Seven decades of Cardiff City v Birmingham City matches.

I listened to a podcast which claimed that Birmingham City are currently the worst team in the Championship yesterday. I’m not so sure about that, but, what is undeniable is that they have the worst record in the division in the period since Wayne Rooney was appointed their manager and that Friday’s 2-0 loss at Coventry took their run of consecutive away defeats to nine.

Birmingham visit us tomorrow and, on the face of it, the fixture appears to be a home banker, yet we’ve been playing poorly lately and I don’t think we can take anything for granted. We appear to be limping towards the January transfer window hoping we have enough to maintain our position until we can sign some new players and Aaron Ramsey, hopefully, makes a full recovery from his injury. However, another thing I learned from that podcast was that there are quite a few Championship sides in the same boat as us.

In fact, some of our rivals seem in worse shape when it comes to things like injuries. Apart from a couple of long term injuries and the occasional suspension and non availability, we have had everyone available for selection in recent games. By contrast, Birmingham could be missing eight members of their first team squad tomorrow including former City loanees, Dion Sanderson and Cody Drameh who were both absent on Friday.

Yet, after our last three matches in particular where it has looked so hard for us to mount effective attacks, I’m not confident about tomorrow’s outcome – if we do manage to win, I suspect it will be another dull 1-0.

Anyway, in the meantime, here’s the usual quiz on our upcoming opponent and I’ll post the answers on here on Thursday.

60s. This forward started off with Birmingham, making his debut for them as a seventeen year old. However, he struggled to establish himself during his four years at St. Andrews and was sold on to a team that was a latecomer to the Football League party so to speak, but were doing pretty well at making up for lost time.

However, although he was part of a promotion campaign, it seems that it was decided that he was not up to second tier football and so was let go to the side where he played most games and scored most goals for by a considerable distance.

Once again, a promotion to the second tier soon followed, but, this time, he kept his place in the team and although, just as through all of his career, his goalscoring figures were hardly sensational, his work as a target man in a notoriously low scoring team helped his new club become established in the second level through the seventies. His final move was to Yorkshire to play for another outfit thought of as something of an underdog and he would later have a spell managing them, but who am I describing?

70s. A defender who left the red half of his boyhood city to sign for Birmingham as a youth, he barely missed a game after making his debut as he established himself as a First Division player. Indeed, it was only when he missed months through injuries sustained in a car crash that his progress stalled. After scoring in his comeback game, he carried on as before, but he would eventually leave after more than three hundred appearances, to make an ill fated and short (both in terms of time and distance) move to local rivals. After that, he had a go at wearing claret and blue twice and became a Shayman for a while, without ever recapturing his Birmingham form – appropriately, his one England B cap came in a game played at St. Andrews, can you name him?

80s. Give stew mix to Ely residents and you’ll discover a winger! (5,6)

90s. Mythical beast slayer on the left bank possibly.

00s. Striker in the paddock?

10s. Sounds like an awful lot of money to pay for a notepad!

20s. This current Birmingham player is English, but his one career goal was scored in front of Borussia Dortmund’s Yellow wall, who is he?

Answers

60s. One of Micky Bullock’s ten goals for Birmingham came against City as he became a squad member at the club despite making his first appearance at a very young age. Bullock signed for Oxford United in 1967, but only stayed there for a year before a move to what I believe was then called Orient where he was to make over two hundred and seventy league appearances over the next eight years. Bullock’s final club was Halifax, who he managed for three years in the early eighties.

70s.  Joe Gallagher was released by Liverpool as a youth and signed for Birmingham where he became a fixture in their First Division team in the seventies. Gallagher was given a testimonial game against Aston Villa before signing for Wolves in 1981. Wolves’ financial problems of the early 80s were behind Gallagher’s acrimonious departure for West Ham where he struggled for game time before dropping down the divisions to sign for a Burnley side that almost lost its Football League status towards the end of his time with them – there was also a short loan spell at Halifax during his time at Turf Moor.

80s. Steve Wigley.

90s. George Parris.

00s.Geoff Horsfield.

10s. Jota.- Birmingham paid a reported club record of around £7 million for him in 17/18.

20s. Lee Buchanan spent the 22/23 season with Werder Bremen and his sole career goal so far came at Borussia Dortmund where his effort started a recovery which turned a 2-0 deficit into a 3-2 win.

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Very scrappy win lifts Cardiff to seventh after a first half from Hell.

I’ve always thought that the worst game I’ve had to write on in the almost fourteen and a half years of this ‘blog’s existence was a goalless draw at Cardiff City Stadium against Brighton. From memory, the match was played during Russell Slade’s first season in charge when we spent months in a lower mid table position hoping for a burst of form to tale us towards the Play Off places and dreading the more likely possibility that we would have a poor run that would see us fall towards the bottom three.

Brighton, who had Joe Bennett playing at left back, were having a bad season and left happy with an away point, but their then manager Chris Hughton was almost apologetic afterwards when he explained his team had to play in the manner they did given their lowly position. City had no excuse though for their part in a truly dismal spectacle , played in dry and clear conditions, that produced one on target effort apiece with ours being an Aron Gunnarsson effort which dribbled along the floor to give the Brighton goalkeeper one of the simplest saves of his life.

I mention all of this because the only reason that the first forty five minutes of today’s City v Millwall match on the same pitch might not qualify as the worst half of football in Mauve and Yellow Army’s existence is that the visitors were able to come up with a couple of efforts in the five minutes before half time which forced Alex Runnarson into action as he, first, dived to make a routine save to deny Kevin Nisbet and then easily held onto a half hit daisy cutter from twenty five yards by Brooke Norton-Cuffy.

All City had to offer in response was a deep corner from captain Ryan Wintle which visiting keeper Martija Sarkic punched clear just as it seemed bound for Mark McGuinness’ head.

If the first half was so bad, did the whole game stand a chance of taking the worst since 2009 crown from that Brighton match nearly nine years earlier?

Thankfully, the answer to that question is no. Although never reaching any great heights, the match improved in its second forty five minutes as both sides tried to win the game a bit more than make sure they didn’t lose it and so we did get to see a goal -albeit a scruffy one from a set piece totally in keeping with the fare on offer throughout.

Of course, it also helps that it was City who got the decisive late goal as they put to an end a bit of a concerning run of results which suggested they would go on dropping down the table towards the sort of position they occupied for much of last season.

That could still happen because we haven’t played well for a few weeks, but, for now, we’re seventh and only out of a Play Off position on goal difference. We’ve also hit the thirty point mark, so we’re averaging one and a half points a game which means we could average just a point a game from now on in and relegation, the avoidance of which was always the primary target this season, would never become an issue.

Returning to today’s match, there was a partial excuse for the woeful opening half as the morning rain had died away, but it had been replaced by a strengthening gusty wind. It only needed a few seconds after the kick off to get confirmation that the weather conditions would have a big effect on proceedings – I’ve always thought that the worst weather conditions to play football in are ones that have a strong wind somewhere in there as it invariably leads to a poorer spectacle and that was definitely the case today.

In saying that, I’d add that wind tests the technique of those involved and those of questionable technique are the ones with most to fear from such conditions. Too many of the highly paid pros involved today were embarrassed more than they should have been by the gusty wind.

Perhaps the improvement in the second half was down to the strength of the wind easing, but I doubt that’s true. I can’t really say that this happened with Millwall, but, as far as City were concerned, I thought the fact that our substitutes tended to be quite a bit better than the people they were replacing had a lot to do with it.

Erol Bulut was critical of his substitutes after the recent home loss to Norwich, but here he went out of his way to praise them and, after his loss of Brownie points among the supporters for his continued selection of Runnarson over Jak Alnwick, he’s due some credit as well for the timing of his changes today.

For example, Bulut reacted decisively by removing the anonymous Ike Ugbo (his selection in place of Yakou Meite was the one change from last week’s lifeless showing at Southampton) and the out of form Callum Robinson at half time for Yakou Meite and Rubin Colwill who was given his longest run out in a league game this season.

I’m not a big fan of Meite being used as a central striker and, to be honest, although he put himself about more than Ugbo did and picked up a yellow card in the process, it was Bulut’s next pair of substitutions which led to an improvement in the ex Reading man’s display.

 Before that though, Colwill helped things along just by looking to get forward with the ball under control. From one such venture he had what I think was our first goal attempt on the hour mark as he cut in from the right and hit a shot which flew well wide of goal.

Minutes later, Josh Bowler intercepted a throw out by Sarkic, fed Colwill who found Meite unmarked in a central position on the edge of the penalty area, but although the shot was well struck, it flew straight to the keeper.

While City were, at last, showing signs of attacking life, the visitors still looked marginally the more likely goalscorers – Zion Flemming was left unmarked to wastefully head over a corner and Nisbet’s free kick from the edge of the penalty area flew just wide, but City moved on to their best spell of the match when Joe Ralls replaced Wintle and Kion Etete came on for Bowler as Meite moved out to the right wing where he was much more effective.

In fact, it took all of five seconds for City to create maybe there best chance so far as Meite nodded on to Etete who took a good touch, but then fired well over from fifteen yards. The fact he was only just on probably offered some sort of excuse, but it didn’t look good from the young striker. However, I thought he then went on to look the best of the three centre forwards we used in the game.

Ralls came to the fore on seventy eight minutes when he maintained his dead ball quality in the difficult conditions to put a corner on to the edge of the six yard area where Dimitrios Goutas got in a firm header which should have been dealt with by Sarkic, but he got his limbs into a tangle and this produced limbs (that’s what the youngsters say these days isn’t it?) behind him in the Canton Stand as the ball squirmed almost apologetically into the net.

This was a game like so many between the two clubs in the last decade – they’ve tended to be the Championship teams that have respected possession the least in that time and this tended to lead to physical battles with plenty of long high balls and low scoring draws galore.

Millwall, who had only been beaten twice on their travels before today and owed their lowly position to a very poor home record, will have reason to feel hard done by tonight as they rallied after falling behind, but, Runnarson, who one bad kick when we tried to play out from the back apart, had a sound afternoon, saved from sub Duncan Watmore and there was a lively contribution from another sub Aidomo Emakhu who gave Perry Ng some awkward moments before the final whistle blew to confirm the sort of tight, scrappy and fortunate win that every team needs a few of every season in a league like the Championship.

Elsewhere, the under 18s travelled to London to face Charlton only for the lunchtime kick off to become a victim of the weather. It was a similar story in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance League where it seems like weeks since any of the Rhondda teams whose results I follow have played – the vast majority of today’s matches were rained off.

Finally, just a quick word regarding the blog. I’ve mentioned before that I’m no longer in the position where financial help from readers is needed to ensure its survival, but, if anyone is still minded to show their support for my scribbles, they are very welcome to do so – payments are accepted by bank transfer, PayPal, cheque and through Patreon, contact me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further information.

A big thank you to all of you who support Mauve and Yellow Army with your donations and to everyone who has done so in the past when help was really needed.

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged | 4 Comments