Lockdown quiz number eight.

With Germany playing games and other countries announcing restart dates, it seems a football of sorts will be fairly commonplace soon even though it still seems ages away to me in the UK despite players now being back training at Premier League and Championship clubs.

Testing at these clubs has identified a few players in the Premier League and a couple in the Championship (both at Hull City) who have the virus, something which doesn’t seem to be putting off the desire for a start sometime early next month that I’ve been reading about.

Anyway, for now it’s just quizzes to report about on here – here’s the latest one with the answers to be posted on Friday;-

1 I’ve heard it said that there are more footballers with birth dates early in the school year than there are with ones late in it – something to do with them being bigger in their academic year than those born later. Having seen a list of the birthdays of players in the current City squad who have played a league game for us, the evidence that this is the case doesn’t appear to be too strong, but how many of our players have a date of birth in May?

2. South American born, he offered a completely different approach to the position he played in compared to the person who most frequently played there for us in recent seasons. At twenty three, he was certainly older than most when making a first team debut, but he became a regular at his first club over the following four years. His move to Cardiff represented an upheaval and he only stayed one season amid some reports that his family were struggling to settle in the area. Maybe this was a factor in a drop in form from a fine start which saw him at his best as City tried a tactical approach that the manager at the time was quite a fan of, but, with a return to a more traditional system under a new boss, his place in the side was no longer secure and it was no surprise to see him returning to where he had come from, albeit with a different club. He stayed with his new side for another four years before retiring at the age of thirty three – who is he?

3. He had played nearly four hundred times in the Football League by the time he turned out for any one else but a London team. When he did try somewhere else, he did so at a place that suffered greatly in the blitz during the Second World War. He had tried his hand at management (and would return to it, with much more success, later) at his next, lower division, side by the time he turned up at Cardiff as part of what could be described as a short tour of selected south Wales footballing venues. He was next associated with a Victory for a while and then he was in quarters before a permanent switch to management, can you name him?

4. A sotonian by birth, he turned up first at a place with an alliterative ground name in London, but not for too long. He did better at a club that’s location has a connection with the stadium he had previously played in and his good form earned him a move to a city which includes the word “upon” in its name. He played for City next and generally did well when injuries allowed him to play with his only goals for us scored against what I would call local rivals and the team he first played for. He played in Hong Kong for a while after leaving us and then returned to south Wales to play and coach at non league level – he was also an occasional spectator at Ninian Park during that time, but who am I describing?

5. Who is this – most of his City goals were scored in the FAW Premier Cup, but he did find the net for us in the league in a romp which saw six different City players score and against men who deal in protein fibre, while he was the match winner at a venue with its own railway station where a current Championship club used to play. He was loaned out by City to play outside Great Britain at United Park and enjoyed more scoring success at each of his three west country clubs – he returned to Ninian Park with one of them to score a goal that he didn’t want to celebrate.

6. Described by a team mate at his first club as “A very gifted centre forward, lean and so quick but unusually with a sharp brain to go with it! He would take a row with a centre half in his stride and yet out-think his opponent, and he was incredibly fit too”, he had an unusual international career for a few reasons, but he scored at almost a goal a game during it and netted four times in an international tournament held in Rome. His Cardiff career ended abruptly following an encounter with a horse’s shoulders, can you name him?

7. This quote comes from a former City player and he’s talking about another former player of ours – can you name the two men?

“For a lad of 26 years of age this is a terrible thing to have to do, but …….. has suffered not only on the football pitch but off it. A good footballer like …… doesn’t leave his problems behind in the treatment room and eventually the problem permeates everything you do and can become intolerable.

“I’ve worked with ……….since he was fourteen, so to say I’m heartbroken for him is an understatement but his decision has been taken with this club in mind. He could have asked for a third operation without the guarantee of it eradicating the pain and resolving the problem, carried on getting paid, and left us short of a player as the season began, but he is such a humble, decent guy he felt that he owed us as a club, and me as his manager and friend, more than that.”

8. Rod in Brine makes landlord/hairdresser (6,4).

9. Crane in Rio by the sound of it (5,6).

10. The answer is sixty eight and it didn’t change during the last match we played, what is the question, which refers to Cardiff City 19/20?

11. With a father who was a champion in another sport, this nomadic striker played in five different countries. Starting off by a river in the Midlands, Swansea were interested in him when he was released, but he decided he didn’t want to move that far and dropped into non league football instead. Strangely, he was prepared to come to Wales for his next move and his exploits for two clubs down here helped him find a way back into league football with United blues. After coming a long way south, he briefly returned to Wales on a temporary basis to play a few games for a struggling City team, but made no real impact and after another loan move to a club further down west than the one he was contracted to, left the Football League never to return. He went abroad to play, firstly, for a side City had faced in European competition a couple of decades earlier and then to another country to play for a club in its capital and then one in its north west area. After that he returned to his native land to see out his career playing as a centre back – he had not reached sixty when he died a few years ago, can you name him?

12. There is a connection between Zsa Zsa Gabor, Arnold the pig and a City striker from the nineties, what is it?

13. Sharing his name with someone who joined the England one cap wonder club in 1966, this full back arrived at City from a team in sky blue whose nickname makes it sounds like they are a bunch of nutters. His five league appearances for us came consecutively, starting at the Valley and ending with a match where two of our players scored five times between them against one of their former teams. His only other appearance came in a Welsh Cup Final defeat shortly before he left the game to become a trainee architect, who is he?

14. What individual club record was equalled in a home game with Mansfield at Ninian Park in March 2003?

15. . Described as “strong, powerful and technically good” by the manager who signed him, this striker with a couple of full caps, proved to be far from strong during his time at Cardiff. Unavailable for some time due to an injury he suffered at his previous club, he lasted less than a quarter of an hour on his debut before picking up a further knock which kept him out for another six weeks. His next first team chance came when he was introduced as a substitute late on in a game in London which we lost to a stoppage time goal and that was the end of his career at the club – after a season away on loan, he moved on during the following summer to play in a city which is one of the homes of an organisation which has one less member this year and is currently going around and around on loan, do you know who he is?

16. Name the season – a website I use describes the City team that year as “dour”. There are only three debutantes, one being an expensive signing who generally gave his all to the team, but I remember him most now for the acrimonious welcome he got from the home fans when he returned to Cardiff with another Welsh team. The other players given their first matches were a midfield player who arrived from the Midlands via a place associated with a singer who died in Cardiff in 2005 and a winger who had been released by a south coast club that would soon be making their first visit to the top flight – the new men managed three league goals between them out of the total of just forty one we scored, but at least one of them provided supporters with some bragging rights in what was a pretty nondescript campaign.

17. Did he put any vest on when he played for us? (4,5)

18. Explicit men of the cloth? (5,7)

19. Fifth Beatle turns up at Ninian Park in early twenty first century?

20. Four players in the current City squad have scored one goal this season, who are they?

Answers

  1. Curtis Nelson is the only player in our squad who was born in May. As far as the theory about the school year goes, Matt Connolly, Will Vaulks and Isaac Vassell were all born in September and Joe Ralls and Callum Paterson were October births, but November is the only month that does not have any of our squad born in it.
  2. Surinam born Winston Faerber played just short of one hundred and fifty times for Den Haag before signing for City in the summer of 1999. He was, perhaps, the best player in the side in his early weeks with the club as City made a decent start in the third tier after their promotion in the previous season. Playing on the right in a three at the back, wing back system used by Frank Burrows, Faerber scored in his second game as City won impressively at Oxford, but he and the side began to struggle in the weeks that followed. When Burrows left, his replacement, Billy Ayre, decided on a 4-4-2 system which meant that Faerber’s defensive weaknesses left his place in the team vulnerable – City went down and Faerber returned to the Netherlands to play for Den Bosch in the summer.
  3. One time England captain Gerry Francis returned to QPR for a second spell after a couple of years at Palace before moving to Coventry City in 1982. He became Player Manager of Exeter City at the age of thirty two, but it was solely as a player that he was taken on by City for a none too successful spell in the poor 1984/85 team. It was a struggle for him at Swansea as well and he left to join Portsmouth and, finally, Bristol Rovers before becoming manager of that club.
  4. Dave Roberts was born in Southampton and signed for Fulham as a teenager in the sixties. After playing just over twenty matches in three years he moved on to Oxford United (the Oxford v Cambridge boat race passes Fulham’s Craven Cottage ground) and he did well enough there to gain the first few of his seventeen Welsh caps. Hull paid a big fee for him in 1975 and it cost City £70,000 to bring him here three years later. Injury meant he only played forty six times for us with his goals coming at Bristol Rovers and then in a home win over Fulham. After playing in Hong Kong, he was a player coach with Barry and Bridgend.
  5. Christian Roberts was loaned to Drogheda United while with City. Scoring league goals for us in a 7-1 win over Doncaster, a defeat by Macclesfield and a 1-0 victory at Boothferry Park Hull, Roberts scored at a decent rate for Exeter, Swindon and Bristol City for whom he scored in a 2-0 win here in 2002.
  6. Bobby Brown won caps for England at amateur level and represented Great Britain at the Rome Olympics in 1960 scoring four times in his three matches. His career was ended on Boxing Day 1967 when he suffered a cruciate ligament injury in a collision with Aston Villa goalkeeper Colin Withers (a horse’s withers is the ridge between its shoulder blades).
  7. Neal Ardley talking about Jon Meades – Ardley was Meades’ manager at AFC Wimbeldon when the latter was forced to retire at just 26.
  8. Ronnie Bird.
  9. Derek Brazil.
  10. The number of yellow cards received by City in all competitions this season.
  11. Paul Bannon’s father was a three times all Ireland hurling title winner and his son started his football career at Nottingham Forest before moving on to Corby Town. His goalscoring for Ammanford and Bridgend persuaded Carlisle to sign him and he played nearly one hundred and fifty times for them whilst scoring forty five times. He next signed for Bristol Rovers and was loaned to City by them in the 84/85 season. He didn’t score in his four matches for us and was then loaned to Plymouth before he moved to Holland to play for NAC Breda. His next side was PAOK Athens and then he moved on to Larissa before finishing his career in Ireland by playing as a centreback for Cork City and then Cobh Ramblers.
  12. Zsa Zsa Gabor’s sister Eva was a leading character in the American comedy series Green Acres that ran from 1965 to 1971 which also featured a pig called Arnold. Chris Greenacre scored twice for City in eleven appearances during the 97/98 season while on loan from Manchester City.
  13. Gordon Harris signed for City from Forfar Athletic (the Loons) in March 1965 and played in the game in which we beat Swansea Town 5-0 at Ninian Park thanks to a hat trick from Ivor Allchurch and a couple of goals from John Charles. His last match for us came in May of that year in a 1-0 defeat by Wrexham at the Racecourse in the Second Leg of a Welsh Cup Final that we eventually won in a replay.
  14. Robert Earnshaw equalled Stan Richards’ club record for the most league goals in a season by a player when he scored the only goal of the game against Mansfield on 21 March 2003 – he claimed the record for himself six weeks later when  his goal earned us a 1-1 draw at Crewe in the last match of the regular league season in 02/03.
  15. Algerian international Idris Saadi was signed by Russell Slade in 2015. He made a favourable impression when coming on in a 2-0 home win over Reading some three months after he arrived, but a separate injury meant it was April 2016 before he featured again for the senior side when he replaced Aron Gunnarsson in the eighty second minute of a 2-1 loss at Fulham. Eventually sold to Strasbourg, he is currently on loan with Cercle Bruges.
  16. The 1979/80 season saw City finish half way up the Second Division with a low scoring side that were hard to break down. Billy Ronson was a club record signing from Blackpool who scored the only goal in Swansea’s first league visit to Ninian Park in fifteen years, ex West Brom player Wayne Hughes was signed from Tulsa Roughnecks (Gene Pitney, whose song Twenty Fours hours from Tulsa reached number five in the UK charts in early 1964, died of a heart attack following a performance at St. David’s Hall fifteen years ago) and Mark Elliott who had been released by Brighton and made little impact in his eight first team appearances for us were the three players to make their debuts for us that season.
  17. Tony Evans.
  18. Frank Parsons.
  19. Tony Sheridan is an Irish midfield player who played in a couple of FAW Premier Cup matches for City in 00/01, while his namesake is one of many people considered to be contenders for the title of the fifth Beatle – he was one of only two non Beatles (the other was Billy Preston)  to receive label performance credit on a record with the group, and the only non-Beatle to appear as lead singer on a Beatles recording which charted as a single (My Bonnie).
  20. Curtis Nelson, Isaac Vassell, Leandro Bacuna and Gavin Whyte.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023, Out on the pitch | 4 Comments

Lockdown quiz number seven.

Another of these weekly quizzes, but, with football started in Germany with some very enjoyable matches that I didn’t think suffered too badly from not having spectators present, perhaps the real thing will be back here sooner than expected?

Also, here’s what I thought was a very nice Peter Whittingham tribute by former City manager Malky Mackay which appeared on the View from the Ninian website last week that you may have missed.

Back to the quiz, the normal twenty questions on Cardiff City dating back to the sixties with the answers to be posted on here on Friday.

1.Born in an area that used to be represented by a beast, he started his career with the village he was born in, before moving on to a team currently in what is the Premiership of non league football in his country. When he moved on, he was originally reported as on the verge of becoming an Essex man, but, instead, he decided to keep on wearing red and opted for the home of the National Trust. He didn’t move too far next and enjoyed success in a record breaking title win for a side that has flirted with the Premier League in recent years. On the face of it, his next transfer represented a continuation of the upward direction of his career, but his one season in an area a long way from where he was used to performing was not really a success and he returned to somewhere close to what he had come to regard as home as he changed colour for the first time – who am I describing?

2. He began his career playing for his home town side alongside another native of the same seaside resort who he would team up with later in his career and did well enough to earn a move into the Football League to a club that was once Arabic, but are thought of more as picaroons or a fuel these days. He did well with his new side, scoring a hat trick in under five minutes once and he also set a club goalscoring record which stands to this day. A move to the top flight followed and having broken his scoring duck in his first season at the higher level, he was top scorer in his second, not that it did him or his club a lot of good. A move back down the leagues soon followed as he headed for the Home counties and what probably qualifies as commuter land – who is he?

3. This player was released by a club with a famed Academy at the time at a very young age, but landed on his feet as he was taken on by one of the “big six”. It was a long and testing road he travelled to reach the first team, but he got there and was part of the squad which travelled to take part in a, fairly, prestigious international competition. Loaned out to blues who had a former player of his parent club in a management position and then to a foreign side for whom the same thing applied, he became a member of the first team squad before another loan move to a nearby boundary. When he returned, he made a first league start for his parent club, but the decision appeared to have been made that he would be moving on after further loans to the White Rose coast, isolated northerners and whites who he eventually signed for permanently after his release. He crossed a border to a capital in a further loan move, but didn’t really grasp the opportunity he had been given and left early. His wandering continued with further temporary moves to London local rivals, one of which he joined for keeps, can you identify him?

4. Cardiff was the second Welsh club this injury plagued defender played for. In between times, he was a sharp operator in Yorkshire – his only City goal came in what could be described I suppose as a local derby, what’s his name?

5. In the noughties, which pair of England internationals, with a total of sixty caps between them, in their final seasons as contracted Football League players were involved in a 2-0 defeat at Ninian Park which, to all intents and purposes ended their team’s prospects of a first ever promotion to the Premier League?

6. One of the Cardiff promotion winning squads since 1963 contained five members whose next club after City were in the USA – which season does this apply to and who were the five players?

7. Name these two players, they both scored four times in a match against us during the eighties – one of them was playing for a side he subsequently was appointed caretaker manager of on four occasions, while the other one was playing for a team he went on to score for in an FA Cup Semi Final.

8. Deny Val is altered, but someone let in all of those goals!

9. More like olive I’d say!

10. 11,233 represented what to Cardiff City in July 2019?

11. Which blink and you would have missed him City winger started out at the same club his father played for, went on loan to Bristol Rovers, then signed for yellow/amber university types before dropping into non League football with a short distance move to “the Blanketmen” before, somewhat bafflingly, we signed him? He never played a League game for us, but his only two matches for the club were both against Swansea.

12.   In the last thirty years, City have had a season where, having ended a run of fourteen matches without a win, they promptly went on a twelve game unbeaten run (in both cases, in all competitions) – name the season.

13. Another name the season question. In which season in the dim and distant past was City’s top scorer going into December a full back with five goals, one of which was a header? Also, who was the player?

14. This English born Cardiff Academy product is now playing league football in a third decade having played first team football for five different clubs based in three different countries – he has never been sent off in his senior career, but who is he?

15. It started on a never to be forgotten night in April 1968 and ended, in torrential rain as I recall it, on a muggy Cardiff night in September 1976 in far more mundane circumstances – what am I describing?

16. Which Welsh international and future manager of Air Force Central, who has also worked as a coach for Arsenal Ladies and the Bangladesh and Vietnam national teams, was recruited by City at very short notice, but found his way into the first team barred by the arrival of another player in his position, who performed ordinarily at best as first choice, and never played a senior game for us?

17. Place me in a mess.

18. Decline shades I hear.

19. A way of making sure a wet thoroughfare is heard?

20. The fiftieth goal conceded by City this season reduced someone to tears, who was it?

Answers

  1. Aden Flint was born in Pinxton (a village in the “Beast of Bolsover” Dennis Skinner’s one time constituency) and, after reportedly being on the brink of signing for Colchester, he opted to team up with Swindon after impressing at his second side, Alfreton. Establishing himself in league football as a goalscoring central defender, he signed for a Bristol City side that eventually walked away with the League One title and handled the transition to the Championship with few problems. The reported £7 million Middlesbrough paid for Flint offered proof that he was a highly regarded centreback in this division, but they were happy to accept City’s lower offer for him last summer as he was signed as a replacement for Bruno Manga.
  2. Dai Ward played in the same Barry Town side as Derek Tapscott who he would later partner in attack at City, Ward signed for Bristol Rovers in 1954 having been on Cardiff’s books as a youngster. He scored a four minute hat trick for Rovers against Doncaster and also set a club record by scoring in eight consecutive league games, Ward returned to Cardiff towards the end of the 60/61 season and got a goal at Everton before the season ended. In 61/62, he scored twenty one times in all competitions as City lost form completely after a promising start to the campaign and were relegated – a return like that suggested Ward had more than done his bit though and there was some incredulity when he was sold to Watford in the summer of 1962.
  3. Ben Amos was not considered good enough by Crewe Alexandra who released him at the age of ten. However, Manchester United then took him on and he worked his way through the ranks to get involved with the first team as he made the squad for the 2008 World Club Championship. Having been  loaned to Barry Fry’s Peterborough and Ole’s Molde. Amos established himself as United’s third choice keeper on his return, but the signing of Anders Lindegaard signalled more loan moves to Hull, Carlisle and Bolton for whom he signed when United let him go. Amos was signed by Paul Trollope on loan for the 16/17 season, but he wasn’t convincing and was one of the players whose cause was not helped by the arrival of Neil Warnock. Returning to Bolton, he was loaned again to Charlton (his current club) and Millwall.
  4. Dave Powell played for Sheffield United in between spells with Wrexham and City – he scored for us in a 1-1 draw at Swindon in 1974.
  5. Martin Keown (43 caps) was in the starting line up for a Reading side which lost to a relegation threatened City team in April 2005 – Les Ferdinand (17 caps) came on as a half time substitute.
  6. 1975/76 squad members Bill Irwin, Clive Charles, Mike England, Adrian Alston and Willie Anderson all went on to play for clubs in the USA after they left the club.
  7. Mark Lillis scored four times for Huddersfield against us at Leeds Road in 82/83 and Chesterfield’s Andy Morris did the same at Saltergate in 88/89.
  8. Lyn Davies.
  9. Matt Green.
  10. The distance travelled by the squad in miles to play their pre season matches, comprising Cardiff to Taffs Well 6 miles, to San Antonio 4,867 miles, on to Albuquerque 715 miles, then to Edmonton, 1.636 miles, before a 4,139 mile trip back to Cardiff.
  11. Phil Lythgoe and his father Derrick both played for Norwich City. Phil signed for Oxford United when he was released by the Canaries and then played for Witney after leaving them. It was from here that Len Ashurst signed him on a short term contract in 1982 – not eligible for league games, he was selected in both legs of the 1981/82 Welsh Cup Final with Swansea.
  12. In 1993/94, City won at 3-1 at Fulham on 21 August then didn’t win again until they beat Afan Lido 2-0 at Ninian Park in the Welsh Cup on 26 October – their next defeat after that wasn’t until December 14 when they were beaten 3-2 in the Associates Members Cup at Wycombe.
  13. In 1972/73, Gary Bell had scored five times in all competitions by mid October and was not overhauled as top scorer until Bobby Woodruff scored twice in a 4-1 over Sheffield Wednesday on 9 December. All of Bell’s goals came from penalties, but with one of them he netted with a follow up header after Jeff Wealands of Hull had saved his spot kick.
  14. Aaron Wildig, best known in his Cardiff career for the assist which led to Michael Chopra’s last gasp winner against the Jacks in 2010, was loaned to Hamilton Academicals and Shrewsbury (for whom he later signed permanently). While at Shrewsbury, he was loaned out to Kidderminster and Morecambe – he signed for the latter upon his release at Shrewsbury and scored three times for them in their last five matches before fixtures were stopped due to the virus.
  15. Richie Morgan’s first team career at Cardiff City. His debut was in the famous 1-0 win over Moscow Torpedo in Augsburg in a Cup Winners’ Cup Quarter Final replay and his last appearance was in a 0-0 draw with Millwall at Ninian Park in which he got injured and City had to bring in Paul Went to replace him – the emergence of Keith Pontin a few months later meant there was no way back into the first team for Morgan.
  16. When Tom Heaton and David Marshall were both injured late in the 10/11 season, Dave Jones brought Jason Brown in from Blackburn on an emergency loan, only to then sign Steven Bywater a day later as his first choice – Brown, surely, couldn’t have done any worse than Bywater in the Play Off disaster against Reading which turned out to be the manager’s last game in charge.
  17. Lee Camp.
  18. Wayne Hughes.
  19. Mike Ford.
  20. Yakou Meite scored Reading’s equaliser in the first FA Cup match against City at the Madejski Stadium and then burst into tears because it was his first game back after being given time off following the death of his father.
Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Comments Off on Lockdown quiz number seven.