Kaba’s eqauliser against timid West Brom helps to keep bottom three at arm’s length.

Very much a case of a point gained, rather than two lost, for Cardiff City tonight in their home game with West Bromwich Albion for a few reasons.

First, for a side that had only been able to come back and get anything from matches where they had conceded the first goal of the match once all season (curiously in a 1-1 draw against runaway leaders Burnley), there was naturally a feeling that the points were as good as West Brom’s when they went ahead on seventeen minutes. However, this time, there was an equaliser midway through the second half to make sure that, with all of the teams below them picking up at least a point in the last twenty four hours, no great damage was done to City’s survival hopes.

Secondly, the draw makes it seven points from a possible nine at home and, for a team that has as bad a home record as us over the past two and three quarter seasons, that is riches indeed. The confidence gained by the Reading and Bristol City wins may have played a part in tonight’s fight back as well because the game was shaping up to be one of those too familiar 1-0 home losses that we’ve seen more than enough of lately – however, having scored three times in the second half of those two wins, maybe there was a bit more confidence around even though things were not going well for the team.

That’s the third thing, this was a point gained from a game we did not play well in – I’ll go into more detail on that shortly, suffice to say our equaliser came as a shock to me because it was hardly as if we were laying the West Brom goal under siege – the goal when it came was from the first of only two first on target efforts all night.

City went into the game under a bit more pressure because of the extraordinary result from last night which saw Blackpool overwhelm Queens Park Rangers to the tune of 6-1 at Bloomfield Road. Mick McCarthy’s side were three up after a quarter of an hour, 4-1 ahead at half time and then they scored early in the second half, so i was hardly a case of them running away with the game late on. Blackpool closed to within three points of us as a result and also made large inroads into the goal difference advantage we had which was, in effect, like an extra point for us.

Wigan had also managed to come back to draw 1-1 at home to an in form Coventry team and, tonight, Huddersfield we’re finally able to score – actually, Norwich’s Grant Hanley did as his own goal ensured Neil Warnock’s team also came from a goal down to draw 1-1 at home.

Reading were able to get it back to 1-1 at Blackburn tonight as well, but the home team got a second to take the win and, with Paul Ince’s team very widely reported as being docked six points very soon, we’d be a point in front of them with a very slight goal difference advantage if there is a points deduction of the speculated size.

Saturday’s opponents Rotherham have only a single point lead over us now following their 2-1 home loss to Preston, while QPR must be so relieved that they, somehow, came up with a win over Watford on the weekend to keep themselves seven points above the drop zone, but it seems to me that they and Birmingham (3-0 losers at Watford), who are above them on goal difference, are not clear of trouble just yet.

 Faced with the absence of Cedric Kipre under the terms of his loan deal with West Brom and with Connor Wickham still injured, Sabri Lamouchi went for a change of formation as he picked a back four with Mark McGuinness and Perry Ng centrebacks, Mahlon Romeo recalled at right back and Callum O’Dowda at left back. Ryan Wintle and Romaine Sawyers were the central two and I presumed it would be Jaden Philogene on the left and Sheyi Ojo on the right with Kion Etete and the surprisingly recalled Isaak Davies being up top in a 4-4-2.

Instead, Davies was on the right with Ojo operating just behind Etete. The changes at either end of the pitch didn’t work though, we looked uneasy at the back throughout and while the half time stats showed we’d had a pretty impressive nine goal attempts, the truth was that we were in hit and hope mode as it looked like we were following the Vincent Tan inspired ploy of shooting from all sorts of wild and wacky places.

Baggies goalkeeper Josh Griffiths was a first half spectator as most of the nine goal attempts flew hhigh, wide and not very handsome with his only anxious moments coming when Davies stretched to screw a mishit O’Dowda shot cum cross wide and when Wintle’s shot from twenty yards had him diving to his left in anticipation of having to make a save only for visiting captain Dara O’Shea to get in a headed block at the cost of an unproductive corner (City, mainly in the persons of Ojo or Wintle, had another seriously below par ninety minutes when it came to set piece delivery).

Despite the fact that the Baggies were playing their third match in eight days, whereas we had only played once in the previous ten days, it was us who looked the more tired team throughout and it was all too easy for the visitors to hold on to the lead given them when Jed Wallace’s fine cross from the right was finished in composed fashion by Daryl Dike.

Certainly, the finish was of a quality you would not expect from City this season and the cross also contrasted totally with what City came up with all night from both open play and set piece – crucially though, there was one exception to that rule.

Jaden Philogene suggested he might be able to come up with something, but Ojo was careless all night, Davies was withdrawn at half time to sum up his frustrating season so far and Etete, after doing so well on Saturday, struggled to get into the game.

The introduction of Sory Kaba at the interval was not a surprise, but, if anything, City’s lack of a goal threat was even more apparent in the game’s third quarter. West Brom had seemed content with their one goal lead before the break and, apart from a Jed Wallace shot which drew a good save out of Ryan Allsop, that was even more the case in the second half.

Indeed, by substituting Adam Reach for Dike on fifty eight minutes, the visitors effectively were playing without a striker as they sat back and handed the initiative to City. In saying that, City were doing nothing with the territorial advantage they were enjoying until Wintle provided their one quality cross of the night and Kaba got free of his marker to head powerfully at goal from about ten yards. It seemed at first that Kaba’s effort was too close to Griffiths, but the goalkeeper could not stop the ball just squirming in by the post despite him getting what the pundits call a strong left arm these days on the header – you’d think it was a goal that the keeper would have thought he should have done better with..

Kaba didn’t do a great deal else, but the mere fact that this was his third goal in eight appearances for City makes him appear indispensable in a team with a scoring record like theirs..

With West Brom on a run of five consecutive away defeats in all competitions, the hope was that the game was there for City to win once they’d levelled, but a shot from Philogene, after he’d been set up by Etete’s best piece of work of the night, from twenty yards which drew a diving save from Griffiths apart, it was a case of City holding on for their point in the face of Albion pressure for the rear of the time.

I criticised Lamouchi’s substitutions on Saturday, but, here I agreed that he needed to bring on Andy Rinomhota for Ojo to strengthen a midfield that was in danger of being overrun and Mark Harris for Etete seemed a correct move as well.

Nevertheless, the visitors will feel they could and should have won – Reach had the ball in the net within seconds of our equaliser only to be flagged offside and Wallace missed a great chance as he jabbed past the advancing Allsop only to see his shot go wide of the far post.

With Albion manager Carlos Corboran frantically waving his men forward with the game in added time and substitute right back Darnell Furlong jumping over an advertising hoarding to retrieve the ball rather than wait for a none too urgent ball boy to get it, West Brom were definitely the team trying to win the game late on, but City were able to see the game out despite never really convincing with their defending – I think it’s one thing to ask Ng to play as a central defender in a back three and another completely to have him as one of two centrebacks.

So, a draw to be welcomed then and, to use a bit of a cliché, this felt like a game we would have lost under this season’s previous two managers. .

Finally, City’s under 21s were convincingly beaten 4-1 at Ipswich yesterday with Cameron Antwi’s late goal proving to be nothing more than a consolation.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v West Bromwich Albion matches.

City take on the side I’ve often seen described, particularly pre season, as the Championship’s most talented when West Brom come to Cardiff City Stadium tomorrow evening. The Baggies have had a strange season, they were definite relegation candidates throughout the autumn, turned things around under a new manager to the extent that they were considered top six certs in January, but, while they remain formidable at home, they’ve lost their last five away games in all competitions and so have now dropped outside the Play Off places.

Despite, their travails on their travels, I would have had this down as a banker away win a month ago, but two successive home victories for City in games where we’ve played well mean I have a bit more optimism. Causes for pessimism include the fact that Cedric Kipre, despite his error which played a part in Preston’s first goal on Saturday, will be a big miss as the terms of his loan stipulate that he cannot play against his parent club, but we will have Ryan Allsop back in goal following his one game suspension just as his deputy Jac Alnwick begins what I assume will be a three match ban for his red card on the weekend.

