Fine wine into stagnant water in five days.

Well, I suppose being able to come away from your first away match of your season with a goalless draw after spending much of the time on the back foot is not too bad, but in truth the phrase which came to mind at the final whistle tonight at Port Vale was “more by luck than judgement”.

A consistent refrain from supporters through the summer was that we needed leaders, more mental toughness and more solidity in defence. Despite the clean sheet from a hard won point at Port Vale tonight, it seems to me that the game offered more proof of these things. As we saw too often last season, it looked like some of the players in blue didn’t fancy it, hence our opponents looking like they wanted it more – probably because they did.

City made three changes from Saturday with new loan signing (yes, we’ve signed someone!) Nathan Trott selected in goal for the unlucky Matt Turner, Calum Chambers returning from suspension in place of Will Fish and Chris Willock coming in for Cian Ashford.

Chambers took over as captain from Rubin Colwill and gave an eccentric first half showing in which he came as close as anyone did all game to breaking the deadlock when he dived to head a cross against his own upright and out for a corner. There were other dodgy moments from the former England international, but, thankfully he improved somewhat after the break. Even so, although it was no surprise that it was Dylan Lawlor who came off for Fish when Brian Barry-Murphy decided he’d seen enough, I thought the youngster had been the better of the two centrebacks at that point (after the game, BBM stated that the reason for Lawlor’s withdrawal was that he’d mentioned his hamstring was feeling tight at half time).

Trott had a quiet debut because for all that Vale were the more lively, committed and dynamic team, both sides only managed one on target attempt each (I think ours must have been a far post header from a corner by Chambers which the keeper saved easily) . City’s new keeper did not have a difficult save to make, but, although he looked confident at first with the ball at his feet, Trott’s kicking fell away in quality as the game went on and it was odd to see him kicking it long and high to sub Callum Robinson late on.

Willock was part of an attack which laboured all night as he and Ollie Tanner, with his new four year contract, produced a variety of crosses which all had the unifying factor that they were rubbish! Most of them were played as if they were being delivered into a force eight gale which necessitated the ball being hit much harder than normal except that, it looked as flat as millpond at Vale Park on the stream I was watching and Sky’s commentators didn’t mention anything about there being a strong wind blowing.

Yousef Salech cut a frustrated figure up front, he had one early shot which flew not too far high and wide, but received no sort of service from the wings and, with dead ball deliveries being equally as slipshod, never looked like scoring. That said, he should have had a penalty when centreback Jesse Debrah clearly grabbed him on a couple of occasions as he tried to get on the end of a Ryan Wintle through ball, but referee Tom Reeves waved play on.

Actually, having been critical of referee Ben Speedie on Saturday, I thought Mr Reeves did pretty well tonight and it seemed to me that, if anything, he and his linesmen favoured us a little. For example, Vale right back Liam Clark had the ball in our net early in the second half only for the goal to be ruled out for offside when replays showed it to be a very, very tight decision. Similarly, a header which cannoned off the underside of the crossbar for the home side was deemed to be offside when replays showed that was clearly not the case.

There was also a tackle by Joel Bagan which might well have seen him shown a straight red card following an incident which epitomized the difference in attitude between the two teams as a home player showed tremendous spirit to keep the ball from going for a goal kick only for us to then carelessly present Port Vale with the ball, immediately followed by a free kick – I think a yellow card was the right decision, but wouldn’t have been surprised at all by a red.

On the subject of carelssness, BBM seemingly wants his wingers taking throw ins when they’re deep inside the opposition’s half, but foul throws conceded by Tanner and I think it was Isaak Davies late on were very cheap, easilly correctable, errors.

All over the pitch, Vale looked more urgent and they seemed to get their head on every corner and free kick that came into our penalty area with Debrah’s powerful header from a corner being blocked close to our goal line by Ronan Kpakio and then another one from the same player was no more than a couple of feet wide.

City improved for a while when Ashford, Fish and David Turnbull replaced the out of sorts Tanner, Lawlor and Joel Colwill, but there was still no end product and it was Vale who finished the stronger although, by now, the lack of quality in front of goal was clear to see from both sides.

So, a real sense of after the Lord Mayor’s Show after Saturday, but, hopefully, this will have been a wake up call that the three or four more new arrivals that we hear are coming eventually really are needed.

 Notts County gave us a very uncomfortable second half in our final friendly game because, basically, they bullied us and tonight Port Vale did much the same for ninety minutes. We need players who are strong physically and mentally because the evidence of last season and the start of this one is that we don’t have enough of them at the moment.

Four days after our Under 21s fired blanks while going out of the Nathaniel MG Cup at Cambrian, they faced Premier League’s Wolves’ under 21s in their final pre season game at Leckwith on Tuesday and beat them 5-0 thanks to goals by Will Spiers (2), Luke Pearce, Jake Davies and Troy Perrett.

Finally, I was not surprised at all to learn this week that the food inflation figure for last month had risen to 4 per cent because I’d been noticing the increase in prices on my weekly shop over the summer. The cost of living crisis has not gone away and so my message to all of you who generously make a financial contribution towards the running of this blog is that you don’t need to do so any more. I needed help tp keep MAYA going when my only income was my works pension, but now that I’m getting my state pension as well, I have no problem funding the blog myself. Therefore, although I’ll continue to be very grateful to anyone who wants to continue to support MAYA, if some of you who are contributing are feeling the pinch, then, by all means, cancel your payments to me – I’ll just remain very grateful for the help you gave me when I really needed it.

