Seven decades of Cardiff City v Hull City matches.

Cardiff City head to Hull today on their worst run and in their worst form of the season to face a side which has done the double over them in each of the past two seasons. Hull were in their own poor run (two straight defeats) until they came from behind to win at Middlesbrough on Wednesday to maintain a position close to the top six somewhat similar to ours, but I get the feeling that Hull’s Play Off hopes are more realistic than ours.

Will our poor results and poorer displays convince Erol Bulut that changes, both in personnel and formation, are needed tomorrow? I doubt it and one position where I hope he sticks with what he picked on Wednesday is at right back after Perry Ng was substituted just a quarter of n hour into the game. Ng has, arguably, been our Player of the season so far, but my concern is more to do with Bulut’s post match comment that the ex Crewe man was not able to see properly when he came off – presumably, the situation will be clarified at our manager’s pre match press conference today.

Hull’s home record isn’t that good, so you’d like to think that we could get ourselves a point to stop the rot, but it would have to be in a 0-0 or 1-1 because the evidence of the last few games when we’ve been up against eleven men is that we don’t have the firepower or creativity to score twice or more.

Anyway, here’s seven Hull related questions dating back to he sixties for you, with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. Old enough to be called an inside forward, Hull was this Cheshire born player’s second club. His biggest moment at his first club came when he scored twice after deputising for a club legend to set up a bigger game for the team in which the legend took his place and got the goals that won the game and a trophy. A year later, our man signed for Hull, but, despite a goal against the City, he was unable to get a regular place in the starting line up in his two years at Boothferry Park. His next move took him west to what is very much the third club in the city in question and, over the next three years, his goals came at a healthy rate as he played more than a hundred league matches while finding the net nearly forty times. After that, he became a non league Latic for a while, but who am I describing?

70s. Who was the Hull player who was sent off in a game against City during this decade after a frank exchange of views with Don Murray which also saw him being given an early bath?

80s. His first three clubs were Retford Town, Bridlington Trinity and Mexborough Town and his last three South China, Voicelink and Frickley Athletic. In between times, he played for seventeen other clubs (eleven of them in the Football League), but there’s no doubting that it was at Hull that he made the biggest impact. Retirement has seen him, among other things, training Greyhounds, running various South Yorkshire pubs and receiving a suspended sentence for benefit fraud. Who am I describing?

90s. Striker ordered to guard Lyn. (4,4,)

00s. Weather beaten decline of a survivor from the Hull stubs match by the sound of it?

10s. He started his career with the Boss of the Peasants and then turned out for the Master of the Petroleum clubs before arriving in the country where he played most of his football – he won ninety two caps for his country and played most games for Hull City. Currently, he’s working in the commercial department of his last club before retiring, but can you name him?

20s. Owner of vibrant garment passes it to family member and laments perhaps?

Answers

60s.Ralph Gubbins became a Bolton Wanderers hero in 1958 when he deputized for Nat Lofthouse in an FA Cup Semi Final and scored the two goals which sent his team to a Wembley Final against Manchester United. The fit again Lofthouse replaced Gubbins for this game and got the goals to secure a 2-0 win and Gubbins moved on to Hull a year later – among his ten league goals for the Tigers was one in a 3-2 defeat at Ninian Park as City closed in on their promotion in 59/60. Gubbins scored most goals for Tranmere though during a stay which ended in 1964 with a season at Wigan Athletic.

70s.Jimmy McGill (Hull’s club record buy at the time) was sent off with Don Murray in the thirty fourth minute of a game at Ninian Park in September 1973. Ken Wagstaffe’s goal had Hull 1-0 up at the time, but Gary Bell soon equalized with his headed penalty, only for two Malcolm Lord goals in the second half to secure a 3-1 win for the visitors.

80s.Notorious football hard man Billy Whitehurst scored forty seven goals in his one hundred and ninety league appearances for Hull, next best after that for goals for him was Reading with eight and for appearances, it was Oxford United with forty.

90s. Gary Lund.

00s. Wayne Brown played in the Hull stubs match on 12/3/08 – keeping the stub for your ticket for this game was a way of ensuring City fans could get a ticket for the forthcoming FA Cup Semi Final with Barnsley.

10s. Ahmed Elmohamady won ninety two caps for Egypt. His first two clubs Ghazi El Mahalla and ENPPI were from that country and it was from the latter that he was sold to Sunderland in 2010. Elmohamady was initially on loan with Hull for their 2012/13 promotion season and then signed permanently for them a few months later before signing for Aston Villa, his final club, in 2017.

20s. Jacob Greaves.

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Coming soon to a football ground near you, Cardiff City, the team which cannot be creative.

I’d say Cardiff City played marginally better in losing 1-0 to Birmingham at home tonight than they did in beating Millwall by the same score on Saturday, but whether you disagree with me or not there, the simple truth is that if you throw in the home game before that against West Brom, we’ve played not far short of three hundred minutes and I’m struggling to remember a single chance we’ve created in open play.

