Erol Bulut’s Cardiff City, the team that keep on finding new depths to plumb.

Picture the scene, a football team and its manager are embarrassingly turned over by local rivals in their biggest derby game of the season and have just short of a fortnight to work on getting the bad memories out of their system as they prepare for a home fixture against a team that have just ended a run of six straight defeats with a dismal goalless draw at home to a side that has been in the bottom three for most of the season.

Yes, the season is over in terms of promotion or relegation, but this is a chance to get fans onside again. After all, before their no show for the derby game, hadn’t they put together four wins on the trot with the last of them being hailed as their best performance of the season?

Indeed, there were rumours that the players were being fed raw meat in the days leading up to the game which was going to put right the wrongs of the derby day humiliation.

Sunderland, for it was they who were the unfortunates cowering in wait for caged animals to be unleashed on them at three o clock on the day of a religious festival, must have been shaking in their boots as the minutes ticked by………………

Sorry, I can’t keep this up any longer, it was, of course, Erol Bulut and his Cardiff City side that were the “caged animals”, so anyone who has followed what’s been going on at City since the end of October will have a fair idea of what happened (the caged animals turned out to be a mixture of timid kittens and clumsy puppies), but, for any City watchers who, for whatever reason, did not get to watch today’s action, I have to tell you that it was definitely worse than you can possibly imagine.

Anyone attempting to list, say, City’s five worst performances of this season has a difficult task because, to my mind, there is so much competition for a place in the hallowed quintet. Without thinking about it too much, I can come up with QPR home, West Brom home, Hull away, Millwall, Birmingham, Leicester and Leeds home, Plymouth away, Preston home, Norwich away, Blackburn  and Huddersfield home and Swansea away, but today things moved on to a new level and Sunderland at home has to be installed at number one.

It wasn’t quite breaking the habits of a lifetime, but City’s positive start three weeks ago against the team that leads the Championship as I type this was highly unusual and, as far as this season goes, I can only think of the start we made to our biggest win, at Huddersfield, to rival it.

We couldn’t match the start we made against Ipswich today, but the opening ten minutes was clearly our best period of the game as we made Sunderland look like a team with such an awful recent record by pushing them back with some well constructed attacks, one of which ended with Josh Bowler shooting into the side netting.

The game changed in the twelfth minute though when Dimitrios Goutas made the first of what were many mistakes in what was his worst display in a City shirt by a distance. Goutas was immense in our win at Sunderland back in September and I’d rate him as a realistic contender for our Player of the Season award, but, today he was an accident waiting to happen and it was his concession of the ball in a dangerous area which eventually ended with a penalty being given against him for a push on Jobe Bellingham.

In Goutas’ defence, it was a very poor decision by referee Jeremy Simpson. While Goutas did make a pushing movement towards Bellingham and there was some contact made, it was very faint. I suppose it was a correct decision by the strictest interpretation of the laws, but the whole thing becomes farcical when Simpson, just like any other modern day referee, lets far more obvious fouls by defenders and attackers alike at set pieces go unpunished – Goutas was clearly grabbed by Sunderland captain Luke O’Nien at two of City’s first three corners and these days it’s obvious that there are two completely contrasting interpretations being followed in the same penalty area depending on whether any incident happens in open play or during a set piece.

Goutas was hard done by then, but it was difficult to be that sympathetic towards him because it was his blunder that led to the concession of the penalty.

I should really know this, but I believe Nat Phillips has been playing left centreback since his arrival on loan from Liverpool, but today it was definitely Goutas on the left as I was reminded that he’d made an uncomfortable start to his City career and it was only when Mark McGuinness switched to the left and Goutas to the right that the Greek international began to improve.

So, If I am right in thinking that our centre backs switched positions today, I’m at a loss to even attempt to suggest why they did. Suffice it to say that the left hand side of our defence was a shambles in the first half especially. Josh Wilson-Esbrand had been doing well at left back during our winning run, but he was one of those who wilted at Swansea and he struggled today before being one of two players to be taken off at half time.

Adil Aouchiche shot high up into the same net that Dan James failed to find with his penalty on Tuesday and from there, the match became like a repeat of the game with Preston about six weeks ago, but worse. On that day, City had made what might well have been their second best start to a home league game this season, but then fell apart completely as soon as they went 1-0 down – Preston got a second before half time and spent the rest of the game holding on to their lead ever so comfortably as we failed to mount a worthwhile response in the last sixty minutes.

