Seven decades of Cardiff City v Sheffield Wednesday matches.

Usual format, seven questions on our next opponents dating back to the sixties – I’ll post the answers on here on Tuesday.

60s. Born in a place where the local football club went into liquidation in the early noughties (only to be replaced by a new version almost immediately), this inside forward started off at a numbered club where his goalscoring feats attracted the attention of Sheffield Wednesday to begin a sequence where he played in stripes, then halves and then hoops. His encounters with City came all in a rush and were successful, but, despite maintaining his healthy scoring rate, his time at the last two of these teams was very brief. In fact, after his three years at Hillsborough, he never played more than twenty league matches again for any of his clubs. He wore blue for a club whose name does not contain the name of the place they are based in, then spent time at what is traditionally one of the coldest grounds in England, before a move abroad to a place where I imagine it gets much colder at certain times of year. Low temperatures would not have been too much of a problem at his next overseas club which, like one of his previous teams, featured the letter J prominently in its name, before he returned to where his career had started – maybe he could have finally got past that twenty game mark with them, but circumstances beyond his control made that impossible – who am I describing?

70s. This forward’s first encounter with City while with Sheffield Wednesday was an unhappy one as he watched the man whose place he was taking score twice against his former club. Over the next three seasons, he was a regular opponent of ours and, although he experienced Wednesday wins during that time, he couldn’t find the net for them. As his team declined, there was a one game temporary stay at an arboretum before he turned somewhat catty. His goalscoring rate, which was never great, didn’t improve in spells with fiends or headwear specialists, but that didn’t stop Sir Alf Ramsey selecting him at a time when he was still England manager, the odd thing was though that this Englishman never won any sort of international cap and was never selected in a squad to represent his country – who is he?

80s. Who is this? Born in a place which produced a couple of England World Cup winners, this defender’s career never came close to reaching similar heights. Starting off with his local team, he was a fairly regular selection during a mediocre period for this club before moving to Wednesday in the late seventies. He played much more first team football at Hillsborough as he was inon the early days of a climb which eventually saw them return to the top flight after some time in the third tier and also scored the only goal of his career while with them. He returned to England after a spell in Sweden to play in a place which you might have thought made flour in a rural setting, before a single appearance for blue northerners ended his league career – he lived a spartan existence for a while after that.

90s. Rake and crib combination produces one time Wednesday man. (4,7)

00s. Top scorer for Wednesday in a season during this decade and a reported one time target for West Ham, he also played for us against them in a game at Ninian Park in the noughties, who?

10s. Who was the Sheffield Wednesday player, who was in one of their teams beaten in Cardiff during this decade, who retired from the game through a combination of disillusionment and wanting to devout more time to his religious beliefs?

20s. Middle eastern capital feeling obstinate?

Answers.

60s. Airdrie born Bobby Craig began his career with Third Lanark, scoring a very impressive sixty one goals in the one hundred and twenty four league games he played for them before signing for Sheffield Wednesday in 1959. He played twice within a week in August 1960 against City as Wednesday completed a double and managed twenty five goals in his eighty four First Division appearances for them before he moved to Blackburn in 1962, but, after three more goals in eight matches, he quickly moved to Celtic where, despite thirteen goals from seventeen league appearances, he was deemed surplus to requirements and transferred to St Johnstone. Spells with Oldham, Toronto City and Johannesburg Wanderers followed before he was back with Third Lanark in 1967, but he was to play in that club’s final ever game as financial problems forced its closure a few weeks after Craig’s arrival.

70s. David Sunley was in the Sheffield Wednesday team beaten 4-0 at Ninian Park in January 1971 – a game in which Alan Warboys scored his first City goals against the team we’d signed him from a fortnight earlier. Sunley played a game on loan at Forest in 1975 before signing for Hull and there were spells with Lincoln and Stockport before he retired from full time football. In 1973, Sunley was selected by Sir Alf Ramsey for a Football Association squad which toured Gibraltar under his management.

80s. Ray Blackhall was born in Ashington, the birthplace of the Charlton brothers and played just over forty times for Newcastle before signing for Sheffield Wednesday. Blackhall left in 1982 to play for Swedish team IK Tord briefly, but was back in England at Mansfield within months. After a single appearance for Carlisle, he dropped into non league football with Blyth Spartans.

90s. Dean Barrick.

00s. Guylain Ndumbu-Nsungu was Sheffield Wednesday’s top scorer in 03/04 and was a reported target for West Ham that year – he came on as a sub for City in a 1-0 home win over Wednesday in March 2006.

10s. Jeremy Helan was in the Wednesday side beaten 1-0 in Cardiff in December 2012.

20s. Aden Flint.

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Home form continues to be the problem for tired looking Cardiff City.

With nine wins and six draws to show from their nineteen away matches, Cardiff City have shown top six, if not top two, form this season, but at home it’s been an impersonation of a relegation fighting team. Today, we got yet another example of why the odds remain firmly against City making it into the Play Offs as they lost for the ninth time in 20/21 on their own ground – Nottingham Forest, the team we always used to beat, gaining their third win in the last four meetings between the teams.

Chris Houghton, the Forest manager, has built his reputation on solid defences and his current side’s position too near to the relegation places for comfort is firmly down to a lack of attacking punch rather than any weaknesses at the back, they average just about a goal a game conceded away from home.

Therefore, given, City’s bizarre pre conditions for victory at Cardiff City Stadium, the chances of them recording what would have been win number eight looked remote.

City are great fun on the too rare occasions when they win on their own patch, because it means they must have scored three or more goals – failure to do that sees them gain the, very, occasional draw, but far more often it means they lose.

Tonight I find myself feeling much the same as a Swansea fan must have after their derby day defeat a fortnight ago. There were a lot of similarities between the two matches in that the away side were slightly the better in the first half, got their goal (in Forest’s case from their only on target effort of the match) and then spent the second period defending manfully in the face of pretty relentless pressure and, at the final whistle, I feel both sets of home team supporters could feel hard done by at their side not coming out of the match with a draw.

With Sean Morrison having not recovered from the injury he received in the Swansea match, the fit again Curtis Nelson replaced him in the only change from the last game. Mick McCarthy clearly felt that the players that won the derby had earned another chance for themselves, but, given the lack of experience Tom Sang and Joe Ralls had in the wing back role, it seemed an unnecessary risk to me given that Perry Ng was fit enough to be included as a substitute.

However, City’s problems today were not in the wing back positions. In fact, Sang and Ralls were among our best players.

To me, there was more evidence that the high intensity and pressing which was so important in keeping the fine run following McCarthy’s appointment going is fading because the effects of a season where the games come around quicker than usual are combining with consequences of the way we have played the game under the current manager to ensure that our players are close to being out on their feet.

There had been hopes that the international break could lead to a recharging of the batteries for at least some of our team, but there was little evidence of that. This was a tired performance by our attacking players, in particular Keiffer Moore who didn’t seem to have benefited from only playing about ninety minutes in total for Wales in the three games they played in the past fortnight.

It’s also a concern that Sheyi Ojo came up with another inconsequential appearance off the bench and one cross which led to our best chance of the afternoon apart, “inconsequential” described Josh Murphy’s contribution as well.

Jonny Williams was introduced along with Ojo and Murphy, but it was no fault of his that City produced very little which suggested an equaliser until the introduction of Rubin Colwill and Mark Harris inside the last ten minutes. Williams stood out of as someone who is well grounded in the basics of the game – that shouldn’t by enough to earn any particular praise normally, but in this team, which so often makes joined up football look almost an impossibility, it does tend to stand out.

To be fair though, City although again displaying their limitations when trying to find another blue shirt, we’re not as bad as usual at passing the ball and the BBC’s stats show that they shaded the possession fifty one to forty nine. However, one of the lessons of this season is that the more we have of the ball, the more our lack of creativity from open play is exposed.

Indeed, City’s best bit of incisive and creative football came in the first ten minutes when the front three combined well to set up Leandro Bacuna with a shooting chance that presented Brice Samba with just about the only save he had to make from a goal attempt – it was a decent piece of goalkeeping but that’s all it needed to be and if you combine that with the fact that Dillon Phillips couldn’t stop the only on target shot he faced all afternoon (he made a diving second half save from a shot which looked to be going wide), it rather tells you what a poor spectacle the game was.

The only goal was well worked by Forest as they made ground down on our left, got to the bye line where a cross was pulled for Manchester United loanee midfielder James Garner to sweep in from about fifteen yards. Now, the club website commentators made great play out of Joe Ralls’ positioning for the goal and how he had not got much help from his team mates, but I was left thinking that if, say, Will Vaulks was told to get himself on, our close to, the penalty spot every time the opposition were in our final third from open play, we’d end up conceding a fair few less goals than we do.

Going back to City’s lack of an end product, that Bacuna effort apart there was only a Sang header not too far over from a good Ralls cross in the best example we came up with of what a pair of wing backs can give you in an attacking sense and one of those long distance Vaulks shots that he occasionally catches so well (this one flew narrowly wide with Samba looking beaten) to get excited about in the first half.

After the break, Forest were able to get in the block that we couldn’t when the ball was turned back towards the penalty spot and so Moore was denied his seventeenth league goal of the season.

Besides that, it was only when we went for the usual aerial bombardment in the closing stages that Forest were seriously troubled.

Stand in captain Aden Flint was unmarked to reach a fine Murphy cross some five yards from goal, but I’m afraid it was the 19/20 Flint that turned up today when it came to his defending and passing, but not when it came to his work in the opposition penalty box, so the header flew over the bar and then Ciaron Brown got a firm header on a Murphy corner only to see the ball hit Forest’s Cafu and, very luckily, lob gently up into the air to Samba who was left with a simple catch to make.

Elsewhere, Barnsley and Reading drew 1-1 to make it a very good day for Bournemouth who were 3-1 winners over Middlesbrough, so the gap to sixth is now five points. That’s not insurmountable, but we haven’t been playing well for a few weeks now (a big win over a dreadful Derby and a gutsy and, but pretty fortunate, win at Swansea apart, we’ve played poorly since our awful showing at Middlesbrough) and I think we really miss Morrison when he’s not there. Apparently, he’s almost certainly out of Monday’s match at Sheffield Wednesday and is considered a doubt for next weekend’s match with Blackburn – I fear we’ll be in a position where we will have to take something like thirteen points out of fifteen by the time he comes back to stand a chance of making the top six.

Just a few words about a couple of widely contrasting results for City at age group levels in midweek. On Tuesday, the under 23s got back on the winning trail with another big win at Leckwith. This one was by a season’s best score of 6-1 over Wigan with Rubin Colwill scoring a hat trick – other goals came from Roland Idowu, Isaak Davies and there was another lovely strike from distance by Keenan Patten for a City team that were 4-0 up at the interval.

On Wednesday, the Academy team travelled to West Brom to play their long delayed Fourth Round Youth Cup tie and came out on the wrong end of a 2-1 scoreline. In a previous visit to the Hawthorns in 13/14, the first team came back to gain a 3-3 draw after conceding twice in the first ten minutes, but the youngsters were unable to do the same as their seniors.

When they found themselves 2-0 down in nine minutes it looked like being a very long evening indeed for City, but, they worked their way back into things to such an extent that, once Tom Davies had reduced the deficit about midway through the second half, they had West Brom rattled for much of the remainder of the game as they finished very strongly, but they just couldn’t find the goal to take it into extra time.

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