Predictable Liverpool win, but a good day all round for Cardiff City as fans do them proud.

In the end, the Fourth Round FA Cup tie between Cardiff City and Liverpool at Anfield this lunchtime turned out in an acceptable manner for both sides I’d guess. Liverpool progressed as they would have taken for granted beforehand, while City came out of their daunting test with honour intact and some encouraging displays by the youngsters who were given a chance to show what they could do.

Again, both sides would look at the 3-1 scoreline and be satisfied I suppose. The home side were a couple of goals better than us over the ninety minutes I’d say, while a City team with two youngsters in the back three, another one at wing back and another in central midfield offered the potential for it to get very messy for Steve Morison’s outfit, but that never happened – indeed, City got to half time with the game still goalless.

Actually, City could point to two incidents while it was still 0-0 which could have made things very interesting if the rulings had gone in their favour. The first occurred about midway through the first half when the lively Mark Harris got goal side of centre back Ibrahima Konate and went down under the defender’s challenge in the penalty area.

With VAR in operation for this game, there was still the chance that Andy Madley’s decision not to point to the spot could be overturned, but it didn’t happen and my feeling was that the officials probably got their decision right.

In saying that, I not sure I’m right in thinking that, because it fell into the “I’ve seen them given” category for me, but I’m just about on the side of the not a penalty view.

However, I think City we’re hard done by early in the second half when goalkeeper Caionhim Kelleher came flying out some forty yards to take out Harris as he moved on to a Will Vaulks pass. Madley deemed the foul worthy of a yellow card, but VAR reviewed the decision on two counts – first, was it a denial of a clear scoring opportunity and, second, was it reckless and serious foul play – if the answer in either case was yes, then Kelleher would have been red carded.

Again, I think VAR was right when it came to the first count – Harris’ touch had taken him into a wider position and it looked like Kanote could get around to cover. When it comes to the second one though, there is no way that Kelleher was in control of his attempt to win the ball and, as such, it was a reckless challenge – for me, the goalkeeper should have been sent off.

Even if that had happened though, would having an extra man have made a sufficient dent in the 80/20 advantage Liverpool had when it came to possession? I’m not convinced it would have done because City we’re never able to escape the clutches of Liverpool’s traditional aggressive pressing game which has a habit of finding out players with faulty techniques and limited passing ranges.

City lined up with Dillon Phillips in goal, a back three of Ollie Denham, Aden Flint and Mark McGuiness flanked by Perry Ng and Joel Bagan who were meant to be wing backs, but the reality was that they were part of a back five most of the time. In the midfield, it was Marlon Pack, Will Vaulks and Eli King who made his first start for the club having only featured for the final ten minutes of Mick McCarthy’s last game against Middlesbrough, with Harris and James Collins up front.

The encouraging thing was that, by and large, the youngsters coped well with Liverpool’s pressing  – Denham, after being turned by a piece of lovely skill by Diego Jota whose fourth minute shot was excellently kept out by Phillips, settled to become, possibly, our best player, while Bagan was calm and effective in the position he looks set to have a long run in now following Alfie Doughty’s season ending injury at Barnsley (if, as I suspect it might be following his ACL injury in the same game, Sean Morrison has played his last game for the club, then I’d like to thank him for his sterling service these past eight years and a half years and for one of the great City moments of the past decade with his second goal at Hull in 2018).

King found the going tough at times, but there were some nice passes from him and it will be great experience for him, while Harris occasionally troubled top class defenders – throw in the contributions of Rubin Colwill and Isaak Davies when they came on and it must be said that our youngsters acquitted themselves well (it was good to see Jai Sememyo given a debut as well when he came on to replace Ng for the last minute or so).

Unfortunately, in a microcosm of our season, it was the more experienced players who tended to struggle with the challenge of playing one of Europe’s top teams. To be fair, I thought Pack did pretty well, Flint, apart from one or two moments like his first half air shot in his own penalty area defended resolutely and you could not fault the endeavour of the likes of Vaulks and Collins, but it is a fact that it was those two who gave away needless free kicks in dangerous positions in a first half where, that early Jota chance apart, Liverpool struggled to open up our massed defence sat very deep.

