Cardiff City and the definition of madness.

I think I’ve used that line about the definition of madness being to keep on making the same mistake time after time and expecting a different outcome on here in recent weeks and applied it Cardiff City – if I haven’t, I’m sure there are very many supporters of the club who have done.

However, I’m going to go for a variation of it this time and say that the definition of madness for a Cardiff City blog writer is to watch the same old, same old week after week, have nothing new to say on the subject, but still write reams and reams of stuff that, in essence, is a repeat of what you said the previous Saturday night.

So, rather than bang on ad nauseum about things like the lack of football expertise in the Boardroom and on the recruitment front, the lack of any sort of coherent recruitment and footballing philosophy, the firing of managers on a whim by the owner and the ignoring of the bleeding obvious fact that we need a Director of Football or some such position, I’m going to leave my talking (writing) to others this time – well, kind of.

That’s the thing, it would be easy to fall into the trap of believing what you read on social media on a topic was a true representation of what the normal person in the street thinks. However, people who have their say on a given subject tend to be more committed and/or passionate about something that many others are apathetic about, so you become a victim of what tends to get called the echo chamber effect.

I would argue however that Cardiff City and their current problems (actually, their long running problems) are an exception to that rule. I say that because, if you talk to supporters of the club (and a few people who aren’t), you’ll hear some or all of the same things said that I set out above from the vast majority of them.

You can imagine the City hierarchy shrugging their shoulders on hearing something like that and snorting “they’re only the punters, what do they know!”.  Then, when it’s gently pointed out to them that journalists are saying the same, they’d respond with “The media! They’re even worse – none of them have played the game”.

That’s the time when it should be pointed out that the army of ex pros you get in punditry, even at a medium sized club like Cardiff City, these days are also saying the same things.

In fact, I’m being a bit unfair on the Cardiff City hierarchy there because one of them has let it be known that he thinks we need a Director of Football and that he has no say in the firing of managers.

 Chairman Mehmet Dalman (who gave a nothing to do with me guv type interview this morning) is at odds with club owner Vincent Tan on some subjects and, to digress for a short while, did a pretty good job of defending the club in that interview when it comes to fall out from the death of  Emiliano Sala. I still think the club are open to criticism over the way they’ve handled the whole episode, but reading what he has to say on it does serve as a reminder that, notwithstanding the tragedy, grief and suffering involved, it was also incredibly unfortunate for Cardiff City football club who are now faced with paying a £15 million fee for, to put it bluntly, nothing.

That said, the criticisms I’m talking about here apply irrespective of what happened to Emiliano Sala and they represent the almost unanimous verdict of supporters, media and ex professionals who give their opinions on the club.

Why is it then that the owner of the club appears to think he knows better than all of these people as he watches the team play from tens of thousands of miles away? Mr Tan is clearly an intelligent man as evidenced by the way his working life has mapped out- but, when he stubbornly continues,  in recent years especially, to follow a course that clearly isn’t working with so many telling him why it isn’t working then, all you can conclude is that his intelligence doesn’t stretch to football.

That’s certainly not an earth-shattering conclusion to arrive at – two promotions and a League Cup Final appearance or not, what other verdict can you draw at the moment than that the Tan project at Cardiff City has failed conclusively?

I said somewhere this week that, in a crowded field of candidates, the biggest failure of the Tan era has been the almost complete inability to bring in players of an age and ability which would enable them to be sold at a profit – think what a difference it would have made if City had become a “selling club” instead of a “give them away” one!

For me, this, and a few of the other elements which have reduced the club to the sorry state it finds itself in now, has its roots in the sense of betrayal Vincent Tan felt in his feud with Malky Mackay more than a decade ago – I’ve always believed that since then Mr Tan has had a distrust of “football men” and it would hardly come as a surprise if it was this that was behind his reluctance to operate with a Director of Football or its equivalent.

I mentioned earlier that Vincent Tan was an intelligent man – I wonder what he would think of someone of a non-retail background who acquired a pretty successful shopping chain and then proceeded to run it into the ground while ignoring the well-meaning advice of those with its best interests at heart? What would he think as the owner of this shopping chain kept on hiring managers with little or no proven record of success and then firing them after only a few months? Am I that far wide of the mark if I said that Vincent Tan would think the way that person was behaving was the definition of madness?

Anyway, there was a match played today and Cardiff City lost it by 1-0 at home to Millwall to make it eleven games now without a win and, if I read the mood right, there are very few supporters feeling optimistic about a relegation escape this season tonight.

City have made a habit of losing 1-0 at home in these last two seasons and this was like so many of these matches in that the goal came in the first half and then all our opponents had to do was defend pretty resolutely on the rare occasions when we put some decent attacking play together and they’d be fine.

Like virtually every team that wins here 1-0, Millwall were nothing special, but they didn’t need to be. What is different now compared to other 0-1s mind is that we now have a team which is completely shot when it comes to confidence – everything has become an effort as the fear of making a mistake has taken over and in a team with the goalscoring issues that we’ve had all season, it manifests itself in the side looking even more inept and ineffective in front of goal.

This was confirmed when Millwall centreback Jake Cooper gifted us possession some twenty five yards from goal and we were presented with what was virtually a two on to none situation with only goalkeeper George Long to beat, but Callum Robinson, the City player you’d most want to be in this position, made a mess of his pass to Jaden Philogene whose first touch wasn’t great and a Millwall defender got back to clear for a corner.

Honestly, if City couldn’t score from a position like that, they were never going to. They had a total of twenty two goal attempts, with the high, for them, figure of four on target, but the only time I can remember Long being forced into a good save was from a Callum O’Dowda effort from an offside position.

That apart, it was the usual combination of scuffs, slices and row zeders with the odd air shot thrown in. That’s not fair actually, Robinson, Kion Etete and Philogene were not too far away with well struck efforts from around twenty yards out.

The goal came from a catalogue of errors from City. First, Philogene, who was careless all afternoon, presented the ball straight to Cooper who advanced to play a through pass for Welsh international Tom Bradshaw. Cooper’s pass was over hit and should have been easily dealt with by Cedric Kipre, but the defender who has been one of City’s most consistent players, was having a poor afternoon and now he hesitated as if believing the ball was going out of play. Kipre’s indecision allowed Bradshaw to put in what amounted to a sliding tackle that enabled him to jab the ball fairly slowly towards goal, but it was enough to beat Ryan Allsop who I think will be disappointed to have been beaten by such a shot.

Straight after the ball hit the net, I thought City would never have scored that. Not many other teams would have made the three individual mistakes that led to the goal, but some would and a Cardiff forward could have found themselves in the position Bradshaw was, but would any of the current bunch have shown the presence of mind and desire to score that the Millwall man did?

There’s not much else to say really – for all of City’s huff and puff in the second half, it was the visitors who came closest to scoring, first when a good block by Mark McGuiness (the back from Sheffield Wednesday defender was probably City’s best player, but can he maintain that standard when so many around him are struggling and out of form?) turned a George Honeyman shot over the bar and then when a fine run and pass by Zian Flemming set up sub Jamie Shackleton who should have scored, but his shot was too close to Allsop who saved well.

As for our latest manager, I often think we could do with Dean Whitehead at his peak in our midfield, but I’m not so sure about him stood in the dug out making the decisions (to be fair mind, I don’t envy him his task in the slightest). I was mystified by his use of substitutes – actually that should really read non use because he waited nearly seventy minutes to make a change and then we only saw two of them. I’m always banging on about Rubin Colwill, but I’ll limit myself this time to just saying that I’m baffled as to why Dean Whitehead only introduced Joe Ralls and Isaak Davies out of the six outfield players he had available to him.

Away from the first team, the under 23s were beaten 1-0 at Wolves in the Premier League Cup yesterday afternoon in a game where they needed to avoid defeat to qualify for the knock out stage. City were unlucky in that the goal which beat them came via a pretty big deflection off captain Xavier Benjamin, but I’m afraid that it was all a little like watching the first team play in that there was nice play at times, plenty of effort and almost no sign of a goal.

Given the big freeze of the last four or five days, it was no surprise that there were only three matches played in the whole of the Highadmit South Wales Alliance League, but in Division One Treherbert Boys and Girls Club were able to play on the G4 pitch at Clydach Vale – they extended their lead at the top of Division One despite dropping a couple of points in a 1-1 draw with third placed Clwb Cymric.

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 Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The stiffs, Up in the Boardroom | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Millwall matches.

With yesterday’s claims that City tried to get Emiliano Sala insured the day after his fatal plane crash (I should say that the club have put out a statement on their website denying the allegation), things have reached a stage which I thought they never would – I get more enjoyment out of doing these quizzes than the match reports these days!

We’ve got yet another of those home games which are being called “must win” tomorrow. The same label was applied to the previous three league matches at Cardiff City Stadium and we didn’t win any of them. With what seems to be a week of aimless drift since our latest managerial sacking behind us, I see no likelihood of us beating Millwall and, you know what, I couldn’t care less what happens – after all, judging by the response on and off the pitch over these last few days, no one at Cardiff City does either.

None of that is a reason to not do the quiz though, so here’s seven questions on Millwall – as usual for Saturday games, I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday morning.

60s. With the middle name Skidmore, this defender was a fixture in Millwall teams for much of this decade after signing for them from a club with a relationship with a card suit for whom he played just three times. He only tasted defeat on one, pretty memorable, occasion with City in the six times he played against us for Millwall. When he left the Den, it was for nicer sounding surroundings not too far away to the west and then, after a season, he was on the move again to a team which did not wear their usual stripes at this time when he was part of one of the great FA Cup giant killings of the early seventies – he finished his career after playing non league football with Kentish Angels, but who is he?

70s. Millwall were playing in white when this full back joined them which meant that he didn’t need to change colours following his release by a First Division club where he had not played a game. In fact, the fifty nine games he played for the Lions were the only ones he ever played in the Football League – one of them being in a win over Cardiff in his only encounter with us. As it turned out, it was the arrival of a Cardiffian that helped to signal the end of his full time career and, upon his release, he signed for a close by non league side whose nickname is a “sport” (the inverted commas are me showing my grumpy old man disdain for this game being called a sport!) who, again, played in white. He also has a famous namesake from another sport who was in the news this week, can you name him?

80s. My heading the Doctors leads to participant in long running Cardiff City encounter! (5,10)

90s. Can’t see many takers for this six legger with curry starter!

00s. Scoring three Premier League goals as a teenager while playing for a long established top flight club suggested a better career for this striker than it turned out to be. After a sheepish loan spell, he next turned up at Millwall in a temporary move and did okay for them in a fifteen game spell which included a home draw with City. A year later, he was made available for transfer and moved for a six figure sum for the first of three spells with a south western club where I suppose he played his best football. He became a lower league journeyman for a few years and, eventually dropped into non league football, but his form for the other Bluebirds and then when he was wearing a hat were the cause of another two spells down west back in the Football League where he probably made most headlines for a six game suspension he received for a couple of incidents in a game against Port Vale. His final club were non league lambs – name him.

10s. Cardiff and Millwall were two of nine clubs this player was loaned to during this decade, can you name this recent opponent of City’s?

20s. Forthright approach towards ball stopping?

Answers

60s. John Gilchrist started his career in his native Scotland with Airdrieonians (the Diamonds) and moved to Millwall as a twenty year old in 1959. Gilchrist went on to play 279 league games for Millwall over the next decade and was in their team that was beaten 2-0 at a frozen Ninian Park when one of the goals came from Brian Clark heading a Millwll goal kick straight back into the net. Gilchrist spent the 69/70 season with Fulham and was in the Colchester team that shocked Leeds United by beating them 3-2 in a Fifth Round FA Cup tie at Layer Road in February 1971. Gilchrist retired from the game after a short spell at Tonbridge Angels.

70s. Eddie Jones signed for Millwall upon his release by Spurs in 1973 and in November of that year was in their team when they beat City 2-0 at the Den. The arrival of Jon Moore, a left back who had been in the same year at Cantonian school as me, saw Jones losing his first team place and he was released in 1977 when he signed for Dartford (the Darts).

80s. Teddy Sheringham – he played in all three matches for Millwall in a long running Third Round FA Cup tie which saw us winning through in a second replay at Ninian Park after a 0-0 stalemate at the Den and a 2-2 draw in Cardiff.

90s.  Anton Rogan (Josh). Maybe an apology’s needed for that one!

00s. After exploding on to the scene with Premier League goals for Everton before he reached twenty, Nick Chadwick’s career rather fizzled out. He was loaned out to Derby and Millwall, then sold to Plymouth before moving on to Hereford, then Shrewsbury.. Chadwick dropped into non league football after that as he played, very briefly, for Chester, then Barrow and Stockport before Plymouth offered him a way back into the Football League, first on loan and then permanently – upon his release by Plymouth, he signed for Tamworth (the Lambs) before retiring in 2015.

10s. Ben Amos, who was in goal for for Wigan against us last weekend.

20s. Frank Fielding.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | 1 Comment