Seven decades of Cardiff City v Huddersfield Town matches.

Even though you would have thought televised coverage of League One and Two clubs would be restricted to the Second Round of the FA Cup this weekend, Sky have seized upon the rearrangement of Saturday’s home game with Huddersfield, which was postponed because of the November international window, to give viewers some action from the lower divisions to watch, hence the match has been switched to a 12.30 kick off.

Like City, Huddersfield appointed a youngish man whose reputation post their playing career was based on what they’d done as a coach. The former Sheffield Wednesday, Burnley and Derby, among others, goalkeeper Lee Grant was appointed as the Terriers’ boss based on the work he had done as a coach at Ipswich Town.

These days, with Directors of Football or some similar titled overseer installed at most clubs, you cannot just say that the manager was given a lot of money to spend in the transfer market, but, whether it was Lee Grant or someone else who took charge of transfer business, they had one of the division’s largest budgets to work with – in fact, I would guess that only Luton’s exceeded it.

However, despite all of the money spent and the fact that Huddersfield were right up there among the pre season favourites for promotion, the season has been an underwhelming affair for them so far and Grant has been a manager under pressure for weeks, if not months.

Only Leyton Orient, with twenty nine, can better Huddersfield’s twenty eight league goals scored so far, but the Londoners are one of only three teams who have conceded more than their twenty five. Therefore, you can see where Huddersfield’s problems have been over the past four months.

In saying that, the compressed nature of League One this season means that Huddersfield are only six points behind us (we have played a game less than them mind) and just two points outside the Play Off places, so it would not need much of an improvement in results for them to be in the sort of position that was being predicted for them back in the summer.

Here are the usual seven questions about our next opponents and the answers will be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. This Geordie defender began and ended his career wearing stripes. In between times he wore what I always think of as one the domestic game’s more distinctive kits for a total of sixteen years. Huddersfield were his first club and it was a testimony to the impact he made with them that he was barely out of his teens when he was sold for what was a record fee at the time for a player in his position. Goalscoring was not a strong suit of his – he only scored seven league goals in a nineteen year career and I would guess that more than half of them were penalties. Who am I describing?

70s. Born in a place with a reputation for producing good players in his position, he was released by Manchester United without playing a game for them and ended up at Huddersfield. I recall him being part of a Huddersfield side that won down here on their way to promotion to the old First Division and he stayed with them all of the way through their subsequent descent into the Fourth tier. When he moved, it was across the Pennines to play for a team that wore white, but he was mainly used as cover during his four years with them and was loaned to a Yorkshire club with a future manager of a country in South America on their way to relegation from the second tier before retiring from the game in 1981, but can you name him?

80s. Violent storm in a hollow?

90s. Co-ed has yearly faculty head check for a striker. (6,5)

00s. Capped once by Sierra Leone, Cardiff and Huddersfield were among the fifteen clubs (only the first six were in the Football League) he played for. He scored once for us and three times for Huddersfield and used to ease his pre match nerves by watching the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory apparently. Who is he?

10s. One of these Huddersfield players from this decade who have the same name has played for us, while the other one is a Welsh international, what is the name they share?

20s. Which first team regular for Huddersfield this season was shown a straight red card just nine minutes into his debut for the club last January?

Answers

60s. The £80,000 Wolves paid Huddersfield for Derek Parkin in 1968 was a record for a full back at the time. After more than five hundred league games with Wolves, he ended his career with a couple of seasons playing for Stoke City.

70s. Terry Poole was born in Chesterfield (the birthplace of Gordon Banks) and played in goal for Huddersfield in their 1-0 win at Ninian Park in March 1970 on their way to winning the Second Division title that season. Poole left for Bolton in 1977 and spent a short while at future Argentina manager Alx Sabella’s Sheffield United on loan in 1979.

80s. Dale Tempest.

90s. Delroy Facey.

00s. Malvin Kamara.

10s. Danny Ward.

20s.Ruben Roosken.

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Oh well, it’ll just have to be the League One title and a League Cup win this season then!

Alan Hansen’s second career as a TV pundit is, surely, best remembered for something he said early on in it about Manchester United after they were beaten by Aston Villa on the opening day of the season. The Manchester side featured quite a few of the “class of 92” who were still teenagers or in their very early twenties and Hansen opined on that night’s Match of the Day that you “win nothing with kids”.

Of course, Manchester United went on to win the title that year with a team which regularly featured the likes of Gary Neville, Nicky Butt, Paul Scholes and David Beckham to go along Ryan Giggs and Lee Sharpe who weren’t much older.

Hansen was clearly wrong, but you could see where he was coming from and tonight City’s team of mostly kids came a fairly distant second to an AFC Wimbledon side that had too much experience, power, know how and finishing ability for them as they eased to a 5-1 win in the EFL Cup round of 32 at Cardiff City Stadium.

People were, rightly, excited by a much less experienced City team’s 3-1 victory over Arsenal’s under 21s last month, but, apart from the first twenty minutes or so, it always felt like Wimbledon, who fielded what I’m fairly sure was their first choice back three and wing backs, were in control.

The disappointing aspect of the night for me was that with Matt Turner, Dylan Lawlor, Gabriel Osho, Joel Colwill, Cian Ashford. Omari Kellyman and Tanatswa Nyakuhwa all starting, City had a nucleus of players who have played a fair amount of first team football this season and yet none of them made a significant impression on the game – indeed some of them were downright poor (the younger, less experienced players were hardly going to prosper under such circumstances).

Not all of the players I named struggled – it was typical of Osho’s luck since joining us that he picked up an injury which forced him off at half time when the score was 1-0 and Ashford looked good on the too rare occasions he was involved in the game, but the rest will have been disappointed with their showings, although Lawlor did give us a reminder of what all the fuss is about with a thrilling run past four opponents before seeing his shot saved by the keeper.

Lawlor was beaten by the very impressive Aron Sasu for the first of his four goals as he went on to beat Turner on his near post on what was not a good night for our second choice keeper. Nyakuhwa had one of those games where nothing he tried came off, Colwill, who was captain for the night, looked lightweight and lacking in pace in a way he never has in his league appearances and Kellyman had some nice touches, but, as happens too often with him, he made no significant impact on proceedings.

Of the others, I thought Luey Giles did okay and our youngest ever player, Axel Donczew built on his decent showing on his debut against Newport with a nice bit of skill soon after coming on which gave him the chance to get away a shot that was, somewhat fortuitously, turned on to the crossbar by keeper McDonnell.

There was one debutante for City, Noah Williams came on in place of Osho and had a difficult first few minutes as the visitors scored three times in five minutes. City lost the ball cheaply on Williams’ side in the build up to Sasu’s second goal although there were others more culpable than him and he was unlucky when a corner skidded off his head into the path of Omar Bugiel who headed in the third at the far post. A crisp finish by Sasu made it four and gave him his hat trick shortly afterwards, but Williams settled after that and did some good things as the half wore on. 

Sasu’s fourth came from a near post header from a deflected cross which Turner should have saved, but at least City got on the scoresheet late on when Giles’ free kick from twenty five yards found the net via a deflection.

City’s youth ranks were stretched by the fact that the under 21s also had a game this lunchtime at Barnsley from which they emerged with a creditable 1-1 draw, no details yet as to who scored for us.

Before the under 21s’ 1 pm kick off, the Welsh Women’s team had already won their first game in game of 2025, thereby ending a run of twelve without a victory. Sophie Ingle, Heather Cain and Lily Woodham got the goals to overcome a Switzerland side ranked eight places higher than them in the world rankings 3-2. It was back to the walls stuff in the last half an hour as Wales seemed to run out of steam after being worth the 3-1 lead they held very early in the second half and, by the end, the Swiss had a right to feel that they had done enough to at least earn a draw.

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