In form Bristol City beaten as Lamouchi shows his local derby credentials.

It was reported that Sabri Lamouchi was not best pleased to be asked whether he’d be speaking to his assistant Sol Bamba about what to expect from a derby game against Bristol City today – apparently, his response was along the lines of I know all about derbies already.

Whether he knew what to expect from a Severnside derby or not, Lamouchi did what Mark Hudson and Steve Morison couldn’t today – he got a performance out of a Cardiff City side that has had a serious issue in games with Swansea and Bristol City lately. Mick McCarthy, Neil Harris and Neil Warnock knew what it was like to manage City to a win over the wurzels, but there were also lifeless defeats in such matches for the three of them during their time in charge.

I daresay that if Sabri Lamouchi stays as City manager beyond this season, there will be a chance that he’ll suffer a defeat against Bristol that will have supporters complaining about a lack of the sort of passion you expect in a derby (it could happen after our game with the jacks on April Fool‘s day of course), but, for now, Lamouchi can bask in the adulation of City fans following a third win in four and a performance which proved that City do get the significance of derby games.

2-0 is a thrashing by the standards of Cardiff City home games this season- it’s only our sixth victory on our own ground and the first one that was not by a score of 1-0.

Therefore, you’d have thought the closing minutes were played out with something of a relaxed attitude in the stands and on the pitch, but not a bit of it – goalkeeper Ryan Allsop got himself sent off and so, with all of the sub windows used, Perry Ng had to play in goal for the last ten minutes or so.

My earlier reference to a thrashing was made tongue in cheek if any Bristol fans are reading this, it’s just that when your team had only scored more than once in a home game on a single occasion (we lost that game!), a 2-0 win is riches indeed!

In truth, it was a close game that saw the visitors lose a couple of important players with injuries and end it with a back four consisting of a right winger, a centreback and two left backs. Bristol had not lost a league game in 2023 before today and could claim that they should have been ahead at half time – they certainly had the better of what few chances there were in a tight first period.

Nevertheless, I think the wurzels would have to concede that the outcome was about right in the end and, for just about the first time since the World Cup break, City put in a performance that had me thinking that we’ve no chance of  going down if we can keep on playing like that.

Sabri Lamouchi finished his previous home game with a very attacking line up and it paid off with Romaine Sawyer’s ninetieth minute winner. Upon hearing our manager’s selection for this game, it sounded like he was going for an even more attacking team because the assumption was that Jaden Philogene and Sheyi Ojo would be the wing backs, supporting a front two of Sory Kaba and Connor Wickham, However, it didn’t take long to realise that captain Joe Ralls was playing on the left and Ojo was being used in a number ten role. So, in some ways, it was an even more attacking line up because it was only Romaine Sawyers and Ryan Wintle in midfield, not Sawyers, Wintle and Ralls.

In fact, Ralls was more in evidence in forward areas than defensive ones as City made a confident start which suggested that this was not going to be another derby no show from them. Wing backs Philogene and Ralls combined as the former’s deep cross was laid back by the latter into an area where the twin strikers were outnumbering a single central defender, but Kaba could only get a slight touch which, as it turned out, only succeeded in taking the ball out of the reach of Wickham.

City’s most impressive performer early on was Ojo (I thought he played as well as he has done all season) who forced visiting keeper Max O’Leary into a diving save with that rare thing, a well struck shot from distance by a Cardiff player – Ojo’s effort was from about twenty five yards..

However, having been second best early on, Bristol began to prosper as Ralls too often found himself facing overloads on his side. That said, it was a terribly mishit shot from Joe Williams (who would soon go off injured) from the wurzels’ left which turned into a great cross for Mark Sykes who headed wastefully over.

Sykes was seen to better effect as part of a swift counter attack as his cross to the far post was met by the visitors’ highly rated teenage linkman Alex Scott whose header beat Allsop, but Cedric Kipre had covered around behind the keeper to clear off the line – the danger was not over though  as the ball rolled into the path of Anis Mehmeti whose shot was superbly kept out by Allsop, but it was worth noting that all three centrebacks were in positions where they could make a block themselves.

Defending like that explains why this relegation threatened team have now, astonishingly, kept a dozen league clean sheets – three more from their final eleven games and they will have reached Neil Warnock’s target for a promotion challenge!

