Seven decades of Cardiff City v Millwall matches.

So, will it be 0-0 or 1-1 this time when we face Millwall tomorrow or will there be a departure from the norm as it finishes 2-2? it’s not really true, I’d almost prefer Millwall to win tomorrow rather than another tight, generally incident free one pointer of the type we’ve become so used to when facing this opposition in recent seasons.

Also, before proceeding with the quiz, congratulations to Glamorgan for their superb win over Durham in the fifty over Cup Final yesterday. While their opponents rushed back two players who had been away with the Hundred, Glamorgan stuck with the men who had got them through the tournament so far.

I must say that, on paper, Durham had the better team for me, but they could have no complaints about the outcome having won the toss and put us in. Captain Kiran Carlson played what, by some distance, was the best innings of the day, but nine of his team mates got into double figures as well to help post a score which proved well beyond the team with the best record in the tournament up to then in terms of wins gained and runs scored. However,Durham had no answer to a bowling attack where, again, everyone made a contribution and they were backed up by safe and nerveless catching for the main part.

Anyway, back to the real point of this message – seven questions on tomorrow’s opponents with the answers to be posted on here sometime over the weekend.

60s. Who or what were the BBs (8,5) that played a part in achieving a City win over Millwall during this decade?

70s. This Londoner had his first acquaintance with City early in this decade while playing for the team closest to his birthplace. Millwall were his second club and, in nearly two hundred and twenty league appearances for them, he scored just once. This turned out to be the only goal of a fourteen year Football League career which also saw him represent a team we played in our recent pre season programme. There is something else that he did three times for Millwall while he was there and one of those occasions came against City at the Den during this decade. Who was the player and what did he do against us that he only did two other times while at Millwall?

80s. Millwall were this forward’s local team and he started off with them during a good period for the club. His first team appearances were sporadic, but he scored four goals for them before moving to another team from south of the river that specialised in ruffling the feathers of the rich and powerful. He never scored for them and didn’t find the net either in loan spells with Nenesiders and borderers. A further, permanent, move to Soricidae finally brought some goals – in fact he was prolific, by his standards anyway, while he was with them. A short move to play in red was next and then his goals really dried up while playing for a club on the Thames. His next team were green and whites from over the border and he finished by having a spell as player/manager for a team City faced in a Welsh Cup Final – who is he?

90s. Around three years after facing France and Brazil while playing for England Under 21s in the Toulon tournament, this winger/midfielder was turning out for City against Millwall, it was the seventh, and last, appearance he made in a City shirt Despite a league career, which at one time saw him turning out for previous European Cup winners, lasting around a decade during which he racked up just short of two hundred and twenty Football League appearances, he dropped into the non league game with a definite feeling of unfulfilled promise following his impressive start with his first club, Oxford United, do you know who he is?

00s. Snide sinew injury could well have been inflicted by him (6,4).

10s. Sounds relevant and correct to me.

20s. Cardiff City 3,973, Millwall – 4,000 what are these figures referring to?

Answers.

60s. The Millwall match I remember more than any other took place in December 1968 when snow and ice made for a very hard, definitely unplayable these days, pitch on which many of the City side opted to wear baseball boots as a way of keeping their feet on the treacherous surface. This was the game with the famous goal scored by Brian Clark when he headed in a Millwall goal kick from about twenty five yards out – that goal added to an earlier one by John Toshack and was enough to secure us a 2-0 win in front of a crowd of 22, 405.

70s. Dave Donaldson was a member of the Arsenal team which beat us in the 1971 Youth Cup Final. Moving on to Millwall in 1973 without playing a first team game for the Gunners. Donaldson took over in goal when Ray Goddard had to go off injured during a 2-0 away win for us in March 1977 – it was one of three times that Donaldson, who later played for Cambridge United, would become a replacement keeper for Millwall.

80s. Striker Steve Anthrobus played for Millwall, Wimbledon, Peterborough (loan), Chester (loan), Shrewsbury, Crewe, Oxford, TNS and Hednesford in a career which saw him net thirty eight two in two hundred and forty six Football League appearances.

90s. Chris Allen had a short loan spell with City in 98/99 which included a 2-0 defeat at Millwall in the Auto Windscreen Cup, before returning to Nottingham Forest.

00s. Dennis Wise.

10s. Jermaine Wright.

20s. The total number of supporters that were at their matches last season. Both of Millwall’s matches where a limited number of spectators were allowed were played at home, with a figure of 2,000 given for the visits of Derby and QPR. That figure of 2,000 also applied when City played Norwich at Carrow Road, but the attendance was recorded as 1,973 for our win at Watford.

Posted in Cricket, Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged , | Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Millwall matches.

Late, late show from Flint rescues point at bogey ground which feels like three!

It doesn’t matter what decade or division it’s in, Cardiff City definitely have a “thing” about London Road, Peterborough (I refuse to call any ground by the corporate name it carries for three or four years before switching to some other bland, history denying, title). They never seem to play well there and their results at the ground reflect that.

If you take away the grounds of the Premier League big six, I bet our record at London Road is as bad as it is anywhere -in fact, on further thought, our record at those clubs that wanted to be in the ESL this season may well be better.

I posted on a messageboard this week that Paul Wheeler is unique among Cardiff City players because he has scored a winning goal for us at Peterborough (it was by 2-1 in 86/87I believe it was).

However, I think that after tonight, the player who will be thought of when conversation turns to trips to Peterborough in years to come will be Aden Flint after he scored twice late on to rescue a point for City in a scrappy and strange encounter in which we, largely, maintained our record of playing poorly on this ground. Our recovery was down more to sheer will power, plus a degree of tiredness on the home side’s part I’d say than any great quality on our part – kudos to Marlon Pack for the quality of his crosses for both goals though.

