hold Goutas at all responsible for the first goal and, to be fair, he was left somewhat isolated out on our left flank here, but, to allow himself to be completely skinned by Jay Rodriguez was shockingly bad. Rodriguez has had a very good career and has been capped by England, but he’s thirty five now and I bet he must have felt like all his Christmas’ had come at once as Goutas launched himself into a lunging tackle from yards away that never got remotely close to the forward – I very much doubt that another Championship centre back will put themselves in such a position against Rodriguez all season. Rodriguez continued into the box and rolled back a cross that was half cleared into the path of Luka Koleosho who scored from ten yards out.

Within minutes, Ralls, who had been showing us the type of creative player he could have been if he hadn’t been turned into a ‘bread and butter” midfielder by Neil Warnock, was forced to hobble off with an injury and was replaced by Rubin Colwill. The half ended with a feeling that City were in the process of losing the superiority they’d enjoyed and the fact could not be denied that, for all of their impressive passing, they had been a lot worse than their opponents in both penalty boxes.

The start of the second half contained little to suggest City were going to stage a dramatic fight back, but they were then effectively blown away when Burnley dispossessed O’Dowda inside their own half and a quick exchange of passes left Brownhill free to run thirty yards through a yawning chasm in the visiting defence before slotting the ball past Horvarth to make it 3-0.

City had now lost their attacking threat and with Burnley, seemingly, happy to see the game out, there was a lack of drama in the next forty minutes or so during which Malachi Fagan-Walcott was brought on for Chambers to make a league debut in which he did nothing wrong.

Sadly, added time saw Aaron Ramsey prove that no one can wind back the clock, especially when you’re a footballer who has had more than his fair share of serious injuries.

The miscontrolling of a simple ball when Ramsey was in acres of space was unusual in such a talented player, but it was born from tiredness as was the way he was then easily brushed off the ball, but Zeki Amdouni’s thunderbolt a few seconds later from thirty yards that bounced down off the crossbar and over the line (it didn’t look like it crossed the line to me, but you can’t argue with a decision like that now in these days of goal line technology can you) was a very harsh punishment for the midfielder.

Within a few minutes, Ramsey was robbed of possession again deep inside the home side’s half and they again broke quickly for veteran Johann Berg Gudmundsson to drill a low shot from twenty five yards beyond the hapless Horvarth to complete the scoring.

So, City find themselves at the bottom of the table having scored none and conceded seven with the away South Wales derby, for which we seldom show up, and a home game with fancied Middlesbrough to come.

Unsurprisingly, Erol Bulut finds himself under pressure tonight, but, in truth, I agree up to a point with his post match comments – you’d never believe it looking at the score line, but I thought there were some promising signs from City today.

I’ve stated that I’m giving Erol Bulut a clean slate this season and, as someone who believes you should never sack a manager two games into a campaign, I’m not going to join the calls for his dismissal now, but, as someone who had serious doubts about the decision to give Bulut a new contract in the first place, I’d like to make a few observations about today and things in general at the club.

