Steve Morison it is then and a surprise, but welcome, return for Mark Hudson.

When Steve Morison was appointed as caretaker manager following the 2-0 home loss to Middlesbrough three weeks ago, it was intimated that he would be in charge for the next three matches before the November international break and then a decision would be made about who would be taking over from Mick McCarthy.

As the first week of that break went by with no official word as to what was happening coming from the club, it might have been that frustration would have built as the Board was seen to be dithering, but it never really reached that stage because, for me at least, it seemed increasingly obvious that the job would be Morison’s.

Mike Flynn, who I wouldn’t have been too disappointed with, was the bookies favourite (for all that is worth when it comes to predicting the identity of a new managers) for a long time and was at the match last weekend against Huddersfield. However, whether he was ever a serious contender or not, he seemed to fade out of the picture after watching us play (make of that what you will!).

My own favourite was Michael Beale who was part of Steven Gerrard’s coaching staff at Rangers. Someone whose opinion I have a lot of respect for when it comes to the fields of youth development and coaching told me it would be a “coup” for City if we could get Beale. Although there is nothing concrete to indicate this, I get the feeling we were definitely interested in him and find myself wondering what might have happened if the opportunity to work in the Premier League had not presented itself this week – Beale is widely believed to be on the brink of following Gerrard to Aston Villa.

Neil Warnock was always going to be mentioned by the media once he lost his job at Middlesbrough and, typically, he had his say on the matter as he claimed he’d been offered the City job – people who usually are on the ball on such things say this is not the case and, thankfully, nothing came of such speculation.

So, Morison, through a combination of improved results and performances from the team under his watch and possibly a lack of serious alternatives, was confirmed as manager until the end of the season yesterday – why only until the end of the season? If they think he’s up to the job, give him a longer contract. As it is, it comes across as more typically Cardiff short termism under Vincent Tan.

For me, there are two ways of looking at Morison’s appointment. The cynical view is that he’s got the job because, as someone who was already at the club, he comes cheaper than most and, as such, it’s more of the blinkered thinking which cannot look beyond the next few months which has been a bane of decision making at owner/Board level that has typified the Tan regime.

I’m not going to argue against this, because there is a part of me, admittedly only a small part, which thinks the cynics may be right, but, on balance, I favour the positive option, as felt by a majority of City fans it would seem, option that there is a degree of joined up thinking going on here. Another appointment announced yesterday (which I’ll come to later) only increases my positivity as well – I say this despite noting that club Chairman Mehmet Dalman was rubbishing Morison’s candidature little more than a fortnight ago!

However, as Mr Dalman also intimated in his meeting with Supporters representatives last month, Vincent Tan is the driving force behind all of the major decisions at Cardiff City even if it often appears to outsiders like me that his commitment to the club is on the decline.

There is logic in the decision to appoint Morison to the extent that it seems to me that City are increasingly going to be reliant on how well, or badly, the series of young Academy products in and around the first team currently handle the step up in standards that they’re currently going through. Therefore, it makes sense to have someone there in charge of the playing side who they know well and, presumably, trust given that they wouldn’t be getting the chances they currently are if they had not prospered and progressed under Morison in the under 23s.

With so many senior players approaching or beyond the age of thirty and coming to the end of their contracts in a little over six months time, Mr Tan must know that, realistically, it’s only Keiffer Moore out of that group who is likely to attract a fee which would make a significant difference to our financial situation.

On the other hand, if two or three of the home produced youngsters or someone like Mark McGuinness can continue to develop and prosper at the higher level, then there is a two fold benefit – results should improve gradually and we’ll have far more saleable assets than we do now.

Furthermore, the difference between what is happening now at Cardiff and what tends to happen at a “normal” football club is that, to borrow that old London buses analogy for a moment, you wait a decade at Cardiff for a good young player to turn up and then suddenly stacks of them arrive at once.

I’ve already mentioned Mark McGuinness, but then you consider the sheer number of young players who have gained some first team experience recently. Mark Harris is a little older than the rest, but shares the inconsistencies you always tend to get from youngsters, yet he has shown an ability within the last couple of months to make a decisive impact on games for club and country when coming off the bench.