Here’s the usual quiz about upcoming opponents with the answers to be posted on here on Wednesday morning.

60s. With a surname you’d associate more with another sport, this midfielder’s career appeared to be going nowhere when he only made nine league appearances for both of his first two clubs. He started off with West Brom and, as it turned out, two of the nine appearances he made for them were against City. A move east to lower division metal workers wasn’t a success and it was only when he moved to the big city to the south that he began to prosper. He was a regular in a team which began just trying to hold on to their Second Division status, but when he left them after four years in which he’d been a regular selection, they were on the brink of promotion. He then spent two years with a club that went up and then were chasing a second promotion, but this time, they didn’t make it and he left for Football League new boys where he found it hard to establish himself during his three years with them. His final club were non leaguers who gave a game (two actually) to George Best and also included a genuine West Brom legend in their ranks for a season, but who is the player I’m describing?

70s. Starting off as an eccentric arty type, this defender then wore hoops to good effect, shining in European competition and then when his team represented an American city as “guests”. His form earned him a move to a team of veterans where he played quite often without ever being able to make the transition to first team regular. He next made a short journey to a club where his finest moment probably came as an unlikely scoring hero in a very famous win over, falling, giants. West Brom were his next club and he played more matches for them than anyone else in a stay of four years. His career moved into a third decade with a return to wearing hoops and there was then a brief spell with Tribesmen to finish. Internationally, he made it to exactly fifty caps, but can you name him?

80s. Mid February specialist on the wing?

90s. Drab nerd arrives early! (6.7)

00s. During 2004, West Brom had eight players on their books who had played for or would play for City, name them.

10s. What links the ruler of the Squamata, one of Gareth Bale’s finest nights in a Wales shirt and a West Brom midfielder from this decade?

20s. Name the current West Brom player who has fifty plus caps for his country, has also played international Futsal, and has sixteen winners’ medals from his time with a previous club

Answers

60s. Jack Bannister played for West Brom against City in Division One in 60/61 and 61/62, but moved on to Scunthorpe having failed to establish himself at the Hawthorns. After again finding it hard to break into the first team, Bannister signed for Crystal Palace and by the time he left them in 1969, they were on their way to the First Division. Bannister was a regular in Luton’s 69/70 Third Division promotion team and they were strong challengers to go up again the following season. Moving on to Cambridge United, Bannister was only a bit part player over the next three seasons and finished his playing days with Barry Fry’s Dunstable who had Jeff Astle leading their attack for a season in the early seventies.

70s. Paddy Mulligan began his career with Bohemians and then Shamrock Rovers who represented Boston USA with teams called the Rovers and, latterly, the Beacons. Mulligan moved to London and the First Division when he signed for Chelsea and then Crystal Palace. He only scored twice for Palace and both of them came in a famous 5-0 win over Manchester United in 1972. Mulligan joined his international team mate Johnny Giles at West Brom and played over a hundred times for them in a four year stay before returning to Ireland to play for Shamrock Rovers, again, and Galway United.

80s. Carl Valentine.

90s.  Darren Bradley.

00s. Jason Koumas, Riccardo Scimeca, Darren Purse, James Chambers, Robert Earnshaw, Junichi Inamoto, Kevin Campbell and Keiran Richardson.

10s. James (Jim) Morrison was the singer with the American band The Doors. Morrison had the nickname the Lizard King (Squamata is the order of reptiles which includes lizards). James Morrison played in midfield for West Brom between 2007 and 2019 and scored three times in forty six appearances for Scotland. One of Morrison’s international goals came at Cardiff City Stadium in October 2012 when he put Scotland one up in a World Cup qualifying game, but Gareth Bale scored two second half goals to turn the game around – the one which sealed Wales’ 2-1 win was a screamer from twenty five yards with two minutes left.

20s.Australian midfielder Tom Rogic won six SPL title winners’ medals, five Scottish Cup winners’ medals and five Scottish League Cup winners’ medals during his time with Celtic.

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