Seven decades of Cardiff City v Queens Park Rangers matches.

Before getting to the quiz, I’ve got to mention last night’s game in which City’s Under 23 side maintained their 100 per cent winning start to the season with a 3-1 victory at Swansea. It’s now eight wins from eight for the Development team and, although Bristol City’s 3-0 win at Charlton a few hours earlier means that our lead at the top of the division has been cut back a tiny bit, we still look well on course for making the end of season Play Offs by finishing in the top two of our league – even if it is becoming increasingly likely that some important members of the squad at the start of the season could well be spending the majority of their time involved with the first team.

Joel Bagan, Eli King and Isaak Davies, all on the bench at Stoke on Saturday, started for City, but, to balance that, Swansea had Yan Dhanda (who’s played fifty times for their first team) and Wales senior squad member Brandon Cooper starting for them.

All of the goals came in the first half, with wing back Jai Semenyo putting us ahead in just three minutes. Lincoln McLayden equalised for Swansea within ten minutes, but a Chanka Zimba header from a Jack Leahy cross restored the lead and Isaak Davies had us 3-1 up ten minutes before the break.

On to the quiz, seven questions on QPR with the answers to be posted on here on Thursday.

60s. Born in the Prime Minister’s constituency, this defender set a QPR club record in his first game for them which stands to this day. He only had the one club in a career which lasted eight years and his association with QPR didn’t end there as he later coached and managed them before having a second go at management with a club that used to play at what sounded like a men only ground – who am I describing?

70s. This clever striker had mixed results from his two encounters with City during this decade while playing for QPR, his first club. His first move took him to the club he probably had most success with as he puffed pipe dreams for six years. Shorter stays among carrion birds and then with male animals further south saw him maintain a scoring rate of around a goal every three games that ensured his career was a long one. That rate fell away dramatically at his next club though where, ironically, he’d been signed for a club record fee and his stay at a ground with an icy blast was a short one. His final club were blue townies on the way to more difficult times and he retired from playing just as he had a short spell as joint caretaker manager there. When it came to international football, he scored in every match he played for his country, can you name him?

80s. Dire losses in artificial intelligence may have contributed to his lack of success as a manager (5,7).

90s. Destroyer of aural timekeeper by the sound of it!

00s. Described by the City manager who signed him as “”a good prospect, a strong player, a good athlete and comfortable on the ball“, this midfielder failed to live up to his billing, but he did play for us against QPR during this decade. He was the subject of a bid from Norwich which would have got more than half of the fee that we paid for him back, but it came to nothing and when he eventually left us, it was for nothing as we didn’t renew his contract. Cardiff are one of eighteen different clubs he has played for in a career which I believe is still ongoing, but can you name him?

19s. Currently on loan to the Falcons and playing top flight football in the country where he is based, this former QPR player appeared for them against us during this decade. He has two internationals caps, he scored in the first of them and his second one came for Sierra Leone in an unofficial, non FIFA sanctioned match against a team of “local Moroccan footballers” which was lost 2-1, who is he?

20s. Parliamentary official in QPR midfield?

Answers

60s. Uxbridge born Frank Sibley played just short of one hundred and fifty league games for QPR before being forced to retire from injury at the age of just twenty three. He was the club’s youngest ever player when picked for a League Cup tie with Aldershot in September 1963 at the age of fifteen years and two hundred and seventy six days. Sibley later coached QPR and was appointed manager of the club in 1977/78, before a spell in charge in charge of Walsall in 1979.

70s. Paul Goddard began QPR’S 1-0 defeat at Ninian Park and their 3-0 win in the return fixture a few months later in 1979. Moving on to West Ham quite soon after, Goddard gained his only England full cap while with them as he scored in a 1-1 draw with Iceland in 1982. Losing his place in the Hammers team due to injury, Goddard moved to Newcastle in 1986 and then Derby three years later, before returning to London to play for Millwall during their brief stint in the First Division. Ipswich were Goddard’s last club and he was appointed joint caretaker manager with John Wark there in 94/95.

80s. Ossie Ardiles.

90s. Tim Breacker.

00s. Solomon Taiwo was signed by Dave Jones for £250,000 in 2009 and a few weeks later was in the City team beaten 2-0 at home by QPR. Taiwo only played in nine league matches for us (I’m surprised it was that many) before being released in 2012 – apparently he’s still playing, at Faversham Town.

10s. City’s former captain Steven Caulker was in the QPR side beaten 2-1 at Cardiff City Stadium in September 2017. His one England cap came in a 4-2 defeat by Sweden (his team were winning 2-1 when he was substituted with a quarter of an hour left) and he scored one of the goals. Currently on loan to Turkish side Gazlantep from Fenerbache, Caulker was selected for Sierra Leone last month in what was described as an unofficial international against a side from Morocco.

20s. George Thomas – his namesake was Speaker in the House of Commons from 1976 to 1983.  

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Amazing comeback from the team that couldn’t score finally gets Cardiff City’s points tally moving again.

Surely, if and when Cardiff City ended their club record run of eight successive league losses it would be through a scrappy, low scoring draw or, if they were lucky, a ground out 1-0 win with a suitably scruffy goal deciding it?

What they were never going to do was, having not scored in over nine hours of play, play like drains for an hour in going 3-0 down and then score three times in five minutes to come back to draw after a close, but correct, offside call ruled out what could have been a winner. However, that’s precisely what happened and the world suddenly seems a better and brighter place after City gained a point which feels very much like three.

All of this surely helps the cause of caretaker boss Steve Morison the coach of the highly successful Under 23 side if he is looking to become our new manager, but it must be said that although there were what I thought were encouraging signs as the match went on which I’ll come to later, in many ways, it was the same old, same old from City at Stoke, themselves on a losing run of four games, today with things reaching the awful stage where their fans were ironically “oleing” them when they completed a successful pass shortly before the fight back began.

The Stoke fans were predictably merciless as their side strolled into their big lead without really having to exert themselves too much, but to hear your own support taking the piss out of you must have had our players wondering just how much worse was it possible for this nightmare to become.

None of this is to criticise those who went to the game. Honestly, I think they deserve medals for still having the faith to endure what, apparently, was a particularly slow journey up on a route that is notoriously bad when you consider the fare they’ve had to put up with and, with the target of their ire in the last few weeks having now left, the team, rather than the caretaker boss, were always going to be targeted in the event of things continued to go wrong.

Go wrong they certainly did as Morison reverted to the three man central defence by opting for the 3-4-3/3-4-2-1 that the Under 23s have used all season. The omission of Aden Flint came as a surprise to me as Sean Morrison and Curtis Nelson returned to accompany Mark McGuinness, while Ryan Giles moved to the left wing back position that it had been assumed he was going to occupy at the start of the season, with Perry Ng on the right.

With Marlon Pack suspended and Sam Bowen and Joe Ralls missing through injury, City would have been grateful that Leandro Bacuna had recovered from the injury which forced him off at Swansea to play alongside Will Vaulks as we were very much down to the bare bones in midfield.

It was up front where Morison’s selection drew on the youngsters he was used to working with as Keiron Evans started for the first with Rubin Colwill as the pair to play on the flanks behind Keiffer Moore.

City’s start was quite an encouraging one, but for now, I want to talk about how we conceded in the ninth minute from what seemed to me to be the first time Stoke put a cross into our penalty area. This time, I wouldn’t be too critical of our central defenders because it was a good quality ball in from the right by Ben Wilmott that Jacob Brown just got in front of McGuinness to nod in from ten yards with Alex Smithies helpless.

No, it was another familiar problem this season that stood out for me as opposition players were allowed far too much room in the areas just outside our penalty box as Vaulks and Bacuna (who may have been a bit rusty about what his duties were in what is his best position as it’s been so long since he played there) got nowhere near their men.

Seven minutes later, Brown was able to find room between our defenders much too easily and burst forward before cutting back a pass to Stephen Fletcher who was able to take a touch before scoring from that twenty to twenty five yard range where we’ve conceded so many goals this season. Once again, the lack of closing down on the player in possession was conspicuous, but luck was against City as it seemed like a shot Smithies would have dealt with pretty comfortably until a deflection off McGuinness took the ball beyond him and in.

Stoke were dominant for the rest of the first half as City struggled in familiar fashion to, first, get possession and then retain it. It was not as if the home side were laying siege on our goal, but for most of the time it was embarrassingly comfortable for them to maintain their dominance.

Two behind at the break, City needed a strong start to the second half, but instead presented the hosts with a third goal within half a minute when Vaulks wanted too much time on the ball and we were in trouble as soon as he was robbed. Once again, it was Brown who fed Fletcher who coolly lobbed Smithies from the edge of the penalty area.

I was going to say that Smithies made some good saves to keep City in it, but that would be wrong – to all intents and purposes, they were out of it already.

Yet, right from the start, this had been a game where City looked like they could cause the Stoke backline problems if they just had a bit more belief in themselves. There has been much said about the lack of pace in City’s squad, but I don’t know if it was that Stoke’s defence was spectacularly slow, but we seemed to have the legs on them throughout with even Moore at times giving his marker a yard or two and managing to beat him to a through pass.

With Colwill a creative influence on the left, City were in the game as an attacking force if only we could find the passes to give him and Moore especially the opportunity to show their ability to cause problems.

It was a shame therefore when, after just five minutes Colwill, made a mess of a marvelous opportunity when two home defenders collided to allow what had looked like an innocuous ball forward to reach him in glorious isolation on the left. Colwill ran in towards goal and probably made the right decision to try to find Evans who would have had a tap in rather than shoot himself, but he played his pass behind his young team mate and a glorious chance to end City’s first half goal drought had gone.

There was one another real opportunity for that first forty minute goal though as Colwill cleverly slid Moore through around the forty minute mark, but last season’s twenty goal striker never looked convincing as he elected to shoot rather than try to find Evans and home keeper Joe Bursik was able to save.

Once Stoke were three up, City’s objectives seemed twofold, keep the score down and, at long last, score a goal. As for the latter, you had to think there was no chance of that happening after Bacuna’s free kick from twenty two yards deflected off the wall and onto the post, but, instead, it was the prelude for an absolutely incredible spell of football which left City fans incredulous and Stoke supporters furious.

When it came a minute after Bacuna’s effort, City’s long awaited goal was courtesy of a goalkeeping blunder – Colwill’s shot from the corner of the penalty area was well struck and bounced slightly awkwardly in front of Bursik, but he really should have found a way to keep it out – instead it burst through him and bounced into the roof of the net.

I watched this thinking that at least City now had something slightly positive to take out of the game, but with Stoke retaining possession and pushing forward, there seemed no reason to expect any more than that until Josh Tymon over hit a backwards pass meant for Jordan Thompson and Moore broke down the right before delivering a well timed and weighted pass through to sub Mark Harris who beat Bursik with a fine first time finish from around fifteen yards.

Harris, on for Evans, has struggled in the last few games to make an impact after coming off the bench, but here he looked the mobile and strong nuisance for defenders he had been on quite a few occasions last season – he may well have played his way into the starting line up for Wednesday’s visit of QPR.

Within another minute or so, City were, incredibly, level following a good period of possession that included a fine cross field pass by Bacuna and eventually the ball reached Giles, who, growing into his role, broke past Stoke right wing back Tommy Smith and crossed low where a slight deflection off a defender took the ball into Moore’s path and he tapped in from no more than five yards.

Okay, the first two goals owed a lot to opposition mistakes, but the second one was beautifully taken and the third was well constructed and they both showed what can be achieved with a little bit more confidence in the camp – the three goals also put to bed that embarrassing stat about only scoring two goals that weren’t headers.

Understandably after that, City were more concerned with holding on to their first point in nine games than chasing the win, but only a close offside decision denied Harris a second goal after a quick counter attack gave Giles the chance to put in another good early cross.

Stoke had their attacking moments after that and former Wales centreback James Chester did City a big favour in added time when he not only blocked a goal bound shot, but also did it from an offside position.

So, City get a desperately needed point in the most unexpected circumstances, there’s still weaknesses in many areas of the team and so many of the faults that have blighted the season were still there today, but, for now, it’s great to have taken a point from a game – there were times over the past month when I truly couldn’t see where it was going to come from.

By complete contrast, the Under 18s are steamrollering teams at the moment. Fresh from scoring nine goals in winning their last two matches, they thrashed Ipswich 6-1 this morning at Leckwith with the goals coming from Morgan Wigley, two from James Crole (one a penalty), Rhys Schwann, Rubin’s brother Joel Colwill and Isaac Jefferies who scored within minutes of coming on as a sub following a long term injury.

As for my local Rhondda valley sides, Blaenrhondda AFC drew 4-4 at FC Cwmaman and, for the second successive weekend, Ton Pentre and Treherbert Boys and Girls club didn’t play.

I should mention as well that I’ve took a small quantity of my book Real Madrid and all that down to the Supporters’ Trust office on Friday and they can be bought at games for a slightly discounted price of £8.99 – the Trust office is situated close to Gate 5.

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” 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 Cardiff City Books, Down in the dugout, Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments