Seven decades of Cardiff City v Luton Town matches.

Cardiff City travel to Luton tomorrow night for a meeting of two of the nine sides between seventh and fifteenth positions who are covered by just three points in the barmy league which is the Championship. Here’s seven questions on Luton going back to the sixties which I’ll post the answers to sometime on Wednesday.

60s. This forward’s early career was a bit of a disaster, his first team finished bottom of the Football League in successive seasons and he was eventually dropped and transfer listed by them. He regained his place and was eventually signed by a much higher placed club only to suffer a relegation during his short time with them. His next move was again in an easterly direction and, although not enjoying great success in terms of league position, his goalscoring rate was good enough to continue the upward trajectory of his career when he moved again. It was at his next club, following a move south, west to the coast where he prospered most. His next move was a short one which probably upset a few people at his former club and, by now, it looked like his career was on the slide as his scoring rate declined, but when he did up sticks again, it was to join the biggest club on his CV – a team he had terrorised one afternoon in 1969. Predictably, his waning powers meant that it was always likely to be a short stay and his last encounter with City came at a level I don’t believe he had played at before while out on loan – his team were beaten 3-1 in London and he was unable to add to his impressive goalscoring record against us. When he died, at the age of 70, it was in the country he had finished his career in and it was in a city where City played a pre season friendly not too long ago – who am I describing?

70s. One of our home matches with Luton in this decade finished as a pretty miserable draw which attracted the lowest league crowd of that season. Yet, it was a day that made me very happy because of something that may have led to the low turn out – what was the game and why did I enjoy it more than the game deserved?

80s. Born in Clipstone, a mining village in Nottinghamshire, this defender’s first club was close to his birthplace and he played a small part in their climb to the highest division they’ve ever played in. Signed by Luton at twenty two, he was a fairly regular choice in a side that was on its way to the First Division and he came up against City five times while at the Hatters with only a single draw to show for it. There were two loan spells in Lincolnshire during this time and he didn’t get quite as far as Cardiff with his next club before ending with a team that were losing a relegation battle from the old Division Two a season after City had vacated it to begin a long absence. Name the player.

90s. Ran AA help for region leader? (4,6)

00s. With a striker brother who has had a similarly nomadic career, this Londoner played for twenty three years and represented twenty clubs as he almost seemed to alternate between Football League and non League teams. Luton were his first team and he played for them in a game at Ninian Park which ended the second Cardiff career of a Larkhall born centreback. Only at Boston United did he make more than the fifty five league appearances he managed for Luton and he was in the starting line up for a place with a church with a crooked spire (quite appropriate given his surname!) when they were beaten in Cardiff during this decade. Among the multitude of clubs he’s been associated are single game spells for Bristol City and MK Dons and his last footballing job was a short spell in charge of blue non league Eagles, who play in a nest, last season, can you name him?

10s. Superb man of the cloth between the sticks?

20s. Which member of the current Luton squad became a fluent Italian speaker in school, played his first senior football when he came on as a sub for Daniel Pacheco against Northampton, once held transfer talks with Monaco and completed one successful pass in fifty seven minutes of a game with Wigan in June 2020?

Luton answers

60s. Ron Davies began his career at Chester who were officially the worst team in the Football League for much of his time with them. However, his forty four league goals in ninety four games got him noticed and he signed for Luton who were in the Second Division at the time. Davies’ twenty one goals in thirty one appearances (one of which came against City, one of seven he scored in ten career appearances against us, in a 3-2 home defeat for the Hatters in April 1963). Another goal filled spell followed at Norwich, fifty eight in one hundred and thirteen league games, but it was Southampton that Davies cemented a reputation which had him regarded as the best centre forward in the UK for many. His one hundred and thirty four league goals from two hundred and forty appearances included four scored at Old Trafford in a 4-1 defeat for Man United in August 1969. At the age of thirty two, Davies moved to bitter rivals Portsmouth where his scoring rate dropped to a respectable one in three and then he returned to Manchester to sign for United during their season out of the First Division in 74/75. Davies, never scored for United, nor for Millwall who he had a short loan spell with in 75/76 – one of his three appearances for them being in a Third Division match at the Den won 3-1 by City in December 75. Davies moved to America after that and died in Albuquerque in 2013.

70s. City and Luton played out a 0-0 draw at Ninian Park on 14 November 1973 in front of a crowd which I’ve seen reported as 5,999 and 5,839, but whichever one is correct, it was our smallest league crowd of that season. Perhaps the reason for the low turn out was that people were still in the pubs celebrating the wedding of Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips earlier in the day – I assume it was a national holiday because the seventeen year old me was certainly grateful for the day off school I got!

