Seven decades of Cardiff City v Norwich City matches.

A few words about a couple of matches from earlier in the week before I start with this week’s quiz. On Monday, City’s under 21s travelled west to Swansea to face the jacks and they returned with a 1-0 win that rather reinforces the impression they’ve given already – that is. they are one of our strongest sides at this level in recent years and serious candidates for a top two finish and the Play Off place that goes with it.

The match wasn’t streamed live, so all I’ve seen are the highlights on the club website. Now, such places, naturally, tend to favour their own team when putting a highlights package together, but, based on what I’ve seen, we could easily have scored more than once as we created quite a few decent scoring opportunities.

The goal came just before half time when Dakarai Mafico picked out a lovely pass to Trey George and his low cross from the left was knocked in from about eight yards out by Michael Reindorf.

Scoring against the jacks at any level gives the City player concerned the backing of fans and, given Reindorf’s performances against Bristol Rovers and Southampton in the League Cup earlier in the season, the number of calls for him to feature in the squad for the upcoming game with his former club Norwich has grown (and there were plenty backing him before he scored on Monday).

However, there are those who watch more age group matches than I do who argue that Reindorf is still too raw for Championship football. For myself, there is evidence to suggest that the senior player who is Callum Robinson’s back up currently and comes on to replace him in most league games is not good enough for Championship football at the moment, so I’d prefer to see someone who is young and ambitious to show what he can do off the bench as opposed to the back up striker we have at the moment.

It’s a similar situation on the wing, Cian Ashford played the whole game on Monday I believe, so he should be available for selection on Saturday – I just hope he makes it on to the bench this time because, again, it seems to me that he has more to offer than the player who has come on to replace the likes of Ollie Tanner in recent matches.

Twenty four hours after the under 21s won their derby, Wales’ women’s team made it through to a two leg Play Off with the Republic of Ireland with the prize for the winner being a place in the Finals of the Euros to be held in Switzerland next summer.

In front of a 10.000 plus crowd at Cardiff Coty Stadium, Wales were as dominant as Slovakia had been in fashioning a 2-1 win for themselves in a First Leg where the home team should really have won by at least a two goal margin.

Wales were still overly reliant on Jess Fishlock who scored a first half goal to level the tie and had two more, rightly, disallowed for offside in the second period. Fishlock didn’t look that fit to me after her recent injury, but she lasted the full one hundred and twenty minutes.

Although others within the team played a lot better than they did in the away leg, Wales couldn’t cash in on a string of good chances they had in the second half in particular and so it went to extra time. A penalty shoot out looked like the most likely outcome through an extra thirty minutes in which Wales mostly looked like a team that had little left to give after playing so intensely during normal time.

However, midway through the second period of extra time, Ceri Holland, selected as the Player of the Match, came up with a winner which was, firstly, disallowed for another offside and then given by VAR after what seemed a very long delay.

Wales went to the Republic of Ireland and won 2-0 in February, so, maybe this is going to be the time when the women reach their first major Finals, but I can’t help thinking that they’ll miss out if the standard shown over the two legs against Slovakia is repeated when the teams meet next month .

Anyway, here’s the seven Norwich related questions for the usual quiz, I’ll post the anmswers on here on Sunday.

60s. With a surname that probably puts you more in mind of an 80’s fashion statement than fish, this Midland’s born defender played three First Division matches for a team that you might think were suffering from the effects of very cold weather before signing for Norwich where he stayed for just short of a decade with most of it being as a first team regular. A regular opponent of City during this time, he got a close look at a famous goal that was scored in the fixture and also scored himself in another game against us. After leaving Norwich, he played non league football in the area for Linnets, Trawler Boys and Bloaters, but who is he?

70s. The Norwich team for one of City’s visits to Carrow Road during this decade contained three players who would later play for us and they had another future City man on their books at the time who didn’t feature that day. Can you name the four players?

80s. Bathed managers and somehow kept the goals out! (6,8)

90s. Was he a servant before he came a footballer?

00s. Name the striker, with a better than a goal every other game scoring record for England over a five year period when he was a regular selection, who got sent off at Walsall while playing for Norwich in this decade.

10s. He played for City against Norwich in the penultimate game of Ole Gunnar Solksjaer’s spell as City manager and is currently first team coach of a team he made a total of three hundred and fifty nine league appearances for. Who is he?

20s. His first name means a dweller near a tree lined meadow – in his case it might be close to a Boat Race bridge as well, who is he?

