Trott, and Fish, to the rescue as unconvincing Cardiff return to top of the league.

After his Leyton Orient side had been unluckily beaten 4-3 at Cardiff City Stadium a fortnight ago, Richie Wellens said you won’t see another opponent come to the ground and win the possession battle (54 to 46) while having 26 attempts on the Cardiff goal.

Mr Wellens was not proven wrong in the first league game after that seven goal thriller because City had 56 per cent possession to 44, but today’s opponents, Reading, matched the 26 shots Orient had.

Cardiff were doing so well prior to the first international break and then appeared to lose their way between the first and second break when they had five home matches to play and just four away ones. 

Three wins and a draw from the away games was perfectly acceptable, as indeed were the performances at  Burnley and Wigan, but Bradford, Burton and Newport all won in Cardiff and Orient should have done.

It certainly felt at the time that City had lost their way as October replaced September and, yet as we go into the spell between the October and November international breaks, we see that one win has taken us to the top of the league again!

Make no mistake about it, I’d say that only at Wigan have we played remotely like a top of a table side in recent weeks. It’s a concern that all too familiar doubts are resurfacing at home, but, on the other hand, we’ve turned losing positions in three home games this season into wins.

Of course, being a level lower than we’ve been used to being in the last couple of decades makes it easier to recover deficits, but, I saw nothing but defeat looming when we trailed 3-2 around the hour mark against Orient and it was the same again at half time today when it was Cardiff 0 Reading 1.

I mentioned after the Orient match that I don’t getBBM’s almost obsessive desire to change his centreback combination from one game to the next. I think the start he’s made here has earned him a fair bit of latitude , so I’m not going to call for his sacking or anything like that, but, I would welcome some sort of explanation as to why his tinkering extends to our centrebacks.

Today, having decided to go with Gabe Osho and Calum Chambers at the back, There was a further change at half time when the former was replaced by Will Fish.

Sadly, Osho was continuing a trend begun on his debut against Bradford when he gave away a daft penalty, then, against Orient, his poor back pass conceded us a goal while today he gave Reading an easy chance to score the game’s first goal and then conceded a really soft corner under no pressure.

The reaction when we signed Osho was that we’d bought someone who was too good for League One and when you consider that he’d played in the Premier League and Ligue A  without making the sort of mistakes that he’s making every week for us it seems, something!g needed to done.

Bringing Fish on made sense, he improved our defending and made a brilliant block on the line to maintain out 2-1 lead. However, soon after he came on, Fish completely lost Jack Marriott and we were, yet again , indebted to Nathan Trott for getting us out of trouble. Fish was playing week in, week out earlier in the season and he had a consistency to his game which, hardly surprising ly , is not as clear now as it was.

That said, I thought the other three members of our back four all improved after Fish replace ed Osho.

Reading had the chances to be well clear at the break. Lewis Wing had a free kick deflected on to the cross bar, Trott denied Doyle and then the keeper was slightly at fault when Wing’s effort from thirty five yards flew into the net in a central position with Trott unsighted by Calum Chambers.

All City could offer in response was a scramble in front of goal which saw Yousef Salech and Joel Colwill denied from close range by desperate defending and goal keeping and they left the pitch to the sound of boos at half time.

City needed a quick response and got it with a first goal for the club by Omari Kellyman. At first viewing , it looked like the result of weak goalkeeping, but replays showed a deflection which made life awkward for Jack Steven’s.

Kpakio, City’s best outfield player provided the assist and when Kellyman’s replacement Isaak Davies combined with the young full back, Kpakio’s cross was turned in from eight yards by Salech to win the points.

City had improved, but Reading must have been wondering how they lost, particularly when Fish denied Paddy Lane and Trott saved from Charlie Savage.

An exciting afternoon then, but you can’t help thinking we cannot keep on winning like this.

The under 18s do keep on winning though- today by 3-1 over Watford at Leckwith, thanks to goals by Jack Sykes and Harry Watts (no news on who scored the other one).

In local football, Ynysygerwen beat Treherbert Boys and Girls Club 3-0 to keep them at the bottom of the Ardal Leagues South West.

In the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Championship Ton Pentre, won 1-0 at Bettws to stay top and in Division One East, Treorchy Boys and Girls Club played out a 0-0 draw with Splott FC.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Apologies to those of you who attempt the seven decades quizzes.

Readers of and contributors towards the Feedback section of the blog will have seen me apologising for not being involved as much ss normal in that part of MAYA in recent weeks. This is because voluntary work I do on the membership side of the Cardiff City Supporters’ Trust has “enjoyed” an unprecedented growth in. membership numbers in the last two months or so and this has meant that what was, very occasionally quite a busy task has, as times become something which regularly takes up three. or four hours a day and, sadly, MAYA is one of the things that has has t9o suffer as a consequence.

Hopefully, things will return to normality as far as the blog is concerned in the next week or so because the process started with the increase in members should become clearer from the end of next week, but, for now, I’m afraid I just do9n’t have the time to do the normal seven decades quiz this week, so, I’m going to do a quick quiz somewhat like I did with the Burton one where the initials of the answers spelt the name of the team we were playing. So, in this case, there’ll be seven questions with the first letter of the answer helping to spell Reading.

I’ll put the answers on here tomorrow;-

Question 1. Currently of no fixed footballing abode, has played for two clubs whose names began with an R.

2. Hampshire born forward with somewhat aristocratic surname who scored once for his first club and sixty eight times for his only other team,, Reading.

3. Apart from a spell in Beijing, spent all of his club career playing in Britain. Never played a hundred league games for anyone, but got closest to doing so at Reading

4. Midfielder who played over six hundred times in the Football League through the seventies. all of the way into the 90s. Made just over a hundred league appearances for Reading after signing for them from Newcastle. Finished his playing days with non League Creeksiders.

5. Hereford was probably the furthest north this busy midfielder got in a long career which, generally speaking, saw him featuring in the south west corner of England. Reading was his sec ond club and he managed nearly one hundred league games for them, but he played almost twi8ce as many for his first club. Once ran sixty yazrds with the ball to score at Wembley after the opposition keeper had come up for a corner with his team losing late on.

6. Played twice for his country with the caps bein three years apart. It’s arguable whether he did best at Reading or York in terms of goalscoring. Never got to play for a club from the country of his birth.

7.More than half of his leaguer appearances in a long career came for Reading. Far from a prolific scorer, his most memorable goal contribution came with an assist one miserable night (in terms of the weather at least!) in Northern France.

Answers.

  1. Andy Rinomhota has played for Reading and Rotherham United.
  2. Pat Earls scored just the on ce for Southampton, but scored nearly 70 league goals for Reading during his time with them in. the 70s and 80s.
  3. Sone Aluko.
  4. Kevin Dillon.
  5. Sammy Igoe played more games for Portsmouth, then Readng, but he was playing for Bristol Rovers when he went on a sixty yard run to score against Shrewsbury in a Play Off Final against Shrewsbury.
  6. Lee Nogan.
  7.  Chris Gunter.

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | Comments Off on Apologies to those of you who attempt the seven decades quizzes.