Deservedly bottom of the Championship.

Cardiff City’s season finished in fairly typical fashion this lunchtime at Norwich – they played some football that was easy on the eye at times, but they folded like a pack of cards the first time they were put under any pressure as, once again, I was left thinking how lightweight we are.

City were on top having forced home keeper Angus Gunn into three diving saves after ten minutes, then 3-0 down having been reduced to ten men after twenty three – in complete contrast to Gunn, the statuesque Ethan Horvarth had conceded three and seen Norwich hit post and crossbar before he finally deigned to dive for something.

Midway through the first half, it looked like we were on our way to a repeat of the 7-0 at Leeds or worse. Norwich have it in them to hand out that sort of thrashing, but, more than any other side in this season’s Championship, they give you a chance.

Therefore, instead of the hiding which we probably would have got from the league’s more ruthless outfits, we got a final hour or so where City were able to take some credit for making a decent and quite watchable game of it as youngsters Dylan Lawlor and Tanatswa Nyakhuwa got their first taste of league football by caming on as subs.

An end of term type atmosphere only helped add to the basketball feel of the second half as both sides took it in turns to attack – as I said, it all made for quite an enjoyable watch, but whether it had anything to do with the sort of stuff to come in League One next season is a completely different matter.

It was a surprise to me to see Ronan Kpakio starting at right back because he had missed virtually all of the second half of the season with the injury he sustained in the FA Cup tie at Sheffield United. In the event, he did pretty well – there were one or two shakey moments during our horror quarter of an hour, but he came out of his contest with Borja Sainz, who was in such prolific form in the first half of the season, with honours even.

City have been willing to give Kpakio games from the start of the season and were willing to use him in league games in the winter, not just meaningless end of season affairs, all of which makes me think that he is probably the one out of the group of highly rated teenagers at the club who should be considered a serious candidate to be a first team regular next season.

Whether Lawlor would have got on so early were it not for Calum Chambers being sent off is doubtful, but he was introduced after thirty three minutes and, just as in the FA Cup game at Villa, was quietly impressive. Joel Bagan had been brought on to replace David Turnbull as City adjusted to the loss of Chambers, but it wasn’t until Lawlor’s introduction and the switch to a back three that a semblance of order was restored to our defending.

Nyakhuwa had less chance to shine when he came on for the last twenty five minutes as it was for Kpakio which meant he had to play in a right wing back role which I’ve never seen him play in for the under 21s and i suspect he’ll be someone who City will be looking to loan out next season.

Best of the subs though was Rubin Colwill who replaced Joe Ralls at half time, in fact I thought he was superb. With Alex Robertson off for Chris Willock at the same time as the Kpakio/Nyakhuwa switch, Rubin played the final twenty odd minutes virtually as a one man central midfield and revelled in the responsibility.

However, there is a caveat to all of this, it was a very open game which played into Colwill’s hands in many ways and his critics, of which there are an increasing number, would say”it’s all very well doing it now, but where were you the pressure was really on in recent games?”. It’s not an unreasonable question, but I’m left scratching my head as to how someone can play like he did today, and at Villa, and yet end up as almost a bit part player in the matches in which our relegation fate was decided?

On to the game then, I’ll not take up much time with it because, in truth, it was the most meaningless one we played all season. Norwich awoke from their early slumbers on the thirteen minutes when a single pass found Jack Stacey in yards of space in our penalty area and his cross was converted on the far post by the unmarked Marcelino Nunez. Horvarth may have been somewhat unsighted by Kpakio, but the ball wasn’t far away from him  as it entered the net and it didn’t look good that he was just stood there watching the ball go in.

Four minutes later Chambers was last man following weak play by Turnbull and he was always going to be sent off for bringing down Josh Sargent. It went from bad to worse when Nunez curled in the free kick past the stationery Horvarth – it was a really good finish, but, again you wondered about the goalkeeping.

Sargent then hit the upright as City remained clueless as to how to deal with the home team’s attacking movement and it was soon 3-0 when we were undone by a pass to Sainz who shot home from fifteen yards as Will Fish appealed for offside and Horvarth again decided not to get his kit dirty.

Horvarth was a spectator again when Ruairi McConville out jumped Yousef Salech to head a free kick against the crossbar a few minutes later. 

The switch to three at the back and wing backs helped City limp to half time with no more damage and forty five minutes was enough for Ralls who may now have ended his time at the club with his contract due to run out in less than two months time.

City face awkward questions about Ralls and Aaron Ramsey this summer. It seems increasingly likely that the latter will not be in contention for the manager’s job as he has indicated that he wishes to carry on playing and does not feel him doing a player/manager job is feasible. However, there can be no circumstances whereby Ramsey’s two year deal signed in summer 2023 can be called a success (thirteen league starts during that time tells you why) and is it realistic to expect Ramsey to play enough games next season to justify another playing deal given his injury record throughout his career?