Answers

60s.Joe Mullett started off with the bluenoses (Birmingham City) before leaving for Norwich in the late fifties. He was in the Norwich team for John Charles’ City debut on the opening day of the 63/64 season when “the Gentle Giant” scored from inside his own half and he put through his own net in Norwich’s 3-1 win at Ninian Park the following season. Mullet played for King’s Lynn (the Linnets), Great Yarmouth Town (the Trawler Boys) and Lowestoft Town (the Bloaters) after leaving Norwich.

70s. Roger Hansbury, Colin Sullivan and Steve Grapes all started for Norwich in their 1-1 draw with City at Carrow Road that was featured on Match of the Day on 7 December 1974 – Doug Livermore signed for us from Norwich about nine months later.

80s. Graham Benstead.

90s. Spencer Prior. 

According to Wikipedia, “Spencer is a gender-neutral name of British origin, meaning “dispenser of provisions,” as well as “steward” or “butler.” Referring to the person who dispensed the provisions in affluent households in times gone past, this title has retained an air of sophistication throughout the ages.”

00s.  Peter Crouch scored twenty two times in forty two appearances for England between 2005 and 2010. Two years before he played his first game for his country, he was loaned by Aston Villa to Norwich during the first half of the 03/04 season  He scored four times in fifteen games for Norwich as they went on to win the Championship that season, but was sent off after scoring in a 3-1 win at relegated Walsall.

10s. John Brayford played at right back in the City team beaten 4-2 at home by Norwich in September 2014. Brayford  is currently first team coach for Burton Albion, the team he served in three different spells during his playing career.

20s. Ashley Barnes – the name Ashley derives from a dweller near an Ash tree meadow and Oxford and Cambridge go under Barnes bridge during the Boat Race.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023, The stiffs, Wales, Women's football | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Norwich City matches.

A point we wouldn’t have got in August and September.

Cardiff City returned to south Wales with a point from the Hawthorns today as they drew 0-0 with West Bromwich Albion. It was their third straight clean sheet and their fifth game without defeat and I’m pretty sure it was a match they would have lost a few weeks ago.

Of course, the longer our good run goes on, the more interim manager Omer Rica will face questions as to whether he should be given the job on a permanent basis (his record was the second best in the Championship in the month of October), but he’s said he’s not going to address this issue with the media from now on – he may not be saying it in so many words, but his message appears to be that he’ll let his record do his talking for him and you have to say that he is right to do so.

If every Cardiff City fan (and I mean every) is being honest with themselves, no one thought “give him the job on a permanent basis” on that Sunday after we’d lost to Leeds when it emerged that Erol Bulut had been sacked and Riza would be the caretaker boss.

For myself, I assumed Riza would do the job for about a fortnight, he clearly wanted to be the full time manager, but I thought he had no chance and believed that the only question was would he be kept on by whoever the new manager turned out to be?

More than that, I didn’t care if the new manager kept him or not – after all, he was supposed to be a coach whose speciality was attacking play and we had a team that had scored one goal in the six league games we’d played since he arrived.

However, its goals that I’d say are now the main reason why Riza has to be involved with City for the long term even if Vincent Tan decides to look to someone else as manager.

Despite our awful, record breaking, set of results to start the season, it was our goals for and against figures that I used to hone in on when I really wanted to emphasise just how bad we were at the time Bulut left – in six league matches, we’d scored just the once, while letting in thirteen. They are figures which absolutely scream out relegation and probably relegation confirmed weeks before the end of the season.

Things got worse before they got better as well, the goals against figure increased rapidly to seventeen after Riza’s first match in charge at Hull with the very small consolation being that we’d doubled our goals scored figure while showing for the first time some fleeting glimpses that Riza did have the ability to make us more effective attackers.

So, it was two scored and seventeen conceded after that first match, but the fact that it is now eleven scored and eighteen conceded after twelve matches is the best reason I can come up with as to why you have to start thinking that there’s not a better candidate out there than the man who’s currently in charge when it comes to availability and the realistic finances the club can afford.

I’ll admit that my huge reservations about Riza’s suitability for the manager’s job had ninety nine per cent disappeared after the Plymouth and Portsmouth wins and, if anything, it was the latter match which played the bigger part in my decision because it showed that what had happened three days earlier was not just some sort of blip – we were very good against Portsmouth for an hour and then when we came under some pressure late on, we showed the extent of our improvement in defence.

However, not everyone feels the same way. There was talk about how Riza’s Cardiff had only played against teams from the lower reaches of the Championship, a game against fourth placed West Brom would provide Riza’s first real test with a tough looking match at home to Norwich, then Luton away and home again to Blackburn to follow.

Well, one down out of the four and, after it, you’ve got to admit that Riza’s stock is higher than it’s been at any time over the past five weeks, but I suppose the remaining doubters would say that Riza had luck on his side because there’s not been a better time to face the Baggies this season than today.

