Pity the poor children.

At the turnstiles before yesterday’s FA Cup Third Round tie with Mansfield, two young lads (I’m useless at guessing kids ages, but I’d say they were seven or eight) were telling a steward it was their first ever City game. The steward responded that they would remember Cardiff v Mansfield in January 2018 for the rest of their lives as the day they embarked on a lifetime supporting their club and I mentioned it was Northampton Town in October 1963 for me – this appeared to impress the steward far more than it did the two first time supporters!

On the face of it, whoever decided to take those two lads along to yesterday’s game seemed to have had a good idea – it was a lot cheaper to get in than normal, the crowd was always going to be smaller than normal and as we were stood third in a division that was two levels higher than the one our opponents were in, you would have thought that there was every chance that they would see a Cardiff win as well.

That’s precisely what I thought when the draw was made about four weeks ago back in the days when we were unbeaten at home in the league (we had lost to Burton in another “meaningless” cup game mind), but to anyone who had watched us in all or some of our four matches over the holiday period, they would not have been too surprised with how the match panned out.

I suppose the good news is that our four game losing run is over, but when you end up grateful to have drawn 0-0 at home to a League Two side, you really know how far things have slipped.

That said, backed by a raucous support of over a thousand fans, who comfortably outsang the home crowd on a bitterly cold afternoon, Mansfield were well worth their draw as they took their fine current run to just one defeat in their last nineteen matches in all competitions.

The fact that Mansfield only lie seventh in League Two despite them having barely lost a game in the past three months offers the clue that probably too many of those nineteen games have ended all square (their ten draws is the highest figure in the division) for manager Steve Evans’ liking, but they looked a confident team yesterday and they were not in the least intimidated by their meeting with their so called betters.

Of course, given City’s recent results and, more tellingly, performances, there was no real reason for Mansfield to have felt intimidated and they returned to Nottinghamshire with their management proclaiming themselves “gutted” to have only drawn – they had a point as well on an afternoon when, in the second half in particular, it seemed to me that they had the better chances to break the deadlock.

As seems to happen so many times in professional games at all levels in this country these days, the first half proved to be a non event with “not conceding” taking priority over attacking ambition – I can remember a header not too far over from the visitors, but that was about it as far as any attacking threat from them went. As for us, Rhys Healey (wasted out on the left wing as far as I was concerned) made such a mess of a decent early chance that his shot from just inside the penalty area flew out for a thrown in, but in the closing stages of the half, there was at least some work for visiting keeper Conrad Logan to do as we upped the attacking pace to the extent that it could be said that we had been the better team in a pretty miserable first period.

So there were grounds for thinking at half time that City could go on to win the game and this despite what seems to be our permanent air of crisis when it comes to injuries reaching new and, frankly, ridiculous, lengths this week.

Yesterday’s team was missing defenders Lee Peltier and Matt Connolly who have both been ruled out for a month with the former needing an operation and Neil Warnock confirmed in his post match press conference that Joe Ralls had “pulled out” on the morning of the game, Sol Bamba missed out with a sickness bug, Junior Hoilett (who came on as a sub in the seventy seventh minute) had been showing flu like symptoms, but I’d also say that he has been suffering from the consequences of all those high intensity games played for Canada in the summer, while Joe Bennett wasn’t going to be playing, but had to and ended up being on the pitch for the whole ninety minutes.

Our manager claimed Hoilett had been tired in the lead up to the game and said that his team had lacked “a little bit up front”. For me, this goes to the heart of the problems we have had in the last fortnight or so – we now finally have the front three which terrorised opposing defences early in the season available, but none of them are performing to anything like the standard they showed then.

For me, the biggest change Neil Warnock brought about last season was that he introduced pace into our attacking play as Hoilett, Kenneth Zohore and Kadeem Harris (who was playing, and scoring for the Development team before Christmas, but the absence of any sort of game time for him since then has me fearing that he has suffered another setback in an injury plagued campaign). The addition of Nathaniel Mendez-Laing only increased our attacking pace to the extent that, for a month to six weeks anyway, I think we had the most potent attack in the division.

Harris has still to see any first team action and so has not been a factor at all, but the other three speedsters are there and yet yesterday really brought home to me how much we are lacking when it comes to attacking pace currently.

