Seven decades of Cardiff City v Norwich City matches.

Before I say anything, I’d just like to pass on best wishes to Sol Bamba following his Non-Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis which was announced earlier this week – with what happened to Emeliano Sala, Chris Barker and Peter Whittingham in the past two years, Cardiff City have had enough of losing young men well before their time and I hope and trust Sol will meet and beat his challenge.

City return to league action on Saturday with a second game in a month against leaders Norwich City, so here’s another quiz on the Canaries with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. Idiotic pain in the neck gets worse (7, 9)?

70s. A Yorkshireman who started off at Norwich and played against us in a game that was featured on Match of the Day. He played for eleven different clubs (one of them in Asia) and, unusually, he made most appearances for his final team, finishing up with one short of a hundred appearances for them before he called it quits some nineteen years after his debut – he ran a greetings card shop after leaving the game, do you know who he is?

80s. I only associate this man with one club really, but, in fact he played for fourteen of them (two with a virtually identical name) in six different countries – he enjoyed a very profitable forty minutes or so against us while playing for Norwich during his career, but who is he?.

90s. Iron beast, initially red then white, transformed into non scoring international (4,7).

00s. A scorer of an international goal against Malta, he’s one of those players who has spent much of his career out on loan from a big team while playing not too many games at all for his parent club. He’s only had a permanent contract with two clubs and has played a few times against City at Championship level while on his excursions out on loan. That’s how he came to play a couple of, unbeaten, matches for Norwich against us during this decade – can you name him?

10s. Currently playing for “Di Roe”, this fifty plus times capped international who has Walkwa as one of his middle names was a scorer for Norwich at Cardiff City Stadium during this decade, who is he?

20s. How many players have Norwich loaned out this season?

Answers

60s. Charlie Crickmore.

70s. Roger Hansbury was in goals for Norwich for the 1-1 draw with City at Carrow Road which was featured on Match of the Day in December 1974. He had a spell in Hong Kong with Eastern AA between 1981 and 1983 – he ended his career with City, retiring in 1992.

80s. Mick Channon played over five hundred league matches for Southampton over three decades. Besides England, he played for clubs from South Africa, Australia (one of which was called Newcastle KB United), Hong Kong, New Zealand and Ireland. Norwich were the club he played second most matches for (eighty eight league matches between 1982 and 1985), with his best scoring match probably being a League Cup match against us at Carrow Road where he scored a hat trick in forty minutes in a 3-0 home win in October 1983.

90s. Iwan Roberts.

00s. Ryan Bertrand has had nine loan moves, two of them to Norwich, while only being contracted permanently to Chelsea and Southampton – he played against twice in 08/09.

10s. Martin Olsson, currently with Helsinborgs (Di Roe – the red ones) was one of Norwich’s scorers in their 4-2 away win over us in September 2014.

20s. An amazing twenty four.  

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Cardiff City maintain their cup tradition as the pressure on Neil Harris mounts.

For about the last seven or eight years, I’ve been bemoaning Cardiff City’s lack of possession in games. If someone undertook the considerable task of working out an average percentage possession figure for all of the clubs to have played in Premier and/or Football League in every season since, say, 2014/15, I’d surprised if there were more than five sides with a lower figure than our – in fact, I think there may well be none.

Neil Harris’ appointment in November 2019 came with talk of an intention of playing more of a possession based game and, certainly in the team’s fine post lockdown run to end the 19/20 season, possession percentages were slightly higher. Most importantly, results were largely good as well, but, if progress was being made on two fronts in June and July, it has stalled, and regressed on the results side in 20/21.

There hasn’t been a great deal of matches this season where we have had more of the possession, but there have been enough of them to give rise to the suggestion that we are a less effective team when we have more of the ball, so the notion that our opponents think that it is to their advantage to let City have plenty of the ball is not a wholly far fetched one.

Those advancing this theory were given further backing today as City slumped to their fifth defeat in six games (thereby undoing all of the good work of late November and early December) as they made their traditional early exit from the FA Cup with a 1-0 loss at Nottingham Forest in this lunchtime’s Third Round tie.

The game’s only goal came as early as the third minute and after that, the home side were happy to sit back and play on the break.

These tactics certainly played a part in City enjoying sixty one per cent possession according to the BBC’s stats. Indeed, there were times when the pressure on the Forest goal was non stop. That term gives a bit of a misleading impression though because, despite those stats also showing that we had fifteen goal attempts to Forest’s six, the truth was that, at the end of the game, I was struggling to come up with an example of us forcing home keeper Jordan Smith into a difficult save or there being any efforts that didn’t miss by much.

Robert Glatzel endured another frustrating afternoon as the opportunity given him by Keiffer Moore’s injury against the jacks has, instead, turned into a period which appears to have drained him of all belief. Today, he missed what was our best chance when Josh Murphy, who, despite being subbed because it seems to be in his contract that he must always be subbed when he starts a game, was one of our best players on the day, was played in by a fine pass by Marlon Pack. The winger got past his man and there didn’t seem anything wrong with his pulled back low cross, but it eluded Glatzel as, not for the first time in recent weeks, I was left wondering about a lack of anticipation among our attackers.

Apart from that, Harry Wilson had two half chances which you’d think he may have scored from if he was in a more confident frame of mind. The first was nearly all of his own making as he burst on to a misplaced pass and tried to beat Smith from twenty five yards – it was a difficult opportunity which was probably no more than a quarter chance in reality, but Wilson has the ability to score goals like that and so there it was disappointing to see a ball which sat up for him nicely be whacked quite a long way wide.

Wilson’s second opportunity came when Joel Bagan, again looking at home in the first team, played one of a few intelligent forward balls that he came up with into the path of Wilson in the inside left channel, but the Wales man never looked convincing as he ended up scuffing his shot straight at Smith.

Wilson was also a little unlucky when his free kick got a slight deflection off the Forest wall and rippled the side netting and sub Junior Hoilett’s first time effort from Bagan’s cross flew not too far over late on, but that was about it from City as far as a possible equaliser went.

So, City ended up with nothing to show from a display that was a big improvement on their dismal showing at Wycombe and the same game as it panned our today under better circumstances (i.e. we weren’t on a losing run) would I’m sure have seen a reaction akin to “we wuz robbed” from some of the same supporters who are now calling for the manager to go.

I feel a draw and extra time would have been fair today, but we are where we are and defeat to a Forest team which I’m told had eight changes from the one which played in their last Championship match and generally looked a pretty poor outfit themselves leaves Neil Harris under huge pressure going into a return fixture with league leaders Norwich who beat us comfortably at Carrow Road just before Christmas.

Injuries to Sean Morrison (who hopes to be back in a fortnight) and Sol Bamba, along with the ending of Filip Benkovic’s loan from Leicester and the decision to give Dillon Phillips a debut in goal left City with a makeshift defence with Leandro Bacuna again at right back, Bagan at left back and Joe Bennett alongside Curtis Nelson in the middle.

The rejigged back line couldn’t have made a worse start either – I’m afraid the dodgy stream I was watching froze as the goal was scored so I only have one replay of it to go on, but it seemed to me that Bacuna was nowhere in sight as left back Gaetong Bong crossed to Lyle Taylor who shot crisply past Phillips from twelve yards.

That apart, it was impossible to draw too many conclusions about Phillips or Bennett as a centre back because they were barely tested after that.

 Much of the remaining eighty seven minutes were spent by City trying to break down a resolute, but hardly outstanding Forest team. Another thing I have tended to have a bit of a rant about in recent years on here is our annual no shows in both League and FA Cups, but I won’t this time because I thought there was nothing wrong with the attitude of the team, the annoying aspect of today was how they made so little out of all of that possession.

Finally, if you don’t know how to spend that Amazon token you were given for Christmas or know a City fan who is in that boat, there’s always my book Real Madrid and that to consider – details can be found here.

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