Sadly, something similar now applies to Ralls who, at one time, you could almost guarantee forty plus games a season from. The fact that both of them are among the best paid players at the club is another factor to contend with and the possibility has to be there that two players who are right up there in any discussion on City’s best central midfielders of the past twenty years will be leaving us in a few weeks time.

Just like the first half, City made a decent start to the second period and this time they got a reward as Lawlor did well defensively and then showed his passing ability to find Salech who went on a great sixty yard run past three defenders which was only ended by a foul by Callum Doyle – Salech put away the spot kick nervelessly to score our first penalty of the season.

After the game there was a message board discussion as to whether a back three of Fish, Lawlor and Bagan with Kpakio and Luey Giles would be the way to go next season. Others drew attention to Norwich’s fourth goal as a reason why this would not be on. Shane Duffy was one of two unmarked Norwich players who could have nodded in Jacob Wright’s corner and you have to wonder if the veteran has ever scored an easier set piece goal.

Salech took his goal tally for less than half a season to eight (plus one in the FA Cup) when he completed the scoring as Willock’s cross from a short corner with Colwill was headed on by Callum O’Dowda into the path of the Dane who shot in from around the penalty spot.

It came as a surprise to me that it was Luton who filled the third relegation spot as they went down 5-3 at West Brom after all of the other candidates for the drop drew their games. The Hatters seemed to have turned the corner following their win here in March and had lost just the once since then before today – you would guess that they’ll be the pre season favourites to win the League One title come August.

Like the seniors, the under 21s season was spluttering to an end with three straight away losses, but they played well in beating Watford 3-1 at Cardiff City Stadium yesterday. Freddie Cook opened the scoring with a header from a free kick and Cody Twose added a fine second following good work by Raheem Conte and Josh Beecher. It was Beecher who made it 3-0 early in the second half with an emphatic finish after he’d been sent clear by a Giles pass that you really should get to watch if you can. A tremendous shot from thirty yards late on from one of the Watford centrebacks meant there was no clean sheet for City who wind up their season on Tuesday with a visit from Burnley.

The under 18s finished their season today and the Academy’s Twitter site was very eager to mention that they had clinched a second successive third placed finish in their league (this is in total contrast to the club’s continuing reluctance to mention the word “relegation/relegated” in the public domain when it comes to the senior team and you’ll not be surprised to learn that the first team’s finishing position is not being acknowledged either!). It finished 1-1 for the Academy side at Barnsley with Hayden Allmark scoring.

Locally, Treherbert Boys and Girls Club are finishing their first Ardal Leagues South West campaign strongly – they beat Bridgend Street 4-0 at home yesterday. In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division, Ton Pentre finished their campaign at the bottom of the table with a meagre five points from their twenty two games, but I daresay they’ll take some consolation from the fact that four of those points came in the closing weeks of the season to offer a little hope of better days ahead. In Division One East, Treorchy Boys and Girls Club finished a lowly ninth with twenty two points from twenty two games, but clear of the relegation places as they drew 2-2 at Nelson Cavaliers yesterday in their last match.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids., The stiffs | Tagged , , , , , | 10 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Norwich City matches.

I wonder if Aaron Ramsey had the riot act read to him after his pre game media conference for mentioning that City had been relegated? It’s not uncommon to hear from clubs at either end of league tables to talk about the “p word” and “r word” being banned in the closing weeks of a season, but City don’t seem to be alone in being reluctant to mention the latter even after the fact!

I could get increasingly angry at this being yet another example of modern day football clubs not realising what they signify within the area in which they’re based (and to the thousands of exiles who no longer live in the locality) as they fall into the trap of using corporate speak and treating supporters like customers of a shop. I admit that I was angry when I read City’s Twitter feed using the term “will be competing in League One” last Saturday after relegation was confirmed.

However, as the days have gone by and the club continues to find different, less brutal, ways of saying we’ve been relegated, I find myself laughing at how pathetic it all is. Until Tuesday, the only confirmation from anyone at the club that we’d be competing in League One because we’d been relegated came from Ramsey again when he spoke at the Player of the Season awards held hours after the West Brom match.

Tuesday saw statements released almost simultaneously from.Vincent Tan and the club. Our owner managed to mention that City had lost their place in the Championship, while the club statement spoke of us leaving the Championship and it being the first time in twenty two years that we would not be in the top two divisions, but neither of them could quite bring themselves to mention the r word! Can I urge all concerned at the club, bar Aaron Ramsey, to take a deep breath, keep calm for a few seconds and then quietly say “we’ve been relegated” – the effect will be cathartic!

Anyway, on to what Tuesday’s couple of, very brief, statements actually said. Apparently, we’re going to have a “a thorough period of review across several structures and practices”. According to Vincent Tan, “This review has begun and involves the Owner, Board, Executive Management and stakeholders. It will culminate in the appointment and announcement of a new permanent manager and management team that can sculpt and coach a competitive squad through pre-season and into the 2025/26 campaign.”

I’m afraid to this increasingly cynical fan who has reached the stage where he has been worn down by fifteen years of damaging mismanagement of the club under Vincent Tan’s ownership, that just reads as “more of the same”. I should retain some optimism though that at this lowest point in his decade and a half with us, our owner might finally, finally have realised that he does not know better than everyone else when it comes to running a football club and, maybe, we will at last start putting ourselves on an equal footing with the competition by not behaving like a very eccentric outlier.

On to the final quiz of the season then with a confession that it’s going to be interesting seeing if I can come up with two sets of seven questions for each of the teams we’re going to be facing next season!

I’ll post the answers on Sunday.

60s. Details are sketchy on Wikipedia for another of those players with a unique surname in that I’ve not come across another footballer in the domestic game with it in the sixty plus years I’ve been watching football. I remember him as a winger and can tell you that his career took him on what I’d call a pretty extensive tour of the eastern half of England with, probably, just the one dalliance with the west side and then I might be wrong in saying that. He played for two Yorkshire clubs, one on the coast and one inland on grounds that no longer exist. His second club saw him, perhaps, cross to the west as he found himself on the coast again with a team which would have had the longest name in the league at that time. From there, he stayed in the south to play on a pitch for men of the cloth perhaps and then, after the second of his stays in Yorkshire, he had a couple of years at Norwich. He won a title with his final club as he wore stripes in what could be described as England’s equivalent of Dundee before a broken leg meant he finished with football, but not with Rugby League which he played to a decent standard after his retirement from the round ball game. Can you name the player?

70s. I’m pretty sure this forward is another with a unique surname. He started off close to his birthplace with a team that had fallen on relatively hard times compared to what had been happening quite recently, but left for Norwich before a nadir was reached. He was a regular starter at Carrow Road in his three years at Carrow Road before a few months spent in a City synonymous with a form of music which would surface around a decade later. His next move took him to what was probably the closest league club to his birthplace and he moved into the veteran stage of his career during the four years he spent with them. There was then a loan move into the lower divisions to wear red on a ground that wasn’t named after a City scorer in a famous Semi Final! He finished his playing days at a club that once had our most recent manager in charge of them, but can you name the player being described?

80s. Curse Eve with consumption? (5,5)

90s. Historical ladies clothing item precedes crop top!

00s. What is the connection. between a Christmas novelty record sung by, among others, Nat King Cole, the Chipmunks, Danny Kaye, The Platters and Dick Emery, a Norwich player from this decade who scored over 200 league goals and Kevin Muscat?

10s. Another connections question. What is the connection between Norwich City in one of our promotion seasons in this decade, Everton’s Championship win in 69/70 and Luton Town?

20s. Which member of the current Norwich squad has also played in white for for the Ravens, in red for the Wings and in yellow for the Wands?

Answers

60s. Charlie Crickmore started out with Hull City before signing for what was then Bournemouth and Boscombe Athletic. He next moved to Priestfield Stadium, Gillingham before a move to Rotherham. Crickmore was with Norwich from 1968 to 1970 and then was part of a Fourth Division Championship winning Notts County squad (Meadow Lane and the City Ground in Nottingham are the closest together club grounds in England, but they’re nowhere near as close together as the couple of hundred yards which separates Dens Park and Tannadice in Dundee).

70s. Chingford born Jimmy Neighbour started with Spurs in the late 69s as they entered a period of decline following their League and Cup double early in the decade, but he left for Norwich just before their relegation in 1977. Neighbour spent a summer in America with Seattle Sounders before signing for West Ham. There was a loan move to Dean Court, Bournemouth before he finished his playing career for Cheshunt who were later managed by Omer Riza.

80s. Steve Bruce.

90s. Spencer Prior (a Spencer is a short ladies jacket from the Regency period).

00s. “All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth” is a novelty record written in the 1940s which has been covered by numerous artists. “All I want for Christmas……..” was the title of Iwan Roberts’ (who lost his two front teeth in a football related injury) book about his final season for Norwich in which he described how he deliberately trod on Wolves’ Kevin Muscat in a game as retribution for Muscat’s horror tackle on his former Norwich team mate Craig Bellamy a few years earlier.

10s. James Husband was a member of Norwich’s squad for the 17/18 season and Jimmy Husband was a member of Everton’s title winning squad of fifty plus years ago who later went on to play for Luton Town.

20s. Full back Kellen Fisher was signed from Bromley (the Ravens) where he had loan spells with Welling (the Wings) and Cray Wanderers (the Wands).

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | 2 Comments