Weekly review 27/5/18.

Apologies for starting these weekly reviews later than normal this year, but, although I will address the subject to some degree later, transfer rumours (which have been the main element in these reviews in the past) have been so plentiful and, in my view, fanciful, so far this time around that I decided not to bother with them yet and, instead, concentrated more on reflecting further on our promotion.

It is that promotion I suppose that we have to “blame” for the plethora of stories we’ve seen linking us to anyone and everyone who has kicked a football at some time in their life over the past three weeks. We aren’t yet Premier League when it comes to websites still running on 17/18 placings, but when it comes to transfer gossip we are and that means that people who’d barely given us a minute’s thought during the four seasons since we left it are now giving us the benefit of their opinions on who we should sell, release or buy.

So, I decided to wait until there was something concrete to write about when it comes to Cardiff City this close season and on Friday we got it with the announcement of some at least of our pre season fixtures.

The build up for the new season will start in the same manner as it did last year then with a game at Taff’s Well, followed by a week in Devon and Cornwall. Hardly typical Premier League then, but, with the Taff’s Well match being played a week earlier than in 2017 and our competitive games starting a week later, there’ll probably be time to take in a few matches in the Far East or the USA as well.

If I had to guess, I’d say that further trips to the likes of Shrewsbury and Plymouth would be more likely under this manager, but I seem to remember him saying something about us wanting to play some foreign opposition in our pre season games and, although it’s not mentioned in the piece from the club website I linked to, it has been reported that there will be a home match against Spanish opposition somewhere along the line.

Will we be getting the chance to maintain our 100% winning record at home against Real Madrid as Gareth Bale plays only his second game against Cardiff in the city of his birth (quick quiz question, when was his first?) then? Almost certainly not and, anyway, if you go by his post match comments after he become one of the leading figures in the Champions League Final last night, there has to be a good chance that Bale will be playing his football elsewhere come August.

There are some City fans who think that we may see Gareth Bale returning to play for us some time in his career. I would suggest that, after his exploits last night, that day is still some way off yet. When and if he does arrive, is there really any chance that Ryan Shawcross will be one of his team mates? I hope not, because it seems to me that it would be one of those transfers which just wouldn’t work out for reasons other than how good or bad a player Shawcross is.

Bale, who had been looking more like his old self in recent weeks as he mounted a late bid to claim a place in the Real starting line up against Liverpool, came across as not being happy at all by his place on the bench despite having just scored what I think is the best goal I’ve seen in a major Final. Pele against Sweden in 1958, Villa against Man City in 1981, Van Basten against Russia in 1988, Zidane against Leverkusen in 2002 are four I can think of off the top of my head as contenders for that honour, but Bale’s incredible overhead kick beat them all in my book.

By adding a second to seal his team’s, deserved, 3-1 win, Bale, arguably, did enough to have a Final named after him in the manner of Stanley Matthews following that FA Cup Final from sixty five years ago, but, sadly, he has a rival for that “honour”, because as with Arsenal’s Welsh keeper Dan Lewis, when we won the FA Cup more than ninety years ago, I can’t help thinking that his wonder goal was scored against a goalkeeper whose career will be forever defined by what happened to him in a major Cup Final.

Jimmy Scoular, infamously, was true to his word when he said Bob Wilson would never play for City again after the keeper’s last minute blunder had led to us losing in the 1968 European Cup Winner’s Cup Semi Final against Hamburg. The truth of the matter though was that we would never have got so far in the competition if it were not for Wilson’s heroics in earlier games – will Jurgen Klopp do the same with Loris Karius after his two howlers last night?

In my opinion, the Liverpool manager would have far more right to do it than ours did half a century ago – I daresay that 2018 will become the Bale Final to Real fans, but for Liverpool supporters, it will always be the Karius Final.

A couple of hours before Bale brought the house down, Fulham had clinched the third promotion place from the Championship with a hard earned 1-0 win over Aston Villa in the Play Off Final at Wembley, thereby prompting stories about how two of the three teams to come up will breath some much needed life into the Premier League next season with their pleasing way of playing the game – all very nice of them, but a little unfair on Wolves I’d say.

Although I’ve read City fans saying that they wanted Villa to win, because it would increase our chances of staying up, I’m pleased to see justice being done – Fulham were the side who came closer to getting automatic promotion than any of the others involved in the Play Offs did and, anyway, despite us being most people’s tips to finish bottom of the league again, I’m fairly confident we can survive with the right type of summer recruitment.

I’ll finish with some words on that subject. First, I’ve heard from a few people that another season in the Championship will lead to some serious cost cutting at Villa Park because of the threat of FFP sanctions. Therefore, a few of their higher earners and bigger names may have to leave over the next few months – I’m not saying that we’ll be in there leading any chase for Jack Grealish, but maybe the speculation linking us with Sam Johnstone and Robert Snodgrass (especially when you consider that the former could well be available on a free with his Manchester United contract expiring this summer and the latter looks likely to drop further down the pecking order at West Ham following their announcement that new manager Manuel Pellegrini will have a bigger transfer war chest than any previous boss of that club) could possibly be correct?

One other name I’d like to mention is Ryan Shawcross. Now, I believe that he is one of a few players destined to leave Stoke after their relegation and the Premier League, rather than a move abroad, would seem to be the destination for a player like him. However, with his previous as the man who broke Aaron Ramsey’s leg and someone who turned down advances from Wales (he was qualified for us as well as England) early in his career, I can’t help thinking that we would be landing ourselves in another Tony Warner situation.

Warner was never accepted by many City fans after his signing in 2004 because of his actions in a notorious City v Millwall match at Ninian Park on the opening day of the 1999/2000 season – the keeper, then a Millwall player, tossed a plastic drinks bottle into the crowd and was subsequently charged with assault.

Although Warner was later cleared of any wrongdoing, this did not stop him receiving abuse from sections of the home crowd in pre season matches shortly after he had been signed by Lennie Lawrence. Whether Mr Lawrence would have signed Warner if he’d known about what had happened before with him, I don’t know, but the keeper was never really made to feel at home at Ninian Park and spent a large portion of his time with us out on loan with Fulham – I’m not a great fan of Ryan Shawcross the player, but that is not the main reason why I hope there is no truth to the speculation linking him with a move here.

Posted in General, Out on the pitch, The Championship | Tagged , , | 15 Comments

Cardiff City and the Premier League – a fleeting moment again or something more permanent this time?

A few months ago someone posted a link to an excellent Welsh football podcast called Elis James’ Feast of Football on the City messageboard I use. I’ll always be grateful to that person because it’s a great listen and I heartily recommend it to readers of this blog if they have the time to listen to the different broadcasts over the course of the season.

Comedian Elis James is a Swansea City fan, but don’t hold that against him, because he comes over as funny, likeable and as someone who also knows his stuff when it comes to many aspects of football.

However, for me anyway, his two sidekicks Danny Gabbidon and Iwan Roberts, who are guests on each podcast, add so much to the show. Both of them are very good in their different ways and they share a habit of letting you in on behind dressing door secrets more than you’re used to hearing from most ex pros now working in the media.

Roberts is the more conventional and serious minded of the two, but is also impressive in the breadth of his knowledge (he is kidded sometimes by the other two for being a bit of a swot in terms of the amount of research he does before each programme). However, it is Danny Gabbidon (I don’t know if I’ve mentioned this before, but he’s the best defender I’ve seen play for City!) who, contrary to the perception I had of him based on interviews he did when he was a player, is the person who gives the most forthright opinions and is most willing to offer insights into the personalities of some of the biggest names in the game.

It’s the honest nature of what Gabbidon has to say that I am going to concentrate on here. If you listen to the podcasts from the second half of the season in particular, you won’t have to wait that long before you’ll hear him rubbishing this season’s Premier League.

According to Danny, the Premier League campaign just ended was of a particularly low standard with some very ordinary teams down near the bottom of the table. It’s a criticism that I’ve heard quite frequently this season and, based on what I’ve seen of it (I’ve not watched as much of this season’s competition as I have done in the past), it’s one I agree with.

There are common themes to the criticisms I’ve heard – while there is an acknowledgment that Manchester City are one of the better teams to have won the competition since it became the plaything of Sky TV and Rupert Murdoch just over a quarter of a century ago and other top sides have made some progress forward (as evidenced by Liverpool’s run to the Champions League Final), dig beneath that top layer of quality and it doesn’t take long before the gold and silver is replaced by base metal.

Although Arsenal need to start producing something soon if they are to continue their membership of the select few that give the Premier League it’s real star quality, there are six clubs which are figured to be ahead of the rest and below them it’s all much of a muchness.

The new ownership at Everton meant that they were being touted this time last year as a side which could prompt a situation whereby the usual suspects might face new competition for their Champions League places, but, based on what I saw during the first half of the campaign in particular, the merseysider’s finishing position of eighth greatly flattered them. If a side as poor as Everton are able to finish eighth in a league of twenty teams, then it really does give you a big clue as to it’s strength in depth.

From what I’ve heard of Elis James in the various podcasts I’ve listened to, he is under no illusions as to how poor his team has been for the last three seasons and Swansea’s continued presence in the top flight in 2017/18 told you as much about the level of ability shown by those at the bottom end of the Premier League as it did to the jacks’ talent for survival.

I’ve mentioned before on here that the definitive text book on how not to survive in the Premier League could have been written with our 2013/14 season in mind, but if there had been a sister publication called “How to  survive in the Premier League when you’re a small to middling club”, then it could have been based upon the jacks’ first two seasons in the division following their promotion in 2011.

When the jacks came to Cardiff in November 2013 for the first Welsh Premier League derby, it was billed as a bottom of the table clash. Swansea were in a proper relegation fight for the first time in their Premier League existence and, despite him having won a first major trophy for the club a little over six months earlier, there were plenty of calls for manager Michael Laudrup’s head at the time.

These only increased after their defeat at Cardiff City Stadium and by the time of the return fixture in February, Laudrup had gone – Garry Monk took charge of the jacks for the first time in the game at the Liberty where City’s limp 3-0 defeat only added to the growing feeling that Ole Solskjaer was not the man to extend our stay in the top flight into a second season.

While we subsided to our inevitable relegation, Swansea comfortably avoided the drop and, albeit with a more pragmatic style than the Premier League had been used to, they prospered for a season under Monk. However, having earned a reputation for finding transfer gems that did not seem to be on the bigger club’s shortlists, Swansea, for whatever reason, promptly lost the knack and their transfer dealings in recent years have been a long way short of the quality of three years and more ago.

When you add foreign ownership, which seems to me to have hindered rather than helped, and Swansea’s template for survival, which had involved the selling of one top player a year to be replaced by shrewd bargain basement (by Premier League standards anyway), simply stopping working, then their subsequent struggles are not too surprising.

Suddenly, where the feeling of continuity that had existed had only been broken when bigger clubs came in for their managers, it was now a case of the jacks going through two or three bosses a season under ownership which seemed unwilling or unable to act on, or even acknowledge, that the club had changed fundamentally from those days when they were envied by so many.

Indeed, when the end came for Swansea as a Premier League club last weekend, it had the feeling of a pet being put out of it’s misery.

The club that had been proclaimed as many people’s “second Premier League team” with an attractive and effective passing game which earned them much admiration, went down playing defensive stuff with what looked suspiciously like a long ball approach – they had become a characterless blight on “the best league in the world” and I get the impression that few outside of their immediate support were too upset to see them relegated.

My point in going on about the jacks at some length is that if a side as poor, and as badly run, as they have been over the past three seasons can survive in the Premier League as long as they did, then that suggests to me that standards at the lower end of the league have dropped, perhaps only slightly, since we were last there.

It used to be said that the Premier League was, in fact, three leagues in one with an elite grouping of six or less which could entertain fairly realistic hopes of winning the title, with the consolation for failure on that score being that they would at least be in the fight for a Champions League place. Then there would be a group of about eight who could dream of a Europa League place and, possibly, a domestic cup win. These sides might end up being involved in a relegation fight, but were generally regarded as having enough about them to win it – finally, you would have another group of six for whom just avoiding the drop would be deemed success.

I’d say that, broadly speaking, that was the Premier League we were in during 13/14, but it was completely different in 17/18. The elite group were still there, but if there was a middle group, I would say it consisted of Burnley, possibly Arsenal above them and maybe Everton and Leicester below them.

However, both of those last two sides spent quite a lot of the season beset by relegation worries and I think it could be convincingly argued that for two thirds to three quarters of the season, the bottom group, as defined by the old standard, contained as many as thirteen teams.

Now, of course, we’ve had a Leicester come along and win the thing a couple of years ago, but, more and more, that just looks like a statistical freak to me because the big boys’ hold on the league seems as strong now as it’s ever been. Also, just because it was a weak league this season, it doesn’t automatically mean that it will be in 18/19, but while some of those teams which survived in the bottom thirteen may make significant improvements with some good transfer wheeling and dealing and/or the right managerial appointment, it’s asking too much surely for many of them to do so.

Therefore, I would argue that, for a large part of the season anyway, more than half of our fixtures are going to be against sides that would be seen as a relegation rival of ours.

Now, I can’t remember where it was that I made this comparison recently, but I’m going to use it again. We started the season with a run of four fixtures with Burton, Aston Villa, Sheffield United and Wolves and then we had a sequence of matches against the same teams in late March/early April.

Comparing the outcomes of these games sends out a clear signal that the Cardiff City of August was a stronger side than the one of this spring. If the August 2017 version of Cardiff City were to face one of those bottom thirteen teams at home with the sort of team spirit and belief we showed throughout the season, I’d back us to win quite a few of those games.

However, the spring version of the team had got into the habit of losing or not performing against the better teams in the Championship and although that spirit and belief seemed as strong as ever, I’d fear another relegation if we couldn’t raise our game to higher levels than that seen against, say, Sheffield United, Villa and Derby recently.

The dilemma for Neil Warnock and the management team is if there is a feeling that we need new players to improve the team (and it seems there is), does that carry the same sort of potential problems as we saw in 12/13 when a side quite like the current one in many respects, was taken apart to include a series of expensive signings on wages that impacted on how we operated for years afterwards?

The alternative is to put more trust in the promotion squad than was shown last time around. Based on what we saw over much of the second half of the season, I doubt if this is going to happen – despite the earlier evidence that the current squad have it in them to play good quality stuff when they are on their game.

As mentioned above, the early evidence is that we will be pretty active in the transfer market in the coming months (don’t forget that the transfer window closes about three weeks earlier in the coming season) – there have been quite widespread stories about five or six new signings and I’ve even seen in one report that the number will be eight (it was broken down into a goalkeeper, two defenders, three midfielders and two forwards).

What needs to be remembered is that, for all of the talk about not wanting to see a repeat of the 12/13 spending levels, a significant difference between then and now is the valuation of players – at least when Premier League clubs with the money from the latest TV deal come calling.

The one transfer which came to encapsulate the overspending and ineptitude of our summer 2012 dealings was the one which brought Andreas Cornelius to the club – this was the signing which Vincent Tan was able to dine out on when he wanted to reaffirm his feud with Malky Mackay.

However one of a plethora of players we have already been linked with is Andre Gray of Watford. Now, I think he could be a very good signing for us, but the fact of the matter is that, having been a quality Championship striker with Brentford and Burnley, he got a reported £18 million pound move to his current club on the back of one fine season in the top division Turf Moor .

Things have not gone so well for Gray at Watford and, if we signed him, there would be a chance that it may be for a bit less than Burnley got, but it’s likely that, especially when you consider the player’s wages, he would cost us double what Cornelius would have done if he had seen out his Cardiff contract.

Similarly, if we were looking at two players with the career prospects that Gary Medel and Steven Caulker had when they signed for us, I suspect we would be looking at something like £35 million in transfer fees alone for such a pair of players.

The reality is that the Premier League millions and an eye watering transfer budget, by our standards at least, are not worth anywhere near as much as it may first appear. City will have to be cute with their transfer dealings this summer and, with us likely to be shopping predominantly in the overpriced domestic market, the odd quality Bosman here and there would be very handy.

Mind you, maybe we’d be better off steering clear of the overseas Bosman market if the rumours linking us with Hamburg’s Sven Schipplock have any truth in them – even my desire to give every new player a full chance before starting to get critical would be be tested to breaking point with that CV!

Let’s not forget that, despite his, justified, reputation as something of a miracle worker when it comes to the Championship, Neil Warnock, who acknowledges his record when it comes to signing strikers is poor, will forever be damned  by the judgment “but he couldn’t do the business in the top flight” unless he proves those critics wrong next season.

You would like to think that our manager would be backed up by a better and more understanding team than we had last time in this league. Ken Choo seems to be a definite improvement on what went before and, leaving aside the whole Malky Mackay thing for now, it’s to be hoped that Vincent Tan would have learned from the contract dispute which dogged the 13/14 team after it became public knowledge about six matches into the campaign.

For me, so much is going to depend on the quality of our recruitment this summer and whether it results in a dilution of the mental qualities which proved so valuable for us in our promotion- get it right and I honestly believe that the we can stay up, perhaps quite comfortably, given the likely shortcomings of, perhaps, a majority of the sides we will face.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The Premier League | Tagged , , | 11 Comments