Here, I will concede that the naysayers have a point – West Brom were five without a win (three draws and two losses) going into today with just a single goal scored in their last four matches.

Furthermore, playing at the Hawthorns seems to becoming a bit of an issue for their players – while they’d only conceded one league goal at home all season, they’d also only scored two and today was their third home scoreless draw of the season.

You could see Albion were a team lacking in confidence in attacking areas today because, despite  a big lead in most of the relevant stats (sixty four/thirty six possession, nineteen to six in goal attempts, four to nil in on target attempts, thirty six to nine touches in the opposition penalty area and twelve/one when it came to corners), City could claim to have the majority of the better chances to break the stalemate.

West Brom captain Darnell Furlong put a header from six yards wide, Grady Diangana drew the best save of the match from Jak Alnwick and Josh Maja headed a presentable chance straight at Alnwick in the dying minutes, but City could point to an early Callum Robinson header against the crossbar from Perry Ng’s cross during a first half an hour when City went toe to toe with the Baggies in terms of attacking intent as an entertaining spectacle flowed from end to end.

However, it was in a more prosaic second period, when City spent nearly all of the time defending as the effects of two games in four days playing a high pressing style at home became a factor, that they had three other great chances.

Robinson’s first half header came from a cross which was just a tiny bit too high for him to head downwards and so I would not be too critical of that miss, but our top scorer completely missed his kick from ten yards when Ollie Tanner rolled back a very inviting cross for him. Similarly, when a blunder by defender Mason Holgate presented an open goal with the keeper well off his line , I was pleased to see the ball going to sub Chris Willock because I thought he was the player on the pitch at that time with the best technique to get the required lob right from a range of close to thirty yards, but, instead, he sent his effort well over the bar. Finally, two players who could not use the tiredness excuse, Yakou Meite and Wilfried Kanga, contrived to make a right mess of a two on one as Albion chased a winner.

Those misses taken along with the fact that we’d had the chances to at least double our score against Portsmouth suggest that, despite all of those goals against Plymouth, the standard of finishing among the squad is still too low.

However, today was more about doggedly defending our goal as old problems concerning ball retention made an unwanted return. To be fair, Albion are a physically imposing side that showed there is nothing much wrong with their pressing game as we found it harder to move the ball about as those stats I quoted earlier presented a fair representation of the match in its last hour in particular. That said, although it was like a fourth v twentieth game in many respects, it was also a chance for our defenders to show that Riza has made big improvements at either end of the pitch.

I’ll finish on today’s match with a question a reader might be able to answer. From what I understand, the object of the exercise in modern day coaching is to create “overloads” (i.e two v ones and three v twos) in any area of the pitch, why is it then that City insist on handing opponents a free overload by only sending one man out to cover a potential short corner, thus giving their opponents a two v one straight away?

It happened plenty of times today and the commentators on the West Brom stream I watched were critical of our laziness and about how we were “not switched on” at set pieces. The thing is, it seems to be a deliberate policy this season because we did it under Bulut and we continue to do it under Riza, so, clearly, the coaching staff at the club believe there are advantages to letting the opposition take their short corners, but, for the life of me, I can’t figure out what it is.

In other football, the Welsh women’s side suffered a very disappointing 2-1 defeat in the First Leg of their Euros Play Off tie in Slovakia last night. Against opponents twenty two places below them in the world rankings, Wales could have no complaints at trailing 2-0 after an hour, in fact it could have been much worse.

For all of the talk of improvement and expansion in the women’s game, the simple truth was that, without long term injury victim Sophie Ingle and the recovering Jess Fishlock for the first time in five years, Wales looked very, very ordinary as they gave the impression that they owed their ranking position solely to the presence of at least one and maybe two world class players in their squad.

This feeling that Wales’ lack strength in depth was only added to when Fishlock, generally reckoned to be well short of one hundred per cent fitness, was introduced and, hey presto, previously insipid Wales started to produce some sort of attacking threat. Slovakia had been so comfortable, but came under real pressure in the final quarter of an hour when Wales had more chances to score than in the previous seventy five minutes. Fishlock managed to lay on a goal that was coolly finished by another sub Ffion Morgan and so it’s everything to play for in Tuesday’s second leg at Cardiff City Stadium.

City’s under 18s were 2-1 winners today at Colchester with Troy Perrett, making his way back after an injury hit start to the season, and Jake Davies scoring.

In local football, Treorchy Boys and Girls Club beat St Joseph’s 3-2 in Division One East of the Highadmit South Wales Alliance, while Ton Pentre lost 3-1 at Porthcawl in the W John Owen Cup.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids., Wales, Women's football | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments