Cardiff go top again after passing stiff Northampton examination.

In my last piece on a City league game, I asked the question whether League One is better than many City fans are prepared to give it credit for? Blackpool, a team that are still in the bottom four, beat us 3-1 and they had the chances to have doubled their score in a crazy second half.

Today, City travelled to face a Northampton side which, in some aspects of the game were better than Blackpool were a fortnight ago, and we were never really able to match some of the slick approach play that marked a dominant first half showing in which we could have put the match beyond Blackpool’s reach.

Once again, the score was 3-1, but the difference this time was that it was in our favour – a result which, for what it’s worth in such a congested division with two thirds of the season to play, takes us back to the top of the league.

Football is supposed to be a winter game and three and a half months into the season with continuous rain, strong winds and cold temperatures, we played in a match in what could be called bleak mid winter.

Back in August and September when we were winning everywhere, there was one of the presenters on a League One podcast I watched for a while who always said the same thing when the discussion switched to Cardiff City. It was along the lines of “Cardiff with their youngsters look impressive in the dry, sunny conditions of late summer/early autumn on pitches in perfect condition, but let’s see what they’re like in the rain, sleet and snow of the winter on heavier surfaces”.

Well, the sample size is way too small currently to come to any conclusions, but the first time they met with the sort of conditions described above, City were not found to be wanting in resolve, bottle and stamina.

Saying that if I were a Northampton fan, I’d be thinking we didn’t deserve to lose that game. They put us under much more concerted pressure, especially in the first half, than Blackpool ever did and City were especially grateful for another eight out of ten showing by Joel Bagan and Calum Chambers’ best display of the season so far.

On the right hand side of the defence, it was tougher going for Ronan Kpakio who was targeted aerially and positionally in the first half in particular, but coped pretty well and came out of the match with two more to add to his growing number of assists.

Inside Kpakio, Will Fish was given his toughest game of the season by Ethan Wheatley who he, apparently, played with in Manchester United’s Academy team. Wheatley is still contracted to the Old Trafford club and is at Northampton on loan. Today he looked too good for this level and the edge he had in the pace department always troubled Fish who picked up a booking very early on for grabbing Wheatley as he was getting away from him.

Ironically, Wheatley had City fans singing for him to do the Ayatollah after he followed up his equaliser by putting into his own goal three minutes later, but, on this evidence, he/s someone we should keep tabs on in the coming year or two.

City made three changes from the Blackpool defeat with Fish coming in for Dylan Lawlor, Ryan Wintle for Alex Robertson and Isaak Davies for Cian Ashford. Davies was prominent in the opening stages down the left as he combined effectively with Rubin Colwill who was getting on the ball a lot to good effect. However, when a goal came on seven minutes it was from the right hand side as Omari Kellyman found Kpakio who cut inside an opponent to pick out Joel Colwill whose shot from the edge of the penalty area was well enough placed to beat Ross Fitzsimmons despite him getting a hand to it.

The younger Colwill’s first ever league goal gave City a lead that they held on to precariously for the next half an hour or so as they faced a series of corners and free kicks as well as crosses from open play. Wheatley led the assault on the City goal, but it was his strike partner Tom Eaves (the one Northampton player I’d heard of before the game) who came closest to scoring with a shot on the turn which came back off an upright. Besides that, centreback Michael Forbes should have done better than head wide from six yards when he got his head to a corner.

City’s loss of control more or less coincided with the loss of Rubin Colwill who tried to play on with an injury, but had to accept defeat and was replaced by David Turnbull. Brian Barry-Murphy said after the game that Rubin’s injury looked serious and feared it was an ankle ligament problem – Ollie Tanner damaged ankle ligaments back in August and has only resumed training this week.

City recovered somewhat in the last few minutes of the first half, but there could be no denying that they were fortunate to still be ahead at the break. Encouragingly, City carried their improvement into the opening stages of the second half and, in truth, the Northampton pressure was never as sustained as it had been in the first half.

However, when Northampton knocked another ball into the inside right channel for Wheatley to chase and his edge in pace over Fish told this time as he got clear and then smashed in from twenty yards to net a fine equaliser that Nathan Trott got a hand to, but could not keep out.

Wheatley went from hero to villain within minutes though as he sliced what looked like a poor low corner from Bagan into his own net. That must have come as a body blow to the home side after they had fought so hard to get on terms and, although Trott had to make a couple of fine saves late on, we held onto our lead fairly comfortably after that.

BBM probably helped with three substitutions straight after Northampton’s goal which definitely worked as Robertson replaced Joel Colwill, who had suffered a cut knee while getting back to snuff out a dangerous situation, a fit again Chris Willock for Davies and Perry Ng for Kellyman who had a quiet afternoon.

Kpakio moved up into a right wing role to offer more defensive protection and City thought they had made the game safe when  Yousef Salech headed in a fine Bagan cross at the far post only for referee Neil Hare, a complete homer in the first half, but more balanced in the second, to disallow the goal, probably correctly, for a push.

A far better corner delivery by Bagan was met at the far post by Wintle whose shot from point blank range was somehow kept out by a combination of Fitzsimmons and a defender.

Gabriel Osho replaced Fish as Northampton roused themselves for one last effort and when Wintle lost possession in our defensive third, a goal seemed inevitable as Wheatley rolled a pass to sub Elliott List who only had Trott to beat, but the keeper was able to turn his shot just wide as he added to his catalogue of important and inspired saves over the past few months.

Willock had looked to be in the mood from the moment he came on and he sealed the points three minutes into seven added on with a lovely placed effort into the roof of the net from twenty five yards with Fitzsimmons a spectator. Willock will be the first to admit though that he owed so much to Kpakio who beat three opponents in a thirty yard run before finding the scorer.

The potentially serious injury to Rubin Colwill aside, this was an encouraging afternoon as City showed something that any promotion winning side needs – the ability to win when not at their best and when the win comes away from home against a side playing well on a day when the weather is awful, then you can’t help but feel optimistic.

City’s under 18s slumped to a disappointing 4-1 home defeat against Swansea in the EPL Cup this lunchtime with Olly Reynold’s goal no more than a consolation in added time.

Local football saw Treherbert Boys and Girls Club’s struggles continue with a 3-0 loss at Ponterdawe in the Ardal Leagues South West.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Northampton Town matches.

The pretty considerable number of City fans in my experience who couldn’t care less about international football will be relieved that it’s now club football all the way through to late March..

Speaking for myself as I still try to take in fully what I saw on Tuesday night, I have mixed feelings about the return of watching Cardiff City because am I going to be watching the team that has taken part in the two games in the EFL this season with the most goal attempts in them this season (Leyton Orient and Blackpool) or the one that barely managed a shot at goal at Port Vale, Stockport and Bolton?

After the loss at Blackpool someone posted on the messageboard I use that there would be ructions after a defeat in which we could have ended up losing by five or six. There wasn’t though, probably because even the most critical City supporter would surely have to concede that it was a truly strange game that they should really have won by cashing in on their sometimes superb approach play during their dominant spell in the first half.

The uneven nature of the season continues with yet another away game to follow on from the home heavy spell we had through September/October as we travel to Northampton, the side I saw us play in my first ever City game back in 1963. We’ve not played the Cobblers too often since then and the fact that when we did it was during our eighteen year spell in the lower divisions through the late eighties, nineties and early noughties tells you that Northampton were out of their comfort zone when they visited us for that Second Division match I saw sixty two years ago.

As we prepared for our first season in the third tier for over twenty years this summer, I took in a lot of podcats and articles where people far more familiar with the division than me predicted how the table would look at the end of the season and, I think without fail, they had Northampton in the bottom four.

Based on the first third of the campaign, those pundits got it wrong because Northampton have built themselves a handy gap over those in the relegation places mainly based on a miserly defence.

Looking at City’s recent results, this has the look of the sort of match this team will lose 1-0 on Saturday with them putting in one of those shot shy performances that marks us our as a team which will be back in League One next season, rather than the occasional one we turn in (too often in cup games lately) which says we are the best side in the division.

Anyway, on to the quiz, the usual seven questions with the answers to be posted on here on Sunday.

60s. What’s the link between Northampton forward from the 60s Frank Large, Eric Cantona and Patrice Evra?

70s.Northampton was this midfield player’s second club. At his first club, another Midlands side to the west of Northampton that had a link with the Cobblers just over a decade ago, he forms part of a very unusual family connection. in that his brother played for the same club and went on to manage at international level. Our man’s nephew also played for the same team and represented a different country to the one his father managed (both countries are in the UK). Can you name the family and the one out of the trio who went on to play for Northampton?

80s.Possessing a surname that was unusual for two reasons (it also is a reminder of veteran rockers from the 60s that had played around 3,700 gigs at the last count in 2022), This midfielder is better known for his spell with his first club that were recent opponents of ours. His second club possess what I heard described as the worst away end in the EFL last week (City last visited there for one of their embarrassing Third Round FA Cup defeats). Northampton ware his last league club when he played for them for a season late in this decade, but, unusually, he returned to them for another season a few years later after dropping into non league football – can you name him?

90s. During one season in this decade City and Northampton did something which I’m 99 per cent sure is unique in our history – I certainly cannot remember it happeining in my City supporting lifetime, can you tell me what it was?

00s. Smear hairstyle perhaps?

10s. Rent on table provides promotion winning centreback (4,7)

20s. Great Italian centreback from the past has a pint and a crisp?

 Northampton answers

60s. They’ve all been sent off for clashing with spectators. Yes, I know Cantona had been red carded when he attacked that Crystal Palace fan, but allow me a little artistic licence! Evra’s short stint at Marseille ended after he kicked out at a spectator after a game – he was also red carded and banned for seven games. Large started fighting with a Swansea fan in a game at the Vetch Field while a Northampton player and was dismissed in an encounter which was featured on Match of the Day.

70s.Trevor Gould played over a hundred games for Northampton after leaving Coventry (who ground shared with Northampton in 13/14). Trevor’s older brother Bobby played for Coventry before going on to manage Wales, while Bobby’s son Jonathan kept goal for Coventry and also won caps for Scotland.

80s.Trevor Quow’s surname is unusual and he’s one of very few footballers to have one that begins with a Q. Quow played for Peterborough and Gillingham before joining Northampton for the first of two spells.

90s. In 96/97, City played Northampton six times in competitive fixtures. The clubs met twice in Division Four, then there was a two leg promotion Play Off and early in the season they were drawn to play each other in the First Round of the League Cup over two legs. Northampton had much the better of things winning four of the matches with one draw and just the one City victory in the League Cup tie which they lost on aggregate.

00s. Mark Bunn.

10s. Leon Barnett.

20s. Nesta Guinness-Walker.

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