Seven decades of Cardiff City v West Bromwich Albion matches.

City take on the side I’ve often seen described, particularly pre season, as the Championship’s most talented when West Brom come to Cardiff City Stadium tomorrow evening. The Baggies have had a strange season, they were definite relegation candidates throughout the autumn, turned things around under a new manager to the extent that they were considered top six certs in January, but, while they remain formidable at home, they’ve lost their last five away games in all competitions and so have now dropped outside the Play Off places.

Despite, their travails on their travels, I would have had this down as a banker away win a month ago, but two successive home victories for City in games where we’ve played well mean I have a bit more optimism. Causes for pessimism include the fact that Cedric Kipre, despite his error which played a part in Preston’s first goal on Saturday, will be a big miss as the terms of his loan stipulate that he cannot play against his parent club, but we will have Ryan Allsop back in goal following his one game suspension just as his deputy Jac Alnwick begins what I assume will be a three match ban for his red card on the weekend.

Here’s the usual quiz about upcoming opponents with the answers to be posted on here on Wednesday morning.

60s. With a surname you’d associate more with another sport, this midfielder’s career appeared to be going nowhere when he only made nine league appearances for both of his first two clubs. He started off with West Brom and, as it turned out, two of the nine appearances he made for them were against City. A move east to lower division metal workers wasn’t a success and it was only when he moved to the big city to the south that he began to prosper. He was a regular in a team which began just trying to hold on to their Second Division status, but when he left them after four years in which he’d been a regular selection, they were on the brink of promotion. He then spent two years with a club that went up and then were chasing a second promotion, but this time, they didn’t make it and he left for Football League new boys where he found it hard to establish himself during his three years with them. His final club were non leaguers who gave a game (two actually) to George Best and also included a genuine West Brom legend in their ranks for a season, but who is the player I’m describing?

70s. Starting off as an eccentric arty type, this defender then wore hoops to good effect, shining in European competition and then when his team represented an American city as “guests”. His form earned him a move to a team of veterans where he played quite often without ever being able to make the transition to first team regular. He next made a short journey to a club where his finest moment probably came as an unlikely scoring hero in a very famous win over, falling, giants. West Brom were his next club and he played more matches for them than anyone else in a stay of four years. His career moved into a third decade with a return to wearing hoops and there was then a brief spell with Tribesmen to finish. Internationally, he made it to exactly fifty caps, but can you name him?

80s. Mid February specialist on the wing?

90s. Drab nerd arrives early! (6.7)

00s. During 2004, West Brom had eight players on their books who had played for or would play for City, name them.

10s. What links the ruler of the Squamata, one of Gareth Bale’s finest nights in a Wales shirt and a West Brom midfielder from this decade?

20s. Name the current West Brom player who has fifty plus caps for his country, has also played international Futsal, and has sixteen winners’ medals from his time with a previous club

Answers

60s. Jack Bannister played for West Brom against City in Division One in 60/61 and 61/62, but moved on to Scunthorpe having failed to establish himself at the Hawthorns. After again finding it hard to break into the first team, Bannister signed for Crystal Palace and by the time he left them in 1969, they were on their way to the First Division. Bannister was a regular in Luton’s 69/70 Third Division promotion team and they were strong challengers to go up again the following season. Moving on to Cambridge United, Bannister was only a bit part player over the next three seasons and finished his playing days with Barry Fry’s Dunstable who had Jeff Astle leading their attack for a season in the early seventies.

70s. Paddy Mulligan began his career with Bohemians and then Shamrock Rovers who represented Boston USA with teams called the Rovers and, latterly, the Beacons. Mulligan moved to London and the First Division when he signed for Chelsea and then Crystal Palace. He only scored twice for Palace and both of them came in a famous 5-0 win over Manchester United in 1972. Mulligan joined his international team mate Johnny Giles at West Brom and played over a hundred times for them in a four year stay before returning to Ireland to play for Shamrock Rovers, again, and Galway United.

80s. Carl Valentine.

90s.  Darren Bradley.

00s. Jason Koumas, Riccardo Scimeca, Darren Purse, James Chambers, Robert Earnshaw, Junichi Inamoto, Kevin Campbell and Keiran Richardson.

10s. James (Jim) Morrison was the singer with the American band The Doors. Morrison had the nickname the Lizard King (Squamata is the order of reptiles which includes lizards). James Morrison played in midfield for West Brom between 2007 and 2019 and scored three times in forty six appearances for Scotland. One of Morrison’s international goals came at Cardiff City Stadium in October 2012 when he put Scotland one up in a World Cup qualifying game, but Gareth Bale scored two second half goals to turn the game around – the one which sealed Wales’ 2-1 win was a screamer from twenty five yards with two minutes left.

20s.Australian midfielder Tom Rogic won six SPL title winners’ medals, five Scottish Cup winners’ medals and five Scottish League Cup winners’ medals during his time with Celtic.

.

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

Cardiff City goalkeeper sent off again as concerning away pattern is followed once more.

Sabri Lamouchi has, rightly, won a lot of praise since his appointment as Cardiff City manager. He has shown himself to be astute tactically, has made some good substitutions that have influenced the outcome of matches and, most importantly, we have been able to win a few games when it was becoming absolutely imperative that we start doing so.

However, today’s 2-0 loss at Deepdale to a mid table Preston side with a wretched home record was a poor day for Lamouchi in my opinion – it was a match which followed what is becoming too familiar a pattern away from home and, frankly, I found his use, and non use, of substitutes bemusing.

2-0 flattered Preston as their second goal came after the ninety minute mark moments after we’d had our goalkeeper sent off for a second successive game, but I thought they were worth their win as City got increasingly careless as the game went on – i also thought we struggled to cope with the home team’s physicality.

In fact, I found myself feeling like I imagine supporters of teams who came off second best to some of our most physical sides of recent years must have felt – it seemed that we had the more talented players, but we ended up getting bullied. That’s not to say that Preston were just all about size and power, but they were generally a bigger team than us and they had an urgency about their work off the ball which we never really coped with.

Preston were nothing special when in possession mind and when some football broke out in what was a typically tight Championship encouner, it tended to coincide with our best spells of the game.

However, Birmingham apart, there’s a disturbing pattern emerging with our away league matches in 2023.

This was our sixth Championship away fixture of the year and five of them have had a depressingly familiar feel to them. At Blackburn, Luton Hull, Norwich and now Preston, we’ve been well in the game for long periods – Norwich was slightly different in that we conceded in the first half, rather than the second, but, even there, we had a twenty to twenty five minute spell where we completely dominated while the game was goalless. However, in none of the five games were we able to cash in with a goal at a time when the game could have gone either way.

At Blackburn, Hull and today we got to around the hour mark with the game goalless, but then conceded – in the first two of those matches, the one goal proved decisive, whereas today our opponents scored a meaningless second very late on. At Luton the goal came just before the ninety minute mark, but a common theme is, just as it was at Norwich, that we barely looked like scoring once we went behind in any of the matches – we’ve only conceded seven goals in our half a dozen away league in 2023, but the only two we’ve scored came in the only game where we avoided defeat, Birmingham.

Lamouchi made four changes to the side which beat Bristol City last weekend, Callum O’Dowda returned in what looked like a back four most of the time, but there were occasions in the first half where we were sticking with the back three plus wing backs – it was definitely a four in the second half though, as Jaden Philogene had much more of a license to wander, he definitely wasn’t playing as a wing back.

At least one of the other three changes was enforced and I suspect all three of them were in reality. As expected, Jac Alnwick made a league debut in goal in place of the suspended Ryan Allsop, but the absence of Joe Ralls and Connor Wickham was a surprise, particularly as, prior to the game, Sabri Lamouchi had said everybody was fit and available apart from hamstring victim Callum Robinson.

With three matches in the upcoming week, I suppose there’s a chance that there was some squad rotation going on, but, surely, both players would have been named among the substitutes if they were available? It seems to me that Ralls and Wickham were either ill or left out as a precaution against making some minor injury worse – otherwise, their absence from the eighteen makes little sense.

The game took a long time to come alive following a long injury delay after Preston goalkeeper Freddie Woodman received a bad cut to his face in a collision with Wickham’s replacement, Kion Etete as the striker looked to benefit from a clever pass from the in form Philogene from the only time he really got on the ball in the first half an hour or so.

Woodman, who has only conceded that derby winning goal by Aden Flint in what seems to me  like fifteen games against us, but is probably about six in reality, just got to the ball before Etete and got a knee to the head for his pains. As a result, the keeper bled from his eye for the rest of the opening forty five minutes without, it seems, any of the officials noticing, but City, who have not scored an away first half goal since Ryan Wintle’s at Stoke three months ago, ensured that the stricken keeper had a quiet time of it.

Etete, who, for me, played his best half of football for us in the opening forty five minutes, had Woodman scrambling with a twenty yarder which flew no more than a foot wide, but generally it was grim stuff which had the commentator on the stream I watched frequently groaning at what he was watching (I suppose it says something about the season we’re having that I was thinking that it was all pretty typical fare from us!).

For their part, Preston tested Alnwick with a couple of i corners into a heavily populated six yard area early on that he dealt with unconvincingly with weak punches that weren’t punished. Apart from that, there was a first sign of the carelessness which would increasingly become part of our performance as Preston were able to play a short corner which ended up with Troy Parrott drifting his shot across goal not far wide and centreback Bambo Diaby was a lot closer with a jabbed shot from around ten yards out just before the interval.

Alnwick had settled by now and he came to his side’s rescue as the hosts looked to step things up following an insipid first forty five minutes, but, in truth, the keeper shouldn’t really have been able to make his diving save because striker Tom Cannon should have buried the chance after he had cut inside Cedric Kipre.

City had begun the second half sloppily, but that escape prompted their best period of the game as Preston this time fell asleep to allow a short corner routine which ended with Philogene putting his shot from the edge of the penalty area about eighteen inches over. Woodman, who must love playing against us, then foiled Perry Ng with a diving save from his free kick from twenty five yards, but his best save came a few minutes later as Sory Kaba, who looked offside in the build up, let fly with a fine volley from twenty yards which drew a brilliant diving save from the keeper who had now started bleeding again.

Kaba had generally had a frustrating time of it as he suffered in comparison to his partner Etete, but this shot was another example of his ability to come up with quality efforts on goal which makes him a hard player to overlook when it comes to team selection – especially in this low scoring team.

However, the loanee was replaced almost straight after by Sheyi Ojo who had been left out of the starting line up for Andy Rinomhota. Unfortunately though, little or nothing was seen of Ojo as City lost their way – although the sub had nothing to do with the concession of a poor goal within four minutes of his introduction.

Philogene, so good last week, was involved in most of City’s best attacking moments, but still seemed on the edge of things here as he found it hard at times to counter Preston’s physicality and a spell of home pressure that would eventually result in the opening goal began with him weakly conceding possession. “Weak” was a word that could be applied to Kipre as well as he missed an attempted interception and was brushed aside by Cannon who gave Alnwick no chance from twelve yards.

Lamouchi reacted by withdrawing Rinomhota and giving Mark Harris some game time after a month or so out of first team contention, but that was the extent of the changes, despite the fact that Etete was less effective as his first half exertions appeared to be catching up with him, Ojo was not making an impact and a shot from Philogene which was blocked for a corner by a combination of Woodman and a defender apart, we were doing nothing to suggest an equaliser was coming.

At his Friday press conference City’s manager spoke of his love for Isaak Davies and Rubin Colwill. Well, given his reluctance to bring them on as his team were slipping to defeat, I can only assume that his love is like that of a father who doesn’t want his boys to play in men’s football for fear of them getting hurt – seriously, I found Lamouchi’s non use of further substitutes very odd.

Preston’s Bradley Potts missed from close range as City struggled to deal with a wickedly flighted free kick as Alnwick opted to remain on his line and this was the signal for a very tough last few minutes for City’s keeper who may have suspected that he had become the victim of a Crewe conspiracy!

First of all, Ryan Wintle blasted a pass back to Alnwick from the half way line which gave him no chance of preventing a corner and then, as the game went into added time, Ng played him a sliced, looping hospital back pass which Cannon latched on to only to be taken out by Alnwick for an obvious red card offence.

This finally prompted Lamouchi into a third substitution as third choice keeper Rohan Luthra came on. Luthra’s introduction into first team football was an unhappy one as he did well to parry Robbie Brady’s shot from the resultant free kick, but the ball was knocked back into play rather than to the side and away from danger, so another sub, Ched Evans, was left with the simple task of firing in from the edge of the six yard box.

Again, I could see little sense in the choice of Harris being the man to make way for Luthra. As it turned out, City were 2-0 down within seconds and the game was beyond them anyway, but if the free kick had been dealt with, we’d have been a goal down with about three minutes to play and we were withdrawing a forward!

City’s under 18s had a 5-0 win over Sheffield Wednesday in midweek Wednesday courtesy of a hat trick from Trey George and a couple of goals from Troy Perrett and they continued their free scoring ways today at Bristol City, although they’ll be disappointed that they had to settle for a draw after being a couple of goals up. Bristol scored first, but Tanatswa Nyakuwha had us level by half time and goals by Japhet Matondo and Cody Twose looked to have won the game only for the home team to fight back in the last quarter.

 No game for Treherbert Boys and Girls Club in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance First Division today, but, in the Premier Division, Ton Pentre drew 2-2 at runaway leaders Cardiff Corries (it was the first time that Corries had dropped points at home all season) and AFC Porth were beaten 3-0 at home by Porthcawl Town Athletic.

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 | 1 Comment