Seven decades of Cardiff City v Bristol City matches.

Another international break looms so soon after the pervious one and so you’d like to think thst Cardiff City will make a positive decision on the new manager in the days following Sunday’s visit to Bristol City.

Mind you, if we were to win at Ashton Gate and maintain the improvement seen on Tuesday when we managed to quadruple our points total, you have to feel that Omar Riza could well be told to continue his interim management. My preference would be to bring a new man in, but is that based on the fact that City have tried prolonging the caretaker manager’s tenure twice before and it definitely didn’t work with Mark Hudson and, while the sacking of Steve Morison may have come as more of a shock, he certainly wasn’t doing well enough to be offered up as an example which proved that the promote from within policy worked.

So, I accept that just because Hudson and Morison didn’t succeed, it doesn’t mean Riza will definitely flop. However, although it’s somewhat unfair, my attitude is that a win on Sunday should extend Riza’s “trial” for a game or two maybe, but it shouldn’t lead to a public statement from the club of the type we saw with Hudson and Morison.

Will we win on Sunday though? Our recent record against the wurzels is good and we will head there with more of a spring in our step, but, we were so bad in our first seven games that I believe we’d still really struggle if we conceded the first goal.

I’d take a point if it were offered now and feel we may get one, but that’s my heart talking, my head says we’ll lose and this will usher in the appointment of a new manager who will be given the chance of starting with home matches against Plymouth and Portsmouth.

Here’s seven Bristol City questions going back to the 60s with the answers to be posted on here on Monday.

60s. This defender was from the same place as a forward who went on to enjoy a far more illustrious career and they were team mates and friends at a club some way to the south when they began their careers. So, any confusion between the two was most likely down to the similarity of their surnames. While the forward went on to play the rest of his career in the top tier, his mate moved to Bristol City where he was a regular pick for most of the next seven years. When he moved on, it was to play for a couple of lower league strugglers from the same county, one of which is now, relatively speaking, prospering after years in the doldrums and the other is now back in familiar territory after having the time of its life in the noughties. I’ve just looked at a thread about our man’s death last year on a Bristol City forum and there appears to be confusion as to whether he was a “no nonsense” defender or a “cultured” one, but who is he?

70s. I only learned this morning that this midfielder, who was a skilful performer who never struck me as looking like your archetypal footballer. was christened with the same name as a member of England’s 1966 World Cup winning team and only became known by the name he used throughout most of his career to avoid confusion between the two. He began in the west country with his hometown club, originally signing as amateur to retain his job with British Rail, but soon became a professional and went on to play most of his career in the First Division before ending his days in league football at Ashton Gate for a short while – one of his twelve appearances for the wurzels came in a win over City, but can you name him?

80s. This defender played in at least one winning Bristol City side at Ninian Park during this decade, but probably doesn’t look upon our former ground with any great affection because of what happened when he returned there with another club in the nineties. He was quite a bit more than a journeyman as a player, but is the epitome of a lower league journeyman as a manager – he’s now at his eighth club, but has never managed at a level above League One. Do you know who he is?

90s. Pest trots on California land, but also has a spell at Cardiff! (5,8)

00s. Which Bristol City player of this decade made three visits to Cardiff City Stadium within four months early in the next decade with another club and lost them all – although he may dispute one of them!

10s. Which former Cardiff City Academy member was released by Bristol City without playing a game for them – he was playing for a Welsh team when he made his EFL debut and is currently a Bluebird?

20s. Sainted old coin perhaps?

Answers

60s. Gordon Low (his team mate, friend and fellow Aberdonian Denis Law played with him at Huddersfield). Low also played for Stockport and Crewe.

70. “Ernie” Hunt was, in fact christened Roger Hunt – he started off at Swindon and played for, among others, Wolves, Coventry and Everton.

80s.Keith Curle was the Manchester City captain who had a penalty saved by Mark Grew in the Nathan Blake inspired FA Cup shock at Ninian Park in 1994, Curle is currently manager of Hartlepool.

90s.Scott Paterson.

00s. Chris Weale was in goals for Leicester in a 4-2 FA Cup defeat at Cardiff City Stadium in January 2010, he was back for a 2-1 league defeat two months later and in early May, Leicester won 3-2 in a Play Off Semi Final Second Leg, only to lose the tie in a penalty shoot out.

10s. Aaron Amadi-Holloway who now plays for Chippenham Town who are nicknamed the Bluebirds.

20s. George Tanner.

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Finally, a win!

Cardiff City remain a team that, apart from the Derby outlier, cannot lose by less than two and cannot win by more than one, but, at least we now know that the latter applies to the 24/25 season as well as the 23/34 one, because, at the eighth time of asking, they have a league win, by a single goal to nil over Millwall at Cardiff City Stadium tonight.

It was not enough to lift City off the bottom of the table, but the sense of relief among all associated with the club will be palpable and it will feel like at least some of that great weight the team has been carrying in recent weeks will have lifted.

If someone ever does a statistical analysis into how sides come up with a win to end a horrific string of results they may prove my contention wrong, but, until then, I’ll maintain it is most likely to be with a scruffy 1-0 victory courtesy of a set piece goal. That’s how it was with us tonight, although, maybe, scruffy isn’t quite being fair because there was a little bit of quality to go with the grit (it was good to see that quality making a comeback after it had gone missing in our previous two games).

Statistically, there was little between the teams, possession worked out at virtually 50/50, Millwall had one more goal attempt and corner than us and on target efforts and goalkeeping saves were level. Therefore, you could deduce that Millwall might justifiably feel aggrieved with the outcome, but I thought City had the better chances in the second half in particular and, generally speaking, visiting keeper Lukas Jensen’s saves were more difficult ones than Jak Alnwick’s.

There was a scare for City in general and Callum Chambers in particular in the last thirty seconds when he tried to let the ball roll out for a goal kick, only to be nudged aside by sub Ivanovic whose low cross gave Duncan Watmore the chance to get in a back heel from four yards that Alnwick was able to block. 

The closest Millwall came to scoring though was when teenager Romain Esse glanced on a far post header and Callum Robinson was on the spot to clear off the line. Those two incidents apart, Millwall didn’t threaten too much in a much better defensive showing by City which benefited from having Dimi Goutas back to something like his form during the first two thirds of last season as he seemed to gain confidence through being played on the right. In turn, Perry Ng also looked more like his old self and this may have had something to do with having the Greek international alongside him.

Joel Bagan also looked the part tonight at left back and, that one late slip apart, Chambers was more secure than he has been recently.

Hardly surprisingly, City started cautiously and the lack of confidence was clear to see, but they would have taken heart from coming through a testing series of corners unscathed as Millwall were able to play through them too easily.

Little of note happened at the other end of the pitch until Robinson cut in from the left to hit a shot that took a slight touch off defender Tanganga to force Jensen into a save he made look easier than it was as he held on with Ollie Tanner waiting to pounce on any fumble by the keeper.

That was the catalyst for City to enjoy a modicum of control of the game – they found it harder to fashion chances than they had done at Hull on Saturday, but they were forcing a few corners and when Joe Ralls swung one into the near post on thirty nine minutes, Ng got free to power a header from eight yards past Jensen before he could move, proving that City had not completely lost the knack of scoring from set pieces which served them so well last season.

Rubin Colwill had not been in the game that much in the first period, but he and Tanner seem to combine better when they are out on the right and playing toward the Canton Stand – the second half was no more than a minute old as Tanner ran sixty yards and the second of the one two’s the pair played left Colwill in a good position some fifteen yards out, but his shot was straight at Jensen who then blocked Rubin’s follow up effort into the path of Alex Robertson who blazed wide from just inside the penalty area.

That was a rare blemish from the Australian who became more influential as the game went on – it was his best game yet for his new team and he was my City man of the match. With Ralls much more like his usual self after his below par showing on Saturday, City just about held sway in midfield for the last two thirds of the game and they almost got the second goal which would have made things less fraught when Colwill skilfully dinked a free kick from twenty yards towards the top corner only for Jensen to pull off the save of the game to deny him.

The goalkeeper should have been beaten for a second time in the closing stages though as Robertson’s superb pass sent Tanner clear and the cross when it came was a good one, but sub Yakou Meite went for his shot with the wrong foot as he stretched to convert and ended up falling over as he missed the ball completely.

It was a miss which, again, highlights why we’re going to probably continue to find it very hard to win by more than one, but Meite deserves credit for the way he drew fouls and harried defenders in the closing minutes to help ensure that Millwall were unable to build up any attacking momentum.

By far the best football played by a Cardiff City team today came in the first half of the under 21 team’s game with Ipswich this lunchtime as they came back from falling behind to a very dubious looking penalty conceded by Tom Davies which Jake Dennis was unlucky not to save to lead through goals by Michael Riendorf and Mannie Barton, but such was their dominance, City should have been three or four goals clear.

Unfortunately, despite Reindorf hitting the crossbar late on with an audacious thirty yard chip, City never found the same fluency after the break and Ipswich’s equaliser had been coming f9r a while. I thought Dennis could have dealt better with the long shot he knocked into the path of the Ipswich centre forward who bundled the ball in from close range, but he made a fine save from a free kick in the final minute to ensure his team got a 2-2 draw in a game they really should have won.

Reindorf continues to look like someone who should be in the first team squad every week, especially when. you see how much other forwards are struggling, and I thought Cody Twose in midfield stood out, but overall, it was a game which, while not perfect, tended to show that the current batch of youngsters coming through are one of the more impressive ones oi the twetny years in which we’ve had an Academy.

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