80s. Mike Saxby was a squad member of Mansfield’s Second Division side in 77/78 and his form with them persuaded Luton to sign him in 1979. Saxby scored in one of his games against City for the Hatters, but, strangely, despite Luton being one of the better sides in the old Second Division and us one of the worst, City were able to win four out of the five times he was opposed to us. Saxby struggled to maintain a place in Luton’s side following their promotion in 81/82 and was loaned out to Grimsby and Lincoln before he had a short spell at Newport County in 84/85. Saxby played for Middlesbrough in the following season, but he couldn’t prevent their relegation to Division Three.

90s. Alan Harper.

00s. Nathan Abbey, brother of ex Norwich forward Zema Abbey, was in goal for the ;Luton team that ended Frank Burrows’ second spell as City manager with a win at Ninian Park in January 2000. Abbey’s next visit to Cardiff was in November 2001 when Chesterfield were beaten 2-1. Abbey has generally been a back up keeper since then for the league clubs he played for and was last seen in charge of Bedford Town (home ground, the Eyrie) during 19/20.

10s. Dean Brill.

20s. Tom Ince, currently on loan from Stoke, learned Italian while his father Paul when was playing in Milan. His first taste of senior football was a subs appearance for Liverpool in a home League Cup defeat by Northampton in 2010 and a few months ago he came in for heavy criticism from Stoke fans for only making one successful pass in a match with Wigan. 

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Quality goals mark mark third successive victory for tired Cardiff City.

At 3 o clock last Saturday afternoon, Cardiff City had not won a match since 16 December. While a couple of draws had steadied things somewhat from the nightmare run of six straight losses that ended the Neil Harris era at the club, the thing I think should be borne in mind is that a loss at Bristol City with a match against in form Rotherham to follow would have meant that there would have been a strong chance that City would have been trying to improve their miserable home record today having not won in ten games.

Instead, the team that were struggling so much less than three weeks ago have not looked back since – Bristol were beaten 2-0, Rotherham 2-1 and today Coventry were dispatched 3-1. Amazingly, City are now seventh and what was a thirteen point gap to the top six just seven days ago has now been reduced to just six.

That Bristol City match now looks so important to how our season develops and I think there has to be an acknowledgment that City got lucky that day to some degree. I’m not saying there that the better side lost. Far from it, we were worth more than a two goal win and, truthfully, with  Wycombe winning today at Huddersfield and the wurzels being trounced 6-0 at Watford, there might well not be a worse team in the Championship currently than our cross channel rivals.

However, I believe we were still somewhat lucky because we went into the match at Ashton Gate on the back of that very rare thing in this tremendously congested season – a week where we hadn’t played a midweek match.

On the other hand, Bristol had to face what may well be the toughest fixture there is in the division at the moment, Brentford away, three or four days before playing us and while I repeat that we were well worth the three points, that trip to London where they put in a big effort only to lose 3-2 must have had some effect on our opponents.

You may be wondering why I’m going over old ground here, but I believe it has a relevance to today’s game In that it was us this time who were in the Bristol position. in fact, our situation was slightly more testing than the one the wurzels found themselves in because Coventry had played well in drawing with Watford in a televised Friday night game a day before the Severnside derby, so they’d not played in eight days, whereas we had to come through a Tuesday night in Rotherham test in grueling conditions against an in form side.

Now, despite there being some very good things about today’s display, there were also questions raised which I’ll come to later, but any criticism I or anyone else directs at the team, should be tempered by a recognition that we went into the game under something of a handicap.

City led at half time thanks to a couple of Keiffer Moore goals and within a minute of the restart, Josh Murphy’s long overdue first goal of the season had us three ahead. Therefore, anyone who had not watched the game would look at the time of Coventry’s late goal and think of it as a mere consolation for a well beaten side, but a look at the match stats may offer the clue that this was not the routine encounter that a cursory glance might suggest.

For example, while we had eight goal attempts, our opponents had twenty one. Coventry had five on target efforts, whereas we were utterly ruthless in our finishing as we scored from all of our three on target attempts.

The foul count is interesting as well – Coventry committed eleven, while we were up at twenty four and I wouldn’t say that referee James Linington particularly favoured the visitors, I thought he was pretty even handed in his approach.

Tellingly, many of those fouls against us were given in the closing stages, when, frankly, we looked out on our feet as a team. The importance of that Murphy goal to take us three clear cannot be overstated because, without it, I feel Coventry’s domination of the closing stages could well have seen them cancel out a two goal advantage as City got the jitters to go with their tiredness – indeed a team with a sharper front line than Coventry’s (they’ve only scored twenty seven times in their twenty nine matches) may well have been able to escape with a draw from three down.

Jason Perry the summariser on the club website’s coverage got it right for me when he said that City won because they were better in both boxes. How Coventry must have envied us with Moore, Murphy and Harry Wilson up front, while, for all that our first and third goals were very easy on the eye if you were a City fan, Coventry will probably be questioning their defending for all three goals.

In fact, I see Coventry manager Mark Robins bemoaned his team’s defending while saying that it was their worst performance of the season. One of the reasons he gave for that was that his side, and the ref, allowed City “to kick Callum O’Hare off the pitch” – I believe Robins may be referring to a tackle by Joe Bennett at the end of the game there and, to be fair, it did look a naughty one.

Robins talked about a lack of fight in his team against a side that fights and, on one level, I think he’s being a bit harsh there because I was quite impressed by how Coventry knocked it about in midfield in a way that I don’t believe we can, but, then you think that, as Robins says, his side only  really reacted in the last fifteen minutes in the manner he wanted them to and you know what he means – for all of Coventry’s pretty patterns, they got them absolutely nowhere as an attacking force for about eighty per cent of the game.

I would argue that, while 3-1 flattered us, much of Coventry’s superiority in the last fifteen minutes was down more to the fact that we were clearly tiring and yet, apart from bringing on Leandro Bacuna for Murphy on seventy three minutes, Mick McCarthy opted not to make any more changes until two minutes into added time at the end of the match.

Our manager’s reluctance to use his substitutes despite the fact that Moore (the one player City cannot afford to lose to injury in the coming months) especially was struggling to last the pace can I’m sure be put down to, Bacuna apart, it was, surely, the most inexperienced bench we’ve ever had for a first team league fixture.

With Alex Smithies still not over whatever it was which made him fall ill in the first few minutes of the Bristol match, George Ratcliffe was again second choice keeper and the most experienced of the rest on the bench was probably Ciaron Brown. Tom Sang, Joel Bagan, Mark Harris and Max Watters were in the group that had at least played some senior football and then we had Ruben Colwill and Isaak Davies who have been doing well for the Under 23s lately.

As it was, McCarthy gave Colwill a minute or so when he came on for Wilson for his first team debut – as the young player that our manager has spoken most glowingly about since he arrived, it was no surprise that Colwill was the youngster that got some game time, albeit a very small amount.

However, should more of our subs been used and used for longer than Colwill was? In our manager’s defence, I go back to what I said about this game not being as cut and dried as it might have appeared at first. Coventry scored after eighty one minutes and for those last nine minutes, plus the added three minutes, there was a definite feeling that, if Coventry got one, another one could easily quickly follow.

On the other hand, with Moore looking so in need of some sort of rest, none of the three most likely candidates to replace him in Watters, Harris and Davies had similar attributes to our top scorer, but they would all have been able to run the channels for balls knocked up to them and would, hopefully, have got us further up the pitch in those closing stages.

With us at Luton on Tuesday, I would just come down on the side that our manager missed a trick by not making more use of his substitutes. While I acknowledge there would have been a degree of risk involved, I can’t help thinking that there are similarities here to Neil Harris’ decision not to make changes during our last winning run late last year and we know how that ended up as far as Moore especially is concerned.

I suppose that bottom line has to be though that we found a way to win what was always going to be a tricky match given our recent schedule compared to our opponents and it would be churlish to make too much of an issue about the non use of substitutes.

As far as the game went, there’s not a great deal on the attacking front to comment on. Aden Flint’s finish from an early free kick was a good one, but he was, rightly, ruled offside. Then, on the half hour mark, it was great to see Josh Murphy chase back, win the ball cleanly, then burst forward to feed a fine pass into Moore’s path with the outside of his foot- from there, the player rated the best in the division according to whoscored.com showed his ability on the deck by stepping inside the last defender and scoring confidently from ten yards with an angled right foot shot.

Moore’s second eight minutes later was more mundane, but no less welcome as Coventry keeper Marko Morosi,, under challenge from Sean Morrison, made a mess of his punch from a Will Vaulks long throw and the ball eluded Murphy stood no more than five yards out, but found its way to Moore on the far post who tapped in from about the same distance with Coventry claiming a foul on their keeper -for what it’s worth, it looked a fair goal to me.

Murphy was not to be denied though and the second half hardly barely begun when Perry Ng showed quick and bright thinking as he took a quick free kick to Murphy while Coventry were preparing for the advance of City’s big men from the back and the former Norwich fan flashed a low fifteen yard shot across Markosi into the far corner of the net for a second high quality City goal of the afternoon.

Finally, just a word on a player whose form has definitely improved under Mick McCarthy, Curtis Nelson carried on the fine form he showed at Rotherham with a series of excellent, often painful, blocks which confirmed he’s now hitting the standards he set for himself last season again.

Finally, it’s now less than a month 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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