Seven decades of Cardiff City v Millwall matches.

Odd that in a season of dreadful home results, despite a recent improvement, one of the matches we have managed to win at Cardiff City Stadium was against the team we always used to draw with, Millwall. Will our 3-1 win in August mean that tomorrow’s return fixture in London will see a home win that maintains the equilibrium between the two sides that seemed to go on for season after season, or will our three match winning run be enough to see us take the honours against opponents who are very much a mid table outfit this season?

Here’s a set of questions dating back to the sixties on Millwall, I’ll post the answers on Sunday.

60s. Millwall were the second of a series of clubs, all in the south east corner of England really, at which this forward was unable to repeat his fine scoring record with his home town club. He played just once for Millwall against us in a game notable only for a spectacular own goal, before a move after a so, so couple of years at the Den saw him join title winners, even if his scoring rate declined even further while he was with them. Returning to the capital to wear red, goals were easier to come by, but they weren’t frequent enough to prevent him being loaned out to one of his old stamping grounds. His final league club saw him enjoying sweet food, before he finished with a non league side that once enjoyed a very happy new year in Cardiff, who is he?

70s. Born in a place which shares its name with the surname of an England international goalkeeper, this small, hard working midfielder spent the major part of his career playing for a couple of clubs which you could almost say were based within the sound of Bow bells. Millwall were one of them, but he played more matches for the first of them, a team with itchy feet historically who have now settled down (there was also a short loan move to the seaside not too far away). Despite managing to score more than once in his encounters with us while playing for Millwall, his side never won when he was involved. When he left the Den, he didn’t go far as he entered a depression and then finally left London to listen to southern bell(e)s, from there it was on to non league football in Kent and then in Essex, can you name him?

80s. This London born striker with a surname that is unique in domestic football during my time watching the game I believe, never played against us for Millwall. They were his first club and although he didn’t make too many appearances for them, he did enough to earn a move to a then First Division club who loaned him out to a couple of teams, one of which was, sort of, in Wales. Given a decent number of chances to establish himself in the top flight, his lack of goals eventually persuaded his team to let him leave and he headed towards the Welsh border again before moving a little further into England. settling at a junction. He represented a seat of learning to end his days in the Football League then moving to another club which straddles the Wales/England border, before spending three years with a team we’d beaten in a Welsh Cup Final about a decade earlier.

90s. Tongan or an Irishman, you decide! (5,5)

00s. He really should have played for City with a name like his! However, despite spending five years at Millwall in the early part of this decade, this midfielder never even played for them against us.

10s. Name the former Millwall player who, at the age of thirty seven, was involved in an unlikely cup run recently for a team with goalkeeping problems?

20s. Very long serving West Ham fan in Millwall midfield?

Answers.

60s. Colchester born Bobby Hunt scored a spectacular eight one goals in his one hundred and forty nine appearances for his home town club, before moving on to Northampton side starting the decline in their spectacular climb from the Fourth to the First Division and then back again during this decade. Millwall were his next club and he was in their team which drew 1-1 at Ninian Park in March 1967 when Don Murray lobbed an own goal over Bob Wilson’s head from thirty yards! Hunt was part of the Ipswich team which won the Second Division title in 1968, but couldn’t establish himself in the top flight and eventually signed for Charlton, before ending his days in the full time game at Reading – he then played for Maidstone United for a season in the mid seventies.

70s. Terry Brisley was born in Stepney and started his career with what was then called Orient, who loaned him to Southend for a while in 1974/75. Signing for Millwall for the following season, Brisley scored twice for them in his five encounters with City, but was never on the winning side. After more than one hundred games for the Lions, Brisley moved to the Valley, Charlton and then to Portsmouth before spells with Maidstone and Chelmsford.

80s. Steve Anthrobus signed for Wimbledon from Millwall and was loaned out to Peterborough and Chester before a permanent move to Shrewsbury. After a spell at Crewe, he next turned out for Oxford United before entering non league football with TNS and Hednesford.

90s.Anton Rogan.

00s. Barry Cogan.

10s. Former Millwall midfielder Jimmy Abdou was captain of the Comoros team which managed to qualify for the knock out stages of the recent Africa Cup of Nations where they were drawn against the hosts, Cameroon. Forced to play with an outfield player in goals because of a combination of injuries and a very stringent enforcement of Covid rules, Comoros gave their hosts a real fright before going down 2-1 on a night when six people died in a crush outside the ground – Abdou was also shown a red card.

20s. Billy Mitchell is a current Millwall player who has made about fifty first team appearances for the first team. Billy Mitchell is also the name of a character who has been in Eastenders since 1998 – the Eastenders Billy Mitchell is an avid West Ham fan, as is Perry Fenwick, the actor who plays him.

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Who were that team in blue?

After tonight’s match with Peterborough, City remain in twentieth position with just the four sides below them, but, suddenly, relegation looks like something we should be able to forget about. City are twelve points clear of tonight’s opponents now with a far better goal difference and, with Reading having lost their sixth straight game at Bristol City tonight, we now have a buffer of ten points over them with our superior goal difference being worth another point.

Of course, thirty two points won’t keep us up and another eight game losing streak to match the one that did for Mick McCarthy in the autumn would resurrect all of the relegation demons and then some. However, such was the manner of tonight’s 4-0 demolition of one of the four other teams we seemed to be locked in a battle with to avoid being one of the trio to drop out of the division in May that the notion that we will be worrying about the drop in the final throes of the season seems daft tonight.

There was a huge gap between the two teams – Peterborough looked as poor as you would expect a team averaging less than a goal a game scored and two a game conceded to be, but I was quite impressed by them back in August when they were a lot better than us for eighty minutes only for Aden Flint to rescue a point with a couple of headers.

That was the old set piece orientated Cardiff though. Watching us that night, the notion that we would soon be going on a run which broke club records for the wrong reasons looked plausible even if you never really think like that at the time as a fan. Tonight we closed to within fourteen points of the Play Off places and, although I’m certainly not expecting a Whitsun Wembley appearance, top six looks a more realistic prospect than bottom three if we could carry on the sort of form seen in our last two home matches.

Everywhere you looked there were strong performances, Cody Drameh had been okay before tonight, but here he was immense as he capped what would probably have been a man of the match performance anyway with his amazing assist for the third goal. Joel Bagan may not have been as eye catching as his fellow wing back on the right, but there was quality in nearly everything he did and he’s clearly taken a lot of confidence from his polished showing at Anfield on Sunday.

The three man midfield of Tommy Doyle, Ryan Wintle and Joe Ralls dovetailed really well with the first named looking more like a complete performer with every game, Wintle just makes us a better team, it’s as simple as that, and Ralls was on the way to becomIng the team’s heartbeat even before Sean Morrison’s injury – the team captain may not be playing currently, but he’s not forgotten as Ralls unveiled a Morrison four shirt after scoring the first goal with a finish that was almost Whittinghamesque.

Isaak Davies, of the one man press, played his first full ninety minutes for the team and Peterborough just couldn’t cope with his pace and non stop harassment of their back line in the first half especially, while Jordan Hugill helped himself to another goal and could easily have ended up with the match ball as there were three other near things from him as City we’re creating the impression that they had been saving up a season’s worth of goal threat for the one game!

I’ve not mentioned Alex Smithies and the back three, but that’s only because they had as comfortable a ninety minutes as they will have had all season. Having spent so long giving the impression that they found it impossible to achieve a shut out, they’ve now got two in two league games and tonight there was only a free kick from sub Jonson Clarke Harris from thirty yards which rippled the side netting that threatened to deny them their clean sheet.

A week ago, we played a relegation six pointer at Barnsley and it was as grim as many predicted it would be – our performance as we picked up three fortunate points offers a counterpoint to tonight and should serve as a reminder not to get too carried away by tonight, but, having watched so much dross in home matches especially this season, I’m finding it hard not to be!

After scoring in six minutes in our last home match, City we’re even quicker out of the blocks this time. Doyle with a well struck effort from twenty yards struck the far post with less than four minutes on the clock and within thirty seconds we had a goal to celebrate. Peterborough didn’t help themselves with some sloppy work out on their left hand side and Davies punished them by bursting clear, looking up and delivering a low cross to Ralls who finished crisply with a first time shot from twenty yards to record his first goal of the season.

