Having welcomed Burnley to Cardiff City Stadium on the weekend, we now entertain their bitter rivals Blackburn tomorrow. For me, the three worst opposing sides we faced on our own ground last season were Peterborough, Reading and Blackburn and it shows how bad we were at home in 21/22 that the latter two sides both won 1-0! This time around, Blackburn seem to be better equipped to last the distance as top six challengers, although the league seems even more closely matched than usual this season and it wouldn’t surprise me if sides like West Brom and Middlesbrough (it won’t be with Chris Wilder in charge mind!) still end up in the top six and the likes of Reading and Wigan battling against the drop.
I reckon it was a point gained for City on Saturday and wouldn’t be surprised to see another draw tomorrow, although that would be a first for the season for Blackburn who have won six and lost five so far.
Here’s the usual seven questions about our next opponents, I’ll post the answers on Wednesday.
60s. This full back only played for two teams, who both wore blue and were both some way from his Northumberland birthplace. Blackburn was the first of them and he would have played some First Division football for them when he broke into the team, but most of his eight years at Ewood Park were spent in the second tier. He stayed at that level when he moved a lot further away from home to represent a side that was fancied to do well at the time, but it turned out they were at the start of a decline which saw them in the basement within five years. Described as “tough tackling” by Wikipedia, he was sent off on one of his visits to Ninian Park with his manager of the time complaining that the challenge he was dismissed for did not even merit a booking. On retirement, he took over the management of the pub which stands very close to the ground where his second side still play, but can you name him?
70s. An unlucky footballer, this forward scored ninety nine Football League goals in his career and never won a cap for his adopted country although he was once stood on the touchline ready to come on for his debut in a very important game, when his team scored the only goal and he was told to sit back on the bench. He started off in a city whose team has never experienced top flight football and, come to think off it, they’ve not played much in the second level either. There was little in his record at this team to suggest that he would be the success he turned out to be at his second club, which was close by to his first one. Three quarters of his goals came for this, seaside, club with one of them coming in a losing cause at Ninian Park. His transfer to Blackburn was seen as a step up for him, but, although he was a pretty regular starter in his one season at Ewood Park, just six goals meant that he was soon on the move again – this time, having spent much of his career wearing stripes, he ended it with a team which wears hoops these days. Do you know who he is?
80s. Blackburn Rovers’ version of Thought for the Day maybe?
90s. How a do0lally underdog could be described perhaps?
00s. So nearly doubles down on North initially to end up with a centreback. (4,6)
10s. Manchester United. Leicester, Derby and Rangers – how is that list relevant to a player who appeared for both City and Blackburn during this decade?
20s. Jan Poortvliet played in the 1978 World Cup Final and lost his first game as Southampton manager in August 2008 by 2-1 at Ninian Park, he also has a nephew who played for Blackburn last season, who is he?
Answers
60. Billy Wilson made his debut for Blackburn in 1964 and played nearly two hundred and fifty times in the league for them before signing for Portsmouth. Wilson made close to two hundred league appearances for Pompey and one of them, in September 1973, saw him dismissed by referee Ray Toseland in a 1-1 draw at Ninian Park. Wilson retired in 1979 and was landlord of the Pompey public house just outside Fratton Park for a while.
70s. Jack Lewis started off at Lincoln City, but it was at Grimsby that he made his reputation, scoring seventy four league goals in over two hundred and fifty appearances. His time with Blackburn was not as successful and he ended his Football League career at Doncaster. Lewis was a Wales under 23 international and was named as a substitute for their vital full international game with Austria in November 1975 at Wrexham when they needed a win to qualify for the latter stages of the equivalent of the Euros – Lewis was just about to come on for his debut when Arfon Griffiths scored the only goal of the game and he never got to get his full Welsh cap.
80s. Christian Dailly.
90s. David Batty.
00s. Ryan Nelson.
10s. It’s a list of the clubs Tom Lawrence has had permanent contracts with, he’s also had plenty of loan moves’ including ones to Blackburn and City in 15/16 when he was with Leicester.
20s.Jan Paul Van Hecke played thirty one times for Blackburn last season while on loan from Brighton.
So, how different is a Mark Hudson Cardiff City team from a Steve Morrison one? On the evidence of today’s 1-1 draw with Burnley at Cardiff City Stadium, it would seem not much, but I’d say that what differences I spotted were more positive than negative.
One was the system used, there was a return to the back four favoured by Morison for much of this season before he reverted to a three in his last two matches, but this was more of a straight 4-4-2 than I can remember Morison ever playing even if it did tend to switch to a 4-4-1-1 some of the time.
As for style of play, I saw no difference whatsoever from the Morison approach introduced this season. If it was true that City sides of recent seasons were only really able to play one way, it seems equally true to say that the squad built by Morison over the summer is not too adaptable either. For a start, they do not appear to be physically able to make a decent fist of playing the direct game before you begin to consider other factors.
If you agree with me that, essentially, we had the same players using the same approach as we had under Morison, then it’s hard to see how much would change from what we’d seen previously if we assume that, first, Morison had not lost the dressing room and, second, the team were giving of their best for him. For me, we had our problems and weaknesses in our opening couple of months to the campaign, but a lack of motivation wasn’t one of them and, while there are rumours about how Morison handled some of the younger players flying about, I don’t think anyone can realistically claim he’d lost the dressing room when it included seventeen players he brought in himself a few weeks earlier.
So, if it’s also accepted that there isn’t a formation out there which could transform us into a much more threatening attacking unit, you have to think that when it comes to sticking the ball in the net, Mark Hudson can only make pretty minor adjustments which may or may not help the situation. Realistically, it can only be the confidence gained by better results and a lifting of the pressure our creative players and strikers are under that will see a slow, but gradual, increase in our goalscoring rate.
That’s why I said at the start that there were one or two minor differences which offered more hopeful signs. For a start, although I accept that I could be seen to be clutching at straws somewhat here, I liked the corner we worked in the first half when Joe Ralls swung it in to the near post where Callum Robinson came off the goal ,line from his marker and got his head to the ball to flick it towards the far post where it dropped just wide – it was only when I saw a replay of the incident that I realised just how close Robinson had come to scoring. It was clearly a planned move and it was as close as we’ve come to scoring from a corner this season, so it was good to see that some thought had been put in to trying to rectify one of our weak points.
The big plus out of the game for me though, and I think Hudson have to be given some credit for this, is that we no longer have to think that’s the end of that then when we concede the first goal. We finally managed to get something out of a match we went behind in.
This is the sort of thing I mean about increasing confidence slowly – by equalising so late on, we have some momentum to carry into Tuesday’s match with Blackburn. If I’m being honest, I was completely, and very pleasantly, surprised when we scored and I think we were helped to an extent by a timid opponent, but it doesn’t matter, we got a draw after conceding and, after Mark Harris at Middlesbrough, we have another forward who is off the mark when it comes to goalscoring.
In some ways, this was like our game against another relegated side in Norwich in that it was a match with not a great deal of goalmouth action in which we competed and defended pretty well and, in the end, we came out with a satisfactory result.
In his post match interview, Mark Hudson said that Burnley are the best team in the division. I’ll come to why I find it hard to agree with our acting manager there shortly, but they are fourth in the table with a quarter of the season almost completed. Therefore, best or not, you have to start thinking that they are going to be around that sort of position for the duration – they are a good side by the standards of the 22/23 Championship.
There are similarities between Burnley and City in that, after years of being a physical, long ball team by the standards of the division they were in anyway, Burnley have rebuilt their squad and are playing a more progressive, passing style under new manager Vincent Kompany and his assistant Craig Bellamy.
For the majority of the game, I thought Burnley were better at playing their new style than we were (so they should be as well given the money they’ve spent compared to us). They scored early in the second half and were looking good for a while for a second, but then, after a quadruple substitution by Kompany not too far past the hour mark, they gradually went deeper and deeper and handed the initiative to City.
Now, given our scoring record this season and the problems we’ve had after going behind, you could understand in a way why Burnley felt they could sit back on their laurels content with a 1-0 win, but would we have been able to get our point without this change of approach by our opponents?
I don’t think we would have if I’m being honest. That said, Burnley were harried out of their measured stride in the closing minutes and were reduced to clearing it anywhere at times as the ball kept on coming back at them. Because of that late rally, I think we were good value for our point at the end, but,I’d also say that it was very much a case of two lost by Burnley rather than one gained – they may have only lost one out of eleven, but with six draws as well, you wonder about their “killer instinct”..
City started the game slightly the better and that header by Robinson I mentioned earlier was his third, and best, goal attempt as City, looking to play on the counter attack with a high press in which Mark Harris was prominent, suggested that they could, perhaps, repeat their Norwich win.
However, Robinson’s header proved to be something of a turning point as the visitors began to take control after that.
Ryan Allsop was forced into the only save by either keeper of the first forty five minutes when he got down well to block Josh Cullen’s well struck low shot from fifteen yards and grab the ball as it threatened to bounce loose just in front of goal.
A poor back pass by the otherwise impressive Mahlon Romeo landed his team in further trouble and Burnley would have had a clear penalty were it not for a marginal offside decision in City’s favour.
Johann Berg Gudmundsson was not too far wide with a curling effort as the visitors enjoyed their best spell of the game with City glad to get in at half time with the scoresheet still blank.
That situation did not last long after the interval though, little more than three minutes actually. Niels Nkounkou has had more than his fair share of defensive calamities this season and a feature of the first half was how much room Gudmundsson was being afforded out on the right when receiving long crossfield passes.
Much the same happened when the Icelandic international was fed in plenty of space and crossed to where Romeo and Nathan Tella competed for the ball, Romeo went down as the ball bypassed both of them and flew beyond the far post to where Ian Maatsen crossed instantly and this time Tella was able to stab home from six yards.
City claimed that Tella had pushed Romeo over, but replays of the goal do not really back that up and so attention has tended to focus on the room Nkounkou was leaving his winger. I agreed with the criticism the Everton loanee received after he gave Afobe of Millwall so much room for their second goal, but, this time, I’m reluctant to blame him because it seems to me that he was playing to orders.
I say that because I can’t imagine Mark Hudson not tearing into Nkounkou at half time if he was under orders to stay tight to Gudmundsson – the fact that Hudson kept him on for the full ninety minutes tells me Nkounkou was under orders to stay narrow in the modern manner which I’m not a great fan of.
Fella’s goal was Burnley’s second and last effort on target of the game, but, maybe Tella would have had a third one if Perry Ng hadn’t deflected his shot over after Ryan Wintle had got in trouble following an unusually poor pass from Allsop.
An unmarked Jack Cork headed the resultant corner wide and that was virtually the end of Burnley as an attacking force.
City still hadn’t had a single on target effort at this stage, but they ended up with a better than normal four courtesy of Wintle’s snap shot, after a Ralls toe poke was deflected into his path, which was easily saved by Arijanet Muric in the visitor’s goal, Romeo’s vicious shot from the corner of the penalty area that the keeper was happy to punch clear and Robinson’s firmly hit effort from outside the penalty area that Muric was again equal to.
There was, of course, also the goal, but, with every cross City put in seemingly being dealt with by Charlie Taylor (credit to the left back turned centre back for being in the right place so often, but he was aided by the lack of quality in our crossing as we again showed our limitations when it comes to delivering the “final ball”.
There was one exception to that rule though when, with the game set to go into six minutes of added time, sub Jack Simpson, on for the injured Cedric Kipre, lofted a long ball that Burnley could only deal with by half clearing to Romeo and this time the full back’s cross was perfect as he picked out Robinson who got a great leap in to flick his header into the net from eight yards out.
Burnley’s marking left a lot to be desired, but it was a good striker’s finish by City’s newest signing to open his account for the club.
Sub Max Watters never looked like getting the better of Taylor as he ran in on goal in what was the only real scare either side had after Robinson’s equaliser and the game finished 1-1 – a result which I reckon has improved Mark Hudson’s chances of getting the manager’s job on a full time basis and, if nothing else, ridded him of the unwanted one hundred per cent losing record he had in four previous games as a caretaker manager.
There was a first league defeat of the season for the under 18s at Watford this lunchtime, Kyle Kenniford’s penalty made it 1-1 around the hour mark, but the home side won it with a late goal. Meanwhile, in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League, Ton Pentre we’re beaten 2-1 at Pencoed Athletic, while AFC Porth’s woes continued with a 5-0 loss at Tonyrefail Boys and Girls Club.
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.
Can I end by thanking all of you who read and contribute towards the blog in the Feedback section, but, in particular, a big thank you to all who have donated in the past and continue to do so now.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok