Did Cardiff City have a “wonderkid” playing for their Development team yesterday?

I’m not going to go into the reasons as to why it’s happening because I had a go at that last month and didn’t really come up with any answers, but yesterday afternoon, Cardiff City’s Development team failed to win a match they had led 2-0 in for at least the fifth time in the last year – I can think of five games where it’s happened, but can’t help feeling there have been others.

Given that the composition of our team at this level tends to change far more than it does in the first team, it’s hard to blame the players involved for these giveaways, but, whatever the reason, it is certainly an issue for the staff in charge of the side to try to address.

The latest fade out came against Crystal Palace at Leckwith yesterday. Last season City led Palace 2-0 after abut twenty minutes at Cardiff City Stadium, only to lose 4-2 – things weren’t quite as bad this time, because it finished 2-2, but they were two goals ahead and looking comfortable with just twelve minutes to go and still couldn’t win.

On the face of it, a 2-2 draw on a cold, but gloriously sunny afternoon does not seem to be a bad a way of spending a couple of hours, but the reality was different, because this was largely poor fare with the two sides cancelling each other out most of the time.

Actually, to be more accurate, the teams cancelled each other out when it came to goalmouth activity, but for the first 80 per cent of the match, at least, City seemed to have things in hand because I cannot remember Palace having an effort on target until they scored their first goal with twelve minutes left.

City included Alex Smithies, Matt Connolly and Gary Madine who were all on the bench at Anfield and the last named was not too far wide with a free kick as he made a bright start which saw him score his first goal for the club in a game where there were points at stake when he headed home Cameron Coxe’s fine cross from close range in the sixth minute.

While never really suggesting that a second goal was imminent, City controlled the rest of the first half as the visitors (with Scott Dann at centreback) looked a frustrated bunch as they were unable to create any attacking momentum at all.

The early minutes of the second period saw Lawrence Wooton hit the Palace post. Perhaps the outcome might have been different if that effort had gone in, but it’s tempting to say that all it would have meant was that the visitors would have had more time available to them to get back on terms.

As it was, the pattern of the first half continued and, in some ways, proceedings had an air of stalemate about them as the game went into it’s final quarter.

Ironically, Palace were having their best spell of the game in terms of possession and territory when City doubled their lead out of the blue. James Waite did very well out on the right touchline to beat his man as City broke and his crossfield ball found Madine who cut inside and tried to curl a shot from the edge of the penalty area around Palace keeper Tupper. Madine’s effort lacked strength and was too close to the keeper, but he still spilled it into the path of sub Jamie Veale who tapped in from about six yards out.

City led 2-0 for six minutes and there was nothing in that time to indicate Palace had it in them to come back, but once their left winger Lumeka steered a well struck shot into the corner of the net from just outside the penalty area, the game changed and three minutes later they were level.

While the first goal they conceded could be put down to a good finish, as a team defending a single goal lead with less than ten minutes to go, City really should not have been opened up on the counter attack as easily as they were when Palace attacked down their left and a low cross saw sub Aveiro presented with a chance he could not miss.

You had to feel sympathy for Smithies – perhaps I’ve forgotten a shot Palace had which forced him into a save, but, assuming I haven’t, he let in the only two shots the visitors had on target all afternoon and didn’t have a chance with either of them.

After that, Palace looked the more likely scorers of a winning goal, but, despite them being, marginally, second best, for virtually all of the game, the match ended with me thinking that a draw was the most City deserved.

Neil Warnock watched the second half of the game and I can’t see that he would have learned much at all from it in terms of first team selection. At least Madine now has a goal to his name and he also won the majority of headers he contested for, but there was also the familiar lack of movement from him which, I believe, makes him someone who Premier League centrebacks would be able to deal with pretty easily – if the first team has to play with a target man type striker, then Callum Paterson still looks the best option for the role to me.

Finally, the City team included a trialist by the name of Christian Koffi. Having done the usual research on any trialist who plays for the Development team, I find that there are two Christian Koffi’s that come up on Google when I search “Christian Koffi footballer”. The first of them is a twenty seven year old from the Ivory Coast who is still, apparently, playing in club football in Africa (the Congo to be exact), while the second is a seventeen year old winger who played for Monaco and moved on to Fiorentina after being linked with Liverpool in the summer. The youngster has been given the “wonderkid” treatment in some press reports and already has an agent video to his name – here is another one in which he advertises Adidas products.

Now, the player who turned out for us yesterday looks enough like the one in the videos for me to believe that it was him – although what he was doing playing for us a few months after signing a contract with Fiorentina, I’m not too sure. So, assuming it was him, we were giving someone who is been very highly hyped in European football a game yesterday. Based on that first video, he certainly has ability and would definitely be worth a look at by City if he was available, but, after watching him yesterday, I’m still none the wiser as to how good or bad he is.

Koffi played for about an hour and was replaced by Veale having had little or no influence on proceedings because he touched the ball so few times. Of course, there is an onus on any  player on trial to get involved in the game, but I felt sorry for him because, with Madine in the side, there was always a temptation for City to aim long balls to his head and the fact that they made extensive use of Coxe’s long throw (you barely ever see long throws from City in Development team matches) confirms that the team were operating in a way which hardly played to Koffi’s strengths as shown in the video – perhaps he’ll get another chance to impress when the Development team travel to Ipswich on Monday?

 

Posted in The stiffs | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Did Cardiff City have a “wonderkid” playing for their Development team yesterday?

Two season defining months await Cardiff City after their brutal Premier League introduction.

When you see a set of post match stats which says one team had nineteen goal attempts (seven of them on target) and four corners, while the other had two efforts at goal (one on target) and no corners, you are on pretty solid ground in predicting which one of them came out on top.

Yes, there are exceptions to the rule when a match has the same sort of figures (Burnley’s win at Cardiff City Stadium last month being one of them), but, to no surprise whatsoever, City’s visit to Anfield this afternoon only offered further proof that such statistical domination usually foretells how the result went.Throw in a possession balance of 80/20 in Liverpool’s favour as well and a final score of 4-1 for the home team as they moved to the top of the table comes as no shock.

City can take some consolation from becoming the first away team to score a Premier League goal at Liverpool’s ground in eight months when Callum Paterson nudged home to make the score 2-1 in the seventy seventh minute. The, once again, tremendous away support were allowed to dream for a few minutes that they might be able to say “I was there” when City turned around a two goal deficit at Liverpool in the last quarter of an hour, but the reality was that the goal was akin to kicking a wasp’s nest – City were stung by two quality goals in three minutes and so, “plucky” Cardiff went the way they were expected to by the sort of margin of defeat they were expected to lose by.

In fact, it was all much as expected really – City were better in the second half and their goal threatened to lift the game out of it’s predictability for a while, but, for me at least, there was never that feeling that they could put the Liverpool defence under the sort of pressure which would make it wilt again.

Last month at Stamford Bridge, City found themselves 2-1 down inside the last quarter of an hour and there had been a few near things for the home defence which meant that it was not beyond the bounds of possibility that the match may end in a draw, but there was little or nothing in today’s encounter to suggest the same thing.

As it was, both matches ended in 4-1 defeats in which a case could be made that the margin of victory was slightly flattering to the big boys, but the main difference between the two for me was that, just as at Spurs, it felt like City were “in” the game for long periods at Chelsea, but  it never felt like that today as far as I was concerned.

It has to be said mind that, just as at Bournemouth on the opening day of the season, City’s central midfield had a bit of a threadbare look to it – “threadbare” is a harsh way to describe it really, because Aron Gunnarsson and Victor Camarasa both played full parts in good team performance against Fulham last week. However the truth is that Gunnar is having to find his match fitness in the first team after injury meant that he played no competitive football until late October and had next to nothing in terms of pre season fitness work and game time.

Neil Warnock has been talking in terms of Gunnar getting something like sixty to seventy minutes in games at this stage of his comeback. He made way today with about twenty minutes of playing time left and the fact that it was Loic Damour who replaced him rather gives away the fact that City were doubly depleted in that area.

Our manager had said in his pre game press conference yesterday that there would definitely be one change from the team which secured that much needed first win of the season last week and it turned out that the man who was missing was Harry Arter. Quite how serious the injury which sidelined him was is a moot point because, with four bookings to his name, it had to be borne in mind that the Republic of Ireland international is one booking away from a suspension – this piece appears to confirm that Arter could have played today if he really had to). If Arter had played at Liverpool and received a caution we would have gone into the home Leicester match next weekend (a much more likely source of three points than Liverpool away) short of both himr and Joe Ralls.

Now, we will, almost certainly, have Arter back against Leicester and if he was to get that fifth booking against them, then at least Ralls would have, hopefully, recovered from the injury to his kneecap he sustained at Spurs and be able to step in against Brighton in a fortnight having completed his three game suspension following his red card at Wembley.

Now, despite that report I linked to, it might be that Arter’s injury was serious enough for him not to have been able to play today even if he had not picked up a single booking this season, but I suspect if it was Leicester we were playing this week and Liverpool next, then Arter would have been out there today.

Either way, if you are a certain type of Premier League club, it makes complete sense to rest important players for matches against “elite” clubs so that they are ready to give of their best in the more important stuff to follow where there is a far more realistic chance of getting the points that are going to keep you in the top flight.

Eight years ago Mick McCarthy and his Wolves team were in hot water after he fielded a virtual reserve team for a game against Manchester United at Old Trafford – maybe McCarthy went too far with all of those changes, but I could certainly see his point.

Forget all of the hype about how the humblest of teams can overcome the big boys in the Premier League. Yes, it does happen occasionally, but the history of the league since is stopped being the far more competitive First Division of the Football League is one of mind numbing boredom when it comes to who wins the title each year and who are realistic contenders to contest for it with them.

Since 1993, there have only been one Premier League Champion who were not in the elite group that the pundits were adamant the title winners would come from and that’s Leicester City in 2016*. Blackburn in 1995 were, possibly, the richest club around at that time thanks to Jack Walker’s involvement and while Manchester City were never in that elite for the first half of the Premier League’s quarter of a century of existence, they are the team everyone else has to better now when it comes to spending power and playing resources.

The received wisdom is that any points picked up by the more modest clubs against the big boys who will be competing for the title and Champions League qualification is a bonus – you will gain the points which ensure your survival when you take them off sides that often end up going down instead of you.

The number and composition of the teams predicted to make up the group which will finish at the top of the table can vary, but, apart from when Leicester won it, it only does so between four and six teams – this promised to be quite an interesting season by Premier League standards because it was generally thought that there would be as many as six sides that were contenders this time around.

The soap opera that is Manchester United under Jose Mourinho had better get a move on sharpish if that sextet is not to become a quintet, because it’s looking increasingly like one of Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool and Spurs will be Champions and one of them will be heartbroken as they see their season long pursuit of a Champions League place foiled at the last.

I’ve mentioned before on here this season that the other fifteen sides have not been having a good time of it against the top contenders this season – nearly three months into the season, the only instance of one of those five clubs being beaten by one of the other fifteen was at Vicarage Road in September when Watford turned a half time deficit against Spurs into a 2-1 win.

That tells you so much about the nature of the division so far and when you also include stats such as the one I read before today’s game about how Liverpool had won all but two (they were both draws) of their home games against the three promoted clubs for each of the last eight seasons I believe City had virtually no chance of extending their unbeaten run to two matches today.

It’s little wonder that you were getting odds like those mentioned in this messageboard thread on a City win today – they really do bring home the enormity of the task we were facing.

Now, it may well be that Bournemouth’s hold on a top six spot is a temporary one as Manchester United, finally, begin to assert themselves, but the line coming through loud and clear here is that the “rest” cannot expect to get a great deal from their encounters with the top six during this season.

With that in mind, it is very interesting from a Cardiff City perspective to see how many games each club in the division have played against the current top six so far – here’s the breakdown;-

Matches against current top six         Matches against other fourteen

Liverpool                                   3                                                                      7

Man City                                    2                                                                      7

Chelsea                                      3                                                                      6

Arsenal                                      2                                                                      7

Spurs                                          1                                                                      8

Bournemouth                          1                                                                       9

Watford                                    3                                                                       7

Everton                                    2                                                                       7

Wolves                                     1                                                                       9

Man U                                     2                                                                       7

Brighton                                 3                                                                       7

Leicester                                2                                                                       8

West Ham                             4                                                                       6

Burnley                                  2                                                                       7

Palace                                    2                                                                       7

Southampton                      2                                                                       8

Cardiff                                  6                                                                       4

Fulham                                4                                                                       6

Newcastle                           4                                                                       6

Huddersfield                     4                                                                       6

Although things are a little uneven at the moment with some teams having played ten games and others nine, the top six will remain the same once this weekend’s fixtures have been completed and so I think it’s fair to say that those figures show that City have had, by some way, the most difficult opening ten fixtures of any club in the division.

Our total of five points with more than a quarter of our season completed would, almost certainly, see us relegated if repeated over the course of the whole season, but our cause, up to now, has not been helped in the slightest by a couple of things – first we have played more of those games against the current top six (five of whom are proving to be almost impossible to beat so far) than anyone else and, second, because we have lost all six of those matches.

Obviously, this means that we will have lost ground against many of the other fourteen clubs once we reach the halfway stage of the campaign when everyone else will have played the current top six as many times as we have now.

However, our next ten matches are all against sides outside of the current top six and our record in the four matches we’ve played so far against such teams offers some grounds for optimism because we’ve only lost one of them (that almost freakish defeat by Burnley).

Yes, those other four games have seen us pitted against the current bottom three and Burnley, who I believe should be very worried that they have to play four of the top five sides in their next ten matches. With that in mind, a record of won one, drawn two and lost one is not brilliant, but if we can continue to win as many as we lose against sides from outside the top six in the period up to when we play Spurs in Cardiff on New Year’s Day, then we would, surely, have opened up a useful gap above the bottom three?

Speaking of the bottom three, the best news of the lot at the moment has to be that, despite our very low points total and very tough start, we are not in it. Although it seems to me that the top five sides have improved on last season in many regards, their almost complete domination when they play against members of the other fifteen suggests that this improvement has not extended downwards and that there is not a great deal between the also rans – we are still regarded as virtual certainties for the drop by the nation’s media, but, for now at least, we can say that there are mitigating circumstances for our low points haul.

While the focus when it comes to the first team is, inevitably, towards the bottom of the division, it’s great to record that our Under 18s are top of their league having won away 2-0 at winless Colchester this lunchtime. Isaak Davies opened the scoring on six minutes and then saw his penalty, awarded after he had been fouled, saved by the home keeper with the game barely ten minutes old. After that, City had to wait until two minutes from time before they made the points safe when Dan Griffiths headed home.

The top three sides are beginning to open up a bit of a gap after they all won today – City are two points ahead of Ipswich with a game in hand and, for now at least, the more serious challenge seems to be coming from Bristol City who are three points behind us having played a game less.

Once again, I’ll finish with a request for support from readers by becoming my Patrons through Patreon. Full details of this scheme and the reasons why I decided to introduce it can be found here, but I should say that the feedback I have got so far has indicated a reluctance from some to use Patreon as they prefer to opt for a direct payment to me. If you are interested in becoming a patron and would prefer to make a direct contribution, please contact me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com or in the Feedback section of the blog and I will send you my bank/PayPal details.

*This piece was written before news of the helicopter crash at Leicester City’s stadium last night after their match with West Ham broke. It is now being reported by several news sources that the club owner, Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, was on the helicopter with the BBC saying that a member of Mr Srivaddhanaprabha’s family has confirmed this to be the case – as yet, there have been no details given as to casualties, but I suspect that there will be bad news on that score soon – my sympathies go out to everyone connected with Leicester City and I hope the outcome is not as bleak as I fear it will be.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , | 4 Comments