Rubin Colwill is the one gets the most publicity, but, on the attacking front, there’s Keiron Evans and Isaak Davies, Sam Bowen has, for me, done enough in midfield to show that he should be starting every week if fit, while Eli King can now say that he’s played Championship football for City as well. At the back, Joel Bagan has got valuable league experience behind him and it’s easy to forget now that Oliver Denham, Tavio D’Almeida and Tom Davies have all played first team football in the League Cup this season and not looked out of place.

Among those who have not made their first team bow yet, I’ve always rated Keenan Patten a fine prospect and he’s been an unused sub plenty of times now for the seniors, Chanka Zimba has been the in form striker at the club this season and you feel a first team appearance can’t be far away for him now, while George Ratcliffe chalked up another Wales Under 21 appearance last night and was being talked up as the best prospect at the club a couple of years ago – Cardiff City are well represented at all age group levels with Wales in the male game currently also.

My point with all of this is that, although City certainly have their problems currently, they are, nevertheless, in a fortunate position whereby sheer weight of numbers combined with the law of averages, tells you that we’re going to have a nucleus of two, three or, hopefully, more who will either become good first team footballers for us or make the club a tidy sum of money.

You’d like to think that, based on his record with us so far, Steve Morison will do his bit to make sure the chances that what I talked of in the last paragraph will come to pass, so you’d hope that, besides saving us money when we appointed him, he’ll help make a lot of it for City in the years to come.

So, financially, Morison’s appointment make sense – it’s on the football side that I feel the risk factor behind his appointment really kicks in. I’d say that, in terms of risk, this is the biggest step into the dark in managerial terms the club have taken during the Tan era and, probably for a good while before that.

Morison deserves credit for taking over a club on an eight game losing streak which had scored in only one of those matches (a solitary consolation goal when the game was well lost at Blackburn) and managed a sequence of draw (under amazing circumstances), lose and win from the next three matches while the team scored five times in all.

Not only that, I often refer to how Neil Harris effectively gave up on trying to introduce a more measured and progressive style at Cardiff a year ago as form dipped and results suffered. Harris figured that the players needed to return to a way of playing that they were more familiar with, so it more of balls whacked back to front quickly, possession at a premium and an over reliance on set pieces.

Mick McCarthy came in, said he was a pragmatist and made the team even more direct, boring and set piece orientated than they had been before. Sadly, the more things went wrong for McCarthy, the more he double downed on a style that was clearly not working, with the infamous five centrebacks becoming the single thing that I believe he will be remembered for at Cardiff in the years to come.

That’s the background that greeted Steve Morison and yet he’s tried, and succeeded to a degree, in getting us to play a passing game which is far more worthy of that description than anything Harris ever managed.

Apologies, because I do not have the exact figures to hand I’m afraid, but the passing stats from the Huddersfield match offer the best evidence as to the change that Morison has instituted in our approach. Around the half time mark last Saturday, the commentator on the club website correctly stated that on the rare occasions that City had more than fifty per cent possession in the past couple of years, they have tended to lose – more evidence of the lack of creativity that has blighted the team since their relegation in 2019 then.

However, against a Huddersfield side that is very much possession based, we managed to win the possession count 54/46 and the game (albeit luckily). More pertinent I’d say was the number of passes attempted (up around four hundred and fifty) and the well over three hundred of them that were successful.

Such figures would have been dismissed as some sort of statistical freak in the City sides of Slade, Warnock, Harris and McCarthy (we successfully passed the ball 110 times I believe it was at Swansea under him!), but I don’t think they should be under Morison. I’ve mentioned on here before that his under 23 side have often had less than fifty per cent possession this season, but there’s a calmness and order to them when in possession which has me thinking they’re in control of the game even when the opposition have the ball – they know what they want to do and are capable of doing it whereas, increasingly, the first team gave the impression of being incapable of sticking to the plan.

I should though at least pose the question that, given those Huddersfield figures, perhaps our experienced players are not as bad at passing the ball as I thought they were and the Morison effect is getting through to them? Time will tell.

So, everything in the last few paragraphs are positives for Morison in a football sense, why then do I say it’s a big risk to appoint him? Well, I can’t help thinking that there’s been an element of flying by the seat of our pants to our three games under our new manager.

While this may be inevitable given the situation he inherited I suppose, I feel that we could very easily have lost those three matches – although we always looked a danger going forward, Stoke were well in control for at least three quarters of that match, QPR were comfortable defending against us for the whole game apart from a spell at the end where we forced a few corners and Huddersfield would have been out of sight with better finishing.

There still seem to be gaps in our midfield that teams can play through and we still are allowing opponents too much time to get shots away from the area in front of our back three, four or five. Worst of all though, we still look so loose defensively and the fault from early in the season when we were being opened up by a single pass has made an unwelcome return under Morison.

We’ve scored five in three, but we’ve conceded that number as well and I’m not seeing an improvement defensively under Morison to go alongside what’s being achieved at the other end of the pitch. The good thing is though that it would appear this fault has been recognised and the appointment of 12/13 title winning captain Mark Hudson as a first team coach, to work alongside Tom Ramasut (the job he’s done in the past three weeks shouldn’t be ignored) looks to be a good move – you’d like to think someone with Hudson’s experience in the position will lead to improvements in central defence.

For now though, it’s great to have someone who I grew to appreciate more the longer he stayed at the club back, at the moment Cardiff City feels like an easier club to like than it has done for some time.

Finally, a mention a couple of wins for Wales teams at age group levels. The under 21s came back after a disappointing October international break which saw them beaten by the Netherlands and Moldova to win in Gibraltar 7-0 last night. Although the hosts hit the post, it was an easy ninety minutes for George Ratcliffe and the introduction of Isaak Davies and Eli King in the second half took the City representation up to three – from memory, the scorers were the very impressive full back Back, Adams with two (one a penalty), Jephcott, Williams, Taylor and Ashley.

More impressive probably was the Under 17s 3-1 win over Ukraine in a mini qualifying tournament also involving hosts Portugal and Kazakhstan on Wednesday with City’s Cole Fleming coming off the bench to score the third goal – Charlie Crewe and Rabbi’s brother Japhet Matondo were City players who started, while Tanatswa Nyakuhwa was an unused sub. Wales face Portugal (5-0 winners over Kazakhstan in their first match) later today.

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Finally it’s over! Another youngster makes a mark as last minute Moore goal clinches long overdue win

Yes, it’s slowly coming back to me minute by minute, that feeling I used to get when we won a game. As someone who’ll be qualified to receive the state pension for the first time in February, there are certainly a few of the pleasures of life that I won’t be experiencing again and I was beginning to think that seeing my football team win was one of them!

What are the best types of win? Is it a 5-0 romp when you team plays really well or a real battle with good football at a premium which is decided by a very late goal? I think possibly the former, but that is not to dismiss the latter which gives you that great explosion of joy which you didn’t see coming – you don’t get that in a 5-0 of the type I’m talking about, it’s more of a contented purr.

Clearly though, when you’ve been on the sort of run that we have, the win, when it comes, is far more likely to be of the last minute winner variety than the five goal thrashing and so it was proved this afternoon as City beat a Huddersfield side that have now not won in sixteen games against us by 2-1.

City ended their horrible winless run of ten matches with the latter of those two options as they beat a Huddersfield side that are challenging for the Play Offs at the moment thanks to a quality goal, which had little in common with most of what had gone before it, in the third, and final, minute of added time.

There were definite parallels with the last time we won as well. Just as at Nottingham Forest, we won from 1-0 down thanks to a couple of goals scored by a Wales international. There was a time not so long ago when Welsh internationals just didn’t play for Cardiff City, now we have four named in the Wales senior squad , four in the under 21s, four in the under nineteens, four in the under 17s and there were seven recently in the under16s.

Don’t get me wrong, although that last paragraph may suggest otherwise and we won today,  that doesn’t mean that everything in the garden is rosy once more. The league table still tells you that this is far from the case, but it is pleasing that the club is now making a full contribution to Welsh international football at all levels in the men’s game.

Steve Morison made four changes to the team beaten by QPR on Wednesday as City tried to prevent a club record for most consecutive home league defeats being extended and one for the longest time without a home league goal being created. Aden Flint came back into the side for out of sorts captain Sean Morrison, Joe Ralls’ reward for his impressive late substitute showing against QPR which almost got us a point was a starting place replacing Will Vaulks (and also the captaincy) and Mark Harris and Leandro Bacuna came in for the injured Keiron Evans and Rubin Colwill who was a substitute.

To be honest, I thought we were terrible for much of the game. Having spent so long moaning about our approach down the years, I really like the fact that we’re trying to retain the ball better and cut down on the route one stuff, but we look so frail at times and, like on Wednesday, we created very little – until we scored that is. The game was panning out like so many of our home matches this season have done where there was this overpowering feeling that the game was as good as lost once we’d conceded a goal.

For most of the last ten games, particularly those at home, we’ve been an impossible conundrum to solve – how do you get out of a losing run when you can’t score a goal or keep a clean sheet? Well, we still can’t keep a clean sheet and we gift wrapped Huddersfield a goal after just twelve minutes today.

Mark McGuinness has been the one central defender not to be dropped in recent weeks and rightly so as he has looked pretty solid despite being unlucky with things like penalty decisions and deflections that resulted in goals, but here he left a back pass a long way short of Alex Smithies to leave Luxembourg international Daniel Sinani with a run in on goal. Curtis Nelson came across on the cover and got a good tackle in, but the ball only rolled a yard or so away from the forward on loan from Norwich who was able to get to it and score from eight yards with a shot which flicked the post on its way in.

To an extent, City responded well to going a goal behind as their high press forced a Huddersfield team determined to play out from the back into a series of errors with goalkeeper Lee Nicholls particularly culpable with his kicking.

Unfortunately, the visitors’ carelessness only served to expose Cardiff’s limitations in terms of finding the pass or cross that would punish the opposition for their slackness and the overall feeling was that Huddersfield would have been punished by better teams than us.

Nevertheless, City could feel unfortunate to be trailing after half an hour because they’d been on the front foot for most of the time against opponents who seemed content to put nine outfield players behind the ball and invite us to break them down. 

Ralls was unfortunate to see a shot that may well have been going in deflected over, but it was noticeable that when Huddersfield did become more adventurous, they looked a lot more dangerous than we did. Three times the ball flashed across the face of our goal with McGuinness redeeming himself to some extent with a block that prevented Josh Koroma, one of two subs brought on by the visitors in the first half as injuries forced off Jonathan Hogg and Duane Holmes, a tap in to double their lead.

Nicholls was finally forced into a save in the last worthwhile attack of the half when Perry Ng, a player who definitely looks to have benefited from having Steve Morison in charge, got in a good left footed shot from the edge of the penalty area after City opted for something different from what looked like being another long throw in.

The opening stages of the second period saw the pattern for much of the first half repeated with Cardiff having most of the possession and territorial advantage without ever really looking like they had an equaliser in them.

I can’t begin to imagine how difficult it must have been for the players in such an awful situation where their confidence must be on the floor as everything they tried to find that elusive goal came to nothing. This was exemplified when last season’s goalscoring hero Moore ballooned a shot high and wide after he’d done pretty well to work himself an opportunity from eighteen yards, at that stage you just had to wonder if that goal would ever come.

City were in need of inspiration and they bought on a player who would later provide it. Surprisingly, it wasn’t Colwill, it was Isaak Davies, who was introduced instead of Harris who had been quiet throughout. Davies had barely got a kick when he was brought on for the final ten minutes in Mick McCarthy’s last match in charge against Middlesbrough (who, incidentally, parted company with their manager, whoever he is, today) for his first team debut and he didn’t do a great deal in the minutes after his introduction today as Huddersfield threatened to put the game beyond City by hitting the post twice in a matter of minutes.

New Welsh international Sorba Thomas, surprisingly playing on the right, was most noticeable today for his excellent dead ball deliveries and he produced a beauty of a corner which found on loan Chelsea defender Levi Colwill completely unmarked some four yards from goal. One of the surprises of this season where we have generally defended awfully is that we’ve still to concede a goal from a corner and it’s down to Smithies that we still haven’t as he produced a great reaction save to turn Colwill’s header on to the far post and out.

Shortly afterwards, Flint, who played well overall, made a mess of a long ball forward and ex City man Danny Ward was able to lob over Smithies for what looked like a certain goal, only for the ball to hit the same post and again bounce out.

City were, somehow,still in the game and, with Colwill on for McGuinness, they stepped up the pressure again as Davies did very well to force a corner on seventy four minutes and then it happened! Some seven hundred and eleven minutes after the last City player had scored at Cardiff City Stadium, we actually found the back of the net.

Although I’d mentioned on here recently that we were looking less threatening from dead ball situations lately, it was still a very decent shout to think that when the goal came, it would be via that method and so it duly did – it really was all so simple as Ralls’ on the mark delivery from the corner won by Davies was nodded in by an unmarked Moore on the near post from six yards out.

It was all set up for a storming last fifteen minutes then as a home crowd finally given something to cheer got behind their team, but, in truth, the next quarter of an hour or so was a bit of a mess – Moore got in another header which Nicholls was able to save quite easily and City were grateful to Marlon Pack and Flint for a couple good defensive blocks, but there seemed no sign of a winning goal until Davies got involved.

The goal when it arrived on ninety three minutes was satisfyingly old fashioned as Colwill fed Davies on the left and, instead of cutting in like so many do these days, he took on, and skinned, his marker on the outside to get to the bye line. If that was impressive, what came next was doubly so as a perfect left footed cross picked out Moore stood just beyond the far post around nine yards out and he gave the cross the finish it deserved with a technically perfect downward header into the opposite corner beyond Nicholls.

As I said before, it was a goal that was out of keeping with the game, but what it will do for the team’s confidence cannot be over stated – it may be that we’ll continue to struggle when fixtures resume in a fortnight, but that goal will have removed a suffocating black cloud that has hovered over City for a couple of months.

As to what all of this has done for Morison’s chances of getting the manager’s job on a permanent basis, a return of four points from the three games he was supposed to have been given is a very good one considering where we were after three quarters of his first game in charge at Stoke and I think it should be enough to make the owner think seriously about giving him the job, but I suspect that Vincent Tan will look elsewhere- surely not to Neil Warnock though after what Mehmet Dalman said about him in that notorious meeting with fans representatives last month!

Whatever, happens as far as the main job is concerned, Morison is part of what has been almost a Renaissance at Cardiff City at the levels below the senior side. Besides the all conquering under 23s, the under 18s have put their stuttering start to their season behind them. Today they made it two wins in a week at Swansea for City age group sides by recording their fourth straight win as they followed up the under 23s 3-1 triumph there on Monday with  a 2-0 victory this morning.

Joel Colwill and Caleb Hughes got the goals to inflict a fifth defeat in the last six games on the jacks in matches at senior, under 23 and under 21 levels between the clubs– I’ve also learned that, at the same time, the under 16s were winning their match against the jacks 4-1.

It was a good day for the local Rhondda Valley sides as well. In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance, Blaenrhondda returned to winning ways in the Premier League with a 4-2 home win over Aber Valley to move up to seventh in the table, while Treherbert Boys and Girls Club consolidated their position at the top of the Second Division with a 4-0 home win over second in the league Aberfan.

In the Ardal Leagues South West, there was a welcome win for Ton Pentre as they beat one of the sides down at the bottom of the league with them, Cwmamman United, 3-2 at home.

It’s the time of year again when I ask readers of Mauve and Yellow Army to make a contribution towards its running costs. Before I go into detail about this, I should, once again, offer my sincere thanks to all of you who have helped ensure the future of the blog over the past three years through a mixture of monthly payments via Patreon, monthly Standing Orders into my bank account and once a year payments via bank transfer, PayPal, cheque and cash.

The first time I made this request for assistance, it was prompted by a need for funds to pay for three yearly web hosting costs which, frankly, I was in no position to meet following my move of house a few months earlier. However, I’m pleased to say that, this time around, the web hosting bill was settled back in June with none of the problems there were back in 2018.

Therefore, any monies received this year will go towards other running costs and, although it’s too early yet to make any formal commitments despite so many of the pandemic restrictions in Wales being lifted recently, I am minded to do another review of a season from the past book to follow on from “Real Madrid and all that” (copies now also available om match days at the reduced price of £8.99 from the Trust Office, near gate five) which looked back on the 1970/71 campaign. At the moment 1975/76, the first promotion season I experienced, looks to be favourite for the book treatment, which would mean a lot more trips back and forth to Cardiff than my finances have become used to over the past year and a half – hopefully, the majority of them will not have to be made via Radyr Cheyne!

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.

Finally, as mentioned earlier, 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.

Posted in Down in the dugout, Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments