Careless Under 18s have lead at top of table cut.

Last week I suggested that Cardiff City, in the form of their Under 18 team, would be winning a league title in 18/19. Well, they are still big favourites to do so with a lead of seven points over the two clubs, Millwall and Ipswich, who realistically are the only ones who could still overhaul them, but while their two rivals won today, City needed a last gasp equaliser to rescue a point in a 3-3 draw with last but one in the table Coventry City at Leckwith this lunchtime.

With such a commanding lead at the top of the table, City are now there as a target to be shot at in their remaining matches and they didn’t cope with that situation very well today as they turned in a display which has to be rated as below par judged by the standards they have set for themselves this season.

With central defender Joel Bagan and striker Dan Griffiths having, seemingly, been promoted to the Under 23 squad (they have featured for them in the last three matches I think it is), the Academy side has changed somewhat in the last month or so, but, having won their last two matches by scoring nine times with no goals conceded against Bristol City and Crystal Palace, they were not letting these absences effect them too much.

Today was different, after looking their usual solid self for nearly an hour, the defence fell apart somewhat in the latter stages of the game as Coventry suddenly began to find large holes in our rearguard. At the other end of the pitch, although Keiron Evans did well as attack leader, we lacked a focal point with Griffiths missing and Isaak Davies still out injured.

With Neil Warnock present to watch his son Will making what I think was his first start for the team on the left wing, City improved as a low key first half went on and at half time I thought that, with Coventry barely threatening, we would go on to win quite comfortably. The only goal of the opening forty five minutes came around the half an hour mark when City put together a move which showed the quality that was to prove to be so elusive on this occasion as the ball was moved fluently from their right to left and Harry Pinchard beat an opponent before sliding in Evans who neatly steered his shot beyond the keeper and into the net via a post.

It was Coventry who came out the stronger after the break though and although there was still little in the way of an end product from them, I began to feel a goal might be coming as they started to dominate in terms of second balls won. Coventry were now pushing us back and they duly leveled when their half time sub McParland shot past Jordan Duffey to put the appropriate finish to their best move of the match so far.

City tried to step things up after that, but their passing was slower and more laboured than normal and when they did score again just past the hour mark, it came completely out of the blue as Sion Spence, who otherwise had a quiet game, finished emphatically from fifteen yards after a cross from sub Sam Parsons found its way into his path.

With Coventry now looking more confident and dangerous and City not being able to fully snap out of their lethargy, a one goal lead was a precarious one to defend as the match entered its final ten minutes and Hunt’s sweetly struck shot had the visitors level again as Coventry began to look the fitter team.

The momentum was now with the visitors and in the eighty third minute they picked apart the City back line again to leave Lautaru with a simple task to finish off another good passing movement.

City looked to have nothing left at this stage and their responses were easily dealt with by the visiting defence until, from nowhere, Evans came up with an equaliser with the match well into added time. I must admit I cannot provide any worthwhile description of the goal because by now I had begun my walk to Ninian Park station to catch my train home – I was about two hundred yards away at the time and could only make out from their celebrations that City had scored.

Two goals for Evans was a deserved reward for the way he went about a pretty thankless task as the team’s central striker – normally a winger, he was quite a bit smaller than the centrebacks he was up against, but he was the major plus point for City on a day when they never really clicked into gear.

Posted in The kids. | Tagged , | Comments Off on Careless Under 18s have lead at top of table cut.

Manager’s bad day at the office and individual howlers consign Cardiff to worst defeat of the season.

After two games where the team responded superbly to the dreadful events of 21 January when they lost the man who was supposed to score the goals to take them to safety, Cardiff City showed why they are still most people’s choice to accompany Huddersfield and Fulham (beaten 3-1 at West Ham this evening) back to the Championship tonight with a shambolic 5-1 home defeat by Watford.

Before attempting to pick apart our performance, it’s only right to give Watford due credit. Although we have been heavily beaten by five of the big six clubs, I would say that only Manchester City have caused us more defensive problems than them this season. At Vicarage Road in December, they really should have beaten us by more than 3-2 as their pace and quick, neat passing in the area just in front of our back four tore us to shreds at times.

This time, they were more ruthless and consistently troubled us on the break, but it also needs to be said that they were given considerable help along the way – mostly by us, but the ref did his bit as well.

For the second goal of his hat trick, Gerard Deulofeu showed that he is one of the quickest attacking players in the Premier League (and just about the slowest one at returning to his own half after scoring!). His first goal was a placed shot from the edge of the penalty area and his third a cool finish from a one on one – they were all quality efforts, but each of them owed something to careless, clumsy or inadequate Cardiff play.

This was worryingly poor from City and, for me at least, worryingly poor from our manager in terms of our selection, tactics and substitutions – presumably, Lee Peltier and Victor Camarasa were injured, because their absence from our eighteen made no sense otherwise.

Into Peltier’s place came Sean Morrison after an absence following his burst appendix last month. It was originally reported that our captain would be out for eight weeks, but, as it turned out, he was back in the side in just over half that time and I’m afraid his performance suggested that he had been rushed back too early. Morrison struggled to cope with Watford’s pace and movement and, in some respects, is an easy scapegoat to focus on, but there were others who were just as culpable as him.

Morrison’s selection came as a surprise, as did the dropping and non use from the bench of Bobby Decordova-Reid, a player who it seems to me is left out of the team at the slightest excuse – certainly, the standards applied to him seem to be much harsher than the ones applied in other areas of the pitch.

Josh Murphy and Leandro Bacuna came into the team as well in place of the aforementioned Decordova-Reid and Aron Gunnarsson. Three changes (one of them enforced it would appear) seemed a few too many when you consider the magnitude of the win at Southampton in our previous match, but, more than that, the way our team was deployed struck me as strange.

Peltier had played more as a right sided centreback in the Southampton match, so Morrison for him made sense in terms of it being just a straight replacement, but, elsewhere, I must admit to being stumped by our tactical approach.

Foster behind Janmaat, Mariappa, Cathcart and Masina does not strike me as a defence to rank anywhere near the division’s best, but with Doucoure (a top six team quality player for me), Capoue and Hughes in central midfield Watford have a nice mix of steel, technique, guile and mobility that we could not hope to match even if we had not decided to leave them with a man advantage in central midfield. In front of those three, Deulofeu and Pereyra, while ostensibly wingers, are rounded attacking footballers who, unlike our collection of fitful wide men, offer a threat across the full width of the pitch.

Stick the old warhorse Deeney at the top of that team and you have a lot of strength through the middle of the park and yet we went with Bacuna as a kind of right wing back, Joe Bennett as a left wing back with man marking responsibilities, Murphy as a left wing and an often isolated Callum Paterson stuck out on the right as a target for long balls aimed at his head.

All of this left Joe Ralls and Harry Arter to cope with a fluid Watford team that was very effective in an area where we were undermanned.

The feeling that the Warnock, Blackwell, Jepson brains trust was having something of an off day was added to by odd substations that saw Junior Hoilett replace the ineffective Murphy, Nathaniel Mendez-Laing on for Ralls and Kenneth Zohore on for Oumar Niasse. The upshot of all this was to leave Arter as virtually a one man central midfield while it looked like we had five players being used predominantly in wide areas.

As is his wont, our manager blamed the officials in defeat, but in as far as one incident can define a game in which your team has lost by four goals, he had a point this time.

I was right up the other end of the pitch when Janmaat appeared to bring down Murphy in the Watford penalty area just before half time with City only 1-0 down at the time so didn’t have the best of views of the incident. However, instinctively, you get an idea with penalty claims in the split second after the incident has occurred and, more often than not, it turns out to be right. I expected to see ref Simon Hooper point to the spot after Murphy went down, but, for some reason, he chose not to.

Tellingly, the overwhelming verdict of various men and women in the media at half time was that it was definitely a penalty and Neil Warnock even said after the match that Watford players and coaching staff were admitting that a foul had been committed by their player, so I think it’s fair to say City were cheated somewhat by the official here.

However, it’s hard to be overly sympathetic towards a team that presented Watford with their first three goals. For the first one, Bruno Manga made one of those errors he is too prone to when he lost possession of the ball on the edge of his own penalty area. Watford’s second goal was gifted to them by a weak Bennett free kick which dropped yards short of its intended targets – so, from a position where we were threatening an equaliser, about seven or eight seconds later the ball was in our net. With the third one, Arter simply passed straight to a yellow shirt when he wasn’t under a great deal of pressure and, again, the ball was in our net within seconds.

So, there’s something of a back to square one feeling about things tonight. This was our fourth very disappointing display in our last five home league games and if we don’t see a big improvement against Everton and West Ham there are, realistically speaking, not going to be sufficient opportunities to pick up points we need at Cardiff City Stadium after that.

Once again, can I make a request for support from readers by them 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.

Posted in Down in the dugout, Out on the pitch | Tagged | 9 Comments