Seven questions on Huddersfield dating back to the 60s, with the answers to be posted on here on matchday morning.
60s. He is the only player ever to be signed by Bill Shankly and Don Revie and managed to score more international goals than he won caps, who is he?
70s. Starting off with his home town club, it was often easy to overlook this forward because of some of the big names alongside him, but, for a while, his goalscoring rate bore comparison with anyone at the club and, when he left for Huddersfield at twenty six, he would have been considered quite a capture by them. However, his record for a side that was in decline was not as impressive as it had been for his first club and he didn’t stay too long as chose to move to capital city unpopulars. His final move saw him not having to move far in terms of distance, but quite a long way as far as status went – he had long since left when this club were winning Cup Finals, but can you name him?
80s. Wet pier the outcome for man who scored one of his one hundred and seventy eight goals for Huddersfield?
90s. Sounds like this short term Huddersfield player from this decade was told to follow Scottish royalty everywhere!
00s. His first experiences of senior football did not go well as he appeared for Huddersfield as a substitute at seventeen one week and then started the following week – both games were lost heavily. He made a better fist of things when given another chance a year later and was only ever kept out of the team by injury after that. Still turning out regularly as he nears thirty, strangely all three teams he has represented play in blue and white – who is he?
10s. He featured for Huddersfield against Cardiff in a “memorable” game during this decade and scored on his debut for his current club on the weekend, who am I describing?
20s. What Huddersfield related fact links Arsenal, Lincoln City, Leicester City and Sheffield United?
Answers
60s. Winger Mike O’Grady was signed by Bill Shankly for Huddersfield as a teenager and then moved to Leeds aT the age of twenty three in 1965. His two England caps were seven years apart – he scored two on his debut against Northern Ireland in 1962 and also managed a goal in 1969 against France.
70s. Phil Summerill was at Birmingham City from 1964 until
1973 and scored forty six times in nearly one hundred and twenty appearances.
Therefore eleven goals in fifty four matches in his year at Huddersfield was
something of a disappointment. He was at Millwall from 1974 to 1977 and played
some games for the old Wimbledon club following their elevation to the Football
League in 1977.
80s. Peter Withe’s final games in pro football were with Huddersfield
– he scored once in thirty eight appearances after signing in 1989.
90s. Marc Stuart.
00s. Alex Smithies.
10s. Lee Novak was in the Huddersfield team beaten 1-0 at
Cardiff City Stadium in August 2012 in the first competitive match played by
City in their notorious “rebranded” red shirts – on Saturday he got Bradford’s
goal in a 1-1 draw with Grimsby at Valley Parade.
20s. They are the four clubs Huddersfield signed players
from in the January transfer window – Emile Smith-Rowe and Andy King arrived
from Arsenal and Leicester respectively on loan, while James Stearman signed
permanently from Sheffield United, as did Lincoln’s James Toffolo.
Posted inOut on the pitch|Comments Off on Seven decades of Cardiff City v Huddersfield Town matches.
When you consider that Cardiff City have just
started a week which sees them face teams that are twenty fourth, nineteenth
and twenty second respectively in the Championship table tonight (they then
play the twentieth placed side a few days later), it’s little wonder Neil
Harris described it as the most important so far during his time at the club.
It matters little that three of the four matches
are away from home, two of them at the very least (and they’d have to be
accompanied by at least one draw) have to be won for any talk of a Play Off
challenge to retain some credibility.
Yes, something like a win and two draws will,
pretty certainly, allow for ultra optimistic noises about a perfectly timed
late surge that will carry us into the top six position that we’ve not occupied
since the August days when tables counted for mouthing to be heard. Honestly
though, on what grounds would anyone believe that a team that has perfected the
art of drawing over the past few months would suddenly became as proficient at
winning?
Truthfully, if the results against Luton,
Huddersfield, Wigan and Stoke are on a par with what we’ve seen since beating
Barnsley in early December, then we’ve got no chance.
That is why today’s 1-0 victory at the bottom
club Luton was so necessary – even with a performance which their manager said
had seen them ride their luck. Indeed, even what could be termed the
cheerleading section of the Cardiff City coverers in the media that is the
official site commentary section sounded like broken men as the team trudged
off the park at half time decidedly lucky that the game remained goalless.
Having watched most of the match up to that
point (I had listened to the rest), I was definitely in sympathy with those who
want to put a positive spin on things – we were just not quick or strong enough
against a side obviously lacking in confidence and momentum. Just as he has
done on a few occasions now, our manager was able to turn things around at the
interval and, although never hitting any great heights either as a team or individually,
we managed to do what we had to.
Anyway, I’m getting a bit ahead of myself here,
let’s go back to the hour before kick off when the teams were announced.
Was anyone really surprised at the omission of
Joel Bagan and Tom Sang, who both made effective and telling contributions in
the midweek cup tie with Reading, not being named in the eighteen man squad
along with the other Academy members who had been on the bench that night? I
wasn’t, because I certainly didn’t expect any of them to be.
Although it’s pretty harsh on Neil Harris to say
this, because he looks to be doing more to promote the youth system at Cardiff
than our previous three managers (at least!) did, it all had the feeling of “oh well, it’s good
to get that out of the way, now we can revert to the proper stuff and I don’t
have to be playing the kids any more.” to it.
More pertinently perhaps, there was no Brad
Smith and Dion Sanderson there as the two full backs signed on loan in the
dying embers of the January transfer window were, seemingly, deemed unworthy of
a squad place.
Although the third new arrival, Albert Adomah,
was in the starting eleven, the team otherwise had a one step forward and two
back look to it as Callum Paterson continued up front ahead of Robert Glatzel
and Danny Ward – the fact that Harris is, seemingly, coming around to thinking
what Neil Warnock did in that the Scottish play anywhere scrapper we have is a
better striking option that the expansive recruits we have from both the
continent and abroad.
Whoever was being used up front though, it
wouldn’t have made much difference in the opening forty five minutes, because,
after a misleadingly bright start, City, once again turned in a miserably banal
and lacklustre first half showing which saw them lucky to still be on level
terms.
With Luton able to exploit huge gaps in our
midfield when we were being counter attacked from our own set pieces and our
centrebacks struggling to cope with strikers with more pace and technique to
them (Curtis Nelson in particular was very error prone and unsure of himself as
he played as poorly as he has ever done in a Cardiff shirt) it all had a pretty
familiar ring to it, but a look at the league table would tell you that our
opponents were unlikely to inflict as much pain on us as others have over
recent months.
Home striker Harry Cornick epitomised this
failure to take advantage of the chances Cardiff were providing his team with
when he, firstly, failed to control a Ryan Tunnicliffe pass which left him free
in front of goal just a few yards out and then, seconds later, when he burst
past Sean Morrison, complete with old Brighton centrehalf Steve Foster type
headband/bandage, to put himself clear down the left, only to fire wastefully
across goal.
Cornick’s were the clearest two sights of goal
Luton had during a dominant last thirty minutes of the first period, but they
were by no means, the only ones – Pelly Ruddock-Mpenza volleyed narrowly wide,
as did top scorer James Collins.
Quite often, you think that a side has to take
full advantage of their dominant spells while they can because things were
bound to change soon as their opponents came more into the game, but so abject
and lacking in spirit were City at this stage, that it was hard to see how and
where that improvement would begin – even the recently inspirational Lee Tomlin
was doing very little to raise hopes, while Adomah’s first forty five minutes
in a Cardiff shirt could, charitably, be described as anonymous.
Recent improvements after painfully poor first
halves against Birmingham and Reading (twice) saw the side go more direct, but
I wouldn’t say that was the case today when I thought, we were our usual
mixture of long ball and a desire to play a little more under this manager both
sides of the half time break.
For me, what made a difference in the second
half was that, almost certainly thanks to our manager getting stuck into the
players, we were a lot more willing to press Luton all over the pitch and we
were able to show more life and commitment to attack when there was a chance
to.
City were helped by Luton’s brittle confidence
levels and their sudden inability to pass the ball in the manner they did
earlier in the game. No one exemplified this more than Chelsea loanee Izzy
Brown who, effectively, ran the game early on, yet presented City with the ball
so often in the opening fifteen minutes of the second period that, incredibly
for someone who had been so influential, he was substituted with more than
twenty five minutes to be played.
It was hardly as if City were hitting any of the
heights seen at times in Tuesday night’s cup replay, more that they were not
just presenting the ball straight back to Luton when they had it and, with more
possession, defensive minded players felt more able to express themselves going
forward.
In the current Cardiff City Championship team,
all this really boils down to is that you’ll see more of Joe Bennett offering
proof that he could be an effective wing back if encouraged. Today’s proof of
this came when he went flying up on the outside of Josh Murphy (generally
speaking, as frustrating and inconclusive as he usually is in unglamorous away
fixtures), received the ball from the winger, then got the byeline to put over
a cross that the stretching Paterson couldn’t quite connect with from about two
yards out and was almost turned into his own net by Tottenham loanee Cameron
Carter-Vickers.
Paterson was more impressive when he burst on to a testing Murphy long pass, harried Matty Pearson into an error and tried to lob the ball over the onrushing Simon Sluga, only for the Croatian international to save impressively as he thrust out a hand to divert the Scot’s attempt away.
With Luton’s inability to keep clean sheets
(only one at home all season) and the growing feeling that this was a match
that would be decided by a single goal, there were definite reasons for City to
believe they could nick the win they needed and, on seventy three minutes, they
duly did that – or, to be more precise, their obvious player of the season
19/20 did!
Lee Tomlin has now scored seven times this
season with nearly all of them classics of their kind – today’s effort would
not get in my Tomlin top three for this season, but, then again, I can’t think
of another City player who could have scored it, but, if there is one, he
wouldn’t have made it all look as simple as Tomlin did!
Regular readers on here will probably have read
something by me on here where I admit that I came to the conclusion that I was
not good enough to become a professional footballer quite early in life (I was
about ten).
In fact, I was nowhere near good enough, but
what I did have was a bit of football intelligence which led me become a bit
better than my level of natural ability entitled me to be. However, this never
extended to the notion of letting the ball do the work for you in the manner
Tomlin did today. With me, and a great number of much better players than me,
it was about taking the ball as early as I could and then thinking about what I
should do with it – the notion of letting the ball roll across me so that I was
able to take it on into a more advantageous position on my better foot would
just not have occurred to me – especially when I was only some twenty yards
from goal.
However, that’s what Tomlin did and from there,
he guided his low shot just out of Stuba’s reach to find the bottom corner of
the net.
It felt like a matchwinner at the time and,
although Alec Smithies caused a late scare when he dropped a pretty tame shot
from sub George Moncur, into a dangerous area only to fall on to the ball in
the nick of time, that’s what it turned out to be as City saw the game out
pretty comfortably.
Although there was a measure of encouragement to
be taken from a much better second half showing from Adomah, there was nothing
in this win to suggest that it will lead to a possible top six finish, except
for the win itself – without playing remotely well, City were able to go to a
bottom of the table team and get the three points just like a side with their
sort of ambitions should do.
Of course, the fact that we’re now eighth and
within four points of the top six, should not mean that questions as to why
something like £100 million spent on new players over the period October 2016
to November 2019 has left us with a squad where the only player with the sort
of skills needed to score goals of the type we’ve seen against Sheffield
Wednesday, West Brom, Leeds and Luton is thirty one years old was left out of
the side for almost a couple of full seasons!
Away from City, Blaenrhondda were beaten 2-0 at high riding Cardiff Draconians in the Highadmit South Wales Alliance League Premier Division, while Ton Pentre were thumped 4-1 at runaway league leaders Trefelin Boys and Girls Club in Welsh League Division One – Blaenrhondda remain comfortably situated in upper mid table, while Ton should be okay if they maintain their improvement of the last month or two a bit longer.
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