Peterborough manager Darren Ferguson has declared himself “devastated” by the manner of his side’s defeat in such an important game, declaring that they could have been four or five goals down after twenty minutes.

Ferguson isn’t exaggerating there either – another testing dead ball delivery by Doyle saw Hugill head on to a post and then the same player nodded over from point blank range as a corner by the Man City loanee caused havoc in the visiting defence. Davies almost picked out the centre forward as well after harrying the Peterborough back line into another error, but, eventually, they began to stem the flow somewhat and start to dominate possession.

If Peterborough could have got to half time just the one goal down, there may have been a way back into the game, but they couldn’t as they fell foul to a set piece goal. Again, it was Doyle who provided the ammunition with a corner that was awkwardly punched away by Swansea loanee Steven Benda to Flint standing some fifteen yards out who showed excellent technique to take a touch and thne bury his shot low into the net past the five or six defenders stood between him and the goal.

As their manager alluded, Peterborough must have been grateful to get to half time just the two goals down, but two half time changes didn’t really alter the general direction of the game. While it was true that the visitors ended up dominating possession 69/31, this was an occasion where such figures didn’t tell the true story. Steve Morison was definitely right to say that we dominated when not in possession after the match – it’s a concept I would have struggled with beforehand, but having seen that ninety minutes, I know exactly what he meant.

There weren’t as many moments of danger for Peterborough after the break, but there were enough of them as the visitors still couldn’t live with our intensity and pace (when’s the last time anyone has been able to say that about the pace of our players and how we move the ball?).

Drameh, so impressive already, applied the coup de gras midway through the second period with Cafu like lung bursting run down the right from well inside his own half which left a couple of defenders in his wake and then, having travelled about sixty yards with the ball, he still had the calmness and quality to pick out Hugill who applied the finish Drameh’s work deserved as he got in front of his marker to turn the ball in from eight yards at the near post.

Incredibly, Drameh was at it again within minutes as he powered down the wing and crossed in similar fashion to Hugill, but this time, one of the better bits of Peterborough defending of the night saw the striker’s effort diverted over the bar.

Davies was about a yard away with a shot from twenty yards after his pace had proved too much for his opponents yet again and Doyle was not too far away with another effort similar to the one where he’d struck the woodwork earlier, but it was left to a couple of substitutes to combine for the fourth goal late on when Ng played Colwill in down the visitor’s decimated left side and his Drameh like cross was turned in once again on the near post by Uche Ikpeazu from inside the six yard box.

So, having given what I described as our best performance of the season in our previous home game, was this an improvement on the Forest showing? Well, Steve Cooper’s side won tonight at ailing Blackburn and have clearly shown their quality since our comfortable victory over them, so part of me says that putting an inferior team to the sword is not as good, but, on balance, I think better sides than Peterborough would have left Cardiff City Stadium heavily beaten tonight so, yes, it was another best of the season for me.

The trick now is to maintain the standards seen in the last three games now (yes, even the dismal game at Barnsley showed some qualities we lacked earlier in the season) – it’s not always going to be as eye catching as tonight, but if that attitude and intensity is repeated often enough, we’ll definitely finish closer to the middle of the table than the bottom of it and, if we do, then that will reflect greatly on Steve Morison and his coaching colleagues while leaving supporters enthused about what the inevitable summer rebuild will hold.

Earlier in the season, the under 23 side was the shining light at the club amid a gloomy autumn and early winter, but they’ve now become a victim of their own success as they’ve lost so many to the first team squad, while others have got themselves loans with regular football at senior level. Hence we have situations like Tuesday’s at Leckwith where there were five under 18s in a starting line up against a QPR outfit that, apparently, had just the one under eighteen lad in their squad.

Certainly, City’s team was dwarfed by their opponents and couldn’t match their strength as they brought on fifteen and sixteen year old’s as subs. It all represented the steepest of learning curves for the youngsters and credit to them for keeping the score down to 2-0 in an encounter where they hardly ever suggested they had a goal in them.

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