At least against Preston it looked like the players were trying, but after today’s match Bulut had to answer questions about whether City were, to use the cliché, “already on the beach”? Sunderland winning what seemed like six or seven consecutive fifty/fifty balls during a particularly scrappy phase of first half play probably prompted such questions – the truth was that, while they were more than two goals better than us, Sunderland were hardly brilliant themselves, but then opponents don’t need to be to comfortably beat Bulut’s Cardiff on one of their increasingly frequent bad days..

Sunderland soon added a second as Joe Ralls, a player who’s had a better season this time around, but the new contract he recently signed looked like a mistake on this evidence, missed a through pass and Aouchiche crossed for Bellingham to score easily from six yards out.

Actually, the second goal was overdue as Sunderland, getting in down our left at will, had already forced saves out of Ethan Horvarth through the sixteen year old Chris Rigg and Abdoullah Ba.

Readers of this blog will know that I champion the causes of City’s younger players, so you’d expect me to be all in favour of Sunderland’s approach which saw them field the Championship’s youngest ever team at Southampton recently, but I think they’ve got it all wrong and have paid with a season that has been well below their capabilities. You need a balance between youth and experience and while City have a manager who sets the balance far too much in favour of experience, Sunderland have got it wrong by going to the other extreme.

Nevertheless, I’m sure if I’d have been a neutral I would have enjoyed Sunderland’s quicksilver youngsters exposing the limitations of Bulut’s plodding twenty nine year olds (I know all of our team aren’t that age, but I think it’s our manager’s dream to have ten outfield players of that vintage who all work terribly hard when we’re not in possession – as for what they do when they have the ball, he can sort that out later). As it was, for the second consecutive match, I felt embarrassed watching my team play.

Talking of working hard without the ball, there’s no prizes for guessing who also made way at half time with Wilson-Esbrand. Yes, it was Rubin Colwill of course. Now, I should say that Colwill was poor today, but, apart from Horvarth and, maybe, Callum O’Dowda, he was no worse than anyone else – it was just typical Bulut that it was the two youngest players in his team of limited huff and puff merchants who had to be sacrificed (completely predictably, there was no sign of the youngsters who were supposed to be getting their chance once we’d reached the nothing to play for stage either).

Aaron Ramsey and Famara Diedhiou were brought on for the second half and if anything, City got worse. There were cries for a penalty when Karlan Grant went down as Sunderland got in a mess while trying to play out from the back (I didn’t think it was one) and Goutas had a header from a corner that glanced off the top of the crossbar, but that was as nothing compared to the string of chances Sunderland had. In truth, we should have suffered our heaviest defeat of the season, but a combination of some good saves by Horvarth and Sunderland getting careless because it was all so easy for them, kept the score at 2-0.

Therefore, Sunderland probably become the latest of what I suspect is quite a large number of teams saying Cardiff are the worst side we have faced this season after an encounter with us, yet, at the same time, I’ve watched a stream this week which nominated City as the Championship’s biggest over achievers.

How do you reconcile those two things? I’ve not a clue, but I think they’re both probably true. What I’m more sure of mind, is that we’re no better than the poor City teams of the previous two seasons when it comes to the things that got all of us interested in the game when we were children. You know, the things we saw footballers do with the ball to get us up out of our seats, Bulut’s Cardiff are a really hard watch and they’re the latest of many City teams of the Tan era that don’t seem to know any other way to win than ugly.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Sunderland matches.

If you’d have told me back on the first of August that Cardiff City would be five points ahead of Sunderland going into Easter in the upcoming season, I would have assumed that we were not only right in the thick of the promotion Play Off scramble, but we may be in with a shout of a top two finish as well.

On Easter Monday last year, Sunderland came to Cardiff City Stadium and won a lot more comfortably than 1-0 suggests without really hitting the sort of heights seen in some of their televised games around that time.

Sunderland looked like a team on the way to a top six finish and they were my promotion picks from the Play Offs especially when they won the first leg of their Semi Final with Luton, but the Bedfordshire club with the ground from a hundred years ago have shown how resilient they are this season and were able to turn the deficit around on their way to their unlikely promotion about ten days later.

When Sunderland murdered Southampton 5-0 about a month into this season, another Play Off place or better looked on for them, but our smash and grab win at the Stadium of Light at the end of September was a warning of problems to come.

Since he threw his toys out of the pram after our defeat at Plymouth just over two months ago, I’ve become a serial Erol Bulut critic who won’t be bothered in the slightest if he and his so dull football is not here next season. However, I have to concede that when a stream I watched on You Tube not too long ago nominated us as the Championship’s biggest over achievers in 23/24, I struggled to come up with a better alternative (Ipswich were being tipped by some for a top two finish back at the start of the season).

The same stream had Sunderland down as the division’s biggest under achievers and as for reasons why this is probably correct, I can think of lots of injuries, proving that the grass is not always greener with their decision to get rid of a very competent and pretty successful Championship manager in Tony Mowbray, who I’d take here in a heartbeat, and proving that while Alan Hansen’s famous old line that you win nothing with kids isn’t always right, it usually is.

Ten years after deciding to give it up for life as I got close to entering my seventh decade, I’m back playing Football Manager again and, as I always did, I make turning my own team into a bunch of promising youngsters a priority – I do that because I enjoy playing the game that way and, in my experience, it tends to bring you success. However, the Sunderland hierarchy’s attempt to build their team in real life using my Football Manager method is proof that, despite said game getting very close to emulating the real thing in many respects, it certainly won’t be able to fully match it in my lifetime at least.

Anyway, enough of me blathering on, here’s the seven decades quiz back after the final international break of the season and I’ll post the answers on here on Saturday.

60s. This midfielder is the only man to have captained each of the big three North East teams (Middlesbrough, Newcastle and Sunderland). He played for Sunderland against City on many occasions with the last of them being a high scoring draw – can you name him?

70s. This defender’s birthplace may have meant that he had to work harder to win over the Sunderland supporters than other youngsters coming into the first team would have and one hundred and thirteen league appearances spread over the five years between his debut and him leaving the club suggests he was more of a squad member than a regular first choice. Nevertheless, his move took him a long way south and from the second division into the first. Again though, he was more a reserve than a starter in the first eleven and did not get to fifty league games for his new club before his retirement from the game at just twenty seven (Wikipedia makes no mention of it being injury related, but, presumably, it was). Going straight into coaching, he worked for the club he’d last played for and eventually followed his manager east where he had a go at taking charge of the team with his mentor overseeing things in a general manager type role. When this set up didn’t prove to be a success, things returned to normal with him working as an assistant to the established manager. His working life in football ended with him performing a variety of roles during a long spell at a London club which won its fair share of trophies while he was there, but who is he?

80s. Lane south lit by signs to Norwich in this defenders case. (5,7)

90s. This full back won the first of his forty six caps for his country in a 4-0 beating of France. The final seven years of his playing career was spent in England – he began in the Midlands before moving to Sunderland and he played more matches for them than he did for the other six clubs from that country he represented put together. After finishing up at a club now in the Conference North, he returned home to go into coaching and, at one of the clubs he worked for, he was suspended as first team coach for a time because he refused to sign a “special anti corruption declaration”, can you name him?

00s. Group Keith Chegwin turned down meets American comedy family from the 70s and wins seventy two caps!

10s. Did this much travelled midfielder who started off at Sunderland, spend all of his spare time preparing Mansaf?

20s. Charger meets Newcastle supporting Archbishop by the sound of it!

Answers

60s. It seemed that Stan Anderson would spend all of his career with Sunderland as he clocked up over four hundred league appearances for them over an eleven year period. However, not long after playing in a 3-3 draw with City at Roker Park in September 1963, Anderson joined Newcastle before a final season with Middlesbrough (who he later managed) in 65/66 gave him the chance to complete his unique hat trick.

70s. Newcastle born Mick McGiven was at Sunderland between 1969 and 1974 before moving to West Ham. Four years later, he became a coach at the club after his early retirement from  the game and when manager John Lyall was appointed by Ipswich, he followed him to Portman Road. McGiven spent the 93/94 season as Head Coach as the Tractor Boys struggled against the drop and he and Lyall left the club when relegation followed the following season. McGivern later worked for Chelsea before his retirement in 2009.

80s. Shaun Elliott.

90s. Polish international Dariusz Kubicki signed for Aston Villa in 1991 and, after an initial loan spell there, signed for Sunderland three years later. Kubicki played one hundred and thirty six league matches in all for Sunderland before his departure for Wolves in 1997 and went on to represent Tranmere. Carlisle ad Darlington.

00s. Keith Chegwin showed great common sense in turning down the chance to become the vocalists of crap glam rockers Kenny in the mid seventies. The Cunningham family featured heavily in the long running American comedy series Happy Days – Irish defender Kenny Cunningham played for Sunderland in 06/07.

10s. Jordan Cook – Mansaf is the national dish of Jordan.

20s. A charger is a kind of tray and Basil Hume was the Newcastle United supporting Archbishop of Westminster during the final years of the twentieth century – Trai Hume is Sunderland’s regular right back.

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