Question; when is a cup giant killing not a cup giant killing?

Answer, when the “giant” in question is Cardiff City.

No one can deny that Cardiff City’s achievement in reaching the FA Cup Final in 2008 and then following that up four years later with an appearance in a League Cup Final was a praiseworthy one, especially when you consider that they were a Championship club at the time.

However, it seems to me that the attitude of the various managers and squads of players we’ve had since then has been one of “well, you’ve had your fun in the cups now, so you won’t mind if we go a bit easier in these games from now on will you – we don’t like playing in these matches you see”,

Maybe there are City fans who have no problem with that. After all, as embarrassing loss has followed embarrassing loss in cup competitions since the heartbreaking penalty shoot out defeat by Liverpool, there are always supporters only too willing to express their contentment that we can now “concentrate on the league”.

Coming from a generation that used to count down the days to the FA Cup Final because it was the one club game you could watch live on the television every season, I just don’t get that attitude.

Today’s depressing 1-0 defeat in the Third Round of that competition by League One strugglers Gillingham hurts me as much as all of the other miserable losses we’ve suffered in recent years – just because the losses have become so predictable now doesn’t make it any more easy to take.

Five years ago, we had what by modern standards is a very long run in The FA Cup when we reached the Fifth Round before letting ourselves down again by losing at home to a Wigan side who were a division below us at the time.

The Third Round that season saw us gain what may well be our best result in the competition since we won at Middlesbrough in 2008 when we came from behind to beat Newcastle 2-1 at St. James’ Park. At the time, I can remember being struck by the amount of vitriol hurled at their team by Newcastle supporters after that match, but I understand it more now, because they were sick and tired of watching their team bow out of the cup in the early rounds with yet another limp display – I understand it more because it’s a habit my team has got into now.

Many of the Cup defeats we have suffered recently annoyed me because it looked like some in the team weren’t trying, but I wouldn’t accuse any of today’s side of that. Sadly though, all I’m doing there is paying the team a very back handed compliment because it wasn’t effort that was missing today, it was quality.

Week after week I check the possession figures in our matches and see that we have struggled to keep possession of the ball for more than a third of the game. While I’m doing that, I’m always thinking wouldn’t it be great if we were the ones having 60 and 70 per cent possession for a change.

Well today it happened and all I can say now is be careful what you wish for! After the now traditional  threat on our goal within the first two minutes (this time goalscorer Elliott List shot straight at Alex Smithies after working himself a promising position following some flimsy City defending), City spent the rest of the first half almost completely dominating possession.

For a while, I was thinking this is fantastic, we’re bound to score soon, but gradually it began to dawn on me that, for all of the possession and passes, there was very little threat to the Gillingham goal. People who didn’t watch the match may well look at the stat which says we had twenty one goal attempts and think I’m being unduly harsh on City there, but the really telling figure is that only four of them were on target.

Despite the domination of ball and territory in the first half, the only real chance we created came early on when our best player, Nathaniel Mendez-Laing, played in Joe Bennett who should have scored rather than allow home keeper Tomas Holy to block an effort which displayed a lack of belief from the full back. Apart from that, our goal attempts in the first half consisted almost exclusively of long range efforts from a variety of players that flew high, wide and not very handsome – all that was on display for most of these efforts was a lack of technique from the City players when it comes to hitting shots cleanly and accurately.

Although outplayed in many ways, Gillingham could justifiably claim that they had created the better chances with top scorer Tom Eaves headed wastefully over just before half time after a quick and direct move by the home side which revealed more of a cutting edge than anything City had shown.

The second period saw Gillingham get more of the ball and they were soon creating the best chance of the game so far as Parker fired over from close in. By now, I was resigned to us losing the game because that’s what we tend to do in Cup competitions, yet, with less of the ball, we were having more chances.- Mendez-Laing came closest with an effort which came back off the woodwork and there was a Callum Paterson shot from close in that was cleared off the line. Generally speaking though, there was the same lack of technique in shooting which ensured that efforts were not going where they were intended to and the same applied to final passes that were not accurate enough when it looked like the obdurate home defence could be opened up – it was all far below what you would expect from Premier League footballers.

The goal when it came was a very sloppy one from a City point of view – Morrison might have been fouled in the build up to the goal, but it somehow looked wrong to see our big centre half and captain stood still as he reacted to what looked like a minor injury while play was going on around him in a very dangerous part of the pitch for his team. Bruno Manga’s tame challenge which followed didn’t look good either, nor did Bennett’s supposed attempt to block the shot or Smithies’ dive to one side as List’s effort from fifteen yards out flew into the middle of the net.

City had chances to get back on terms in the quarter of an hour which remained, but were let down by the same lack of precision that haunted them all game and it was Gillingham that came closest to getting the match’s second goal when a shot was deflected on to our crossbar.

So, congratulations to any Gillingham fan who may be reading this, but you didn’t kill a “giant” today, you beat the usual modern day Cardiff City cup team which can always be overcome by any lower league team which shows a bit of spirit, desire and organisation – the only difference between this cup exit and all but one of the embarrassments we’ve suffered since 2012 is that we happened to be a Premier League team when it happened this time.

There’s one other thing I should mention about the match– completely predictably, Cameron Coxe, Lloyd Humphries and James Waite, the three youngsters that travelled to Kent as part of a nineteen man squad, didn’t make it on to the pitch. In fact, Waite didn’t even make it onto the bench, as he was the one in the nineteen to miss out completely.

Given the way we dominated possession in the first half especially, it turned into a game where Waite’s lack of size would not have stood against him as much as it would in a “typical” game under Neil Warnock’s management. Also, considering the miserable standard of finishing displayed by the more established players who were used, Waite’s ability to usually hit the target when presented with an opportunity would have been most welcome, as, indeed, would have been Humphries’ impressive technique when striking a shot from distance – the recent goal he scored for the Under 23s against Colchester put the attempts by the first teamers seen today into their proper perspective!

At least the Under 18s managed to consolidate their position at the top of the table following a 3-2 win at Watford. The in form Dan Griffiths notched another goal while it was good to see Sion Spence get back into scoring form after his injury lay off with a couple – with second placed Ipswich beating Millwall 5-3, the top two have now opened up a cushion of five points (that gap is eight points in City’s case) over the pursuing clubs and so must be strong favourites to qualify for the end of season play offs. Also, congratulations to Blaenrhondda FC who made it into double figures with an 11-0 hammering of bottom of the table Llangwynyd Rangers BGC which keeps them in fourth place, five points behind the side in third and six adrift of the team in second, but with five matches in hand on both of them.

Once again, I’ll finish with a request for support from readers by 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 Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , , | 11 Comments

Tracing Cardiff City’s complete change of character through two matches against Tottenham Hotspur.

Before getting into the crux of this piece, a few words about the issue which has been hitting the headlines at the club in the early days of 2019.

With the transfer window now open there has been plenty of conjecture about the players we may or may not be signing this month. Frankly, when I look at the extensive list of speculative suggestions who are, in some cases, on the brink of signing for us apparently, I’m struck by the completely contradictory signals they send out – are we going to be spending getting on for £20 million for an Argentinian striker and around £6 million on a teenage centre half from Galatasaray or are we bringing in a Celtic reject, now playing for Hibs, for less than £1 million or a twenty year old striker from Sunderland who may be coming here on a Bosman free transfer in the summer?

However, with the current scattergun approach to possible transfers seen on the plethora of sites which specialise in this sort of thing, attention has settled on the story concerning allegations being made against Craig Bellamy, the man in charge of the City’s successful Under 18 team, of bullying and anti English bias.

The story had been featured on a daily basis since Wednesday I think it was in the Daily Mail. It started off with claims from the parents of Alfie Madden, an English youngster who arrived at the club two and a half years ago after being released from West Ham, that Bellamy made their son’s life a misery at Cardiff with the result that they effectively withdrew him from the club with just under a half of his two year deal left – there are also claims today that there is another player besides Madden who has made a complaint against Bellamy and is still at the club.

I could say plenty about this from both sides of the argument, but I would prefer to leave it until the club’s investigation into the story has been completed – as for Bellamy, he has denied all of the allegations and has, at his own behest, stood down from his post until the club enquiry has been concluded.

I mention the Bellamy story here mainly because it is connected, albeit loosely, to the subject of this article. As one of the people responsible for developing young players good enough to, eventually, play first team football for City, Bellamy has to be under pressure due to the fact that what was a stream of them has now slowed to what can’t even be called a trickle – to be fair to our former player, he is a relatively new employee at our Academy and, as such, can hardly be assigned “blame” for the lack of quality youngster coming through during the period of, say, 2010/2017.

On Tuesday City were brushed aside by a Tottenham outfit which, despite the glowing reputation they and their manager enjoy, have not won anything tangible since lifting the League Cup in 2008. The final score was 3-0, but, having got three goals clear, Spurs effectively declared before half an hour had been played – the gap in quality between the two teams was embarrassing as City’s inept defending played a part in each goal conceded.

The Cardiff side that subsided meekly against Spurs, following earlier home thrashings by both Manchester clubs, did not have a single Welshman in its starting eleven and there wasn’t one among the seven on the bench either. If you were looking for the closest thing to a “local boy” in the Cardiff eighteen that were shown to be not remotely in Spurs’ league, then I suppose you’d go for Bristol born Bobby Decordova-Reid who I somehow think was hardly in with the away fans in any Severnside derby he may have attended at Ashton Gate as a kid!

So, when the Spurs fans began singing “He’s one of our own”, as they have been doing about Harry Kane for the last five years or more, after our shambolic defending presented him with a goal in the third minute, our fans had no one who we could come back with using the same tune in reply. No surprise there really, because, apart from the odd brief rendition relating to Merthyr born Declan John when he played a few matches during Paul Trollope’s ill-starred reign as team boss, it’s a song that has never been heard coming from the the home support at Cardiff City Stadium.

How different it all was back in March 1961. On the eleventh of that month, a crowd of 45,000 plus made its way to Ninian Park for a Saturday evening kick off (Wales had played what was a Five Nations match in those days at Cardiff Arms Park a few hours earlier) to see their side take on a Spurs team on their way to capturing the First Division title. Not only that, they would also win the FA Cup a few weeks later, thus becoming the first side to win the League and Cup double in the twentieth century.

Now, any football comparison between the game of nearly sixty years ago and the one now is going to face charges that you are not comparing like for like. Therefore, let’s concede straight away that general playing standards in their domestic game’s top division were probably not as high in 1961 as they are now. Players are fitter these days, better prepared in terms of things like diet and their mental approach towards the game – probably most tellingly, the Premier League is a far more international competition than the old First Division was back then. The First Division was, primarily, a competition for the best the British Isles had to offer, whereas the Premier League has many of the best players on the planet performing in it every week.

So, it’s entirely possible that, despite their lack of silverware, the Spurs team of 2019 would be able to overcome their one of 1961 if they were ever able to play each other. However, when measured by what was available in 1961 and what preceded them, the team that won the first domestic double in sixty four years and in 1963 became the first British side to win a European club trophy, has, surely, to be one of the best this country had seen at that time.

The Cardiff team that faced Spurs that night had, like City’s current side, been promoted from the domestic game’s second tier the season before and had spent the first half of the 60/61 campaign too close to the relegation places for comfort. However, an improvement, which began after a 6-1 defeat at Blackpool on Bonfire night and saw them lose only three league matches in sixteen left them safely ensconced in ninth place when Spurs came  visiting.

Therefore, the team which were to win the league by eight points back in those days when it was just two points for a win, must have known it wouldn’t be straightforward for them in Cardiff, but, nevertheless, their 3-2 defeat must have been seen as a pretty big shock at the time.

There are plenty of possible candidates for the award of Cardiff City’s best ever one off win in their history. 1-0 over Arsenal in 1927 would, obviously, be one, as I suppose would be 1-0 over Real Madrid in 1971 or, maybe, 2-1 in Lisbon against Sporting in 1964. 2-1 over Leeds in 2002 is a candidate given the relative status of the two sides going into the game, but, if you are talking about league fixtures only, I think I’d come up with a couple of 3-2s (Man City, the eventual Premier League Champions in 2013 and Spurs in 1961) and I can remember my parents telling me about a 2-0 win over Champions Wolves at Molineux in 1955 some three months after being beaten 9-1 by the same opposition at Ninian Park.

Forced to choose between those three though, I’d go for beating Spurs because of all of the trophies they side won (they also retained the FA Cup in 1962).

So, what was the City side which proved to be good for the “Glory, glory Tottenham Hotspur” side of the early 60’s – the contrast in make up between that team and the Welshman free zone that was our eighteen on Tuesday is very telling. Here is the eleven that managed to do what the current team couldn’t on Tuesday;-

Goalkeeper Ron Nicholls was born in Sharpness and was signed from Bristol Rovers.

Cardiff born Alan Harrington spent his whole senior career at the club after signing from local team Cardiff Nomads as an eighteen year old.

Ron Stitfall was another Cardiffian who came through the club’s junior ranks and played over 400 times in a sixteen year first team career which began in 1947.

Barry Hole originated from Swansea, but signed for us and made his first team debut as a teenager in 59/60.

Scotsman Danny Malloy was born in Denny Loan and was signed from Dundee in 1955.

Colin Baker’s route into football was identical to Harrington’s – another local boy who became a one club man over thirteen seasons after arriving from Cardiff Nomads.

Brian Walsh from Aldershot arrived from Arsenal in 1955.

Hengoed born Graham Moore came up through City’s junior ranks, signing a professional contract in 1958 as a seventeen year old. A few months later he scored on his first team debut.

Derek Tapscott was born in Barry and scored stacks of goals for his home town club. City were one of the clubs interested in signing him, but he moved to Arsenal as a twenty one year old and joined us five years later.

Peter Donnolly was from Hull and joined us from Scunthorpe in 1960.

Stockton born Derek Hogg also arrived in 1960 from West Brom.

More than half of the side were Welshmen then and, apart from Barry Hole, five of them were born within a fifteen mile radius of Cardiff with three of them being from the city itself.

City reached a season high sixth after their magnificent win. Maybe it was the effort put in on that night which was responsible, but they were not to win another match that season – in fact, their last nine games produced just three draws as they declined to a fifteenth placed finish some five points above relegated Newcastle.

The win over Spurs cannot be discounted as a one off freak result though, because third placed Wolves were also beaten 3-2 at Ninian Park, fourth placed Burnley were another to leave Cardiff defeated (by 2-1 and we beat them by the same score at Turf Moor), while sixth placed Leicester came a cropper here as well by losing 2-1 and, in another comaprison which shows the team from fifty eight years ago in a better light than the current side, seventh finishing Manchester United were thumped by 3-0..

So, a Cardiff team with a majority of Welshmen in it were able to consistently take on the best in the old First Division on their own ground that season and beat them. Certainly, the contrast between those results and the feeble efforts put in by the current team against the big six at Cardiff City Stadium are marked and cannot just be explained away by the probable lower standard competition in the early sixties. If Cardiff could field a team like that fifty seven years ago, why can’t we find even one Welshmen considered good enough to merit a starting place for us now?

I can’t answer that question in any way that satisfies me, but I do note that 1960/61 was anything but a one off.

A few years earlier, City had a spell in the old First Division around the mid fifties and which lasted for five seasons and invariably they had a majority of Welshmen in the team then. For example, the side which played its first game back in Division One after an absence of nearly twenty five years had six Welsh born players in it, while there were the same number of “natives” in the team which won that game with Wolves I mentioned earlier.

In fact, Cardiff teams throughout the club’s ninety nine year Football League existence have drawn heavily upon the talent in this area and while my knowledge of the club’s history is not sufficient to state this categorically, I’m pretty confident that that every Cardiff City manager in our Football League tenure up to and including Dave Jones would have had no compunction in giving a local youngster a first team debut in a league fixture with something on it if the situation warranted it.

Of the managers since Jones, Malky Mackay gave a first team debut to Declan John in our first game in the top flight in over half a century and in his each of his first two seasons with us regularly included an English born Academy team graduate in the seventeen year old Joe Ralls and nineteen year old Ben Nugent. Mackay’s successor Ole Gunnar Solskjaer marked our final game in the Premier League in 2014 by bringing on another Academy graduate Cardiff born Tom James for a league debut (albeit in a “meaningless” match), while Paul Trollope was appointed with the intention of introducing a “Cardiff way” which involved promotion of young Welsh talent, but didn’t stay long enough to show whether he would have implemented it or not – what is known though is that the “Cardiff way” died a death with Trollope’s departure!

I always feel a bit guilty that the only times I tend to mention Russel Slade these days is to say what an appalling City manager he was when it comes to youth development , but as this piece is about that very subject, that guilty feeling is not that strong this time! Slade wasn’t a complete failure as a City manager, far from it, but his record demonstrably proves that he was just awful when it came to developing and/or promoting young talent, be it Welsh born or not.

Current boss Neil Warnock has to be a realistic contender as best City manager ever, but I find his record when it comes to youth development disappointing. He’s not in the Slade class because players such as Swansea born Mark Harris and Merthyr’s Cameron Coxe have made first team debuts under his tenure, with Harris even playing some league football for us, but, tellingly, never in games that couldn’t have the term “meaningless end of season affair” applied to it.

So, something has changed in what is a pretty short time when you consider the total period of our Football League existence. It seems to me that somewhere along the line during this decade, picking youngsters for our first team has come to eb regarded as a risk not worth taking,

Is it a coincidence that this period equates to the time Vincent Tan arrived on the scene? I suspect it is, except that it may be that the demand for success has become greater, but, even then, three different managers were able to pick youngsters for the first team and it was only when Slade arrived that they disappeared altogether.

Of course, it needs to be said that the higher up the league structure you go, the better you have to be if you’re a youngster trying to break into the first team and it’s definitely true to say that there have been a few players at Cardiff in this decade who would have played first team football for the club if they had been around in, say, the eighties or nineties. However, local youngsters were always able to find their way into the first team in our previous stays in the top flight in the twenties, fifties and sixties and, anyway, for most of this decade when we have been a Welshman free zone, we have been a second tier side – again a level where we were never so reluctant to look to youth as we are now.

Also, I would argue that as the number of South Wales born youngsters in the Cardiff side has dried up, so their influence in the Welsh senior side has grown. Ryan Giggs, Craig Bellamy, Gareth Bale and Aaron Ramsey are among the best players ever produced by this country in many people’s eyes and they were all born in, or very close to, Cardiff. Furthermore, this era, possibly the most successful in Wales’ history, includes players such as Joe Ledley, Chris Gunter and James Collins who all started off at City and are, as with the four others just mentioned, from Cardiff and its surrounding area.

Therefore, far from a bleak period, this is something of a boom time for football talent produced in this area and yet, after, playing an active part in the early days of what has been something of a renaissance for the Welsh national team, Cardiff City representation has been conspicuous by it’s absence in recent years. Is this because the kids at Cardiff just aren’t good enough or are they being held back for some reason in a manner they have never been before?

I’ll finish on something of an optimistic note by saying that Coxe, James Waite and Lloyd Humprhies, who are all members of the Under 23 side that came through the club’s Academy have travelled to Gillingham as part of a nineteen man squad for tomorrow’s FA Cup tie. Given City’s ongoing problems in the right back position, I’d say Coxe should start the game, but it’s more likely to be Lee Peltier I suppose and I wonder if we will see any of the young trio playing a part?

I hope I’m wrong, but my guess is that we won’t. Even if we do, the day when there will be a  Welsh presence in the Cardiff City line up for “bread and butter” league games still seems an awful long way away – I find that not only sad, but also short sighted and, in the end, counter productive.

Once again, I’ll finish with a request for support from readers by 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 Memories, 1963 - 2023, Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , | 6 Comments