Seven decades of Cardiff City v Bristol City matches.

Barring another meeting in the FA Cup, City will be in the unusual position of having completed their home derby fixtures before the end of October following Bristol City’s visit tomorrow.

With victory over Swansea last month and a win over the wurzels back in March, derby games are no longer the embarrassment they were a year ago and with Bristol hard hit by injuries, particularly in defence, there are grounds for hope this time around, although, to counter that somewhat, the wurzels seem to be a better side away from Ashton Gate this season.

A week ago, I would have probably been not too upset by a draw tomorrow, but Tuesday’s completely unexpected result has, of course, led to an increase in expectations – if it wasn’t my team involved, I’d probably be tipping a narrow home win tomorrow!

Meanwhile, here’s the usual seven decades quiz, the answers to which will be posted on Sunday.

60s.Norfolk born, this forward was a one club man before a knee injury forced his retirement at the age of twenty seven. Some supporters who saw him play are adamant that he had the hardest shot of anyone who has played for the wurzels and his powerful physique was a big part in making him a goal every four games merchant over a ten year period where he played jut short of two hundred games. He remained as a Bristol City employee on the administrative side of things for a while after his retirement and then became a full time official for the Transport and General Worker’s Union – who am I describing?

70s. Born in county Durham, this full back was at a club where he’d played under a managerial legend when he signed for Bristol City for a modest £10,000 fee as the sixties were coming to an end. He proved to be a bargain and gave the wurzels great service over the next eight years before moving on to a city with a district called Jericho. He returned to the west country to become player manager of four non league teams in the area and his son made a living from the game playing in the same position as his father – his son made close to two hundred league appearances, but that was less than half the number his father played in, can you name father and son?

80s. He is the great, great grandson of a one time Bristol City Director, played in the same school team as Ian Holloway, played one game for the wurzels before moving to a Welsh club, has a degree, gained at Swansea University, in English Literature, he played for a side which has won multiple European Cups and Champions Leagues and another one that is appearing in this season’s Champions League,. He has worked as a nightclub bouncer at times since his retirement from playing, who is he?

90s. Cashed New York earnings at first to become manager. (4.5)

00s. Sounds like fuel that’s a bit wonky!

10s.. Something Waylon Smithers might shout in a moment of panic? Think this one probably deserves an apology from me!

20s. Male rustic who sounds like he’s mastered two professions!

Answers

60s. Terry Bush signed for Bristol City in 1960 and retired ten years later having made a significant contribution to their promotion to the Second Division in 1964/65.

70s. Brian Drysdale played under Brian Clough and Peter Taylor at Hartlepool before signing for Bristol City in 1969. He moved to Oxford United in 1977 for a short spell before ending his playing days in non league football in the Bristol area. Brian’s son Jason played nearly one hundred and fifty times for Watford, before spells with Newcastle, Swindon and Northampton.

80s. Goalkeeper Mike Hooper was with Liverpool for the second half of the eighties and later moved on to Newcastle. He started off at Bristol City, before signing for Wrexham from where he signed for Liverpool.

90s. Sean Dyche.

00s. Cole Skuse.

10s. Wes Burns – Waylon Smithers is Mr Burns’ sycophantic assistant in the Simpsons.

20s. Taylor Gardner-Hickman.

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Cardiff back in top six after an amazing night when they could have had eight!

Anyone watching Cardiff City’s last two matches against Watford and Blackburn would probably have thought they’d had their flirtation with the top six places for the season and the object of the exercise would be more about making sure they did not fall into the relegation scrap.

However, following tonight’s completely unexpected 4-0 win at a hapless Huddersfield Town, City are back in sixth position. Even though their lofty position will almost certainly only last for twenty four hours once the other half of the division plays tomorrow, this is the sort of morale booster that gets people thinking that perhaps the top half or better may be an area we can keep interested in for the duration of the season.

So, how did a team that had mustered a grand total of seven on target goal attempts in their previous three matches manage to become so ruthless in front of goal (in truth, ruthless might not be the right word there because, with better finishing, there could have been a doubling of our goal tally on a night when we looked dangerous every time we attacked)?

The reaction to the three winless matches we’ve just been through centred on the manager’s decision to use Ryan Wintle as the closest thing we had to a replacement for the injured Aaron Ramsey. In truth, Wintle was never playing as the genuine number ten that Ramsey had been, he was the most advanced of the three central midfielders, but he’d still be doing his bit defensively and this was the nub of an issue which is the closest thing there’s been to a rift with the fans for our new manager in a first few months which has generally gone better than most were expecting.

Don’t get me wrong, the use of the word rift probably overstates what happened, but, there were a proportion of supporters, myself included, who felt that the manager’s very frank analysis as to why Callum Robinson and Rubin Colwill were not being picked in the starting line up (they don’t do enough when they don’t have the ball) ran the risk of becoming an incidental matter. This is because, for all of our good work without the ball (we’d only had two on target shots on our goal in our last two games), the lack of a natural creator in the central midfield three meant that we were not cashing in on this and it was all making for incident free football that was reminiscent of last season.

I for one was not expecting Erol Bulut to change his approach tonight and I don’t think for one minute that he was persuaded to do so by what some supporters were saying on social media, but, for whatever reason, he went with Robinson instead of Wintle tonight and it took us less than two minutes to find the net!

The other change from the Blackburn game saw Yakou Meite replace Ike Ugbo as the attack leader and I would say that this was at the heart of the reason why we won at a canter.

After about half a dozen games where we were fielding eight players who were more instinctive defenders than attackers, we changed the balance to seven/four, but tonight was more about who the four were.

I’m not saying that Meite, Robinson, Josh Bowler and Karlan Grant are one of the Championship’s great front fours, but they are all experienced players at this level who have had spells during their careers when they were very effective second tier forwards and tonight during a first half that saw us take a 3-0 lead all four of them were a fair bit better than the people charged with marking them – that only happens rarely.

Perhaps the downside of the “gamble” behind tonight’s selection was seen in how, despite the clean sheet, we were more open than we have been – Huddersfield really should have scored despite some sterling work by Jac Alnwick, Dimitrios Goutas, Mark McGuinness and Jamilu Collins as well as Manolis Siopis’ best performance for us so far I’d say (there were a few candidates for man of the match tonight, but it was Sipios for me).

However, it was not to be, the home side’s best player in my opinion Rudoni hit the bar late on and missed a bit of a sitter from a header at the end of the first half, Wales international Sorba Thomas drew a spectacular tip over from Alnwick and the keeper also did well to keep out two more Rudoni efforts – Huddersfield had nineteen goal attempts to our fifteen and we only shaded the on target attempts by seven to six..

The first good Alnwick save came during a strong Huddersfield response to falling behind so early on, but when City made it 2-0 in just the twelfth minute, the rest of the first half was as one sided in our favour as any forty five minutes I’ve seen us play in recent seasons.

Meite established a physical dominance over his Japanese opponent Nakayama when he freed Bowler down the right in the second minute and the winger’s low cross was backhealed towards goal by Robinson and found the net with the help of a deflection off Matt Pearson which I think may end up being adjudged an own goal, but, for now, it’s Robinson’s first league goal of the season in his first league start.

Huddersfield were suggesting that they had an equaliser in them and perhaps more when Perry Ng fed Bowler in space and his left footed shot drew a good save out of Lee Nicholls in the home goal. Huddersfield had not got off the hook though and from the resultant corner swung in by Joe Ralls, Goutas flung himself at the cross to head home from six yards and this time there was no idiot referee desperate to find a reason to disallow it.

Bowler, Grant, Meite and Robinson all might have made it three before Meite did so with his first goal as a Cardiff player when another Ralls corner was only half cleared to the former Reading player who smacked home from ten yards.

I’ve never known a manager make four changes at half time before like Huddersfield boss Darren Moore did tonight and there was an improvement from his side (although I think this probably had a bit to do with City, hardly surprisingly, being content with what they had).

In saying that, Bowler should have done better after Collins had got to the bye line and pulled the ball back to the winger fifteen yards out. There were also good chances missed on the counter attack in the closing minutes, but there was a fourth goal in the form of another great free kick from Perry Ng.

The full back’s goal at Birmingham last February was one of the best moments of a dismal season and Ng said he rated that one as better than tonight’s, but I’m not sure about that. This one might have been better as he bent the ball outside of the goal and around the wall only for it to come back enough to go in about a foot inside the upright – I don’t believe Nicholls lined up the wall badly or he positioned himself poorly, but he was still well beaten by the sheer quality of Ng’s strike.

The under 21s were in action at Watford today and Cian Ashford put them ahead on forty three minutes. A second goal soon followed (sorry, no news on who got it), so it was disappointing to learn that the home team scored twice in the second half to secure a draw. There was also a 5-1 win for City’s women’s team at Pontypridd on Sunday and they are now the only unbeaten side in their league – Eliza Collie, Siobhan Walsh, Molly Kehoe, Seren Watkins and Mikayla Cook were the goalscorers.

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