Pack was lucky to still be on the pitch at this stage mind for a couple of reasons as his sheer accumulation of fouls to go alongside a booking for a so called foul when he was the man the offence was committed against meant he could well have been shown a red card by a ref who I’ll come back to later.

Also, credit goes to Mick McCarthy for keeping the midfielder on when he must have been thinking that he’d better take Pack off before he was red carded, but overall, I thought we got a draw tonight despite Mick McCarthy, rather than because of him.

I’d like to think that I’ve been pretty fair over the last eight months to our manager and would say I’ve given him credit when it’s due. Overall, I think he’s done a pretty good job at City so far, but tonight I felt he got his selection wrong and took too long in bringing on his second and third substitutes because our lifting of performance level from truly dismal to no more than adequate coincided almost exactly with the moment that Mark Harris and Rubin Colwill were introduced.

Having now seen extended highlights of our match at Blackpool on Saturday, I can confirm we did play well, but tonight’s evidence suggested that some of our players were not really up to a second intense game in three days physically and/or mentally and, consequently, a degree of squad rotation may not have gone amiss.

I’m not particularly criticising these players, but it seemed to me that, for different reasons, Perry Ng, Joel Bagan, Ryan Giles, Leandro Bacuna and James Collins did not match the level of their contributions at Blackpool and with what we are being told is a strong bench and fewer injuries about the place now, maybe one or two of them could have been given a rest tonight?

There was definitely a listlessness about us after a first twenty minutes that I thought we edged without ever really suggesting we were going to score. However, although it wasn’t as immediate as a light being switched off, we grew more sloppy and lethargic as we started to do what we always do on our bad days – make football look a very difficult game to play.

The half time stats showed neither side having an effort on target with the home side coming closest when Harrison Burrows, a nineteen year old who looks a fine prospect on this evidence and his substitute appearance against Derby on Saturday, shot across the face of our goal and wide.

Our best moment of the half came when Flint nodded a great cross by Bagan just over, but the main talking point of a dull first period arrived in the forty fourth minute when the home side’s Nathan Thompson miscontrolled the ball and lunged in on Pack with the City man penalized and cautioned for some reason after a melee ensued which then saw Flint given a yellow card as well by referee Thomas Bramall who was taking charge of just his second ever Championship game.

Mr Bramall favoured the home side throughout the first half in particular and then missed a shocking tackle on Keiffer Moore by home substitute Frankie Kent after the break – although it should be said that Sean Morrison was lucky when what could easily have been construed as a stamp on home striker Jonson Clarke-Harris went unpunished by an official who, to be frank, looked out of his depth.

It was as if City were still distracted by the Pack incident at the start of the second period. If we were poor in the minutes leading up to half time, we were doubly so in the minutes after it, as Peterborough scored two goals which showed their sharp and nippy attacking players in a good light and our defenders in a bad one.

First of all, Burrows and Sikiri Dembele exchanged passes and revealed some fancy footwork in the process as the former lashed his shot beyond a helpless Dillon Phillips from around twelve yards, but City’s “after you Claude” defending as they stood back almost in admiration certainly helped them along the way.

Two minutes later, we were caught out by a sucker punch as Peterborough broke with devastating effect from one of our long throw ins and Dembele side footed past Phillips after being fed by Clarke-Harris. Again, however, we made it easy for them as Ng was beaten to a ball by the scorer that should have been his some thirty yards from the Peterborough goal.

Apart from a good save by Phillips to deny Burrows as we chased a late equaliser, that was about it as far as Peterborough were concerned as an attacking force, but there could be no denying they were worth their lead as time ticked on in the second half, especially after a bizarre miss by Pack who, having been put through by Bacuna’s best piece of work of the night, sent home keeper Christie Pym the wrong way by “giving him the eyes” and then shot wide!

Moore was introduced for Ng around the hour mark and Morrison headed a Giles corner narrowly wide a few minutes later, but it was only when Harris and Colwill came on for Collins and Bacuna in the seventy seventh minute that a labouring City began to offer a hint of a suggestion that they could yet save the match.

Predictably, City looked to get crosses and long throws into the Peterborough penalty area and with Giles, who I thought was erratic tonight while still retaining his ability to occasionally come up with some really piercing crosses, finding his range, the home side were being tested more in defence that they had been at any other stage of the night.

It was Pack though who supplied the cross from the right for Flint to nod firmly in on the far post on eighty three minutes and with five minutes added on for extra time, there must have been around twenty more of them played into the Peterborough penalty area of varying quality before we got the equaliser from the last of them.

Dillon Phillips had come forward for what looked like one last chance from a Pack long throw, but when it was half cleared, the keeper just managed to play a pass out to Pack who, this time from the left, came up with the quality that the situation demanded and, once again, it was Flint who headed in at the far post.

There was barely time left to restart the match and so, on a ground where we have suffered so much late heartbreak, it was us who caused it this time. We turned in a typical Cardiff at Peterborough performance, but this time, we got a point we probably didn’t deserve, but it really feels like a win because it’s probably the closest we’ll come to another one on this ground in the rest of my life!

One other thing to mention, the club confirmed last night that Marley Watkins is not going to be offered a contract when his current short term deal runs out, despite his two goals against Sutton. Apparently, City are looking instead to their youngsters coming through to provide the cover that Watkins might have. In particular, it looks like plans to send Mark Harris out on loan have been shelved and so they should be in my opinion, because the Welsh Under 21 international has a habit of making things happen when he comes off the bench and makes what can be a predictable attacking game from City a little different.

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 | 3 Comments