January becomes the new November as Erol Bulut’s frustration reaches boiling point.

Remember how the month of November was always dreadfully bad under Dave Jones? It almost became a joke as team after team under “the surly scouser” would start like a train through August, September and October and then hit the buffers when Halloween and Guy Fawkes night arrived – I remember checking and the November dip was often there in Jones’ time as Stockport, Southampton and Wolves boss as well.

Now it would appear Cardiff may well have another cursed month, but this time, it won’t disappear with a change of manager. In fact, it will only become worse, because, after tonight’s interview with Erol Bulut in the aftermath of a 3-1 loss at Plymouth, shock waves will have been sent through the club – January is in serious danger of becoming the new month to dread for City.

Back in January 2021, Neil Harris was sacked with City in a similar position to the one they find themselves in now (in mid table, but very much on a downward trajectory). Harris’ successor, Mick McCarthy steadied things in the short term as City made it into the Play Off positions for a while, but things deteriorated so badly that McCarthy did not get to celebrate a year in the job. Instead, Steve Morison was in charge and fighting a relegation battle in January 2022 only for some effective signings in January to help us secure safety.

2022 was the exception to the January rule, because having got rid of Morison in the autumn, Vincent Tan sacked his successor Mark Hudson in January 2023 with City on a long run of matches without a win. After a short stint in charge for Dean Whitehead as caretaker manager, Sabri Lamouchi took charge, but, although we eventually stumbled to safety under the Frenchman, he couldn’t stop us entering February without a win since early November after another nightmare January for City.

This time around, there have been clues that all has not been well in the club/manager relationship throughout this month, Erol Bulut had talked through part of November and all of December about the need for signings to be made in January. In fact, to hear him talk, he thought there was every chance we would be making signings very early in the month – he was also remarkably open when talking of the club’s interest in Kieffer Moore and I think it’s fair to say that many City fans were thinking that Moore would have been with us early enough to have made his second “debut” for the club last weekend against Leeds.

I think our manager was being naïve there, it might be different in Turkey, but signings in January tend to be made as the month is ending, not at its beginning.

 Now, it needs to be said that the feeling that Moore was as good as signed already did not arise because of what the manager said. There were “in the know” merchants on social media telling us the deal had been done from around the time the summer transfer window closed at the end of August, but Bulut’s willingness to talk so openly about Moore did tend to give the claims of those making out they were in the loop more credibility.

When no one, let alone Moore, turned up before the Leeds game, was it just coincidence that Erol Bulut decided to bring up the subject of his one year rolling contract in the pre match media conference? The manager told the assembled hacks that he had not been offered an extension on his contract yet, while appearing to hint that he may not sign it anyway (that’s how it seemed to me at least).

When the team folded in falling to an emphatic 3-0 home defeat by Leeds with some fans claiming the team had not been trying, the following day or two saw stories appearing online that fears of breaking what I still call Financial Fair Play rules were behind the lack of new arrivals during the transfer window.

This prompted the club to respond through a statement issued by the Supporters’ Trust that there was no truth to these claims and that there should be transfer business, both incoming and outgoing, by the end of the week.

Well, there certainly have been outgoings aplenty with Ike Ugbo and Jonathan Panzo having their loans cancelled and no end of youngsters leaving on loan during the last few days. It all had the feel of a clearing of the decks to help finance the arrival of new players, but they still resolutely fail to turn up.

Just before I get to what Erol Bulut said today, I’ll mention that a City video podcast streamed in midweek had the presenter, who emphasised how much he disliked “in the know shit”, claiming that he’d been told by someone he completely trusted that relations between the team and manager were very poor.

I make no comment on such a claim except to say that there have been times in our last two matches where we have looked a bit like a side that was no longer fully in tune with their manager.

It needs to be remembered though that we’ve been playing really poorly when compared to the first third of the season in the last two months and we’re getting worse, so that could be the explanation as to why it has sometimes looked like the team wasn’t trying.

Anyway, on to what our manager had to say. Here’s a link to it and, although I’m aware of the risk of over dramatising things, I have to wonder whether a manager/club relationship can survive such things – that’s assuming that Erol Bulut is minded to stay.

Under different circumstances, I think what Bulut said could be put down to frustration at a bad defeat for his team in a game which they were bossing in the first half for a very short while. However, there is all of the stuff that has been said in recent weeks leading up to today’s words from Mr Bulut to consider as well. More than that though, we have a Chairman who has said on more than one occasion that there is really only one decision maker at the club and that is the owner. Vincent Tan sanctioned the appointment of Erol Bulut, but he is very much Mehmet Dalman’s pick, so you have to wonder whether Tan has ever offered unconditional support for Bulut or whether there are some reservations there?

From my point of view, I would say that if Vincent Tan really does watch all of our games and if he has acquired a decent knowledge of the game over the last decade and more through doing so, I would not argue with him much if he thinks that we’ve looked absolutely nothing like a Play Off team for months and our recent performances suggest that he would have to spend a lot more during January to turn us into a team with a decent chance of finishing in the top six.

Furthermore, let’s be honest, the top four sides in this season’s Championship look to be a lot better than the rest, so, in truth, it’s only really one, or maybe two places up for grabs for the dozen or so sides that still dream of extending their season beyond early May. So, even if City were to somehow squeeze into a fifth or sixth place finish, they would have little chance of going up or even reaching the Play Off Final.

Therefore, can you criticise Vincent Tan for, perhaps, believing that there’s little point pushing the boat out when it comes to the January window and that we will, in all likelihood, see the rest of the season out content that we’ll be in the Championship next season – even if the nature of our last couple of performances means that the thought of relegation cannot wholly be dismissed.

What I would say mind is that it’s getting hard to see what the plan is with Vincent Tan, his club is drifting along, but it is drifting towards the edge of a huge waterfall – we look like staying up this season, but we’re being run like a club that will go down eventually. He is acting like an owner who is looking to sell up, but he must know that his club is not looking like an attractive proposition just now. To get people interested in a possible take over of his club, Tan is surely going to have to speculate to accumulate a little?

Moving on to the game, the first thing I’ll say is that I spent much of the first half trying to figure out what system we were playing. On the left we had Ollie Tanner taking the throw ins (a sure sign that he was playing full back or wing back) and given how much Jamilu Collins was coming inside, as well as pushing forward at times, it seemed to me as if he was one of three centre backs with the usual pairing of Mark McGuinness and Dimitrios Goutas.

However, it was on the right that it was hardest to tell what was going on as Perry Ng was the full back/wing back if you applied the throw in test, but he was spending much of the time playing in front of Rubin Colwill who looked like he was playing as a right sided midfielder in a 4-4-2.

If I had to guess what we were doing, I’d say it was a back three with wing backs with a right sided midfielder, two central midfielders in Ryan Wintle and Andy Rinomhota and Karlan Grant playing as a second forward supporting Yakou Meite.

The fact that I may be completely wrong in that opinion shows how confused I was, but I wasn’t the only one – Plymouth were baffled by what we were doing for a while as well.

The Colwill/Ng partnership was to the fore in an attacking sense early on and with Meite proving a bit of a handful and Wintle showing up well, we were supporting my theory that we play better away than we do at home these days and we deserved to be ahead after a first quarter that we dominated.

As is too often the case, this superiority was not manifesting itself in chances created in open play, but at least we had a set piece goal as home centre back Phillips made a right mess of dealing with Wintle’s corner and the ball fell to Ng who hooked in from five yards.

For ten minutes or so after that, City knocked the ball around in pleasing style, but there was no end product and once Plymouth had worked out how to deal with our strange formation, we had nothing to offer in an attacking sense apart from an odd thirty seconds or so in the second half when sub Josh Bowler had a shot blocked as we messed up a three on two and then when another sub Kion Etete set up Bowler again his shot was saved this time by keeper Conor Hazard who then tipped over Collins’ bouncing bomb shot from the rebound..

Going back to the first half, I mentioned that the Colwill/Ng partnership was working well going forward, but it was impossible to see what the plan was when they had to defend- or whether there was a plan at all.

All game long there was a yawning gap down our right in the defensive third which often saw Goutas forced to come out and take on what was almost a full back role = needless to say, Plymouth exploited what looked to me to be a shambles.

For the equaliser, Ng was left with two players to look after and when the cross came over, the impressive Ryan Hardie got free of Goutas to score easily from eight yards.

It was 1-1 at half time, but the story was of increasing Plymouth control and, after, Bulut replaced Tanner with Mahlon Romeo, City paid for another one of their too frequent dozy second half starts by conceding a shocking second goal.

Romeo took over in the role Ng had played in the first half with the ex Crewe man becoming the right sided member of the back three, while Collins became the left wing back, but, if Plymouth were the ones who were confused first time around, it looked like we were this time.

Colwill started things by carelessly losing possession around the half way line and the home team moved the ball to their right where a cross was eventually put in to Hardie who turned Goutas too easily and hit a shot which, although well hit, was straight at Jak Alnwick who added to the catalogue of errors by not dealing with it well enough as the ball burst through him and into the net.

After that, the brief period when City could have scored three times apart, it was just a question of how many Plymouth would win by. As it was, they scored once more with a crisp and effective counter attack, which would have been well beyond our capabilities, that ended with Morgan Whittaker receiving Hardie’s pass to score from just inside the penalty area.

I’ll finish on the game by lamenting Bulut’s non use of substitutes. We were told that a mixture of injuries, sickness and African Nations Cup call ups meant that we only had fifteen senior players available and that the other places on the bench would have to be taken up by kids from the under 21s. In the event, it wasn’t quite as bad as that and it was only Joel Colwill and Cian Ashford (who signed a contract extension until 2027 yesterday), who were on the bench for the previous two matches, plus Raheem Conte, a midfielder/winger signed from QPR in 2022, who were needed.

It goes without saying of course that none of these three were brought on, yet Bulut has been happy enough to use the younger Colwill and Ashford in cup ties all through this season, when it comes to league games though they may as well not be there – Bulut’s never going to use them, despite a level of performance from the seniors that has just not been good enough in recent games.

So, our nine substitutes were effectively just six, only three of whom the manager chose to use despite us being overrun at times in the second half. We were told Manolis Siopis had been affected by the sickness which has hit the City camp in the past fortnight, but he was considered fit enough to be a substitute, so why wasn’t he used?

While the first team is imploding, the under 18s sail serenely on. Well, maybe serenely isn’t the right word to use about today’s 5-2 win over Bournemouth which saw both sides reduced to ten after what was described as “a mighty scuffle” between the teams which saw coaches from either side come on to the pitch to try and calm things down. Jac Thomas was the City player dismissed with his side holding a 4-2 lead at the time. City were 3-0 up at half time thanks to goals by Jake Davies, Trey George and Joseff Edwards. Louis Phillips got a fourth before the visitors hit back with two quick goals, but George made sure of the win late on from the penalty spot.

Ton Pentre’s home game with Bridgend Street in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division was postponed, but Treherbert Boys and Girls Club moved up to third in the table with a 4-3 home win over mid table Cardiff Airport.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Plymouth Argyle games.

In the Vanarama National League the tendency is for there to be local derbies to be played over the Christmas period, so you get, say, Rochdale v Oldham on Boxing Day with the reverse fixtures being played a couple of days later or, perhaps, on New Years Day.

In the EFL you sometimes get the reverse fixtures from Boxing Day being played over the Easter weekend, but there’s a strange one this year as City travel to play Plymouth on Saturday just short of four weeks since the teams played out a 2-2 draw at Cardiff City Stadium on Boxing Day.

I don’t think we play any other team this season so quickly after our first encounter with them and I’m at a loss as to why these matches look to be out of sync with the rest of our fixture list, but I must say I’m quite pleased that they are. I recently described the Boxing Day encounter as an oasis in a desert on here and, as a match which could be described as entertaining, it rather sticks out like a sore thumb among Cardiff City matches of the last couple of months or so.

In truth, it was Plymouth’s attitude which contributed most towards the enjoyable aspect of the first game between the teams, but City were much more watchable than they’ve been in most of their recent home matches in particular – here’s hoping that we see another good game on Saturday which helps to dispel some of the sense of gloom that has descended over City since the turn of the year.

Whether it’s feast or famine regarding Cardiff City though, the seven decades quiz soldiers on and here’s the latest seven questions on upcoming opponents with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. One was a one time milkman who signed for his home town club where he scored goals at a better rate that one in three over a six year period before an unsuccessful move to Kent which ended with him retiring through injury from the game at the age of twenty nine. The other one was born in a group of villages which traverse the Derbyshire/Nottinghamshire border and he started off with a team from the latter county before signing for the club with which he is synonymous. He scored his goals at a better rate than the first striker I talked about and did so over a period of twelve years before he retired. One of the two men I described played for Plymouth, while the other one’s main club had very, very little in common with the port in Devon apart from the fact it was on the coast. However, the two men share something which if it’s not unique in City’s history, it must be very, very rare – who are the two men and what did they do in games against City in the autumn of 1966 which may not have happened before or since to us?

70s. This alliterative forward scored for his team in a win at Ninian Park in a season in which he later signed for Plymouth and returned to the ground in their colours. He didn’t score this time, but he enjoyed a long career in which he made a decent reputation for himself at Second and Third Division levels (he was probably at his most prolific while wearing a blue and white shirt). However, it could be argued that he enjoyed a better career after his retirement from football as he established a sporting footwear retail company that launched a mail order service in the mid eighties before becoming one of the first UK businesses to launch an e commerce website. Who am I describing?

80s. Another player to enjoy a lucrative career away from the game, although, in this case, his success came while he was still playing. In 2018, he was still turning out playing veteran’s football for Charlton Athletic at the age of fifty seven having left the pro game at the age of thirty six some eighteen years after making his debut as a crustacean at eighteen. Another who spent his career outside of the top flight, I’d say he was a bit better than a journeyman as he played for seven clubs and, apart from a very brief loan spell at Notts County, the furthest north he got was probably Swindon. His time at Plymouth looks strange to an outsider like me – he was there two years, played well under a hundred league matches for them and yet was selected in Argyle’s team of the century! Around a decade later, he embarked on his side line which eventually got him shortlisted for a prestigious annual award, but can you name him?

90s. Even tuning in key initially helps make lower division striker eventually. (5,6)

00s. Who is the player who made his debut for Plymouth in 2001 and retired while a Plymouth player twenty one years later, having captained the club in the second of three spells he had with them and what was the reason for an interruption to his career in his mid to late twenties?

10s. Steal cord from African country seemingly!

20s. Mad one time Plymouth manager meets Mary Poppins star!

Answers

60s. On 8 October 1966, Ke Wagstaff of Hull City (he’d been signed from Mansfield Town two years earlier) scored all four of his team’s goals in a 4-2 win at Ninian Park. In City’s next game a week later, Plymouth Argyle’s Mike Bickle scored four of his team’s goals in their 7-1 win over us at Home Park. I don’t know whether this is the only instance in our history of a player scoring four goals or more against us in successive matches, but there has to be a good chance that it is.

70s.Bruce Bannister enjoyed a very fruitful striking partnership with former City striker and fellow Yorkshireman Alan Warboys when they were at Bristol Rovers. Both of them scored in Rovers’ 2-1 win at Ninian Park in our first home match of the 76/77 season and Bannister was back at the ground in a winning cause again in March 77 when his new team, Plymouth, beat us 1-0. Bannister formed a company called Sportsshoes on his retirement in 1982 and it went from strength to strength over the next decade or so. Sportsshoes was eventually taken over by Bannister’s son and is still going today;

80s. Garry Nelson began his career with Southend and went on to play for Swindon, Plymouth, Brighton, Notts County, Charlton and Torquay. It was while he was with the last two clubs named that he turned to writing and his books Left foot forward and Left Foot in the Grave were written in diary form describing a footballer who realized his playing days were almost over – both books were shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year award and I can recommend them to anyone who fancies reading about the game of thirty years ago.

90s. Kevin Nugent.

00s. Goalkeeper Luke McCormick played over three hundred league matches for Plymouth in three spells with them. The first of these was ended in 2008 when he pleaded guilty to charges of causing death by dangerous driving and driving with excess alcohol in his blood. Initially sentenced to over seven years imprisonment, McCormick was released after four years and was eventually offered a contract by Oxford United before returning to Plymouth in 2013.

10s. Nick Chadwick.

20s. Ollie Tomlinson.

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