The best month in Cardiff City’s recent history by a mile.

I suppose perfection would have been beating Burton on Tuesday to make it seven wins out of seven in the month, but six victories is enough to make August 2017 easily Cardiff City’s best month since the 2012/13 promotion season and I would argue that the unexpectedness of it all means it’s been better than any month during our title win as well – our bigger spending than all of our rivals and huge lead built up in the first two thirds of the campaign meant that there was a sense of inevitability about 12/13 and there was also the rebrand issue clouding things as well.

Yesterday City extended their winning run at the start of the season with an ultimately well deserved 2-1 home victory over Queens Park Rangers and will return to action after the first international break of the campaign looking to double the length of the previous best start to a League season record to six consecutive wins from three. Our opponents in thirteen days time will be Fulham who did us a big favour yesterday in ending Ipswich’s one hundred per cent winning record by beating them 2-0 at Portman Road. However, it also was a sign that the Championship’s most attractive team last season, in my view at least, are finding their feet again after a hesistant start to their 17/18 which had seen them without a league win until yesterday.

We’ve  got a decent record at Craven Cottage down the years, but I can see our winning run ending at Fulham at the start of what looks to be a very testing run of matches through September and October. Then again, I thought we’d draw our first game at Burton, thought Sheffield United could be a banana skin and had us down to lose at Wolves – this City team has a very pleasant habit of surprising me and they may well do so again in their next game.

Just as I was against Villa, I was pretty confident of a win yesterday, but City had to show qualities that hadn’t been needed in their first four Championship matches to beat a QPR side that have made a good start to the season themselves and came here with members of their squad talking about how they were going to continue with their tactic of pressing sides all over the park.

Certainly, that approach proved to be a successful one in the early stages yesterday as the visitors settled much the quicker and were worth the lead they earned in the fifteenth minute as City fell behind for the first time this season in a league game.

This gave us a chance to show some of those previously unseen qualities that I mentioned earlier. If memory serves me correctly, we had the best record in the Championship from the time of Neil Warnock’s appointment for gaining points from losing positions, so you would have hoped that the 17/18 side would respond well to falling behind, but, all the same, this was the first time that line of thinking could be tested.

Not only that, we were playing dreadfully when the visitors took the lead and so there was also the challenge of having to raise our performance level as a team and, I would say that, in all but one case, also as individuals.

QPR were as “in your face” as they said they’d be in the game’s first quarter as they also won the battle for second balls and passed it better than us. Mind you, even if we are never going to be a team that goes out with the intention of passing the opposition into submission under this manager, QPR would only have needed to pass the ball in a mediocre fashion to have been better in that facet of the game than we were in those opening exchanges,

There is an argument as to whether it was good play by our opponents or our own awfulness which led to the first twenty odd minutes turning out as it did, and, although I’m not saying that QPR weren’t doing exactly what their manager and coaching staff wanted them to, I’d edge more towards the latter than the former.

There are times for virtually any team when they make what is an immaculate playing surface look like a ploughed field with their first touches that make you question if they  have legs made of concrete and you wonder at their inability to string even the most basic of passes together. For such sides. two touch football entails the first one being a failed attempt to bring the ball under control and the second one sees the bouncing ball being hooked vaguely forward in a manner which either sends it out of play or straight back to the opposing team.

That was City to a tee for twenty two minutes yesterday and, while, as I mentioned earlier, any team can fall into playing in that way, it is somewhat unusual for sides at the top of the table and having not dropped a point yet to fall into such a rut.

I’ll come to the one outfield player who was unaffected by City’s general torpor shortly, but Neil Etheridge had also not done much wrong until he elected to take charge of a situation caused by a high ball from Luke Freeman which I’d say was a useful one that asked questions of our defence, but shouldn’t have ended up with the ball in the back of our net.

By the way he reacted, it would seem that Sol Bamba got a shout from Etheridge that he was coming out to claim the ball, but, from where I was sat, that looked an over optimistic decision by the keeper because the quality of the pass meant that the towering Matt Smith would have fancied his chances of getting his head on the ball as well.

In the event, while Bamba stood waiting for his keeper, Smith was able to get his head on the ball well before Etheridge arrived and it sailed gently into the net.

I was mildly critical of Etheridge for his part in the conceding of our league goal of the campaign last week, but, also wondered if I was being a little harsh in doing so – here though, it just looked like a goalkeeper error pure and simple.

Last weekend, City had been so good in the opening twenty minutes and the contrast between what happened then and the opening stages of yesterday’s match was staggering. For a while after falling behind, it looked like there would be no escape for City from their nightmare start, but it was now that the one player who was suggesting he may be able to do something about the situation took a hand – with a little help from one of his friends.

Up until the twenty second minute when he closed Steven Caulker down and the former City captain was forced to play the ball back to co centreback Nedum Onuoha, Kenneth Zohore had been doing a convincing impersonation of the player by the same name who was at City between February and November in 2016, but his chasing of what looked to be a lost cause paid off as Junior Hoilett got involved.

I’ve mentioned before that you can usually tell pretty quickly if Hoilett is on form because, while other players seem to take a bit of time to play themselves in so to speak, the Canadian can look on his game as soon as he touches the ball for the first time. Yesterday was not one of those occasions, but only because City were having such problems getting the ball to him – on the rare occasions he was in possession, Hoilett had shown signs that he offered the best chance of us starting to play something like our best.

Alex Smithies’ clearance rebounds off Junior Hoillet (for me, our best and most consistent player so far this season)  for City’s equaliser. The keeper was slaughtered by Wales Online for what was seen as something of a howler and he has to accept some responsibility for the goal, but. for me, the real damage had already been done from a QPR point of view by then.*

Here though, all Hoillet did was, just like Zohore before him, chase the ball down with an intensity which surprised and discomforted our previously serene opponents – Onnoha played a back pass to keeper Alex Smithies that did not have enough pace on it and so the resultant attempted clearance smacked against Hoillet’s right foot and rolled into the net.

Lucky? Yes of course, but by the way the two City player’s reacted to the situation when they could quite easily have just kept their heads down and felt sorry for themselves in a manner that had been seen too often beforehand, meant that it could be claimed that they had earned that luck.

Of course, QPR will have felt differently about the whole thing. After all, they were comfortably in possession inside the City half one moment and then the ball was being diverted into their net from about ten yards out by Hoillet the next, with that the only touch by a Cardiff player in the episode.

Hardly surprising then, that Ian Holloway (who called us the best Cardiff team he has faced in his managerial career) saw the goal as the game’s turning point.

Apart from a carefully placed Jamie Mackie effort from twenty odd yards following Sean Morrison’s weak headed clearance in the dying stages of the first half that thumped back off an upright and a frantic scramble in time added on at the end of the match which saw Etheridge eventually work the ball out for a corner, Holloway’s side were more concerned in keeping their goal intact in the face of City pressure than trying to score a second one themselves.

The effect the equaliser had on City was all that their fans hoped it would be and, by the end, there was general agreement that they were worth their win – in fact, for me, QPR ended up a little fortunate not to be on the end of a 4-1 or 5-1 beating.

One of the reasons this didn’t happen was referee Simon Hooper. The official was praised by Neil Warnock in his post match press conference for his general handling of the game, but taken to task for the way that he disallowed two home goals for reasons which are still unclear to me.

For the first one a few minutes after we had equalised, the “foul” was assumed to have been committed by Morrison, but, if anything, it looks on the video as if he was being fouled – perhaps Aron Gunnarsson was penalised for backing into an opponent? Whatever the reason, Zohore was denied a goal and it was Hoillet who was unlucky early in the second period when his close range finish from a lovely Nathaniel Mendez- Laing cross was ruled out for pushing.

Again its hard to see an offence by the Cardiff player on the video and yet earlier in the move, an obvious shirt pull by Caulker on Zohore was ignored by referee and linesman.

Despite these unfair looking setbacks, City were now playing in a way that was much more typical of their general level of play this season and they were building up a head of steam which saw them in front by the end of the first period.

Sol Bamba really should have scored at Molineux last week when he headed against the crossbar from no more than two yards out, but what was astonishing about it was that he looked to have jumped as high as the bar to reach the ball. here, he is not as far off the ground, but it’s still an impressive leap as he scores the goal which gave us the three points.

Shortly after Mackie’s effort against the post, the impressive Smithies was forced into action as he turned aside a Mendez-Laing daisy cutter from the corner of the penalty area, but he was helpless from the resultant corner, taken by Hoillet, as Sol Bamba celebrated his new three year contract with a far post header that turned out to be the match winner. Again, Holloway found his team’s defending wanting as he questioned how it was that Caulker had been left to try to cope with both of City centrebacks (Morrison was just behind Bamba and would have had a good chance himself if Sol hadn’t got to the cross first).

Just as they did against Sheffield United in their last home league match, City had something of a purple patch at the start of the second half as shots rained down on the QPR goal. Besides, Hoillet’s wrongly disallowed goal, there was a shot by the same player turned over by Smithies shortly after Mendez-Laing had seen a shot from a very acute angle come off the crossbar.

With City enjoying more and more success down the flanks, they were close to putting the game to bed on numerous occasions, but most notably when, following  Mendez-Laing crosses, Zohore was denied by a great save and visiting left back Jake Bidwell performed wonders to stop sub Danny Ward from scoring.

I’ve heard some people talking about how it’s good to win scrappy games like this one, but, although I never thought I’d be saying this after the way we played early in the match, I’m not sure “scrappy” is the right word to describe it – certainly from a City point of view, we played in what has become our normal powerful, quick, enterprising, effective and, often skillful style for three quarters if the game.

Finally on yesterday’s match, whatever you may think of him as a player, Steven Caulker had been having a pretty desperate time of it as a person in recent years. I daresay a lot of you will have read this piece from the summer already, but I’d say anyone who hasn’t done so should take the time to have a look at it. Caulker played his first match in ten months on Tuesday when he turned out for QPR against Brentford in the League Cup and, in truth, just like others before him, he found Zohore a struggle yesterday as he often seemed to resort to fouls against our centre forward. Caulker also was involved in the defensive calamity that was our first goal and was outjumped by Bamba for our winner (he had a thankless task there mind given the lack of support he had from his team maters). He was also subbed with a little under twenty minutes left as the visitors chased an equaliser, but the applause from the home crowd for him before the game and then when he went off were a sign that there are many at his former club who are glad to see him playing again and hopeful he is over the worst – I’m one of them.

To finish, I thought I’d give a mention to some of our Academy sides who have had a pretty good last few days. The Under 18s are still without a win after three matches, but they got a second creditable away draw of the campaign as they finished up at 3-3 at Nottingham Forest yesterday. Sion Spence, Isaak Davies and Keiron Evans got the goals, while there was also a draw for the Under 16s as they finished level at 2-2 after Forest had been a couple of goals up at half time. Particular credit has to go to the Under 12,13 and 14 teams though for their victories by 3-0, 3-2 and 5-1 respectively over Stoke on Thursday.

 

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City Under 23s up and running with first win.

After starting their season with a losing Sheffield double (the 2-1 home loss to Wednesday on 14 August was followed up by a 3-0 beating at Sheffield United on Monday), City’s Under 23 Development side got their first points of the campaign yesterday afternoon at Leckwith when Crewe were beaten 2-1.

While the win was a deserved one with City dominating in terms of possession, pressure and territory for long chunks of the game, the relative lack of action for Jussi Jaaskelainen’s son Will in the Crewe goal gave the clue that, for all of the home side’s superiority in other facets, they didn’t really translate into many on target goal attempts – Jaaskelainen senior is still without a club by the way, having been released by Wigan at the age of forty two at the end of last season.

City’s side at Sheffield United had featured some unfamiliar names including defender Matt Makinson who played a few matches for us at the end of last season on trial and has presumably signed a contract for us now following his release by Blackburn in the summer. There were also three trialists in Monday’s side with Deigo Poyet, who had also played against Wednesday, joined by David Attah and Ufumwen Osawe at right back and on the left wing respectively.

Poyet was missing yesterday, so I’d assume his trial period has ended without him being offered a deal (he wasn’t too impressive when I watched him against Wednesday), Attah, a nineteen year old right back who has played for PSG Under 19s and Lorient B, and Osawe, another nineteen year old who was released by Bayer Leverkusen at the end of last season, were both there with Makinson in yesterday’s team.

City started pretty brightly and soon had Crewe on the back foot as a series of crosses from their right in particular rained in on the visitor’s goal. However, as mentioned already, it was all almosts and not quites from the home team until Mark Harris (named in the Wales Under 21 squad for their matches during the upcoming international break along with team mates from yesterday, Cameron Coxe and Rhys Abbruzzese) hit a shot from twenty yards which beat Jaaskelainen all ends up and rebounded back off the crossbar.

Shortly after that, City had what looked to be a good claim for a penalty when Makinson I believe it was, was held back as he went for a corner turned down, only for referee Robert Massey-Ellis to point to the spot a few minutes later when a much more innocuous looking offence, which also looked like it might have occurred outside the penalty area, gave Crewe the chance to take the lead completely against the run of play.

I should say here that I was sat close to a hundred yards away from where the alleged offence took place and so I’d normally think the ref had a better view than me and accept his decision, but Massey-Ellis’ decision making struck me as being erratic all afternoon and so that makes me less inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt.

Whatever the merits of the decision, Lewis Reilly beat Oliver Byrne from the spot as City kept up an unwanted record of conceding the first goal in all of the matches so far. However, with three quarters of the match left, there were few reasons to think that the team were on their way to another defeat if they could keep up their performance level of the opening twenty odd minutes.

That said, there was still that lack of a killer instinct in front of goal to consider, as City were able to get so far without too many problems before they had one with the final ball/shot. Perhaps, part of the explanation as to why there was so little in the way of an end product came from the fact that, although Harris, leading the attack after Ibrahim Meite’s loan move to Crawley was announced yesterday, is about six foot tall, his strengths lie more in having the ball played into his feet than in the air and many of the stream of crosses coming in were gobbled up by the Crewe central defenders.

Keiron Proctor, being used in a number ten type position, isn’t really built to prosper from high crosses either and so, the realisation began to dawn that an equaliser wasn’t really the inevitability that it might have seemed at first.

Indeed, Crewe looked as if they may reach half time with only that Harris shot off the bar to have put them in serious danger of conceding, but, then with just two minutes left of the first period, two of the Wales Under 21 call ups combined to get their team on terms. Harris played Coxe into space and the teenager, who had made his first team debut in the week and was being used here as a winger rather than his normal full back position, showed a good level of finishing ability as he shot across Jaaskelainen and into the far corner of the net from around fifteen yards.

Most of the second half followed the same pattern as the first with Crewe far more occupied with defending than attacking. Proctor had not done badly, playing for an hour as he makes his way back from what I can only presume was a serious injury that kept him out for the large majority of last season, but he was replaced for the last half an hour or so.

The absence of Waite, who had made a big impact at this level last season, from our opening matches this season has been a bit of a mystery to me, as has been he complete absence from Under 23 squad of Sion Spence, who was considered good enough to have been on the bench for the first team in their final game of last season, only for “insurance reasons” to deny him that opportunity, and yet he has played all of his football in the Under 18s so far in 17/18.

One of Waite’s strengths is that his goal attempts tend to be on target and, so when a Crewe player was robbed by the corner flag by Osawe, and the ball was worked to the sub on the edge of the penalty area, I knew there was a good chance that Jaaskelainen would be called into action for one of the first times in the game. As it was, the keeper did have to make a save, but it was a pretty easy one as the shot lacked power.

Still, at least it was an on target effort to put alongside the ones which were flying high, wide or not too handsome – Coxe was not too far away with another angled effort and there was more in the way of scrambles and shots than in the first half, but there still weren’t the good chances that you would have thought would have been inevitable with all of the pressure the Crewe goal was being put under.

Indeed, with the visitors now beginning to look threatening on the break themselves, the possibility of an away win had to be considered as City’s back four were often left pretty exposed as Crewe came forward with increased confidence.

The game now had the feel of one which was going to produce another goal at one end or the other and it duly came with five minutes left when Harris got in a fierce shot from the right side of the penalty area (most of the good attacking play from City had Harris involved in it somewhere along the line) which Jasskelainen was able to save, but could only knock out into an area about two yards out from the centre of goal. For a while, it looked to me as if the keeper would be able to recover and fall on the ball, but it was Osawe who reacted quickest to tap in possibly the simplest goal he’s ever scored.

The remaining minutes were seen out with few alarms by City and one of their trialists had a match winning goal to back up his claims to be given a contract by the club. However, in truth, although I thought Osawe did okay, it was the other trialist, Attah, who impressed me more. He seemed to me to be caught out defensively now and again, but he was quick, decisive in his tacking and very keen to get forward – with Callum Paterson now getting involved in full training (he still a few weeks away from playing a game according to Neil Warnock mind), we are going to have even more strength in depth in Attah’s position, but he’s the one who has impressed me most out of the trialists we’ve had at Development team level in these early weeks of the season.

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