When Vaulks, who had shot not too far wide to round off our best move of the first half, gave away another cheap free kick, and picked up a yellow card, he and his team were punished five minutes after the break. Trent Alexander-Arnold had been some way off target with his efforts from the free kicks I mentioned earlier, but, this time, he elected to cross and Jota showed the aerial ability which is so good for someone of his size as he guided a header from about fifteen yards well wide of Phillips. It was a fine ball in and a great header, but, nevertheless, it did come from a dead ball and, in terms of height at least, that was one phase of the game where you would have thought we could have competed with Liverpool as equals.

That was the end of the game as a true contest really, Liverpool took control and, having made the breakthrough, it seemed that there would be further home goals. Unfortunately, when the second one arrived, it was another to be added to the list of horrendous goals we’ve let in this season.

Maybe it’s the near ten years of largely headless chicken football City have played, but the one quality I like to see most in a City footballer these days is composure. Denham and Bagan showed composure which contrasted nicely with the panic stricken stuff we saw in Bristol City’s first goal in particular a fortnight ago. Parry Ng is a composed player as well and he showed it today in what was largely another good performance, but when you’re too composed and your team pays for it, there really is nowhere to hide.

Ng was a little unlucky in that it was one of those balls which looks like rolling out of play but resolutely refuses to do so, but he really should have put it out for a corner or throw in, instead Liverpool’s new signing Luis Diaz (who says he wanted to sign for us in 2019!) was able to gain possession on the bye line and roll a pass back for Takimo Minamimo to score easily.

The third goal followed eight minutes later and provided the story of the game really as sub Harvey Elliot, making his first appearance since dislocating his ankle after it looked like he was establishing himself in Liverpool’s first team, instantly controlled and classily swept in a fierce shot from around the penalty spot that was in the net almost before Phillips moved – albeit, Elliot was helped by an unfortunate slip by McGuinness on a pitch made a little tricky by heavy rain that had begun during the game.

There was a chance after this that the game could become the massacre that some City fans feared, but, in fact, the final goal of the tie shortly afterwards in the eightieth minute came from City and it provided the scorer with a lifetime memory as he put the ball in the Liverpool net in front of City’s travelling army of six thousand fans.

It was a goal with its origins and execution in the club’s Academy as Colwill gained possession ten yards inside City’s half, fed Davies who provided the pacy impetus City struggle for when he’s not on the pitch before finding Colwill who took a perfect touch before beating Kelleher comprehensively from the edge of the penalty area.

So, it’s all Championship football from now on for City starting on Wednesday with a visit from Peterborough  – a game where the reality is that a home win would make relegation a remote possibility.

Saturday lunchtime saw a disappointing loss to Swansea at Leckwith for our under 18s where the visitors’ early lead was cancelled out very quickly by an Isaac Jefferies penalty, but the decisive goal came around the hour mark from the jacks.

Elsewhere, Blaenrhondda played out a home goalless draw with lowly Garw in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League, but Treherbert Boys and Girls Club continued their remorseless march towards the Division Two title with a 3-0 home win over Cardiff Cosmos.

In the Ardal Homes League South West, Tom Pentre came a cropper with a 4-1 home defeat by Ynyshir Albions in a Rhondda derby, while Porth AFC picked up only their fifth point of the season with a 1-1 home draw with mid table Treharris Ath Western.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Dreadful fare at Oakwell, but Ikpeazu makes an instant impact as Cardiff go nine points clear of bottom three.

Readers of one of the Cardiff City messageboards and the Feedback section of this blog may have seen that I’ve been a bit sniffy about the last of our loan signings in the January window, Uche Ikpeazu – I still am to an extent, because I’m not sure we needed another target man type centre forward even after the sale of Keiffer Moore to Bournemouth, I would have preferred a centre back.

However, I think I may have been a bit unfair on the player we’ve loaned from Middlesbrough, because I had him down as nothing more than a bruiser of a centre forward who offered little else but brute force, but the winning goal he got tonight in an awful game at Oakwell, Barnsley demonstrated he has more to offer than that.

Yes, much of it was about power as he outmuscled a couple of home centrebacks, but there was also a nice touch to work himself the room to send a cleverly manufactured shot (I should add that manager Steve Morison called it a bobble like Jordan Hugill’s debut goal on Sunday mind) rolling slowly past keeper Collins for what could be a huge goal in our season.

This was the latest in what seems to be a large group of 1-0 wins at Oakwell in matches that have little to commend them but the result – actually the 2-0 and 2-1 wins we’ve got at what is a happy hunting ground for us down the years have, with the exception of the one that opened the 06/07 campaign when Joe Ledley scored what was voted the Football League’s goal of the season, have been nothing to write home about either.

This must have been the worst of the lot though – where City had been lively and mentally right on Sunday against Forest, they looked jet lagged and sloppy here as the old curse of poor ball retention reared its ugly head again.

In mitigation, Bournemouth, also 1-0 winners at Oakwell on Saturday, left there moaning about how long the grass on the pitch was as they struggled to play their normal passing game and so City may well have an excuse for the fact that they struggled so much to gather any attacking momentum.

The problem I have with the blame the pitch argument is that Barnsley didn’t find it that difficult to retain possession tonight, even if they did so to little effect, so I’m not sure that the conditions can be held solely responsible for ourr poor performance with the ball.

I use the qualification “with the ball” there because there was a fair bit to take heart from if you look at how we fared when not in possession. For a start, after twenty six games I think it was without a clean sheet, we finally managed one!

True, I believe luck was on our side when sub Leya Iseka put the ball in our net after four of the five added minutes at the end of the game, only for the goal to be disallowed for offside when TV replays showed that Mark McGuinnesss was probably playing him onside, but we were more disciplined and alert when balls were coming into our penalty box than we usually have been this season.

For all that Barnsley had a marginal edge in my book for most of the match even if there were only four incidents I can think of when we were seriously tested at the back. The first came within the first five minutes when Josh Benson forced Alex Smithies into a routine save from a volley from the edge of the penalty area. There was also a low cross which flew dangerously across the face of our goal in the first half, while the home side were kept quiet until beyond the ninety minute mark in the second half before Leva Iseka nodded just wide from a free kick and then had his goal controversially disallowed.

Mind you, that was four times more on the serious goal attempts count than City had, because Ikpeazu’s goal apart, I can’t remember another worthwhile from them – Will Vaulks, in for the injured again Joe Ralls in the only change from Sunday, had a well struck effort from just outside the penalty area which flew not far wide, but far enough for it to be clear that it was never going in, but I can’t recall anything else and we didn’t force a single corner.

So, should there be concern that we were lucky to win, while playing hardly any of the more progressive football Steve Morison, seemingly, wants, against what is the weakest team in this season’s Championship or was it always a night where the result was everything?

While I think the former applies to an extent, I believe it was far more to do with the latter tonight – this was a game which Barnsley surely had down as an absolute must win. After all, they’re no twelve matches without a win, they’ve lost their last five, they’re seven points behind Reading, the team just outside the drop zone, and have won just two matches out of twenty eight now. For City, I would say that it was a more of must not lose occasion given that we had a six point cushion over Peterborough in twenty second along with a considerably better goal difference, so, by winning, we have effectively put a ten point gap between ourselves and the bottom three.

This was a match between two poor Championship teams this season in a fixture which, as I mentioned at the star,t has a history of tight, low quality, encounters and it was played on what, apparently, was a poor playing surface by modern standards  – all things considered, it was never going to be a classic!

