Weekly Review 9/7/17.

Well, the new players keep on turning up, but unlike the five that had arrived up to last week, I don’t think anyone saw the latest one coming!

On Friday afternoon I was sent an e-mail saying we had signed a player from Ligue 2 (France’s equivalent of the Championship) and within an hour or so, it had been confirmed by the club that central midfielder Loic Damour had joined us on a two year Bosman type deal from Bourg-Peronnas.

Now, that’s a club I’d never heard of before and my initial assumption was that they were from the third or fourth tier of the French game. It turns out that they are based in Bourg-en-Bresse, but, it’s hard to find too much on line about them in English, and the impression I get is that, with their 11,000 capacity ground, they are living somewhat above their station at a level they’ve only been playing at since 2015/16.

Last season was something of a struggle for Bourg-Peronnas as they finished in fifteenth position in the twenty team league, some six points ahead of the side in eighteenth that had to play in a relegation Play Off. So, on the face of it, a twenty six year old from a team like that on a free transfer hardly sends the expectation levels soaring at a time when Wolves are signing a player that has been described as one of the best prospects in Europe (Ruben Neves) from Porto for a Championship record fee of £16 million.

Damour could well turn out to be a French flop at Cardiff (anyone remember Luigi Glombard?), but there are a few grounds for hope that we may have got ourselves a bargain.

One thing you can say about our new player (who speaks good English) is that he is brutally honest, both in his assessment of his early career when saying;-

“I’m 26 years old. I was 17 then. I had a bit of a bug. I made mistakes. I left Strasbourg in 2011 as a pretentious young con. I was a little s***.

I already saw myself in Manchester United. I did not behave like a pro.”

and also in saying that the Championship represents a huge step up from the level he had been playing at.

Damour comes to Cardiff having had what he describes as the best season of his career – a season where it was reported that clubs from the French game’s top flight had been watching him.

There is the what has become known as the obligatory grainy You Tube video  and it’s hardly what I would call spectacular stuff. I’ve read very contrasting views on what those clips show, but my opinion is that Damour looks a tidy footballer, with a bit of a turn of pace and a good technique. Of course, the level he is showing these qualities at needs to be factored into the equation, but, with a total of thirty nine caps for his country between Under 16 and Under 20 levels, it’s fair to say that Damour was considered quite the prospect in his youth and with those comments I quoted above suggesting a more mature outlook at a time when players are generally regarded to be coming into their prime, there may be some grounds for optimism.

This picture of our newest signing appears in a story from 2015 which my grade nine O level French (I don’t want to talk about it!) tells me was entitled “Loic Damour, at last on the good wagon?” – more evidence of a career of unfulfilled promise in it’s early years.

Certainly, someone I know who watched City train on Friday was impressed by what he saw of Damour (he was also very complimentary about another new signing, Danny Ward), so, as in every case like this, it’s a case of wait and see really.

Also at that training session was Sheffield Wednesday attacking midfield man Lewis McGugan who it’s being reported is on a two week trial with us despite having a year left on the deal he signed when moving to the Hillsborough club two seasons ago.

This gives the clue that McGugan’s time at Wednesday has continued the generally downward trajectory of his career from a peak of around five years ago. At that time, Lewis McGugan at pre season training with City would have been greeted with huge enthusiasm by supporters because he was considered one of the foremost playmakers in the Championship with an eye for spectacular long range goals.

However, even then, my feeling was always “I wouldn’t swap him for Whitts”. We had the best player in the league of that type already and, if the thinking is that the former Forest and Watford man is being looked at as some sort of replacement for the man who did what he wanted, I would have preferred to have kept the original.

After making a positive impression initially at Wednesday, McGugan dropped completely out of the picture and this piece, coincidentally referring to a game against our Under 23 team in March, shows how far he has fallen since those early years of this decade when he had such a good reputation.

Before the Damour signing was announced, Neil Warnock was talking about still wanting to get more goals into his squad. With the greatest respect to the Frenchman, there is nothing in his previous career to suggest that he is going to fulfill that criteria for us, so it seems to me that we are still in the market for one or two more attacking players – in his pomp, McGugan would definitely have fitted the bill, but, with the local media saying that it was “unlikely” that he would be offered a deal by City, it seems we will be looking elsewhere for those goals.

As is the norm these days, it was a case of one out, one in at the club last week with Thursday’s news that Rickie Lambert had been released from his contract. Neil Warnock had outlined the dilemma the veteran former England striker was facing at City last season when he said he needed to get fitter, but could only do that by playing regularly and he just wasn’t going to get those opportunities here – self evidently, it was going to be the same again for Lambert in 17/18 if he stayed here and the current speculation is that he will be playing in League One next season with either Blackburn or Plymouth.

Unfortunately, despite there being much to suggest that City are a better run club these days compared to two or three years ago, they still cannot shake off their habit of being forced into terminating player’s contracts by “mutual consent” with the inevitable expenses (that, surely, come from the playing budget) which spring from such decisions.

For all of the talk of an increased budget compared to recent summers for Warnock to work with, our transfer activity so far seems much the same as it’s been since the splashing the cash approach which ended with Ole’s departure in September 2014. There have been fairly modest fees involved with the Danny Ward and Callum Paterson transfers, but, with Criag Noone, and, possibly, Anthony Pilkington available at the right price and some pretty big earners not having their contracts renewed, the potential is there to recoup these costs and more.

However, it’s encouraging that a bid, believed to be in the region of £3 million, for Sean Morrison from Sheffield Wednesday was turned down a few weeks ago and this week it was good to see speculation that Hull were thinking of paying something around double that for Kenneth Zohore being given very short shrift by our manager as he spoke about not accepting £20 million for the man who has probably become our most important player in the last six months or so.

That’s about it really, except for a couple of stories about pre season games. Firstly, Neil Warnock confirmed that efforts are still being made to arrange a replacement fixture for the one against Portsmouth scheduled for the weekend before competitive games resume which was cancelled after we were drawn against the same opposition in the First Round of the League Cup. Apparently, our manager would have preferred domestic opposition, but he seemed resigned to the fact that, if a game could be arranged at such short notice, it would have to be against a foreign team.

Secondly, next Friday we travel to Taff’s Well and as that’s as close as we’ll ever get to playing a game where I live in my lifetime (it’s about a six or seven minute drive away), I’ll be there to watch what should be a pretty strong looking City side get their first run out of the new season.

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Weekly review 1/7/17.

City players reported back on Thursday for what, on paper at least, looks a lower profile pre season programme than in previous years. I should clarify that by adding that what I mean is a week spent in Cornwall could be portrayed as a lot less glamorous, and cheaper, than the trips to, off the top of my head, the likes of Portugal, Scandinavia, Germany, Austria and Switzerland that we’ve become used to in the past fifteen years or so.

However, Assistant Manager Kevin Blackwell made a good point when he said that both he and Neil Warnock had experienced problems with the quality of pitches and matches being cancelled when they had taken teams abroad for pre season training camps in the past, whereas you know what you’re going to get when you go to a location you’re used to – a location which has the additional bonus that more supporters can get to watch their team play while also taking their summer holidays.

Certainly, the approach of the current management team looks a sensible one when you think back to how City were forced to go driving around Germany, at very short notice, to find somewhere to play one of their fixtures just under a year ago.

As we enter July, we reach a stage where contracts expire and so there are probably thousands of players around the country who will be formally unemployed from today – they will not include two players who City have not offered new contracts to though.

In some ways, Tom Adeyemi and Theo Wharton represent opposite ends of the spectrum as far as out of contract players are concerned. On the one hand, box to box midfielder Adeyemi was always going to be in demand after making a decent fist of the thankless task of being loaned to a Rotherham team that finished a long way tailed off from the rest in last season’s Championship.

Certainly, Rotherham manager Paul Warne made no secret of his desire to take on Adeyemi on a permanent basis for his club’s League One campaign, but he was forced to concede that there was little chance of getting his man because there were Championship sides who were willing to offer him a new deal.

It was generally accepted that East Anglian rivals Ipswich and Norwich were chasing Adeyemi’s signature and, with the latter, it would be a case of going home for the player who left the Canaries to join Birmingham prior to signing for City in the summer of 2014.

Whether Norwich’s interest in Adeyemi was ever that strong is arguable as far as I’m concerned, because you’d suspect they’d have had a big advantage over others if they had really fancied him, but, in the event, it was Ipswich who won the race for him as they secured his services on a two year contract yesterday.

I believe Adeyemi would have a point if he claimed that he was never really given a fair crack of the whip at Cardiff. Certainly, he appeared to be no worse than some of the players who kept him out of the side for most of the eminently forgettable 2014/15 campaign. However, by doing nothing more than okay at an ordinary Leeds side during his season long loan in 15/16 and, as mentioned earlier, being decent at what was comfortably the worst team in the league last year, he didn’t do enough to persuade City to extend a stay at Cardiff where he had not been able to establish himself over a three year period under four different managers.

I’ve not looked it up, but did Tom Adeyemi start a game for us after we changed back to blue from red? I’m not sure he did – if that was, indeed, the case, then it shows how out of favour he became at Cardiff.

By contrast, Wharton, who signed for York City (now in the National League North following their relegation from the Conference last season) yesterday, came to represent the failure of City’s set up below first team level in recent seasons and his name, along with Tommy O’Sullivan’s, will, for me, be forever synonymous with what became a wasted and lost generation of talented City youngsters.

Wharton made quick progress when he broke into City’s Under 18 side in the early years of this decade and was brought on by Malky Mackay in an FA Cup tie at West Brom in January 2012 for his first team debut as a seventeen year old. In the year after that, he established himself as one of our better players at what was then Under 21 level, but then his career just stalled I’m afraid.

Injuries didn’t help and I have to admit that his later performances for our second string were not to the standard he had set three or four years earlier, but I can’t help thinking that City didn’t do Wharton any favours by the way they treated him. If they weren’t convinced by him a couple of years ago, then that was the time to let him go and give him a chance elsewhere – as it was, he was given another contract which served absolutely no positive purpose whatsoever for either club or player.

The legacy Wharton and O’Sullivan left to City was that they were inadvertent catalysts for what has to be a positive change at the club. While it may have looked ruthless to cut someone like Jamie Bird from the staff earlier in the year, the club could argue that this was preferable to giving him a second pro deal at a time when he had not established himself as a possible first teamer of the future when measured against the alternative which could well have seen his City career meander along going nowhere like O’Sullivan and Wharton’s did when they were in their early twenties.

Last week I mentioned the need for City to do some balancing of the books following the new arrivals to the first team squad in recent weeks and I also commented on the likelihood of Emyr Huws leaving. Well, Tom Adeyemi wasn’t the only City man to join Ipswich this week, as Huws completed a move to Portman Road on a four year deal.

The length of that contract offers proof that Ipswich believe what I suspect to be the truth – they might just have signed a player who could either make them a great deal of money in the future by either providing them with a profit on their investment or by being instrumental in transforming a team that have been on something of a downward curve in recent years.

I believe that I wasn’t the only one who thought that Ipswich did not have the transfer budget to pay the sort of fee that we should have been looking for with Huws and that the only was they could get him permanently would be if, like we have done with so many others in recent seasons, we let him go on the cheap.

However, all of the signs are that Ipswich will end up paying a fairly substantial sum for Huws. Of course, much of that could end up going to the player and his agent, but it seems clear that the task of balancing the books will have been given a pretty big boost by the receipt of the transfer fee and the savings made in wages.

Regular readers will know that I have always been a Huws fan and I retain a fairly strong suspicion that we could end up with egg on our faces for letting him go, but, for the sake of balance, I should say a couple of things.

First, in his, albeit very rare, outings for the first team, he did nothing which demanded a regular starting place and, second, when around the time of his sacking, Paul Trollope cryptically remarked about feeling let down by some who he had placed a lot of faith in, the first name I thought of was Emyr Huws.

I watched more of Huws in a City shirt than most, because I saw him play two or three times for the Under 23 side as well and I still can’t work out quite what I was watching in those games – was it someone who was going through the motions somewhat or someone who was completely lacking in confidence?

Huws showed some quality for the Under 23s with his tendency to grow into games as they went on, but what was noticeable to me was how simple he kept things in the early stages of those matches with a series of “nothing” passes which did little more than retain possession for his team. As I say, someone who was either taking it easy at a level he should have been very comfortable at or someone who needed to keep things very simple because he did not have the confidence to try anything more ambitious? I honestly don’t know.

Either way, the truth is probably that, for whatever reason, it would never have worked out for Huws at Cardiff and, although I would have liked him to have been given a chance to establish himself here during the coming weeks, it was probably the right decision to accept what was a more generous offer than I anticipated for him – even so, I hope Huws prospers at Ipswich for Wales’ sake.

So, we now find ourselves in the position I mentioned last week whereby we look very short of viable central midfield options and while, it was reassuring to see Aron Gunnarsson’s agent and Neil Warnock confirm that they saw his future as being with Cardiff City, our manager did concede that a couple of midfield men would probably feature among the three new arrivals he still feels we need for next season.

Warnock was also forthcoming on the future of Rickie Lambert when he admitted that the veteran former England striker would struggle to get game time during the coming season, but needed to be playing to get his fitness to an acceptable level – the solution would appear to be that Lambert will be leaving, perhaps on loan, within the next fortnight or so, with Blackburn a possible destination if messageboard gossip is to be believed.

On the subject of strikers, there was speculation in the local media, that Neil Warnock was going to give Idriss Saadi (who made his full international debut for Algeria last month) a chance to convince him that he has a future at Cardiff on his return from his loan spell which saw him score fourteen times in twenty nine matches for Vincent Tan’s Kortrijk in the Belgian football’s top flight last season.

While one City forward leaves Kortrijk, it appears that another one might be headed there to replace him – Frederic Gounongbe could well be headed back to Belgium on a season long loan deal.

Usually the days following the announcement of City’s fixtures for a new season include multiple examples of changes of the dates and/or kick off times of matches. This time around, there have only been two so far and they are both entirely predictable – the match at Bristol City on 4 November will now kick off at midday and he home match with Burton has been moved to Good Friday (31 March) to give the team an extra day’s rest before they travel to Sheffield United on Easter Monday.

So, all in all it’s been a week where the talk of who may be coming in has been overshadowed by who has gone out or is likely to go out, but I’ll end on the very positive news that Bruno Manga has committed to the the club for another two years by extending the contract that was due to run out yesterday – barring any departures in the position in the next couple of months before the transfer window closes, we will have central defensive resources for season 2017/18 that many other Championship clubs will be very envious of.

 

 

 

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