Debut goal for Nathan Broadhead earns depleted Wales a magnificent, and unlikely, draw in Croatia.

Before tonight, Croatia had never lost a home European Championship qualifier in their history. They still haven’t, but Wales became only the second team to have returned from the country which has finished second and third in the last two World Cups without losing after their totally unexpected 1-1 draw in Split tonight (edit, the stat about Croatia having only failed to win once in a home Euros qualifier is wrong. It was reported on the BBC and in the national press, but it’s wrong, Croatia are unbeaten in home Euro’s qualifiers, but, in fact, Wales are the ninth side to avoid defeat in that country – not as brilliant a result then, but still an impressive one under the circumstances)..

Unexpected is one way of describing the match, strange would be another and no doubt the home fans in the sell out crowd would be thinking that floodlight robbery would be a term that would cover what happened to their team.

This was a game which would have ended up as a comfortable home win about eight times out of ten given how it panned out in terms of balance of play and chances. However, Wales deserve a great deal of credit for the way they hung on after conceding just before the half hour mark and their depleted team can take great heart from what has to be up there with the best away results in qualifiers of recent times.

Welsh morale took a pummeling during what was supposed to be the celebration that was the first World Cup Finals reached in sixty four years, but three flat, tired and underwhelming matches saw them depart with a single, pretty lucky, point and a feeling that it had turned out to be one tournament too far for some of the really big players who had been most responsible for what became the golden era of Welsh football.

Gareth Bale’s retirement captured all of the headlines, but Joe Allen was, in some ways, as important as the brilliant Bale, while Chris Gunter would leave a big hole in the squad, likewise  Jonny Williams, who with Gunter played their part in creating the superb spirit which was so important in the 2016 campaign especially.

All four of them are not the players that they were and Bale’s reputation alone was probably keeping him in the side by the time we faced England in our final game in Qatar, but the thought of being without him and Allen especially, was a sobering one. So, the additional absence through injury of Ben Davies and Brennan Johnson, who could be described as Wales best pair of players currently, only added to the lambs to the slaughter feel that surrounded the build up to the game.

Robert Page had spoken about a more athletic approach from his side in the days preceding the match, but when only three of the team he picked could be described as current regular first team starters for their clubs, the match sharpness required at this level has to be in short supply with the result that the hoped for athleticism wasn’t there tonight. Indeed, in the first half especially, Wales looked slower and weaker than opponents who have faced the charge that they are an aging team for two or three years now.

Back in 2016, Wales had a strong nucleus of players who were regular starters at Premier League level (plus Bale at Real Madrid) in their ranks – tonight there were none. Only Ethan Ampadu on loan at Serie A team Spezia and Joe Morrell at League One Portsmouth can confidently expect to be playing every week  for their clubs currently- Danny Ward was first choice in the Leicester side until recently and Connor Roberts starts most weeks for a Burnley side that is all but in the Premier League, but the likes of Nico Williams, Chris Mepham, Harry Wilson, Dan James and Keiffer Moore are very much bit part players these days and new captain Aaron Ramsey and Joe Rodon have been sitting games out lately at their French clubs.

Wales we’re also without a win in the eight matches which had followed the win over Ukraine in June and so a team that played with a back four and Ampadu sitting in front of the defence, Ramsey playing in a deeper role and Moore up front alone found themselves on the back foot from the start.

The ageless Luka Modric forced a decent save out of Ward within three minutes and, just over ten minutes later, the keeper made his best save of the night to deny Andrej Kramaric and as the pressure on the Welsh goal remained intense, I thought Ivan Perisic was unlucky to have a goal disallowed because of a foul as well.

It mattered little though because within about three minutes, Croatia were in front – Rodon and Williams added to the collection of incidents in which we looked weaker than our opponents and Kramaric steered a precise effort beyond the diving Ward from twenty yards.

Kramaric wasted a great chance shortly afterwards when he elected to shoot rather than feed the better placed Perisic and I feared for Wales at half time as they gave the impression that, far from showing athleticism, they were tiring.

Wales’ only response to the Croatian dominance came just before the break when young defender Jusko Gvardiol who seems to be linked with a different Premier League club every week, gave away a daft free kick some twenty two yards out that saw Wilson shoot not far over as the ref, who was something of a Homer, missed a fairly obvious deflection off one of the Croatian wall.

For a while, it looked like more of the same in the second half as Chelsea’s Mateo Kovokic powered his way forward only to shoot wastefully over, but Wales then went on to have their best ten minutes of the match as Williams shot just over and then Wilson’s best piece of play of the night set up a chance for James that he volleyed high and wide from a good position.

