Seven decades of Cardiff City v Queens Park Rangers matches.

A return to the ground where we began this awful year with an abysmal result. City are due a result at Loftus Road, but, even if it ends up as another 6-1 humiliation, there’s still the seven decades quiz to enjoy! Seven QPR related questions with the answers to be posted on here over the weekend.

60s. He was a defender who won his only encounter with City while at QPR and stayed in London throughout his career in England before finishing it in a far off country on another continent. He died at the age of just fifty four and Terry Venables said the following about him after his death;-

“It’s like being hit by a sledgehammer, I can’t take it in, he was the greatest friend a man could have. Through all the times I’ve had when it was really bad, he would ring me every day. My thoughts are now with Jan, Nicola, Christian and Karl.”

Jimmy Hill observed that;-

“He was a very unusual mix – tough on the field, an excellent, astute businessman and one of the boys at the same time, he was a very rounded character, as cheeky as they come.”

It was rumoured that he joined QPR after the manager of his previous team attempted to instil a more professional attitude at the club, but who is he?

70s. Something of a utility player who is probably best remembered as a winger/midfielder, he started off at a club close to his birthplace and scored a historic, but ultimately insignificant, goal for them as a teenager. Moving on to another club close by, his most settled spell came over the next six years playing over two hundred and twenty league matches while wearing a unique kit for most of them. He next joined a Midlands giant in decline for a season before he arrived at QPR. He only scored twice during his three seasons in London, but one of those goals came against City towards the end of his time there. Next he played for gold newcomers and then went overseas to turn out for some pyramid builders before returning to the UK to play at a spotty stadium (he also had a later spell as manager here) and then finishing his playing days in Yorkshire at a ground named after a horse carriage – do you know who he is?   

80s. Wear slices (3,6)?

90s. Ken leaving Liverpool initially to become QPR “legend” (5,6).

00s. He had a move to Darlington blocked by the Home Office, but a loan deal was later arranged to Yorkshire city gents and his form while with them persuaded QPR to sign him permanently. He became a solid and reliable member of their team in the next few years despite a couple of red cards in his second season (he also made a losing visit to Ninian Park that season) and it came as something of a surprise when they sold him to much loved songbirds where he also saw red on his league debut. Now getting to the veteran stage, he didn’t make the expected impact at his new club and was loaned and then sold permanently to bigger, louder birds with criminal tendencies. After that, he paid a couple of visits to Malaysia and now can be found managing his first club looking out over all of the ships. Name him.

10s. He’s played for AFC Wallingford, Windsor and Eton, Burnham, Hayes and Yeading, Reading Town and Marlow among others and featured twice in a season for QPR against us during this decade. He’s now at MK Dons having arrived there from QPR via a couple of clubs in red to the west and Wild Rovers to the north, do you know who he is?

20s. Who played his last league game for us in the 6-1 defeat at Loftus Road on New Year’s Day?

Answers

60s. Bobby Keetch started his career with West Ham, but didn’t play a first team game for them before signing for Fulham in 1959. It took him another three years to break into the first team, but he scored a couple of goals in his hundred or so appearances for them before moving on to QPR in 1966. One of his fifty odd league appearances for the Loftus Road side came in a 1-0 home win over City on Good Friday 1968 as they closed in on a promotion to the First division – four days later, the teams met again and it was City who scored the only goal of the match this time. Keetch ended his career in South Africa with Durban City and when he died of a stroke in 1996, Fulham’s Chairman Jimmy Hill said that the club’s financial situation was so grave that they would not be able to afford a wreath for his funeral – it’s believed a supporter of the club came forward with the money to pay for one.

70s. Burnley born Mike Ferguson signed for Accrington Stanley as a youngster and scored their last goal before they dropped out of the Football League in 1962. Moving on to Blackburn, he was a regular with them before signing for Aston Villa in 1968 and then QPR a year later. He played nearly seventy league matches for them in the next three season with one of the two goals he managed coming in a season ending 3-0 win over us at Loftus Road in May 1972. Cambridge United were his next port of call before he moved to America to play for Los Angeles Aztecs. He was manager of Rochdale a couple of years after playing for them on his return to England and ended his playing career at the Shay (a name for a light horse drawn travel carriage) with Halifax.

80s. Don Shanks.

90s. Kevin Gallen.

00s. Damian Stewart was due to leave Jamaican club Harbour View for Darlington until the Home Office pulled the plug on the deal. Bradford City were able to take him on loan though and he then signed for QPR for whom he made getting on for two hundred appearances for between 2006 and 2010 (he was in the QPR side beaten 3-1 by City at Ninian Park in January 2008 in Aaron Ramsey’s first league appearance for us). Moving on to Bristol City and then Notts County, Stewart played for a couple of clubs in Malaysia by returning to Jamaica where he currently manages Harbour View.

10s. Ben Gladwin played for a variety of non league sides before breaking through with some style into league football with Swindon. He signed for QPR in a joint deal which saw Massimo Luongo move from the County Ground and started in a 2-2 draw (he came on as a sub in the goalless draw in the return match between the sides some eight months later). Gladwin suffered injuries in recent years as he was loaned out to Swindon (twice) and Bristol City before signing permanently for Blackburn who released him this year and signed a deal for this season with MK Dons.

20s. Neil Etheridge.

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Same script as previous two matches not good enough for stuttering Cardiff.

Cardiff City’s season spluttered along tonight with their fourth draw in eight games as they finished level 1-1 against a Derby County side that had not taken a point or even scored a goal at Pride Park before they faced us.

For the third successive match, City conceded the first goal (their first one in an away match this season) to go in one down at the interval only to come back in the second half to level things up. On the face of it, being able to come back from a losing position, particularly away from home, is a decent and acceptable outcome – especially when tonight’s draw means we have not lost in five games, but, based on the four matches I’ve been able to watch, we’re not playing well.

A record of won two, drawn four, lost two, goals for seven, goals against seven is suggestive of dull football and when you think that the matches I’ve seen (Forest, Preston, Bournemouth and Middlesbrough) probably represent most of our better efforts, you have to think that “dull” is a fair way to describe us.

Certainly, the commentary I listened to on Radio Wales tonight made it sound as if I wasn’t missing much. I’ve nothing against Rob Phillips, in fact I’ve said on here this season that I like his commentaries, but I did groan to myself when I switched on and heard his voice because the three previous games I’ve listened to with him describing the action were the dreadful League Cup loss at Northampton and the limp home defeats to Sheffield Wednesday and Reading.

I shouldn’t jump to too many conclusions when I’ve not seen anything of the game yet, but, based on those matches I have watched, the commentary provided by Mr Phillips, backed up by summariser Kevin Ratcliffe, did not come as too much of a shock.

Despite Ratcliffe being quite impressed by our first five minutes or so, there was nothing sounding like we were causing the home defence any alarms and things got worse from there – in fact, until we woke up somewhat in the final moments of the half, I heard nothing to indicate we were in the game as an attacking force.

Hardly surprisingly given their poor home results and not much better away return, Derby were pretty cautious themselves early on, but they were growing into the game and it was they who had done all of the worthwhile attacking before they took the lead on twenty four minutes when Martin Waghorn curled in a free kick for a second successive game after Welsh international Tom Lawrence was fouled by Joe Ralls after City had, not for the first time, conceded possession in a dangerous area with their trademark poor passing.

With the arrival of Harry Wilson to join Lee Tomlin I had assumed we’d seen the last of Ralls as our most attacking central midfielder, but with Tomlin still not quite ready for a return following his suspension and Wilson absent from the eighteen with what had to surely be an injury of his own, I was wrong – Ralls was our number ten with Marlon Pack and Will Vaulks behind him.

There was mixed news when it came to our full backs with Leandro Bacuna at right back because of the injury which forced Jordi Osei-Tutu off on Saturday (it looks as if the loan signing from Arsenal will be out for between four and six weeks), while Joe Bennett was able to return on the left in place of Joel Bagan who had done all that was asked of him in the previous two matches. While Bennett’s return was understandable in many ways, it also struck me as typically Cardiff City in that the young player steps down as a matter of course despite having played better than quite a few of his seniors while he was in the team.

For the twenty minutes or so after Derby scored, the impression I got from the commentary was that they were very comfortable as City, with their midfield three being bettered by the home team’s two according to Kevin Ratcliffe, struggled away with our isolated front man Keiffer Moore getting no service worthy of the name.

However, the last minute or two offered some hope as Moore nodded a Vaulks cross onto the outside of a post and we forced a couple of corners, one of which led to a fleeting chance for Junior Hoilett, back in the side in place of Josh Murphy, which he lofted over from fifteen yards out.

Derby did have one last opportunity to again get the first touch on a corner of their own as City again showed the fallibility in defending set pieces that has cost them so much in home games and there could be little doubt that they were fully worth their lead at half time.

The second period started promisingly when Hoilett also hit the woodwork with a header from a Sheyi Ojo cross and we were definitely giving a better account of ourselves, but, even with a Wilson or a Tomlin on the pitch, we do not create a great deal of chances and Robert Glatzel was introduced just after the hour mark for Vaulks.

City had played their best football in Saturday’s grim draw with Middlesbrough when Glatzel came on to accompany Moore and while that was also probably true here, there was not a great deal coming down the radio commentary to suggest that we were going to get on terms as the match moved into its final quarter of an hour.

However, Ojo, who seems to be the City winger most likely to make something happen at the moment, got himself an assist to go with his couple of recent goals when he sent Moore through and the striker, who has hardly been having chances galore created for him since his brace of goals in our second match at Forest, calmly tucked his shot past Kelle Roos, who was deputising in the Derby goal for the injured David Marshall.

Both sides looked for a winning goal after that without really suggesting they had it in them to find one and so City finished up with a draw which has seen the first rumblings of discontent against our manager on the messageboard I use tonight – I think that’s uncalled for at the moment, but a return of ten points from eight games and a position just below halfway in the table seems about right based on what we’ve done so far.

A quick word about a couple of games played yesterday. First, our Under 23 side avoided defeat for the first time this season when they deservedly beat Hull 2-0 at Leckwith. Chanka Zimba’s early goal was a gift from the visitors as they got in a mess while trying to play out from the back and Isaak Davies’ header from a Keiron Evans cross midway through the second half made sure of the points. Filip Benkovic, the Croatian defender on loan from Leicester, played seventy five increasingly impressive minutes and there was a great save from George Ratcliffe in added time to preserve his clean sheet, but best City player for me was left back Dan Martin.

An hour or so after that match finished, the Welsh women’s team faced one of the real world powers of the women’s game in Norway in a qualifying game for the Euros at Cardiff City Stadium and, for the second time, gave them a tough test before being beaten 1-0.

To be honest, Wales were very, very defensive in their outlook until Norway scored with an hour played, but then they rattled the visitors somewhat in the last quarter of an hour or so to raise questions about their approach for the first two thirds of the game.

As it is, Wales look like being pipped by a Northern Irish side which cashed in on a sloppy early Welsh performance to draw 2-2 at Rodney Parade and It’s those two away goals that are probably going to cost the Welsh ladies dear in the qualification process when Norway’s two 6-0 wins over the Northern Irish suggest strongly that we’re the side who should be finishing second in the group if we had played to our potential throughout.

Can I also remind you about my recently published book Real Madrid and all that which is available in e book and paperback formats and can only be purchased from Amazon.

I’d like to thank all of those who have posted a review of the book so far – it goes without saying that I’m very pleased with what the feedback has been like up to now!

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.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The stiffs, Women's football | Tagged , | 4 Comments