Nine league defeats out of ten – have Cardiff City ever been this bad at home?

Another home game, another defeat. Unbelievably and unforgivably, Cardiff City made it nine defeats in their last ten league matches on their own ground when they were beaten 1-0 by a Blackburn side that was nowhere near as good as their recent record (twenty two points from eight games now) suggested they’d be.

City deserve some credit for making the side that are now third in the table look pretty ordinary and this was a match they were definitely unlucky to lose, but this was the fifth 1-0 loss in those nine games and, apart from Bournemouth who scored around the hour mark, Reading, QPR, Hull and now Blackburn have all got their goal in the opening forty five minutes (the last three in the first twenty minutes actually) and then held on with varying degrees of comfort, although, in truth, it was only Reading before today where the visitors could be said to be lucky.

Although, as I mentioned, City were worth a point today, Blackburn did not need to rely on Reading like luck for their three points because they defended like a side that had only conceded three goals in their last nine league games before today, getting in important blocks when they were needed and then when the defenders couldn’t repel City’s efforts, goalkeeper Thomas Kaminski was there to foil them with some good saves.

I should say at this stage that I’m unable to provide much of a detailed report of the game because, in truth, I didn’t really see a great deal of it. The game had been switched to a 12.30 kick off so that City would be able to provide a live stream of a match UK based fans would not have been able to watch if it had kicked off at three.

However, even season ticket holders who had already paid the entrance fee for this match so to speak had to pay the £10 fee to get to see the game. I say see the game, but it seems that for many, that was a forlorn hope. When I went to log into my club account a few minutes before kick off, I was greeted by a gateway error message. I gave up after ten minutes of getting that same message every time I tried to log in,  grateful at least that that I hadn’t yet paid the tenner for the viewing pass, but I understand that there were plenty who had and it seems that City will have a lot of apologising to do and decisions to make regarding supporters who had, in effect, paid to watch this game twice and were let down on both occasions.

Of course, you have to feel sorry for City in one regard in that the kick off time change and the need to change streaming arrangements were only needed because of the Welsh Government’s decision last month to ban crowds for indoor and outdoor sporting events.

For myself, I used a dodgy, non official, stream to attempt to watch the match, but, apart from the last twenty minutes or so of the first half, the constant buffering meant that I missed as much of the action as I saw.

The stream worked for the few seconds leading up to the goa though, but I still don’t know how Joe Rothwell was put into the huge amount of space he had in the area in front of our back three because I haven’t seen the part of the build up. From there, it was a repeat of what we’ve seen so often this season as an opposing player scores from around twenty yards while not being closed down by any of our team. This one came courtesy of a classy side footed effort which started outside the goal but curled back enough to find the net.

So, credit to Rothwell and perhaps to one or two of his team mates for playing him into the area from where he was able to go on and score, but I was still left wondering why he had all of that room and then was not closed down by a retreating Aden Flint who seemed to me to be doing nothing more than offering Rothwell an aid when it came to measuring up his shot in terms of where he needed to put it.

However, I read Wales Online and listen to the match commentary on the club website through that dodgy link and Flint gets credit for showing Rothwell “the angle” whatever that means! Indeed, the newspaper website even says Alex Smithies was to blame for the goal. Now, I am a bit of an old fogey and the game has changed a lot since I first started watching it, but I don’t get how and when centrebacks retreating away to keep a gap of five to ten yards from an advancing opponent became good defending rather than bad defending – similarly, I’m not sure when it became the case that goalkeepers are to blame for not keeping out the sort of shot Rothwell came up with today.

It would be wrong to say that was it as far as Blackburn were concerned as an attacking force, but there wasn’t a great else from them besides that. However, although Steve Morison talked about us playing well up until the final third today, that really only shows how easy we are to score against when you think about it. We’ve now had more than five months of the season and, criminally, we’re still only on one clean sheet kept – I’m sure I’ve said this before on here, but the more I have to say it, the more likely it is to come true – unless we start keeping clean sheets and stop losing at home, we’re going down.

One final thing about our defending today, I’ve been critical of Curtis Nelson over the past few months, but I thought he played as well as I’ve seen him all season today and would make him our man of the match.

As it turned out, Nelson came as close as anyone to scoring for us today with headed chances from set pieces. That revolving circle on my television screen to which I direct no end of abuse meant that I didn’t see the first one, but the second one (from a Joe Ralls corner) drew the best of Karminski’s saves. Sub Isaak Davies also hit the woodwork (in truth, that sounds better than it actually was though, because it was the outside of the post from a cross which was more an attempt to get a corner than anything else). Apart from that, it was a story of Blackburn blocks more than anything else, notably from a well struck Will Vaulks shot in the first half and a Ralls volley after the interval which he caught perfectly.

City dominated possession, I’ll say that again, City dominated possession, but their 66/34 advantage only served to emphasise a common failing when they do have over, say, fifty five per cent of the ball, because it only tends to emphasis their lack of creativity more. Ryan Wintle slotted into that central three pretty seamlessly and my early impression is that he helps to improve us in that area, but only because he does much the same as most of the players we already have in that area, just that little bit better.

New loan signing from Leeds Cody Drameh made a good impression in the first half and was quieter after the break, while I thought Perry Ng at left wing back improved on his recent showings on his more favoured side.

Our manager had a point about our play in the final third, but I thought he didn’t help our cause by taking off Mark Harris and I would have liked to have seen him having a chance leading the line with Davies coming on for the hard working, but ineffective, James Collins instead.

To finish on today’s game, referee Matt Donahue somehow saw fit to issue eleven yellow cards, seven to Blackburn, four to City, in an encounter that was never dirty. Two of them were to Blackburn right wing back Ryan Nyambe, the first for dissent and the second a harsh one for a foul on Ng.

To be frank though, the dismissal didn’t do City much good. Blackburn dug in and looked to play on the break more, which meant more possession for opponents they knew would struggle to create chances.

Elsewhere Blaenrhondda maintained their upper mid table position in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier League after a 2-2 home draw with Llanrumney United, while Treherbert Boys and Girls Club got back to winning ways at home in the Second Division with a 5-1 victory over Cwmbach Royal Star.

Finally, I’ve only just realized that I didn’t do a quiz on Blackburn. Apologies for that – my only excuse is that I’d scheduled one of two jobs around the house that had needed doing for a while for the end of the week and so it slipped my mind completely!.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Cardiff under 23s beaten on their return from mid season break – a strange team selection doesn’t help them either.

Ajax of Amsterdam have always had a much admired youth development programme. The club which, above any other I’d say, brought us “Total Football”. This is the concept whereby, ideally, the aim is to have all outfield players equally comfortable in any position on the pitch and, to that end, the Dutch club would move their youth players around to give them experience of what is was like to, for example, play in the position of a player who, ordinarily, would be marking them.

It’s an approach I’ve heard British coaches endorse from time to time – including one at City a few years back if my memory serves me right..

You can certainly see the potential benefits from such an approach because it gives an insight into how the other side thinks so to speak. However, I’ve never heard of a method whereby.a whole team is drastically changed as everyone operates in a position they’re not familiar with, so you end up with a team that is operating under a self inflicted disadvantage I suppose in the name of youth development.

It would be a big exaggeration to say that Cardiff City did that today when were defeated 2-0 by Ipswich at Leckwith, but when I saw the side picked for Darren Purse’s first game in charge since being brought in as Steve Morison’s replacement, it seemed that there were elements of a similar type of thinking.

Before today, it did seem to me that our under 23 side’s second half of the season might well be substantially different from their all conquering (barring one game at Millwall anyway) first half. Players such as Isaak Davies, Kieron Evans, Sam Bowen and Mark McGuinness who all were in early season Development teams, are now probably more likely to be seen in first team squads than second team ones and the departure of top scorer Chanka Zimba and captain James Connolly to Northampton and Bristol Rovers respectively until the end of the season (both featured in their new club’s matches on Saturday) all adds to the feeling of change which does not just apply to the new man in charge.

Therefore, it’s unrealistic to expect things to carry on just as they were, but it did seem that City we’re putting themselves at a disadvantage with a very odd, unbalanced looking team selection.

It was impossible to guess what formation City were going to play when looking at the team sheet, but, whatever it was they decided to go with, it did seem certain that James Crole, the one naturally attacking player in the side was going to be spending a lot of the match battling away on his own with little in the way of help from team mates.

I say that because, besides goalkeeper George Ratcliffe, Crole’s nine outfield team mates were a mixture of defenders and central midfielders, none of whom were best suited to operating in advanced positions.

Eli King, Keenan Patten, Tavio D’Almeida and Sam Bowen (making a welcome return after more than three months out with an injury he sustained just as he was looking like establishing himself in the first team) are all best suited to deeper lying roles in my opinion and, behind them, we had the normal three centrebacks and a pair of wing backs who fell squarely into the category of being more full backs than wingers.

In the event, an understandably rusty Bowen and Patten were assigned as the two to give Crole some support, but, in practice this was nothing like a 3-4-3, it was more akin to 5-4-1 with the one very much in isolation.

To make a success in attacking terms of a virtual 5-4-1 formation, I’d say you’d need full backs who were willing to get forward more often than our wing backs were today and midfielders with the pace and mobility to make runs beyond the striker – as mentioned earlier, that’s not really how any of today’s midfield four play (especially when you consider one of them is not match fit).

City had no one who was a natural “ball carrier” (to use a rugby term) – that is someone who is comfortable and effective when running at opponents while operating “between the lines” and, in truth, the actuality turned out to be exactly what many pretty seasoned City age group team watchers would have predicted when they saw the team.

I can understand the absence of players like Evans and Tom Sang because of their time on the pitch in Sunday’s first team game, but where, for example, were Jai Semenyo, a genuine wing back who has been a regular for the under 23s all season and Cian Ashford who, from the little I’ve seen of him, is a lot better suited to the natural number ten, ball carrier role than any of the four central midfielders we saw today?

Maybe Ashford and Semenyo were injured (Lord knows what’s happened to the once very promising Taz Mayembe in the last two seasons), but the overall effect was a team that an efficient and bright Ipswich team would surely have liked the look of when they saw it.

Not surprisingly, City ended up failing to use the flanks effectively as much of their passing became bogged down through the middle and, in truth, the only worthwhile opportunities they had were presented to them by their opponents getting into trouble with their play out from the back approach.

Bowen had one chance when a rare effective City press of the kind we saw so much of before Christmas found him with the ball at his feet twenty yards out and the goalkeeper some way off his line, but the midfielder, who certainly has the skill set to score from such a position seven or eight times out of ten, saw his chip clear the bar by a couple of feet – Bowen was withdrawn at half time as this was very much a case of easing himself back after a long time out. The other chance fell to Crole who benefitted from what might be called a one man press to be presented with a one on one with the keeper similar to the one Isaak Davies missed on Sunday – Crole came closer than Davies did as his shot came back off the post, but I’m sure he’ll be thinking he should have scored.

Ipswich we’re deserving winners as they scored the very important first goal in such a tight contest with a crisply struck twenty two yard effort by Cameron Humphreys around the hour mark and then Bailey Clements slotted home a coolly taken second ten minutes from time after they had missed some decent chances as City’s challenge wilted.

It was all pretty disappointing from a City point of view, but there were some good individual performances. Ratcliffe made a fine low save early in the second half and his judgement was faultless when playing as a “sweeper keeper” as he snuffed out a couple of dangerous attacks and, despite that miss I mentioned, Crole proved a handful for the Ipswich central defenders at times with some neat touches and clever movement – he also should have earned his side a penalty, but the referee ignored what was a clear foul and waved played on.

Best player for me though was Keenan Patten by some distance. The commentator on the club website stream mentioned City’s lack of dynamism as a team, but, correctly, applied that word to Patten as an individual – he did his best in an unfamiliar role and there was also some very nice sleight of foot (something you don’t really associate with him) at times. Patten is unlucky in that while so many of the team he grew up playing with have now made their first team bows, he’s still waiting, despite him having been named as a substitute around ten times now – despite this, I still rate him as up there with the best of the generation that has broken through this season, I hope he gets his first team chance soon, he deserves it..

Posted in The stiffs | Tagged | Comments Off on Cardiff under 23s beaten on their return from mid season break – a strange team selection doesn’t help them either.