Seven decades of Cardiff City v Birmingham City matches.

When Huddersfield led 1-0 at Deepdale last night, it was all making for a very tense atmosphere at St. Andrews for tonight’s game between Birmingham City and Cardiff City. As it is, despite Preston overwhelming Huddersfield by 4-1 in the end, you would expect nerves to be frayed among Bluenose fans as they play their game in hand over many of their rivals while still in the bottom three.

Last night’s results made mathematically certain of something that had been clear for weeks, if not months – City would be staying up this season. Therefore, we are now officially the sort of team that those still involved at the top or bottom of the table love to face during the run in to the end of any season – a side with nothing to play for.

If tonight’s match was being played at Cardiff City Stadium, the three points would be as good as Birmingham’s already, but, although we can sometimes be just as hopeless away as we are at home (e.g. Hull, Plymouth, Norwich and Swansea) we don’t tend to be the soft touch that out of form Sunderland and Hull sides found us to be on their recent visits to our ground.

Birmingham’s current plight is completely at odds with what was coming out of the club in the early weeks of the season when new owners were letting the world know about their “no fear football”. However, they then decided to sack John Eustace when he had them in the top six because he wasn’t a big enough name for the ambitious new owners and so Wayne Rooney oversaw a slide down the table which was temporarily arrested when his woefully out of form side won 1-0 at Cardiff City Stadium in December.

Rooney had to go though and he was eventually sacked. His replacement Tony Mowbray looked a sound appointment, but health problems mean he has had to temporarily step aside with his long time assistant Mark Venus taking over. However, results took another dive and now they’ve made a stop gap appointment in Gary Rowett – another manager that over ambitious owners of Birmingham decided wasn’t showbiz enough for them back in the season when Neil Warnock took us to promotion.

Rowett teams might not be exciting, but they have generally tended to be effective at this level and, although I’d quite fancy our chances if we were to score first, I can see Birmingham edging a tight game, probably by 1-0.

This time tomorrow we’ll know if I was right or not and we’ll also know the answers to these seven Birmingham related questions.

60s. From memory, this defender cum midfielder never had what his name suggested he should, but he was a regular in Birmingham sides throughout this decade. When it was time for him to move on, the destination would surely have caused a shock to blues fans, but, in the event, it turned out that all but a half dozen of his Football League appearances were for Birmingham – there was a season playing for non league snakes from Sheepy Road, but his playing days were over by the mid seventies. However, he has spent much of the time since then working in the game, notably as a scout, but who is he?

70s. This forward crossed two borders to sign for his first club and was soon making an impact for them, finishing their top scorer in one of his three seasons with the club. However, it was his performance in a charity match which persuaded London giants to pay what was a fair sized fee for him at the time. For a while, he did quite well in his new surroundings as he became what is now known as a squad player during his first season, but his second one did not go well – he did get a winner’s medal, but it was for winning the Football Combination (the competition for the reserve teams of clubs in the south of the country) as he made little impact in the senior team. Birmingham then paid a bigger fee for him, but he was bought as a replacement for a man who had once scored a hat trick for England and had scored goals at a healthy rate while at St Andrews. Our man found the player he was replacing’s boots too big to fill and was now in the declining years of a career that never lived up to its early promise -there was a loan move to a Midlands side that played in white at the time and he wore the same colour shirts at his next two clubs, one in London and the other very close to one of those two borders he crossed, before finishing with a county set not far from where his first club played – who am I describing?

80s. I suppose it could be said that this midfielder’s surname encapsulates mid table mediocrity!

90s. Cradle the last vestige of striker. (5,8)

00s, Sounds like this bird family wanted to work on the farm!

10s. Observe Welsh singer.

20s. Which current Birmingham player has been the subject of a couple of transfers totalling around £20 million and informed his last club a few months ago that “he would not be available for selection and wishes to leave with immediate effect.”?

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

Moneybags Hull the latest beneficiaries of the Cardiff City Stadium Benevolent Society.

I think I’ve mentioned before on here that I do some voluntary work for Cardiff City Supporters’Trust. One of my duties is to prepare and send out e-mail messages to members and today I was asked to send this one out.

“Cardiff City Supporters’ Trust Board today issued a statement because of growing uncertainty over the future of manager Erol Bulut.

The Board said: “We are reliably informed that the decision on who shall be the club’s manager for the 2024-25 season, and on what terms, has been solely in the hands of club owner Vincent Tan for some time.

“The Trust Board understands that as of today he has not made a decision on whether or not a new contract should be offered to the current manager Erol Bulut or the search should begin for a new manager.

“We strongly urge the owner to make that decision as speedily as possible to remove growing uncertainties and disquiet amongst fans about the matter. Cardiff City fans deserve certainty, given that at this time they are being asked to renew their season tickets or become new season ticket holders.”

Tonight I heard the message referred to on Radio Wales as a plea to give Erol Bulut a contract for next season, but is it really that? It seems to me that if there is a plea involved in it, it’s more that Vincent Tan should make his mind up one way or another on the matter- either offer Bulut his new contract or tell him he’s not getting a new one and start the search for another new manager.

Anyway, that’s not really why I made reference to the message, it was more to get over that, despite the issue of Bulut’s contract being the subject of the moment at Cardiff City judging by what I’m reading on social media and hearing on post game phone ins, working on that message for about ten minutes before I sent it out just brought home how apathetic I am about the whole thing.

I’ve been gradually moving into the Bulut out camp since he had his moan after the Plymouth match and the Swansea game, but more particularly, the feeble surrender against Sunderland moved me firmly into it.

Therefore, you would have thought that I would be thinking let’s get rid of Bulut as soon as possible, but how can you be hopeful that this would lead to an improvement when you know that the decision on who replaces him will be made by men who have gained themselves plenty of experience of appointing new managers in the last ten years or more, but still seem completely hopeless at it?

This week I saw it suggested somewhere that Vincent Tan and Mehmet Dalman have alternative attempts at appointing new managers because it’s thought that the other made such a bad pick with the last one that they were happy to let thee other have a go. I don’t think that’s true, but it doesn’t fall into the too ridiculous to be true category either.

Where the theory holds water is when it’s particularly applied to Erol Bulut. Back in the summer when he was appointed, it was pretty obvious that he was Mr Dalman’s man, not Mr Tan’s. Indeed, there were remarks towards our owner which may have been viewed as disparaging regarding his football knowledge made at Erol Bulut’s first press conference from a surprising source (I think you know who I mean).

Mr Dalman had tried to bring Bulut to the club a year or two earlier, but he was just about to be appointed Fenerbache manager apparently and it was his time in this job I believe which enabled the club and some in the local media to portray Bulut as representing a managerial step up in class from what we’ve been used to.

Well, today’s 3-1 home loss to Hull left me even more convinced that our manager is not much of an upgrade on the likes of Harris, McCarthy, Morison, Hudson and Lamouchi – if he is one at all. This afternoon, there was all of the usual negativity, obsession with what his team did out of possession, uninspired substitutions and lack of attacking numbers, but there were also one or two new things which only made the whole step up in class line all the harder to believe.

Of course, those who defend our manager can, rightly, point to the fact that, in reality, we’ve been safe from the drop for weeks and barring a very poor finish to the campaign, we’re going to finish in the region of ten places higher than we did last season.

So, although I’ll say that sometimes it’s hard to work out how and why it’s happened, there has to be an acknowledgement that we have improved since last season. However, while some will use the transfer embargo we were under to further Bulut’s cause in that he’s improved us while having his hands tied by not being able to spend on new players, I would argue that it looks to me as if he’s had the biggest football budget to work with of any City manager since the summer of 2020 when Neil Harris was able to bring Kieffer Moore and Harry Wilson to the club.

I’ll not go into a blow by blow account of today’s game because, to a large extent, it was more of the same old, same old, but there were a couple of notable exceptions.

For example, despite being 2-0 down at half time, I thought it was a slightly more encouraging first half compared to many at Cardiff City Stadium this season. I say this because, as someone who always used to rail against the long ball game we played for so many years, it was notable that it had all but disappeared today.

Instead, what attacking we did (there still wasn’t a great deal of it) consisted of us trying to put together the sort of move that Hull managed for their second  goal. The intention was laudable, but all it did really was show our limitations in this department (especially in comparison to most of the teams we play).

I’ll single out two players here, but they’re far from the only ones guilty of these sort of errors – today Manolis Siopis and Jamilu Collins had the chances to play passes to a team mate that would not have left them through on goal, but would have put them in down the flank clear of the full back, in both cases, they were simple passes that were completely botched. It’s a source of mystery to me that professional footballers in what is portrayed as one of the strongest leagues in Europe cannot be relied upon to make passes that should not test their technique – especially using modern day equipment and pitches.

In saying that, City did not have much luck today. Only Hull’s second goal out of the three they scored did not carry a degree of good fortune to it – before I develop this, I would just say that the goal, which to my eyes consisted of slick, incisive passing and combination play before a very composed finish by expensive Liverpool loanee Fabio Carvalho, provoked a totally different response from our manager. He saw it as the low point in what he thought was an unacceptable first half showing –  Bulut was left fuming at what he saw as his team’s lack of a press and not implementing what they’d done in preparation for the game in training – you know, all of the usual out of possession stuff he puts so much emphasis on..

Going back to City’s lack of good fortune, Carvalho’s opener was a fine example of hitting a half volley from the edge of the penalty area correctly, but there was luck in how a half cleared corner fell so perfectly for him.

Another example of this ill fortune came in the second half when sub Josh Wilson-Esbrand pulled up with a hamstring injury to end a promising looking attack, but, having made his usual type substitutions by bringing on Wilson-Esbrand for Josh Bowler, Aaron Ramsey for David Turnbull (the usual reluctance to have two attacking midfielders on the pitch at the same time) and Famala Diedhiou for Yakou Meite, Bulut now had to bring on Josh Tanner to play left wing back, but not acting to make his fifth substitution while he could looked like a mistake (needless to say, Joel Colwill and Cian Ashford stayed on the bench).

Whether Hull’s third goal was down to bad luck or pure farce is arguable, but, I’ll be generous and edge towards the former. Very annoying is definitely what it was though because, having just got back into the game when Karlan Grant surprised Ryan Allsop with a shot from fifteen yards hit earlier than the ex City keeper expected, Bulut decided to change to a three centreback system and he was passing on instructions to Nat Phillips when Joe Ralls, keen to keep the momentum in our favour, took a quick free kick to Phillips, but the defender, distracted by what his manager was saying, let the ball run past him and Jaden Philogene, making an otherwise quiet return to Cardiff City Stadium, accepted the gift and ran on to comfortably beat Ethan Horvarth to, effectively, kill the game off.

I wouldn’t blame Bulut, Ralls or Phillips too much for this goal, but it was yet another home defeat to go on top of the three previous seasons full of them – this abysmal record in front of their own fans makes it hard enough for the club to sell the season tickets for 24/25 that went on sale this week, so, to make that situation even worse with the uncertainty about the manager only makes the job even harder..

Elsewhere, the under 18s followed up a midweek 4-4 draw with Hull with a 5-0 win at Wigan thanks to goals by Tanatswa Nyakhuwa with two, Ronan Kpakio, Louis Phillips and Lennon Talbot.

In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club’s title chances took a hit with a 4-3 loss at Cardiff Airport, that left them in fourth place, but still only two points off the top, while Ton Pentre drew 1-1 at one of the title challengers, Bridgend Street.

Posted in Down in the dugout, Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments