Seven decades of Cardiff City v Middlesbrough matches.

The first thing to say is that a limited number of signed copies of my latest book “Tony Evans walks on water”, which recalls City’s promotion season of 1975/76, will be on sale in the Supporters’ Trust office (near gate 5) at tomorrow’s match for the reduced price of £9 (it normally costs £11) for Trust members.

As for the match itself, I’ve no expectation whatsoever that we’ll win (or draw) and very little confidence that we’ll score, but, you never know, there have, very occasionally, been times when I felt similarly before a game and City have surprised me by digging out a win.

That first half at the Riverside back in September was as well as we’ve played all season I’d say and it’s amazing, even by Cardiff City’s standards, to think that four days later, our manager was our of a job – what would the person who sacked him give for a display half as good as that tomorrow?

Here’s the usual quiz with seven questions on Middlesbrough dating back to the sixties and I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday.

60s. This one time Middlesbrough record holder was a solid performer who could be said to have matched his surname. Starting out with five years at a dual purpose ground well to the south of Middlesbrough, he had six years at Ayresome Park before ending his playing career with a club that has always made me think of breakfast. Upon retirement at the age of thirty four he was appointed manager of his final club and his reward two years later following a close promotion miss was the sack! Who am I describing?

70s. Who knows how many times this man would have played for Middlesbrough if he had not been forced to retire at the age of twenty six with a persistent knee injury? He was originally a striker and played in that position against City at Ayresome Park during this decade, but, as far as goalscoring against us went, he had more success when playing as a full back (which also wasn’t the position he’s best known for) in a game at Ninian Park – who is he?

80s. This midfielder had a fairly nondescript career save for one remarkable fact about him. Released by old Londoners as a youngster, he made his senior bow at Middlesbrough and was a fairly regular choice during his three years at Ayresome Park in the first half of this decade, but it was at his next club, quite nearby to Boro, where he made history when he was appointed team manager at the age of just twenty four, thus becoming the youngest man ever to manage in the Football League in the process – it was only a short term appointment and he only ever managed at non league levels after that. He soon returned to playing and clocked up over three hundred Football League appearances all told as he returned to the capital to play for wandering Londoners who have settled down during the second half of their existence. After that, he represented two teams that play in what is, if a recent poll is to be believed, still the most Brexit favouring county in the UK. Can you name him?

90s. Verse evicts knee cap to end up with centreback. (5,7)

00s. Order Staggies to reposition male animal!

10s. Three past or future City players featured for a winning Middlesbrough side at Cardiff City Stadium in a game during this decade, what season was it in and name the three players involved?

20s. Almost, but not quite, Born to Boogie star!

Answers

60s. Ray Yeoman began his career at Northampton (whose old home the County Ground is still used by Northants county cricket club) and was signed by Middlesbrough in 1958. A regular in the first team, Yeoman held Middlesbrough’s record for consecutive appearances when he left in 1964 for the Quakers (porridge!) of Darlington. Yeoman became Darlington manager when he retired from playing in 1968 only to be sacked two years later.

70s. Willie Maddren played just short of three hundred league games for Middlesbrough, his only club, before having to retire at just twenty six. In September 1971, Maddren played as a centre forward in a 1-0 home win for Boro over City and, just under a year earlier, he’d been one of his team’s scorers while playing right back in a crazy 4-3 win at Ninian Park.

80s. Paul Ward played for Middlesbrough, Darlington, Leyton Orient, Scunthorpe and Lincoln City following his release by Chelsea as a youngster. But in 1987, he was appointed manager of Darlington at the age of just twenty four.

90s. Steve Vickers.

00s. Ross Turnbull – Ross County’s nickname is the Staggies.

10s. When Middlesbrough won 1-0 here in September 2014, their starting line up had Dimi Konstantopoulos in goal and Albert Adomah on the wing – Lee Tomlin came on as a sub as well.

