Seven decades of Cardiff City v Watford matches.

Lately I’ve been thinking of this match as one we can pick up points in because I see Watford as erratic underachievers and possibly more of a shambles of a club than we are. The trouble is, their win over Bristol City on Saturday (the only favour the wurzels have done us in recent weeks is to let us beat them), Watford are still, just about, in the Play Off hunt and so one of the more impressive teams to visit Cardiff City Stadium this season still have something to play for.

We’ll certainly need to cut out the individual errors that cost us on the weekend, but, as we get closer to a game I was quite optimistic about, I find myself thinking we’re going to lose again – if that happens, we’ll really need a win against a Stoke side which has gone off the boil lately on Saturday. A home match against a team with nothing to play for is the best fixture a relegation fighting side can hope for in the closing weeks of a season, but playing on our pitch has been putting the fear of God into City teams for three seasons now, so I’m a bit glass half emptyish at the moment I’m afraid.

Here’s seven questions on Watford with the answers to be posted on here on Thursday.

60s. Did this defender have to wrestle for his ale? (6,4)

70s. This defender’s Watford career was rather summed up by one of their match programmes which got his first name wrong – he made fifty plus league appearances for them, but always seemed to be more of a squad member in a side which struggled to establish themselves in the second tier. His encounters with City were typical of his time at the club with one start and two sub appearances and he was eventually loaned out to a club with a unique name not long before being released by Watford. Teamed up with three other members of Watford’s FA Cup Semi Final side from 69/70, he did much better at a lower level, eventually earning himself a testimonial against West Ham and an induction into the club’s Hall of Fame. Who am I describing?

80s. Born in a place in Derbyshire which sounds like a footballer from the nineteenth century, this utility player’s career seemed to prosper under the influence of Graham Taylor. Starting off with red Londoners in the sixties, he then had a brief spell at a bracing seaside location in the north before moving hundreds of miles south to another place with a beach. A loan move to a Cathedral city eventually became a permanent one and it was here that he seemed to move up another level before heading for Watford where, having been something of a lower league journeyman throughout his career, he was able to hold down a regular place in the second tier with them although he was unable to get a win in his two encounters with City. Now, at the veteran stage, there was one move for him to a club that also played in amber/yellow – he became assistant manager of this club after retiring and had a short spell as caretaker boss as well. Who is he?

90s. This midfielder with a surname which is unique in football in my experience was a regular starter in a non league side which played in the same colour shirts as Watford that came very close to pulling off an FA Cup shock at Ninian Park.. Amazingly, at the age of twenty six, his next move took him to a club in the top flight and he did well enough for them to win himself a place in the first team from time to time over the next four years. His next move was to Watford, but he barely featured for them in his two years at Vicarage Road and he was soon back in non football including a single game for the club he was with when the First Division came calling – who am I describing?

00s. Testament for Eddie Valiant?

10s. Male behaving masterfully maybe?

20s. What connects the number most associated with the sport of baseball and Watford FC during this decade?

Answers.

60s. Walter Lees.

70s. Mick Packer was loaned out to Crewe Alexandra shortly before being released by Watford in 1973. Packer spent the next decade at Colchester United making just short of three hundred and fifty league appearances for them.

80s. Born in Stanley Common, Dennis Booth played his early football for Charlton before a move to Blackpool and then Southend. Booth played under Graham Taylor at Lincoln and the future England manager took him to Watford when he took over there. Booth was transferred to Hull at the start of the 80/81 season and played on for five seasons for them.

90s. Steve Talboys scored for Gloucester City against City in the Second Round of the FA Cup in December 1989 – they were 2-0 up going into the final minute at Ninian Park before young sub Morrys Scott scored twice to earn a replay which we won 1-0. Talboys signed for Wimbledon in 1992 and played twenty six time for them in the First Division/Premier League, scoring once. Things didn’t go so well for Talboys at Watford, who were in the Third tier at this time, and he’d only played seven times for them when he left the club for Aldershot Town.

00s. Will Hoskins – Bob Hoskins played Eddie Valiant in Who Framed Roger Dabbit.

10s. Tom Cleverley.

20s. There are nine players in a baseball team and there are nine innings’ per team in a baseball game – nine is also the number of managers/head coaches Watford have had so far during this decade.

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Better, but individual errors cost Cardiff dear against Premier League bound Sheffield United.

It’s strange, City suffered their heaviest defeat of the season so far when we went down 4-1 at Sheffield United this lunchtime and yet I reckon we’ve played a lot worse in quite a few of the 1-0 losses we’ve gone down to in the last seven or eight months (last Monday for example).

In the end, we were well beaten and could not complain about the outcome (we could about the margin of defeat though). After taking the lead, we stayed in the game for eighty minutes and if a shot had been three or four inches lower, we might have come back with a point – that said, our defence was more error prone than normal and they probably would have gifted the Blades a further chance somewhere along the line.

Sabri Lamouchi dropped Connor Wickham and brought in Kion Etete up front, Joe Ralls replaced Sheyi Ojo, Romaine Sawyers made way for Andy Rinomhota and Jack Simpson was on the left instead of Mahlon Romeo – I think that was all of the changes from the Sunderland game, but I’m still not sure what formation we started off with.

At times it looked like a flat back four with Perry Ng at right back and Simpson left back, but then Simpson would be operating in a back three with Ralls outside him and Ng pushed more forward on the other side. With Jaden Philogene given a roving role and Rinomhota getting forward at times, it certainly seemed to be a flexible approach as Etete was also doing more than his share of defensive work on our left.

Simpson’s cause was not helped by a hospital pass from Rinomhota which left him with little option but to bring down Iliman Ndiaye and earn a yellow card after only four minutes. Besides that, Simpson also suffered a shoulder injury which made it no real surprise when he did not come out for the second half – the surprise was what Lamouchi came up with by way of a replacement!

Before that though, City survived an early period of Sheffield territorial dominance with few alarms and then spent ten minutes or so showing that any nerves on show were not solely of the fighting relegation variety.

Ryan Wintle forced a sprawling Adam Davies to turn his well struck twenty five yard shot around the post and the home team’s edginess was showing when ex Cardiff loanee Tommy Doyle presented City with the ball in the United penalty area to prompt a scramble which ended with it anxiously being put out for a corner.

Sheffield didn’t escape though as the ball bounced around as the set piece was half cleared, but Max Lowe’s boot was level with Simpson’s head as they challenged for it and referee David Webb, rightly, pointed to the spot.

Maybe it’s a sign of how much threat we pose in home matches, but the five penalties we’ve been awarded in all competitions this season have come in away games. Of course, as all three of the spot kicks we’d been awarded in League games had been saved by the keeper, there was still a big challenge to be overcome before anyone could start celebrating.

Sory Kaba, who has taken penalties at his other clubs, was the obvious candidate to try and put us ahead. Although Kaba’s penalty was not too convincing as it went straight down the middle, Davies dived to one side and so the man who has only played for us since February became our top league scorer with six from twelve games.

City predictably took confidence from this unexpected lead and, for a short while, they continued to worry the home defence at one end, while Sheffield were not creating anything up the other.

However, although it may not have seemed significant at the time, one of the game’s turning points came when Ndiaye chased what was nothing more than a long punt forward and got clear of Kipre to hit an angled shot which brought Allsop into action for the first time.

The sequence was repeated shortly afterwards with Allsop’s save being a better one this time, but now Sheffield, who were not that impressive in all honesty, had a City weakness to play on and they were good enough to put this to their advantage – especially, as Ndiaye would show he had the beating of Mark McGuinness for pace as well.

Sheffield’s equaliser on twenty four minutes did not come from that route though, it was down to a combination of Manchester City’s James McAtee’s skill and poor City defending. The loan signing neatly created the space for himself to get a shot away from the edge of the penalty area which Allsop got a hand to as he dived to his left, but could not prevent entering the net.

At half time, Robert Earnshaw, who was one of Sky’s guest pundits, said that Allsop may have been disappointed with his part in the goal and, as the saying goes,there is the rub for City’s goalkeeper these days.

There are those who are blaming Allsop for every goal we concede lately, but I can’t think of a single one that he’s been one hundred per cent to blame for (i.e, he’s committed an absolute howler). However, increasingly, I find myself thinking the same as Earnie – there are more and more goals being conceded that Allsop might feel he could have done better with.

Allsop was less of a culprit than McGuinness for me though as the centreback turned too early and easily to make McAtee’s task simpler.

To be honest though, the equaliser came somewhat out of the blue and City were playing with a calmness which angered well – Lamouchi’s tactics (as far as I could work them out!) were working and we would have gone in at the break ahead if it wasn’t for a fine save by Davies as Ralls looked set to cash in on some dozy United defending – the keeper showed the speed his team mates lacked as he raced off his line to give the City captain little room to work with.

So, 1-1 at the break with things going a lot better than most expected. Lamouchi had a decision to make regarding Simpson and, correctly in my view, he decided it was too much of a risk to let him continue. With Callum O’Dowda fit again, it was a bit surprising to see him only on the bench in the first place considering all of the problems at left back/wing back against Sunderland, but now he could come on to operate in the position he has largely looked good in over the last few months. Instead, the Irish international came out to play on the left of a back three – I can’t say for sure that this is a position O’Dowda has never played in before, but, even if he has, it was a huge risk putting someone there for the first time this season against a team that is, in all likelihood, going to be playing in the Premier League next season.

Completely unsurprisingly, O’Dowda looked like a fish out of water as Ng stayed out on the right and Ralls took the wing back role – moving either of those players into a position they were very familiar while playing O’Dowda at wing back was, surely, the more sensible way to go?

O’Dowda soon picked up a yellow card for fouling McAtee, but he didn’t suffer too much by way of comparison with fellow centrebacks Kipre and McGuinness who both found it hard going in the second half.

That said, on an afternoon of expensive defensive mistakes, I’d rather give Doyle praise for a marvelous cross into the defensive “corridor of uncertainty” which took both defenders and goalkeeper out of the equation as home centreback Jack Robinson dived to head his side ahead on fifty three minutes.

Forced to chase the game now, Lamouchi decided to sacrifice Etete for Wickham and, with a single exception, the change didn’t work although, to be fair, it came very close to doing so. Etete showed commendable industry and a good team ethic which you weren’t likely to get from Wickham, but the experienced striker does give you more of a goal threat. Wickham showed this when City’s one really dangerous attack of the second period produced a frantic scramble which ended with him crashing a shot from fifteen yards off the crossbar with Davies well beaten – just that little bit lower and City would have been level with about a quarter of an hour left in a stadium that would have got very nervous.

Instead, the game got away from City in the last ten minutes as United used all five substitutions available to them and Lamouchi, for some reason, stuck with the two he had already made.

On eighty minutes, the pass behind the back three for Ndiaye to chase ploy worked again, but only after McGuinness got to the ball first then left his back pass well short of Allsop and United’s top scorer neatly side stepped the keeper and walked the ball into the net.

This season is in danger now of ending like his first one at this level did for McGuinness as an encouraging six months or so was followed by a final few weeks where his form fell away.

A fourth goal soon followed as City showed how far their standards have dropped when it comes to attacking and defensive set pieces – Allsop claimed a foul as he missed a corner (I didn’t see one and this became another “he’ll be unhappy with that one” goal for our beleaguered keeper) and the ball bounced around before the offside looking sub Ciaran Clark whacked it in from about a foot out.

Defeat for City then, but subsequent results ensured no great harm had been done to them. Apart from a very creditable 0-0 home draw for Reading against Burnley and a 1-0 win for Blackpool which gave them some faint hope, but all but relegated Wigan, everyone else at the bottom lost. Swansea did us a favour by beating Huddersfield 1-0, Luton were 2-0 winners at Rotherham and, after claiming QPR had turned the corner following their draw at West Brom on Monday, Gareth Ainsworth may wish to revise his thinking after a 3-0 home loss to Coventry.

Ton Pentre played out an entertaining local derby in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division when they drew 4–4 at mid table Tonyrefail Boys and Girls Club. With so many clubs having games in hand to play in the closing weeks of the season, Ton have dropped down to sixth in the table and whether they are still in the promotion hunt depends on how many sides go up -I believe it’s three and, if it is, they’re right in the mix for the third spot, but if it’s only two then Cardiff Corries and Canton Liberals look to be out of sight. Sadly, AFC Porth’s fate has been known for weeks and the only matter to be resolved is whether they will go through the league season without recording a single win – on the evidence of their 8-0 loss at Llanrumney Athletic, the answer is probably yes.

In Division One, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club trounced mid table Aberfan FC 9-0 and remain eleven points clear at the top, but, with five games in hand on the leaders, Caerphilly Athletic will be hopeful of overhauling them, while Clwb Cymric, thirteen points adrift with three games in hand will not be giving up hope yet either.

Pride of placed must go to Cardiff City’s women’s team mind who completed an unbeaten season in the Adran Premier League (they’d won the title a few weeks ago) by beating Swansea City 3-1. It was an all too rare win for a City team at Cardiff City Stadium as they overcame the side who were the dominant force in the competition until this season after falling 1-0 behind. City hit back with goals from Lily Billingham, Rhiane Oakley and sub Zoe Atkins and they now go for a double when they defend the defend the FAW Women’s Cup trophy they won a year ago when they face Briton Ferry Llansawel in the final at Merthyr Town FC next weekend.

Finally, there are still a few signed copies of my latest book “Tony Evans Walks on Water” available from the Trust Office (near Gate 5) on matchdays at the reduced price of £9 for Trust members.

Posted in Out on the pitch | 5 Comments