Chasing pack pass up another chance offered to them by misfiring Cardiff City.

After this lunchtime’s goalless stalemate at Cardiff City Stadium in which a Blackpool side with the second worst defence and the second worst away record in League One kept City out pretty comfortably, I’m reading the words “we’ve been found out” quite a bit on message boards and social media.

I beg to differ, are we really saying that it’s taken about three quarters of the season for visiting teams to get around to trying sticking eleven men behind the ball, keep two rigid banks of four, or five and let us have the ball as long as it is in front of them?

There have been teams who’ve come to our ground and had a go at us, – Bradford did and, fair play to them, they were worth their win, but the other teams who’ve come to played more positively were beaten. Trying to think of the top of my head, I’d say Leyton Orient, Reading and Doncaster came with a positive attitude, Huddersfield, Barnsley and Luton all conceded a goal so early in the game that it was hard to get a handle on what their attitude was as the match kicked off.

As for the rest, I’d say that their attitude was little different from Lincoln, Wycombe and Blackpool, the three sides that have kept us goalless in our most recent trio of home matches with a return of a single point. 

Most of our fourteen home wins have come against sides with a similar game plan to the last three visiting teams, we weren’t “found out” against them, but, in my opinion, there were two big differences that have not applied against Lincoln, Wycombe and Blackpool.

First, we’re not playing with a six foot five inch “old fashioned target man” currently and, second, any novelty value in our false number nine approach which saw opposing sides bemused as to how they should cope with what was definitely an unusual approach for the lower divisions has now gone.

We’ve had two big away wins in our stuttering run in recent weeks which have shown that, if we can get ahead while playing with a false number nine, it can be very effective against sides that have to come out and look for a way to get back into the game. 

Unfortunately though, without Yousef Salech we’re finding ourselves in a position where we have to play in a more patient way which can lead to a situation, which certainly applied today, where what I believe has been a mainly successful attempt to play a front foot passing game becomes the sort of “tippy tappy” stuff that many supporters have an issue with. 

With Salech in the line up, City had the ability to leave defences in two minds. For much of the time, they would be facing a team that played in what I’ll call the BBM way, but there was also the option, which City were not averse to using, of going direct towards the big man if needed.

Today, Omari Kellyman had a far post header turned around the post by Bailey Peacock-Farrell in the first half, but that was the only header at goal from open play that I can recall in our last three home games – lately, opposing centrebacks have known that they only need to be adequate with their aerial defending to keep us out from that facet of the game.

Put Salech in the team and central defenders have to stay on the back foot so to speak because they know that besides the movement of our wide attackers and sometimes there’d almost be two number tens all breaking into the penalty area to cash in on the uncertainty Salech would cause.

It should also be remembered that Isaak Davies has been missing for a month or more and, while his pace would not be as much of a weapon against sides prepared to sit as deep as Lincoln, Wycombe and Blackpool have done, his finishing ability would be welcome in a side that have been misfiring in front of goal lately.

Those who say we do not shoot enough should note that with their twenty six goal attempts today, City took our tally in our last three matches to a whopping seventy five, but only eighteen of them have been on target and ten of those came in last weekend’s romp at Exeter – again, I don’t think we should be criticised for a lack of goal attempts, it’s the lack of accuracy involved that is the problem. 

So, for all, that City will be criticised for their “sideways and backwards” football, the truth is they’ve been getting shots away left, right and centre lately, but, in actuality, I think all that does is betray a lack of confidence in our players. Whereas before there was trust in the system, there’s a hit and hope element to our shooting now with too many of them being purely speculative with very little chance of succeeding.

Credit should go to Lincoln because they were the first to draw the sting from our false number nine system as they seemed to know exactly when their centrebacks should go with Kellyman and/or Rubin Colwill when they dropped into midfield and when they’d leave someone else to pick them up.

I’ve already mentioned Kellyman’s header that drew a save from Peacock-Farrell and the keeper did well to deny him from another effort early in the second half, but overall Omari’s not recaptured the form he was showing before he picked up the injury which forced him to miss a game.

As for Colwill, his performance today has been called terrible on social media. I disagree with that, he wasn’t terrible when he had the ball, I’d say the problem was he had so little of it. I don’t think I’ve ever seen Rubin have a more muted game than today  and, if he’s going to live up to the billing of best player in League One which some have bestowed on him, he has to do a lot more as the season comes to its climax than he did today.

For all of City’s seventy eight per cent possession, twenty six shots and forty seven touches in the Blackpool penalty area, the visitors could claim, with some justification, that there were two occasions where they came closer to breaking the deadlock than we managed to.

The first instance came when forwards Tom Bloxham and Ashley Fletcher combined to good effect and the former should have done better than stab his shot inches wide. Josh Bowler was largely quiet on his return to Cardiff City Stadium, but he brought the save of the game out of Nathan Trott after a short corner routine. 

Ryan Wintle perhaps came as close as anyone to scoring for City with a shot from twenty five yards which missed narrowly and then Peacock-Farrell made his best save to keep out the midfielder’s header from Bagan’s corner in added time.

Apart from that it was all a bit of a concerning mess played in a flat atmosphere with the lunchtime kick off not helping in that respect.

I find it hard to blame BBM for the downturn in our fortunes. However, I would say that the fact we cannot field a genuine forward on the bench apart from Callum Robinson ,who has a tendency to come deep for the ball like Kellyman and Colwill do, and I’m afraid he looks increasingly like a player that has age catching up with him (he made no impact when introduced after an hour today) is an indictment of our squad depth in some positions.

If we wanted to have a target man type striker on the bench, then you’d have to look to Dan Ola I suppose who has had only had mixed success this season in handling the jump from the under 18 team to  the  under 21 one.

We do still have a striker on our books who has done a decent job for us in the Championship at times, but Kion Etete’s form and scoring record since he injured a hamstring fairly early on in 23/24 seem to have fallen off a cliff. He’s failed to score in unsuccessful loan spells with Bolton and Rotherham and is hardly setting the world on fire in his latest loan move with St Mirren. 

When you also throw in the fact that, according to Wikipedia, Etete moved to St. Mirren on 22 January, that is two days before Salech suffered his neck injury in the game with Stockport, then I think it would be harsh to say City had blundered in not keeping Etete around “just in case”.

It’s different with Luke Pearce though who gained some first team experience with City last season. The young Irish striker has often had me thinking “he has something about him” when I’ve watched him play for the under 21s this season. Granted his figures for the under 21s do not cry out that he’s ready for senior football, but he could have been a useful option to have on the bench at this time when we don’t have another realistic contender for the first team of his type available.

Instead, Pearce was loaned out to Finnish team IFK Mariehamn in February at a time when it had become clear that Salech would be out for some time – that looks like a bit of a mistake at the moment.

One of the regular contributors to the Feedback section has said on a few occasions that we should have signed a back up target man in January. To be honest, I’ve tended to think that, with only a week between Salech’s injury and the closing of the January window, we would have struggled to bring in anyone good enough to fill in for the Dane, but, despite an initially successful attempt to cover up for our lack of striking options, we’ve reached a position where we look seriously short in the final third of the pitch when faced with a team which sets out to frustrate us. 

I mentioned the words concerning mess a little early about today’s game, yet the truth is City are closer to promotion tonight than they’ve ever been after this afternoon’s games. I think we should forget about catching Lincoln now after they beat Rotherham 3-0 today, but Bolton’s long unbeaten run came to an end with a 1-0 loss at, of all places, bottom of the table Port Vale. The news got even better as well as Bradford were beaten 2-1 at Burton. Stockport drew 1-1 at Luton and Stevenage are now sixth after beating Reading 1-0.

The under 18’s hopes of making it into the end of season Play Offs suffered a blow with a 1-0 loss to Peterborough at Leckwith this lunchtime.

Treherbert Boys and Girls Club were heavily beaten again in the Ardal League South West I’m afraid, this time by 4-1 at home to Cardiff Airport. Ton Pentre were beaten 1-0 at home by Dinas Powys in the Highadmit Championship, but Treorchy Boys and Girls Club stopped the weekend being a bit of a disaster by winning 2-1 at Aberdare in Division One (East).

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Blackpool matches.

Blackpool were in the bottom four of League One even after beating us 3-1 on 8 November to make it seven points from the last nine under the recently appointed Ian Evatt. However such was the nature of their win, we could easily have ended up conceding more than the five we let in recently at Plymouth, I fully expected Blackpool to be well clear of the drop zone when the two sides met again in the return fixture.

Well, Blackpool come here tomorrow still in the bottom four, although they will have the absolutely crucial win over bottom of the table Port Vale on Tuesday when they were twice behind, but eventually came out on top by 3-2 to boost them.

Before that, Blackpool had taken just two points from five matches and, after a good December run when they won five out of six in all competitions, they fell away to such effect after a 5-1 loss at Port Vale when they were reduced to ten men, that they only have three wins from their last fifteen games (sixteen, if you include an FA Cup defeat at Ipswich).

Conceding five against the team that has been bottom of the league for most of the season offers a clue as to why, despite having a squad that is generally reckoned to be a lot better than bottom four standard, the season has turned into a relegation battle for Blackpool. They have the division’s worst defensive record with sixty three goals conceded in their thirty eight matches. For all that, they could have scored a hatful against us at Bloomfield Road, we should have got far more than the one we did score as a combination of some fine saves by Bailey Peacock-Farrell and poor finishing meant we never cashed in on the dominance we had in the first half in particular.

Blackpool have conceded four or more on six occasions in all competitions this season. Furthermore, with us being the division’s leading scorers having netted four times in seven of our matches, while lying second in the table, you’d have thought we should be on for a comfortable win tomorrow.

However, Blackpool will take heart from a couple of things going into the game, first, the fact that they’ve already played well in beating us and, second, our patchy results since the aforesaid loss at Plymouth. I said in my Wycombe reaction piece that I don’t think we lose the game without Gabe Osho’s red card, but the result is there in the record books. It’s now three defeats in our last six with our previously impregnable home form having disappeared with of couple of successive defeats and many saying we looked out our feet against Wycombe. While that’s not a view I necessarily agree with, it’s hard to avoid a feeling that the latest international break can’t come soon enough for us as we should have our two injured strikers back when fixtures resume over Easter.

Onto the quiz, the answers to which will be posted on Sunday.

60s. After leaving Blackpool, he played for Preston, Wrexham, Bradford Park Avenue and Morecambe – when asked whether he felt bitter about only winning a single international cap, he replied “No, I thought I might have been given another chance. But I was not surprised when I was dropped. I just could not get into the match. I think four of the five forwards were making their first, and last, appearances.”. Who is he?

70s. Born in Blackpool, this winger featured pretty regularly for them over a three year period without really establishing himself and so it wasn’t too surprising to see him loaned out to another Lancastrian outfit beginning with the letter B. Eventually released by the Tangerines, he joined another coastal side with sandy beaches close by. Moving on after a couple of seasons he turned up another side on the coast not too far away, but this one had mud flats, as opposed to tourist trap beaches, close by! Here he prospered to the extent that he has been inducted into the club’s Hall of Fame as he was a regular in one of the best teams in the their history. He was loaned out to a landlocked town sixty miles along the motorway towards the end of his career, but can you name him?

80s. Hating law at the start of the Regency, but eventually turning up in Cardiff for a short while. (4,6)

90s. Operator from Cumbria by the sound of it!

00s. Ghost’s aural meeting with the family of former Tory Minister perhaps!

10s. He played for us in the Premier League and was the subject of something of a dispute between City and Blackpool during the following season, who is he?

00s. A meeting between the title character of an old musical and the title character of an ancient medical drama maybe!

Answers

60s. Ray Charnley scored 193 goals in his 368 league games for Blackpool between 1957 and 1967. He only appearance for England was in 1962 against France in a match played at Hillsborough.

70s. Kevin Moore spent time on loan at Bury during his time with Blackpool before moving to Swansea and then Newport where he was a member of the team which won promotion from the old Division Four, challenged at the top of Division Three and reached a European Cup Winners Cup Quarter Final – he also had a brief spell on loan at Swindon before leaving the game in 1983.

80s. Alan Wright.

90s. Clarke Carlisle.

00s. Kaspars Gorkss.

10s. Joe Lewis played just one league match for us in the Premier League at Hull in September 2013. Loaned to Blackpool for the 14/15 season, he was their regular goalkeeper until he was omitted in January for reasons which were, at first, said to be tactical, but eventually emerged as financial. Blackpool would have had to pay City a fee of £40,000, which would have been the fee for a permanent deal the following summer, if he had played one more game. Blackpool tried to terminate the loan, City refused and Lewis eventually returned to us with no permanent transfer completed.

20s. Oliver (Ben) Casey.



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