  1. Bulut’s selection was the usual same old, same old today. City’s crop of promising youngsters were either ignored and omitted from the squad or, like the fit again Cian Ashford, left unused on the bench, just like he was for most of the second half of last season. What we saw from the youngsters in Tuesday’s cup tie may as well not have happened as Bulut followed the precedent of last season of treating non league games as an irrelevance when it came to selection for Championship fixtures – it was so telling that the youngest players in today’s starting lineup (Kanga and Chris Willock – who I thought was our best player) were 26 years of age!
  2. That said, the Siopis,’ Ralls and Ramsey triumvirate showed that it does have a part to play as, for half an hour or so, they worked very well together . However, Ralls going off injured and Ramsey’s nightmare last few minutes offered a reminder, which shouldn’t really have been required, that it needs to be managed properly and you would have thought that the lesson that you shouldn’t play Ramsey for the whole game would have been learned last season. As soon as we were three down, Bulut should have been looking to take Ramsey off, but, for some reason, he seems determined to keep him on for the full ninety this season when he is selected.
  3. Alex Robertson, the midfielder so many fans were desperate to see us sign because he would give us some much needed legs in midfield was an unused sub today, what’s that all about? Also,  it’s hard to see the logic behind freezing Ryan Wintle out of the first team picture and the continuing selection on the bench in front of someone like Eli King of Andy Rinomhota, who was being loaned out to Rotherham last season.
  4. We’ve now conceded sixteen goals in our last four league games and our best defender, who played and scored in the week, was not even in the squad today. Mark McGuinness was also missing for all but the last few minutes of one of those four matches. The reason McGuinness wasn’t there today? It seems he’s on the verge of being sold – fans of other clubs would look at that and think it was madness!
  5. On the subject of defending, Goutas was a good defender for us for much of last season, but his form suffered towards the end of it and, although I’m still not sure who it was who lost his man for the initial header with Sunderland’s first goal, Goutas was clearly not marking anyone when the cross came in – there were plenty of players who appeared culpable with that goal and Goutas was certainly one of them. Now, he has the second goal today to be chalked up against him as well.
  6. Ethan Horvarth had a nightmare today. Some were blaming him for the first three goals, but I don’t think he can be faulted for any of the five apart from the first one – that was all his own work though and it has to be right up with the worst goals of its type I’ve ever seen. I think it’s fair to say that many City fans are from convinced that our best goalkeeper is playing every week and, after what happened today, I’ve joined them.
  7. Despite what I say in points five and six, above, I’m pretty confident that both Horvarth and Goutas will be there in the starting eleven next Sunday at Swansea because some seem undroppable in league games under this manager, while others, Rubin Colwill for example, are never picked in the starting eleven no matter what they do in preceding matches.
  8. I’m struggling to see signs of Erol Bulut’s management of the club developing in a way which suggests he is learning about the Championship. I like the fact that he is trying to implement a new style, but in so many ways, Bulut’s management has regressed since November and he appears to have lost the knack of producing well organised, tactically astute defensive sides that formed the basis of his reputation, such as it was, when we appointed him.
  9. I found the degree of support during the summer for Bulut on social media sites like Twitter mystifying, just as I found the chanting of “we want you to stay” at some of the closing games of last season truly baffling. Yes, he took us into mid table which I accept was something of an achievement, but the level of general performance and many of the end of season stats were suggestive of us being in a false position – once again, the word freakish seems appropriate when describing our top half finish.
  10. Despite this, we can’t really be looking at a situation whereby we’re going to sack another manager who we not long ago gave a new contract to so early in the new season can we? Although I wouldn’t be wholly disappointed to see it happen, I can’t help thinking that financially it would be a bonkers decision by the City Board to sack Bulut, but that hasn’t stopped them in the past has it!

Finally, after the under 21s disappointing 1-0 home defeat by Sheffield Wednesday in their first game of the season last Wednesday, the under 18s made it two wins from two at lunchtime today with a 2-0 triumph over Birmingham at Leckwith – Osian Rees and Lennon Talbot scored either side of half time to secure the victory.

Oh, let’s not forget the two cricket games taking place this Sunday, best of luck to Glamorgan in their One Day Cup Semi Final with Warwickshire and to the Welsh Fire women’s team in their Hundred Final against London Spirit.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Burnley games.

The theory that the 22/23 Championship was the weakest one in recent years was given credence by the performance of the three promoted teams that year in the Premier League last season.

The trio were relegated with the team which came up through the Play Offs, Luton, coming the closest to surviving. Yet, despite them becoming “everyone’s favourite second side” for a while as they suggested around January/February time they could stay up, Luton finished four points short of the total City accumulated in the worst of their two relegation seasons in the top flight in the twenty first century – Luton’s eighteenth placed finish with just twenty six points suggested that the three relegated sides were just not up to the task of competing in the Premier League.

For me, Sheffield United, with their mere sixteen points and a hundred and four goals conceded were, possibly, the weakest Premier League side ever, save for the notorious Derby team of 07/08 that finished with just eleven points.

Burnley, second tier Champions in 22/23, finished two points behind Luton and, despite many predicting that they could survive before a ball was kicked, never really threatened to do so – they did have a decent run towards the end of the campaign which raised hopes a little of a spectacular escape from the drop, but they had left themselves too much to do.

Given all of this, the 24/25 Championship does not feel as daunting a challenge for ‘the rest” as it did a year ago when Leicester, Southampton and Leeds were getting their bearings following their relegations, but Burnley sent out a signal that they could be a formidable team this season by going to Luton on Monday night and winning 4-1.

I did not watch the game live, but have since watched some highlights and what struck me was how much attacking pace Burnley looked to have – Luton just could not cope with it and, from. what I saw, a three goal winning margin didn’t flatter the visitors.

Tomorrow, a Cardiff City team frequently criticised for their lack of pace go to Turf Moor for what might well turn out to be their toughest away fixture of their league season. Not only that, City head north with a worryingly large injury list for so early in the season with David Turnbull and, possibly, Callum Robinson joining long term absentees Isaak Davies, Kion Etete and Jamilu Collins on the injured list.

Going back to City’s Premier League days, tomorrow’s game has the feel of a visit to, say, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal or Manchester United – it’s something of a free hit and let’s not forget that we did win at Old Trafford in 18/19, but, realistically, it’s hard to see anything other than a defeat for City with the hope being that it doesn’t get too messy for us.

Here’s the usual quiz with seven questions about onr opponents dating back to the sixties, I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday.

60s. This Liverpudlian midfielder began his career in non league football representing a place far more famous for its Rugby League team, but he was picked up by a stripey First Division outfit and then signed by Burnley when he was released without playing a game for them. He soon established himself at Turf Moor and had broken into the team just as the decade was coming to an end. A deep lying operator in the main, he was still able to score at a decent rate and his next move took him further north. He was an ever present in one of his four seasons in the First Division with his new club during which he chalked up more than a hundred league appearances. He stayed in the First Division for his final move as he followed his manager to a team trying, unsuccessfully, to recapture former glories – his career just about made it into the eighties, but it was soon ended by an encounter with one of the game’s hard men of the time in a derby fixture as he suffered the injury he never filly recovered from. Who am I describing?

70s. Starting out with the Candystripes, this winger, capped twenty eight times for his country, then wore blue for the Blues, but it was with the Bannsiders where he broke through and international recognition followed before he made the move to Burnley. His new club were struggling somewhat during his time with them, but his form was still good enough to earn him a move to First Division reds. It was here where he played his best football probably, but, after a loan spell in Hong Kong, he left to perform in front of the Rainham End. He went globe trotting again with a short spell in a place famous for its Cowboys, before a return home for what seemed like a gradual rewind down to retirement, but some big cats thought he could still do a job for them and then he became a monkey hanger before finishing his days playing for a succession of non league sides in North East England. Can you name him?

80s. This England international played for four clubs, the last of which was Burnley, before being forced to retire at twenty six. Unusually, perhaps uniquely, the same manager was in charge for at least part of the time he spent at every club he played for. Who is he and can you name the manager?

90s. Hah! Arfificial Intelligence ranted at forward who had two spells with Burnley. (6,5)

00s. The first time this century it took forty minutes, the second time it took four hundred and thirty nine minutes in total, what occurrence relating to City v Burnley matches at Ninian Park am I describing?

10s. Arrest at the Vatican? Surely not, but it sounds like one!

20s. It first happened for Cardiff, against Burnley actually, over sixteen years ago, but hasn’t happened for Burnley yet. It has also happened for Cheltenham, Norwich and Middlesbrough though and there could be twice as many chances as normal of it happening tomorrow – what occurence am I talking about?

Answers

60s. Geoff Nulty was spotted by Stoke City while he was playing for St Helens Town, but he had to wait until he had moved to Burnley to make his league debut. After playing in all forty two games for Burnley in 73/74, Nulty was sold to Newcastle early in the following seaso before his former manager at St James’ Park, Gordon Lee, signed him for Everton in 1978. Nulty’s career was ended in February 1980 because of an injury caused by a challenge from Liverpool’s Jimmy Case.

70s.  Northern Ireland international Terry Cochrane started his career with Derry City before moving to Linfield, but it was at Coleraine that he really came to prominence and his form attracted Burnley who signed him in 1978. Moving on to Middlesbrough next, Cochrane signed for Gillingham in 1983. Three years later he signed for the Dallas Sidekicks and then returned to Coleraine, but Millwall and then Hartlepool ensured that his Football League career was not quite over yet.

80s. Kevin Reeves was managed by John Bond at Bournemouth, Norwich, Manchester  City and Burnley.

90s. Adrian Heath.

00s.The time between Burnley goals. Steve Davis put Burnley a goal up in the twenty first minute of a game at Ninian Park on April Fool’s day 2000. Andy Payton then doubled their lead on sixty one minutes as Burnley won by 2-1, but their next goal at the ground was not scored until Ade Akinbivi equalised for them in the fiftieth minute of a game they eventually lost 2-1 on 6 October 2007. In between times, Burnley had made four further visits to Ninian Park and had lost them all without scoring a goal.

10s. Nick Pope.

20s. Someone called Aaron Ramsey scored in the Football League (EFL). Our Aaron Ramsey scored his first goal for us in a 3-3 draw at Turf Moor in April 2008, Burnley’s Aaron Ramsey has not scored for them yet, but he did score goals for Cheltenham, Norwich and Middlesbrough while on loan to those clubs from Aston Villa.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Burnley games.