Seven decades of Cardiff City v Coventry City matches.

Although we’ve played Coventry City quite a lot since 1963, their long spell in the First Division during the latter part of the twentieth century means that we have only played them in three of the seven decades covered by this quiz, so there’s probably less of a City emphasis to these questions – I’ll post the answers on here on Thursday.

60s. Born on Bonfire night, this midfielder cum winger started out in the place of his birth with a club that had an alliterative ground and, at that time, Chairman. In eight years, he appeared close to two hundred times in the first team while maintaining a healthy scoring rate for someone who played in his position and when he moved it was in a downward direction to join Coventry, However he played some part in his new side’s rise up the leagues to the top flight and was in their side for two of their six encounters with us during this decade. Despite a slightly better scoring rate than at his first club, he played less than thirty times in the league for Coventry before heading home again, this time to play for a club that sounded like it was from somewhere else and they played at a ground on the other side of the world – in two years at this club, he only played ten league games and retired from the game just as the decade was coming to an end, can you name him?

70s. A goalscoring winger, one of the earliest games in his senior career was when he was on the winning side in a notorious match that could never have finished with the scoreline it did do these days. His time at his first club lasted five years during which he was twice the club’s top scorer. He only played for two teams in the UK and swapped one city for another one not too far away midway through the decade. Although always a regular selection at his new club, his goalscoring figures were not as impressive as at his earlier team. He eventually moved on to a club formed in remembrance of a famous party and his outdoor career ended with a spell at a city which was at the heart of one of the most pivotal areas in a recent election. In 1997, some fifteen years after his retirement, he died in the land that had become his home, at the age of only forty six, do you know who I’m describing?

80s. Parker veto of Eastern leader provides Coventry lynchpin? (6,5)

90s. This midfielder made his debut for Coventry when he came on as a seventeen year old substitute in a defeat at Chelsea. The following season, he appeared twenty seven times in the Premier League and was in the Coventry side that decided the destination of the title that year before playing against his boyhood idol, who was making his final appearance for his club, in the last match of that season. During his time with Coventry, he played under a couple of managers who went into to do the job at international level, “Big Ron” and a future City boss. When he moved on, it was to a team whose supporters, apparently, used to sing about how he would never play in an international game in Warsaw. His next move saw him head to the North East to play under someone who may or may not have had a Scottish “sophisti pop” band named after him and he, perhaps, recited poetry at his final club – who is he?

00s. Great things were predicted for this sixteen year old defender when he made his first team debut for his first club. Injury held him back for a while, but a manager renowned for loving a deal signed him for blue Premier Leaguers in 2004. A few months later, he made what turned out to be the only top flight appearance of his career in a draw with Fulham as he settled into the increasingly common routine of teenage players at clubs in the top flight of multiple moves out on loan – he was borrowed by Lancashire winos, his old club and Coventry (in fact he had so many moves to them, four in all, that I believed at the time he had signed permanently for them). It appears, however, that he only played once against us in all of that time with Coventry and then it was in an undistinguished affair that had little to commend it. Five years after he signed for a Premier league club, he left for one in League One at the time (they are very recent opponents of ours) where he made little impact. His next move saw him wearing stripes down west and here he notched up over a century of appearances, as he did at his next destination (a team that had a pointless trip to south Wales a few days ago). Having spoken about how settled he was at this club, he then turned down a new contract with them to sign for Eastleigh two levels below them and then left them after a month to return to league football with midland carrion birds. His time at this club ended when they were relegated from the Football League and he spent last season with “The Grove” – he played thirteen times for his country, but who am I describing?

10s. Starting off with his home town club, Wilham Town, before moving on to Maldon Town, Dartford and then breaking into the Football League, this striker scored for us in a game against Coventry during this decade, name him.

20s. City have had one of them this season and Coventry five – what?

answers 

60s. Johnny Key started his career with Fulham and played nearly all of his first team games for them during Tommy Trinder’s time as Chairman. He scored thirty seven times in one hundred and eight one appearances in all competitions for the Cottagers before signing for Coventry in 1966. One of his first games for his new club came in November of that year when we lost 3-2 at Highfield Road and it was Key who got Coventry’s goal five months later when they drew 1-1 at Ninian Park as they closed in on promotion to the First Division for the only time in their history. Not too long after this game, key returned to London when he signed for Leyton Orient, but he was never a regular there and retired from the game at the age of thirty one in 1969.

