The “horrible to play” team becomes horrible to watch for ninety minutes.

Will Vaulks, who is a good and interesting interviewee whose opinions are always worth a listen, got a lot of positive feedback a week ago after the Preston win with his defence of Cardiff City’s method of playing. According to our midfield man, not every team has to build from the back and there’s nothing wrong with getting the ball forward quickly – we are, according to Vaulks, “horrible to play against”.

This was a line endorsed by Mick McCarthy later in the week and I’m sure that, if they were being honest, most teams we play would admit this is the case, so the “horrible to play against” line is, probably, officially true.

However, as the whistle blew to the signal the end of our six game winning run today with a 1-1 draw at Middlesbrough, a variation on that theme came into my mind – today, we were horrible to watch.

Now, it’s only fair to qualify that in a few respects. Firstly, and most obviously, there’s the aforementioned six game winning run, and eight match unbeaten run, during which we have played our best football of the season and attacked, and defended, with quality at times to consider – any criticism of today’s performance has to come against that context.

Second, rather like Neil Harris during our four game winning pre Christmas run, Mick McCarthy has stuck with the same starting line up game in game out – today was the fifth successive match we had begun with the same starting eleven.

Thirdly, and this particularly applies to the second point above, what looked like an outstanding physical effort to win a crucial game at Bournemouth on Wednesday was proved to be exactly that today. It felt like one game too many for too many of our team today, there was none of the spark or confidence you’d expect from a team that were on such a fantastic run – we were also up against opponents who had a day longer to recover from their midweek match.

So, what I’m going to say now comes against that background and I want to re-emphasise that we’ve been so good since the change of manager – we’ve scored some great goals, we’ve scored goals at a greater rate and conceded them at a lesser rate, so I don’t want to be critical just for the sake of it.

However, that performance under Neil Harris would have been widely panned by media and fan alike and with good reason. For me, a major factor in our improvement has been that we’ve been able to bring our matchwinners into the game more – today that just didn’t happen.

For myself, I’m sorry for getting on my hobby horse again, but I’ve got to talk about our passing, or, to be more accurate, about the lack of it.

The last week has seen a reaction from some in the club against the supporters and pundits who have been critical of our style of play (Neil Warnock also joined in) and they had a point in many respects because, as mentioned earlier, there has been a lot that is good in our play over the past few weeks. What I don’t get though, and have never done, is why it should be that playing in the manner that we have done under Russell Slade, Neil Warnock, Neil Harris and now Mick McCarthy should somehow mean that we have to pass the ball as poorly as we so often do?

Under Neil Warnock, I used to write about periods of up to twenty minutes when I would struggle to recall a single pass that was completed in a manner which did not put the receiver under unnecessary pressure – that sounds ridiculous I know from professional footballers, especially when we’re talking about a team that got promoted to the Premier League, but nevertheless I’d be at games where this would happen.

Although it doesn’t strike me as being the case, the fact that I’d not had that feeling for a while, may suggest that we’ve improved on this front – or maybe I’ve just got used to it?

Today though, it was back again, we went for a long stretch of the game in the first half without playing an accurate, measured pass that reached its intended target. Actually, that’s not true, there were two, both from Vaulks in the form of under hit back passes to Dillon Phillips that were just about dealt with as Boro attackers closed in as they sniffed a gift goal, so we did manage two passes, both of which happened within a period of about five minutes when Vaulks was also booked.

With Marlon Pack anonymous and Vaulks having his poorest game for some time, this was a day when the limitations of playing with just two central midfielders were shown. Pack and Vaulks had done well in recent games, but their cause wasn’t helped by our three centre backs looking what they are today, a trio of defenders who are not that comfortable with the ball at their feet when asked to play passes from the back – it seems we can have one or the other at Cardiff, defenders who are good at stopping the opposition scoring or defenders that can pass the ball better than our current crop can, but not both .

Things weren’t helped either by the relative lack of movement in front of the central defenders and midfielders – it’s easy to bemoan the standard of passing, but it’s a two way thing, there needs to be a desire from any receiver to help the passer by making delivery of the ball easier through their desire to find space, but, perhaps down to tiredness due to the shift they put in on Wednesday, it wasn’t really there from Messrs Moore, Wilson and Murphy.

The irony was that it was at a time when we were really struggling to get any sort of foothold in the game that we scored our goal – we’d absorbed a lot of Middlesbrough pressure without being able to get out when we finally managed to get a chance for Vaulks to send in a long throw and when it came, the ball ended up in the Boro net thanks to a pretty faint touch from Sean Morrison. The fact that our skipper still had his feet on the ground when he made contact with the ball must be a reason why Neil Warnock will have been furious at his defence. for conceding such a goal.

Before that, Harry Wilson had a free kick turned aside by home keeper Marcus Bettinelli and that was the sum total of City’s attacking efforts – two goal attempts and no corners.

However, although Middlesbrough were always the side trying to force the issue, their own lack of fire power was evident through the fact that Bettinelli’s pretty routine stop from Wilson was the best save of the game.

The home team have not been in the best of form lately and this showed with their almost complete lack of an end product to their attacking play – with City looking more comfortable after the break, I was just beginning to convince myself that we could see it through for a 1-0 win (we were never going to score a second goal) when we conceded what was a very lucky equaliser by the home side.

Boro’s good fortune began when Bettinelli scuffed his clearance along the ground, but the ball somehow found its way to the halfway line where some effective combination play down our left saw a dangerous looking cross played in which Aden Flint should have been able to deal with, but on an afternoon where composure was a notable absentee from the Cardiff ranks, the defender thrashed at the ball which rebounded off a home player back towards our goal, on to a Boro attacker’s head from which it looked to be going just wide until Paddy McNair netted from a yard or two out.

For all that it was an unlucky goal to concede, it would have been something of a travesty had we won – as explained earlier, there were reasons for our poor display and we, clearly, aren’t as bad a side as we looked today, but we were a horrible team to watch today.

It needs to be said though that, despite his culpability with the goal, Flint was part of a defensive trio which were largely responsible for us returning home with a point and an unbeaten record stretched to nine matches – Morrison and Flint were generally dominant and there was a trademark superb block by Curtis Nelson in the first half as the three of them ensured Phillips had a quiet afternoon of it.

Finally on the game, Mick McCarthy’s use, or non use, of substitutes raised some questions. Although there was a slight difference to the norm today with Wilson staying on about ten minutes longer than Murphy, you could generally set your watch in recent games by the change which sees the two of them go off to be replaced by Sheyi Ojo and Leandro Bacuna and, given our toils in the middle of the park, it was no surprise to see the fit again Joe Ralls on for Vaulks (we actually managed a few passes in central areas with Ralls on!).

However, given that he’s only scored once in more than two years at Cardiff and hardly has mountains of assists to his credit, the Bacuna move to play in a forward role looks increasingly like it’s done for its nuisance value (i.e putting defenders under pressure) than anything else – with Junior Hoilett available again, that would have been a move which suggested we were still looking to score again and you also have to ask why haven’t we seen anything of Jonny Williams if he has been fit enough to be a substitute in our last three matches?

Williams has a capacity to win plenty of free kicks when he is used by Wales and that would have been a good string to have to our bow today given our inability to make significant inroads into Middlesbrough territory, but our manager decided to make just the three changes which meant that there was another grueling ninety minutes for Moore whose body broke down under the strain of being used continuously back in December.

With Bournemouth beating Watford 1-0 and Barnsley keeping their fine run going with a 2-1 win over Millwall, our hold on sixth place proved to a very short one, but we’re right in the hunt for a Play Off place now and, with Jordi Osei-Tutu and Lee Tomlin, hopefully, rejoining the squad soon, we should have decent cover for all positions except striker where Keiffer Moore remains crucial to our hopes of a top six finish.

This weekend had a feel of back to normal to it after all of the victories of the last month or so, because, a few hours before the first team played, City’s Academy team ended their run of three straight wins when they were well beaten 4-1 at Ipswich – James Crole got our solitary goal as our youngsters struggled to come to terms with what is the longest trip of their league campaign..

Finally, it’s now less than a month to the fiftieth anniversary of our win over Real Madrid in the European Cup Winners Cup Quarter Final First Leg in March 1971. To commemorate that anniversary, I’ve written a book called Real Madrid and all that – details of which can be found below;-

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Middlesbrough matches.

The first reunion with Neil Warnock at the back end of last season was one of the easiest matches we had in 2020, but Middlesbrough’s visit to south Wales in October was a much tighter affair and although Warnock’s Boro have been inconsistent lately, I’d expect a tough test on Saturday as we seek a seventh straight win. Here’s seven questions on Middlesbrough with the answers to be posted on Sunday.

60s. A defender who started off with his home town club, he endured a tough childhood living on a street which produced four other professional footballers of a similar age to him. his form after breaking into the first team at this club which would have a name change during his second spell with them attracted the interest of Manchester United at one time, but when he, reluctantly, moved on, after seven years, he signed for the red of Middlesbrough. Boro were regular opponents of ours at the time, but it took him a while to face us after signed – when he did, things generally went well for him, with only one, heavy, defeat against City to his name, His time at Middlesbrough included a detention by police who were suspicious of what they thought was a resemblance to Great Train Robber Ronald Biggs! Maybe this incident planted the seed for a move a lot closer to home after three years on Tees side, he stayed in red at his third club and was made club captain upon signing, but he returned home before what was arguably the greatest moment in his third club’s history. There was a promotion to be celebrated when he got home, but his manager’s decision to introduce afternoon training sessions led to him deciding to retire in 1971 at the age of thirty four because the extra training was interfering with his business interests. Can you name the player being described?

70s. Very much the support band to the main act, this man’s Middlesbrough career was winding down when he played for them in a win over us at Ayresome Park that saw four members of our 1971 Youth Cup side, which reached the final of that competition, in its ranks. A lack of first team opportunities following Boro’s promotion to the First Division saw him return to the second tier on loan and, despite only playing nine games for these birds with a connection to this blog, he ended up as their top scorer for that season. Permanent moves to a home of confectioners and then a place where they execute animals followed before his retirement at thirty two, but who is he and who were the four youngsters in the City side mentioned above?

80s. This midfielder declined offers of a contract with the two biggest clubs in the area where he was born for one at a city which is generally perceived to be its rival. The decision looked to be a good one as he broke into their first team at eighteen as he was seen as an eventual replacement for one of an iconic midfield trio that had helped them win the league title the previous season. Although he developed into someone who was a first team regular for much of the next seven years, injuries held him back and he was eventually sold to stripey under achievers on the other side of the country. He played a part in getting this team back to the top flight, but, in the process began a process which saw him become surplus to requirements and he was released to play for less fashionable striped strugglers close by. Even though his career was on a downward slope, he was still too good for such a level and, after just six games, he was restored to the second tier at one of the Football League’s outposts and, after a season, he left for his final club, Middlesbrough – he came up against City twice in his one season with Boro with both matches resulting in narrow home wins between sides much closer to the bottom of the table than the top – can you identify this player from the above?

90s. Angels prone to want inclusion of an Indian opener. (5,7)

00s. Bovine manoeuvre in Scotland? (4,8)

10s. Take note of big nose? (3,6)

20s. Which current Middlesbrough player can be turned into a “glittering chipolata” with a bit of the North?

Answers.

60s. Swansea born Mel Nurse lived on Alice Street when he was growing up – this was also where John and Mel Charles, and fellow Welsh internationals Jackie Roberts and Ernie Jones lived for some of their childhoods. Nurse’s only defeat by City in a Middlesbrough shirt came in a 6-1 loss at a Ninian Park in January 1965. Nurse signed for Swindon after leaving Boro, before a return to Swansea Town just before the club’s name changed to its present title.

70s. Eric McMordie was the boy who travelled to Manchester from Belfast with a young George Best and promptly headed back home with him when they were intimidated by their new surroundings, but, whereas Best was persuaded back, McMordie never returned and stayed in Belfast until 1964 when he moved to Middlesbrough. McMordie made around three hundred appearances for Boro in eleven years with them with one of the latter ones being in a 3-0 win over us at Ayresome Park in November 1973 (our team that day included Phil Dwyer, John Impey, Jimmy McInch and Derek Showers who were all in the successful 70/71 City youth team). McMordie was loaned to Sheffield Wednesday in 74/75, scoring six times in his nine appearances for them before spells with York City (home of Rowntrees)  and Hartlepool (the monkey hangers) brought an end to his career.

80s. Salford born Gary Buckley chose to link up with Everton as a teenager despite interest from both Manchester United and City and he was to play around one hundred and fifty times for the Merseysiders before being sold to Sunderland in 1978. Buckley had five years on Wearside before signing for Hartlepool for a short period before finishing with a season each at Carlisle and Middlesbrough – he was in the Boro team which beat us 3-2 at Ayresome Park and then lost 2-1 at Ninian Park during 84/85.

90s. Nigel Pearson.

00s. Ross Turnbull.

10s. Ben Gibson.

20s. The “glittering chipolata” was a not very flattering nickname given to Marc Bolan as he put on weight towards the end of his life – current Boro player Marc Bola can be turned into Marc Bolan with “a bit of the North”.

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