A first midweek match of this season this week against regular opponents Derby County, here’s seven questions on them with the answers to be posted on Wednesday.
60s. This defender was a regular opponent for City in games between them and Derby during the sixties and, with five defeats and only two wins while wearing white, it’s fair to say Cardiff had the better of things in the rivalry. Derby were his second club after having started off with the team closest to his birthplace. Despite staying with this bunch of thieves for seven years, he barely made it into double figures for them when it came to league starts and so he was into his mid twenties by the time he made the move to the Baseball Ground. He played over a hundred times for the Rams before a move to a city whose team was struggling at the time and his spell with them saw a gradual improvement which featured heroics in a cup competition. His next move was a short one to a place which has its own island, of sorts, but he didn’t stay there long before he moved a few miles up the road to finish his career with Cromwell’s men – it was while he was here that he scored the only two goals of his Football League career, but can you name him?
70s. Can you identify the Derby player from the 70s, by this list of clubs from his post Derby days?
Bournemouth, Torquay, Southend, Southend, Chelsea, Brentford, Yeovil and Southend.
80s. One time record Derby buy out to con English footballing hero? (12)
90s. Although not from the area, this England international’s first three clubs were bitter east Midlands rivals. Later in his career he was signed by a club from a capital after a bid for Oleg Luzhny fell through, but he had only played four times during an injury disrupted stay when manager Jupp Heynckes transfer listed him. Since retiring from playing, he has, among other things, been Director of Football at Nottingham University and manager of a club which plays at Liberty Way these days, who is he?
00s. A familiar name to City fans, this midfielder was on the winning side on the one time he faced us in a Derby shirt. His most famous club was his first, but he was limited to just cup games there when it came to senior team action. Since then, he has played for nine other clubs with Derby being the only one he has played for both as a loan signing and a permanent player. Five of those nine have been sides from Lancashire and he also went Dutch for a while – although he is currently without a club and will be thirty six in just over a week, he is still qualified to play for Wales despite the fact that his limited international experience was at age group level for England, can you identify him?
10s. A winger we were reported to be interested in around a decade ago, he signed for Derby from a Midlands club we’ve played this season, and his two appearances against us for them both ended in draws. Since leaving Derby six years ago, he’s played for Midlands nomads, had a spell on the golden mile on loan, performed at a venue with an unusual pier and is currently at a club where the bells have been silenced, name him.
20s. Mole wax on the move last month (3,4)
Answers
60s. Bobby Ferguson began his career with Newcastle United before moving to Derby in 1962. Three years later, Ferguson was signed by Jimmy Scoular for City and he was a regular in the team which made it through to the Semi Final of the European Cup Winners’ Cup in 67/68. Pretty soon after that though, Ferguson found himself second choice to a young Gary Bell and he was tempted to drop into non league football to become player manager of Barry Town, He must have done a good job there, because, within months,, Newport County (the Ironsides) appointed him in the same role making him the youngest boss in the Football League at 31. Newport had a disastrous time of it in their second season under Ferguson’s management however and he lasted barely three months in 70/71 before he sacked following a 6-1 FA Cup defeat at non league Barnet. However, Ferguson stayed on at Newport as a player and saw out the rest of the season at the club.
70s. Dave Webb played for Derby at the end of the seventies before going on to managed the clubs listed in the question – he was player manager at Bournemouth and Torquay.
80s. (David) Swindlehurst was Derby’s record signing when he signed for Derby from Crystal Palace for a fee of £410.000 in 1980.
90s. Gary Charles was loaned to Leicester City by his first club, Nottingham Forest before he signed for Derby in 1993. Two years later, he signed for Villa before moving on to Benfica where the Injuries that dogged him through his career kicked in again. Charles then moved close to his Newham birthplace by signing for West Ham, but he barely played for them and, after a short loan move to Birmingham, he retired in 2002 – Charles had a try at management with a three month spell at Nuneaton Town in 2018.
00s. David Jones played for Derby in their 3-1 win over us in 2006/07 while on loan from Manchester United – there had been earlier loans for him to Preston and NEC of the Netherlands. Jones signed permanently for the Rams during the summer following their promotion, but his only season with them was the one which saw them being generally accepted as the worst team ever to have played Premier League football. Jones moved on to Wolves and then Wigan where he was loaned to Blackburn for a while before becoming a regular under Sean Dyche at Burnley, the then had three years at Sheffield Wednesday and, following his release by them early this year, played a few games for Oldham, but was not offered a contract with them for this season. Qualified to play for England and Wales, Southport born Jones turned down the latter and his only international experience has been a single substitute’s appearance for the former at under 21 level.
10s. Northampton’s Michael Jacobs was linked with City for a while before he chose to sign for Derby upon the expiry of his contract in the summer of 2012. He started in the 1-1 draw at Pride Park during City’s Championship winning season and came on as a sub when the teams drew by the same score in Cardiff a few months later. Jacobs was first loaned to and then signed permanently by Wolves and he had a short spell at Blackpool on loan while at the Molineux club. Jacobs spent five years at Wigan before signing for Portsmouth during the summer when his contract ran out.
20s. Max Lowe was transferred from Derby to Sheffield United last month.
Four matches or three hundred and sixty minutes of football played at Cardiff City Stadium and City have been in the lead for a big, fat zero minutes in them, while I make it they have trailed for something like half of that time.
Middlesbrough joined Sheffield Wednesday, Reading and Bournemouth in scoring the first goal of the game at City’s ground this season, but, at least, just as on Wednesday against Bournemouth, we were able to avoid the defeats we suffered in our opening pair of home matches.
Nevertheless, although we are currently in an era where playing at home is not the advantage that it has been throughout our football supporting lives, two 1-1 draws on your own ground in the space of three days does rather undo the good work in gaining a draw at Blackburn and a win at Preston. Therefore, with two wins, two losses and three draws with a goal difference of nil, we remain the epitome of a mid table outfit reliant once again on getting wins away from home in the coming week from at least one of the trips to Derby and QPR to become something better than that.
However, my feeling at the final whistle today was much the same as it was on Wednesday in that there was a sense of relief that at least we got something out of a match we looked like losing at half time – albeit for entirely different reasons.
In midweek, a fluent and positive Bournemouth side took us on in a football match and I thought they showed themselves to be a little better at it than us even if we were encouragingly enterprising in the second half and offered a definite promise of better things to come.
I described Wednesday’s game as the best I’d seen in the Championship this season (not quite as big a compliment as it might appear to be given how few of them I’ve watched up to now), but today’s match was never going to be a candidate to better the entertainment level of Wednesday – Middlesbrough came to stifle us and for long stretches of the game, it looked like they would succeed in their aim.
I won’t be hypocritical and go off on a bit of a rant about how boring Middlesbrough were for much of the time, because I used to praise Neil Warnock’s City teams when they went away and did the sort of job on Championship sides that his current team threatened to do on us today.
Neil Warnock will be seventy two in just over a month’s time, so he’s hardly likely to have a road to Damascus like conversion now when it comes to his footballing philosophy is he? His team looked to slow the game down whenever they could (they were doing this even before they went 1-0 up in the thirty fifth minute) and generally “played” a poor referee to perfection.
Warnock sides are spoilers and after their no show back in July when their phobia about playing on their own ground gave us a big helping hand in the first meeting between the teams since he left Cardiff, you can’t help but grudgingly admire the way our old manager has drilled what is a squad which hasn’t changed too much since last season into one which seems unlikely to struggle in the same manner as they did in 19/20.
Boro lost by a single goal at Watford in their opening game, but are unbeaten since then and came into today’s match having had an excellent pair of results against the teams who were occupying the top two positions in the table. A week ago, they ended Reading’s 100 per cent record by drawing 0-0 with them at the Riverside Stadium and then they went to Ashton Gate and inflicted a first defeat on the wurzels as they cashed in on a goalkeeping clanger to score with the only on target goal attempt either side managed in the game!
Boro kept up their perfect conversion rate by scoring with their only on target effort of the ninety minutes today. It came when their match winner at Bristol, George Saville, glanced in a header from the first “normal” corner they tried – they had opted for very un Warnock like short corners before that.
After the game Neil Harris, rightly, bemoaned defending which saw us concede a third set piece goal at home this season – for all of the talk we hear about how dangerous we are from attacking set pieces, we remain pretty poor at defending them given how big a side we are.
With one of our two injured full backs, Jordi Osei-Tutu, returning, Joel Bagan kept his place in the starting eleven while Leandro Bacuna dropped to the bench along with Marlon Pack in what looked like squad rotation type changes – similarly, Robert Glatzel and Junior Hoilett stood down to accommodate the return of Keiffer Moore and a first start of the season for Josh Murphy.
All of this meant that, with Harry Wilson playing in a Lee Tomlin type position, Joe Ralls and Will Vaulks tended to find themselves outnumbered by Boro’s trio of Johnny Howson, Sam Morsey and Saville in central midfield.
Although Middlesbrough made little of their extra midfield resources in terms of domination of the ball (not surprisingly given who the opposing manager was, we had fifty nine per cent of the possession today), but they helped ensure there was very little continuity in our play as our most dangerous first half moments tended to spring from things like quickly taken throw ins or individual efforts arising from rare moments when we succeeded in lifting the match out of its slow tempo.
A clever effort by Wilson which glanced off the top of the net, an effort blazed high and wide by Moore and a better attempt by the same player that rippled the outside netting from twenty five yards looked to be the sum total of our first half efforts until Murphy took aim from distance and forced visiting goalkeeper Marcus Bettinelli into a diving save.
The fact that City were unable to build any attacking momentum had me thinking that it would need something special from one of our four front players to get us on terms because we were not forcing corners and the constant, steady rain was not helping Vaulks when it came to his long throws.
A Cardiff equaliser looked a very long way off in the opening ten minutes or so of the second half though as Boro forced four corners without causing too much of a concern from any of them. Still, they were looking much more likely scorers of the game’s second goal than us as a lethargic City team struggled to get out of their own half.
When City did manage to put something together in an attacking sense, the result was that Bettinelli was forced to tip over a side footed effort from Vaulks from just outside the penalty area. Having finally got their first corner, City were to have three more in the half an hour or so that remained and, with the rain easing enough to allow Vaulks to get more distance and pace on his throws, we were able to build that attacking momentum – although, as so often with Cardiff, it was primarily set piece orientated.
City players, usually Sean Morrison, were consistently able to get their heads to the free kicks, corners and throw ins that came into the Boro penalty, but co commentator Steve Morrison could often be heard in the background bemoaning the lack of anticipation of our players as they failed to cash in on a series of second balls that bobbed dangerously about close to the visitor’s goal.
You could see what Morrison meant on a few occasions when City finally began to put in some quality crosses as Began, Sheyi Ojo and late sub Hoilett all followed Wilson’s example with deliveries that might have led to a winning goal which I would say their pressure in the final third of the match merited.
Perhaps the best example of the lack of anticipation that frustrated commentator Morrison arrived when Moore headed across the face of goal from beyond the far post, it would have been a simple tap in for a Chopra, Earnie, Neil Harris or even a Rhys Healey, but we don’t have that sort of instinctive goal poacher these days.
It wasn’t just in terms of a lack of a fox in the box type that City were found wanting as seventeen goal attempts (a figure like that should have a better reward than just one goal) only produced three on target efforts.
I’ve mentioned the first two of them with those efforts from Murphy and Vaulks which forced Betennelli into urgent action and the third one was our goal. In typical Cardiff fashion, it came from a set piece as Wilson’s corner was met fifteen yards out by an unmarked Moore, once again in a position beyond the far post. The pace Moore was able to get on his header was always likely to cause a problem on the sodden, skiddy pitch and sub Glatzel, who livened up our attacking game, got a touch on the ball before it was turned over the line from about three yards out by Ojo to complete a good week for the winger on loan from Liverpool with his second goal during that period.
Of course, the afternoon wouldn’t have been complete without a Warnock tirade against one or all of the officials. I thought ref John Brooks (a new name to me) was pretty poor all afternoon and a lot of the time, it was City who suffered through his inability to notice what were pretty obvious fouls on our players.
However, Warnock surely had a point regarding this game when he spoke of how his team had been robbed of four points in their last three matches because of a goal being disallowed against Reading for offside and now Vaulks’ obstruction on Paddy McNair as the corner from which we scored came in – our former manager was railing against “obvious bloody decisions” which had gone against his team.
I thought Glatzel and Moore up front worked pretty well when the German came on for Murphy and it’s good to see Ojo turning into a better signing than I thought he would be. Bagan again looked at home at this level and, in the second half especially when he hit some well thought out passes which suggested a quality and vision that some of his more senior colleagues could only dream about.
However, for a second time this season, a full back returning from injury had to go off with a recurrence suggesting they had been brought back too early – Joe Bennett hasn’t been seen since he went off with less than a quarter of an hour played at Blackburn and here Osei-Tutu had to leave the pitch with a quarter of the match left to be replaced by Bacuna who epitomized City’s desire to win the game by popping up in the Boro penalty area on plenty of occasions.
Unfortunately, it was a fourth straight defeat for the Academy team today at Barnsley and the most frustrating thing about that record is that they have had a half time lead in at least three of them.Today, after missing a penalty, they turned around 2-1 ahead and ended up losing 3-2 with their goals coming from newly signed professional Caleb Hughes from the penalty spot and Taylor Jones.
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.
Here are the reviews which have been posted on Amazon about the book so far;-
“As the quintessential Blogmeister with his “Mauve and Yellow Army” Paul Evans has been producing comprehensive and incisive reports on Cardiff City performances for a number of years. His capacity for a staggering amount of hard work and constantly fair-minded comments which characterise his writings are equally apparent in this new book. It revives so many pleasant memories of times gone by and will inevitably appeal primarily to the nostalgia of an older generation. Yet it has much to interest not only Cardiff City supporters of all ages but also anyone with an interest in professional football in general — including my wife whose favourite, back in the day, was John Toshack.”
“A great read about a very average football club having one of its more memorable seasons. I will admit to being a Cardiff follower and have followed the author through his blog and on a message board some I am somewhat biased. However, this is an interesting and engaging read throughout and certainly brings back memories of my first year as a season ticket holder. Unlike the team this book does not let you down and I throughly recommend it regardless of what team you follow .”
“Another excellent piece of work from Paul. I’m just old enough to remember this and saw about half a dozen of the games during the season that I can remember. I didn’t get to see the Real Madrid game (it was a school night and my father didn’t want to take me) but this has been a great opportunity to refresh many of the other stories. What gives added value are the extra bits included from paper cuttings that also give a falvour of the time – especially the bit about the building of the A470. A great read!”
“As a lifelong Cardiff city supporter, I found this book really fascinating. The author is obviously a keen supporter himself, but he has put into words a whole wealth of information. Well done”
“My father is 75 this year and always says ‘I was there when City beat Real Madrid’. A great book and a trip down memory lane for those City fans who can remember.”
and
“Reports on each match of City’s most eventful season to date. Good background stuff about life at that time as well.”
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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