The rest of the half saw Wickham (who again looked our best bet for striker – you can see why he was once so highly rated) spin well, but then sky his shot and Mark McGuinness saw his free header from a Ralls corner fly straight at O’Leary.

The second period began quietly – Scott rather lashed at a twenty yard opportunity presented to him by the superb Jaden Philogene’s only mistake, but, from nowhere really, the game’s first goal arrived on fifty one minutes in a very unlikely manner for the 22/23 City team!

For a side that finds it so hard to score a goal, this one was very simple in its execution as, after retaining possession well for a period, Wintle’s excellent cross from the right was firmly nodded in from ten yards by Kaba with O’Leary rooted to the spot.

I’ve been quite critical of Kaba this week following his poor showing after coming on as a sub at Norwich last weekend, but he now has two goals in six appearances for us and that’s prolific by our standards – his textbook scoring header also created something of a mystery as to why he often appears completely ineffective in the air in general play..

Kaba soon made way for Andy Rinomhota who supplied energy and defensive nous to a midfield in which Sawyers was again very good. However, Bristol’s response to going behind was one of a confident team as they pressed forward, but all they had to show for their attacking was a free kick from Mehmeti which drew a for the cameras type save from Allsop.

Ralls made way for the surprisingly left out Callum O’Dowda (Sabri Lamouchi said after the match that he has done no training in the week leading up to the game) around the hour mark as City switched to a back four with Ng moving to right back.

This freed Philogene to move forward a bit and, on seventy minutes, the Aston Villa loanee took a pass from Rinomhota, cut inside and from twenty yards hit a daisy cutter with his left foot which beat O’Leary on his near post.

City brought on Kion Etete and Rubin Colwill for Wickham and Ojo and the two of them combined well when Etete shot narrowly wide as it was looking like they were easing to victory, but a brainstorm on Allsop’s part as he came charging out for what was nothing more than a big boot down the middle changed all that.

McGuinness and Kipre would surely have sorted the situation out for themselves, but the ball ended up being played on to Allsop’s arm some twenty five yards from goal as the keeper’s presence caused confusion where there should have been no need for any.

I don’t think Allsop could have any complaints about his red card, but Ng seemed happy to take over between the sticks although he would have been pleased to see the resultant free kick from sub Nahki Wells deflected wide by a wall that appeared to have a hole in it.

The substitute keeper then held on to Matt James’ header and City had their win which temporarily took them seven points clear of the bottom three – that gap closed in the case of Blackpool who gained a very honourable home goalless draw with Champions elect Burnley and Wigan who relied on a missed penalty by Birmingham to get a 1-1 home draw. However, Warnock’s Huddersfield were thumped 4-0 on their own pitch by Coventry. Rotherham won, but it was against a free falling QPR side who are now just a point in front of us, as are Birmingham, while. Reading, who are widely reported to be docked six points this week, were beaten 5-0 at Middlesbrough

A good day for City had started with a 3-1 win over Ipswich at Leckwith for the under 18s with the goals coming from Japhet Matondo with two and Will Spiers.

In the Highadmit Premier League, bottom of the table AFC Porth were beaten 3-1 at home by Ely Rangers, who are the sort of side down near the bottom they should be taking three points off if they were to have any chance of avoiding relegation. The team above Porth are Merthyr Saints and they also look destined for the drop as, like Porth, they are still on minus points as not enough of them have been accrued yet to overcome the deductions they’ve had from the league for some form of rule breaking. The Merthyr team’s latest defeat was by 4-1 at home to a Ton Pentre side which has a decent chance of coming second if they win the games they have in hand on some of the teams above them and a couple of teams below them suffer because of an end of season fixture pile up which causes them to not make maximum profit from their games in hand on Ton.

It’s a similar situation in Division One – Treherbert Boys and Girls Club are ten points clear at the top following their 6-0 home win over lowly Maesteg Park, but there are still four or five sides with enough games in hand on them to overhaul the league leaders if they were to have a tremendous end to their campaigns.

Finally, there are still a few signed copies of my latest book “Tony Evans Walks on Water” available from the Trust Office (near Gate 5) on matchdays at the reduced price of £9 for Trust members.

Posted in Down in the dugout, Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on In form Bristol City beaten as Lamouchi shows his local derby credentials.

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Bristol City matches.

Sabri Lamouchi becomes the latest Cardiff City manager to attempt to get the team to turn up for derby games on Saturday when Bristol City visit seeking a fourth consecutive victory at Cardiff City Stadium.

It might not seem like it on here at times, but I’m fairly philosophical about what has been happening at Cardiff City in recent seasons – we’re a shambles off the pitch, so this is bound to catch up with what’s happening on the field eventually. We may survive this season, but we’re heading for League One in the next year or two if the current ownership stays in place and they don’t finally learn their lessons regarding the lack of footballing know how in the Boardroom soon (as they haven’t done so yet, I’ve no great hopes of this happening in the future I’m afraid).

However, you cannot blame Messrs Tan, Dalman and Choo for our shocking performances against Bristol City and Swansea City in recent seasons – that’s entirely down to the management and players. We face Bristol and Swansea in the next month having been beaten 2-0 in the away games against these teams earlier in the season.

At least we had an excuse this time for our loss at Swansea in that we had a player sent off inside the first ten minutes, but we were feeble at Ashton Gate as a Bristol side that weren’t in great form strolled to a comfortable victory. Unfortunately, the wurzels are a better side than that now, whereas we’ve probably gone backwards since then. They were on a long unbeaten run before Manchester City’s comfortable win at Ashton Gate in the FA Cup on Tuesday, but we gained nothing last weekend from having a free week while Norwich played in the midweek, so I’ve no great hopes of it being a factor this time either – I’d gladly take a draw from a performance which shows that our players actually get what a derby means to supporters if it was offered to me now.

Here’s the usual quiz with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. This Cumberland born defender’s introduction into professional football was delayed for a couple of years because of National Service and the most famous game he played in his career is probably the one where his first club scored the highest number of goals while ending up losing in the Football League’s history. After playing close to one hundred league games for his first club, a player exchange deal saw him move to Bristol City where he saw out the rest of his full time career. After nineteen years as a professional, he dropped into non league football to play for Merseyside squirrels until the age of forty one, who is he?

70s. He scored in his final game for City a month or so later, but in his penultimate league game for us he became the founder, and only, member of a 1970’s Bristol City related club? Who was he and what was his unique achievement?

80s. As this man with a famous sporting surname never played a first team game for the north eastern club which represented his birthplace and was his first employer, all of his football had been played for three United’s before he signed for Bristol City. Two of the United’s were close enough to each other for games between them to be classed as derbys, while he came up one short of a hundred league games for the third one in a stripy city. He spent four years at Ashton Gate and made just over a hundred league starts for them during that time and, as was the norm in those days, his record against City was a good one – three wins and a draw from four encounters with us. He was mainly a back up after leaving Ashton Gate while representing one time Bantams and a team that’s relationship with a pop icon had just ended – who am I describing?

90s. Decline of a Costello classic perhaps?

00s. Linkman features in bland video it seems (5,5).

10s. Kowtow to Irish location maybe.

20s. Listen to Plank creator?

Answers

60s. Dave Connor was Huddersfield’s centre half in the amazing game at the Valley in 1957 when the visitors led 5-1 after an hour, only to end up losing 7-6. Connor signed for Bristol City in 1960 and stayed with them for eleven years while making over three hundred and fifty league appearances – he ended his playing days with Formby FC (the Squirrels).

70s. By playing in the 1-0 win over Bristol City in April 1971 at Ninian Park, Ronnie Bird became the only City player to have a one hundred per cent winning record over the wurzels in the seventies – it was the only time we beat them in that decade.

80s. Sunderland born goalkeeper Keith Waugh signed for Peterborough after his release by the Wearsiders and then joined Sheffield United, who loaned him to Cambridge for a spell. Waugh signed for Bristol City permanently after an initial loan move and was at Ashton Gate between 1985 and 1989 before having short spells at Coventry and Watford.

90S. Wayne Allison.

00s. David Noble.

10s. Neil Kilkenny.

20s. Mark Sykes (Comedian Eric Sykes’ most famous work, arguably, is The Plank).

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Bristol City matches.