Mendez-Laing has been back for a month now after missing a similar period with the injury he sustained early in the Severnside derby game in November, but he’s not the same player of August and September as he struggles to get past his marker continuously. As for Zohore, well, it was like watching one of his very poor early games for the club yesterday as he completely failed to impose himself physically on his markers.

It is generally accepted now that, even at his best, Zohore isn’t as good in the air as someone of his height should be and there was the usual lack of success when contesting high balls yesterday, but, far more concerning for me was the lack of pace and power shown by him.

I’ve read and heard comments that Zohore looked disinterested yesterday and it’s easy to see why people would reach that conclusion, but I wonder if it may have been that we were seeing a player who was feeling sorry for himself somewhat? Zohore was continuously flexing and stretching his legs which suggested to me that he had some sort of issue in his groin area, but, given that he stayed on until the eightieth minute when he was replaced by Anthony Pilkington, it obviously wasn’t a major inconvenience.

Neil Warnock made no reference to this when asked about Zohore after the game, but did say that his striker was still searching for that burst of acceleration which was instrumental in making him such a key performer for us in the first ten months of 2010 and, not for the first time, I thought that, understandably in a squad which is so injury racked I suppose, players are being rushed back from their bumps and bruises when they’re not quite ready for a return to first team action.

In the case of Mendez-Laing in particular, I think we are seeing him going through a crisis of confidence as he needs something good to happen for him to get him back to thinking like he was back in the autumn. The same applies to Zohore and Hoilett, to some extent, but I’d say there are also physical issues with these two as well in that they are playing more football than their body can cope with at the moment.

Amidst all of the injury gloom, the better news is that Sean Morrison played seventy five minutes in his return after the injury he picked up at Reading and did well, while Jazz Richards played his first game in three and a half months and came through without any sign of a problem. However, once again, we have this situation, caused by having so many first team squad members unavailable, that sees players returning from injury thrown in at the deep end when they should really be getting a more gentle reintroduction through a Development team match or two.

Zohore and Mendez-Laing continued to labour in a second half which, again, saw the best opportunities fall to Healey, notably when he fired over from a sharp chance from about twelve yards out and then when he didn’t put enough power into his shot after being put through by Callum Paterson (part of what Neil Warnock called a “mix and match” central midfield duo with Greg Halford) as a defender got back to clear a shot, which had beaten Logan, off the line.

However, Mansfield could point to chances that probably should have been taken with a bit more sharpness in front of goal as they showed a more ambitious approach after the break. By and large, City defended well and either Brian Murphy or one of the back four would be able to snuff out the danger, but it was Hoilett who made his best contribution during the short time he was on the pitch with a great bit of tracking back and covering which prevented the visitors breaking the deadlock from their best opportunity.

City roused themselves for a “grandstand” finish when they put Mansfield under the closest thing that passed for concerted pressure during the whole afternoon, but it was typical of their lack of attacking punch all game that, when Logan was called on to make the save of the match in added time, it came from a header from one of his own players, Kristian Pearce.

So, City face a replay which, as the media always say, is the last thing the bigger team in any Cup tie want. Speaking as an old fogey who can remember the days when sixty games a season plus was a common occurrence, I don’t generally have much sympathy for the modern day professional who often doesn’t manage a half century of appearances during a campaign, but it’s a bit different this time when we have so many players unavailable, not match fit, ill or generally knackered.

Maybe a win against Sunderland next Saturday will make things look different, but after Neil Warnock took the option of picking what was a strong team yesterday given all of our injuries and we still couldn’t our poor run, Mansfield have to be considered favourites for the replay.

Whatever happens at Field Mill though, I wonder whether, having had to sit through ninety minutes of poor quality fare almost devoid of the sort of action needed to capture the attention of youngsters on a bitterly cold afternoon, those two boys I mentioned at the start will ever come back to watch their second City game – they certainly deserved more from their first one.

 

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged | 8 Comments

From bad to worse as Cardiff’s wobble becomes something more serious.

 

If there is a league in this country which proves the validity of that well worn term that a season is a marathon, not a sprint, then it, surely, has to be the Championship. It is a nine month (nearly ten if you make it to the Play Off Final) campaign punctuated by many periods where you are playing three matches a week and, on top of that, there are very few games which teams can coast through because, as befits a league where you frequently see so called strugglers beating the “elite”, the margin between success and failure is usually a very thin one.

Therefore, the Championship is a competition that, to borrow from another sport, favours stayers and it usually tends to involve a gradual accumulation of points as targets set over what are usually six game periods are met or often bettered.

So, how does a long drawn out sporting event like the Championship, the Grand National or a marathon in a major athletics event tend to be won? Well, the first thing I’d say is that there is no set formula for being victorious. For example, two seasons ago Burnley, Middlesbrough and Brighton broke clear of the rest of the chasing Championship pack and it was obvious for weeks before the end of the regular season that it was any two from three for the automatic promotion places.

The fight for those two places went right down to the wire and, in the end, it was Brighton who missed out – hardly surprisingly, they were then beaten in the Semi Finals of the Play Offs. In marathon terms, it was like three athletes condensing the twenty six miles, three hundred and eighty five yards down to a burn up over the last hundred of those yards – it makes for a great finish and is probably the way all neutrals would want the competition to end.

On the other hand, you can get the killer burst from someone well before the culmination of the event which turns it into something of a procession. Again in marathon terms, this is when someone piles on the pressure around the fifteen to twenty mile mark and the rest can’t cope. In cases like this, that circuit around the track in a packed stadium to end the race becomes a lap of honour – it’s a boring way to finish in terms of it being a spectacle, but it should be a tremendous experience for the winner.

That’s exactly what happened to Cardiff City five years ago when we were on our way to winning the Championship. Already at the top of the league going into the Christmas and New Year period, City stole a march on the field by picking up four wins from four with their twelve point haul being five more than anyone else in the division could manage.

Although it didn’t feel like it at the time of course, that was the title virtually decided and, far from “limping over the line” as some killjoy supporters claim, we crossed the finishing line just as the others were entering the stadium.

However, what I cannot ever recall seeing in a high quality marathon field is the winner, or the silver or bronze medalist for that matter, experience the ordeal of what is known as hitting the wall just over halfway through the race.

For those who are unaware of what hitting the wall means it’s when a runner’s legs turn to jelly as they slow to walking pace and their sense of coordination appears to leave them – it makes for very dramatic viewing especially when it happens to one of the race leaders.

By doing the complete opposite of their predecessors from 2012/13 in failing to take a single point from their four holiday period matches, Cardiff City hit their own wall yesterday as they were beaten 2-1 at Loftus Road by Queens Park Rangers to follow on from their dismal losses against Bolton, Fulham and Preston.

Thankfully, other sports are more forgiving than Athletics, the horse that almost comes a cropper at Beecher’s Brook or the Chair as it loses dozens of yards to those in front of them can sometimes come back to win and if I had the time (which I haven’t I’m afraid), I’m sure I could find some sides that have won automatic promotion despite having a pointless Christmas and New Year

However, there can be no avoiding the fact that we look like one of those marathon runners that are reeling around unsure how they are going to manage to take their next step at the moment – where there was strength of mind and clarity, there is now mental frailty and confusion.

There are some straws to cling to. I’ve heard ex pros say that there are nearly always three, maybe four, members of a team who are some way off their A game, no matter how well the side is playing, but when you’ve got eight or nine struggling (as I believe we had in both of our last two home games), then you’ve got no chance. However , all of the indications are that we played better yesterday (it’s hard to see how we could play worse than we did against Preston mind) and, completely bizarrely, Bristol City’s 5-0 pasting at Aston Villa means we actually climb a place to third!

Before this horror period, City fans could be forgiven for thinking that a game was as good as over once we went a goal up – after all, we didn’t drop a single point from such a position before Christmas. That was then and this is now though – when Callum Paterson was fouled as he challenged for a Joe Ralls cross, the latter showed his mental strength following his last, truly dreadful, penalty against Norwich by calmly dispatching the resultant spot kick to give us the lead. Sadly though, our defence couldn’t cope as QPR upped their attacking intensity and the absence of Sean Morrison was clearly felt again as the home side could easily have netted more than the two they did get to turn the game around.

It goes without saying that you don’t tend to get much luck when you’re in a rut like ours and the pictures of a disallowed goal for Junior Hoilett against his old club appear to show that he received the ball from a touch by a defender, rather than Kenneth Zohore, so the decision to disallow it for offside was wrong.

Neil Warnock has always had a habit of deflecting attention away from his team’s failings after a defeat by zoning in on some decision or another from the officials that he claims cost his team a point or, even, a win. Based on what I’ve seen down the years, these claims can run the range of justified right through to completely spurious, but, to be fair to our manager, the pictures say that he was justified in his complaints this time.

Indeed, the fact that referee Tim Robinson (a new name to me) chose to consult his linesmen before making a final decision (a consultation which took a long time) surely indicates that there were doubts in his mind about the offside decision? Therefore, the subsequent decision to stick by the original ruling seems wrong when you consider the edict from FIFA some time again that, in an effort to make the game more watchable, the benefit of any doubt concerning offside decisions should go to the attacking side.

In saying that, I think Mr Warnock is realistic enough to know his side has got major problems – a team that is in the upper echelons of the Championship should be able to cope far better with the challenge of preserving a lead against opponents in eighteenth place and with just one win in their last ten games than we did.

The equalising goal, scored from a header direct from a long throw in, was a shocker from a defensive point of view, while the winner showed that Bruno Manga is probably going through his dodgiest period yet in a Cardiff shirt – its got so bad with him that he was playing better at right back a few games ago than he is at centreback now.

Also, I would hope and expect that our manager has ordered some sort of internal investigation into why we have had such an horrendous time of it with injuries this season. At his meeting with supporters at the end of November, he said that we “did not know the half of it” when it came to our injury situation, so I’d assume that we have had, and almost certainly still do have, members of the squad who are playing through a pain barrier and, probably, would not be involved if circumstances were different.

The situation is so bad in central midfield that Lee Peltier was the latest partner for Ralls in the middle of the park yesterday. People who were at the game have been saying that the defender did a reasonable job before going off with yet another injury and it’s true that it is not a position with which he is totally unfamiliar, but it does tend to endorse my view that the ability to be able to pass the ball to a team mate figures fairly low down on Neil Warnock’s list of priorities when it comes to the sort of central midfield player he wants.

Of course, it has to be said that those aforementioned injuries are making life very difficult for us in that area of the team, but, even when everyone is fit, it is hard to see someone at the club who justifies the term “midfield playmaker” in the sense that Peter Whittingham, Steve McPhail or Graham Kavanagh did with their ability to spot and execute a pass which could open up a defence.

All of our four senior central midfield players are capable of passing the ball well at times, but when it comes to the blending of artists and artisans, it’s pretty obvious that our manager has a big preference for the latter over the former in this area of the pitch (if we discount Lee Tomlin as a midfielder, which we surely must, then do we have an “artist” among our central midfield in the first team squad?) – you look at our central midfielders and it’s no surprise that our possession and passing stats are so poor.

All of a sudden, who we bring in this month has become a lot more important than it was looking ten days ago and I hope there is some truth in the rumours linking someone like Charlie Adam with the club. At 32, Adam’s best days are behind him and he will add little in terms of speed and mobility, but I’d like to think that there would be more than a reasonable chance that we would still have possession of the football after he, or someone in the same mould as him as a player, had attempted a pass.

It will be very interesting to see what the attitude is towards Saturday’s FA Cup tie with Mansfield now. In recent years, the FA Cup has become synonymous with weakened teams and embarrassing defeats at Cardiff, but will the need for the morale booster of a win of any type dictate a change of approach whereby we see as strong a side as possible taking the field?

My own view is that it won’t and I must say that, given the injury situation he is having to deal with, I could fully understand it if Neil Warnock decided to indulge in some squad rotation (for example, I would expect someone like Jazz Richards, an unused sub yesterday after three months or so out of the team, to start) . However, given that Mansfield will, in complete contrast to us, be coming off a holiday period which has seen them take ten points from a possible twelve, it would be no real surprise if the match ends up being another Fulham, Reading, Shrewsbury or Wigan as a sparse home crowd watches their side make an early exit from the competition.

City owe those supporters who have had to witness those shocking performances over the past four seasons a win in this competition and it would also mean a lot in terms of the wall we’ve hit since those days such a short time ago when we were four points clear of the club in third place and had an eleven point buffer when it came to the Play Offs.

Finally, don’t forget you can be added to the blog’s subscription list, whereby you will be notified by e-mail when a new article is published on here, by applying through the Feedback section or e-mailing me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com

 

 

Posted in Out on the pitch, The Championship | Tagged | 10 Comments