Lead over third place extended as free scoring Cardiff go twelve unbeaten.

AFC Wimbledon gave Cardiff City a much more testing time tonight than Luton had done on Saturday, but you wouldn’t have guessed it by the scoreline as City scored four goals for the fifth time in a home league game this season to record a win on a night when Lincoln won again, but the chasing pack stumbled to an extent.

Bolton rescued a point at Reading with a goal six minutes into added time, while Stockport came out on the wrong end of a 1-0 scoreline at Bradford which propels them right back into the heart of the battle for a top six place. Meanwhile a bad few days for Huddersfield ended with them beaten 1-0 again, this time by Doncaster.

So, we continue to lead Lincoln by four points, but now it’s a gap of twelve to Bolton in third and, as of tonight, Bradford, fourteen points behind us, but with a game in hand, are probably best placed to catch us as they have now moved two points ahead of Stockport.

A scoreline of 4-1 probably flattered us somewhat against opponents who were deservedly level with us at 1-1 after forty five minutes. However, a couple of quick fire goals around the hour mark swung the match decisively in our favour and the chances were there after that for us to go beyond that four goal mark for the first time this season.

City brought in Will Fish (23 today) for Gabriel Osho and Ryan Wintle returned after his suspension for David Turnbull in the only two changes from the weekend and we were set back on their heels somewhat by a lively Wimbledon start which saw the ball bouncing about a few yards from our goal from a corner with barely three minutes played.

City took a while to get going, but, when they did, they started to pose a threat down the right with Oliie Tanner prominent while on the other flank, a subdued Chris Willock had a night when the ball just didn’t seem to head his way as much as normal.

Perry Ng shot wide from close range as Wimbledon struggled to cope with Tanner, while Omari Kellyman forced a diving save out of Nathan Bishop, but it was by no means one way traffic as Wimbledon showed more ambition than I for one had been expecting from them.

When the game’s first goal came on twenty two minutes, it was hardly as if it had a sense of inevitability about it, but as it came for City, I couldn’t help feeling that it was the signal for us to take charge.

It was one of those goals where you have to salute the scoring team for both cleverness and technique and yet the defending side’s coaching staff and manager would be fuming because they’d got caught out from a set piece. Alex Robertson went out to take a corner on our right which seemed a bit strange as Tanner had been taking inswingers up to then from that side. However, the reason for the change was made clear as Robertson played a low pass from the flag kick to Joel Colwill who was stood around the penalty spot and he swept his first time shot beyond Bishop. It was a quality goal in terms of both the assist and the finish, but, as I say, Wimbledon erred by leaving Joel with so much room.

The goal seemed to rock the visitors for a while, but they worked their way back into the game despite having to make a change up front when Matt Stevens replaced the injured Omar Bugiel. 

Tanner was still the main threat for City, but he was becoming a bit more careless as the half wore on and this maybe gave the visitors the encouragement to push on a bit more after a short spell where we did look like we could take charge in the manner I was expecting us to.

City weren’t quite “at lt” in the way they’d been in their last two games though – although still dominating possession, they were sometimes unusually careless in their passing. Careless would be the word I would use to describe a pointless foul given away by Ng as well as the half went into the signalled two minutes of added time.

City were made to pay as Steve Seddon’s nicely flighted delivery was deftly volleyed in by Stevens as he got in front of Calum Chambers.

While it was hardly a case of BBM needing to read the riot act to his team at half time, it felt like City needed to wake their ideas up somewhat in the second half. Instead, it was a quiet first ten minutes or so which would have had Wimbledon feeling increasingly confident of heading home with at least a point, but City suddenly came to life in a five minute spell which had them looking almost certain winners by the time it was up.

Tanner almost cashed in on as a misplaced pass by visiting captain Ryan Johnson as he ran from half way only to shot a yard wide. Within another minute or so, Joel Bagan was worked into a great position only to see his shot deflected up and narrowly over the bar by a defender.

From the resultant corner, City regained their lead when Tanner’s inswinger was nodded in at the near post by Ng to make it three goals in three home matches for the full back.

Again though, Wimbledon had left the City scorer unmarked when defending a corner, but there was certainly no feeling sorry for themselves as they opened up our defence with some neat passing straight from the restart and Stevens shot across Nathan Trott, but also across the face of the goal as his effort rolled  four foot wide.

With Tanner having provided an assist for Ng, the roles were reversed as a long period of patient City passing was ended by Perry playing a short pass to the winger who was able to burst inside and shoot low past Bishop from the edge of the penalty area.

It was Tanner’s first goal of the season and I’m grateful to blog reader Howard Jones for informing me that this makes eighteen players now who have scored for us this season which I’m told equals a club record that was set in 1999/2000 – a season when we got relegated!

Although Wimbledon ended up having one more goal attempt than us (16/17), they didn’t really cause us many problems in the second half and, apart from a header against a post in the dying seconds and the Stevens chance mentioned earlier, they never looked like scoring after the break. 

On the other hand, we had plenty of occasions where the final ball wasn’t quite right when we’d virtually opened the Wimbledon defence. As it was, we were able to add one more goal when substitute Callum Robinson’s clever pass set Kellyman free and he calmly beat Bishop from twelve yards.

There was five minutes or so for loan signing Callum Scanlon as he replaced Kellyman, but I’m pretty sure he didn’t touch the ball as the game petered out rather gently as City made it twelve without defeat. They are probably in a position now where a mere point a game in their last fourteen games would be enough to guarantee a Play Off spot and a mid table type finish of a point and a half per game would see us equaling the club record of ninety points set in our 17/18 promotion season.

Finally, a first half goal was enough to condemn the under 21s to defeat this afternoon at Queens Park Rangers. 

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A few decades of Cardiff City v (AFC) Wimbledon matches.

After spending most of the season being perceived as a low scoring side that was greatly reliant on their decent defensive record, AFC Wimbledon have become the great entertainers as they have hit a run of form which should be enough to help them stay above the bottom four – something which would have been regarded as success before a ball was kicked for the team which made it up through the League Two Play Offs last season.

For a while during the first two or three months of the season, Wimbledon’s sights were aimed much higher than mere survival as they spent much of their time in the top six, but a run of nine league games without a win through to the New Year had many thinking they were right to tip the Dons to go down after all.

A win at Leyton Orient on New Year’s Day didn’t stop the slide as just one point was taken from the next twelve available and so when they went to rock bottom Port Vale early this month, it looked like a way for Vale to, perhaps, launch a revival at the expense of a team they could potentially finish above come May.

I watched part of that game and it was just as tense as you would expect it to be with quality at a premium, but the Dons got the vital goal in the eighty eighth minute and, since then, there’s been a 3-2 home win over an in form Reading, courtesy of a Marcus Browne hat trick, and a 3-3 draw at Barnsley on Saturday in which they turned an early 2-0 deficit into a 3-2 lead and would have been disappointed to have let the home side equalise in the eighty seventh minute.

Wimbledon come here tomorrow with a surprisingly good away record which includes six wins and three draws in their sixteen matches and, in fact, their twenty two goals scored is only bettered by Plymouth and Reading.

I think now we’re at a stage where for the majority of our remaining matches the formula has to be not to allow complacency to creep in because we’ve proved we’re better than most of the teams we’ve got left to play, but if we take our foot off the gas at all, sides like Blackpool and Burton have shown that we aren’t good enough to assume we only have to turn up to win.

We should beat Wimbledon, but they’ve triumphed against Lincoln this season and so we need to be on our guard against, perhaps, the team in this league that is easiest to underestimate.

On to the quiz, seven questions related to the different versions of the team from Wimbledon going back to the 60s.

60s. This forward, who I remember as the player with the most impressive pair of sideburns/mutton chop whiskers of the time, had an unusual route into the professional game as he began his working life in the coal mines of Kent. However, his prolific scoring during his three years in non league football for Wimbledon predictably had clubs from the Football League circling. When he left the Dons, it was for a modest fee to join a team which had recently recorded a notable cup win at Ninian Park and, after starting quietly in his first season, he went on to win the club’s Player of the Year award, plus a Player of the Year award voted for by the managers in the division his team had just got promoted from. In fact, his scoring rate at his first professional club was slightly better than it had been in non league football and so it was no surprise when a club in the north of the country which had a very illustrious past paid a then club record fee for him. Despite a still decent scoring rate, the move did not work out – as to why, home sickness shouldn’t have been a factor because the club concerned were from the county of his birth. It was something of a surprise though to see him again drop into non league football after a couple of years as he moved to a city with a team nicknamed the Clarets. He didn’t stay long though because another team that had been a power in the land decades earlier before falling on hard times brought him back into the Football League briefly. After that, he had a season in South Africa and then saw out his football career with various non league sides in Kent. Who am I describing?

70s. This Scottish full back was at Leicester as a youth, but left to join a team in hoops without playing a game for them. His form over four years for his new team earned him a move to another side with a distinctive kit which would soon be playing in the First Division for the first time in their history. He played in most of the games as his team earned that promotion and was a fairly regular selection in the first season after they went up, but saw little first team action after that and was eventually loaned out to to reds from another country. Surprisingly, at the end of the loan spell, he chose to sign for Wimbledon, who were still a non League side at the time and he was a regular in their team for two seasons before ending his career among Poppies. Who is he?

80s. See how many times crayon is used perhaps to find a player who began his career at Wimbledon and returned there later on loan – he played just one league game for the Dons on both occasions However, he clocked up more than three hundred appearances for a team that had a reputation for playing like Wimbledon at that time. (5,6)

90s. Recently arrived slaughterer maybe?

00s. Appropriately I suppose, this forward’s first club was Wembley because he’s most remembered for a goal he scored for a then non league club in a controversial tie with Premier League opposition in the FA Cup. His goal earned his team a draw before they lost narrowly in the replay and, although he played close to three hundred Football League games, it’s what he did while out on loan to that non league club which people associate him with now. In fact, there was one other game which was truly memorable for him – that was when he scored five times in a League Two game I believe it was in what was the club who loaned him out’s record win. Towards the end of his career, he had an injury hit spell at AFC Wimbledon as they climbed the leagues to regain their EFL status, but who is he?

10s. Sounds like an Argonaut with a liking for Christmas!

20. Measurement of distance followed by an oxymoron perhaps!

Answers

60s.John O’Mara joined Brentford from Wimbledon in early 1971 and scored twenty five times in forty games in his first full season at Griffin Park. Blackburn Rovers then paid £50,000 for him before he returned south to join Chelmsford City in 1974. O’Mara soon returned to the pro game with Bradford City, but only played three times for them before leaving league football for good.

70s. John Loughlan’s form for Morton earned him a move to Crystal Palace in 1968 and he was a regular in their promotion team in 1969/70. Loughlan then played more than half of the league games as Palace fought successfully to maintain their top flight status in 70/71, but largely dropped out of first team contention after that and had a loan spell at Wrexham in 1972, before signing for Wimbledon and then Kettering.

80s. Goalkeeper Simon Tracey played one league game as a youngster for Wimbledon before signing for Sheffield United where he went on to play more than three hundred league games. During his time at Sheffield, he was loaned to Wimbledon and again just played the once – this time in a 4-1 defeat by Nottingham Forest.

90s. Justin Skinner.

00s. Giulliano Grazioli scored for Stevenage against Newcastle at Broadhall Way in 1998. A few months later, he scored five times for Peterborough in a 9-1 win at Barnet which is, apparently, a record win for Posh. Grazioil was near the end of his career when he turned out for AFC Wimbledon a couple of times in 07/08.

10s. Jason Euell.

20s. Myles Hippolyte.

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