“Boring” stalemate still shows evidence of Cardiff City’s recent improvement.

There were three seasons in the late sixties running into 1970 that dictated what sort of Cardiff City fan I became. The outlandish run to the Semi Finals of the European Cup Winners Cup in 1967/68 started the process and then there were the two seasons which followed when, for the first times in my City supporting life, promotion to the top division seemed a realistic prospect.

Before those three seasons, I was a supporter of the club, but not what I’d call a diehard supporter – for example, I found the 9-0 defeat at, appropriately enough, Preston North End in the last game of the 65/66 season for from the disaster that got adult fans so annoyed, in fact, it made the ten year old me laugh.

City losing wasn’t too hard to take for me in those early years – it happened quite a bit more than us winning, but after those three seasons, my mood for the weekend was shaped by what happened to us on a Saturday afternoon and that continued into adulthood until I reached a stage somewhere in between those two extremes which I maintain to this day.

Anyway, to go back to the point I’m, laboriously, trying to make, although I was more committed to the Cardiff City cause in 68/69 and 69/70, I learned something at the back end of those two seasons that has held true for the next half a century and more.

In both of the seasons I mention, our promotion bid ran out of steam in the final few matches and so we had one or two home games with nothing riding on them. From memory, nothing games against Huddersfield in 68/69 resulted in a 0-2 loss and a year later, Oxford United and Millwall were the opposition for a couple of goalless stalemates, the second one in front of a crowd of under nine thousand – City just weren’t the side they’d been for most of the season in those matches and, eventually the penny dropped with me as to why that attendance was so much lower than normal.

The fourteen year old me cottoned on to the fact that if your side has nothing to play for and they are up against opponents in the same position, the football classic that some insist will result as sides can fully express themselves with no real pressure on them is far rarer than the snooze fest which tends to result when the intensity and pressure drops in a professional game.

In some ways, I should have seen today’s boring (to use Steve Morison’s word to describe it) 0-0 stalemate between the 2022 versions of Cardiff City and Preston North End coming, but I fell into the trap that I described earlier in that I looked at an encounter between two in form sides that had an outside chance of a top six finish in Preston’s case and a very small chance of going down in ours and was thinking in terms of an entertaining tussle. After all, Preston had lost just once in ten Championship games and our nineteen points from the same number of matches was almost top two form.

The mistake I made was in thinking that, with all of the nothing to play for, half hearted, miserable messes I’d seen down the years taking place in April and May, it would be different in early March with ten matches of the season still to go.

I was wrong though. Looking at it from a City viewpoint, that was a performance today of a team that is no longer thinking about the possibility of relegation. I used the term “half hearted” earlier, but I’d be wrong to apply it today’s display, the effort was there, but there was a carelessness with basics of the game suffering because of a slight drop in mental intensity.

Now, I can imagine some regular readers thinking what’s he talking about, he’s always saying that Cardiff are worse at the basics like control and passing than most of the sides they play. I’ll plead guilty to that, but I think what I’m trying to say is that it wasn’t “the usual suspects” who were the culprits today, it was players such as Cody Drameh, Ryan Wintle and Tommy Doyle (the last named was unusually slipshod with his passing and crossing).

I find it hard to be too critical though because this team has put an awful lot into the last ten matches and, in a way, have earned their right to an off day like today because they’re well ahead of schedule in how most of us thought a successful relegation battle would pan out – Steve Morison said that he wanted to avoid “testimonial” type performances between now and the end of the season, well he got one today and I think he and his staff will be drumming into the players that there is still much to play for -contract offers for a start in some cases.

It wasn’t all bad, Alex Smithies made a fine close range stop to deny Daniel Johnson, the best player on the pitch in my view, from close range and all of the back three had strong matches as we again showed how much we’ve improved in that area in recent weeks. A word too about Uche Ikpeazu who was almost entirely responsible for our worthwhile attacking play – we’d shown absolutely nothing as an attacking force going into the last ten minutes and then, almost by sheer force of will, he got us playing a bit by forcing Preston keeper Daniel Iversen into two smart saves. The first came from a placed effort from twenty yards and the second was more of a thump from fifteen – they were both saves that Iversen would have expected to make, but they were still good saves, especially when concentration levels might not be as high as they couldt have been having had so little to do.

As someone who has been quite critical of Uche in the past, I must say I was very impressed by him today, although, ironically, he became the villain of the piece late in added time when Jordan Hugill volleyed home Mark McGuiness’ headed flick on only for us to be denied a win we wouldn’t have deserved for a foul by Ikpeazu as the ball came in.

It was a little annoying though that referee James Linington put the whistle to his lips this time when he had been so reluctant to do so during the ninety minutes plus beforehand. Usually a referee who “lets the game flow” gets a thumbs up from me, but Mr Linington let too many clear fouls go on both sides and it goes without saying that Uche’s offence would never have been penalised if he had done the same thing in the City penalty area while defending a corner.

There’s not really much else to say about a game which I thought Preston edged from about the midway point of the first half onwards until the last few minutes – I just hope that we don’t have to go through nine similar such “wind downs” as our season runs out.

Bizarrely, the Under 18s went from 2-0 up at half time to a 5-3 defeat his lunchtime against Millwall at Leckwith this lunchtime as their losing run goes on – Morgan Wigley got the two goals that had us ahead at half time and Cole Fleming scored the other one.

Better news for the Under 23s though whose long spell without a win, that had stretched to almost three months, won 2-0 at Watford yesterday – James Crole and Jack Leahy were the scorers.

First Round W John Owen Cup (a League Cup for Highadmit South Wales Alliance League clubs I believe) ties today for Blaenrhondda FC and Treherbert Boys and Girls club with mixed fortunes against sides from their own division – the first named, who won the tournament in 17/18 as a Second Division team,  bowed out with a single goal defeat at Cwmaman who sit one place below them in the Premier League table, while Division Two leaders Treherbert were 3-1 winners at Llantwit Fadre who are last but two in their division.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Preston North End matches.

Sorry to those regular readers who have probably read this for the past decade or so, but I’m certain I’m right in saying Preston are the side I’ve seen us play most often since my first game in 1963 and I’m pretty certain that I’m right in saying that they are the opponents we’ve played most often in league matches and, of course, we’ve had an extra game against them this season in the FA Cup.

City are going for a treble this season against Preston after 2-1 wins at Deepdale and at Cardiff City Stadium where Mark Harris’ extra time goal sent us on our trip to Anfield, but the Lilywhites (wonder if anyone else calls them that these days?) are a tough nut to crack under new manager Ryan Lowe with just one defeat in their last ten league games and having completed a league double over Bournemouth only last week.

Here’s seven questions on each decade going back to the sixties on Preston with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. Born in a Derbyshire town more famous for producing goalkeepers than outfield players, this forward never matched his scoring rate of nearly one in every two matches, albeit in not many games, for his first club, Preston, at his other teams . In all, he represented seven other clubs, but I recall him most for wearing claret and blue. He played most games for a team he joined at a home for Monks or Nuns in the beginnings of a new journey for them, but cannot be confused with any other footballer over the past sixty years because I’ve never come across another one with the same surname as him, who am I describing?

70s. Food for Bluebottles?

80s. Led guard to top of Everest and to find midfield man. (4,5).

90s. After a misleading start which saw him score twice as a winger for high flying birds you don’t see too often, this player became a journeyman lower division left back during what was a five hundred plus game league career. His one goal in just over a hundred appearances for Preston, he played more matches for them than any of his other seven Football League clubs, was more typical of his goal output – he’d look back on his two encounters with us during this decade with affection though even if he didn’t score one of the six goals Preston managed without conceding as they recorded a couple of victories. In later life, he was the head of PE at the British School in Warsaw, who?

00s. What is the link from a Preston v City game in this decade between a player on one side who famously won his only international cap against Andorra and someone from the other whose two caps for his country came against Japan and Ukraine?

10s. Name the player who was in a beaten Preston team during this decade, in which he had to watch a goal he would have been proud to score, who has a move named after him which appears in the EA Sports FIFA series of games.

20s. Needle gentry?

Answers.

60s. Brian Greenhalgh.

70s. Bobby Ham.

80s. Dale Rudge.

90s. Dean Barrick.

00s. David Nugent and Glenn Loovens were sent off in separate incidents in City’s 2-1 defeat at Deepdale in September 2006.

10s. Aiden McGeady.

20s. Josh Earl.

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