That was the signal for Page to remove Wilson and James as well as Ramsey and replace them with Nathan Broadhead and Wes Burns of League One side Ipswich plus Sorba Thomas, currently on loan at Blackburn from Huddersfield.

Moore made way for Millwall’s Tom Bradshaw currently in the form of his life soon after that, but the four newcomers felt like a downgrade on who they were replacing – one of them would end up having the last laugh at a very late stage though!

That missed James chance looked like being the moment Wales would end up regretting, but, with Croatia giving the impression they felt they’d already done enough to win, Roberts’ long throws were not always being dealt with that well by the home defence.

An outrageous angled volley on eighty two minutes by Perisic that came back off the crossbar could have given Croatia the second goal they deserv3d, but deep into added time, Roberts hurled one last throw in, Mepham, who I thought had a good game, glanced on a header and Broadhead timed his far post run perfectly to force the ball in from about five yards out.

There was still time for a heart in mouth moment as the ball fell to Perisic on the edge of the penalty area, but the shot flew straight at Ward and Wales had their unlikely, but so precious, point.

The other game I watched today was like a mirror image of the Croatia one in that it finished with the same scoreline, but this time it was the Welsh who ended up feeling luck was against them as their under 17 team drew 1-1 with Iceland at Dragon Park Newport in the second of their elite group qualification games for the Euros.

A 4-2 win over Scotland at Rodney Parade on Wednesday signaled a fine start for a Welsh squad which has eight City players within its ranks and, with Iceland and Montenegro playing out a goalless draw in their first game, Scotland’s 2-1 win over Montenegro at lunchtime meant that Wales only needed to beat Iceland to ensure a first ever appearance at the Finals with a game to spare.

For a long time it looked like Wales would get the win as they led through a goal midway through the first half only for the visitors to equalize early in the second period. Following that goal, a Welsh team featuring City’s fifteen year old Ronan Kpakio at right back, Dylan Lawlor at centreback, Luey Giles at left back and Cody Twose on the left wing (Troy Perrett also came on as a sub) pressed strongly to regain their lead and a bigger Iceland side were hanging on by the end – right at the death, Wales hit the crossbar for the second time in the game, but they had to settle for a point which means that all four sides can still finish in the top two (the eight group winners progress as well as the seven runners up with the best records).

Currently, the table has us on top with four points, Scotland on three, Iceland two and Montenegro one, but, with the Montenegrins knowing that it’s head to head records rather than goal difference which takes priority, they only need a win on Tuesday to overtake us. If we were to lose, then a win for either Scotland or Iceland when they meet on Tuesday would put us out of the competition. We know that we will qualify as group winners if we beat Montenegro and a draw would clinch a top two finish at least, but it’s going to be a nervy couple of hours next Tuesday before we find out whether this City dominated squad can achieve something no other Welsh under 17 side has.

In local football, Ton Pentre made it into the Semi Finals of the Loosemore Senior Cup with a penalty shoot out win at Aber Valley and in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League, AFC Porth’s search for a first league win of the season continues following their 4-0 home loss to a Canton Liberals team which has the best chance of overhauling top of the league Cardiff Corries.  In the First division, it was a good day for Treherbert Boys and Girls Club who edged to a 2-1 win at bottom of the table Grange Albion, while their closest challengers for the title, Caerphilly Athletic were being held 3-3 at home by mid table AFC Penrhiwceiber.

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.

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Freak downpour robs dominant Cardiff City as Rotherham’s groundstaff “go through the motions”.

Fifty-five years, four months and fourteen days, I make it that’s how long ago it is since Cardiff City had a match abandoned before today’s vital relegation battle at Rotherham’s New York Stadium fell victim to a downpour that lasted something like twenty minutes starting from around the time the first half ended.

On 4 November 1967, the game at Ninian Park against Millwall was abandoned because the pitch had become waterlogged after around half an hour had been played with the game still goalless. I’d just assumed that this would be the one and only time in my City supporting life that we’d have a match abandoned, as opposed to postponed, but I was wrong.

What makes the whole thing so frustrating is that City played well to be leading 1-0 at half time in a game played in dry, calm conditions which gave no clue as to what was coming. Indeed, when the stream I was watching came online again for the second half, the first picture I saw was a misty and murky landscape shot of the area outside the ground and I just assumed they were showing some other game as a mistake. However, the scene then changed to a shot from inside the ground which showed that there clearly had been a spectacular opening of the heavens during the interval and the rain was still absolutely hammering down.

