Steve Morison sacked – who saw that coming?

Until today, there’s been a common link with every instance of a City manager leaving bar one in my time supporting the club – you’ve seen it coming. The one exception to that rule was when Phil Neal left us in October 1996 to become Steve Coppell’s assistant at Manchester City, only for Coppell to resign about three weeks later.

It was a surprise to see Neal go, but not an unpleasant one- he’d done little in his eight months in charge to get supporters enthused, but I can’t remember there being many calls for him to be sacked, so his departure came out of the blue.

Usually when a manager goes, there’s a groundswell of opinion against him and Board cottons on to the fact that there would be no great reaction against them if they gave the man in charge the bullet – in fact, the fans are grateful to them for doing so more often than not.

All too rarely in the case of Cardiff City, clubs from higher divisions become interested in a manager because he’s doing such a good job for us. I wouldn’t say that was the case with Phil Neal, but it definitely was when First Division Sunderland came in for Len Ashurst in 1984 and Frank Burrows’ first spell with us ended in 1989 when he agreed to become Assistant Manager at Portsmouth.

There’s one other category – although the club could claim that Malky Mackay was sacked because of poor results just after Christmas 2013, it was also true that his relationship with Vincent Tan had broken down months earlier and Mackay had been on borrowed time after that.

So, no shock when Mackay left, nor once news had broken of Ashurst and Burrows being wanted by clubs from higher divisions and none either for any of the multitude of sackings I’ve seen down the years – until today.

I’m sure I’m not the only City fan who thought it was a joke when the news broke at lunchtime today that Steve Morison had been sacked and my messageboard reaction when I realised he had gone was to say it was the most ludicrous sacking in the club’s history –  I’ll try and explain why presently.

First though, although I think the decision a truly daft one, I can never say I was a big Morison fan. I’ll always be grateful to him for keeping us up last year and for taking us away from hoofball – in fact, such was his commitment to that cause, even I, as a dedicated anti long ball merchant, thought he’d gone too far down that road and wanted some more height in the team to counter set piece weaknesses at either end of the pitch.

However, right from day one, Morison (a self confessed “Mr. Angry” as a player) seemed overly abrasive in his dealings with the media, he was also too quick to criticise young players in public while under performing seniors escaped censure from him. The worst example of this was how he answered questions about his decision to sub Isaak Davies half an hour or so after he brought him on at Bournemouth- that was just rank bad management in my book.

Similarly, I think it can be said now that Morison’s approach towards Rubin Colwill did not work – the player that came on and won a game at Forest around this time last year under a different manager has been held back by his predecessor who came over as being wholly unsympathetic towards a talented youngster despite his protestations to the contrary..

There are other examples I believe of Morison hindering, rather than helping, younger players, but to return to the point I want to make about the timing of this sacking, whatever my gripes and those of other supporters regarding some aspects of his work, Morison was handed a double vote of confidence in the spring and summer.

Firstly, he was awarded a contract until June of next year once our Championship status had been secured and then he was given a virtual free hand to rebuild the playing staff when so many senior players’ contracts were running out. Not only that, he was seemingly backed by the owner and the Board when it came to introducing a more progressive style of play with more emphasis on ball retention and less reliance on power and resilience.

So it was, that Morison was allowed to bring in an amazing seventeen new players on what we were led to believe was a shoestring budget, but, after being given around half a million pounds to spend on a young “project” striker, a further £1.5 million was found to spend on Callum Robinson on the last day of the transfer window less than three weeks ago.

Now, all of this strikes me as an enormous display of faith in someone who was an inexperienced, young manager – did anyone truly believe when Morison was taking questions from the media about what he thought Robinson could bring to his squad that he would be sacked a little over a fortnight later?

Of course, after an encouraging first few games, things were not going as hoped in Morison’s Brave New World. I found, and still find, the performances in our four away defeats to be concerning and there has been a distinct lack of chance creation and natural finishing ability so far, as evidenced by just seven goals scored in eleven competitive games, with three of them coming in the first half at Middlesbrough five days ago. Again I ask would anyone have thought Steve Morison would have been sacked on the weekend when Perry Ng put us 3-0 up on Tuesday?

Last night, there were a few calls for the manager to go as there always is these days when a team have won three, but lost five, of their first ten league games. However, I’d say that the large majority recognised that patience was required because a big rebuilding job was being undertaken – however here we appear to be in an almost unique position where the fans are calling for patience and it’s the owner and Board that have the jerking knees!

On the face of it, it’s ridiculous sacking a manager so soon after what the City owner and Board were prepared to grant Steve Morison at the start of this month – Vincent Tan and co have form for naivety and poor footballing judgement, but this is in a different league to anything we’ve seen from them before.

Yet, it’s so foolish that you start to think there has to be something other than just dissatisfaction at eleven points from ten games and eighteenth place in play here. While I find it hard to believe that Morison has gone because this lot have a replacement already lined up who will enthuse the fans and galvanise the club, the notion that something has happened “behind the scenes” to bring about today’s dramatic news does not seem completely far fetched.

For now, Mark Hudson will take over as caretaker manager, so, if the Board and owner run true to form, we can expect him to be given the job for the rest of the season if we manage to avoid defeat against Burnley in the first game after the international break.

Hopefully the next few days will bring news which makes today’s decision look more sensible, because, as things stand, our reputation within the game must be a lot lower than it normally is – would you apply for the manager’s job at Cardiff at the moment?

Having just written the above, I find that Paul Abbandonato of Wales Online has written a piece which I must admit has left me wondering whether Cardiff City are worth bothering with any more under its current ownership.  Mr. Abbandonato can usually be relied upon to provide a pretty accurate account of the thinking of those in power at Cardiff City Stadium and I’ve no reason to disbelieve him here. I despair, I really do despair – all aboard for the cheapest managerial option again and probably a return to hoofball with a squad of players wholly unsuited to playing that way.

Posted in Down in the dugout | Tagged | 5 Comments

Six losses in eight and no clean sheets, who do you want to face? Cardiff City!

Apologies for the dodgy Ghostbusters reference in the title, but I’m afraid the signs that Cardiff City are exactly the sort of team you want to face when you’re in need of a win is growing.

Doubtless the effects of two of City’s longest away trips of the season within four days of each other will be claimed as an excuse for losing 1=0 this afternoon to a miserably out of form Huddersfield Town side which had parted company with their Head Coach/manager Danny Schofield in midweek.

With the days of flying to away games in the north of England a thing of the past now, as City go almost everywhere by coach (albeit pretty luxurious ones I would guess), there is an element of justification to such thinking. However, I don’t think it can be used to completely explain away a performance that was as lethargic and lightweight as today’s through most of the ninety minutes. At times, City looked so slow and tired that you could be forgiven for thinking that they’d all cycled the two hundred and twenty odd miles up to Huddersfield!.

If Steve Morison’s pre game instructions to his team were that he wanted them to be second to every ball, sloppy and slow witted in possession and to make a team who would have been in not the best frame of mind feel comfortable from the first whistle, then they carried them out to the letter to the degree that it could be claimed that the goal was coming when it arrived as early as the eighth minute.

Huddersfield played exactly like you’d expect a team that had lost two Head Coaches and six matches out of eight this season since their unlucky Play Off Final defeat by Forest back in May. There was plenty of commitment and urgency, but not a lot of style. However, that was enough to deservedly see off a City side that had more poise than their opponents, but wasted their one golden chance to equalise and displayed what is becoming an all too familiar fallibility when it came to both creativity and finishing.

Huddersfield were more dynamic and the better chances tended to fall to them – especially as City forlornly chased an equaliser in the closing minutes.

It was as if that fluent and assured first half at Middlesbrough had never happened. On this evidence, nothing was gained from that performance when the team that has now scored four times in ten and a half matches found their shooting boots for one glorious forty five minute period. Indeed, on today’s showing, you have to think that we used up about six games worth of goals on Tuesday night.

Steve Morison hinted at changes in the starting line up when asked about those two long coach journeys and he was true to his word as he came up with a strange looking selection which appeared to feature wing backs and wingers or it may have been a flat back five with full backs – it was really hard to tell what the formation we were playing was supposed to be.

What was certain was that it was the same three central defenders, Mahlon Romeo was the right back cum wing back, but, after looking none too assured in his half an hour or so on the pitch on Tuesday, Niels Nkounkou was back on the left enabling Callum O’Dowda to push forward while Jaden Philogene came in on the right. All of this effectively binned the two strikers approach which, for forty five minutes anyway, had worked a lot better than any of the other attacking combinations seen so far.

Mark Harris was back on the bench then, leaving Callum Robinson to plough a lone furrow up front – it also meant that there were just two central midfielders in Ryan Wintle and Andy Rinomhota.

Sometimes though, formations count for nothing if most of your side isn’t “at it” both mentally and physically and, although they did improve as the first half wore on, City were so slow out of the blocks, it was untrue.

The game’s decisive moment came early on as the veteran Jordan Rhodes drilled a low shot from the edge of the penalty area past Ryan Allsop who did not bother diving for a shot he was never going to save. It was a lovely piece of finishing and it’s tempting to say it was of a quality that we cannot match, but It was no better than Romaine Sawyers’ finish against Luton and Mark Harris’ on Tuesday – the players have shown they can score good goals, it’s the more mundane ones that are, almost completely, lacking from this team’s CV.

