Patreon – a way of helping Mauve and Yellow Army survive.

It’s nine years this month since Mauve and Yellow Army (MAYA) was created, but there were times this summer when I wondered whether it would be celebrating this birthday and the truth is that it wouldn’t have done so without outside help.

I’d known that I was heading into three or four years of choppy financial waters for some time and this summer things came to a head for the blog with the receipt of the latest web hosting fees bill, which I simply would not have been able to pay without the assistance mentioned above .

MAYA will survive for now, but it’s hard to see how it will be able to do so for too much longer without something in place which will help to avoid a repeat of the sort of situation that existed a few weeks ago.

This is why I’m now requesting that readers of this blog, in effect, become my patrons by making a modest monthly donation of $1 (it can be more if you want it to be) through the Patreon website.

That link tells you the basics about Patreon and you can see how it would apply to this site by clicking on my Patreon page which can be accessed at

https://www.patreon.com/mauveandyellowarmy

or by clicking on “Became a Patron” on the blogroll on the right hand side of this page.

There will be plenty on there to help answer the questions you may have about this matter and you’ll also have the chance to see the, cringeworthy, video I’ve made!

However, I’m going to reproduce my more detailed explanation of what all of this entails, which appears on the Patreon page, here for you to have a look at. Hopefully, having read through it, you will feel that you can make that small monthly contribution I mentioned earlier, but please contact me through the Feedback section  or at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com if you have any questions that are not answered by the following;-

What this is about

Hello, my name is Paul Evans and I’m sixty two years old. I’ve always been a frustrated sports journalist and in 2009 I decided to create Mauve and Yellow Army (MAYA), a blog about the football club I have supported for fifty five years, my “home town” team, Cardiff City – recently, I have also set up a Twitter page at https://twitter.com/MauveAnd.

During the past nine years I would like to think that MAYA has established a foothold for itself as a place to go to for comprehensive and, I hope, honest and fair analysis on Cardiff City Football Club. In that time, I must have watched at least three quarters of all of the home matches played by the club’s Under 23 and Under 18 (Academy) sides, so the coverage on MAYA is by no means limited to the senior team at Cardiff – as a look at the sections entitled “The stiffs” and “The kids” will testify. Besides this, there is also a section on Welsh international football.

I’m the sole contributor to MAYA, but I’m very grateful for the input of all of those who have helped to turn its Feedback section into a vibrant, entertaining and informative portion of the site.

I used the word “honest” earlier to describe the sort of stories I provide, but, perhaps, a more apt one word description would be “independent”. Whether I’m right or wrong (believe it or not, I do get things wrong at times – as a look through the “Old Stuff” catalogue of all of the articles I’ve written will prove!), the opinions expressed are no one else’s but my own.

My intention nine years ago was not to earn a regular income from my writing, more to do something that I enjoyed about a football team I love. In all of the time MAYA has been in existence, my average level of income from it has been less than £10 per annum and it’s been quite a bit less than that in recent years!

The advert some of you may see (it isn’t there with some browsers!) in the top right hand corner of the page when reading MAYA is the only one which has ever appeared on the site, because I made the decision very early on that I did not want it to be “plastered with adverts”.

However, running costs have become increasingly hard to meet as they have almost doubled in the near decade of MAYA’s existence and it would not have survived this year without the extremely generous help of a body of fellow Cardiff fans who covered the cost of the latest set of web hosting fees.

Cardiff City’s totally unexpected promotion to the Premier League a few months ago has left me wanting to expand MAYA to reflect our new status, but the matters outlined in the previous paragraph would have made this impossible and so, I was becoming reconciled to the fact that it wouldn’t be able to continue beyond the next web hosting fees demand in the current format when I found out about Patreon.

If you have read this far, it means you are at least mildly interested in MAYA. For that I thank you and encourage you to read on as I outline my plans for the future, while also explaining what Patreon is.

 

How will MAYA change?

The plan is that it won’t change at all in terms of content. I intend to keep on producing the same sort of work, written with the aim of being fair minded and analytical, that I have done throughout MAYA’s existence.

The aim will be that there will be more content, but I won’t be making any promises about daily pieces or anything like that, because it seems to me that you end up writing for the sake of it then. I feel the need to produce something every day leads to a decline in standards – if there’s nothing worthwhile to write about, don’t try to “con” your readers by making out that there is.

This takes me on to Patreon. A look at their website should tell you what they are about – essentially, they operate and manage patronage schemes, whereby fans (for want of a better word!) of a creator pay a monthly fee as a means of expressing their appreciation of the work being produced.

 

How much will becoming a patron cost?

Before answering that question, I should emphasise that Patreon is a voluntary scheme, so, if you do not feel you want to make a financial contribution, you will still be able to read all of the same content as you can now – MAYA is not going to become a site where you have to pay to read it.

However, if you do feel that you would like to become a patron, then, as someone who is not entirely comfortable with the notion of asking people for money to read my digital scribblings, I will be requesting the smallest monthly donation available under the scheme – payments are in dollars and so it would be a minimum of $1 per month from every patron, rather than going in for the sort of tiered system which is an option in Patreon,

I should say here that $1 is the base level of funding that Patreon allows, but there is nothing to stop you adding to that figure if you want to – suffice it to say, you will have my heartfelt appreciation if you do, but, then again, that also applies to anyone who contributes a dollar a month.

 

What’s the plan for the future?

As mentioned earlier, the group of City fans who provided the funding this summer to pay the latest web hosting bill helped postpone things for a while, but I have always known that there would come a day when I would have to make a decision on whether or not I could continue with MAYA.

I always thought that, when that day came, I would be faced with two choices – either not pay the bill and let the blog die, or soldier on by opting for, say, a subscription scheme where everyone would be charged to read MAYA or go down the route of trying to dramatically increase advertising revenue by, say, using the “clickbait” option and/or “plastering the site with adverts”.

Frankly, I was never overly happy with the subscription option and was far from convinced that any advertising revenues raised would be sufficient, but I’m hopeful that the third option, Patreon, will work because of its voluntary nature and the fact that the sum I’m asking for every month is a relatively modest one.

The concept behind Patreon appealed to me, but I have to be honest and say that, primarily, I view it as a way to help with those costs.

As for plans, I’m thinking in terms of short, medium and long term priorities. The first one being to, hopefully, recompense as soon as possible those who have come to my aid in 2018 by paying those web hosting fees. In the medium term, I would like to get into a position whereby running costs will never again become the issue that they have been in recent years. Then, if both of those aims can be achieved, I would like to have another go at writing a book on Cardiff City – I co-wrote one called “The Journey Back: Cardiff City’s Rise Through the Divisions 1991 to 2013” which was published in November 2013.

I mention elsewhere that I’m thinking in terms of MAYA becoming a job rather than a hobby from now on. That doesn’t mean that I’m expecting a regular wage as such from my patrons, rather that MAYA will be able to break even to the extent that additional expenditure on things like the hardware required to produce it would be covered and, with my move from Cardiff to Tynewydd in March 2018, the travelling costs to the matches at three different levels that I fully intend to keep on covering will increase significantly as well. In short, MAYA has become a pretty big loss making operation at a time when I cannot afford it to be and so I’m hoping that situation can be changed.

 

How will MAYA change with direct funding?

A lot of this has been already covered above, but I hope the blog will change for the better as the additional time I’m willing to invest in MAYA will bring about improvements in things like research and scope of coverage – I also have one or two ideas in mind when it comes to the type of coverage I provide.

 

Finally

I’m so excited that you have reached my Patreon page and are interested in becoming a member of the close knit and friendly MAYA community. As my patron, you will not only have my heartfelt appreciation, but also an opportunity to influence what is published on MAYA in the future, because I will give full consideration to any suggestions from you regarding the nature of further blog entries – I also have one or two other “irons in the fire” when it comes to incentives for Patrons that I plan to reveal if things go well in the coming months.

Thank you so much for reading this sprawling ramble, the fact that I even feel capable of asking something like this of you says a great deal.

Bluebirds!

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Patreon | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Sobering start for the first team on a day when the Academy lads impress.

I only ever got to watch highlights of our 2-0 opening day defeat at West Ham five years ago in what was our first ever Premier League match, so I cannot comment with any certainty about the claims from some of those who watched the game live that they felt the writing was on the wall right from day one for Malky Mackay’s squad.

I can certainly remember it being remarked that it was all fairly simple for the Hammers as they eased to a win over opponents that offered little once the first goal had gone in and that those who were predicting relegation for one of the outfits involved were not referring to the London team!

So, when the 2018 version of Cardiff City began the club’s second Premier League campaign with a loss by the same score at Bournemouth yesterday, it’s only natural I suppose that the parallels between the two matches would be remarked upon. Furthermore, given that anyone who is asked for an opinion on City in 18/19 seems contractually bound to have to say we are going to finish twentieth out of twenty, it’s no surprise at all that people are queuing up to tell us that our second stay in the Premier League is going to be as short as our first one.

Nathan Blake is one of a number of ex City players who works in the media and usually isn’t far out with his predictions as to where we’ll finish – I can remember him saying we’d finish around eighth position early in the 2015/16 season and that’s precisely where we ended up, while right from week one last year, he was saying that automatic promotion was very much on.

Therefore. it sounds a bit ominous for us when Blakey was of the opinion that Bournemouth “won at a canter” yesterday. From memory, I thought we would finish around tenth in 15/16 and had us down as Play Off possibles last year (think I said we’d finish eighth), so Nathan’s record is better than mine, but, having actually seen all of our opening day 2-0 defeat this time, I can’t say I agree with his view that it was all so easy for our hosts.

I won’t deny that Bournemouth were well worth their 1-0 lead at the interval and that if it hadn’t have been for Neil Etheridge’s fine save to deny Callum Wilson’s penalty awarded shortly after Ryan Fraser’s twenty fourth minute opener, we might have ended up getting a bit of a pasting, but I thought we did well in the second half as we forced home keeper Asmir Begovic into urgent action on occasions.

For me, there wasn’t a great deal between the teams and we can take heart from the fact that Etheridge was a reassuring presence, Sean Morrison looked at home at this level, Joe Ralls, once again having Callum Paterson and Sol Bamba for support in a depleted midfield, showed enough to justify the confidence of those of us who reckon he’ll cope with the step up in standards and Bobby Decordova-Reid impressed in a thankless lone striker role.

Josh Murphy, surprisingly left out of the starting eleven after his fine display against Betis last week created a favourable impression when he came on for the last half an hour as well.

It’s also worth recording that there was a reminder from five years ago in the performance of referee Kevin Friend – we never seemed to get much from the officials in 13/14 and it was the same yesterday. I’m not saying that the ref had a decisive influence on proceedings, but the penalty award against Bruno Manga when he tangled with Fraser was harsh, Charlie Daniels might have seen red, not yellow, for his foul on Junior Hoilett just before half time on another day and the winger was given nothing when he was obviously brought down on the edge of the penalty area at a time when City were suggesting that they had an equaliser in them.

Add in that Harry Arter was missing because of the convention which says loaned players do not appear against their parent clubs, Victor Camarasa needs more time to integrate before he becomes a contender to start and that both Kenneth Zohore (suffering with a groin injury that manager Neil Warnock hopes won’t keep him out of the Newcastle match next weekend) and Aron Gunnarsson (out for another fortnight yet as he recovers from the latest in what seems a never ending run of injuries) were out and there are plenty of reasons not to be too downcast.

That said, there’s also a need for realism. If we were missing important players, then it’s also true to say that two players who Bournemouth paid nearly £40 million for this summer did not feature – full back Deigo Roco was suspended and club record signing  Jefferson Lerma was not felt to be ready to be involved.

It must be admitted as well that too many of the occasions when we could have scored came from set pieces and that, overall, those who think our squad doesn’t have enough goals in it would have seen very little to make them consider that they might have been mistaken in that view.

On an individual basis, Joe Bennett, who I thought was excellent last week, mixed good points with being beaten too easily in one on one situations on occasions. While I hesitate to be too critical of Sol Bamba, who was playing in a position he would prefer not to and deserves to be judged on what he does in his “proper” role, the first goal stemmed from the sort of area you would have expected him to be covering – instead, a home player was allowed to run unchallenged into a threatening area as I kept on saying “I don’t like this, I don’t like this” for about fifteen seconds before the ball hit the back of the net!

Referee Friend only showed the one yellow card to a City player. It came after just three minutes and I was convinced that Lee Peltier would not see the game out after that. Credit to him for staying on the pitch for the duration after such an early setback, but the way Fraser burst away from Peltier to draw the cynical foul which followed and the fact that the offence took place on the half way line with plenty of City players covering behind him must raise questions about both the full back’s ability to cope when attacked and his defensive judgement at this level.

There has been plenty of talk over the summer about us needing a new right back. I’ve never bothered commenting on that position because I’ve always been convinced that our manager would be happy to go with Peltier as his first choice, but, having used the word ominous once already in this piece, I have to do so again in relation to that early incident which saw Peltier booked.

On reflection, I think it might be fair to say that Bournemouth were just a little too cute for us. Using that so important first goal as an example, City had been holding the home side at arm’s length with relatively few alarms when, suddenly, they left that bit of a gap in the area in front of the centrebacks and it was quickly and ruthlessly exploited – even with their missing players available, you doubt whether we would have been able to take a similar such opportunity if it were offered to us.

As I say, I’m not too downcast as I write this, but, with one of our trio of relatively undemanding fixtures to open our season out of the way, it has become very important that we get something out of at least one of the next two. i say that because what follows on from them carries the very real threat that we could be looking at a Crystal Palace from a year ago type start to our campaign and, try as I might, I don’t see us recovering from something like that in the same way as Roy Hodgson’s side did.

Anyway, on to a happier outcome for a Cardiff City team yesterday because at lunchtime I watched our Under 18s steamroller Colchester 5-0 at Leckwith in their first league game of the season.

It’s been an encouraging pre season for the Academy team with wins over Leicester and West Ham in their warm up matches (the Under 13s beat Liverpool as well) and their performance in the first half in particular was good enough to make me forget about the rain which began virtually as the match was starting and got heavier as it went on – the game was played on the pitch out in the open adjacent to the one at the Athletics stadium with it’s covered stand!.

As usual at this time of the season, there were plenty of new faces to get used to in the team, but credit to the club’s website for getting the Under 18s fixture list online so quickly and for this introduction of the eight new scholars for this season.

Bagan, Davies (who I’ve seen play many times already) and Colwill were all in the starting eleven against Colchester, while Ryan Kavanagh at right back and Dan Griffiths at centre forward were new names to me – Kavanagh was in a City squad made up of Under 13 and 14 players which won a tournament called the Rotterdam International Cup in April of last year, so he can only be 16 at most, while the only Dan Griffiths I could find who seemed a likely fit was a seventeen year old from Wrexham who had been selected in Wales Under 17 squads while on Liverpool’s books.

Right from the start, City pressed forward and were ahead inside ten minutes when the unmarked Griffiths headed a cross from the right home from six yards. I remarked last season about the impressive midfield axis of Sion Spence, Sam Bowen and Keenan Patten which the Under 18s could field, well they were all included yesterday and it was Bowen who doubled the lead on seventeen minutes with a shot from twenty five yards which seemed to get a couple of very slight touches on it’s way into the net.

Spence was next to score when he hit a shot which was either a very cute chip or a flukey miskick from ten yards which found it’s way past keeper Hallett and into the corner of the net with the game still in it’s first quarter.

Isaak Davies, one of a few in City’s Under 18 team who were very impressive in the 5-0 win over Colchester yesterday.

Isaak Davies, playing wide on the left to accommodate Griffiths’ inclusion through the middle was having a very influential game and was involved again when Griffiths got his second with a firm close in header on the half hour mark.

The game was only thirty five minutes old when the scoring was completed as Davies skillfully controlled a long ball and fired past Hallett in the same movement for what I rated as the best of the five goals, but there was much to admire in the creation and execution of all of them.

Centreback Ryan Reynolds had a header cleared off the line and there could easily have been another goal for Davies before Colchester reached the interval probably feeling relieved that they were only five down.

It would be easy to say oh it was only Colchester, their senior side are in the Fourth Division and City should be beating teams like that 5-0. but they did reach the Quarter Finals of the FA Youth Cup last season and, in a much more even second half, there were more impressive runs by their right winger Todd Miller while they came closest to getting what would have been the second half’s only goal when a shot from the edge of the penalty area was deflected just wide with keeper George Ratcliffe helpless and they hit an upright from the resultant corner.

Spence had an effort turned around the post by Hallett, but City were unable to convert some fine approach play into further goals – truth be told, there was some self indulgence on the part of some as they ignored better placed colleagues to go for glory themselves, but that’s what you do when your seventeen and your 5-0 up, in fact, thinking about it, I was self indulgent when it was 0-0 when I was their age!

I’ll finish by mentioning something I heard from someone, presumably watching his boy play for Colchester, who was stood quite close to me when City were 1-0 up. From what he had said up until then, it was obvious this man knew what he was on about and that he was a regular watcher of football at this level.Indeed, by the time I moved to somewhere else at half time, I was fairly sure he must have played the game professionally at one time as well. Anyway, as City put together another smooth attack, he said “I do like watching Cardiff, they play the best football of any side in the league” – I came so close to blurting out “yeah, but you should see our first team”, but managed to bite my tongue!

When you think about it though, if somebody who is watching another team can say that, it only increases the feeling of frustration that we have stopped producing our own first team players. There was some outstanding football played by our kids today and at a time when I’m sure the first team will be receiving criticism in the coming weeks for playing “hoofball”, they provided a couple of examples of glorious long passes, not whacks downfield, that produced goals -I’ve had high hopes for this group since I first saw them a couple of years ago when they were playing for the Under 16s and, although it’s too early to get too upbeat about their prospects for this season, they were very impressive yesterday.

One last thing, can you please also read the message entitled “Patreon – a way of helping Mauve and Yellow Army survive.” which will be appearing on here very shortly – any help you can provide will be greatly appreciated.

 

Posted in Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , , , , | 14 Comments