Seven decades of Cardiff City v Millwall matches.

I’ve seen today described as the day that will define our season in some quarters. A bit overly dramatic I reckon, but there’s no denying that a feeling is growing that 22/23 is going to be a lot tougher if we have to go through to January with the current strikeforce which is still awaiting it’s first goal of the campaign.

I’m pretty confident that we will not do this, but am none too sure of us being in a position to move beyond what has been almost a complete reliance so far on the loan and free transfer markets. There is talk of £1.5 million bids being put in for a striker at a Championship club, but that strikes me as odd when everything we’ve heard from City through this summer has indicated a tightening of the belts – the loss at the Court of Arbitration for Sport last week in the Emilio Sala case makes any transfer spending more unlikely if anything surely?

New players or not, the season will continue on Saturday with a visit to Sreve Morison’s old club, Millwall who were fancied by many as dark horses for a Play Off spot this season after a summer where they’ve been spending more than you’d normally associate with that club.

So far, the newcomers have not gelled and there’s an un Millwall like number of goals being conceded which means that they’re too near the bottom of the table for their liking at the moment, but any opinions expressed about any team should be prefaced with the words “it’s early days yet” (even when talking about our chronic lack of goals I suppose!) and I’d be surprised if Millwall are not heading towards mid table or higher in the coming weeks. For that reason, I’d be happy with what had become the traditional draw between the teams in meetings at the New Den until Millwall’s 2-1 win last season.

Here’s seven Millwall related questions dating back to to the sixties, the answers to which will be put on here on Sunday.

60s. When I think of this forward now, it is not with him playing in Millwall blue, or white. In fact, I didn’t know he’d played for them until a few minutes ago! Starting off in youth football in Dublin (he was associated with Shamrock Rovers at one time), he crossed the sea to play his first senior football with defunct Redcoats, but made so little impact that he had to move to non league Steelmen to play regularly. Millwall signed him on the back of what he did at that club and it turned out to be good business for them, as , after only one full season at the Den, he was sold at a profit to a club that played in the colours of every other club he played for bar one. His career trajectory continued on an upward path with a move west to the Midlands, but a transfer to learned relative newcomers signalled the beginning of the descent part of his career. A move north to white roamers signalled a change from his normal colour, but, in a transfer which almost seemed like he was missing wearing his favourite attire, he returned to the club which had sold him to see out the final days of his playing career before a brief spell as a manager at a nearby non league Cross. On the international front, his sole goal came in a losing cause at Wembley, but who is he?

70s. This midfielder played nearly all of his football many miles away from his birthplace. The closest he got to home was as a youngster when he won a Youth Cup with bitter rivals and played around fifty times for their first team before a move to more aristocratic surroundings in the capital which did not work out for him. With no offence meant to his next club, it was definitely a downmarket move for him, but he did pretty well there overall and played some First Division football for them. Millwall were his next club and he was a regular in their team for a couple of years culminating in a relegation. His final two clubs saw a contrast between the genteel south at a retirement home and a venue in Yorkshire that was no stranger to a struggle at the foot of the table – it’s looking like they face another one this season. Who am I describing?

80s. Rule pet grease mess be moved from Millwall to Bournemouth? (5,8)

90s. Who links The Flinstones, former President Walken and the Millwall forward line from early in this decade?

00s. South coast cat as a none too successful Millwall striker?

10s. A beaten Millwall side at Cardiff City Stadium in this decade included two current day Championship managers, name them.

20s. Which member of the current Millwall squad is in his fourth separate spell at the club?

Answers

60s. Hugh Curran’s family moved to Dublin when he was a boy, hence his early association with club’s in that city, but he was born in Scotland when he started off his senior career with Third Lanark. Curran had to move south though to Corby Town to make his first significant impact in the game and earn a move to Millwall. Curran was top scorer as Millwall were promoted from Division Four in his one full season with them and this led to moves to Second Division Norwich and then First Division Wolves. Oxford United signed Curran in 1972 and he was to have a second spell there five years later after three seasons spent at Bolton Wanderers. Curran also managed Banbury Town  for a while and his one goal in five caps for Scotland came in a 3-1 defeat at Wembley in 1972.

70s.Newcastyle born Brian Chambers was part of an FA Youth Cup winning team at Sunderland before he signed for Arsenal. After playing just one league game for the Gunners, he signed for Luton and then Millwall before spells with AFC Bournemouth and Halifax.

80s. Peter Gleasure.

90s. John Goodman was the voice of Fred Flinstone in the film version of the sixties cartoon show, he also played Glenallen Walken. who took over as President of the United States for a few days in the West Wing, while his virtual namesake Jon Goodman was a Millwall forward who won a couple of caps for the Republic of Ireland in the early nineties.

00s. Tom Brighton scored just the one in sixteen league games for Millwall between 2006 and 2008.

10s. Steve Morison was in the starting eleven for Millwall’s 2-1 loss at Cardiff City Stadium in September 2011 and current Huddersfield boss Danny Schofield came on as a sub.

20s. George Saville first played for Millwall on loan from Chelsea in 2013. Two years later, he was back on a temporary basis again while a Wolves player and then he signed permanently from them in 2017. Last year, Saville signed for Millwall yet again, this time from Middlesbrough.

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Sawyers offers a smidgeon of hope in goalscoring gloom for anxious Cardiff.

Well, at least City scored I suppose which means they’re up to averaging half a goal scored a game again, but Romaine Sawyers’ late consolation effort apart, this was another reminder that, for all of the clear improvements that have been made in some areas of the pitch, they’re not going to count for much while what has to be accepted now to be a really significant weakness in the squad is not, or is unable to be, addressed.

For forty five minutes, Cardiff City and Luton provided a watchable contest that was evenly matched, but towards the end of the half, the tell tale signs were appearing that the belief was draining out of the home side when they were getting close to the opposition goal.

As the clock ticked towards four hundred minutes without a goal for City, the anxiety levels began to rise and the number of wrong options taken and misplaced crosses into the box grew. Luton by contrast, were beginning to get more dangerous crosses in and, having started the match with a very strong first five minutes from the visitors, the writing was on the wall in the final five before half time for the home team as well.

For the thirty five minutes in between, City we’re probably the better team. Having seemingly gone with physique and running power by leaving the likes of Sawyers, Rubin Colwill and Jaden Philogene on the bench, City were still able to play some nice stuff at times with Mark Harris, given his first start of the league season and Sheyi Ojo making promising starts, as did Andy Rinomhota who was recalled in central midfield.

Max Watters forced Luton goalkeeper Ethan Hogarth to turn his snapshot from twenty yards aside for a corner with about ten minutes played, but, tellingly, City’s ratio of on target efforts to off target ones was far too low again – apart from the goal, this was the only on target effort out of their seventeen goal attempts in the game.

So, that’s five times in seven league matches that we’ve had two or less attempts on target and we only had three of them in the Bristol City and Portsmouth matches as well. Put in that context, our feeble goalscoring record shouldn’t come as a surprise.

To be fair, City we’re not far off target with quite a few of their “wayward” attempts tonight – Ojo and Joe Ralls went close in the first half, but the former should have done better when the ball broke to him eight yards out than lift it over as he stretched.

It was Luton who came out the stronger after the break as well and within two minutes, City’s record of not conceding at home in the league had gone as Fred Onyedimna got past Niels Kwounkou too easily and crossed for Luke Freeman to leave Ryan Allsop helpless with a crisp finish from eight yards. It was noticeable how many players Luton had in the box as targets for Onyadimna as well – too often a City player in a similar position looks up to see just one of his team mates to aim his cross at.

After that, the gap between the sides grew, Luton are no strangers to leading away from home and are well versed now in how to maintain such advantages against more threatening attacks than we possess.

As City’s confidence in front of goal declined from what was never a very high starting point anyway, so the visitors sensed that they could cash in further without taking too many risks. After the playing out from the back policy almost cost us a first goal of the season as Luton shut us off successfully to give Carlton Morris a chance to shoot no more than a foot wide, a cheap free kick conceded from a throw in on our left gave James Brie the chance to swing in a superb free kick which any one of three players in white could have touched in as it flew across the six yard box and it was another sub, Gabriel Osho who applied the finishing touch.

Brie’s dead ball delivery was very hard to defend, but that shouldn’t exonerate the City’s backline – they’d conceded a similar type of goal at Ashton Gate, but this was worse as it seemed all most of them were doing was standing with their hands up appealing for offside.

The introduction of Sawyers for Rinomhota ten minutes after the substitutions of Watters and Ralls by Colwill and Philogene gave City a bit of poise which the first two earlier replacements didn’t really provide – Colwill was some way below Saturday’s performance levels and Philogene missed the two best opportunities City had in the second half.

In saying that, it was more a case of a very good block by Wales international Tom Lockyer with the first one as he diverted the winger’s shot from around the penalty away for a corner and I’ll come to the second one shortly.

A goal never really looked on for City going into the closing minutes because, in terms of constructing a chance and then trying to take it, they looked devoid of belief on both counts. So, it was no surprise that the opportunity for our goal came about via an “assist” by a Luton defender who diverted a Mahlon Romeo cross into the path of Sawyers whose technique proved up to the task of taking the chance he was presented with as he fired a low shot into the corner of the net past Hogarth from twenty five yards.

There were about ten minutes left to play when Sawyers scored, but Luton were able to survive them comfortably apart from one incident in the eighty sixth minute when Colwill drove over a cross which was half blocked by a defender, this intervention caused the ball to clear Harris and his marker and also bounce over the defender supposed to marking Philogene, but, sadly, the loanee rather made a hash of what was by no means an easy opportunity – it was the sort of chance a natural finisher would have at least forced the keeper into a save from though and in that moment, as Philogene nodded tamely over, it came through loud and clear how important it is for us to move heaven and earth to bring in a striker in the two days left in the transfer window.

That said, it is very much a double edged sword of problems City face when analysing why they’re scoring so few goals. Just bringing a striker or two better than what we have at present will improve the situation, but I don’t think it will cure it completely.

Putting it in most basic terms, Luton won because, first, they produced a couple of crosses of a quality that we could not match and, second, they had the bodies in the penalty area to profit from them when they came.

They say you shouldn’t make too many judgements before any team has played about ten games, but it only needs eight to show that this City squad, while improved in some ways, do not get enough players into the opposition penalty area in open play and we’ve not seen enough of wingers or full backs on the opposite flank from where an attack is coming getting into the sort of position Philogene was in for his goal against Birmingham.

At the moment, the way Sawyers scored his goal stands out like a beacon because, firstly, it highlights the inadequacy of so much of our work in and around the opposition penalty area and, second, it offers some hope that all of the others who get into similar positions can show that they have the ability to come up with something similar.

We can all pick on individual players as much as we like and it may be that some of them are are generally not up to Championship standard, but they’re professional footballers who should have the natural ability to strike a ball better than they are doing when they see the whites of the opposition’s goal. For now, it’s all a little too frenetic and anxious and it becomes a vicious circle as players try that bit too hard to get things right. Sawyers trusted his ability with a chance that was harder than so many that have been wasted this season – a bit of composure can take you a long way, but I appreciate it’s so hard to think like that when confidence levels are low and you’re heading down the table rather than up it.

The under 21s could have few complaints about their 2-1 loss to Burnley at Leckwith this lunchtime. To be fair, it was a young side with few players who will have been playing at this level last season and a  Burnley team that had lost their first three matches were worth a bigger win, particularly after a dominant second half showing.

City had led at half time thanks to a lovely goal scored by Raheem Conte, a new arrival who was with QPR previously. His chip from the edge of the penalty area ended City’s best move of the game as they patiently went from left to right and Jay Semenyo crossed deep to Cian Ashford who rolled a pass back into Conte’s path.

Burnley would have felt unfortunate to be down at the break, but they were able to force the sort of mistakes out of City as they tried to play out from the back that we’ve rarely seen from the senior team up to now and that’s how the winning goal came as Helm was left with a simple finish after the ball was turned over about twenty yards from our goal. This followed on from a route oneish equaliser when a header was glanced on to Richardson who calmly got the better of the covering centrebacks to roll the ball past keeper Turner.

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.

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