Groundhog Day is for wimps, you should try watching Cardiff play at home!

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Well, all of the late additions in the January transfer window and the returning Aaron Ramsey have made no difference, we’re still not just bad at home – we’re pathetic.

 Our early exit from the FA Cup meant that we did not have a chance to break up a schedule which had us not playing at home for four weeks, but, in a way, that was no bad thing because it gave the chance for the horror show that was Cardiff 0 Leeds 3 to fade from memories, while last week’s good win at Watford offered the hope that the feelgood factor that victory generated could spill over into the home game which followed.

Of course, if you are a cynic (I’m afraid I’m definitely one now when it comes to City playing at home) or, as I would argue, a realist, then you would remember that no end of good away wins have been followed within the next eight days by a turgid home defeat.

In fact, it’s happened so often over the past three and a half years that you know that no matter how much the personnel changes on or off the pitch, we are a lot more likely to lose than we are to win when we have what most other clubs regard as the advantage of playing at home.

I mentioned the Leeds game earlier, well, today’s 2-0 loss to Preston wasn’t as bad. Against Leeds there was a complete absence of hope that we could stem and then turn around the tide which saw play centred around our goal, but today there was hope for a while – a short while perhaps, but twenty minutes or so of “domination” is a scrag end bone to be fed on voraciously if you’re a City fan.

Before going on to the small amount I want to say about the game (this is going to be a shorter report of the actual match than normal because, as I’ve said before, it’s gets impossible to think of anything new to say about a problem that has existed for close to four seasons now), a few words about City’s starting line up.

Erol Bulut has been picking City teams and formulating match tactics for six months now and my opinion is that, like very many managers, entertainment does not figure high on his list of priorities, but I now think he is in the Jose Mourinho class when it comes to ensuring that his teams does not entertain. Bulut couldn’t have been more clear about what he expects from his players when they don’t have the ball and, although I accept that this is an important part of the game, I think it’s possible, or even probable, that he places more importance on it than he does on what they can do with the ball.

On second thoughts, that might be too harsh a judgement, but I definitely think Bulut’s tactical approach and selections are dictated by what he thinks the opposition will do. Using today as an example, Preston played with two strikers and a proper number ten in beating Ipswich last week and so, Bulut went even more defensive than usual today as, besides having his normal two sitting in front of the defence, he also instructed David Turnbull to play deeper than you’d expect him to on his home debut with the result that our striker (Kion Etete) was left even more isolated than usual and often dropped into the sort of areas that you’d expect a number ten to be filling.

So, while Preston, as the away side, went ahead with what was quite a bold approach, we got even less players into forward areas than we normally do in home games – and people wonder why we’ve only scored in two of the last seven games played at Cardiff City Stadium!

The area I’m talking about is the one Rubin Colwill has been occupying in recent games. Colwill was very influential last week at Watford and has, by general consent, been playing well lately. However, as someone who always fights the Colwill corner, I did make a point in my Watford reaction piece of saying that his performance, while very encouraging, wasn’t perfect.

Nevertheless, I think it’s fair to say that Colwill has been winning over some of his doubters recently and has been playing well on a pretty consistent basis. The question Erol Bulut was asked about Colwill in the pre game press conference on Thursday reflected that thinking, but the manager’s answer was a surprise as he once again voiced reservations about the player and came over to me at least as someone who was more intent on burying Colwill than praising him.

It came as no real surprise then to see that Colwill was back on the bench today, but what was a shock was that, with his team lacking invention and an X factor as they laboured to string two passes together once they went behind, Colwill was not introduced until the seventieth minute and was the last of the five substitutions. To my mind, he should never have been on the bench in the first place, but, having been put there, he should have been the first one to come off it, not the fifth.

Despite Bulut’s even more defensive selection and tactics though, City, playing towards the Canton Stand in the opening half for the first time in ages after Preston won the toss, made a bright start, by home game standards at least, by doing most of the attacking early on.

With Manolis Siopis dictating things and Preston looking pretty sloppy, there were even on target efforts from City early on, when in recent home games it’s often been a case of spot the shot.

However, the two shots by Etete and one by Karlan Grant were all straight at Freddie Woodman, not that well struck and were all from around twenty yards out.

Preston were toothless during this period and it really was against the run of play when Emil Riis cut in from the left in the space vacated by Perry Ng (one of several City players whose average level of performance in away games is some way above what we’re seeing from them in home matches) who had lost the ball deep in Preston territory, beat Dimitri Goutas too easily and shot home from eight yards.

The effect of that goal was dramatic as City collapsed like a house of cards and Preston were never troubled again until Goutas (having his worst game in months) had a very well struck effort from thirty yards held by Woodman deep into added time at the end of the game.

That shot represented City’s only worthwhile effort on goal in a second period which began with the introduction of an understandably rusty Aaron Ramsey and Josh Wilson-Esbrand for Ryan Wintle and Josh Bowler. The Welsh international was able to offer little to overturn Preston’s comfortable superiority and, in fact, the latter couldn’t either, but the Man City loanee was at least able to add some much needed pace to his pedestrian team.

Maybe City would have offered a bit more resistance were it not for the visitors doubling their lead five minutes before half time. The move which ended with Ben Whiteman besting Jak Alnwick from twelve yards was of a quality and slickness City never came close to matching, but the visitors’ cause was aided considerably by referee Dean Whitestone who first, bafflingly, decided to penalise Etete for some reason and then ignored a blatant two handed push on the striker by Jordan Storey which provided the possession for the visitors which led to the goal. Those decisions earned Bulut a yellow card for his protests regarding the first one and Etete one for dissent against the second one – the latter one in particular being a disgraceful decision in my opinion,

City cannot blame the ref for their defeat though, just like they cannot blame officials for the fact we’ve had more than three and a half seasons of rubbish being played on our own pitch. Although I doubt it myself, maybe today’s defeat will finally end the talk of a Play Off place – our home form since we last reached them in 2020 is just not good enough to think of such things now.

February is the time of year when selection for the Academy team begins to reflect who will be getting pro deals and who won’t. Usually around now, there’s an influx of younger players into the under 18s team and this may explain why their results have taken a turn for the worse in the last week or so, with a 5-0 defeat at Watford last weekend followed by 1-1 draw at Leckwith against Colchester this lunchtime with Jac Thomas’ equaliser coming in the ninety sixth minute.

Posted in Down in the dugout, Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , | 5 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Preston North End matches.

Another fixture against the team we’ve played more than any other in league football beckons then. The last two occasions when Preston have visited Cardiff City Stadium have seen the matches end in 0-0 draws.

Would a repeat of that outcome be seen as a good result for City? I very much doubt it, but, given our abysmal home results since 2020, a couple of draws isn’t too bad really and clean sheets are to be welcomed at any time given how few of them we’ve had on our own ground in recent years.

However, even though the transfer window newcomers and the returning Aaron Ramsey had little obvious impact on the outcome, last week’s 1-0 win at Watford has improved the mood among supporters and given that Preston, after a great start to 23/24, are having an erratic season, there will be expectations in some quarters of a home win.

Whether these are justified or not is arguable, there have been far too many examples of a Cardiff away win being followed by a home defeat in the last four years to expect that this latest one should be any different from the rest. I suppose you could say that the new signings, plus Ramsey, helped get a performance out of those who started at Watford because they saw people who could come in to replace them watching on the bench, but we’ve bought in plenty of new players in recent years without stopping the number of home defeats climbing.

For a while in the early autumn, I got confident enough to start predicting the occasional City win in a home game, but I struggle to think of many other times during this decade when I’ve felt confident we could win at Cardiff City Stadium. However, although I can think of no logical reason to justify it, I have a feeling we’re going to win on Saturday – there you are, we know who’s to blame if and when we fall to yet another defeat on our own ground this weekend!

Win, lose or draw, here’s the seven decades quiz for our next match, I’ll post the answers on Sunday.

60s. Never playing for a club outside of Lancashire, this forward’s early career was disrupted by his national service call up and when he returned to play for the home town club he began with, it was in a new position as he moved out wide. Bad luck with an injury denied him a winner’s medal at one time, but he managed to get one a few years later as he made a telling contribution to the triumph. Preston paid a decent fee for the time to sign him, but the three years he was at Deepdale saw the team stuck in a rut which would eventually culminate in relegation. Our man never got to play in the lower level for North End though as he joined what was then a non league team where he played for a season before retiring. As far as international football was concerned, I suppose it could be said that his one cap came a year too early, but who am I describing?

70s. This centre forward came to notice while scoring prolifically for Scottish Undertakers. Eventually signing for a First Division club, he did modestly over a period of two years and when he also struggled at a Yorkshire moor, he moved closer to home and it was here that he began to prove himself as one of the most consistent marksmen outside of the top flight. Before that there was another attempt to establish himself in the First Division in the midlands, which went better than the first one, but he was to experience a relegation before a move back to the club which I suppose was his spiritual home after a short lived stay in the west country did not work out, A cross country move saw him score the winning goal in one of Ninian Park’s most memorable games of the early seventies before a switch to Preston which in terms of scoring rate was perhaps his least successful – he was part of a Preston team that became unwilling holders of a City related record that lasted more than two years. His two seasons at Deepdale were ended by a move which took him close the scene of his undertaking days to play at a ground which still has a crane close by that dominates one end. A short return to England for a third, less successful spell with the club he’s most associated with followed, before he renewed acquaintance with the crane briefly – can you name this player that Wikipedia credits with two hundred and fifty career goals?

80s. What connects

“While I watch the cannons flashing
I clean my gun”

with a convoy of four vehicles which took food to Ukraine from the UK in April 2022 before returning with thirty mothers and children to be looked after in this country and Preston North End in this decade?

90s. Severed Diva somehow leads to prolific scorer! (5,6)

00s. Earliest man polished off it seems!

10s. Missing queen gives you defender who is virtually identified in ancient Ned Miller song.

20s. It doesn’t seem Aladdin was one of them, but surely one of the one Thousand and One Nights was – aurally at least!

Answers

60s.Liverpool born Derek Temple became a regular starter for Everton through the early sixties, but a cartilage operation meant that he did not play sufficient games in 1962/63 to win a First Division title medal. Three years later, Temple scored the winning goal in one of the more dramatic FA Cup Finals as Everton came back from two down to beat Sheffield Wednesday, but the following year he was sold to Preston for £35,000. Preston were relegated in 68/70 and Temple’s final move saw him sign for Wigan that summer. Temple played once for England, in a 1-0 win over West Germany in 1965

70s. Hugh McIlmoyle’s scoring record with Port Glasgow (the Undertakers) persuaded Leicester City to sign him in 1960, but when that move, and a subsequent one to Rotherham, didn’t work out, it felt like a last chance when he signed for Carlise. McIlmoyle played a full part in that club’s climb to the Second Division and, signed for Wolves where he found goals easier to come by than he did at Leicester, but was unable to stop them being relegated to the Second Division. McIlmoyle ended up back at Carlisle when a very brief move to Bristol City concluded, Two years at Middlesbrough were next for the man for whom the term nomadic striker could have been invented and it was he who scored the winning goal in “the Frank Parsons match” in which Middlesbrough came from 3-1 down to win at Ninian Park in October 1970. At his next club, McIlmoyle was part of a Preston side beaten 2-1 at Deepdale by City in October 1971 in what turned out to be our last league away win until December 1973! Returning to Scotland with Morton, there was one further spell at Carlisle for McIlmoyle before a second spell at Greenock and then retirement.

80s. The lyrics were from Galveston sung by Glen Campbell which reached number 14 in the charts in 1969. Glen Campbell was also a goalkeeper who played for Preston in the early eighties who, at the age of 57, led a convoy to Ukraine to deliver food and bring refugees back to the UK some two months after the Russian invasion.

https://www.lep.co.uk/news/ex-preston-north-end-player-in-mercy-mission-to-rescue-refugee-children-from-war-torn-ukraine-3647132

90s. David Reeves scored thirty three times in his forty seven league games for Preston.

00s. Adam Eaton.

10s. Jack King.

20s. Jordan Storey,

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