Cardiff City are beaten at the death as gap to top six widens to seven points.

Cardiff City’s eleven match unbeaten run under Mick McCarthy came to an end in very unfortunate circumstances today as Watford scored a soft goal in the fourth minute of added time at end of the match to snatch a 2-1 win as the weird stat which says that two goals or below from us in a home game means that we do not win – in fact, as this eighth Cardiff City Stadium defeat of the season suggests, we usually lose.

City went into the game with a home win over Derby that was even more convincing than the 4-0 winning margin suggests sandwiched by draws in away matches at Middlesbrough and Huddersfield where luck was on our side.

Now, when a run of six straight wins comes to an end with a draw at the home of a Play Off rival, it’s a bit harsh to be critical of the performance, but we were poor at the Riverside Stadium and not much better last Friday at Huddersfield where a missed penalty enabled us to extend our unbeaten run for a while longer.

So, the momentum of February was showing signs of stalling in March before today and, although I thought we played better than we had done in our last two away games, the indication that we have hit the buffers to some extent grew stronger as we now find ourselves seven points from the top six with two matches to be played before the final international break of the season.

For all of the hurt of losing through a preventable very late goal, I thought Watford’s win was just about deserved. About ten minutes after the coverage of the match on the club website had finished today, they showed a highlights package that was notable for how much of the action took place in our penalty area – when such a notoriously biased source’s highlights reel is so weighted in the other side’s favour, it does tend to tell a story!

Although there was the ever present threat from set pieces from City which led to second half efforts being hooked over the bar by Keiffer Moore and Aden Flint, in truth, Watford seemed to have most difficulty in dealing with long, high balls forward in the first half especially as central defenders and keeper got themselves in a pickle on a few occasions and needed a bit of luck at times to survive.

However, it was noticeable that the City back three, with their distinct height advantage over their opponents were also less commanding than usual when the ball was played high in their direction, so I think it’s probably fair to say that the gusty wind which blew throughout was more of a factor at times than the pictures, which often showed, bright, sunny conditions, suggested.

City were also dangerous for a short while during a positive, purposeful start which saw Josh Murphy and Harry Wilson getting more possession in promising areas than in any other game I can remember, but it didn’t last and from about the fifteen minute mark onwards, the game was like so many under Neil Harris’ management as we struggled to get our game changers into the match.

Murphy especially was prominent for that short while though as a slip by visiting centre back William Troost Ekong allowed him a clear run in on goal which he wasted with a poor touch as he closed in on keeper Daniel Bachmann. Murphy was much more impressive seconds later though when receiving the ball in a similar position, this time he opted to cross low for Moore who would have had a tap in if the ball had reached him, but Francisco Sierralta in trying to intercept turned the cross into his own net from six yards out.

Watford’s away record this season features plenty of draws and goals scored and conceded at a rate of less than one a game, so there was a feeling before kick off that goals would be at a premium and I definitely felt that, if we were to get the three points, it would be by rediscovering the lost art of the 1-0 or 2-1 home win.

Unfortunately, any chance of a victory through the first of those options disappeared within about a minute and a half of our goal as Watford showed their attacking teeth for the first time by working the ball into our penalty area to create a chance which we looked to have snuffed out until the ball broke to captain Nathaniel Chalobah who worked the space for himself in a crowded penalty area to shoot low past Dillon Phillips from about fifteen yards out.

Jason Perry on the club website and Mick McCarthy after the match were disappointed that Chalobah was allowed to get his shot away and that is the sort of attitude you’d expect from ex players, but, as a fan, I always tend towards praising the scorer when a goal is as expertly taken as this one was – even when it’s against my team.

Watford, with Will Hughes an increasingly influential figure while playing in a manner which you’d never see from a member of our current team, were the better side for the rest of the first half as Joao Pedro’s overhead kick was well struck, but flew straight at Phillips and then Ismailia Sarr’s shot got a slight deflection which made Phillips’ sprawling save to turn the ball for a corner all the more impressive.

With Pedro also flicking just over from eight yards out, Watford could feel a bit hard done by to still be level at the break with their often slick passing only emphasising our shortcomings in that area – I usually agree with what Jason Perry says when he is commentating on one of our games, but when he commented during one of the periods where Watford were particularly on top, that we needed to start passing the ball better to break up our opponent’s control, I couldn’t help but blurt out “but, we can’t do that, haven’t you been watching us for the last six months?” – in truth I could have said five years!

To City’s credit, Watford, and Hughes, were unable to move the ball about as effectively after the break, but still, the bulk of the best chances were theirs. Sarr had a header saved by Phillips and blazed wide from six yards when he should at least have got his effort on target and rather like in their previous two draws, this became a game where you were hoping City would get in with their point intact rather than wishing for, or expecting, a winning goal.

It was definitely looking like we could do that and make it to a dozen unbeaten when Sarr got the better of Perry Ng, who had switched to the left as part of a rearrangement when Curtis Nelson went off with a calf injury (Ciaron Brown moved into central defence and Tom Sang was introduced at right wing back), and was brought down right on the corner of the penalty area.

Now, I’ve seen comments to the effect that we didn’t have enough men in our wall for Adam Masina’s free kick, but, for me, what happened next was a goalkeeping error pure and simple by someone who had been faultless before now since he came on at Ashton Gate to replace Alex Smithies nearly two months ago.

Masina’s shot was certainly well hit, but it didn’t have much else to make you think it was going to be a match winner and it wouldn’t have been if Dillon Phillips had stayed on his feet as it would have been headed straight towards him, but, instead, he went to ground and waved a hand at the ball as it flew over and past him. There was an assumption at first from the commentators that there had been a deflection on the shot, but the first replay knocked that on the head – it was an odd one, maybe a combination of that problematic gusty wind and the modern balls tendency to “wobble” in the air did for Phillips?

So, Watford have three points which may prove vital to their top two hopes come May, not the one they looked like getting. I think that they are probably the team most likely to accompany Norwich into the Premier League automatically, but I hope they don’t and I hope they don’t make it up through the Play Offs either because I find the modern version of the club a hard one to like with their never ending turnover of players and managers.

Watford boss Xisco Munoz, who appears to be doing a very good job and has his team playing better football than his predecessor Vladimir Ivic, spoke of the need for “humility” after the game which was a bit rich when you consider the antics of him and his bench when the winning goal went in and of some of his team when the final whistle was blown. Also, for all that Munoz has done to get Watford playing in the last few months, you know that two or three defeats as the pressure mounts in the spring may well see their trigger happy owners act again – City are a far from perfect example of how a modern day club should operate, but, for all of their time in the Premier League since 2015, I wouldn’t want to be a Watford fan these days.

Just a quick word about Academy. This statement, which was issued by the club overnight suggests that the issue of bullying of youngsters didn’t begin and end with the Craig Bellamy issue which caused the club a lot of bad publicity a year or two ago and, although I cannot go into detail because I would be breaking a confidence, it ties in with a few things I’ve heard since the Bellamy issue – let’s hope the club inquiry is a proper and complete one and not a whitewash.

There is no suggestion that matters under review happened at any particular age group at the moment and the Under 18s were, seemingly, unaffected as they got back to winning ways at Leckwith this lunchtime after a couple of defeats by beating Colchester 5-0 with goals from Taz Mayembe, James Carole, Rhys Schwank, Ryan Kavanagh (pen) and Taylor Jones.

Finally, some words about a couple of books. Firstly, regular Feedback column contributor Anthony Mor O’Brien has published a novel recently – in Anthony’s words,

“The story is about Stanley Sharp  (*”Sharp by name and sharp by nature!”)  who, with his friend, come out of the Army just after VE Day. They experience several escapades usually involving the quick mind of Stanley at various venues they reach by motor car with petrol from a government storage facility they have discovered.

Stanley briefly meets a WREN named Gloria Munday in London and some time later encounters her again in her home town of Pontypridd. Various adventures in other parts of South Wales occur (Including Tiger Bay) and are generally historically accurate.” 

The book is called EPONYMOUS SHARP ESCAPADES and can be bought at

Also, the fiftieth anniversary of City’s 1-0 win over Real Madrid on 10 March 1971 passed on Wednesday, so here’s a further reminder of my book Real Madrid and all that which is a review of both that match and the 1970/71 season in which I’m afraid another home defeat by Watford played a major part! Real Madrid and all that can be ordered from;-

Posted in Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Seven decades of Cardiff City v Watford matches.

After the rare luxury of no midweek games, City return to action at the beginning of what might be a defining week in their season with a home game against Watford. Here’s seven questions on Saturday’s opponents with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. This defender was born in a small town which sounds like it was named in honour of a 1967 European Cup winner, but wasn’t. He only played for two sides and both of them had amber/yellow as the main colour on their kit (although he was at his second club long enough to have seen change their shirts to blue and to white for a time). Watford were his first club and he found his way into the first team blocked by the fact that the player manager played in the same position as him. So, after less than twenty appearances for them, he was off to the club he is most associated with. Relatively early in his stint at this club, he was in a team which embarrassed a side featuring multiple World Cup winners in a cup match before bowing out at the next stage with a narrow 1-0 loss to what could be considered to be local rivals from the top flight. Late in his time with this club, they experienced promotion twice as they reached unsurpassed heights – he went nearly seven years without missing a game for them and has a bar named after him at their ground, but who is he?

70s. A Scotsman who spent all of his career in England, this midfielder started off with contented tools during a time when life was something of a struggle for them. He was more out of the team than in, but found the net against Stoke and Burnley during his three years with them. He then signed for Watford for a fairly modest fee and only had a draw to show from his two meetings with City while he was with them – transfer listed at the end of his first season with the Hornets, he stayed for another two years without achieving very much and was eventually given a free transfer which led to him linking up with Essex boys for another unsuccessful season. His next move – west to a market town saw an upturn in his career with a promotion though and he was in their side when they were beaten on a memorable night at Ninian Park. His poor record at our ground continued the following season when his side returned there this time for a bottom of the table scrap and following their relegation, he was on the march so to speak as he moved north to a happy field where he experienced the second league title of his career as the seventies were coming to an end. He stayed around for another year or two before retiring with a modest goalscoring return of 26 from his 314 league appearances – do you know who he is?

80s. Comfort grass seed?

90s. Nato stencil used by Watford? (5,6)

00s. Born in the town where the Poppies play, this defender was a serial promotion winner/challenger during his career following his release by a managerial great for whom he didn’t play a game at his first club. It was cup success which first got him noticed though and this helped get him a move to red city dwellers with whom he played a small part in a promotion. Following a loan spell with rivals of Watford, he next showed up at a lair where there was another promotion and a Play Off Final defeat. Watford were his next club and there were mixed results (a win, a draw and a loss) in his games against City and no promotions during his three seasons with them. His final team were situated not far from his birthplace and there was one more promotion to celebrate before retirement. Who is he?

10s. Who is being described here? This full back had two spells at Barcelona in his home country before arriving at Watford via Spain and had a short loan spell with red and white Thyrios while in Hertfordshire. A loser and then a winner in his encounters with City while at Watford, he’s back home now in the country that he played every minute for in their appearance in the 2014 World Cup Finals.

20s. Shrewd blue train perhaps.

Answers

60s. Sandy Pate was born in Lennoxtown in East Dumbartonshire, but spent all of his long playing career in England. A right back, he was kept out of the Watford team by player boss Ken Furphy for most of his two years at Vicarage Road and moved on to Mansfield in 1967. Two years later Pate was in the team which beat West Ham 3-0 at Field Mill in an FA Cup tie and they gave Leicester (who were beaten finalists that year) a real battle before going down by a single goal in the Quarter Final. Mansfield were promoted into the Third Division in 1975 and then the Second a couple of years and Pate’s retired at what turned out to be their only season so far in the second tier with a club record 413 league appearances behind him.

70s. Jimmy Lindsay played nearly forty league games for West Ham between 1968 and 1971 before moving on to Watford for £20,000, but he couldn’t prevent their relegation and then struggles at the lower level before he left for Colchester on a free transfer, His next move was to Hereford and he was an eve present in their Third Division title winning side of 75/76 who were beaten 2-0 by runners up Cardiff in front of 35,000 at Ninian Park. Hereford struggled in the Second Division in the following season and were in the bottom of the league they occupied for most of the campaign when they were beaten 3-1 in Cardiff on Boxing Day 1976. Lindsay signed for Shrewsbury a few months later and they were Third Division Champions in 78/79 before he retired from the game in 1981.

80s. Pat Rice.

90s. Clint Easton.

00s. Kettering born Sean Dyche was a youth player at Nottingham Forest, but never played a game for them. He played over 250 times for his next team, Chesterfield, though and was a mainstay of their team which reached the 1997 FA Cup Semi Final. Loaned to Luton during a short stay at Bristol City, Dyche established himself as a second tier level player with Millwall and almost made it into the Premier League as the Lions were beaten by Birmingham in a Play Off Final. Dyche captained Watford in the last of his three years with them and ended his playing career at Northampton.

10s.  Juan Carlos Paredes played every minute of Ecuador’s 2014 World Cup Finals campaign and had two spells with Barcelona Sporting Club, who are based in Guayaquil, the largest city in that country. Paredes signed for Grenada in 2014, but did not play a game for them before linking up with Watford and, apart from a loan spell at Olympiakos, he stayed with them for three years before returning to Ecuador.

20s. Thomas (Tom) Cleverley.

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