Forget the elephant, Cardiff City’s defending this season is the blue whale in the room!

Steve Morison singled out Cardiff City’s final third players after last week’s loss to Blackburn, saying that he told them that he would have to look to replace them if they did not start doing the business. Our manager stated he was happy with his teams play away from that area, but I did think “really?” when I heard that.

Blackburn may not have had chance after chance last week (in fact, I can’t think of any besides their goal at the moment), but our ever obliging defence made sure that the promotion chasers only needed the one as a midfield runner got the wrong side of our players in the middle of the park and took advantage a centreback who ran away from him to place a shot beyond a keeper who others have blamed, but I don’t see it myself.

So, despite conceding such a sloppy goal, our manager was happy with his defenders last week it seems, I wonder if he will be after this lunchtime’s 3-2 loss at Bristol City? I’m not usually a great one for using terms that have arisen in recent years because, invariably, there’s something that has been in use for decades, or even hundreds of years, which conveys the requisite message already. However, I’m really not sure if that applies to the term “elephant in the room”, so it’s going to have to do this time. I like the commentator who did the game on the club website today (think his name’s John Donovan), but when he was mentioning our naivety in other areas of the pitch (with justification some of the time), I did rather thank he was ignoring the elephant in the room somewhat – we’ve not been able to defend to even an average Championship standard all season and, too often, it has been well below that level.

Not every goal we concede can be put down to our bad defending, but most of them can. All season long, Sean Morrison, Aden Flint and Curtis Nelson, three central defenders who have proved themselves to be more than adequate at this level in the past, have been found wanting when it comes to fairly basic defending – the only other player to be used at centreback, Mark McGuinness has hardly been error free either, but he has time on his side and has been the best of a bad bunch.

Well, Morrison can’t be blamed for what went wrong today because he spent the whole game on the substitutes bench, but, I’m afraid that, to varying degrees, the other three have to carry the can – this was as bad as it’s been all season for City with the first two goals in particular being unbelievably poor from a defensive point of view.

One of the things you learn when you’re a kid is not to relax after you’ve just scored. Well, after getting the goal that our slight superiority in the first thirty minutes perhaps deserved, we did just that, which, when you think of how we defended this season, is criminal.

Flint cleared one off the line and there was a fine second half block by him which may well have prevented a goal, so he wasn’t a complete disaster for him today, but get a fairly quick forward with a chance to run at him and he’s all at sea. Within thirty seconds of the restart following our goal, Andreas Weimann got beyond Flint way too easily and was in on goal, Flint managed to stall the home players momentum somewhat by seemingly fouling him and as the ball almost came to rest on the edge of the penalty with Weimann now on the ground, it seemed that the immediate danger had passed, but, no, a panic stricken Nelson came sliding in from nowhere and delivered what was a beautifully weighted pass to Chris Martin. Fair play to him, the veteran striker took his goal well as he guided his shot beyond Alex Smithies, but I still can’t figure out what possessed Nelson to do what he did.

Just as they had done in the first half, City began on the front foot after the break, but, anyone who has watched us for any amount of time in recent years will know that periods of superiority for us don’t equate to many chances created in open play. No, it’s dead ball situations we get by on, but, this time, they came to nothing and, despite the direction of the game being mostly towards the home goal, it was Bristol who had the more threatening moments before they went ahead courtesy of more farcical defending.

This time our three centrebacks were completely undone by a simple one two. To be fair to Nelson, he did nothing wrong as the left sided centreback, but what Flint and especially McGuinness were doing as they came over to join him I cannot begin to guess. It would be an exaggeration to say you could throw a blanket over our back three as the exchange of passes which completely opened us up took place, but not much of one.

That three defenders could be so easily outmaneuvered and outthought by a couple of attackers would be embarrassing at minor league levels, but in the second tier of domestic league system it’s unforgivable – Martin thus routinely helped himself to his second, no doubt wishing he could play against us every week.

After going behind, City lost their way and did very little to suggest they could find a way back into things. Morison replaced loan signing from Man City Tommy Doyle (who, understandably given his lack of game time this season faded after suggesting in the first half that he could supply some much needed creativity) with Ryan Wintle, bizarrely dropped for a well below par Marlon Pack who, somehow, managed to stay on for the ninety minutes, Max Watters for James Collins and in a switch to a back four, Isaak Davies for McGuinness.

All this change in formation did really though was offer Antoine Semenyo in particular the space to cause us all sorts of problems and it was increasingly likely that the next goal would come from the red shirts rather than the blue. It duly arrived when Semenyo got the better of an isolated Cody Drameh, who had a tough second half, and fed Weimann, who had come back from an offside position and he shot past Smithies for his third goal of the season against us.

For a while after that, it seemed like we could be on for a beating to match the 5-1 at Blackburn in September, but, to my great surprise, the four minutes of added time turned out to be very nervy for the home team as a result of a header by Watters which, although well placed, should really have been saved by home keeper, Max O’Leary.

Watters’ first goal for City in his first game back following a pretty successful loan spell at MK Dons added to the earlier James Collins header from a quality Doyle cross after Bristol midfielder Hah-Noah Massengo carelessly conceded possession deep inside his own half. Apart from than that, City only threatened from set pieces – McGuinness hit the outside of a post after the home defence had failed to deal with a Pack long throw, there was another headed effort from the same player that O’Leary saved easily and the keeper had little difficulty with a disappointing Joe Ralls free kick from a promising position some twenty odd yards out in added time.

3-2 flattered City though as their very disappointing results and performances this season in derby games continued. I thought we looked like a relegation side today and I’m now more concerned than ever that we’ll go down despite the four sides below us having lost today – Steve Morison says we could sign one or possibly two players in the final week of the transfer window, I just hope at least one of them is a centreback.

Elsewhere, City’s under 18s played out a goalless draw at Watford, while AFC Porth were beaten 4-0 by Penydarren BGC last night in the Ardal Leagues South West and Treherbert Boys and Girls Club beat Nelson Cavaliers 3-0 in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance League 2.

One other thing before I finish. It’s a good news story of a sort, although the problem should never have arisen in the first place – I’m not a lover of McDonalds the company or their food, but well done to them for recognising the error of their ways in this case.

Posted in Out on the pitch | 5 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Bristol City matches.

Once again, apologies for forgetting the quiz last week for the Blackburn game, but here it is back again for the local derby on Saturday at Ashton Gate.

Results in this fixture have been strange since our relegation in 2019. In saying that, perhaps it isn’t that surprising given our feeble home form in the last four seasons that Bristol City have won all three games played at Cardiff City Stadium. In 19/20 and 20/21 though we struck back with 1-0 and 2-0 wins respectively in the return fixtures and so I suppose we should be confident that we can make it three this Saturday lunchtime, although, clearly, it will need to be by something like two or three one given that we aren’t doing clean sheets this season.

I’ll post the answers on here on Sunday.

60s. Born in a tough, hard city, this defender started off on the road to what was to become one of the powers in the game in the sixties, but never got there, clocking up around seventy appearances for near neighbours instead. Moving on to Bristol, he was a pretty regular pick during his seven years in the city, but, despite scoring twice in fixtures between the two clubs, he didn’t enjoy the best of times against Cardiff. Next, he joined a county set that is currently trying to recover its former position, before a few games close to the tracks brought his Football League career to an end, can you name him?

70s. Initially equine, he only lost once against us while at Bristol City.

80s. Any Eastern landing will do for shot stopper (4,7).

90s. With a healthy seven goals in eighteen appearances for his country (he was selected in the party for the 1996 Olympics, but never saw any game time), this forward had a decent, if not spectacular, career which was mostly played out thousands of miles away from his homeland. His domestic form earned him a move to a kids team on mainland Europe and then he stayed in the same country for a few games with a team which begins with a Y, before teaming up with Bristol City for a couple of seasons where he was a regular starter, scoring his goals at a rate of one every four games or so. When he moved, it was back to Europe to a team that were not the power they had been when they were contesting European Finals at Wembley a few decades earlier, but he gave them a decade’s service during which he scored over eighty times in all competitions – his career ended playing in the city of his birth, a city which has got into the habit of playing its test cricket under floodlights. Who am I describing?

00s. This forward played for nineteen different clubs if you include the ones he played for after dropping out of league football in his early thirties. However, he only really did his scoring for two clubs, one of which was Bristol City, while he had four separate spells for the other one (with an airport which featured in an advert and an awful song off the back of it), who were also his first club. In all, he scored one hundred and nineteen league goals for the two teams, with fifty one of them coming for the wurzels. Among the sides he was less successful for were Fulham, Reading and QPR – he failed to net in his two appearances for Bristol City against us, but he was on the winning side in one of the matches and the other one ended in a draw. Who is he?

10s. Bristol didn’t beat us too many times during this decade, but, on one of the occasions when they did, they had three players, all full internationals, who had played, or would go on to play, for City in their side, name the game and the players concerned.

20s. He’s only played in eleven senior games throughout this decade and all of them were for either us or Bristol City, who?

Answers

60s. Aberdonian Gordon Low never played senior football in the country of his birth. His career started at Leeds Road, Huddersfield before a move to Bristol City in 1961. He had only a draw to show from his four encounters with City in 65/66 and 66/67 – he scored the wurzels’ goal in a 2-1 defeat at Ashton Gate in the latter season and put through his own net in a 5-1 loss at Ninian Park in the reverse fixture. Low’s next move took him to Stockport County for a couple of seasons, before he finished up with a few games for Crewe in 70/71.

70. Gerry Gow.

80s. Andy Leaning.

90s. Adelaide born Paul Agostino signed for Young Boys of Berne in 1992, but did not make much of an impact in his two years with them. He played for Yverdon Sport before signing for Bristol City in 1995 and then moved to the Bundesliga to play for Munich 1860 two years later. Agostino played close to two hundred and fifty times for the side beaten 2-0 at Wembley by West Ham in the Final of the 1965 Cup Winners Cup, before a return to Australia with Adelaide United.

00s. Tony Thorpe had four spells at Luton, scoring nearly seventy league goals for them and got fifty more for Bristol City in his four years with them – he played for the wurzels against us in a 1-1 draw at Ashton Gate in October 2001 and then in the “Scott Murray match” which they won two months later at Ninian Park 3-1.

10s. In our 4-2 defeat at Ashton Gate in August 2012, Tom Heaton, Greg Cunningham and Albert Adomah all started for Bristol City.

20s. Filip Benkovic.in loan spells from Leicester City.  

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