Before going on to examine why this has the potential to become a controversy which could,  conceivably, end up in the courts if City were to be relegated by a margin of three points or less, I should say that the pitch was obviously unfit for play when referee Oliver Langford started the second half. For reasons best known to himself, he let play go on for about ninety seconds, spoke to both captains and, then, bafflingly, played on for another thirty seconds or so before leading the teams off the pitch, never to return!

After another few minutes, the rain eased and then stopped and Langford then came out again to look at the pitch, decided to have another look with both managers about a quarter of an hour later, rolled a ball about a bit and tried to bounce it, before walking off with a frustrated looking Sabri Lamouchi giving the biggest clue as to what the ref’s decision was going to be. For some reason, there was then a further delay of about five minutes until, accompanied by cheers from the home fans, it was announced the game was off.

That’s the bare bones of the story, but there are further considerations here. After the abandonment, Rotherham announced that there would be an EFL investigation into the circumstances behind the calling off of the game – this should not just turn out to be the whitewash it almost certainly will be.

Here are things that I know occurred because I saw them on the stream I watched and there are videos on Twitter confirming it.

  1. No more than four members of Rotherham’s staff were out on the pitch using a mixture of forks, brushes and squeegees trying to clear the pitch.
  2. Their efforts could be described, diplomatically, as half-hearted.
  3. One of the staff was pushing water back on to the pitch from the sidelines with his squeegee!

Furthermore, it’s been confirmed, with Twitter videos to back it up, that the sprinklers were turned on during the half time interval when it was emptying down! The end City were to be attacking in the second half appeared to be worst affected by the rain and the video posted on Twitter appears to show that it was the sprinkler at that end of the pitch which was turned on – although it’s hard to be 100 per cent sure of that this is correct, because the stands at both ends of the ground are virtually identical – either way, having a sprinkler operating on any part of the pitch during a downpour is, obviously, ludicrous.

It’s also been claimed on Rob Phillips’ phone in that Sabri Lamouchi was ordered by the EFL not to comment on the matter after the game (City’s website has put out a very short statement saying, incorrectly, that the game was postponed which ends with the cryptic remark that “Further details will follow in due course.”).

Meanwhile Rotherham manager Matt Taylor has had plenty to say as he defended his club against justified claims that the ground staff were hardly busting a gut to get the game played – Taylor also claims that the pitch was unsafe.

There have been criticisms of the drainage at Rotherham’s ground online, but I’m not convinced by such arguments. The New York Stadium opened in 2012 and, apart from one season (2014/15?), I don’t recall Rotherham ever building up a backlog of home games because of postponements and/or abandonments – the issue for me is that Rotherham could do nothing about the rain or the sheer volume of it that came down, but could they have worked harder to get the water off the pitch once the rain stopped?

As to what happens now, there are contradictory precedents out there as to what happens when it comes to replaying, or not, an abandoned match with the name of that great Scottish forward Dennis Law writ large in them.

First though, I should say that the abandoned City v Millwall match in 1967 was replayed in full about five weeks later and finished in a 2-2 draw. That was a simple, non controversial decision considering that the original game was scoreless when the decision to call it off was made, but imagine how Dennis Law and Manchester City must have felt in 1961 when their Fourth Round FA Cup tie at Luton was abandoned with them 6-2 up with Law having scored them all? Law found the net again in the replayed game, but it was Luton who progressed with a 3-1 win!

On the other hand, when Law, again playing for Manchester City, scored the goal at Old Trafford which relegated Manchester United in 1974 and home fans invaded the pitch forcing the game to be abandoned, the authorities decided that there was no need for a replay because there was only a few minutes left in the game. Similarly, when Blackpool fans protesting against the club owner forced an abandonment of their final game of the season in 2015, the match was not replayed (Blackpool were already relegated) and it was deemed to be a 0-0 draw.

Another instance of the authorities not bothering to replay a game was the notorious “Battle of Bramall Lane” in 2002 when Neil Warnock’s Sheffield United, down to eight men following three sending offs and with a couple of players not fit enough to continue, saw their game with West Brom abandoned with the Baggies 3-0 up. The rules state a game should be abandoned if a team only has seven players, or less and, at the time, there was speculation that Warnock deliberately tried to get the game called off – as it was, West Brom were awarded a 3-0 win and the game was never replayed.

I’ve been trying to find examples of games that have only been replayed for the period left in the match when it was abandoned with the score set at what it was when called off – this has happened in the past, but I couldn’t find an example of it.

If Rotherham were deemed to be guilty of trying to get the game abandoned, then you’d like to think we’d be awarded the points (I’d guess a legal challenge would follow from them if they then ended up going down on goal difference), but, realistically, that’s not going to happen and I think a forty two minute game starting with us 1-0 up is wishful thinking as well.

Matt Taylor has already decided that the game is going to start from scratch on some Tuesday night in April and I’m pretty sure he’s right in that opinion.

One final observation from me, being old enough to remember that abandoned game from the sixties means that I can recall things like Derby County winning the league title twice in the early to mid seventies despite having to play their home games on a quagmire of a pitch at the Baseball Ground. Although there was a part of the pitch yesterday which would have proved problematical when it came to taking corners, I’m positive that I saw TV highlights of Derby playing games at the Baseball Ground in worse conditions than those at Rotherham when the decision to call the game off was taken – Derby would never have been able to complete their fixtures every season if modern day criteria were applied as to whether the pitch was fit to play or not.

Similarly, I can recall the 71/72 season when some expensive, by the standards of the time, work during the summer to improve the Ninian Park pitch went wrong and so City ended up playing about three quarters of the season on a pitch that seemed to alternate between a mudheap or a desert such was the amount of sand which had to be dumped on it. There was one particular game against Sunderland during that season where I’m sure the pitch was in a worse state than Rotherham’s was yesterday when the game was called off. I can also remember games down the years played at Ninian Park where there were large puddles in the Grange End goalmouth (a game against Bury as recently as 2002 being a case in point) and yet all of them were completed. Unfortunately, the will did not seem to be there from Rotherham to get the match completed and this begs the obvious question of would we have seen a different attitude from them if they were 1-0 up, as opposed to 1-0 down?

As for the football that was played, it only adds to the frustration that we were playing as well as we have done in an away game in months and were worth more than a 1-0 lead.

The goal arrived as early as the fourth minute when Callum O’Dowda led a counter attack which saw the ball worked out to Mahlon Romeo whose deep cross was nodded back by fellow wing back O’Dowda into the path of Jaden Philogene who calmly side footed into an empty net from eight yards.

City remained in control without taking advantage of some promising counter attacking opportunities, but in the five minutes before half time they could have added to their lead on a couple of occasions. Firstly, Perry Ng’s free kick from twenty yards bounced off the crossbar and over and then when Sory Kaba did well to play sub Sheyi Ojo through. Ojo, on for Kion Etete who was having another fine match before being forced off with what hopefully is not a hamstring strain, saw his shot saved by Victor Johansson – Ojo should have scored, but the opportunity arrived no more than a minute or two after he came on and so he was hardly up to match speed.

Elsewhere, the bad news is that ex City man Danny Ward scored to give Huddersfield an unlikely 1-0 win at top six candidates Millwall and Wigan came from one down to get a good point at Watford. Birmingham look safe now after a win at QPR, but the home side are still really struggling. The best result for City came at Bloomfield Road where Blackpool were unable to build on their huge midweek win as they were thumped 4-1 by Coventry.

Mixed news at Under 18 and 21 levels. The Academy side were beaten 2-1 at Leckwith by Crewe with Cole Fleming getting the goal. Meanwhile, the under 21s followed up their 4-1 loss at Ipswich last Tuesday by beating the same opponents on Friday in an incident packed game at Leckwith.

A great free kick by Joel Bagan and then a good finish by Cameron Antwi sixty seconds later had us two up with just over twenty minutes played, only for Aiden MacNamara to be promptly shown a straight red card for a foul as last man. City were able to get to around the hour mark with their two goal lead intact, but a scruffy scrambled goal had the visitors back in it with half an hour to go..

City survived a few scares and there were a couple of fine saves by keeper Joe Thomas as Ipswich piled on the pressure, but then we broke well to enable substitute Cian Ashford to put us 3-1 up. A header from a corner got Ipswich back into it within a minute, but Ashford made sure of the win with a second goal in the closing minutes.

In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division, Merthyr Saints won the battle at the foot of the table by coming out on top by the odd goal in seven at AFC Porth leaving the home team rooted to the bottom of the table with little or no hope of avoiding the drop now. In the First Division, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club edged out lowly AFC Whitchurch 3-2 at home to maintain their lead over the chasing pack.

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 Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids., The stiffs | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments