Six decades of Cardiff City v Tottenham Hotspur matches.

Another opponent for whom the “six decades” title isn’t quite accurate, but I’ve put together questions going back to the 60s with a Spurs, and, in most cases, Cardiff flavour – I’ll put the answers on here tomorrow.

60s. Although it may sound like this, one of the teams this member of a Spurs side beaten at Ninian Park during this decade later went on to play for and manage was not named after a member of our playing staff at the time of their defeat – name the two players I’m talking about here.

70s. Born in a place meaning “old wood” in English, he was playing as an amateur at a location which becomes a focal point for many sport lovers in March every year when City spotted him and brought him here for a small fee. His stay at Cardiff lasted about four years and it could be argued that the biggest game he featured in for us during that time was against Spurs. His spell at Cardiff ended, allegedly for disciplinary reasons, and he moved on to perform at a location on Cromwell Road. His next, and final, stop was at a place where, apparently, some expected to be able to see one of the Seven Wonders of the World and herds of wildebeest, but who am I describing?

80s. The scorer of an own goal on his debut, the man pictured started off a long career in the game, which is still going on, with Spurs towards the end of this decade, but had to move on from White Hart Lane to become an established first teamer. Apart from three games on loan at Oxford, all of his Football League appearances after leaving Spurs came for four clubs within a 100 miles of Tottenham that all had blue in their shirts. In all, he made over five hundred and fifty Football League appearances over a twenty year period and, since then, apart from a very brief spell with a former club in Sussex, has spent all of his time working in the non league game – can you name him?

90s. Can you identify this player from these clues?

Signed for a club from his homeland with the word Stella in it’s name, this defender moved to Spurs at fifteen and was playing first team football within a couple of years. It took him a while to establish himself in the side, but a memorable goal against Manchester United helped him along the way and by the end of this decade, he was rated one of the best around in his best position. Unfortunately, the injuries which dogged him for the rest of his career took a hold and after a couple of seasons where he was mostly absent, he left the club to sign for alleged avian thieves. More injuries led him  to announce his retirement four years later, but he was persuaded back by a team supported by people with an odd coloured facial protuberance and captained them to a Cup triumph before retiring for good this time shortly after we had become a Premier League club for the first time.

00s. He played for us against Spurs in this decade, but can you identify him from this list of some of the clubs he has played for since leaving us?

Southend, Peterborough, Portland Timbers, Yeovil and Shamrock Rovers – a relative of his is currently on the books of a London based Championship club.

10s. Name this membet of a Spurs squad to have faced us during this decade.

 

Answers.

60s. Peter Baker played at right back for the Spurs side beaten 3-2 by City in March 1961. He went on to play for and manage South African club Durban United in two separate spells with that club – although he was not involved in the game in question, Alan Durban was a member of City’s playing staff in 1961.

70s. Ray Bishop was born in Hengoed and played for Cheltenham Town before signing for us in 1977 – he came on as a sub in the home 0-0 draw with Spurs in September 1977 and then started in the return game, which we lost 2-1, four months later. His next club was Newport County (whose old Somerton Park ground was on Cromwell Road), before ending his career at Torquay where, according to Basil Fawlty, a guest at his awful hotel had expected to see Sydney Opera House, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and ”Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically………” from her room window.

80s. Defender Guy Butters put through his own net when making his debut for Spurs in a League Cup tie with Blackburn in1988. After playing on loan at Southend, he moved on to Portsmouth in 1996 and played over a hundred times for them, before making a total of over three more hundred appearances for Gillingham and Brighton – he went  into playing, managing and coaching in the non league scene in 2008 after his release by Brighton.

90s. Stephen Carr was signed by Spurs from Dublin team Stella Maris and moved on to Newcastle after more than a decade at White Hart Lane – he then finished his career at Birmingham, captaining them to a League Cup win in 2011.

00s. Kerrea Gilbert played in both of our FA Cup games with Spurs in 2006/07 – QPR mIdfielder Jordan Cousins is, appropriately enough, his cousin.

10s. Eighteen year old Oliver Skipp was an unused sub for Spurs in their 1-0 win over us at Wembley in October.

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Camarasa stunner wins it after Etheridge heroics.

When I moved up to Tynewydd from Cardiff just before Easter, I spent the next month bemoaning a dodgy internet connection which meant that I saw very little of the televised away mathes at Sheffield United, Villa and Derby (not that I missed that much really!).

Once it was up and working, my connection, under a new, improved, provider, has proved very reliable until yesterday at least, when the connection grew more and more intermittent. It seemed okay again this morning, but around lunchtime started playing up and, by the time City’s game at Leicester was about to kick off, there was no chance of me being able to watch a stream of it.

I decided to ring my provider knowing that, in my previous experience, such calls can drag on for ages and so I may well have being doing myself out of listening to a good portion of the match. That was precisely what happened as the game was into it’s second half by the time I got off the phone after being told that the problem looked to be something that would need to be looked into by Openreach – at this time of year especially, this probably means problems with my broadband for the best part of aweek (all of this following on from the news that my shower packed up on Thursday!).

So, this is going to be one of those shorter pieces I have to do from time to time where I know less about what happened during the game than most who get to read it. What I can say is that the twenty five minutes or so that I was able to listen to sounded great as the first thing I learned was that Neil Etheridge (who now looks to be staying here rather than flying out to represent the Philipines in the Asia Cup next month) had just pulled off his third penalty save of the season as he guessed right to save a weak spot kick from James Maddison.

The England squad member had gone down rather easily apparently after being challenged by Sean Morrison and so, maybe, justice was done as Etheridge was helped out by a superb block and clearance from Sol Bamba to make sure Leicester couldn’t score from the rebound from our keeper’s save.

Judging by what I heard after that, City spent the last twenty minutes or so defending their goal more comfortably than they had done at Selhurst Park on Boxing Day and, for all of the world, it sounded like we would be picking up a second consecutive and creditable goalless away draw, but then Victor Camarasa came along and won the game in added time.

Camarasa’s goal is the only thing I’ve seen from the game up to now and it was good enough to deserve the very excited reaction it got from Rob Phillips on Radio Wales when the ball hit the back of the net.

Over the past month, goals from right footed shots hit with the side of the foot from distance have become something of a speciality at Cardiff City – Junior Hoilett won the November goal of the month award on Match of the Day for his winner against Wolves on the last day of that month yet there are those who say his goal at Watford was an improvement on that one and now Camarasa has come up with one, from neat build up play by sub Bobby Decordova-Reid and Harry Arter, which may be the best of the lot.

What I would say is that today feels like the best day of our season so far. Leicester have been inconsistent at home this season and, seemingly, have something of a tradition of losing to lowly sides in their final game of a calender year, but, having drawn on the ground of a side who were coming off the back of a win over Manchester City, we have now beaten a side who won at Chelsea a week ago and then beat Pep Guardiola’s team three days later.

Before Christmas, it was being widely touted that we were unlikely to pick up an away win this season and it was being taken for granted that we would be going down unless we started picking up something on our travels soon – well in the course of two games, we’ve quintupled our number of away points!

Okay, I know that stat doesn’t look quite as impressive when you just say we’ve gained four points from our last two matches, but it is a statement of intent from a team that spent much of the previous eight weeks or so making a statement that they have it within them to win home matches against sides who are unlikely to get caught up in the relegation struggle this season.

City now have eighteen points from twenty games and so if they can keep on gathering them at a similar rate over the remaining five months of the season are on their way to ending up with thirty four or thirty five points – that’s enough to have avoided the drop last season and probably in the one before that – with it being widely predicted that safety could be achieved with lower numbers than that this year, I think it’s fair to say we are confounding quite a few critics already.

I’m grateful to the messageboard contributor who posted a link to this piece in which Sky pundits picked their team of 2018. Paul Merson does a prediction column for the Premier League fixtures every weekend and, more often than not, he tips us to lose, but we’ve obviously made some sort of an impression on him – maybe there is a grudging acceptance among some at least in the media that we have a bit more about us than they thought we did a few months ago.

Truth be told, it’s not just the media who have been guilty of underestimating City – many of their supporters have done so as well. I count myself in that number as well – I’ve said a few times that we look the worst team in the Premier League by quite a distance when we have an off day and I think my concern about the manner of the Watford and Manchester United defeats came through pretty clearly in my reaction pieces for those games.

However, it can be difficult at times to appreciate what your team has going for it – I was guilty of that for much of last season when I was sometimes nonplussed by the fact that we were not just keeping our promotion challemge up in the face of all that pressure from Fulham, we were actually winning the battle for second place.

Because of the way we play, we are not a side that is easy to praise, but we are, undoubtedly, one that is better than they are often given credit for – as 2018 ends, we definitely have a better chance of staying up than a couple of teams in this league and as good a chance as at least two others.

 

 

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