Another point at a promotion chasing club for Cardiff City despite Smithies’ howler.

Chwarae teg, as someone who has often been critical of Cardiff City this season, I thought we played pretty well on our first visit to the new Brentford Community Stadium tonight. It finished 1-1 and so, although our promotion hopes realistically ended at Sheffield Wednesday, we’ve damaged the aspirations of two of the sides above us in the last four days.

With Reading on Friday, we were playing a team that knew automatic promotion was out of the picture and their Play Off hopes were fading pretty quickly. Tonight, it was different – Brentford may have stopped winning matches recently (one in six going into tonight’s game), but, with a top six finish virtually certain, they still entertained lingering hopes of automatic promotion.

However, with Watford winning tonight at already promoted Norwich, Brentford find themselves ten points adrift of second place with just four matches to play – they have to face the fact that they are going to be in the Play Offs once again and they have an appalling record in the end of season mini competitions.

It’s hard to avoid the suspicion that what happened at the back end of last season is haunting a club thats recruitment policy is equally admired and envied by many in the game. I’ll be wanting Brentford to win the Play Offs because I think they deserve promotion, but losing both of their last two matches last season when two points would have seen them go up automatically is a tough one to get over and I suspect promotion may be beyond them again this time around.

Certainly, Brentford weren’t as impressive tonight as they were on Boxing Day at our place when, after a low key first half that saw them trailing by that Will Vaulks goal from inside his own half, they went up through the gears in the second period to deservedly win 3-2 with Sergi Canos netting a hat trick.

For City, there was frustration tonight at losing a hard won lead within minutes of scoring just like they had done at Reading, but they could be satisfied that, as a team with nothing really to play for now, they did not lack for effort at all and may even have won but for a very poor individual error.

There was disappointment again for supporters like me who were hoping that these last few games would see some game time, or squad experience at the very least, for some of our home produced youngsters, but, once again, Mick McCarthy stuck with the “tried and trusted” senior men with teenager Rubin Colwill stepping down to accommodate the return of Leandro Bacuna to the substitutes bench after a spell of illness in the only change to the squad for the Reading game – as has been remarked upon by many, the continuing selection of Junior Hoilett in the squad when our manager, apparently, has no intention of using him seems very odd.

City made a bright start, pushing Brentford, who had drawn both of their last two home matches 0-0, on to the defensive with their urgency, but they only had a half hit Perry Ng shot which home keeper David Raya saved easily to show for their pressure. Coversely,at the other end, Brentford, distinctly second best for the first ten minutes or so, created a better chance out of nothing really when an unmarked Marcus Forss put his shot straight at Alex Smithies from about twelve yards out.

Brentford were able to impose their passing game on proceedings more as the half wore on, but City were unrecognisable defensively from the team that collapsed at Hillsborough as they maintained their shape and discipline to largely keep the hosts at arms length. Forss carelessly shot over after the Championship’s top scorer, Ivan Toney, nodded back a deep cross – in fact, I’m being generous when I say it was a deep cross, because it looked for all of the world like it had gone out for a goal kick.

Marlon Pack then must have feared the worst when his back pass was picked up by Toney who bore down on the City goal only for Smithies to produce a good save to deny the striker who City have done a good job of keeping in check in their encounters with this season. Going back to Pack, I must say that I’ve more time for him than many City fans do, but he has been prone to giving away or losing the ball in deep areas lately due to wanting to take too many touches – it’s not cost us a goal(s) yet, but I fear it will do soon.

City had a chance of their own as well when Ciaron Brown’s pass was flicked on by Moore into the path of Joe Ralls who went for goal himself rather than look to play in the unmarked Harry Wilson – Ralls’ shot was held on to in regulation style by a diving Raya.

The first half was short on goalmouth action, but it had a watchable quality to it and this continued into the second half as Brentford upped their efforts in attack, but City were able to launch counters of their own that showed they were not solely preoccupied with defending.

With wing backs Ng and Tom Sang both looking impressive, City were able to move the ball around more cohesively than normal, but there was still a lack of precision in their passing at times which meant that good chances, particularly late on when the home side were chasing the win they so desperately needed, went begging.

City took the lead on fifty seven minutes when Wilson and Sang’s persistence won a free kick close to the bye line right on the edge of the penalty area. Vaulks’ resultant cross was met by an unmarked Curtis Nelson standing just beyond the penalty spot, but his header looked to be going just wide when it hit Ethan Pinnock on the hand and referee Darren England pointed to the spot – by the interpretation of the handball law we’ve seen this season it looked a fair decision to me, but the referee’s decision not to further punish the player looked the right one to me given that Pinnock had not kept out a goal attempt which looked like it was going in.

Keiffer Moore’s three penalties before today had all been aimed high into the net, but this time he went low to Raya’s left as he dived to his right – it was another impressive spot kick by the striker who has now reached twenty for the season if you include his goals for Wales.

City had been defending well enough to make me think that Moore’s eighteenth goal of his league campaign would prove decisive, but I figured without an awful blunder by Smithies who allowed a shot from Tarique Fosu from twenty yards which was well struck, but straight at him, to slip through his hands and dribble apologetically into the net.

With Smithies having been at fault with one of Blackburn’s goals in his comeback game after his illness enforced withdrawal at Bristol City in January and his erratic spell around Christmas (at least one of Brentford’s goals at Cardiff City Stadium should have been saved to my mind), our number one goalkeeper is having his worst season since signing for us nearly three years ago and it only re emphasises that Dillon Phillips has been very hard done by – he’s been penalised for letting in five in his last match, yet none of them were down to him.

Brentford forced a lot of corners and free kicks after that and City needed to be vigilant at the back in the twenty five minutes or so that remained. However, with all of the back three continuing with the improved form seen at Reading, they came through their defensive examination despite the ball sometimes bouncing around dangerously in their penalty area and Smiithies opting to fist away a Canos shot late on which moved about a fair bit in the air.

However, it was us who missed the best chance of a winning goal when Raya made a mess of Vaulks long throw in and the ball fell to Wilson on his left foot about five yards out – it was an awkward ball to hit, but it was the player in blue you would most want the chance to fall to and it was disappointing to see the shot dribble wide.

Finally, it was good to see Jordy Osei Tutu back in action after his long lay off (even if it was at the expense of injuries to the very good Sang and Ng) and he was able to give us a few signs of what we’ve been missing – we look like we will be losing a lot of wingers/wide players this summer and I wonder if we could try to get him back for next season to play further forward than he has done in his all too rare appearances for us this time around?

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Brentford matches.

Quite unusually, Cardiff City’s season is coming to a gradual halt with no promotion or relegation issues to concentrate on. Just four matches left, with the first of those at Brentford tomorrow evening – here’s seven questions on our opponents with the answers to be posted on here on Wednesday.

60s. Beginning his career in the city of his birth playing for the Hatchetmen at Seaview, this forward scored goals wherever he went, but he scored most for Brentford. His first move saw him playing in Brentford’s colours and scoring at a rate of better than a goal every other game, but the arrival of an England striker whose record was even better saw him drop out of the side and he was eventually transferred to wild Rovers to the south where he did pretty well for a couple of seasons. He next moved to a place which calls itself an “industrial garden town” (most of the industry’s gone now though). This club became the first in the Football League to move to a new stadium in thirty three years, but this was a long time after our man left having scored at a rate of better than one in three in just over a season there. Brentford, his next club, was an unusual move for him in that he came south of Watford for the only time in his career, but he must have been happy there because the four years he was with them was a long time by his standards. It was back up north after that with a club with an x in their name and then he finished his league career with five years at a County set that has hopes of a return to the Football League next season. His last club saw him playing in a city with a name which is the same as a town in his homeland and, in doing so, he took the number of countries he had played in to three. Internationally, the first of his four caps came in a 3-2 defeat by Wales, can you name him?

70s. This defender started off playing for a club that had a preoccupation with building a white elephant stand which had a good deal to do with their subsequent relegation towards the end of his time with them. Never establishing himself at his first club, his move to Brentford was a short one both in terms of distance and time spent there, but he did enough to earn himself a move to a higher division for a pretty big fee in those days to another club that played in a combination red, white and black. There was a relegation and a promotion during the seven years he was there before he stayed in the same three colours again to team up with a club in the midst of a fairly rapid drop from the top flight to the bottom one. His last club saw him get a change of colours in a location well to the south of his previous two where he represented a team that gained only its second win in its last twenty six matches on Saturday. He played once for his country, against Denmark, but who is he?

80s. A much travelled Brentford player of this decade, he and his family took thirty three chickens, three horses, two dogs and two ducks with them when they moved from Leicester to Blackpool (he also acquired seven turkeys while at Blackpool), while he once came fifteenth in a Time Out poll to find the funniest person in London – who?

90s. A scorer for Brentford against us during this decade, he was once sent off at Ninian Park while playing for Swansea, who is he?

00s. Brentford scorer out of Nepal and Suva?

10s.Man of the cloth from Shropshire turns up at Cardiff City Stadium?

20s. He’s a member of the current Brentford squad and his first three teams in senior football were Hadley, Hayes and Hendon – who?

Answers.

60s. Belfast born Ian Lawther signed for Sunderland from Crusaders and did very well there for three years before the arrival of Brian Clough saw him relegated to the reserves and an eventual move to Blackburn. Scunthorpe were Lawther’s next side and then after his spell at Brentford between 1964 and 1968, he signed for Halifax. Three years later, he moved to Stockport and then had a season at Bangor City before retiring in 1977.

70s. Stewart Houston started his career at Chelsea, but only played nine league matches in the five years he was with them. After an initial loan spell at Brentford, he jointed them permanently in 1971 and did well enough to earn a £55,000 move to Manchester United in 1973. Houston played over two hundred league games for the Old Trafford team, winning a Second Division title medal while he was there, A new decade brought a move to a new club in Sheffield United and he was part of a squad that was relegated to Division Four for the first time in their history, but he won another title medal when they made sure their start was the shortest one possible the following season. Colchester were Houston’s final team, playing over a hundred times for them to take his career record for league appearances to just under five hundred before retiring in 1986.

80s. Ian Holloway.

90s. Joe Allon scored for Brentford in a 1-1 draw against us at Griffin Park in November 1993 some six years after he had been sent off in Swansea’s 1-0 loss at Ninian Park in August 1987.

00s. Paul Evans.

10s. Harley Dean.

20s. Charlie Goode.   

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