Reborn Romaine Sawyers wins it late on for resurgent Cardiff City.

Last season Reading were one of a dozen opposing sides to win in the Championship at Cardiff City Stadium. Like a lot of teams that got the three points at our ground, the score was 1-0, but this was definitely the most weird of those games.

City dominated from the first whistle and the goal attempts figure was something like twenty eight to two in our favour – ex City man Junior Hoilett got the goal and, from memory, Reading’s other goal attempt almost hit the corner flag.

Reading’s 22/23 visit to Cardiff wasn’t as one sided as last season’s, but it was similar in that City were the better team as their start showed a lot of confidence gained from the midweek win at Birmingham. Again, the game produced just the one goal and I wondered as the minutes ticked away towards the ninety whether a Reading side that had not lost here since 2015 could conjure up a goal to escape with another unlikely win.

A week or so ago, it wouldn’t have been a surprise if they had done, but the last few days have seen the tide finally begin to turn somewhat – our two goals on Tuesday came after the eighty fourth minute and here it was us who came up with the win just as the game went into added time. We couldn’t add a second this time, but we seem destined to only win games 1-0 at home this season and, for the second time, it was Romaine Sawyers who proved the match winner with a goal similar to the one which beat Norwich on the opening day of the season.

Dean Smith the then Norwich manager had Sawyers in the Brentford team he had charge of before he went to Villa and he was insistent that the City man’s Sawyers’ daisy trimmer from twenty five yards that day was actually a pass. However, there could be no doubt what the midfielder’s intentions were this time as he showed great technique to drill his low shot through a sea of Reading bodies for the ball to nestle in the corner with keeper Joe Lumley motionless.

If one player above all others has benefited from Sabri Lamouchi’s arrival, it’s Romaine Sawyers who has played every minute of the five games our new manager has taken charge of.

Tonight, Lamouchi picked what I thought was a team to play a standard 4-4-2 – out from the team at Birmingham went Mahlon Romeo, and Andy Rinomhota as Jaden Philogene and Callum Robinson came in. My assumption was that Perry Ng would switch to a right back role and Callum O’Dowda would be at left back, but, instead, it was the same back three from Tuesday with Philogene and O’Dowda operating as wing backs and Robinson playing a number ten type role.

Lamouchi had picked a very attacking side, but, in doing so, he had placed a huge onus on Sawyers and Ryan Wintle in midfield

I’ve given my opinion on Sawyers’ form for us before Lamouchi’s arrival a few times on here, so I’ll keep it brief and just say he was the summer signing that most excited me, but it looked for all of the world like his legs had gone and he faded further and further out of the first team picture, particularly under Mark Hudson.

Sawyers turned thirty one in November, something which adds credence to my feeling he was struggling physically (I was certainly not alone among City fans in thinking that), but he’s lasted the pace in the last five games with no obvious problems despite the last three of them have come in the last six days.

Perhaps the deeper role Sawyers is being used in is helping to save his legs to some extent, but, tonight, against opponents who played a 3-5-2 with three central midfielders, he and Wintle could easily have been overrun by superior numbers.

Instead, Sawyers and Wintle (who had been out of form through the first five weeks or so of 2023) were, in my opinion, our two best players and won their midfield battle against their three opponents.

Sawyers and Wintle enabled City to dominate statistically to the tune of sixty three/thirty seven possession, nineteen to five with goal attempts and five to nil in on target efforts. City were as dominant as they’d been in a home league game since their draw with Blackpool in December in a game which should have been put to bed in the first half only for the visitors to escape with a 1-1 draw.

Reading weren’t as bad as Blackpool, but they do possess the second worst away record in the Championship and so, while our dreadful home form over the past three seasons and the fact that we’d gone nine without a home win (ten if you count the Leeds game in the FA Cup), if any home game deserved to be described as one we should be winning, this was probably it.

City with O’Dowda prominent down the left kept Reading pinned back for the first twenty minutes or so when Sory Kaba could have had a hat trick. The on loan striker should have done better than head a fine Philogene cross wide on the far post and when Cedric Kipre played a superb cross field ball to O’Dowda, Kaba got a better contact on the cross with his header, but could only direct it straight at Lumley. Then, when Wintle’s free kick got a slight touch off Robinson, Kaba was completely unmarked on the far post, but the ball came to him very quickly and he couldn’t control his header.

Kion Etete forced a save out Lumley as well as crossing to an unmarked Robinson who seemed set for a simple opportunity, only for a deflection off a defender to knock the ball just behind him.

There was also almost a repeat of Ng’s goal on Tuesday, but this time his free kick rippled the wrong side of the net as it hit the side netting and fooled plenty of people, myself included, into thinking it was a goal.