70s. Brian Alderson made his debut for Coventry in September 1970 and was in their team the following month when Ernie Hunt and Willie Carr engineered a famous “donkey kick” goal, which was soon ruled as illegal by the game’s authorities, in a 3-1 win over Everton. Alderson scored nearly thirty goals in just under a hundred and thirty league games for Coventry before signing for local rivals Leicester in 1975 and three years later he moved to America to play for New England Team Men who he played for both indoors and outdoors and the same applied when he moved on to Atlanta Chiefs two years later. Alderson finished with a stint for New Jersey Rockets in America’s Indoor League and then settled in Atlanta until his early death in 1997.

80s. Trevor Peake.

90s. Willie Boland made his first appearance for Coventry when he came on as a sub at Chelsea late in season 92/93. In 93/94, he made twenty seven appearances for the Sky Blues and was in the team which ensured Manchester United would win the title that year when they beat Blackburn – Coventry then drew 0-0 at Old Trafford in the final match of that season when Boland played against his hero Bryan Robson who was playing his last game for United that day. Boland was never such a regular choice again for Coventry after that, but got into double figures in appearances in his final season with them – he had played under Bobby Gould, Ron Atkinson, Phil Neal and Gordon Strachan during his time at the club. In 1999, Boland moved to City and scored one of his three league gpals for us in his debut against Millwall. Apparently, City fans used to sing “Willie… Willie Boland, he’ll never play for Poland.” During his seven years here during which he made over two hundred league appearances. Boland signed for Hartlepool, managed by Danny Wilson, in 2006 and then returned home to Ireland to play just a single game at Limerick.

https://www.the42.ie/willie-john-boland-limerick-interview-league-of-ireland-coventry-city-cardiff-city-premier-league-4400232-Dec2018/

00s. Richard Duffy was only sixteen when he made his first team debut for Swansea in 2001 and three years later Harry Redknapp signed him for Portsmouth. He returned to Swansea on loan and there was also a temporary move to Burnley, but he spent more time at Coventry than anywhere while he was a Portsmouth player, making sixty one league appearances for them during four loan  spells – it would appear that he only played against us in a dismal 0-0 draw at Ninian Park in November 2005 though. Duffy had an unsuccessful spell with Millwall before moving on to Exeter and then Port Vale, he next dropped into non league football to sign for Eastleigh, but then moved to Notts County within a month – after his release by them at the end of 18/19, he signed for Northern Premier League West team Kisdgrove Athetic. Duffy played thirteen times for Wales with, perhaps, his most significant impact being when he gave away the penalty which led to a 1-0 defeat in Poland.

10s. Coventry’s Cody McDonald scored an own goal in the 2-2 draw against us at Cardiff City Stadium in March 2012.

20s. Captains – Sean Morrison has been our captain in every game we’ve played, but Kyle McFadzean, Liam Kelly, Matt Godden, Michael Rose and Dominic Hyam have all worn the armband for the Sky Blues this season.

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Pandemic or not, you can’t stop Cardiff City and Millwall drawing with each other!

Wales may not have been great to watch until their most recent game this season, but when the entertainment value is low, you can still at least take pleasure from the team you support grinding out the wins.

The fact that Cardiff City have only won three out of eleven (twelve if you count the League Cup no show at Northampton) rather tells the story that there hasn’t been much satisfaction to be had from admiring chiseled out victories from the club I support. Although the recent win over Barnsley was enjoyable and we played pretty well in an unlucky defeat by the wurzels in our last match, there is little doubt that I find myself on the side of my country in any club v country debate as to who I’ve enjoyed watching more in 20/21 so far.

Now though Wales have to be put on the footballing back burner until the end of March as we enter four months where it’s going to be club football all of the way.

To be honest, at a time when you would really like something from your football team to take your mind off the grim relentlessness of life in this miserable year, the thought of four months of watching City playing like they have been doing so far doesn’t fill me with excitement.

Furthermore, a game in south east London against a Millwall team that have been the closest thing to a Championship equivalent of Cardiff City in terms of style of play in recent seasons to start things going again was hardly something to get my juices flowing.

Earlier in the week, I did a piece on City’s season so far while also drawing attention to our recent record against Millwall which, if it is possible for something to be this, manages to be both remarkable and mundane at the same time!

I say that because, before today, Millwall had only beaten us once in fourteen games, but we’d only managed three victories ourselves during that time – furthermore, the previous five matches between the clubs at the New Den had finished all square.

There’s more to it than that though, I look back through the meetings between the clubs I’ve watched at Development and Academy team levels down the years and an awful lot have ended up as draws – as, indeed, have many of the reverse fixtures in London.

I can’t be sure of this, but my guess is that something like seventy per cent of matches between the clubs at those three levels since our senior side’s first promotion to the Premier League in 2013 have ended up as one pointers.

Therefore, if I were a betting man, I would have put a pretty heavy wager on today’s match finishing level and I would have favoured it finishing 1-1 – sure enough, that’s how it ended up, but I don’t claim any great credit for being right, it was simple law of averages stuff.

I’m afraid I cannot claim any great insight into what sort of match it was because it was another of those ones where, apart from the two goals which I’ve seen, I only had the Radio Wales commentary to go on and, on that score, Wales women’s team striker Helen Ward came across very well as both knowledgeable and insightful – being the age I am and having lived a life where for more than ninety per cent of the time, football was covered as a solely male sport by the huge majority of the media, I found it hard to adjust to hearing and seeing female pundits and commentators, but there are some very good ones around and today Ms Ward was a definite improvement on some of the male summarisers I’ve heard at City matches.

Based on what I heard from the Welsh women’s team highest ever scorer and her colleague Mark Poyser, today’s game was the slowest of slow boilers, but at least it was the better type of draw where your side comes back after falling behind.

With Lee Tomlin out until mid January at the earliest following an operation on what is a chronic groin condition and Jordi Osei-Tutu still a month away from a return from his hamstring injury, the only good news on the injury front is that Greg Cunningham is back in training, so, at a time when the number of substitutes has increased because of the reintroduction of the pandemic induced rule from last season which allowed five changes to be made, our bench included a few names that you would not really have expected to see used.

As for the starting line up, having reverted to the usual 4-2-3-1 for the wurzel’s game following the 4-4-2 used against Barnsley, it was back to the latter again with Keiffer Moore and Robert Glatzel up front, Harry Wilson and Junior Hoilett on the wings and Marlon Pack and Joe Ralls in the middle of midfield.

While that system worked well against Barnsley, I must admit to not being a great fan of it when City use it because, with two strikers who both not far short of six and a half feet tall, it can draw the team into playing in a manner which we are trying to move away from to an extent. Furthermore, when you consider what a coup Wilson was considered to be when we signed him, sticking him out on the wing seems a waste to me.

We struggled to get Wilson into the game against Barnsley and it was only when he moved into a number ten role and we reverted to 4-2-3-1 that he became an influence on proceedings – self evidently, 4-2-3-1 is not the complete answer to the problems we’re having this season, but I don’t believe 4-4-2 is either.

In truth, I don’t feel it’s a case of us discovering the right formation and then everything will be fine – it seems to me that, whether it’s because of instructions from the manager or it’s an attitude of mind thing with the team, we do start games timidly and yet, in the last ten minutes today we were really going for the win and could easily have lost the game when Millwall caught us on the break.

Suffice it to say, the first half was another tough listen with, seemingly, only two incidents of note. The first of these came on thirty five minutes courtesy of rare blunders by two of City’s most reliable players, Alex Smithies and Curtis Nelson, who both gave the impression they were going to deal with Shaun Williams’ cross, then decided to leave it to each other, thereby presenting the towering Matt Smith with a simple chance to score his fourth career goal against us.

Just before the break, Glatzel got his head to a Hoilett cross and was denied by the first of three very good saves by home keeper Bartosz Bialkowski in what was our sole worthwhile effort of the first forty five minutes and the opening half an hour or so of the second period offered little hope of a way back into things either.

Millwall didn’t sound anything special themselves, but Ben Thompson should have doubled the home team’s lead rather than head Jed Wallace’s cross over from close in and then the same player wasn’t too far away when he tried his luck from twenty yards.

The home side, with one of the better goals against records in the division, were comfortably coping with City and, given the chance to make five changes to his team, Neil Harris only chose to make two as Sheyi Ojo came on for Hoilett and Josh Murphy for Glatzel.

This was the crucial substitution for City. Murphy had only been on the pitch four minutes when he split the home rearguard with a lovely pass which sent Moore running on goal – there was some luck for the striker and his team in the end as home captain, Jake Cooper, slid in to try and block the shot and only succeeded in getting a slight deflection on it to help beat Bialkowski.

What had been a pretty miserable showing by City was now transformed – Murphy, showing the ability we all know he has, set up Wilson for what seemed a certain goal only for Bialkoski to deny him from close in and the keeper again performed heroics to keep out a Moore header.

There was a also a home clearance off the line well into added time, but it was Millwall who wasted the best opportunity of the closing minutes when sub Jon Dadi Bodvarsson ran from half way with desperate defenders in pursuit only to shoot wide.

So, yet another draw which leaves the teams with only two wins between them in their last thirteen matches – it’s a result which is no good really for either side and City really do need to record a couple of wins in their upcoming matches with Coventry, Luton and Huddersfield before what looks a tougher run of fixtures in the run up to Christmas. 

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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