Seven decades of Cardiff City v Swansea City matches.

Cardiff City go into the south Wales derby on Sunday against opponents who have walked all over them in recent meetings. They’ve played poorly in their last two games, while Swansea have won five out of six and came back from 2-0 down to beat Reading on Tuesday. With no sign whatsoever in the three and a half weeks since Steve Morison was sacked of the club actively searching for a replacement, there is a sense of drift about the place which would surely need to be addressed if we were to see a repeat of the sort of spineless, just don’t get it type showings which have become the norm in games against Swansea, and, to a lesser extent, Bristol City lately.

I wouldn’t give Mark Hudson much chance of keeping his caretaker manager’s job if we surrender as meekly as we did in the two derby’s last season. However, given how bad we’ve been in the fixture and Swansea’s current form, a positive result (a creditable draw would suffice in my view) would work wonders for his job prospects when it came to our next permanent manager.

I’m not optimistic regarding that positive outcome mind. A defeat with honour is as good as it will get for us I fear, but win. lose or draw, the answers to this quiz will be posted on here on Monday!

60s. The term journeyman can definitely be applied to this player who racked up over six hundred appearances without getting the chance in the top two divisions that his talent probably merited. Down the years, he appeared against City at Ninian Park wearing white for Swansea, as well as green and black stripes, as an away kit if I remember rightly, for his second club and he was a scorer against us wearing red for another team during the same season. His career spanned three decades and during the last of them he featured against us while wearing amber – who is he?

70s. This defender spent the whole of his career playing for clubs west of his Wiltshire birthplace, seemingly with a career motto of anywhere but Cardiff! He didn’t play too often for his first club where he could look out at a bridge while playing at home, but he became a regular when he moved to Swansea where his eye for a goal became a feature of his game – he once scored twice in a game at Ninian Park. His next move took him closer to home as he played just under a hundred times for a club which also had his brother on their books for some of his time with them. He experienced a promotion with this club as well before he moved on to end his career with non league Tigers. – can you name him?

80s. Loser chic adds man to produce a Semi Finalist. (5.7)

90s. By the time he arrived at Swansea, this winger’s career had gone into a pretty steep decline. Six years before he signed for the jacks, he’d scored over twenty times to become one of the biggest clubs in the land’s top scorer. He also played in a Wembley Final for them before losing his place to a union man. He would go on to play for clubs in all of the countries in the UK, but once he’d left his first club, it was only at Swansea where there was something approaching a sense of being settled. He played over sixty times in his two years with the jacks and later managed various non league clubs in south east England including one that was involved in a ridiculous game with Wrexham last season – who is he?

00s. Who played thirteen times for Swansea during 03/04 and was on City’s books in 2020?

10s. Add to Bluebirds by the sound of it!

20s. President pops up in Bolivia maybe?

Answers.

60s. Dave Gwyther played in the Football League for Swansea, Halifax, Rotherham and Newport (two spells) during a nineteen year career between 1965 and 1984 – he also had a short spell with Crewe on loan from Newport.

70s. Dave Bruton started his career with Bristol City, before moving on to Swansea in 1973. Bruton scored at both ends of the pitch in 1-1 draw against the jacks at Ninian Park in the Welsh Cup in February 1976 before a move TO Newport in 1978. His brother Mike was on County’s books for a while in 79/80 and Dave stayed with them until 1981. He finished his career with a spell at Gloucester City.

80s. Chris Coleman.

90s. Martin Hayes was a regular in the Arsenal side in the mid eighties and scored twenty four times for them in 85/86 – he was also a goalscorer in the Gunners’ League Cup Final defeat by Luton. He lost his place in Arsenal’s starting eleven when they signed future PFA Chairman Brian Marwood and a move to Celtic did not work out for Hayes. In 1993 he signed for Swansea – Hayes scored for them in a 1-1 draw at Ninian Park in September 1994. Hayes also played for Northern Irish team Cliftonville for a while and was a manager of four non league clubs, one of which was Dover Athletic.

00s. Brian Murphy.

10s. Mo Barrow.

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You can’t keep on blaming the officials all of the time – City have not been good enough in their last two games.

Okay, referee James Linington was, like so many of his EFL colleagues, crap, but Cardiff City we’re not good enough on Saturday when the officials were offered up as an excuse for defeat and they weren’t good enough tonight in losing 3-0 at QPR in a totally one sided encounter.

True, City had to play for more than seventy minutes with ten men as a consequence of more woeful officiating. However, the eighteen or so minutes when it was eleven against eleven saw City performing as poorly as at any time this season with the possible exception of the League Cup loss to Portsmouth.

The match was not much more than fifteen seconds old when Perry Ng, under no great pressure, carelessly miscontrolled a throw in and ended up having to give away a free kick on the edge of the penalty area. Ng became one of six Cardiff players to be shown a card by the fussy Mr Linington and his team were able to survive that early scare with no damage done.

In fact, for a very short while, it looked like City had recovered well from their sloppy start as Neils Nkounkou flashed a twenty five yard shot narrowly over and Ryan Wintle was not far away with an effort from a similar distance a few minutes later.

However, all that had happened was that City had condensed the sum total of their worthwhile attacking play into the opening ten minutes because there was nothing after that Wintle effort worth recording. The team which specialises in nil’s is really back on track after scoring in three successive games with a total of no goals and one effort on target in their last two games.

That on target figure should be two of course, but Bobby Madley ensured that it isn’t.The refereeing howler this time came at the other end of the pitch with a dubious penalty award and a ridiculous red card which I’ll come to later, but you couldn’t blame tonight’s ref for the panicky and error prone defending in those first twenty minutes or so.

QPR could easily have scored three during that time against a City side that, despite looking the same sort of soft touch as they were at Bristol City, Millwall and Huddersfield, were picking up cards at an alarming rate.

Jack Simpson was shown a red one for a foul which led to the penalty from which Rangers went ahead on eighteen minutes. Young forward Sinclair Armstrong burst between Cedric Kipre and Simpson and fell to the ground as the latter moved across to put in a tackle. There was some contact, but only from Simpson’s arm as far as I could see and it did not appear to be forceful enough to merit the sort of fall we saw from Armstrong.

However, I thought there was enough in it to merit an “I’ve seen them given” possible penalty ranking and so, although it looked soft to me, I wasn’t altogether surprised to see the spot kick. awarded.

Once I’d seen a replay though, I was convinced that the referee had got the red card decision wrong. I’d also say that I thought the laws of the game had been changed recently so that there is not the “double jeopardy” of a red card and the likely concession of a goal these days – the penalty is considered sufficient punishment with only a possible yellow card for the offender.

This was definitely yellow card territory at worst for me under the new interpretation I mentioned earlier. As Lyndon Dykes placed his penalty well enough to just beat Ryan Allsop’s dive to his right though,plans were already being made in the City dug out as to how we could go about trying to make up for Simpson’s absence.

As happens so often when a team goes down to ten men following the dismissal of a defender, Mark Hudson opted to shore up an under manned defence with the introduction of Curtis Nelson – Romaine Sawyers made way for him. I would have taken Sheyi Ojo off myself because we needed to keep it three against three in midfield as we were struggling to cope when there were equal numbers in the middle of the park before the sending off.

Instead, we went with two against a good Rangers midfield trio and, in doing so, we consigned ourselves to an evening of very little possession and keeping our defensive shape as damage limitation became the order of the day.

It could be said that the match was over as a meaningful contest once Dykes scored his second in the thirty third minute with a simple close range finish as Manchester United loanee Ethan Laird featured prominently down the right. Laird won his attack v defence dual with Nkounkou who was his usual mixture of defensive liability and exciting ball carrier.

N’Kounkou’s best attacking moment in the first half was when he went on a long run past four or five opponents and slipped a good ball through to Ojo I think it was. It looked a promising situation for City, but Linington brought play back to award us a worthless free kick and issue a yellow card to the QPR offender. This was one of sixteen fouls committed by the home side compared to our eleven and yet Mr Linington saw fit to give us five yellow cards and one red one compared to the home side’s two yellows.

There’s not much I want to say about the rest of the game. All City had to offer through the second half was dogged defence and they did this to pretty good effect (certainly better than they did while it was eleven v eleven).

Rangers scored once more when Ken Paal guided a header from beyond the far post over Allsop and into the corner of the net. I thought there was a slight element of luck to it, but, truthfully, it seemed to me that Rangers could have scored five or six if they’d wanted to.

Away from the first team, there were a couple of 1-0 wins over the past few days. The first came when the women’s team beat Aberystwyth Town 1-0 thanks to a first half goal by Rhianne Oakley, thereby maintaining their 100 per cent record at the top of the table. The Under 21s were 1-0 winners at Watford thanks to Raheem Conte’s late goal and they are now third in their league after three consecutive wins – although, just as with the other two, it was hardly the most convincing of performances. Still, what would the first team and their caretaker manager give for an unconvincing 1-0 win at the moment?

Finally, as has been the habit at the start of a new season in recent years, can I ask readers if they’re willing to make a donation towards the running costs of the blog. I say running costs towards the blog, but, that’s not really true this time because this year any donations will go towards costs incurred in the production and publication of the book I aim to have out for sale by October.

As mentioned this time last year, I decided to do another review of a season to follow on from Real Madrid and all that which was about 1970/71. This one is about the 1975/76 season and will be called Tony Evans walks on water. I finished writing the book over the weekend and now it’s a question of tidying it up, proof reading, inserting a few photos and designing a cover  before sending it off for printing.

As always, the blog will still be free to read for anyone who chooses not to make a donation towards its running costs and, apart from the one in the top right hand corner which is to do with Google Ads, you will never have to bother about installing an ad blocker to read this site because there will never be any.

Donations can be made through Patreon, PayPal, by bank transfer, cheque, Standing Order/Direct Debit and cash, e-mail me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further payment details.

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Posted in Out on the pitch, The stiffs, Women's football | Tagged , , | 1 Comment