20s. Only an absent letter “n” stops Middlesbrough full back Marc Bola sharing his name with T Rex front man Marc Bolan who starred in the 1972 film Born to Boogie which was made at the height of his fame.

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Another game, another 1-0 loss for the team that has forgotten what it’s like to score a goal.

I’ve not seen Sabri Lamouchi’s post game comments regarding today’s match at Hull, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they were fairly positive because, despite following up a 1-0 loss at Luton in his first game in charge with another single goal defeat this afternoon, he would have seen his side compete well and he might be forgiven for thinking that, with a bit more luck, he could have been looking at a couple of draws from our two games this week.

Clearly, there’s not been the hoped for new manager bounce in results, but I’d definitely say we’ve played better in our games under Lamouchi than we had been doing immediately before he came here. However, that’s where any positives begin and end as far as I’m concerned – even if Lamouchi had not seen us play before he took the job, he will, I’m sure have been aware of our goalscoring record.

Yes, I know it’s overly simplistic to say that one stat defines a team, but in Cardiff City’s case, it could be argued that they are exceptions to that rule. Actually, while one would do the job adequately enough,, to hammer home the point, I’ll use two of them which prove beyond a shadow of a doubt why it’s becoming increasingly likely that we’re going to be relegated.

The first is the straight goals to games figure which now stands at a feeble, miserable and barely believable twenty one in thirty league games, but, if anything, it’s the fact that we’ve now failed to score in exactly half of those matches that is most damning.

I’ve mentioned before that, with seventeen new players arriving in the summer transfer window, you would expect there to be an initial “bedding in” period at both ends of the pitch as new team mates got to know each other’s game. However, while that was never a problem at one end of the pitch, it started badly at the other end and has just got worse  – as evidenced by just the one goal scored in our last seven league matches.

So, while it wouldn’t be fair to say that it’s entirely negative under Lamouchi in that there’s signs he might just get it right eventually, I’m afraid that, with that one, overwhelming, reason why we are where we are, there’s little evidence that our new manager is succeeding so far.

Yes, I accept that two matches is a very small sample size, but watching us attack under Lamouchi is not much different to what it was like under Morison, Hudson and Whitehead. On second thoughts,that’s not quite true, because the return of Mark McGuinness and the arrival of Sory Kaba on loan means that we possess more of an aerial set piece threat than we’ve had all season and, with Kaba and Kion Etete on as subs for the closing stages to join McGuinness and Cedric Kipre, we had an aerial presence which, on paper at least, could match what we had in recent seasons.

Callum O’Dowda is useful aerially as well, but we’ll have to wait to see whether having four or five big lumps in the opposition penalty area will lead towards an improvement in our goalscoring, because all today did was to prove that there are two parts to the attacking set piece conundrum and merely having the height we’ve been lacking until now is only half of the story.

To put it bluntly, our set piece delivery this afternoon was abysmal. Time after time, the cross did not get beyond the first man and, then when it finally did, Ryan Wintle’s corner was so overhit, it went out for a goal kick not too far away from the opposite corner flag! Twice within a minute in the first half, short corners worked Sheyi Ojo into a position where he had the time and space to deliver a quality cross and both times, the first defender was unerringly found.

I promise this isn’t going to become a stat fest, but there is one more I heard in the week – it was claimed that we’d only scored one header all season. That’s not true, I can think of three pretty quickly – Callum Robinson’s last minute equaliser against Burnley, Cedric Kipre’s goal against Watford and Gavin Whyte got one in the home game with Hull. However, I think what the stat was referring to was headers from set pieces – I’m pretty sure that goal by Kipre is the only one we’ve managed.

Struggling sides get themselves into vicious circles and I think we’re seeing an example of that when it comes to our attacking play. What I mean is that although the delivery from set pieces and in open play was particularly bad today, it hasn’t been great all season, so I think you then start to see a situation develop whereby players waiting for a cross or a pass do not attack spaces as wholeheartedly as they would if they knew that eight or nine times out of ten, there be a good delivery coming their way – when that’s only happening once or twice out of ten the runs and/or jumps to meet the ball become less committed.

