Poor refereeing mars top of the table clash.

Cardiff City dropped their first home points since 30 September as they were held to a 1-1 draw by fourth placed Stockport in a game which included a serious looking injury to striker Yousef Salech who was treated for thirteen minutes for what looked like a neck injury.

I’ll return to Salech’s injury later, but, as I type this, City’s position at the top has improved as Bradford were beaten 1-0 at Huddersfield and seventh placed Luton went down by the same score at Plymouth in the other lunchtime kick offs.

Lincoln’s 2-1 win on Thursday over Burton means that the six point gap over second position we has last weekend has been cut to four, but with the three o clock kick offs just starting we’re ten points ahead of Bradford, albeit we’ve played a game more than them and seventeen points clear of Luton with them having played one more match than us.

I’ve tried to steer clear of the subject of League One referees recently because the standards are generally so low that you end up sounding like a stuck record. However,I cannot apply my recently acquired more tolerant approach to them after Paul Howard’s inconsistent showing today.

That said, I would say that, albeit only on the one viewing, the incident that led to Salech’s injury was an accident which did not merit any further action from Mr Howard in terms of a card being shown. What happened as I saw it was that Stockport Centre back Brad Hills challenged for a high ball with Salech and the striker landed awkwardly, possibly on his neck, with Hills then landing on top of him. It was a forceful challenge with a possibility that Hills’ elbow made contact with Salech, but it did not strike me as deliberate. It was the sort of challenge which may have been penalised by a foul, but it would have struck me as harsh.*

Maybe I’ll feel a bit different when I see a few replays of the incident, but, by playing on (and then booking Ryan Wintle a few seconds later), I thought Mr Howard got it right.

If I would criticise Mr Howard, it would be for not recognizing the possibility of a serious injury of a type which could have serious consequences for the player concerned.

So, rightly or wrongly, I’m not too critical of the referee on the game’s main talking point, but I fail to see how in a match which saw Stockport penalised seventeen times for fouls to our eleven, we ended up with three players booked to their two.

I’m not saying that the yellow cards issued to Wintle, Joel Bagan and Omari Kellyman were wrong – they were all for cynical “take one for the team” fouls (including two shirt grabs on a player who had got the wrong side of the three of them). If Mr Howard did not caution the three City players, he would have been marked down by the assessor for not interpreting the laws of the game as current guidelines say they should be. However, something is wrong when Ollie Norwood is not shown a card for a late diving tackle on Callum Robertson – Norwood seemed genuinely contrite after the foul on a former Sheffield United, but it was a poor tackle and a yellow card, possibly a red one, all day long. 

Worse still was the elbow to Wintle’s face by Josh Stokes which Mr Howard did actually show a card for, but, for me, it was the worst of a few occasions when Stockport elbows were raised when jumping for the ball and was worthy of a red card – especially as Stokes looked to check where Wintle was before jumping with his elbow raised.

Also, Stockport scorer Kyle Wootton who had already been booked was penalised for a shirt pull by Mr Howard, but no further card was shown – there were one or two other fouls committed by Wootton after his caution as well.

Hills, of course, was treated by the crowd as very much the villain of the piece after the Salech injury and he was another one who could have seen a card for persistent fouling following that incident.

The ref was definitely inconsistent and poor, but were Stockport as dirty as I’m sure many City fans are accusing them of being? I’m not sure about that, I thought they were physical and played with an aggressive forward press in what I felt was an impressive first half showing.

In fact, I’d say Stockport were bettered only by Bradford in terms of the best visiting sides to come to Cardiff City Stadium so far this season and it was easy to see why they possess the second best away record in the division. However, on another day and with a better referee, they could have easily have been reduced to ten, or even nine, men.

David Turnbull missed out because of the illness he’d been suffering with all week with Joel Colwill replacing him and Cian Ashford came in for Chris Willock in the two changes BBM made from last week at Bradford. There was also a late change on the bench when Dylan Lawlor sustained an injury in the warm up which at least meant that we had a keeper among our subs as Harry Tyrer got his first call up into the first team squad.

I found the game a good watch, but looking back at it now, It’s difficult to recall too many events in either goal mouth worth recording. 

In very dull, wet and windy conditions, it was the visitors who settled first to take the lead inside ten minutes as Josh Dacres-Cogley, an influential player in the first half especially, got clear of Wintle to create plenty of space for him to run into as a three on two in his team’s favour was created. The Stockport player decided to hit a low twenty yarder which Nathan Trott dived to keep out, but the ball bounced straight into the path of Wootton who tapped home from six yards.

City struggled to respond until Wintle’s chip presented Salech with a diving header half chance which was directed too close to visiting keeper Ben Hinchcliffe.

That was to be Salech’s last meaningful contribution and his injury seemed to affect City, but in the seventh of fourteen additional minutes at the end of the first half, a fluent move ended with Tanner, who had a Curate’s Egg of a game, claiming another assist as his good pass found Colwill who worked himself some room on the edge of the area before beating Hinchcliffe with a shot which may have got a very slight deflection off a defender.

City went on to have the better of the second half as they passed the ball well until they got into the final third where they struggled to find the creativity to unlock a stubborn visiting defense. Kellyman replaced Tanner, but proved to be more erratic than Ollie was, while Willock did supply some creativity on the left after he replaced Colwill. However, while our results since he sustained his injury at Northampton suggest we haven’t missed him that much, this felt like a game where we could have done with a fit Rubin Colwill.

Isaak Davies came on for Alex Robertson as City chased the win and they finally had the chances to get the three points in the last fewminutes as Willock picked out Ashford whose shot flew over after a Stockport defender got a touch on it – Ashford didn’t really have the time to take the touch which came before he shot. Then it was Willock again who set up Robinson for what looked to be the winner only for Hinchcliffe to get off his line quickly to block the close range shot.

Elsewhere, Bolton moved up to third on goal difference when a penalty in added time secured them a 2-1 home win over Leyton Orient. Stevenage drew 1-1 with in form Mansfield and Peterborough won 2-0 at Wycombe.

After the game, BBM said that Salech had gone to hospital to have a precautionary scan on his neck, but he sounded positive about the outcome and there was even a suggestion that he could be available for Tuesday’s game with Barnsley.

While our manager would not comment on the incident which led to Salech’s injury, he was critical of the way his striker has been treated by officials this season with all sorts of fouls going unchecked virtually from day one back in August as yet another interpretation of the laws which favours defenders has been applied.

It was a draw as well for our under 18s as it finished 2-2 away from hone against a Bournemouth team we’ve tended to struggle against in recent seasons at age group levels – Leo Papirnyk and Hayden Allmark were our scorers.

In the Ardal South West League, things are looking really bleak for Treherbert Boys and Girls Club after their 5-0 home defeat by Evans and Williams FC, while in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Championship, Ton Pentre ended their poor recent run with a 5-2 home win over bottom of the table Bettws FC.

*I’ve now seen the Hills/Salech incident a few times on video and the Stockport man’s elbow does make contact with Yousef’s neck, but, for me, it’s because the momentum of Hills getting up to continue with the game causes the contact to be made. I should say that there are plenty of City fans who’ll think I’m being over generous to the Stockport player there, but I just feels that the images aren’t conclusive to maintain that Salech’s injury was caused deliberately.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , | 10 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Stockport County matches.

A few hours after City’s Under 21s had suffered their second straight conclusive defeat, by 3-1 at Bristol City, after the mid season break, thereby making it clear how much they’re missing the players who have been loaned out this month, Stevenage and Bolton, two of League One’s top eight, played out a 0-0 draw which didn’t really do either side much good.

However, Bolton remain one of two teams I keep on hearing from the pundits which can make it into the automatic promotion places by the end of the season despite their campaign so far making it look like that’s a tall order. The other one of those two sides are Stockport County who come to Cardiff City Stadium in fourth place, but unable to shake off a feeling that this season has seen them not playing to their potential – or maybe more accurately, not hitting the heights most of those pundits were predicting for them back in August.

I’m pretty sure I’ve only seen Stockport play three times this season – I watched much of their early season 4-2 defeat at Plymouth and their 3-0 loss at Peterborough in November I think it was and I must be honest and say I wasn’t too impressed by either of them. By far the best performance of the three was the game at what I’ll always call Edgeley Park in mid September in which City escaped with a 1-1 draw thanks to a late, late Yousef Salech goal after they had been second best throughout.

However, even then, when Stockport were in control for so many of the ninety minutes, they had to rely in a penalty for their lead as, by and large, they proved that the quality of finishing at this level is some way short of the standards City fans had got used to after twenty plus years spent in the top two divisions.

In saying that, three wins and a draw in their last five matches suggest Stockport have come out the other end of their mid season slump and our win at Bradford on the weekend took us a point clear of them at the top of the League One away results table, but we have played a game more.

So, Stockport are showing automatic promotion form away from home. While the Bradford win felt like a very important staging post in our season, Stockport’s record on their travels suggests that they’ll be more than able to take advantage if some of the complacency I’ve seen from some City fans following our last game is repeated by the team on Saturday.

Stockport are another team that we’ve not played much in the past sixty odd years (indeed, they slumped as low as the National League North after the previous meeting between the teams in 2003 before this season’s draw), but I don’t think they’re in the Stevenage and Burton class, so here’s the usual seven questions on our next opponents with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. This Yorkshireman, with a name which would make him unusual in even these more cosmopolitan times, would have spent more than half of his career being called an inside forward. His period with his first club began at the age of fourteen when he also became an apprentice joiner. That first club represented the place where he was born and my guess is that they would have been considered Yorkshire’s leading club when he joined them. Although he played most games for his first club, he’s probably best remembered for his six years with his second club on the other side of the Pennines. He stayed in Lancashire as he entered his thirties to sign for another club which, like Stockport, has dropped into non league football for a while in this century and two years later, the fag end of his professional career was spent with a season at Stockport in which he only played thirteen games. On the international front, he was the last surviving member of an England World Cup Finals squad, but who is he?

70s. Which World Cup winner played a game for Stockport during this decade?

80s. Blood Donor up front?

90s. The epitome of a “no nonsense” defender, he began his career with his hometown club and did so well that he was signed by a First Division club for a six figure fee as a teenager. He played for thirteen clubs all told in league and non league football and his second club. was the only one which I would consider to be in the south of England – he ended up leaving them without playing a single game. He headed back north for an even bigger fee to wear white, but, ironically, a financial crisis forced him to be offloaded to Stockport for a nominal fee. His form for Stockport was so good that a bid of just short of a million pounds was received for him, but he stayed at Stockport long enough to be given a belated testimonial in 2014. A change of manager saw him fall our of favour as he was loaned out to striped ceramic workers before he signed permanently for Yorkshire reds and then there was a return to his native county to play in very distinctive colours. After that, he dropped into non league playing for, among others, Accrington Stan!ey, Stalybridge Celtic and Salford City. Can you name him?

00s. Dog gone it! What caused Russian leader to err? (6,5)

10s. He played for Stockport in the national League North during this decade and has also played for them this season, who am I describing?

20s. Revolutionary meets caretaker perhaps?

Answers

60s. One of only a few footballers to have a surname beginning with the letter Q, Albert Quixall began his career with Sheffield Wednesday and was a first team regular through most of the seven years following his debut in 1951. Quixall signed for Manchester United in 1958 and played over one hundred and sixty league games for them before signing for Oldham in 1964 and then Stockport two years later. Quixall won five capes for England and was the last surviving member of their 1954 World Cup squad before his death in 2020.

70s. Sir Bobby Charlton “guested” for Stockport County in 1975 in a friendly game with Manchester City.

80s. Before his tragic, self inflicted, death at just forty four, Tony Hancock was, for a while, perhaps the UK’s foremost comedian. He had a show on the BBC which I can just about remember watching as a kid called Hancock’s Half Hour and it’s most famous episode was entitled The Blood Donor. A Stockport striker of the late eighties who went on to play for Burnley and Preston was also called Tony Hancock.

90s. Mike Flynn started off with Oldham Athletic, then signed for Norwich for £100,000 as a nineteen year old, but the move was not a success and Preston paid £25,000 to sign him a year later. However, Preston were forced to sell him to Stockport in 1993 and he clocked up nearly four hundred league appearances for them before the appointment of Carlton Palmer in 2002 saw him fall out of favour as he was loaned to Stoke and eventually left for Barnsley on a free transfer. Blackpool were Flynn’s last Football League club as he spent the 03/04 season with them before dropping into non league football.

00s. Gordon Greer.

10s. Goalkeeper Ben Hinchcliffe has been at Stockport for ten years and recently played his four hundredth league game for them – he was in their team for the 3-2 win over Rotherham last Saturday.

20s. Che Gardner. 

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023, The stiffs | Tagged , | 4 Comments