Bagan again as Cardiff and Blackpool battle to a windy draw.

Well, considering our home record this season, I suppose if our run of three straight wins (with clean sheets in the last two of them) at Cardiff City Stadium had to end, then a 1-1 draw in a game that improved as it went along wasn’t a bad way for it to happen.

Early on, the game had a script straight out of the Cardiff City first half of the season playbook as opponents Blackpool went ahead inside the first quarter of an hour and we spent the rest of the first half huffing and puffing ineffectively in search of an equaliser. Only against Huddersfield did we manage to recover from going a goal behind during our horror run of home form – every other time we were beaten and could have few complaints about it either.

So, I think you can say that it’s a sign of progress made that we were able to come out of the game with a point – I’m fairly sure we wouldn’t have done a month or so ago.

When I learned that the early trains from Treherbert had been cancelled today in the wake of Storm Eunice yesterday and I couldn’t get confirmation that they would be running later on, I decided I wouldn’t bother going and so watched the stream of the game on the club website. In the event, it turned out that I could have got to the game, but then in the last few minutes one of the commentators said there had just been a message displayed on the scoreboard saying that all Valley Line trains had been cancelled for the rest of the day (presumably because of winds that were not a patch on yesterday’s, but were still much stronger than usual?). I’m sure alternate transport has been laid on to cover for this, but when someone living at the top of one of the affected valleys would get home is anyone’s guess, so my sympathy goes out to anyone who used Valley Line trains to get to today’s game and then saw that message.

Anyway, back to the commentators, I was grateful to them for their information on how Blackpool would set up as they explained that they used a pressing 4-4-2 formation with two deep sitting central midfielders.

It’s incredible how the game has changed in recent years, time was it seemed everyone played 4-4-2, but now it is very much the exception – indeed, you wonder how much a Blackpool side that was put together on one of the smallest budgets in the Championship owe what looks pretty certain to be a comfortable first season back at this level following their promotion in the Play Offs to the system they play?

I mentioned in the preamble to the seven decades quiz for this game that Blackpool have drawn at Fulham and Bournemouth and won at Middlesbrough and Sheffield United, so many of the division’s better sides have found them awkward customers in home games and today City we’re clueless in an attacking sense against them during the first forty five minutes – there seemed to be no space on the pitch and on the rare occasions that a City player in possession found some, he was closed down quickly by very effective Blackpool pressing. Watching how powerless we seemed at times, I found myself wondering if the modern player has forgotten how to cope with 4-4 f*cking 2!

In City’s defence, they had played in midweek and Blackpool had not, so this may have explained both why Blackpool were more energetic and why we were caught on the back foot so much.

In addition, the wind that had, seemingly, stopped the trains was a factor – I’d agreed with Steve Morison in his pre game press conference when he said the enclosed nature of Cardiff City Stadium meant that wind doesn’t usually have a big influence on matches played there.

I’ve gone to a few matches at what I still call our new ground expecting the strong wind outside to have an effect in the ground only to find that it all looked pretty normal when the game started, but you only had to see how both goalkeepers were forced to turn over crosses that caught on the wind early on to see that this was not the case this time.

Maybe City players were being caught in possession so much because the ball seemed to take so long to settle and with a team that, still, perhaps has below average technique and passing ability for this level, those little defects became magnified in such conditions.

By and large, Blackpool did not have the problems with the conditions that City did early on. For example, there was a lovely bit of skill by debutante winger Charlie Kirk which provided the assist for their eleventh minute goal as he produced a side foot half volleyed cross, which made it look as if the conditions were as flat as a mill pond, in after a free kick had been half cleared for the scorer to head home from eight yards.

The “look” of the goal had me convinced that Gary Madine had scored on his return to Cardiff for a second or two, but the fact the scorer was black was a fairly obvious give away that it was not the man who never found the net for us in his two years at the club!

Madine had what was probably Blackpool’s best first.half chance to go two up, but he made a mess of another good cross from the left, this time to the far post rather than the centre of the goal, a few minutes after his team had gone ahead. This epitomised what was a quiet day for the ex City man, something that I was not really surprised at considering that he was up against a pair of centrebacks with a combined height of around thirteen foot in McGuinness Flint.

The scorer was Blackpool’s impressive centreback and captain Marvin Ekpitata – on this evidence, Ekpitata, who I would say won his duel with Jordan Hugill, fully justified the opinion of the commentator when he said that he was a player we should look to sign – his contract runs out in the summer, but I think that, on this form, better clubs than us will be in for him.

Ekpitata and co saw the game out for the first half, but credit to Steve Morison, whatever he said at half time worked for the third quarter of the game at least. City were out of the traps quickly after the break and were level on four minutes as the increasingly influential Cody Drameh got to the bye line and sent over a fine low cross which was met by City’s replacement for Keiffer Moore from six yards out to level the scores.

Seeing one wing back provide the assist for the other one to score is so satisfying as it proves that we’re making progress in the procedure whereby we move away from the route one stuff that I think we can say with certainty a majority of City fans are glad to see the back of.

When Joel Bagan scored he held up three fingers in celebration of his third goal in three games – this was more of a Millwall style finish compared to Tuesday’s fine effort against Coventry, but it was another indicator of the confidence of a player who came through his worst forty five minutes since his recall to the side to return to the form we’ve become used to in the last few weeks in the second period.

 Incredibly, the man who can’t stop scoring was soon presented with an opportunity to net his fourth goal in. a week when a cross from the right found him unmarked about fifteen yards out, but this time he opted for a left, wrong, footed effort and sent his shot high and wide – it was not a thing of beauty from a player who tends to make the game look easy when in possession.

That was probably as good an opportunity to put us in front as we had, but we were on top now and I really felt a winner was coming. Instead though, that was the signal for a resilient Blackpool to up their game somewhat and when their winger Josh Bowler went down in the penalty area under challenge from a combination of McGuinness and Wintle, I feared the worst as referee Darren Bond immediately blew his whistle, but it was to award City a free kick and show a yellow card to Bowler for diving. Replays showed that the Blackpool player went down pretty easily, but I would have had few complaints if the decision had gone against us.

Maybe it was the conditions, but the referee seemed determined to let a lot of things go and Isaak Davies, who looked sharp and a danger when we could feed him in the right areas, in particular suffered from the interpretations of an official who was erratic for both sides.

The introduction of Uche Ikpeazu for Hugill livened up the crowd and the big loanee won his share of free kicks, but that apart, this time he offered little more than brute force and a series of wrong options as, perhaps, affected by the crowd reaction to him, he often ignored better placed colleagues and once almost appeared to tackle Drameh when the wing back was in a position similar to where he had provided the cross for the goal.

Unfortunately, the main contribution made by the other sub Mark Harris, who replaced Davies, was to block a close range Flint header from Tommy Doyle’s best dead ball delivery of the game by a distance – looking at the replay, it seemed that Blackpool keeper Daniel Grimshaw would have been able to keep out Flint’s effort, but it’s impossible to tell for sure.

So, the game ended 1-1, an outcome which seemed right to me. Steve Morison was again correct in my opinion that wind is the weather condition that disrupts a match most and his side did not come to terms with it in the first forty minutes or their opponents unusual system.

Even though a run of thirteen points out of a possible eighteen speaks for itself, a feature of too many of our recent matches has been a return to our insipid first half form of the first three or four months of this season. It looks like a weakness on the part of the newish managerial and coaching line up that we start games in the wrong manner, but a strength that they often are able to put things right during the half time interval – that was the case today as we now move on to games against an in form Huddersfield side who won at leaders Fulham this lunchtime and then try to keep our unbeaten home run going when we face the Londoners in a week’s time.

Predictably, it was a near total wipe out of local football this weekend with none of the Rhondda sides I follow on here playing and the same applied to our under 18s with their scheduled match at Ipswich.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Blackpool matches.

Next up it’s a Blackpool side that have settled into life back in the Championship with few alarms, they may not have many star names, but they’ve fared pretty well when visiting the grounds of much better teams than us (e.g. draws at Fulham and Bournemouth and wins at Middlesbrough and Sheffield United) – it won’t be easy for us to extend our home winning run to four.

Here’s questions on Blackpool from every decade going back to the sixties, the answers will be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. This one time underground surveyor was something of a trail blazer during this decade as he led a team that had been reduced to getting the begging bowl out for three consecutive seasons to an amazing campaign which saw them score one hundred and forty one goals in all while he was player/manager – they were on their way to promotion a year later as well until a New Year’s Day trip to Aldershot which saw both of their full backs suffer broken legs brought on a slump. Before that, he’d had a couple of years at Blackpool early in this decade where he’d been a regular in their First Division team, but he then moved into non league football at a town more famous for another sport (their showpiece event is less than a month away), before the call came to return to the full time game at the club he eventually managed at the age of twenty nine, can you name him?

70s. Born in a steel town, this forward joined his local, striped, team and maintained a thoroughly acceptable scoring rate for them over three years without quite establishing himself as a regular pick and he eventually left to join Blackpool in a part exchange deal. Once again, his scoring rate was pretty good, but he only played ninety odd league games during his five years there (Blackpool were a bogey team of City’s then and so, like his team mates, he tended to enjoy his games against us), although the knee injury which forced his eventual retirement from the full time game had a lot to do with that. This didn’t stop him signing for some Dollies from a county town (now a city) which seems some way off ever having a Football League club – he later managed this team for three years, who is he?

80s. Blackpool forward from this decade or maybe mad racing from Germany? (5,6)

90s. Office worker from up north by the sound of it!

00s. This defender, born on Christmas Day and the holder of fifteen international caps, was never in a winning Blackpool side against us during his three years with them at the end of this decade and into the next one, but, although more unlikely now, it’s still not beyond the bounds of possibility that we could come up against him next season – there may well be bigger clubs who will try to prise him away before then though, who?

10s. Quietly spoken presenter at full back?

20s. West Indian glove man meets England regular?

Answers.

60s. Born in Kimberley, South Africa, Peter Hauser became one of the first foreign managers in British football when he took over at Chester (they had finished in the bottom four of the Fourth Division and had to apply for re-election, a process whereby they were reliant on the votes of the other Football League to avoid being relegated). Before that, Hauser had played eighty three times for Blackpool in the First Division, scoring ten times between 1962 and 1963 before a move to Cheltenham Town.

70s. Keith Dyson was born in Consett and signed on as an apprentice for nearby Newcastle United. Making his debut at eighteen, Dyson scored twenty two First Division goals in seventy six games for the Geordies between 1968 and 1971 before he was a part of the deal with Blackpool which took Tony Green to Newcastle. Two of Dyson’s thirty league goals for Blackpool came at Ninian Park in Blackpool wins, but he failed to reach a hundred games for them because of the knee injury which forced him to “retire” in 1976. However, he kept on playing at non League level with Lancaster, who he also managed between 1979 and 1982.

80s. Craig Madden.

90s. Clarke Carlisle.

00s. Welsh international centreback Rob Edwards was at Blackpool between 2008 and 2011 and had two draws and a defeat to show from his three encounters with City in that time. He’s now in charge at Forest Green Rovers who look certainties to win League Two this season.

10s. Bob Harris played a few games at full back for Blackpool early in this decade – his name sake “whispering” Bob Harris was the presenter of the long running music show The Old Grey Whistle Test for much of its seventeen year existence.

20s. Dujon Sterling is currently at Blackpool on a year long loan from Chelsea.    

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