Seven decades of Cardiff City v Sheffield United matches.

Congratulations to Mark Harris and Rubin Colwill for their selection in the Welsh World Cup squad. Unbelievably, the tournament the nation has waited sixty four years for is now almost up on us – I just wish it was being played somewhere else, but, clearly, greed was the main factor in FIFA choosing to hold the game’s biggest showpiece in Qatar.

Cardiff City go into their final game before the World Cup under a cloud following a performance on Tuesday against Hull of the kind which will see us relegated if it becomes the norm.

The Blades looked as good as any side I’ve seen at this level this season in thrashing Burnley 5-2 last weekend, but then, as if to show what a mad league this is, they went and lost at home to a Rotherham side which was really poor in our recent victory over them at Cardiff City Stadium. However, Tuesday has severely knocked the faith I had in this squad and, even though we should have a stronger starting line up this time, I can’t see beyond another defeat I’m afraid.

Anyway, here’s the usual quiz with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60.s This midfielder shared his name with a soap character and his surname with a television detective of this time. He clocked up over a hundred appearances for Sheffield United before crossing county lines to become a record signing for a club in blue that had a reputation for producing fine players in a certain position. A succession of knee injuries prompted his retirement at thirty one and he went on to have a long career on the coaching/management side during which he worked for both of the clubs he had played for. Who is he?

70s. The specialism of a very particular kind of orthopaedic surgeon perhaps?

80s. You start vile stew for example and go out on a wing. (5,6)

90s. This defender got into hot water while at Manchester City for publicly criticising manager Brian Horton. This may have played a part in his move to Oldham which didn’t work out and so he next signed for Sheffield United. His three years with the Blades were dogged by injuries from which he never fully recovered during his time with his next club which was based at the venue of a famous treaty from this decade, He managed two clubs, one of which shares its name with a UK number one hit from the sixties. Can you name him?

00s. Capped fifteen times for his country, this player made his first league start for City in a game against Sheffield United during this decade. He was loaned to Carlisle while with us and one of his clubs after leaving us was Colorado Rapids, do you know who he is?

10s. There is a link between two players loaned to Sheffield United in 2014 and 2021 and this week’s announcement of the Welsh World Cup squad, what is it?

20s. Currently with the River Islanders, he scored his first goal in senior football at Cardiff City Stadium for a team we usually beat (although we didn’t this time). Since then, he’s played his club football in three countries besides England, played for Sheffield United and scored for his country against Cyprus. Who is he?

Answers.

60s. Frank Barlow was a character in Coronation Street and there was an Inspector Barlow in Z Cars and a spin off show Softly, Softly. Frank Barlow was also a footballer who played for Sheffield United and Chesterfield.

70s. Tony Field.

80s. Steve Wigley.

90s. Michael Vonk played for Maastricht after leaving Sheffield United. He later played for Maastricht and then managed Dutch club Telstar – Telstar was a number one for the Tornadoes in 1962.

00s. Miguel Comminges made his first league start for City in a 0-0 draw at Sheffield United in August 2008. Comminges was capped fifteen times by Guadeloupe and never played a game for Carlisle while on loan to them from us in 2010.

10s. Ben Davies. Ben Davies, a right back who began his career at Shrewsbury, was loaned to Sheffield United in 2014 before signing for them permanently later that year. Ben Davies, a centreback who spent some time on loan at Newport County early in his career, was loaned to Sheffield United last season from Liverpool and is currently with Rangers. Ben Davies is also arguably Wales’ most important player currently and is regular starter for Spurs.

20s. Oliver Burke scored for Forest in a 1-1 draw at Cardiff City Stadium in December 2015. He’s had a lot of big money moves since then and played in Germany, Spain and Scotland – he’s currently playing in Germany again for Werder Bremen. Burke’s one goal for Scotland came in a 2-1 win over Cyprus.

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Absence of Wintle and Kipre felt as Cardiff return to their bad old long ball ways.

They keep stats on almost everything these days in football, but there’s some things that you don’t need them for.To give a couple of Cardiff City examples of what I mean, we discovered in tonight’s 3-2 home defeat by Hull City that we are half the side we can be when Ryan Wintle and Cedric Kipre aren’t playing.

With both of those players out because of a one match suspension for five bookings we were reduced to a return to the turgid long ball stuff I’d hoped we’d seen the last of. Wintle and Kipre bring a degree of poise that wasn’t seen tonight and I’m afraid their absence offered further evidence of the adage that you don’t realise how important some players are until they’re missing from the team.

Wintle has an ability to switch the ball either way when receiving passes from keeper and centrebacks that looks pretty straightforward and easy to emulate, but clearly isn’t because it seemed that without him, we decided not to play as we’ve tried to throughout the season. Instead, apart from a short spell when we looked in control at 2-1 up, we were second best and 3-2 suggests a closeness to the match that wasn’t really there.

Kipre contributes to the playing out from the back game we’re trying to implement, but he’s also the rock our defensive game is built around and we looked lost at times without him.

Also missing was Jaden Philogene who has been in such good form recently and, again, you think he’s cemented his place in the starting line up by not being there tonight.

Returning to stats, I can only assume that City do not keep them for the number of times a player loses possession, I say that because surely Mark Hudson would not be so keen on picking Sheyi Ojo for every game if a record of how often he gives the ball away was kept.

I try not to single out players for criticism on an individual basis on here, but seeing Hull’s first two goals come as a result of him losing the ball inside his own half just brought my frustration with him to a head.

Okay, Ojo may have had a bit of a case for a foul against him with the first one (I didn’t think it was mind), but it happens far too often week in, week out with him. Sadly, he doesn’t look the player he was in his first spell with us – he wasn’t great then, but at least he was inconsistent, now, sadly, he’s very consistent.

Vincent Tan was there tonight to watch what I’m pretty sure was his first live game since before the pandemic (the BBC reported that it was his first home game since Palace in 2019 – we also lost that one 3-2) and beforehand came the so predictable news that Mark Hudson had been offered the manager’s job until the end of the season.

I don’t think Hudson has done a bad job so far, but I can’t shake off the feeling that an “interim” manager with a record like his would not be getting offered employment until the end of the season at other clubs.

City’s dismal first half performance could perhaps have been put down to the sort of thing you sometimes see when an on loan player signs for a club permanently – his performance levels drop once his future is sorted out and I wonder if there was a similar reaction on a collective level from the team because of the news of Hudson’s contract offer? Alternatively, and flippantly, maybe it was that City saw Sunderland’s first half showing against us on Saturday and were so impressed that they decided to copy it.

Suffice it to say, if our first forty five minutes on Saturday was our best half of the season, tonight we provided our worst so far. Hull were in front in just four minutes after a lovely cross from the left byJacob Greaves was turned in by Dimitrios Pelkas from close range with the left side of City’s defence sleeping.

Hull could have added to their lead when Greg Docherty’s deflected shot was superbly tipped over by Ryan Allsop, but the keeper should have been left with no chance when Ryan Longman glanced a close range header wide.

All City could offer in response was a well struck Joe Ralls shot which flew a yard wide with goalkeeper Nathan Baxter beaten.

With Hull committed to playing out from the back, Baxter had given City some hope as he often looked ill at ease with the ball at his feet and a couple of minutes after the break City we’re level courtesy of a mistake by the keeper.

Baxter played a short pass to Jean Michael Seri, but Ralls was in quickly to direct the ball to Callum Robinson who turned and beat the keeper from twelve yards.

City, who had been ponderous in possession, were now playing better (they could hardly be worse), but it was still a surprise to see them go ahead just after the hour mark when Robinson flighted a fine cross in from the left that was headed in on the far post by Gavin Whyte.

The Northern Ireland international had been brought on with Mark Harris for Romaine Sawyers and Neils N’Kounkou who were both poor on the night and they helped to bring about a more urgent and confident approach from City that suggested they could see the game out.

However, having scored more than once at home for the first time, they chose this night to concede three for the first time on their own ground in a league game this season.

Regan Slater turned the game on its head with two goals in two minutes, the first was a low shot from twenty yards after he got away from Ralls too easily and the second was to finish off a move which had a fluency and cutting edge that City couldn’t match.

Slater’s finish from eight yards gave Hull a deserved win, but they did have a brittleness about them that better sides than City could have exploited. However, they also contributed virtually all of the good football as, increasingly, City reverted to high balls into the box – an approach which made you wonder if they thought Flint, Morison and Moore were still playing for us.

Only when Curtis Nelson headed a Ralls corner not too far over the bar did an equaliser look possible, but it was not to be and so it’s beginning to look like City could be on their way to unwanted hat trick of seasons where they lose more home matches than they win.

Finally, City’s women’s team retained their place at the top of the league, but lost their 100 per cent winning record when they were held 1-1 at Pontypridd Town. It looked like Megan Bowen’s long range goal had won the game for City, but an equaliser in added time rescued a point for the home team.

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