We’ve now lost three home matches out of four and I’d say that we’ve played seven consecutive very mediocre halves of football on our own ground now since we scored twice just before half time to go in at the interval 2-1 up against Norwich. Unfortunately, having coped pretty well without Aaron Ramsey for a couple months, the last six weeks or so have really illustrated the lack of creativity and ability to deliver an effective final ball in our ranks – our set piece strength is all that we have to fall back on now it would seem when it comes to sticking the ball in the net.

Joe Ralls was missing tonight with what was described as a minor injury and I suppose he may have been able to pick out a pass or two which might have given Birmingham the odd problem, , without him though, we only had one player who drove us forward in the middle of the park and passed the ball with any cleverness.

Rubin Colwill made his first league start of the season tonight and I think the fact that Erol Bulut kept him on for the whole ninety five minutes tells the story that the player he has been critical of at times this season was the one he felt he could trust most tonight.

The problem is that, although Colwill. was my choice for City man of the match, his performance didn’t merit more than, say, a six or seven out of ten, yet I’d say that was two marks higher than any of the others in midfield and attack.

Actually, that’s probably a little unfair on Kion Etete, who was given a start and didn’t do badly until   he was, surprisingly, withdrawn around the hour mark and Yakou Meite who was selected on the right wing and, in his Boris Johnson shopping trolley way, gave visiting left back Lee Buchanan some awkward moments.

The central point remains though, City are just not creating anything. Even last season with all of those games we did not score in, there was usually the odd chance created where we could show that our finishing was crap, but, lately there’s been nothing – when’s the last time a City forward missed a sitter?

Etete put a  pretty good opportunity over the bar within seconds of him coming on against Millwall, but it wasn’t what I’d call a great chance – the last one I can remember is Karlan Grant in a one on one with the Norwich keeper over a month ago.

Just as on Saturday, City made basic ball control and the ability to deliver simple and effective passes look beyond them for much of the time and this time they could not use the weather conditions as an excuse for the inadequacies that marked them down as well below Championship standard when it came to the technical side of the game.

Let’s remember that tonight we were up against the team with the worst record in the Championship in the period since Wayne Rooney was appointed Birmingham manager and a team that had lost their previous eight away games. Yet, by the end, I don’t think you could deny that the visitors deserved their win even if their goal had an element of luck to it.

Referee Steve Martin had not had a bad first half really, but what happened in the time after the two minutes extra that had been shown by the fourth official rather blotted his copybook – City were attacking near the Birmingham corner flag when Etete went down under a challenge by ex City loanee Dion Sanderson and knocked his team mate Colwill over in the act of falling.

That would not have been a problem if we’d been given the free kick that most were expecting, but when the whistle didn’t come, we were left with two men out of the game as Birmingham went the length of the pitch at hardly what I’d call breakneck speed to find Juninho Bacuna who clipped the ball over an unconvincing Alex Runnarson challenge and walked it into the net with more than a minute extra having been played over the signalled two when there had been nothing that had happened to justify the addition of that extra sixty seconds.

To be honest, I’m not convinced Etete was fouled, but I don’t get why the ref didn’t blow the whistle for half time somewhere between that incident and the goal – it was hardly as if play switched from one end to the other that quickly.

After that, the ref and the linesman on the Ninian Stand side of the ground earned the wrath of the home crowd, for making most of the marginal calls in favour of the visitors. That said, it seemed to me that often the City player involved was looking for the free kick because that would give us a dead ball situation from which a goal was far more likely to come compared to anything they tried to do themselves.

When you think of all of the attacking players we brought in during the summer and the emergence of someone like Ollie Tanner, it’s rather depressing that we’re now going through a phase where we’re beginning to look even more toothless than we were last season.

If you discount Aaron Ramsey for now, I make it that we have five new attacking players this season plus the three or four who were here last year, yet we look incapable of coming up with anything from open play.

Any attacking threat tonight came from set pieces, apart from when visiting keeper John Ruddy got in a bit of a mess with a ballooned cross by Mahlon Romeo, who replaced Perry Ng after a quarter of an hour, and almost presented Etete with a tap in. Dimitrios Goutas forced Ruddy into his best save of the night with a header from a Ryan Wintle free kick and then was not far away from reaching Wintle’s subsequent corner as Mark McGuinness tried, but failed, to turn the ball in at the far post.

Forty five minutes of thud and blunder second half attacking only produced a free kick on the edge of the penalty area gained by another sub, Josh Bowler just as the signalled added five minutes was up – Colwill got his shot from the free kick on target, but Ruddy was able to make what was a pretty simple diving save and that was that.

Up the other end, Runnarson had to make a couple of decent saves in the first half and then was the busier keeper in the second period as the visitors created and wasted the chances to make the game safe – although the truth was that as long as they stayed vigilant when defending set pieces, the game was already won at 1-0.

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