Yet, it was a match that engendered real passion on the benches, too much of it in fact, when you consider that some would argue that the chaotic scenes at the end were more memorable than anything seen in the ninety minutes which preceded it!

The Barnsley version of events is that Steve Morison (who was yellow carded about thirty seconds after the final whistle), said something to the Barnsley bench which provoked one of their coaching staff into having a face to face encounter with Mark Hudson which soon calmed down.

However, it was obvious that the Barnsley man was still raging and when Morison celebrated in front of the City fans as he was leaving the pitch (the tunnel is in the corner of the pitch right by the stand away fans are housed at Barnsley), he gave our manager a push which developed into what looked like a shoving match inside the tunnel with some City players and security staff also getting involved.

Morison, who is probably looking at a misconduct charge and possible touchline ban as a punishment for what happened, was of the ’s view was that Barnsley had been “at it” all game with the towels Vaulks uses to dry the ball before his long throws being hidde. There was also particular anger at a tackle by home captain Mads Andersen, which looks more nasty with each viewing, that forced Alfie Doughty off. Andersen could easily have received a red card for that rather than the yellow one he was shown and with further fouls committed by him after that, it was only referee Geoff Eltringham’s leniency which kept him on the pitch for the whole game.

Judging by how he left the field of play, Doughty, who, one error apart, was secure in the left wing back role, could be out for a while and the same applied to Sean Morrison who was forced off after just ten minutes. Morrison was replaced by Aden Flint, who could claim an assist for the goal with what was little more than a hoof downfield, but, like the rest of City’s back and midfield threes and wing backs defended manfully all night without doing a great deal when in possession.

With Isaak Davies coming on for Max Watters in the same ten minutes into the second half substitution as Sunday, the choice facing Morison when Doughty was injured seemed straightforward – replace him with Joel Bagan. However, with Jordan Hugill’s energy levels virtually at zero due to his lack of match fitness, that would have left us with very little up front for the last half an hour, so our manager took the braver option of sending Ikpeazu on and the rest, as they say is history.

So credit to the manager for that and also for singling Davies out for praise for, once again, showing that he has something to offer at this level particularly when he has the chance to run at tiring defences, but, if anything, it was his defensive discipline and willingness to work for the team that shone through here.

Finally, a few words about our table topping under 23 team’s visit to second placed Bristol City on Tuesday. It would be wrong to say that a match which finished 3-3 was ruined by the weather, but the very strong wind blowing straight down the pitch throughout was a dominating factor and meant that the side facing it were consigned to defence and facing a barrage of corners in particular much of the time.

With Ciaron Brown at Oxford, Tom Sang at St. Johnstone, Keiron Evans at Linfield, Keenan Patten at Hereford (no offence to that club, but he’s better than their level) and Caleb Hughes at Haverfordwest on loan deals until the end of the season to go with the earlier ones of James Connolly to Bristol Rovers and Chanka Zimba to Northampton, City’s current team shows little resemblance to the one which carried all before them in the first four months of the campaign. A run which is now at four games without a win is testimony to this and here, playing into the gale, they were caught cold in the first ten minutes during which the home team (who included Nahki Wells and Danny Simpson) scored twice.

City were under the cosh for the rest of the half, but got to the break just two down only for Wells’ second goal not long after half time to seemingly put the game beyond them. However, with Rubin Colwill, much more influential than he had been in last week’s draw with the jacks, the Welsh international gave us some hope with a well hit twenty yard free kick fired in low to take the wind out of the equation.

The elements clearly played a part in the later two goals which completed a great fight back though. Soon after Colwill’s goal it was 3-2 when the home keeper couldn’t deal with Tom Davies’ corner which hit the bar and bounced into the path of Ibrahim Bakare who fired home from six yards.

This left City with about twenty minutes to come up with an equaliser, but, as the game went into added time, it looked beyond them until sub Cian Ashford’s corner was caught on the wind and sailed over everybody before dropping into the net at the far post.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The stiffs | Tagged | 4 Comments