Composed Brighton expose Cardiff limitations on and off the pitch.

Well, it was fun while it lasted, but Cardiff City’s improbable run all the way through to the Second Round of the League Cup came to an end tonight with a 2-0 home defeat by Premier League side Brighton.

I make no apologies for the somewhat hyperbolic and unjustified language in my first paragraph,  my thinking was that when you have a record in the cup competitions like we do since we reached the 2012 Final of this tournament, anything that isn’t a First Round exit constitutes a cup adventure!

The truth of the matter is that made City eight changes from the team which beat Millwall on Saturday with only the three central defenders remaining in the starting line up, but one of those only lasted thirty five minutes before he was replaced by a debutant who thus joined two others who were making their first appearances in the senior side, so the defeat was, up to a point, understandable..

To put some names to all of that, captain Sean Morrison went off after being unable to shake off an injury he’d suffered about ten minutes earlier – the Radio Wales commentators sounded pretty hopeful that Morrison’s withdrawal was a precautionary measure and that he will be okay for the Severnside Derby on Saturday. Him going off gave a chance to Ollie Denham, the teenage ex Manchester United defender who joined us at the start of last season.

I’m sorry, but I don’t know the name of the former Welsh international who was the co commentator, but she was pretty impressed by Denham, as she was with one of the others making a first start, Sam Bowen, who she rated as our best player when she spoke about him about an hour into the game.

Bowen played in his natural position in central midfield, maybe it would have been better though if he had been chosen in the right wing back role he occupied in a couple of our pre season matches. I say that, because the other debutant, Tavio D’Almeida, occupied that position despite him never having played there, as far as I can remember, during what must now be two years with City.

D’Almeida‘s usual position is deep lying central midfield, but, having been out injured for much of last season, he returned to play as one of a back three for our Development team in much the same sort of experiment that saw Marlon Pack play in defence towards the end of last season. Like Pack, D’Almeida would improve the passing out from the back of the City team if he was used in a back three, but the big question is would his defending be up to the job?

That’s why I thought using this game to see how D’Almeida fared at the back seemed a good way to go or, failing that, he could have slotted in there when Morrison went off. Instead, he was asked to make his first team debut in an unfamiliar position and, although he grew into the role as the match went on apparently, he was singled out for criticism for his role in the early goal which ensured the visitors enjoyed a dominant first half in which they were seemingly worth more than a single goal lead.

Having now seen that goal, I think there was, just as with criticism of Joel Bagan following Peterborough’s second one last week, an element of blame the youngster going on there when far more responsibility lay with more experienced players. At Peterborough, Perry Ng was at fault first and foremost for being beaten so easily as last man, while last night, the three experienced centrebacks left a huge gap through the middle while also pushing up too far, thereby allowing Polish international Jakub Moder to seize on to a through ball and score easily.

The goal illustrated that while Mick McCarthy has made three at the back work a lot more effectively than the two Neil’s ever did and Curtis Nelson’s relative speed and good defensive instincts have helped us improve at the back, talk about us having a good defence, which I hear so often, should be qualified to acknowledge that we’re strong when dealing with an aerial assault, but teams utilising more subtle stuff like pace and movement, which you find more of in the Premier League, often make us look a lot less secure.

City fared better in the second half, hitting the crossbar through James Collins and forcing visiting captain Jason Steele into some good saves, but, just as in the first period, they conceded a soft goal stemming from them handing over possession (this time Will Vaulks was responsible) to Brighton ten minutes into the half and there was no way back for us from there.

Manager Mick McCarthy was honest in his post match assessment saying City had been “terrific” in the second half, but they had been beaten by a better team. Such a statement would be likely to be heard you would have thought if your team, showing changes galore, had lost to a side from a division above you, but then you discover that Brighton made eleven changes themselves from the team which beat Watford on the weekend.

The Brighton side was a mixture home produced youngsters and players brought in from abroad and it was when the commentator started to say how much these players had cost that I started to get a bit agitated.

There were a few that cost in the region of £5 million, but it was the revelation that Enoch Mwepu had cost Brighton £20 million this summer that couldn’t help but make me start making an unflattering comparison between them and us.

My mind went back to what I’m pretty sure was the last time we played Brighton at home in a night match. It was in February 2015 and it was a strong contender for the worst game ever played at our new ground as both sides had a single effort on target in a miserable 0-0 stalemate.

After that match, Chris Hughton, the Brighton manager, spoke of his satisfaction at having gained an away point in their battle to avoid the drop into the third tier of the domestic structure and it’s instructive to trace Brighton’s progress since then.

Hughton kept them up, got them promoted two years later and he kept them in the Premier League  in the next two seasons, yet he was still sacked at end of the 18/19 campaign because the Board at the club wanted to move away from the cautious approach adopted by their successful manager and go for a more progressive style under Graham Potter.

It was a risky move, but it is a gamble that has definitely succeeded because Brighton now have a younger, much more entertaining and successful side that has kept their place in the top tier pretty comfortably and their recruitment is both shrewd and enterprising. They have also been able to bring the occasional player from their Academy through to the first team including Ben White who was transferred to Arsenal this summer at a price that more than pays for the club’s summer recruitment.

I’m not telling the whole story there though because in Hughton’s last season they came close to being relegated. Brighton we’re the one team I always thought we had a chance of overhauling to escape relegation in 18/19. Of course, their supporters will tell me to look at the league table for that season and say to me we were better than you, but I maintain that from November onwards, we were the better side – we did the double over them with a pretty fortunate 2-1 home win and a comfortable 2-0 victory at the Amex after which I was as confident as I ever got that we could send them down at our expense.

The point is though City and Brighton were very closely matched sides a little over two years ago and then Brighton made the most of their escape by making bold and progressive changes. In 2015 we were above Brighton in the table when we played out that awful 0-0 draw and four years later there was very little between the teams.

I just hope that, after watching the latest meeting between the two clubs, City Board members compare their short termism, which never sees them look beyond the end of any season, their cautious managerial appointments and their hit and mostly miss recruitment with the club that beat us pretty comfortably tonight.

Cardiff and Brighton are clubs that strike me as being about the same size and having around the same amount of potential, while I’d say we have slightly the more illustrious history – we could be in the position they are in now with different, more clued in attitudes at the top of our club.

It’s the time of year again when I ask readers of Mauve and Yellow Army to make a contribution towards its running costs. Before I go into detail about this, I should, once again, offer my sincere thanks to all of you who have helped ensure the future of the blog over the past three years through a mixture of monthly payments via Patreon, monthly Standing Orders into my bank account and once a year payments via bank transfer, PayPal, cheque and cash.

The first time I made this request for assistance, it was prompted by a need for funds to pay for three yearly web hosting costs which, frankly, I was in no position to meet following my move of house a few months earlier. However, I’m pleased to say that, this time around, the web hosting bill was settled back in June with none of the problems there were back in 2018.

Therefore, any monies received this year will go towards other running costs and, although it’s too early yet to make any formal commitments despite so many of the pandemic restrictions in Wales being lifted recently, I am minded to do another review of a season from the past book to follow on from “Real Madrid and all that” which looked back on the 1970/71 campaign. At the moment 1975/76, the first promotion season I experienced, looks to be favourite for the book treatment, which would mean a lot more trips back and forth to Cardiff than my finances have become used to over the past year and a half – hopefully, the majority of them will not have to be made via Radyr Cheyne!

As always, the blog will still be free to read for anyone who chooses not to make a donation towards its running costs and, apart from the one in the top right hand corner which is to do with Google Ads, you will never have to bother about installing an ad blocker to read this site because there will never be any.

Finally, as mentioned earlier, donations can be made through Patreon, PayPal, by bank transfer, cheque, Standing Order/Direct Debit and cash, e-mail me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further payment details.

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Two more for Championship top scorer Flint as, amazingly, a Cardiff v Millwall game doesn’t end in a draw!

As I endured the thud and blunder first half of Cardiff City’s 3-1 win over Millwall this afternoon, I tried to remember a few highlights from all of those drawn games we’ve seen at our stadium against the London side since Rudy Gestede’s early goal proved decisive in our Championship winning 12/13 campaign.

It didn’t take me long, I could recall a tremendous free kick from Jed Wallace on Boxing Day 2019 to get Millwall back on terms, but apart from that, all of the 0-0 and 1-1 draws (I’m guessing there must have been six or seven of them) merged into a maelstrom of giant centrebacks nodding away punts from goalkeepers and opposing defenders, of midfielders bumping into each other as they tried to find a yard of space and mishit shots from strikers rolling gently into keeper’s hands.

Yes, a visit from Millwall, who have been one of our few serious rivals for the title of Championship kings of hoofball over the past decade, has been the signal for some pretty awful football at Cardiff City Stadium, but I’m not holding them solely responsible for that – far from it, if anything, as the home side, we’ve been more culpable, because the onus has been on us to try to force the issue.

That opening forty five minutes, in fact, make it the opening hour, was right down there in the recent tradition of games between the two teams as many supporters, including me, looked on in the forlorn hope that a game of football might break out somewhere on the pitch.

If I had to pick out a couple of things to typify the mess of bruising, often unpunished, fouls and outbreaks of not very good head tennis which was passing for entertainment in what I’ve sometimes seen described of the fourth best league in Europe, it would be the couple of corners Millwall had in front of the Canton Stand where I’d say about fourteen of the players were wedged into the six yard box waiting for an in swinging delivery – I could only scratch my head as to how “the beautiful game” had become something akin to a rugby scrum before the scrum half puts the ball in.

What action there was in a first half which I would say was very slightly edged by the visitors consisted off an excellent Curtis Nelson block of a Benik Afobe close range shot and a Keiffer Moore header after some great work by Tom Sang, in for Perry Ng, which bounced on the top of the crossbar and over just before the half time whistle.

Moore was part of an all Welsh front three which saw him accompanied by Mark Harris and Rubin Colwill that had definitely been an improvement on what had gone before when they were introduced as subs in midweek at Peterborough. However, although Harris showed some nice touches at times and Colwill improved somewhat after the break following an anonymous first forty five minutes, they couldn’t be called a success here.

Harris and Colwill were still on the pitch as City finally began to get what had been a quiet crowd involved with a spell of sustained pressure which at least led to a few uncomfortable moments for the visitors without suggesting that a goal was imminent, but it was the introduction of Ryan Giles and Leandro Bacuna which helped transform the match.

Bacuna, with his energy and mobility, played his part, but it was Giles who supplied the quality the game had been crying out for.

If anyone had suggested during the first three quarters of the match that the final portion of it would see four goals scored, the woodwork struck, a very close miss for City and a central defender robbed of a hat trick with a clearance off the line by a defender, they would have been greeted with sympathetic looks, eyebrows raised and invitations to go to a cool, dark corner and calm down a bit.

Giles, who I thought had been little more than okay at Peterborough, made his first impact by being body checked by centre back Jake Cooper for what was an overdue first Millwall booking. The free kick was swung in by Giles from a position about thirty five yards from goal out on City’s right and it dropped some five yards from goal on to the head of an unmarked Aden Flint who was never going to miss from such a position after his two goals in midweek.

My mate who sits next to me is a former goalkeeper, only at parks level mind, and his first reaction was to blame Millwall keeper Bartosz Bialkowski for not coming out to try and gather the cross, but, having seen replays of the goal, he agreed with me that the quality of Giles’ free kick took both defenders and keeper out of the game.

If Giles’ cross for the first goal was superb, the one he came up with four minutes later for the second one was truly something to behold. Maybe I imagined it, but I’ll swear that I heard a collective rendition of the word “cross” within about a second of the ball leaving Giles’ foot as the  crowd realised that this was going to be a beauty as well. The ball in this time came from virtually on the bye line on the left, but was again delivered to the far post where who else but Flint leapt to head back across Bialkowski into the opposite corner of the goal.

For me, this was the best of the four goals Flint has scored in the past four days to install him, incredibly, as the Championship’s leading scorer at this early stage of this season – if any stat tells you what Cardiff City are all about in these first few weeks of the 21/22 second tier, this has to be the one!

Of course, anyone who has seen much of Millwall would know that they are hardly the type of side that will lay down and accept a 2-0 beating like good little boys and the next ten minutes were theirs as Afobe punished substandard defending (generally, I thought we defended pretty well mind) to reduce the arrears with a shot that got a slight deflection on seventy six minutes. A few minutes later came what, for me, was the decisive moment of the game when former City man Scott Malone was on the end of a cross some eight yards from goal with just Dillon Phillips to beat  – he should have scored, but, instead, his shot came back off the crossbar.

If Millwall had equalised then, especially having been 2-0 a few minutes earlier, I don’t believe there would have been any way City would have promptly gone up the pitch and scored a game settling third shortly afterwards. This time, the goal was a simple one as Sean Morrison capitalised on very un Millwall like defending to glance in a Marlon Pack long throw on the near post.

I was heartened to see City looking to add to their lead in the five minutes of added time rather than take the ball to the corners to waste time as they’ve often done in the past when two goals clear and it nearly paid off as Flint saw another header cleared off the line and James Collins, a late substitute for Moore, was just wide as he stretched for a low cross by Sang.

So, City stand sixth in the table with two wins and two draws from their four league matches (plus the League Cup win over Sutton). When you also consider that we were unbeaten in our last six games of last season, eleven competitive matches without defeat has to mean that we’re in a good place.

However, on the phone in I listened to driving home and on the messageboard I looked at when I got in, there was much talk of a lack of creativity in open play and a pragmatic, unattractive style of play from City.

Now, I think I’ve made my feelings clear on this over the last few months (and years!) and vowed to cut back on my criticism of our style last weekend, but I hope you will indulge me as I comment on the pretty critical reaction I’ve seen and heard to our win.

For me, there are two separate things at play here. First, Rob Phillips was asking on his phone in if City fans had any feelings about the fact that all eight of our Championship goals have come from headers (they’ve also all been scored in the second half).

Speaking as someone who has very occasionally had a bit of a dig at the number of set piece goals we score, I must say that in truth it doesn’t bother me in the slightest and it certainly doesn’t bother me that, at the moment, we’re only scoring headers this season.

Surely, every side is entitled to play to their strengths or are we supposed to say to Ryan Giles, “look, we know you’re a superb crosser of the ball, but would you mind awfully if you stopped them from now on because we don’t like the type of goals we score from them?”.

In an era where Liverpool are employing a long throw coach, there is a growing acceptance of the importance of set pieces and, if we happen to be good at them, fine, let’s take as much advantage of them as we can.

The second matter is our lack of creativity. This is different, because here we’re talking about a weakness, rather than a strength.

As someone who has always tended to pin the blame for this on our central midfielders, I must say that t I believe Joe Ralls and Pack are both playing well at the moment – the fact remains though that we barely looked like scoring for sixty six minutes today and for eighty minutes at Peterborough.

To just go off the subject for a short while to make an observation that is relevant to what I’m trying to say. A talking point so far this season has been how lenient the refereeing has been and today we saw a series of rugged and heavy challenges on Moore which referee James Linington, largely, left go unpunished – it was very much 21/22 style refereeing as opposed to 20/21.

In the main, this new approach has been welcomed, but I thought there was evidence in the way Millwall went about dealing with Moore today which suggested that sides are, even this early in the season, adjusting their understanding of what they can get away with.

Even in the more punitive atmosphere of 20/21, Harry Wilson spent much of his season with us being kicked from pillar to post by opposing teams and now we have a situation whereby our eight goals have come from four Giles crosses, two Pack crosses and two throw ins by the same player.

If these trends continue it’s not going to take sides long to cotton on to the fact that, if you can force one or two Cardiff players to go off injured (particularly Giles), then you’re significantly reducing the chances of them scoring against you.

I’m not sure what can be done about our lack of creativity at the moment. Maybe we’ll sort it out with a couple of loan signings in the next ten days or so (that’s what some callers to the phone in were advocating) but I don’t expect us to make signings of the type that will see new players come straight into the team and transform the way we play.

Part of my toning down of the comments about the Cardiff way is down to the acceptance that we are what we are, at least until January. Therefore, I think we have to show faith in and patience with younger players such as Sang, Colwill, Bagan, Bowen, Evans and the Davies (Tom and Isaak) who I believe could make a significant difference to how we play if they can handle the transition into the first team without, hopefully, impacting on our potency from set pieces..

A quick word about the Under 18s who notched a first win of the season to follow on from last week’s traumatic 3-2 defeat at Hull by beating Peterborough 2-0 at Leckwith this lunchtime thanks to a couple of James Crole goals.

Finally, I’d like to add my support to Andrew (someone who I went to school with over half a century ago) who rang Rob Phillips to talk about the situation at the club regarding season tickets that have still not been sent out yet at a time when the ticket office is barely ever open. This follows on from a time in the run up to the season where the club shop was closed along with the ticket office, the club were not answering phone calls, e mails were being either answered very slowly or not at all and any supporter without online access was, to put it bluntly, stuffed – they had no way of contacting the club and so didn’t have a clue what was going on with regard to their season ticket.

The situation has improved somewhat now, but it’s still far from perfect. There were just over 18,000 there today, which was a slight increase on the turn out against Barnsley, however, it’s hard not to believe that it could have hit 20,000 if the club had pulled its finger out when it comes to ticketing – if there are valid reasons for the very unsatisfactory situation, why not let us know about them?

It’s the time of year again when I ask readers of Mauve and Yellow Army to make a contribution towards its running costs. Before I go into detail about this, I should, once again, offer my sincere thanks to all of you who have helped ensure the future of the blog over the past three years through a mixture of monthly payments via Patreon, monthly Standing Orders into my bank account and once a year payments via bank transfer, PayPal, cheque and cash.

The first time I made this request for assistance, it was prompted by a need for funds to pay for three yearly web hosting costs which, frankly, I was in no position to meet following my move of house a few months earlier. However, I’m pleased to say that, this time around, the web hosting bill was settled back in June with none of the problems there were back in 2018.

Therefore, any monies received this year will go towards other running costs and, although it’s too early yet to make any formal commitments despite so many of the pandemic restrictions in Wales being lifted recently, I am minded to do another review of a season from the past book to follow on from “Real Madrid and all that” which looked back on the 1970/71 campaign. At the moment 1975/76, the first promotion season I experienced, looks to be favourite for the book treatment, which would mean a lot more trips back and forth to Cardiff than my finances have become used to over the past year and a half – hopefully, the majority of them will not have to be made via Radyr Cheyne!

As always, the blog will still be free to read for anyone who chooses not to make a donation towards its running costs and, apart from the one in the top right hand corner which is to do with Google Ads, you will never have to bother about installing an ad blocker to read this site because there will never be any.

Finally, as mentioned earlier, donations can be made through Patreon, PayPal, by bank transfer, cheque, Standing Order/Direct Debit and cash, e-mail me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further payment details.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged | 5 Comments