Moore keeps scoring as City break into top half of the table.

When a limp, listless and lifeless Cardiff City were deservedly beaten 1-0 at Coventry six days ago, they faced the prospect of two home matches against sides in mid table positions (albeit higher than them) to try and get themselves in better order before they embarked on a run of five matches in six against teams that have started their seasons with a real statement of intent that they are serious promotion contenders.

When the fixtures for this season were released, Luton and Huddersfield at Cardiff City Stadium within three days of each other will have looked like an opportunity to record very rare back to back wins in one of those increasingly common pairs of Saturday/midweek or midweek/Saturday clusters of matches which make up so much of the Championship season.

City have generally been pretty ropey at getting six points from these games down the years and given the fact that confidence was so low following a run of one win in eight games from a side their supporters had been anticipating another top six challenge from and that they only won one of the first six home matches (three of which were lost), it was clear to see why the metaphorical vultures were circling around manager Neil Harris.

Well, with Luton dispatched 4-0 in the first of the two encounters which may possibly have seen Harris lose his job, the pressure had certainly lifted on the City boss, but not completely. That one home win I mentioned earlier had been another big one, 3-0 over Barnsley, but that had been the single victory in that run of eight matches I mentioned earlier. As such, it was a source of frustration as much as anything, because it showed what we were capable of, but remained a distance above the standard of performance that had been the norm in 20/21.

The challenge facing City tonight against Huddersfield was twofold, do not allow another Barnsley follow up situation to develop whereby things slipped back into their bad old ways and, second, ensure that the team would go into a run of matches that might well define their season in a much better frame of mind than seemed possible last Wednesday.

It’s fair to say that City managed this as they brought their tally of unanswered goals to seven in their last two matches with a comprehensive 3-0 win which may not have quite hit the heights seen on Saturday, but was, in some ways, more impressive.

I say that for a few reasons, first, Huddersfield had plenty of possession (sixty seven per cent according to the BBC) and made a strong start to the second half as they pushed us back for ten minutes or so. However, we responded with calm and organised defending which meant that we were never in serious danger of being opened up. Second, although set piece goals certainly have their place in any season where City enjoy a degree of success, scoring three goals from open play, even if one of them was an absolute gift from our opponents, is reassuring at a time when it seems to me we have reverted, to a small degree at least, to our Warnockball roots – I’ll make what I mean there more clear shortly.

Thirdly, and finally, two more goals from Keiffer Moore to take his tally for the season to seven offers the hope that we may finally have found a striker who can move us on from the days when we have been viewing ten goals in a season as a good return for one of our front men – that’s not to say I’m expecting our new striker to hit the twenty mark or anything like that, but, injury permitting, he’s on his way to allowing us the rare luxury of having a Cardiff player near the top of the Championship goalscoring charts come May.

Just a few words now about my earlier Warnockball reference, it was made only semi seriously. Neil Harris remarked after the Luton game that we had been a bit more direct than in recent matches, this was partly down to the type of team we were playing apparently (the same would have been true tonight) and I would say the movement and willingness to run the channels shown by Mark Harris has almost forced us into knocking early balls to him.

There was a telling comment in the commentary tonight (the commentators on the club website have their critics, but I must say that I think they do a good job and the addition of another knowledgeable and interesting guest in new Academy appointee David Hughes was a welcome bonus tonight) that Neil Harris tends to go with the Joe Ralls, Will Vaulks combination in central midfield in games where the opposition are expected to have a lot of the ball and brings in Marlon Pack for matches where we expect to have more possession.

There was a bit of a dogs of war mentality behind Ralls and Vaulks tonight as the free kicks given against them mounted up. In their defence, we had our first Premier League ref of the season in charge of a game tonight – Kevin Friend is someone who I’ve never been too bothered about when I see he is to take charge of one of our matches, but tonight he penalized us nearly twice as often as he did Huddersfield and I thought there were a few against us which certainly fell into the dubious category from him.

Anyway, Ralls and Vaulks were instrumental in showing that the much maligned 4-4-2 system still has a place in the modern game, especially when the wide players do such a good defensive job when the opposition are dominating possession as Harry Wilson and Sheyi Ojo did tonight.

More than in any other game since I’ve had to change my seat in the ground for the one in my computer room at home where the view of the pitch differs so much from what I’m used to, I was struck by the amount of disciplined defensive work our wingers were putting in during that period when Huddersfield briefly got on top. Wilson and Ojo were part of an organised and confident two banks of four which made it so difficult for the visitors to penetrate when they were pressing for an equaliser after half time.

Unlike some wing combinations we’ve used in recent years, Wilson and Ojo were able to display their ability up the other end of the pitch as well – in the case of the former, it was in the form of a succession of quality crosses when we were enjoying our best spell of the game in the quarter of an hour before half time, while the latter was able to add a couple more assists to the good one he came up with in the build up to Harris’ goal on Saturday.

Ojo’s long run down the left touchline on thirty five minutes ended with him playing a low ball to the near post where Moore got ahead of his marker to give City a deserved reward when they were playing well and there could have been further goals during that spell as the visitors struggled to cope with our physicality, urgency and quality.

The second goal came midway through the second half at a time when City were just beginning to reestablish themselves after Huddersfield’s strong spell.

Such is the determination of some sides to build from the back that they’ll occasionally have a nightmare moment or two and present their opponents with a goal. That’s exactly what happened tonight as Ben Hamer rolled the ball to centreback Naby Saah who was immediately put under pressure by sub Junior Hoilett, who had just come on for Harris. Hoilett was able to get the ball off Saah and from there a goal was inevitable as he played it to Moore who couldn’t miss from six yards.

The icing on the cake was a fine late goal by sub Robert Glatzel as he received a pass from Ojo, side stepped the last defender and fired an unstoppable shot high into the net from just inside the penalty area. It was the German’s first goal in sixteen games and, although that stat wasn’t really as bad as it seems because so many of those appearances were as a sub, it will still be a relief for him to have got off the mark this season. You can never have enough strikers with the confidence a recent goal gives them and I’m guessing it’s been some time since we had three of them.

Neil Harris made full use of his substitutes in the remaining minutes as City maintained their perfect record in matches in which they score first (played five, won five, goals for thirteen, goals conceded none), but you have to assume that is not a sequence we’re going to maintain in our upcoming run of fixtures – Watford A, Stoke A, Swansea H, Birmingham H, Norwich A, Brentford H.

However, what is encouraging is that we’ll begin this testing run of games, in front of a crowd of around a thousand at Vicarage Road on Saturday, in a far better place than would have seemed possible after Coventry – the pressure will be right back on our manager if we revert to the general form of our first thirteen matches at Watford and Stoke, but our last two games really couldn’t have gone better for him.

Given the, hopefully, unique circumstances of this Christmas, it seems to me that we may see a much increased number of gift tokens/cards given as presents. Therefore if you’re a City supporting receiver of such a gift why not take a look at my new book “Real Madrid and all that” when cashing in your present? In fact, if you’re buying for a City supporter or are one yourself, you could do a lot worse than buying a book which has received excellent reviews (with one exception!) – here are details of what the book is about, what formats it can be bought in and where it can be bought, you can also read its mixed reviews!

Once again, can I finish by making a request for support from readers by them becoming my Patrons through Patreon. Full details of this scheme and the reasons why I decided to introduce it can be found here, but I should say that the feedback I have got in the past couple of years has indicated a reluctance from some to use Patreon as they prefer to opt for a direct payment to me. If you are interested in becoming a patron and would prefer to make a direct contribution, please contact me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com or in the Feedback section of the blog and I will send you my bank/PayPal details.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Huddersfield Town games.

The games, and the quizzes, are coming thick and fast now with December a very busy month – here’s seven questions on the first of our opponents in the last month of the year, with the answers to be posted on Wednesday.

60s. This former railway worker was given his Huddersfield debut by a one time City player and played in a number of games against Cardiff until the middle of this decade – he lost slightly more of them than he won. When he moved on, injury caused him to miss much of his first season at his new club, but he was there a few years later for a match which produced a memorable City related image . Another injury proved harder to recover from and his fortunes quickly declined to the extent that he was given a free transfer in 1969, he next was to be found playing in orange and on the edge of things so to speak and his final move saw him wearing another distinctive kit at a venue which sounded like marching through a depression – he also had a spell as caretaker manager at this team, but who is he?

70s. This midfielder was on the other side in a match already referred to above and his one appearance at Ninian Park for Huddersfield took his losing run at the ground to three matches in which the sides he was playing for had conceded eleven goals. Huddersfield were his second club and his move there meant he stayed in Yorkshire. That changed after three years and eighty league matches at Leeds Road when he signed for the team representing the, border, city of his birth, but he was back in Yorkshire in 1977 to play at a place with what, apparently is/was a healthy tree. His career stretched into a third decade with a move not far from Yorkshire to a club whose nickname reflects the industrial heritage of the town it represents – he would have worn an all red kit while he was at this club, but they have since returned to one much more like the one they wore in their early years. Who am I describing?

80s. A Lancashire born central defender with a surname which suggested another part of the country, he arrived at Huddersfield via Devon and Berkshire (where he had been on loan). Described by the manager who signed him as one of his best buys for the club, he was a regular in a successful Huddersfield team – he played twice for them at Ninian Park, the first time being a draw in a season which would end well for both clubs, but his team were defeated in his next visit. When he left Leeds Road, it was to go for a jog of sorts with a team that had definitely seen better days, his final move as a player was a short one to blue perennial strugglers who he later managed to the brink of a Play Off place with what was described as a crowd pleasing attacking style of play, but who is he?

90s. Mixture of tin and stone, together with Leeds beginnings, produces a fixture at the back for Huddersfield.

00s. He played for five Football League clubs, making not far short of three hundred appearances in all and the two goals he scored for Huddersfield were the only ones he managed during that time, yet he could be said to have brought total football to all of them, who?

10s. With one exception, it’s been a case of blue is the colour all the way for this midfielder in his club career. He started off with Citizens, but had to use a last to get a taste of first team action and then went golfing (well, kind of) in loan moves. He was also borrowed by a side which hails from a town that has a dominant team in another sport and he eventually signed for them on a permanent basis. It was while he was with this club that he was loaned to Huddersfield and his first appearance for them came at Cardiff City Stadium. His time at Huddersfield was considered a success and this persuaded another team to sign him permanently. What seemed on the face of it, to be a good move for both player and club turned out to be anything but that and he was soon on the move again, first on loan and then with a permanent contract to a place which was once described as having the largest and most important dock in the kingdom and has been rated as the third happiest place to live in the UK in the recent past – I’m not sure our man would agree with that though, having spent much of his time there on the treatment table, do you know who he is?

20s. It’s happened at Saltergate on 21 November 2009 and at Huddersfield on 27 August 2013 and 20 August 2016, what am I referring to and which current member of the Huddersfield squad does it relate to?

Answers

60s. Gordon Banks, Bobby Moore and Bobby Charlton are the members of the 1966 World Cup winning team that are considered to be genuinely world class, but if there was a fourth member of that England team the term could be applied to it was probably Ray Wilson, who is Huddersfield’s most capped international player to this day. Wilson was first selected in Huddersfield’s senior team by Bill Shankly in the mid fifties and played nearly three hundred league matches for them before his transfer to Everton in 1964. Two years later, he was in the Everton side which recovered from 2-0 down to beat Sheffield Wednesday 3-2 in a match which saw Brian Harris put on a policeman’s helmet in the chase to catch an Everton fan who ran onto the Wembley pitch when his side equalized and, of course, Wilson was back there a few months later for England’s finest hour. However, within three years, he’d been freed by Everton and turned up next at Boundary Park, Oldham, before finishing his playing days at Valley Parade, Bradford City where he took over as caretaker manager for ten games in 1971.

70s. Graham Pugh was in the Sheffield Wednesday side beaten by Everton in the 1966 FA Cup Final. In April 1973, he was in the Huddersfield side beaten 4-1 at Ninian Park in a very important relegation clash which virtually made certain that they would go down for a second successive season. Pugh signed for Chester in 1975 and then Barnsley two years later, before ending his Football League career at Scunthorpe in the early eighties.

80s. Dave Sutton began his career at Plymouth and, after a loan spell at Reading, was signed by Mick Buxton for Huddersfield in 1978. Huddersfield rose from the Fourth division to the Second with Sutton a regular throughout, but in 1985, he moved to Bolton who would drop into the fourth tier for the first time while he was there. Sutton finished his playing career at Rochdale and spent three years as their manger in the early nineties.

90s.Lee Sinnott.

00s. Chris Holland.

10s. Emyr Huws never played first team football for Manchester City and, after loan moves to Northampton and Birmingham signed for Wigan in 2014. Huws was then loaned to Huddersfield and scored five times in thirty appearances for them during the 15/16 campaign. In the summer of 2016 he was signed for City by new manager Paul Trollope who had worked with Huws with Wales, but neither man was to make much of an impact – Huws only featuring in three league games before being loaned to Ipswich for who he signed a four year contract for in the summer of 2017.

20s. Jonathan Hogg scored for Darlington at Chesterfield on his senior debut while on loan from Villa, but since then his only other career goals have come in home matches for Huddersfield against Charlton in the League Cup in 2013 and Barnsley in the Championship in 2017.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Huddersfield Town games.