Once Rhodes’ shot hit the back of the net, it was impossible to avoid a suspicion that the game was as good as over from a City perspective. After all, probably the most worrying aspect of a pretty worrying start to this season has been that we have not once come back from going a goal behind – once that happens, we lose.

Mind you, we had our best chance to break that particular duck so far today when, from nowhere, we were awarded a penalty. It came about ten minutes after Rhodes’ goal when Huddersfield half cleared a corner to the edge of the penalty area where Rinomhota ducked to get his head to the high bouncing ball only to be caught near his face by Tino Anjorin’s high boot. I’ve seen some City fans claiming it was a harsh decision, but, for me, although it was unfortunate as there was no intention to play the man, it was definitely a penalty – Dean Whitestone got it right as far as I’m concerned.

Anyway, arguments about the validity of the award were rendered redundant as Robinson’s attempt to score his first goal for his new club ended in pretty ignominious failure as his weak effort was easily saved by Lee Nicholls diving to his right – once he chose the right way to go, the keeper was always going to save it.

Strangely, although never hitting the heights of Tuesday, City gradually worked their way back into some sort of supremacy as Huddersfield’s early authority diminished and Robinson again should have done better as, looking offside, he received a long pass forward in oceans of space some twenty yards from goal with no one blocking a run in on Nicholls, as Huddersfield defenders waited for an offside flag which never came, Robinson miscontrolled the ball and City’s second best chance of the game had gone.

After the game, Steve Morison claimed his side should have had a second penalty. Presumably, he meant when Philogene was fouled right on the edge of the penalty area. It was certainly a close call as to whether it was inside or outside the box, but, having got one penalty, we were always unlikely to get a second one on such a tight call.

City had what is becoming their norm of two on target efforts per game. The first was Robinson’s penalty and the second was O’Dowda’s crisply hit effort from the free kick which was straight at Nicholls.

Half time saw what has to be seen as an admission that Morison had got his selection wrong as Nkounkou and Philogene made way with Mark Harris and Romaine Sawyers coming on with O’Dowda moving to wing back, as City reverted to the system used at Middlesbrough.

This time though, it was more second half Middlesbrough than first – not because, we were forced to defend all of the time, more that we barely looked like scoring.

Despite a lot of possession and territorial advantage as well as another tactical tweak to a back four as Perry Ng moved to right back as Romeo was replaced by Rubin Colwill (Ng was subsequently replaced by Tom Sang and Sheyi Ojo came on for Rinomhota very late on), Huddersfield were only seriously troubled when Nicholls just about managed to dive on a Harris cross shot with Robinson ready to pounce from point blank range and they had few problems holding out for a first clean sheet of the season..

Huddersfield’s right to all three points was confoirmed during the second half as, while City huffed and puffed to little effect, Rhodes forced Allsop into a diving save with a close range header, Cedric Kipre (our best player for me) robbed Jack Ridoni as he looked certain to score and there was a shocking miss by Sorba Thomas in added time after Jack Simpson had been robbed by Patrick Jones.

So, City’s weird away record continues whereby we play well and avoid defeat under the midweek floodlights (see West Brom and Misddlesbrough) and perform feebly in losing in natural light on the weekends as at Reading, Bristol City, Millwall and now Huddersfield.

There was more poor fare at Cardiff City Stadium last night as the under 21s conceded five again in losing 5-3 to QPR. All of this after we’d begun well with James Crole opening the scoring with a fine header from an Ollie Tanner free kick. The visitors were well on top however by the time they scored three times in about five minutes just before the interval.

Matthew Turner saved a penalty early in the second half, but when he was beaten to make it 4-1, I gave up on watching the match and thereby missed what, apparently, was a great free kick goal by Caleb Hughes (I’ve now seen it and it was top quality) and another good finish by Crole,

Based on what I saw though, it was another game where the new men brought in during the summer failed to impress, but, to be fair, QPR had four players (including Welsh international George Thomas) in their side with pretty extensive first team experience – they were a strong team for this level.

There was better news this lunchtime as the under 18s gained an added time win at Hull. Gabriele Biancheri opened the scoring and Tanatswa Nyakuwha regained the lead from the penalty spot. In the second half, there was a second equaliser for the home team only for sub Cody Twose to win it for City beyond the ninety minute mark.

In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League, AFC Porth’s struggles continued with a 2-1 home loss to Bridgend Street, but Treherbert Boys and Girls Club’s good start to life in the First Division continued with a 1-1 draw at Cwm Welfare.

Something else I wanted to mention is that I’ve had a couple of E-mails from readers who have been unable to send messages to the Feedback section on here. There has been no problem with several regular contributors, but if you find that you cannot post your comments on my articles, send them to me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com and I can put them on here for you.

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.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids., The stiffs | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment