Now that’s what I call counter attacking football!

Coymay

In my opinion, one of the reasons Paul Trollope’s time as Cardiff City Head Coach was so unsuccessful was that he set us up as a counter attacking team and yet we played as if we were wholly unsuited for such an approach.

Time and again, the lack of pace in the team was remarked upon and the fact that we also moved the ball so labouriously only made this defect more apparent. It wasn’t as if we completely lacked pace, but players such as Jazz Richards and Declan John seemed to lack the belief to perform the attacking side of the wing back role in the manner in which some of us thought they could.

Consequently, whoever was playing as our main striker always cut a forlorn and isolated figure who would never see anyone within twenty yards of him when we tried to attack.

Therefore, it was easy to believe that we just didn’t have the players on the staff to counter attack effectively, but last night our Under 23 team proved this was not the case as a starting eleven made up entirely of players who were at the club when Trollope was in charge, played as well on the break as I’ve seen a City side do in ages in beating QPR 4-0.

I should qualify that sentiment somewhat by saying that, just as in the last home game when Crystal Palace were beaten 3-0,  it was a City side full of players with first team experience as Emyr Huws, Kenneth Zohore, Lex Immers and Declan John all started against a visiting team which looked like it would struggle to cope physically with opponents who, in many cases, towered above them.

Indeed, QPR’s number six Romeo Akinola must have been the smallest player I’ve ever seen at this level – he wasn’t as short as someone like Willie Carlin, but the midfield battler who played for us in the seventies had a physical solidity to him that Akinola lacked.

As it turned out, appearances were a little deceptive because our physically unimposing opponents contained three players who had played competitive first team football for QPR and another who had featured in Bolton’s first team this season, while Akinola proved to be a pretty accomplished footballer until injury forced him to be replaced at half time.

However, even if City were never able to walk over their opponents completely, it was clear from the opening exchanges that QPR might be in for a tough evening as John fired a shot from twenty yards at keeper Joe Lumley in the opening minute and, when possession was carelessly lost by the visitors shortly afterwards, you would have expected Immers to have done better with his attempt from around thirty five yards to find what was an empty net with the keeper out of position .

As the minutes went by, City still looked the more likely scorers, but QPR had steadied themselves and as the first quarter of the match ended, they could, justifiably, feel that they were beginning to give as good as they got. Indeed, their centre forward Axel Prohouley forced Luke O’Reilly into the best save of the game so far when he cut inside and drew a diving stop from the City keeper with a shot from just inside the penalty area.

So, as they prepared to take the resultant corner, the visitors could be forgiven for thinking that, not only were they competing, they were possibly starting to get on top. However, within a few seconds they were a goal behind as City launched a devastating counter attack which started with the corner being cleared to Tommy O’Sullivan who had been left as the one player forward for us.

From here, O’Sullivan combined with Immers and suddenly Huws was in on goal with just the keeper to beat as City players streamed forward – the midfield man then, unselfishly, rolled the ball sideways to Zohore to take Lumley out of the game and the striker tapped in to complete a move which must have taken little more than ten seconds for the ball to get from our penalty area into the QPR net.

Shortly afterwards, City again broke threateningly from an opposition corner and probably should have doubled their lead, but, after that, QPR were always more wary of our ability to break quickly as they took more precautions when they had an attacking free kick or corner – nevertheless, they would concede twice more from City breaks in the second half.

With Lumley making a fine save from an O’Sullivan header and Immers hitting the post with another headed effort, the score remained 1-0 at half time with both sides making a change during the interval as Josh Bowler (a very lively winger who impressed with his ability to run with the ball) came on for the visitors for Akinola and Australian Under 23 international Peter Skapetis replaced David Tutonda in the City team.

Presumably, Neil Warnock's knowledge of Peter Skapetis from his time in charge at QPR is behind the decision to give the Australian a trial at Cardiff. I'm not sure how long his trial is for, hopefully, he'll get more game time with us after a six out of ten type forty five minutes last night.

