Another heavy defeat for the Under 23s while Derby postponement row rumbles on,

A very short piece today concerning recent events at Cardiff City. I’m not going to waste much time on last night’s Development team game with Bolton at a freezing Cardiff City Stadium. Bolton are top of the Northern Section in the competition we take part in as representatives of the Southern Section, but they weren’t what you’d expect from league leaders – rather like the Preston side that came here and beat our first team, they didn’t look anything special at all, but they were still too good for our collection of trialists and young players who didn’t feature in Saturday’s 6-0 FAW Youth Cup Semi Final win over Airbus United (we will play Swansea or Connah’s Quay Nomads in the Final).

Ciaron Brown and Paul McKay both played, but, apart from that, I can only think of James Waite who might have got into what may be considered our strongest Under 23 side. Unfortunately, McKay (playing at right back to accommodate a trialist at centre half) was carried off on a stretcher in a lot of pain after sustaining an injury to his left leg. It was hard to see what happened, but there was a foul on one of our players a second or two after McKay sustained his injury and the match eventually restarted with a free kick for that challenge, rather than one for the incident involving the player we signed from Leeds at the turn of the year.

We only had two efforts on goal that I can remember and both forced good saves out of the Bolton keeper. Trialist Matthew Campbell (who started in lively fashion, but faded in the second half) got in a shot from the edge of the penalty area which the keeper pushed out and a great defensive block ensured that our trialist number nine was robbed of what at first appeared to be a simple, tap in, goal. Besides that, Waite had a shot from twenty yards tipped over in the opening minutes of the second half, but that was it as far as City were concerned as an attacking force.

Bolton led halfway through the first half through Connor Hall and then stretched clear in the final five minutes through goals by Ryan Moore and Hall again – 3-0 may have flattered the visitors, but not by that much.

Meanwhile, the row about the postponement of Sunday’s match at Derby less than four hours before kick off continues. While in sympathy with all of those City fans who were already in Derby or were on their way up after starting their journey’s from snowy South Wales in the early hours of Sunday morning, I must admit that I thought the war of words which followed the decision to postpone was of a “tomorrow’s fish and chip wrapping paper” type which would soon be forgotten. However, developments throughout Monday suggest I may be proved wrong – rather than going into detail myself, I’ll let this good story from Wales Online outline the current position.

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Six decades of Cardiff City v Derby County matches,

Six questions with a Derby County angle from each decade going back to the sixties, the answers will be posted over the weekend.

60s. With an alliterate surname and place of birth, he played his first, and only, game for some Citizens, who played in the wrong shade of blue for him, as a teenager in the second season following the Second World War. For five years, it looked like that one game would be his only Football League appearance, but he became a regular in a team of song birds that, in those days, flew lower then they do now. He then moved west to Derby where he was a regular over the next five years in a team which was ensconced in the lower half of the old Second Division. Next stop was Yorkshire to play at a ground where, two decades later, the club’s Chairman would be jailed for conspiracy to cause arson after the main stand burned down. He finished with a spell at the ground that was once going to be “the Wembley of the North”, but didn’t play a single game for a team that would be managed by a footballing Knight a couple of years after he left. So, he never did get to play for the place with the dreaming spires – he really should have done though. Who am I describing?

70s.  A plum nose for a man of the left whose Derby career started late in this decade.

80s. The player pictured was on a losing City side in both of his encounters with Derby during during this decade, who is he?

90s. Can you identify this player from the following description?

A cultured midfielder who holds winner’s medals for, arguably, the two best club prizes available to him during his career, he never played for a team anywhere near his north eastern roots. He played over five hundred games for his first two clubs, the second of which was was a few miles down the road from here (Cardiff) by the sound of it. He was always in demand in the later years of his career, but never stayed anywhere that long – Derby got his services for a year in the middle of this decade, but, truth be told, his best days were about ten years behind him by then and Wolves only had to pay a tenth of what Derby had done for him when he moved on.

00s. One of this player’s first team appearances for City came against Derby, but he never became a regular here and Hamilton Academicals were beaten in their bid for his services by another team beginning with H when he left us. At the last count, he has played for sixteen different clubs, the majority of which have been in the Football League at one time or another, but they were often out of it when he was playing for them. His hottest scoring streak came at the club which has an off field philosophy which matches the colour of their shirts and it was at this time that he turned down a possible six figure move back into the Football League. A year ago, he was back in Wales playing for a team that wears white shirts and currently, he is turning out for some Worcestershire reds, but who is he?

10s. The player in the foreground of this picture was in a Derby side beaten at Cardiff City Stadium early in this decade and he had no better luck when he came here with his current club this season, who is he?

Answers.

60s. Former Manchester City, Norwich, Derby, Doncaster and Port Vale goalkeeper Ken Oxford.

70s. Paul Emson.

80s. Wayne Curtis.

90s. Ex Bari midfielder Gordon Cowans.

00s. Stuart Fleetwood, who has played for Hereford, Forest Green, Merthyr and Redditch among, many, others.

10s. Daniel Ayala.

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