Reading had little to offer as an attacking force at this time and their manager Paul Ince was critical of his team afterwards, even if the main point of his post match interview was to slag off referee Darren Bond for showing Mark McGuinness a yellow, not red, card for his first half foul on Amadeus Mbengoe. It was hard to argue with Ince on that one, it looked a definite red to me on first viewing and it gets worse with each replay I’ve seen of the incident.

Perhaps it was a sense of injustice that was behind Reading’s strong start to the second half as they enjoyed their best period of the game. However, the visitors were one dimensional in their attacking as they constantly looked for Andy Carroll’s head and we were able to survive a series of long throw ins, free kicks and corners without too many alarms.

In fact, the only time the visitors looked like they were going to score was when the under employed Ryan Allsop, usually so assured with the ball at his feet, got a slight touch with his left foot as he went to clear with his right and so had an air shot which left sub Yakou Meite contemplating a simple tap in. However, Allsop saved his blushes with a desperate sliding tackle on the Reading man and City heaved a huge sigh of relief.

City struggled to reach the levels of the first quarter of the game after half time, but enjoyed rotten luck when Robinson and Wintle combined on the edge of the Reading penalty area and the former saw his shot from twenty yards smack off the cross bar, then, three minutes later, sub Sheyi Ojo cut in from the left and his shot from fifteen yards was deflected onto the bar for a second time.

Another sub, Connor Wickham forced Lumley into a save with a clever turn and shot, but, as play became scrappier, Reading were looking good for a point until Wintle played a free kick from a central position about thirty five yards out to Philogene whose cross was diverted towards the edge of the penalty area where a Reading player thought he had cleared the danger, only for Sawyers to apply the coup de grace with his excellent winner

The possible down side of the night came in the form of injuries. O’Dowda’s influence faded after a kick he took just before half time and he was eventually replaced by Ojo, Robinson looked to pull a hamstring as h chased a ball forward, but carried on after treatment only to give up the ghost in the dying minutes and come off and Philogene required treatment at the same time as Robinson’s apparent hamstring issue occurring.

Our former manager Neil Warnock has been in the news recently as he took over at Huddersfield for the rest of the season at the age of seventy four and I’m reminded of his mantra that that he would target fifteen clean sheets a season as the foundation on which a promotion challenge can be built. Well, two more clean sheets in the past four days have taken us on to eleven in thirty three league games, so, if we keep on keeping a clean sheet every three games over our remaining thirteen Championship fixtures, we’ll hit Warnock’s target.

I must admit, I find it hard to gauge this season’s team. Through the first half of the season up to that Blackpool match I mentioned earlier, I was always confident they wouldn’t go down, but, after we threw away three easy points that day, I changed my mind and decided I could no longer avoid the elephant in the room that was our chronic lack of goals.

January and the first half of February were played out with me almost, but not quite, in the going down camp, but I don’t know what to think now. The usual lack of finishing ability was there tonight in a match we should have won more comfortably, but you cannot just focus on the lack of goals to the exclusion of the fact that our defensive record is top six class.

Barring a defensive collapse over our final thirteen games, I’d say that my earlier feeling that we’d need to average getting on for two goals a game from February onwards to dodge the drop could be overly pessimistic – with our defensive figures being so good, maybe all we need is to average something like a goal a game from now on? In saying that, even this requires a big improvement on a current scoring rate of twenty five from thirty three matches.

Also, 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.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Reading matches.

City’s best twenty four hours of 2023 so far concluded with defeats at Swansea and Stoke respectively for Blackpool and Huddersfield, two of the three sides below us in the table. Wigan, the other team in the relegation places, followed up their vital win over Huddersfield (to be managed by Neil Warnock from this weekend) with a good 1-1 draw at in form Bristol City, but the opportunity is there for City to put real distance between themselves and the bottom three with a won over Reading tomorrow at Cardiff City Stadium.

Reading have a poor away record, but that is counterbalanced by us being probably the team with the worst home record in the EFL over the past three seasons and the fact that Reading very rarely lose in Cardiff these days.

Unfortunately, Sky coverage means a Friday night kick off at 8 pm (can’t ever remember us kicking off a home game that late before in my time supporting the club),. Therefore, the answers to the questions below will be posted on here on Saturday morning.

60s. A forward born not too far from Reading in a place where City almost came a cropper in the First Round of the FA Cup once, he did well enough at Elm Park with his first club, to get himself a move to the Second Division to a club which was so right for someone with his surname. He was able to maintain the scoring rate of around a goal every three games that he enjoyed at Reading with his new club, but when they were promoted, he dropped out of first team contention and ended up on loan to a Fourth Division side quite nearby that got him wearing blue again after a few seasons in a completely different colour. . he. stayed in blue at his next club where, again, he didn’t have to travel too far and, if anything, his strike rate improved, but not by enough to prevent his side being relegated to the fourth tier. During this time, he was frequently loaned to American clubs during the summer and he also returned to Reading temporarily. There was also a loan to a side from the north of England that played in a blue and white combination. He finally moved to the USA permanently, but it did not go well for him in the capitol and he was soon back in England playing in a team managed by Ron Atkinson. Once again though, his stay was only a brief one and he finished his playing days with a team which no longer exists, but, briefly, made it into the Football League – the modern day version of the club play on an artificial pitch and look like they will be dropping further away from the EFL at the end of the season. Can you name the player described?

70s. This forward cum midfielder was clearly rated highly in his early days as a footballer as future European Cup winners, First Division Champions and FA Cup winners all gave him a contract, but, after not playing a league match for any of the three, his first team debut came at Nuneaton Borough. However, his form in the part time game attracted the interest of Football League clubs and he was able to eke out a journeyman’s career in the lower divisions over a dozen years. He played his first Football league games at a club which has changed its mind over a letter “S” down the decades and he experienced a managerial great in action in his first job. He then moved on to Reading for four years into the early seventies with his most notable feat being his Player of the season award – ironically, shortly after receiving the award, he scored the own goal that relegated Reading to Division Four! He played most games (over one hundred and twenty of them) for his final club and had Neil Warnock as a team mate for a while. He also wore their red twice against City and was a scorer of a late winning goal against us at the play area which was home to them, but his second encounter with us ended in 1 -0 defeat at Ninian Park on a bone hard pitch. Can you name him?

80s. This Lancashire born forward’s first football was, in fact, played in the stockbroker belt at non league level, but the game then took a back seat for a while until a very brief, but noteworthy in terms of goalscoring, few games for Reading. His football career really took off at his next club after an obstacle to his progress in the game was removed and his exploits with this team earned him a big money move to a side which wore the same colours in combination if not identical kits. The next two years saw three loan moves and a bit of a stalling in his career before a move to the capital to play in the same colour combination which could not be called a success either. It was his next move, to male animals, that saw him make a big impact and he was soon the subject of a six figure transfer to a club where I recently saw him on a You Tube video of a game which saw him sent off and then trying to climb the walls of the players tunnel as he left the pitch in an attempt to get at supporters who were giving him stick! A move to his native county was next as he kept on scoring goals at a good rate and he made it into the new Millennium with stripy scamps before ending his Football League career on the south coast. Who is he?the

90s. Robot many use with Welsh house. (6,5)

00s. Speculation on “the man in the street”?

10s. He played for City against Reading during this decade and is currently in Clover with the Queen – who?

20s. Unholy Promises once at Reading, now Cambridge.

Answers.

60s. Peter Silvester signed for Norwich (Sylvester was a cartoon cat that was always trying to, unsuccessfully, catch a canary named Tweety) from Reading and, after a loan spell at Colchester, signed a permanent deal with Southend. Silvester was loaned out Reading and Blackburn during the four years he spent at Roots Hall as well as various American clubs and he eventually signed for one of them, Washington Diplomats, permanently. Within a few months though, Silvester was back in England playing, briefly, for Ron Atkinson’s Cambridge United and then there was a short spell with Maidstone United

70s. Terry Bell had spells with Forest, Man City and Portsmouth before turning up at Nuneaton after being released by all three of them. Bell played under Brian Clough at Hartlepool(s) before signing for Reading in 1969 and he was their Player of the Year in 70/71. His final club was Aldershot and he was in their sides which played us during the 75/76 season.

80s. Phil Stant played for Camberley Town before being drafted to the Falklands to fight in the 1982 war. Upon his return, Stant scored twice in four matches for Reading before Hereford United bought him out of the army to give him a contract. Stant’s goals got him a move to Notts County, but it needed a drop into the fourth tier with Mansfield to begin the phase of his career where goals came most frequently for him. Stant signed for City around Christmas 1992 and had a tempestuous, but successful, stay at Ninian Park. His two and a half years with City took in a game at Stockport in 1995 when he was sent off and then tried to climb over the players tunnel wall to get at the home fans who were taunting him. Stant signed for Bury after City, then played for Lincoln (where he was manager for a short while) and Brighton before playing for a variety of non league sides (two of which he also managed) over the next few years.

90s.  Martyn Booty.

00s. (Average) Joe Gamble.

10s. Adam Matthews plays for Cypriot side AC Omonia which has two nicknames, the Clover and the Queen.

20s. Unholy and Promises are, apparently, songs by Sam Smith whose namesake is a footballer who played for Reading and is currently at Cambridge United.

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