Emiliano Sala (30/10/90 – 21/1/19)

The first thing I saw when I switched the television on at five to seven on Tuesday morning was the lead story on BBC Wales news that a private plane carrying two people from Nantes to Cardiff, which left France at 7.30 pm the previous day, had gone missing just north of Alderney in the Channel Islands after radar contact had been lost.

I’m certain I wasn’t the only City fan that immediately thought this must relate to club record signing Emiliano Sala, who had signed from Nantes only three days earlier and had  returned to France to say his goodbyes to his former team mates on Monday.

For a short while, there was some relief for worried City fans when a French journalist tweeted that our new signing was not on the missing plane, but, even then, it was hard not to think that someone (e.g, family members or City staff) involved in the deal was on the plane because the chances of that flight being part of a completely unrelated matter seemed too unlikely to be true to me.

Within an hour or so though, the French Air authorities had confirmed that Emiliano was on the plane and so, for me at least,  the rest of Tuesday was spent constantly checking social media every few minutes in the increasingly forlorn hope of good news.

Now, the news that the search has been called off this afternoon for the player and pilot David Ibbotson means that what has been feared for nearly three days has come to pass and the man who we were all hoping would score the goals to preserve our Premier League status will never get to wear the blue shirt.

Regular contributor to the Feedback Section, Lindsay Davies contacted me with the following words on Tuesday;-

“I have to express my quite extraordinary level of sadness at the probable death of Emiliano Sala (and his pilot)…a young man at a huge turn in his career, so far from home…the distress of his family can only be imagined.

I have very rarely felt so profoundly the meaning of that old message – of an event putting Football into perspective.”

I can only agree with Lindsay, it has come as a something of surprise just how much this event has affected me. I said “I feel useless, helpless and devastated.” in a messageboard post shortly after it was confirmed that Emiliano was on the plane and found myself asking “why should I feel like that when I know so little about the man?” – I still can’t answer that question, I can only confirm that the awful feeling I had on Tuesday has barely abated.

The closest parallel I can find in terms of how I’ve been affected is the Gary Speed one, but its not a good example really because the circumstances were so different and also all Wales football fans over a certain age would have watched Speed grow up with them. However, I felt “useless. helpless and devastated” on that Sunday eight years ago as well and it’s not how I normally react to the death of a “famous” person.

Although it’s low on any list of priorities at a time like this, just a few words on Emiliano the footballer now. Some eight hours before that plane took off, a thread had been started on the messageboard referred to above containing  a link to the Nantes club website showing all of the goals he had scored for them. I watched it on Tuesday morning and it was so poignant to see his goals being celebrated in such a passionate way, but what goals some of them were! In particular, headers powered into the net from ten yards plus out, calm finishes with his feet, evidence of the knack of being in the right place at the right time for “lucky” striker’s goals, penalties blasted into the net and, on one occasion, a decent turn of pace from a player who, reportedly, did not possess such a thing as he left a centreback floundering in his wake before scoring.

The impression I got from watching that video was that Emaliano Sala was an example of that quite rare thing in football, a late developer. His CV up to the age of about twenty six had been a moderate one, but there were definite signs of a big improvement at a stage in his career when you would have thought the chance for such things had gone.

Virtually everything I read about Emiliano said he was someone who was not born with a great degree of natural talent, but he had made a career for himself through sheer hard work and now he has been taken from us just as he was about to start performing for a manager and set of fans that, probably more than anything else, love a trier. Throw this in with that heading ability, which may have proved truly devastating against defenders who are not as used to facing opponents like him as their predecessors would have been a decade or two ago, and I feel Emiliano Sala could have been a real hero among City fans on a scale we’ve not seen in ages -instead, there’s just that feeling of devastation I keep coming back to.

RIP Emiliano Sala – Cardiff City fans never got the chance to watch you play for our team and you never even got to meet many of those who would have been your team mates here, but we’ll never forget you.

Posted in R.I.P. | Tagged | 9 Comments

Cardiff’s miserable 2019 continues – things need to change, and quickly.

I sat down to watch Cardiff City’s game at Newcastle today with a sense of foreboding. Part of the reason for this was that City were missing two important players, Harry Arter and captain Sean Morrison.

As is always the case under this manager, it is easier to get blood out a stone before a match than information about possible absentees and the reasons why they wouldn’t be playing. As I type this, I’m still none the wiser as to why Arter did not play – presumably, he was injured, but there are stories emerging now that Bournemouth may want to curtail his loan deal early.

As for Morrison, early in the week there was a brief statement from the club saying that he was in hospital for a “procedure”. Well, it turns out that our skipper’s appendix had burst and his life would have been under threat if the required operation on it had been delayed much longer.

Morrison will be out for at least six weeks it seems and, while he has not been in the best of form lately and Arter did a passable impersonation of a headless chicken in last week’s draw with rock bottom Huddersfield, these are two big players for the club and without them, our line up looked a very weak one by Premier League standards as Bruno Manga moved into the middle from right back and Lee Peltier came in as an indirect replacement for Morrison – a central midfield combination of Joe Ralls and Victor Camarasa with Callum Paterson operating as a kind of number ten looked weak as well..

The other reason for that sense of foreboding which I mentioned at the start was a purely selfish thing – any sort of streaming using my sometimes problematic Broadband had been very much hit and miss in the hours leading up to the game and I was not confident that I would get to see too much of what was being described as our most important match of the season so far against the team that was a point and a place below us in the table.

In the event, the streaming service was patchy for the first twenty minutes and then packed up completely, so, this is going to be one of those occasional shorter pieces I’m forced to do because it seems daft to go into great detail about a game which I saw so little of – especially when so many of you reading this saw all of it.

From what I did watch, I was not altogether surprised by the eventual decisive 3-0 defeat we suffered. While there was no great threat to our goal apart from a Rondon header that Neil Etheridge did well to turn over the bar while I was watching, the way we were continually gifting back possession to our opponents suggested that even a Newcastle side with the worst home record in the four divisions would make us pay eventually and, shortly after the stream of the match had packed up for good, that’s exactly what happened.

With a couple more goals added after the break, a team that you’d class as representing one of the best bets to go down instead of us were comfortably better than City, just like another such team in Huddersfield was in our previous game.

While I accept that I shouldn’t really be drawing too many conclusions from a game I saw so little of, everything I’ve read and heard about it so far cries out that it was another one of those games where we look like the worst team in the Premier League by an absolute mile.

The table may tell you something different and there might be someone that has not gained a point so far compared to our one, but, in 2019 at least, we have been the worst team in the Premier League. After all, New Year’s Day saw us lay on a comfortable training game for Spurs, we then clung on for a home point against a bottom of the table side that had lost their last nine games and today a team that has given the impression that they were scared of their own shadow when playing in front of their home crowd were way too good for us.

The stats say that we had one on target effort today to go with the none against Huddersfield and the three against Spurs, but the truth is that I cannot remember us coming remotely close to scoring in the first two of those matches and I heard nothing to suggest that we did today either – throw in the traditional couldn’t care less third round FA cup loss as well and it’s now something like three hundred and seventy minutes since Victor Camarasa’s superb match winner at Leicester which tonight feels much longer ago than just three weeks.

As a side that played for much of the first half of the season without a natural striker, our need for one was blindingly obvious and there was indeed one involved today in Oumar Niasse who signed on a loan deal until the end of the season from Everton yesterday. Niasse was thrown in today without even training with his new team mates it seems and so can hardly have been expected to transform our play, but it’s mildly encouraging that he comes here with the good wishes of many Everton fans who say he made a good impression with them as an impact sub.

Niasse’s arrival does not mean that the move for Nantes’ Emilliano Sala is off though. While the Argentinian’s club record signing is dragging on interminably (the club have finally confirmed his arrival tonight), he has taken his medical, terms have been agreed and he has, reportedly, snubbed a late and more lucrative offer to go and play in China in favour of coming here.

So, hopefully, we will have two strikers with decent scoring records in the English and French first tiers respectively for the rest of the season, but, even if the Sala we were signing had an h on the end of his surname, he would find it next to impossible to hit the net with the sort of service his new team mates have been providing in the past month.

Neil Warnock said that the fee for Sala is going to be around £15 million rather than the oft reported figure of at least £3 million more than that, Even if we go with that lower figure though, Sala’s arrival would take the transfer spending by City to the £50 million mark for the past twelve months, but, realistically, if we are going to give ourselves a decent chance of survival, the figure will have to rise a fair bit more to bring in the right back and central midfielder we are crying out for.

Although the perception is that Vincent Tan is operating much more carefully this time around, Sala’s arrival would see transfer spending getting towards the sort of levels seen in 2013/14 – in fact, if we do get the defender and midfielder I mentioned then it may well exceed it.

Our manager said he wasn’t too displeased with his side today considering that nine of the starting line up were with City in the Championship last season, but, yet again, there was no place in the starting eleven for the four players brought in during the summer for a combined fee of about £28 million, while £6 million striker Gary Madine made his debut on loan to Sheffield United at Swansea tonight – all of this stands as an indictment against a manager who has done so well here in many other ways.

However, I found it a bit depressing to hear Neil Warnock almost talking down our new strikers as players with limitations because that was the nature of the market we have to deal in. While you can look at the spending levels of other clubs in this league and see Mr Warnock’s point, you would like to think that £50 million would still be enough to buy yourself a bit of class and the quality I believe is so sadly lacking in this squad, composure – but, instead, it’s almost as if the latter is discouraged at Warnock’s Cardiff!

So far, all of this transfer spending has seen just the one technical footballer come in (and he’s only on loan at present), while there have been plenty of workhorses, athletes and/or power players. No one should be surprised by this sort of transfer dealing because it’s the way our manager has gone about things since he first became involved in that side of the game back in the eighties, but it’s a method that has never worked in the Premier League for him and, as of tonight, it’s looking very much like it won’t do again.

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