Six decades of Cardiff City v Chelsea matches.

Six questions about Chelsea going back to the 1960s, the answers will be posted on here tomorrow.

60s. Can you identify this player from these clues. This member of a Chelsea side heavily defeated at Ninian Park during this decade never ventured outside of West London in terms of clubs played for during a ten year career mostly spent at Stamford Bridge, but it was a different story when he became a manager. He started off at the port city of Athens, before a spell at another port, this one much closer to home where Victory was never far away. His best days came when he made Eagles soar to Championships ten years apart in two separate spells and there were also cup wins in successive years for him there. He then crossed the border to take charge of one of City’s pre season opponents this year, there was a year with a club nicknamed “the pastries”, before he had a spell as joint caretaker manager at a now defunct small valley near trees – he later became President of this English club.

70s. This question may be hard to fathom for a while, but you should get it in the end. In February 1972, Chelsea beat Leicester City 2-1 at Stamford Bridge, but who bedazzled the crowd when they attempted to invade the pitch during the game while trying to attract the attention of Peter Osgood?

80s. City were on their way to relegation when they visited Stamford Bridge for a Division Two match watched by a crowd of just 9,710 during this decade. The game was lost 1-0, but who was our unused sub that day who would depart for Newport YMCA three months later with a sub’s appearance at Newcastle and a start at Bolton the sum total of his first team experience in the Football League?

90s. Eddie Newton has to be a candidate for our best ever loan signing following his successful stay with us in 91/92, but this question relates to players who made their debuts for us in matches in which Newton played. First, Newton made his debut for us in a 4-0 home win over Chesterfield, who was also making his first City start that day? Who was the midfielder from the north east who debuted for us in Newton’s twelfth game, the locally born striker who made his first appearance in the following match, the centreback from a Staffordshire club who was there for the next match alongside an experienced left winger from some Shrews  who was also starting his City career?

00s. Who is this Chelsea player from this decade?

10s. Can you identify the following players who all featured in the last match between us and Chelsea? First, this player’s first two clubs were  El Mokawloon and Basle, second, he was replaced by someone who was born in the Hague and now plays for a side on the south coast. Third, another one who came on as a sub – he went home and joined the Wolves after leaving Chelsea, but now he’s back with a team close by. Finally, who is the player, now with our last Championship opponents for a season at least, who made his  senior debut that day when he came on for Eden Hazard in the eighty ninth minute?

Answers

60s. Chelsea centre half John Mortimore scored one of City’s goals in our 5-2 win in September 1961, he made nearly two hundred and fifty matches for them before moving on to QPR for a short while. His management career started off at Ethnikos Piraeus, then a season at Portsmouth, while he won Portuguese titles in 76/77 and 86/87 in his two spells with Benfica. Real Betis and then Belenenses were his next clubs, before he returned after  a five year break to help out Southampton as joint caretaker manager in 1994 – he later became President of that club.

70s. Raquel  Welch, chaperoned by Jimmy Hill, was out on the pitch before kick off, but when the game started, she stood on the touchline shouting at Chelsea centre forward Peter Osgood (who scored both of their goal in a 2-1 win that day).

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2902414/When-Hollywood-came-Chelsea-Raquel-Welch-stood-Stamford-Bridge-touchline-shouted-Wooee-bye-bye-Ossie.html

80s.Alan Sanders.

90s. Gerry Harrison, on loan from Bristol City, made his debut in Eddie Newton’s first match for us. Gary Gill, ex Middlesbrough and Darlington, made his debut for us in a 1-0 loss at Scunthorpe almost two months after Newton arrived at Cardiff. Tony Bird got his first taste of senior team action in a 0-0 draw with Maesteg Park in the Welsh Cup ten days later and it was also goalless when City visited Northampton four days after that as Gary Bellamy, on loan from Wolves, and Allan Walsh,  signed from Shrewsbury, made their debuts.

00s. Slaviša Jokanovi?.

10s. The match in question was played on the final day of the 2013/14 campaign. Mo Salah signed for Chelsea from Basle, having started off with Cairo based El Mokawloon was replaced by. Bournemouth’s Nathan Ake with ten minutes to go and shortly before that, Fulham’s André Schürrle, who signed for Wolfsburg after leaving Chelsea came on for John Obi-Mikel – Reading’s Jon Swift is the player who made his Chelsea debut that day.

 

 

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | 1 Comment

Events conspire against Wales, but better team wins on the day.

Much was made of Denmark’s strange build up to their Nations League game with Wales yesterday. The attitude of many reporters towards the dispute between the Danish squad and the game’s administrators in that country was one of wry amusement as the players in top two divisions of the country’s domestic league backed their international counterparts by refusing to accept selection for the national team in their place, hence the decision to field a team containing lower league performers. Futsallers and keepie uppie specialists for the friendly in Slovenia which was lost by the not too embarrassing margin of 3-0.

What the bust up did though was ensure that while Wales would be playing their second match in less than seventy two hours, Denmark’s best players would be coming into the game fresh following the decision to suspend resolution of the argument over match fees and commercial rights until after the first of their Nations League games have been played. So the possibility exists that the Danes could still face the Republic of Ireland next month with their “novelty” team next month.

Wales were also not helped by the fact that their flight to Denmark on Saturday evening was delayed because of “technical faults” with the plane.

So, all in all, there were reasons to fear that there would be an element of after the Lord Mayor’s show following the thrashing of the Irish on Thursday for the Welsh team – especially considering that the Danes currently stand ninth in the FIFA’s world rankings (we are nineteenth), they had gone twenty games unbeaten (not counting penalty shoot outs) before the Slovenia farce and had only let in nine goals in those matches.

The odds were against Wales even without the disadvantages of their opponents being fresher and the travel delay and, realistically, there were all sorts of reasons not to expect a performance as entertaining and enjoyable as the one seen against the Irish – if they did end up getting anything out of the match, it would be much more likely to have been down to a backs to the wall showing in an attritional affair.

“Attritional” was the right word to describe the opening half an hour of the game as Wales, with Chris Gunter restored at right back as Connor Roberts was pushed forward in place of David Brooks and James Chester back instead of Ashley Williams, comfortably dealt with isolated attacks from the home team while also suggesting themselves that they might be able to create something from their more fluently put together attacks.

Actually, to be more precise, Wales were able to pass the ball in non threatening areas with some fluency, but they were barely ever able get within shooting distance as a combination of the Danes defensive efficiency and the advantage they enjoyed in power ensured that they were never in any real danger of conceding a goal.

Certainly, it is hard to imagine that Denmark would have allowed Gareth Bale the time and space inside the penalty area that Wales gave to the home side’s best player, Christian Eriksen, in the thirty second minute as the Danes switched the ball to the right for Brentford’s Henrik Dalsgaard to deliver a low cross which left Eriksen with enough time and space to take a touch before scoring with a neat, low drive from fifteen yards which went in off a post.

On the face of it, one of Joe Allen or Ethan Ampadu should have been there to make scoring much more difficult than it was for Eriksen. The Spurs man had got beyond the pair of them though and he was able to prove what everyone knew anyway – that he had the quality to punish Wales for such carelessness.

Within minutes, Wales’ Man of the Match Wayne Hennessey was producing the first of three or four good saves he made as he flew to his left to keep out a viciously struck shot by Pione Sisto at the expense of a corner as the Danes upped the pace.

The home side were now showing that they had more to offer going forward than the rather laboured stuff they produced during their World Cup campaign which ended at the last sixteen stage with shoot out defeat to eventual finalists Croatia in a match where they were, arguably, the better side over the one hundred and twenty minutes.

Wales got through to half time just the one goal down though, so they were still well in the game although they must have known that they needed to up their attacking game considerably. Up to then it had only a Gareth Bale (given the captaincy in Williams’ absence) shot not too far wide of a post and a nice move which put Roberts free in the penalty area into a dangerous crossing position, which came to nothing, to recommend it.

If the closing stages of the first period had suggested the home side were getting on top, the opening period of the second half saw Wales coping better without really suggesting that an equaliser was coming.

However, the visitor’s task, already difficult given the quality of their fresher opponents and the distraction of that delayed flight, was made virtually impossible by the awarding of a very, very harsh penalty against Ampadu just past the hour mark.

One of the concerning legacies of a World Cup which contained so much that was good for me was the way that the otherwise very successful VAR system was applied to alleged handling offences by defending teams in their own penalty area. A number of very dodgy spot kicks were given on review for “offences” which seemed to be much more a case of ball to hand rather than the other way around.

What these decisions showed was the, bizarre in my view, official interpretation of what consists a handball in the area. Therefore, I suppose there shouldn’t have been too much surprise really at German referee Deniz Aytekin’s decision to point to the spot when substitute Viktor Fischer’s cross struck Ampadu’s slightly outstretched arm from a distance of about two yards, but that doesn’t make the decision a correct one in my book.

Eriksen duly scored to, essentially, end the game as a contest and the only question really in the closing stages was whether Denmark could increase the margin of their victory – they probably should have done, but I’m still of the opinion that, while the outcome might well have been the same, the way the closing stages would have panned out would have been a lot different were it not for that penalty award.

That said, there was some significance in the fact that the Danes second goal originated from Gareth Bale losing possession cheaply on the half way line because it tended to epitomise a night when Wales’ big guns simply didn’t fire. Bale might have been given more protection from a referee who tended to favour the home side throughout, but really it was a quiet night from him, the same applied to Aaron Ramsey, while Allen struggled manfully without achieving much and Ampadu, who was certainly a big gun on Thursday, experienced the other side of the game in what was a frustrating evening for him.

It will be the Republic of Ireland’s turn to play two group games during the international break next month as they host the Danes and us before things end in November with them travelling to Denmark who will then come to Cardiff for what, hopefully, will be a winner takes all encounter.

Just a quick mention of other Wales game played in the past few days. The Under 21s were unimpressive in beating group minnows Liechtenstein in Bangor on Friday evening – two goals by George Thomas in the first ten minutes seemingly set the home team on their way to the expected big win, but they were unable to add to them and ended up hanging on for the win. Mark Harris, who had a goal disallowed and then had to leave the field following a nasty looking clash of heads, and Cameron Coxe were the City representatives in a team which conceded late on and then were relieved to see a header come back off their own crossbar deep into added time – Wales now entertain Portugal on Tuesday in what is a must win game if they are to keep their faint Play Off hopes alive.

There was also another Wales win over the Republic of Ireland yesterday, this time at Under 19 level. City representation was provided by captain Ryan Reynolds, Sam Bowen, Dan Griffiths and Sion Spence (Isaak Davies was also on the bench), with Spence getting the game’s only goal – the sides meet again on Tuesday.

 

 

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