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Port Vale matches.

Sky Sports have decreed that City’s first away league game should kick off at 8 pm on Thursday night, yet it will not stop around two thousand Cardiff fans travelling to Burslem to watch a game which is being televised.

No doubt, some of that very impressive away support will be going because it will be their first visit to Vale Park as, apart from a League Cup tie around ten years ago, it’s the first time we’ve played there since February 2003..

Vale were beaten 2-1 at Rotherham, who we face in our second home league game a week on Saturday, on Saturday in a game where they found themselves two down within half an hour and reduced to ten men before half time. However, the second half saw a Vale comeback as the home team, themselves down to ten men by this time, were hanging on at the end.

There were two divisions between us and Port Vale last season, so I’m sure that there’ll be those among our support who are confident of a win, but I think it’s fair to ask of our very young side “will they fancy it on a warmish Thursday night in one of Stoke’s five towns?”.

On the transfer front, the Nathan Trott deal still has not been confirmed, so you start to wonder what’s gone wrong, while there are strong rumours, by the standards of this summer anyway, that we may be about to buy Darko Gyabi of Leeds United. Gyabi had spent much of the last two seasons on loan at Plymouth and was valued at £5 million in 2022 when he was signed from Manchester City as part of the transfer which saw Calvin Phillips moving in the opposite direction.

Gyabi is a central midfielder, so, it seems likely that, if we were to sign him permanently, the transfer fee would be paid for by the sale of one of our current midfielders. Ordinarily, I would be dismissing this rumour as having no chance of being correct, but Gyabi would have worked with BBM at Manchester City during the first of the three years our Head Coach spent there and so there is a chance that the player might want to team up with him again I suppose.

On to the quiz, I had thought of Port Vale as the sort of team it would be hard to set a quiz for with any City related questions, but, in fact, it turns out that by Friday we will have played them at least once in each of the seven decades the quiz covers.

As normal, I’ll post the answers on here on the day after the game takes place.

60s. The closest to home this north easterner managed while playing league football was probably when he was with Workington for five years. Once signed by Lawrie McMenemy for a non league club, he described himself as “a non-running, non-tackling, non-heading midfielder”. He was never a prolific goalscorer, but he did find the net in a Cup Final win at Wembley for his team. His league career began with Port Vale before his move to Cumberland and from there he played for two clubs we’ll be facing in our first ten league games this season, playing nearly two hundred league matches for the first of them and just two for the second. He was also an Honorary member of Cardiff City Supporters’ Trust until his death in 2020, but who is he?

70s. This midfielder played against us for Port Vale during this decade and not too long afterwards, he moved to a team we would end up contesting a promotion bid with. After a playing career which saw him making a total of over six hundred league appearances while representing four clubs, He also managed seven league clubs (the last one in two spells). Included among that seven were Port Vale, the side he left them for as a player and a team that has won the Champions League, can you name him?

80s. Sour sounding midfielder who had two spells with Port Vale?

90s. What connects APA, Dog Chewed the Handle, Road to Eden and The Cold Blooded Hearts with a one time Port Vale and City player?

00s. Merry man up front – don’t think he ever played in the same team as Dane Scarlett though! According to Wikipedia,he was also once City’s first team physio (if he was, I can’t remember it). Can you name him?

10s. What is the connection between a Port Vale goalkeeper from this decade and the comedy series Extras?

20s. At least one Port Vale player will be out on Thursday with some ban or another. (3,4)

Answers.

60s. Bishop Auckland born Jimmy Goodfellow scored for Crook Town in their win over Enfield in the 1964 FA Amateur Cup Final. Soon after that, Goodfellow signed for Bishop Auckland (managed by Lawrie McMenemy at the time) and then turned professional with Port Vale in 1966. Moving on to Workington in 1969, he finished one short of two hundred league appearances for them and he then played a similar number of games for Rotherham before having a season at Stockport to finish his playing career. Goodfellow then moved into coaching and had a spell at Cardiff which saw him doing the Assistant Manager (to Len Ashurst), joint caretaker Manager, Manager, Physio and Coach jobs at various times during a spell with the club which lasted from 1982 to 1994 apart from the two years following his sacking as manager early in the 84/85 season. Goodfellow was given a testimonial game by the club and his popularity was shown when the Trust held an event to commemorate our promotion in 82/83 and the group of players who attended invited him along with him and the players being made Honorary members.

70s. Brian Horton was in the Port Vale side that beat City 2-1 at Vale Park in September 1975 and a few months later he signed for Brighton, one of the teams that was in the promotion race with us that year. Horton’s managerial career saw him in charge at both Port Vale and Brighton, while he finished off with a couple of spells at Macclesfield. However, he was best known for his time with Manchester City where, despite always seeming to be close to the sack, he kept a side that nothing special in the Premier League for a couple of seasons.

80s. Colin Tartt.

90s. They are all bands that Gareth Ainsworth, who played for Vale between 1997 and 1998 has played in.

00s. Adrian Littlejohn (think Robin Hood) spent the 03/04 season with Port Vale and Wikipedia says he was our first team physio in 2019 – it also says he was very loyal to Neil Warnock who he played under at four different clubs and Warnock would have been our manager at the time Littlejohn was meant to be our physio.

10s. Chris Martin played in goals for Port Vale between 2007 and 2012 and Coldplay front man Chris Martin was once a guest on Ricky Gervais’ series Extras.

20s. Ben Amos. 

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