Presumably, Neil Warnock’s knowledge of Peter Skapetis from his time in charge at QPR is behind the decision to give the Australian a trial at Cardiff. I’m not sure how long that trial is for, but, hopefully, he’ll get more game time with us after a six out of ten type forty five minutes last night.

Skapetis is a trialist who it seems has been released by Stoke City after an injury ravaged couple of years in the Potteries. As this piece shows, Skapetis was playing against one of his former clubs last night after leaving West London for Stoke two and a half years ago for a fair sized fee – now, as he tried to resurrect his career after his injury woes, he found himself operating on the left wing, with John dropping back to left back.

The second half started quietly, but burst into life with a couple of City goals within a few minutes of each other. The first came when the home team again broke quickly with Zohore being put through in the inside left channel – a heavy touch looked to have lost the Danish striker his chance, but he recovered well to record another brace of goals to go with the pair he got against Palace as he dinked the ball neatly over the diving Lumley.

As is usually the case with him, Zohore combined moments when he looks like a complete novice with others when you think he could become a very effective striker at Championship level in a year or two, but, by the time he was withdrawn for Marco Weymans, he had at least done enough to remind Neil Warnock that he was still around.

A shot well blocked by a defender at the expense of a corner, offered Zohore the chance of a hat trick before he was taken off, but, by then, City were three up courtesy of another counter attack. This one was different from the other two which led to goals because it was a long aerial pass which created the problem for QPR, rather than the shorter, ground based, variety that had proved so effective earlier.

Semi Ajayi has shown before that he possesses the ability to hit accurate long range passes from the back and he did it again when he found the increasingly impressive Ashley Baker with a fifty yard crossfield ball. The right back fed O’Sullivan who rather mishit his shot/pass, but the ball was still able to find it’s way to Skapetis who got a reward for a performance which hardly cried out “give me a contract”, but did have it’s moments of quality, by scoring easily from eight yards out.

Just as against Palace, City found themselves three goals up with less than an hour played and the similarities didn’t end there either as there was, again, a sense of a performance being wound down in the last third of the game.

However, unlike three weeks ago, there was another goal for City as their saw out the rest of the game when Huws (who unfurled a few Whittinghameqsue long passes in a display which had you wondering why first team chances have been so few and far between for him at Cardiff) swung over a corner which the unmarked Ajayi nodded in from the angle of the six yard box to give his side something to show for the height advantage they had enjoyed throughout from set pieces.

City got a little careless after that with Tom James and Weymans picking up needless late bookings for fouls and O’Reilly (who impresses me more and more as a shot stopper) did brilliantly to preserve his clean sheet when Ryan Manning tried to surprise him with a Whitts type free kick following the James challenge.

So, another comfortable home win for a strong looking Development team side and, with Neil Warnock talking about how he likes to “help” players not currently featuring for the first team, it seems that there may be something of a putting people in the shop window element to these more experienced Under 23 sides we are seeing lately to go with the need to give them some game time.

 

 

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Finally, some entertainment and a home win at Cardiff City Stadium.

Coymay

Dave Jones left Cardiff City more than half a decade ago, but, in recent years, it’s become increasingly common for Cardiff City fans to look back wistfully to when he was in charge.

You know, those times when Steve McPhail was threading balls through for Michael Chopra to race clear of the defence and score from, Jay Bothroyd was beguiling us with his unique, for a Cardiff City target man anyway, blend of power, pace, sublime skill and intelligence, Chris Burke was turning left backs inside out as a right footed winger caused havoc on the RIGHT flank, Ross McCormack was showing flashes of why he would come to be described as the Championship’s best player in later years and, of course, we had someone who did what he wanted out on the left!

Now, like so many other things in life, there is a tendency to look back and only remember the good times. The truth is though that, apart from the bloke who was doing what he wanted, all of those in that forward line of all of the talents had moved on by the time we finally ended our fifty year plus wait for a return to the top flight – a fourth place finish and a defeat in a Promotion Play Off Final was the best a Dave Jones team ever managed.

I suppose having so many players in a team to which the adjective “mercurial” could be applied always carried a risk and, certainly with some of those named, you never really knew what you were going to get in terms of attitude from one match to the next, so the City teams either side of the onset of this decade sometimes had a frailty to them which gave far less talented outfits a belief that they could still get the win on any given day.

However, when those Dave Jones teams got it right, they were tremendous to watch and you could come away from something like a quarter of the games they played having not only seen your team win, but also having been right royally entertained.

Dave Jones was dismissed by City after a 3-0 aggregate defeat by Reading in a Play Off Semi Final in 2011, with all of the goals coming in the home leg after we’d gained a good draw at the Madejski Stadium in the First Leg.

That comprehensive defeat came on the heels of another loss by the same score against Middlesbrough in the final home game of the regular season  just as City fans were allowing themselves to think this could be the year we made it up after so many narrow misses.

When it all ended to ignominiously, there were many supporters, myself included, who thought Jones had taken us as far as he could and, as I recall, there were few among the club’s support at the time who thought that the decision to change the manager was a wrong one.

I wonder how all of those people would have felt though if they had been able to see what was to become the norm over the next five years on the entertainment front in home matches in particular?

Now, I always maintain that, especially in the early parts of his first two seasons with us, Malky Mackay’s City sides were able to get that balance between results and entertainment right and I’d also say that, although it all went so wrong, there was almost a sense of wonder to our Premier League season which meant that the frequent defeats. along with a lack of any real entertainment was somehow bearable.

It also should be said that I’ve been to very few City matches as exhilarating as the 3-2 win over eventual Champions Manchester City in our first ever Premier League home game, but how many matches at Cardiff City Stadium since then have passed the test whereby you could say that a winning City team had also entertained you?

Actually, scrub the bit about winning, how many home matches have you been to since that glorious afternoon in August 2013 where you left the ground feeling that you had been entertained by what you’d just watched?

For myself, I’d say beating the jacks that season was great, as was going toe to toe with Manchester United in a game where we ended up with a deserved point thanks to a very late equaliser and I suppose you cannot help but be entertained to an extent when a match finishes Cardiff 3 Liverpool 6.

Since we were relegated however, your typical City home game has become something to be endured rather than enjoyed. I still say that the only home fixture I really enjoyed during the dreadful 2014/15 campaign was the 1-1 draw with title winners Bournemouth, while last season, Russell Slade’s team  were able to provide regular wins, but little in the way of entertainment – there was that strange 4-1 win over Brighton (Lord knows where that came from!), but, for me, the best and most attractive games of football at the ground were those two matches at this time of year when we twice let 2-0 leads slip in draws with Burnley and Sheffield Wednesday.

If anything, this season had been even worse than our first year back at this level – beating the wurzels in Neil Warnock’s first game in charge was a memorable occasion rather than match, the Shane Duffy game had an oddity value and I suppose Sheffield Wednesday was an okay match, but, for the most part, it has been turgid in the extreme with the added frustration that we were getting beat all of the time!

So, while it was far from perfect for reasons I’ll go into later, what a pleasant surprise yesterday’s 3-2 win over Huddersfield Town turned out to be as it passed the test on both the result and entertainment criteria.

It was a surprise to hear Sean Morrison confirm that it was a week short of a year since his last goal for City. As so often has been the case so often in the past, he relied on a quality dead ball delivery from Peter Whittingham for this one - a Huddersfield defence which struggled to cope with high balls into their penalty area throughout also helped mind.*

It was a surprise to hear Sean Morrison confirm that it was a week short of a year since his last goal for City. As so often has been the case so often in the past, he relied on a quality dead ball delivery from Peter Whittingham for this one – a Huddersfield defence which struggled to cope with high balls into their penalty area throughout also helped mind.*

Truthfully, I was fairly optimistic about the outcome of this game beforehand because it seemed to me that there were similarities between a Huddersfield team which had topped the table for much of the first three months of the campaign playing a bright passing and effective high pressing game and the Dave Jones team which were at one time five points clear at the top during the early months of the 2006/07 campaign.

As we now know, that City team hit something of a wall going into November and, although they were able to maintain a challenge for a Play Off place until quite late into the season, were never able to recapture the intensity and style which had them top of the table on merit at one time  – Huddersfield’s recent results had me thinking that they might be going through something similar and now seemed to be a good time to be facing them.

That said, although I fancied we might win, I thought we’d be looking at a ground out 2-1 or 1-0 – I certainly didn’t expect us to leave the field to a standing ovation at half time 3-1 up, having had the chances to have doubled our goal tally!

At this stage, I want to talk for a while about Neil Warnock. With him having been in management for so long, I daresay we all would say we knew him pretty well already when he was appointed – I was going to say he was something of a “Marmite” figure, but that’s not right, because the whole point of that term is that many people love Marmite!

As I’ve said before on here, I was most definitely not a Warnock fan, but after six weeks or so with him in charge of my club, I now realise that feelings can change when the person concerned is in charge of your team as opposed to sat in the opposing dug out – many of the reasons why I disliked Neil Warnock in the past are the very ones why I’m appreciating him so much now!

We may have thought we knew our manager already, but, if you are a Cardiff City World subscriber and can regularly watch his press conferences and, in particular, the question and answer session he had with a couple of hundred supporters on Thursday evening (the videos of it on the club website last the best part of an hour, but are well worth watching if you can find the time), you get to see what really makes him tick.

Warnock’s a shrewd cookie who has mastered the art of saying what the supporters of any new club he goes to want to hear, but, get him talking about the game for some time (like he did on Thursday) and you can see that the shrewdness extends into football as well – to write him off as just a motivator (as I have tended to do in the past) is to ignore his tactical acumen and ability to judge a player.

Our manager was very persuasive when talking about the modern preference for “passing football” as opposed to the long ball approach he has always been accused of favouring, Our manager recalled how he had watched England take a free kick on the half way line. pass the ball backwards and across among the back four for a while, then get into trouble and end up almost conceding themselves – to Warnock, free kicks on the halfway line are an opportunity to get the ball into the opposition penalty area and put them under pressure.

Listening to our manager, it was hard to argue with him and it was harder still when Lee Peltier planted a free kick, taken from in front of the opposition dug out, on to the head of Sean Morrison. from where it dropped to Rickie Lambert who swept in his first home goal from ten yards out to restore our two goal lead at 3-1.

It was fascinating and encouraging hearing Warnock talk about the game. I say encouraging because he spoke of getting some Academy players training with the first team and spoke of one youngster at the club who has really impressed him – as he mentioned striker Mark Harris by name in his pre match press conference on Friday, I’m presuming it’s him.

Going back to his tactical approach, Mr Warnock was adamant that although he firmly believes in getting the ball forward quickly, he is happy for his team’s to play their football high up the pitch and, for the first time since he came here I’d say, there was  evidence of this because I thought we played some good stuff in the first half as we proved that it was not just from set pieces that we were a threat.

Much of this unexpected fluency stemmed from a tweak Warnock said he made after seeing Huddersfield’s team sheet. Giving the outstanding Junior Hoilett licence to roam infield and play further forward certainly worked and, again, it was really interesting after the game to hear the manager say it was a change designed to get Peter Whittingham into the game more.

I’ve talked before on here about the dilemma every City manager since Dave Jones has faced about getting that man who does what he wants into the side and, judging by his comments in the past week, it’s one that is occupying Mr Warnock  as much as the four men who did the job before him.

What still seems to be the case though is that they all feel we are a better side, certainly in terms of goalscoring, with Whitts in there and, with a corner placed on to Morrison’s head for our first goal and a fine, volleyed pass out to Hoilett as part of the build up to a rare goal from open play for us for our second a couple of minutes later, our longest serving player again showed that we lose so much in terms of a goal threat when he isn’t on the pitch.

Although Junior Hoilett's first  Cardiff City goal was little more than a tap in, it was, in many ways, the most satisfying of the three we scored.  I say this because, first, it came at the end of a fluent move from open play and, second, because, unlike for the vast bulk of the season, we had a forward following in on a ball which squirmed loose within a few yards of our opponent's goal.*

Although Junior Hoilett’s first Cardiff City goal was little more than a tap in, it was, in many ways, the most satisfying of the three we scored. I say this because, first, it came at the end of a fluent move from open play and, second, because, unlike for the vast bulk of the season, we had a forward following in on a ball which squirmed loose within a few yards of our opponent’s goal.*

However, I said that yesterday’s win wasn’t perfect and I’d guess Neil Warnock will have noted how, as Whittingham, like one or two others, began to look more of a passenger, his team were clinging on at the end despite having, largely, been in control for a good two thirds of the match .

Before developing this theme, I’d just like to quickly mention that the BBC stats for the game showed that Huddersfield enjoyed seventy one per cent possession. My assumption had been that the possession figures given after each match were a measurement of the amount of time a team had the ball during the game expressed as a percentage. However, as this piece shows, Opta, the recognised brand leaders when it comes to football stats, do not do it that way any more and their figures are a reflection of the number of passes a team makes rather than time spent in possession.

Therefore, I now find myself in agreement with Neil Warnock, who has expressed his scorn for possession  stats in the past, because it seems to me that having a figure over, say seventy five per cent possession, is counter productive in many ways, because it is indicative of a team which passes, passes, passes and gets nowhere – Neil Warnock’s, and Russell Slade’s before him, Cardiff teams tend to have possession figures around the thirty five/forty five per cent mark which reflect the more “old school” get it forward quickly approach they favour.

Nevertheless, the truth is that, yet again, us poor souls who sit at the Canton End of the ground saw barely any attacking play from our team when they were playing towards us. After a bright start to the second half when we really looked as if we were hunting a fourth goal to make the game safe, things soon reverted to the norm whereby people at our end of the ground spend the entire ninety minutes peering one hundred yards into the distance to see nearly all of the meaningful goalmouth action.

This usually happens because City have run out of attacking ideas by the time the second half starts, but, this time, with a two goal lead to protect, the virtual non existence of any attacking threat was more explainable. Even so, City are going to have to do a better job of retaining possession in the closing stages when holding on to a lead than they did yesterday if we are really going to start climbing the table – poor old Frederic Gounongbe. on as a sub for Lambert, was handed a very tough task as the striker in what sometimes resembled a 9-0-1 formation, but turned in what I thought was, by some way, his best performance for the club so far.

Huddersfield showed themselves to be quite a slick passing side going forward and scored two great goals (I’ve long since given up seeing us score a goal like their first one, while their second was a club goal of the season candidate I would have thought). However, they were pretty ropey at the back in open play and terrible at defending set pieces (Mark Hudson should, surely, have been on the pitch throughout rather than sat on the bench) and, although it was understandable given that time was running out for them by then, I thought their decision to go more direct played to our strengths.

So, although it was exciting and ultimately enjoyable to see the way we repelled Huddersfield’s late pressure, I think it was more a case of an entertaining first hour or so, rather than for the whole game. However, we’ve now taken at least three points from  a trio of very daunting looking fixtures this month and at least we can head into games against Villa and Brighton (who both looked decidedly useful in their 1-1 draw on Friday) knowing that there are a now a few signs of us being able to pose a counter attacking threat, which has been absent for nearly all of the season so far, to go with the problems we can cause from free kicks, corners and throw ins.

*pictures courtesy of http://www.walesonline.co.uk/

 

Posted in Down in the dugout, Out on the pitch, Wales | Tagged , , , , | 11 Comments