Having been so critical earlier, I thought we did put in two good crosses today and the first, by O’Dowda saw Robinson and Jaden Philogene not showing enough desire to reach the ball, arguably because they were surprised by its quality. The second one was different as Philogene, who I thought played well overall, received another short corner, beat his marker beautifully, got to the bye line and pulled back a low ball to around the penalty spot. Unfortunately, all of our attackers raced into the six yard area and none of the others thought to put themselves in what would have been a great position to be coming on to a ball that was begging to be hit.

That was City’s attacking afternoon summed up really, quite a few promising situations, but hardly anything to seriously worry Hull. There were two exceptions to this though, first when defender Alfie Jones diverted Ojo’s cross into Kaba’s path some six yards from goal, but home keeper Matt Ingram was no more than a yard or so away from him and so was able to make what amounted to a point blank range save – maybe if. Kaba had mishit his shot the ball may have rolled past the diving keeper, but he made a good contact and so turned it into what was a pretty straightforward save.

The second occasion came earlier on in the game when Philogene was brought down just inside the penalty area by a clumsy and unnecessary tackle from left back Callum Elder. It was a clear penalty, but, in a replay of his miss from the spot at Huddersfield, Robinson went to the keeper’s right after a stuttering run up and, although this one was hit better than his first one, Ingram was able to pull off a good save.

Robinson had scored from the spot in the replay at Leeds in the FA Cup when he went straight down the middle and the keeper dived out of the way, but it’s one thing taking a penalty with virtually the last kick of the game when you’re 5-1 down in a cup match and another completely when it’s 0-0 and your painfully goal shy team are in a relegation scrap.

So, in this season when they could least afford to be missing penalties, it’s none from three now for City and, if we get another one, whoever takes it is going to need nerves of steel.

The penalty award came in what was a rare City attack as Hull dominated the early stages, Regan Slater’s deflected shot came back off a post and Jones headed narrowly over as the home side looked to follow up their 3-0 win over QPR last weekend with another home win in a season that has not seen too many of them up to now.

Strangely, the penalty miss seemed to affect Hull more than City and we were the better side during the second quarter of the game, but the home team were always the more dangerous attackers and veteran right Cyrus Christie was within inches of opening the scoring early in the second half as his shot flew just wide.

However, when the exact same chance presented itself to Christie a few minutes later, he was able to get away with a less than perfect first touch, break through a weak tackle by Jack Simpson and hit a low shot across Ryan Allsop and into the net to win the game.

For reasons which elude me, City agreed to put themselves at the disadvantage of having played twice in a week when Hull (like every one else in the division bat Luton) had a free week. They could have been able to go into today’s game with a full week’s training under their new manager behind them, but chose not to and, although I’m sure it’s not really the case, when you put things like this together with our feeble January transfer window, I do sometimes find myself wondering whether City are trying to get relegated this season.

Yesterday brought another poor defeat for the under 21 side as they went down 3-0 at Colchester and, after today’s result, I make it that the senior, under 21 and under 18 teams have lost their last nine games between them – thank God for the all conquering Women’s team I say!

In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club were 3-2 winners at Vale United who are one of about half a dozen clubs with games in hand on them who will think they can overhaul them at the top of the First Division table. If Treherbert do go up to the Premier League though, they will almost certainly have a Rhondda valley derby with Ton Pentre to look forward to next season because, despite a 4-0 win over lowly Ely Rangers today, Ton have probably got too much to do to get into a promotion place. What they have done though is end their downward spiral of recent seasons by stabilizing themselves in the top six of the division.

Anyway, on to happier times, a further reminder that my book on our 1975/76 promotion is on sale now in paperback form or as an e book – it’s called Tony Evans Walks on Water and can be bought from Amazon at

Posted in Down in the dugout, Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The stiffs | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments