Seven decades of Cardiff City v Millwall matches.

We meet another one of Mick McCarthy’s former teams on Saturday as we try to build on last night’s point and improve our miserable home record against another side having a disappointing campaign who we invariably end up drawing with lately. Here’s seven questions on Millwall dating back to the sixties, the answers to which will be posted on the weekend.

60s. This forward never stayed anywhere too long in his thirteen year career with the forty one league matches he played for Millwall being the third highest he managed for any of his eight Football League clubs. After a false start close to home which saw him freed to join alliterative non leaguers, he found himself at a club that, judging by their nickname, could be mistaken for cowards. Goals at a better rate than one in every three matches attracted Millwall’s interest and he played two or, possibly, three times against us at Ninian Park for them without experiencing a win. Moving on to a road, apparently, named after itinerant Irish gamblers, he did less well playing in what is a very distinctive kit now, but would have been less so then. Another transfer after just a season saw him go to another team further north with unique garb in the Football League and while he was there he went on loan train spotting for a short while. Next there was an undistinguished season with what were church going competition newcomers in those days before he finished off close to home at a genuine contender for the coldest ground in England for a team that are trying to regain their Football League place this season – who am I describing?

70s. Defender who was a natural for a strange, foot related, version of pairs wrestling? (4,4)

80s. A fairly frequent opponent of Cardiff’s in a playing career which extended into three decades, this defender will have no reason to remember the two matches he played against City in a Millwall shirt with any affection. Apart from a short spell on another continent after leaving Cold Blow Lane, Millwall was the furthest south he played in an eleven club career which had almost ended by the time he was, possibly, reciting what might be termed down market poetry. This was where a new career started for him, one which continues to this day, but who is he?

90s. Len in messy spiking down Millwall way? (5,5)

00s. This Edmonton product was part of an unlikely trio in one of his visits to Ninian Park as a Millwall player. Forced to leave his first club because, frankly, he was never going to break into the first team there, he signed for Millwall and had seven good years there during which he captained the team at times and was a winner of a club Player of the Year award. His longevity at his second club was in complete contrast to what happened at his third despite a pretty big fee being paid for him and he was off to a different type of cats almost before his feet had touched the ground. In cricketing terms, his next club was a little akin to fielding in the outfield and his playing career wound down with short spells with flying rats, a team that can’t make up its mind whether it plays in orange or white and and a side that plays at a home for insects. His final team were based in a village which, for a short while, entertained genuine ambitions of making it into the Football League and they also beat fallen giants, who have a penchant for losing to lower league sides these days despite an improvement which has seen them get quite close to former heights, in the FA Cup. He started in management at this team and is currently looking for a new club. Do you know who he is?

10s. He scored for Millwall at Cardiff City Stadium during this decade, had a loan spell at another Welsh club and was forced to retire because of a recurring hip problem at the age of twenty nine, can you name him?

20s. This current Millwall player’s first ever taste of senior first team football came when he was brought on as a substitute for Aaron Wildig and fans at his first club were likening him to Andrea Pirlo by the time he left them, name him.

Answers

60s. County Durham born Bryan Conlon started his career at Newcastle, but never played a game for them and signed for South Shields when he was released by them. Darlington offered him a route back into the Football league which he took well enough to persuade Millwal to sign him in 1967. Conlon definitely played against City at Ninian Park for the Lions in 67/68 and 68/69, but he also may well have done in the last City home game to be abandoned in November 1967, but I was unable to confirm that. Conlon left Millwall for Norwich in 1969 and then played for Blackburn, Crewe (on loan) and Cambridge United before ending his professional career at Hartlepool.

70s. Tony Tagg.

80s. Sam Allardyce came up against City twice while playing for Millwall. The first game ended in a 4-0 defeat at the Den for him in September 1982 and they were beaten 3-0 at Ninian Park five months later. Allardyce played for Tampa Bay Rowdies for a few months after leaving Millwall and was outside the UK again when his management career as he took over as player boss at Limerick in 1991.

90s. Nigel Spink.

00s. David Livermore never played for Arsenal’s first team and left Highbury for Millwall in 1999. One of his three hundred plus matches for the Lions saw him sent off in the 90th minute along with team mate Tony Dunne and City’s James Collins in a 1-0 Millwall win at Ninian Park in February 2004. A £500,000 fee took him to Leeds in 2006, but, just as at Arsenal, he never played a game for them and was sold ten days later to Hull. A loan spell at Boundary Park, Oldham followed, then he was off to Brighton, loaned to Luton and signed by Barnet. Histon, winners of an FA Cup tie with Leeds in 2008, were his final club and in 2010 he became their manager. Livermore was sacked from his job of Cardiff City Assistant Manager last week.

10s. Scott Barron scored for Millwall in their 2-1 defeat in Cardiff in September 2010. Barron played for Ipswich and Brentford besides and was loaned out to Wrexham in 2007 while with the Tractor Boys.

20s. Ryan Woods replaced Aaron Wildig in the eighty ninth minute of Shrewsbury’s 1-0 win over Oldham in April 2013, by the time he left them for Brentford in 2015, Shrews fans were calling him the Ginger Pirlo.

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McCarthy emulates Harris and Cardiff City finally avoid defeat.

Neil Harris’ first game as Cardiff City manager was at Charlton fourteen months ago and he watched his new side recover from 2-0 down to get a point from a 2-2 draw. Tonight, Harris’ successor, Mick McCarthy, had the same experience at his home town, Barnsley as City scored twice in ten second half minutes at a time when they looked certs to equal an unwanted club record by losing a seventh straight game.

So, Alan Durban’s awful 85/86 side, which took City into the old Fourth Division for the first time, do not have the current team to keep them company as holders of a record which sees them consigned to the Cardiff City Hall of Shame and so they shouldn’t! While the last few months have proved the sort of opinions that had us as genuine contenders for promotion before a ball was kicked were over optimistic, the amount of money spent on assembling the squad in terms of transfer fees and wages demands that any equalling of club record losing runs while being a Championship club would represent serious under achievement.

Of course, scraping a draw with a display that offered the new boss plenty of evidence of the substandard basics and lack of creativity that have increasingly driven me to distraction as I try to find different ways of saying the same thing game after game hardly qualifies as a corner turned, but there were at least signs of a return of a couple of Cardiff old dependables – fighting spirit and an attacking dead ball threat.

It should be said as well that an Oakwell pitch which, from memory, didn’t look too bad to me in Barnsley’s televised match with the jacks recently was, by modern day standards, in an awful state – presumably as a result of the snow of the last few days.

So, if the McCarthy era is going to see a return to Cardiff sides playing the beautiful game (don’t laugh!), it was never going to start here and surely it was always going to be that the losing run when it ended would do so with a scrapping, scrappy showing which saw us picking up a point or three that we didn’t really deserve. When you consider Barnsley’s near total dominance of the first half and a second half that we probably just shaded, that was just about what happened tonight – to use an old analogy, Barnsley would probably have won on points if it were a boxing match.

In his pre game media video conference, our new manager indicated that Max Watters had a problem with his Achilles’ tendon which could rule him out and it duly did, but, otherwise, it was a clean bill of health for his squad- this, apparently, was not the case though.

Maybe Sean Morrison’s presence on the bench was not too much of a surprise given he’d only just returned from injury, but very few would have foreseen the omission of Harry Wilson (the Welsh international was not used off the bench either and McCarthy’s answer to post match questions about his decision met with a pretty curt response about him picking the team based on what he had seen in the two days training he had taken). Marlon Pack did not return to the line up either as no one got the starting eleven right in the pre game pick the team thread on the messageboard I use.

Maybe the inclusion of Aden Flint for the first time this season was predictable given that Mick McCarthy had told the local media in Ipswich what a thorn in the flesh Flint had been at both ends of the pitch when they played Bristol City during the manager’s time there , but Joel Bagan starting was a surprise with neither Greg Cunningham and Joe Bennett picked even as substitutes.

Presumably Bennett was injured, but with both senior left backs out of contract this summer there is the possibility that one or both of them could be leaving before the transfer window closes (there was a post match confirmation from the manager that Cunningham was joining Preston on loan, so, the likelihood is that he has played his last game for City)..

Finally when it comes to Mick McCarthy’s first squad selection, it was good to see another Academy product breaking into the senior ranks with striker Isaak Davies named as one of the substitutes.

With many supporters predicting a start for Josh Murphy, it was Sheri Ojo who was given one of the wing births with Junior Hoilett on the other flank, but the Canadian international’s first contribution on five minutes was to begin a sequence of errors by men in blue as comic cuts defending saw Cauley Woodrow bundle the ball into the net, possibly with a touch from Flint to help it on its way in. It really was dreadful defending which certainly didn’t deserve the good luck we got as referee Andy Woolmer disallowed the goal for reasons that weren’t clear to me.

City weren’t so lucky a quarter of an hour later when, just as against QPR last week, they fell asleep from a throw in as the home side surprised them by not throwing the ball long and Dominik Frieser was given plenty of time to cross to unmarked centre back Mads Andersen who nodded in powerfully from ten yards out – the fact Andersen did not have to jump to meet the ball only emphasised further City’s shoddiness.

Woodrow should really have made it two just before half time, but shot over from close range. However, given Barnsley’s control of the game, it didn’t seem that this would be an expensive miss by the home team – City hadn’t really done anything to suggest they had an equaliser in them in what was very much a late Harrisesque first half showing.

McCarthy’s frustration with his side could be judged by his decision to introduce Murphy for Hoilett with the second period barely started, but things took a decided turn for the worse when Woodrow got above Bagan to head home a Nicky Mowatt free kick from out on the touchline as City once again showed that their good set piece defending of recent years is a thing of the past.

Although City were making a better fist of it in the second half, there was no sign of a way back into things for them until they scored a goal out of the blue when Ojo touched in a mishit cross shot by Murphy on fifty eight minutes as the home side struggled to deal with a corner.

City stepped up their pressure for ten minutes after that as they enjoyed their best spell of the ninety minutes without looking overly dangerous, but, once again a corner kick proved pivotal to the outcome – it all looked so easy as Ralls swung in the corner from the right and Keiffer Moore rose on the far post to nod in from eight yards after home keeper Bradley Collins came for, but got nowhere near the cross.

The momentum was now with City and, ordinarily, it would have been disappointing that they didn’t really kick on from here and step up the pressure on a shaky home team, but, given what has happened to them over the past month or so, I suppose it was understandable that they appeared to be more concerned with holding on to their point than looking to try to turn it into three.

As it was, Barnsley came closest to getting a winner in the time that remained with Victor Adeboyejo and Callum Styles unable to convert what were decent chances.

Ir would be daft to expect Mick McCarthy to have an instant impact given how far confidence must have fallen recently and what the new manager got was a full breakdown of the squad’s weaknesses, some of which have been staples in Cardiff teams for years, but, as mentioned earlier, also a glimpse of some of their strengths.

Two more set piece goals emphasized that most teams would love to be as good at scoring from them as we have been for some time now, but they would probably say “nah, we won’t bother” if gaining our set piece threat meant that they also had to inherit our “ability” to create chances from open play.

Finally, it’s now less than two months 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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