Double for Harris makes it one defeat in seven for Cardiff City Development team.

After losing their first two matches this season, Cardiff City’s Under 23 Development team have hit a rich vein of form that has seen them win five and draw one of their last seven games. A few weeks ago, they were able to beat Charlton 4-3 despite having to play three quarters of the game with ten men and last night, they picked up another red card which left them having to face the last thirty five minutes or so a man down.

Nevertheless, just as they had done previously, they were able to overcome this disadvantage as they eased to a thoroughly deserved 2-0 win over Watford at Cardiff City Stadium.

One of the consequences of our bigger squad this season is that you are finding more senior players involved as the occasional outing for what is, effectively, our reserve team is a way of keeping those not seeing much first team action match fit.

Greg Halford was a case in point last night, while Anthony Pilkington is becoming a regular at this level as he finds himself way down the pecking list in the fight to gain a senior eleven start up front. Recent weeks have also seen Callum Paterson and Lee Camp featuring regularly as they make their way back from long term injuries.

Paterson, fresh from his debut appearance for the first team following his few minutes at the end of the Middlesbrough match, played the full ninety minutes last night, but Camp had to withdraw just before kick off as Oliver Byrne stepped into the line up – maybe Camp dropping out was a precautionary move, but Neil Warnock’s mention last week that he is still was some way away from a return to first team contention was made to look all the more appropriate.

There was another over age player though as forgotten man Frederic Gounongbe  returned to play what was surely his first football for City in 2017. The Benin international striker has been the subject of much messageboard speculation during this year as supporters wondered what had happened to him following his last outing for the first team (at Ipswich on 10 December last year). However, his return for the first forty five minutes last night would appear to indicate that some of the more imaginative reasons for his absence stated were well wide of the mark and it was the more mundane long term injury which had kept him out.

As he usually did last season when he got the chance, Gounongbe did some good things as a hold the ball up type target man, but never suggested that he would score. I know I’ve trotted out the stat about the first team still not having scored in a competitive match while he has been on the pitch before, but I’m pretty sure the Development team were able to find the net with him in their team last season – even if I’m wrong there though, the second team do have a goal to their name with Gounongbe in the team now as they made a fast start here which should have seen them more than just the one goal up after ten minutes.

Gounongbe was heavily involved in a flowing move which saw him send Cameron Coxe racing down the right wing and the full back, who was again playing further forward to accommodate Paterson, produced a peach of a low cross into the path of Mark Harris who was moving on to the ball some ten yards out. It should have been a goal, but great credit has to go to Sam Howes in the Watford goal who was able to turn the shot away for a corner from which Paterson should have done better than head wide from an unmarked and central position some six yards out.

City didn’t have to wait too long for their goal though as Harris, looking sharp and eager on his return from suspension following that red card against Charlton, burst on to a loose ball and shot low past Howes to score from the edge of the penalty area via a post.

Although the Watford side did not have the smattering of senior players that City did, it would be wrong to say that, like their team that was beaten 7-1 in the corresponding match last season, they were a side full of youngsters taking their first steps in the pro game, because their starting line up included six players with first team experience at Vicarage Road.

So, in some ways, City’s early domination was misleading as it soon became clear that there was going to be no repeat of last season’s goalfest. Indeed, the visitors probably gave as good as they got for the rest of the first half as they enjoyed a lot of possession, but, as throughout the game really, they struggled to turn it into anything tangible in terms of a goal threat with Byrne only called into urgent action once as he saved well from centre forward Michael Folivi.

At the other end, Paterson forced Howes into a save with a header from a corner, Pilkington would probably have thought he could have done better with a chipped effort that flew over after he won possession off the keeper around the corner of the penalty area and Harris wasn’t far away from doubling the lead with a shot that went just wide.

Half time saw Gounongbe make way for James Waite and George Ratcliffe come on for Byrne. Watford must have been really pleased to see Waite on after his four goals against them last season, but he played in a deeper role here and this time it was his neat control of the ball in confined spaces which troubled them – an early example of this came when he got to the byeline and drove over a cross which Pilkington was so close to connecting with.

The game was drifting a little now with Watford’s lack of an attacking impact contributing to a feeling that City were comfortable despite only being a goal ahead, but that all threatened to change when Connor Young, usually a cool and assured centreback, committed two fouls in about a minute and couldn’t really have any complaints about the fact that referee Tom Reeves deemed them both worthy of a yellow card.

The reshuffle caused by Young’s dismissal saw Paterson move to centreback and Coxe drop back to right back, but, far from being intimidated by their situation, City seemed inspired by it and took the game to their opponents in the ten minutes following the sending off to such an extent that they were two up just past the hour mark as Pilkington’s shot was beaten out by Howes into the path of Harris who was able to divert an awkwardly bouncing ball into the net as Watford appealed unsuccessfully for offside.

Pilkington drew another save from Howes soon after that, but that was more or less it from City as an attacking force as they concentrated on keeping their opponents at bay. A City backline which included a possible man of the match candidate in Tyrone Duffus who was playing as well as I’ve seen him do for us, coped quite easily until Reeves deemed that a challenge by Waite on Ivorian international and ex Marseille man Brice Dja Djédjé was worthy of a penalty.

City contested the penalty award fiercely and to me, albeit from a long way away, it did look a harsh decision, but what happened next was a bit of a mystery because Dja Djédjé’s penalty came back off the post to him and he promptly knocked the ball into the net only to have the goal ruled out. The rules are clear that the penalty taker cannot score after their spot kick had hit the post if the goalkeeper had not touched the ball, but it seemed to me (and everyone around me) that Ratcliffe had turned the shot on to the post.

With the lineswoman stood on the goal line concentrating on things like did the ball cross the line and did the keeper move before the kick was taken, she was in no position to judge whether someone was offside or not, so it seems that referee Reeves ruled that Dja Djédjé was offside, but, from memory, I can remember seeing Peter Whittingham score twice after a goalkeeper had saved his penalties and, surely he would have been as offside as the Watford man was last night – doesn’t the goalkeeper play the penalty taker on as soon as they save a spot kick?

Anyway, having not shown much belief as as an attacking force before that, the penalty miss only made Watford look more shot shy as the game turned scrappy with City happy enough to hold on to what they had – an efficient, rather than sparkling, win then which keeps the Under 23s heading in the right direction.

 

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Very significant victory keeps City first team in top two as Under 18s extend winning run.

Especially coming on the back of a 0-0 draw where we barely ever looked like scoring, last week’s 1-0 defeat at Birmingham for Cardiff City left me concerned that our superb start to the season had run out of steam and we were into a phase whereby a top two finish would look, increasingly, unlikely and the talk would shift to whether we had it in us to squeeze into the top six come May.

That may still happen of course, but yesterday’s 1-0 win at the Riverside Stadium over Middlesbrough was, for me, one of those results which sends out a signal to the rest of the Championship that, despite the occasional recent wobbles, this Cardiff side won’t be going away – they have it in them to be up there right to the end.

I’d rate our earlier wins over Villa, Wolves and Leeds as other games which forced our rivals to reappraise their opinion of us somewhat, but, while the performance, certainly in an attacking sense, at Boro wasn’t as eye catching as what we produced in that trio of matches I mentioned above, I believe it could be argued that, in it’s way, it was the best of the lot.

Yes, the doubters will look at an away win at a side that now find themselves in the bottom half of the table and are without in a win in five league games and say it is exactly the type of fixture a team in our position should be winning and, at face value, they are right.

However, those stats don’t tell the whole story about Middlesbrough. The first week in August always sees pundits of all sorts of ability giving their predictions for the Football League season which kicks off on the upcoming weekend and this year it seemed that every other one of them, at least, was saying that Boro would win the Championship – those that weren’t tipping that outcome, tended to be of the opinion that they would be finishing second or, at the very worst, be good for a Play Off spot.

On one level, the faith being shown in Boro made no sense. After all, City are generally reckoned to have made something of a pig’s ear of their season in the Premier League back in 2013/14 as they finished bottom of the table with thirty points and yet Middlesbrough ended up with two points less than that last season . Further examination shows though that the Teesside club had the ninth best defence in last season’s Premier League and their problems lie almost entirely with their inability to be able to find the net enough – they were the lowest scorers with twenty seven from their thirty eight games.

In a way, Middlesbrough only did in the Premier League what their promotion in 15/16 suggested they might, because it was earned on the back of the best defensive record in the division, while they scored fewer goals than anyone else in the top six.

However, with a bigger transfer budget than any of his Championship rivals had at their disposal, new manager Garry Monk set about rectifying those problems at the top end of the pitch during the summer with tens of millions being spent on four new strikers, as well as reinforcements at the back and adding Johnny Howson to a central midfield unit that had already proven themselves at this level a couple of seasons ago.

I must admit that Boro’s squad as it began life back in the Championship looked better to me than the one they had in the Premier League and I expected them to have few problems adjusting to life again at the lower level.

Last season saw Aston Villa spending the same sort of sums as Boro did during the summer, but their subsequent lack of impact did not come as a shock to many because, despite the addition of a few of the sort of doughty competitors you always need in this league, they had looked wholly unsuited to what was coming in the Championship as they slid to their inevitable relegation and, if anything, their transfer dealings in the summer of 2016 only added to that feeling.

Middlesbrough didn’t, and still don’t, have that same appearance of frailty and, in some respects, naivety to them that Villa did though – I look at them every weekend and think this will be the week when it all clicks into place. I’m still pretty sure it will happen for them sometime soon and am so pleased that it didn’t against a City team that seemed as vulnerable as they have been at any time this season as yesterday’s match got underway.

It wasn’t only a run of just two wins in seven matches and the way that we had gone off the boil so much in an attacking sense in our precious two fixtures which added to that vulnerability though – there was also the absence through injury of, arguably, our two most influential players of last season in Aron Gunnarsson and Kenneth Zohore.

Apparently, they are both suffering from similar type ankle injuries which Neil Warnock seems confident will not keep them out for much longer. Of course, Gunnarsson had not been in the starting line up at Birmingham as he came on in the second half after a period out with the injury which had kept him out of the Leeds and Derby games at the back end of last month, so it wasn’t a complete surprise to see Neil Warnock keeping changes to a minimum despite a couple of unconvincing showings by his side either side of the last international break.

An overdue first league start for Danny Ward in place of Zohore was the only change in personnel from Birmingham, but, tactically, there was an alteration which I, for one, was very happy to see as Sol Bamba dropped back to his normal centreback role alongside Sean Morrison and Bruno Manga.

Nowadays, there is a tendency to say that sides are playing a 4-3-3 formation when it’s actually more like a 4-5-1 – certainly, the sides which play that way are far more likely to have a striker and two wingers than three centre forward types and this just reflects a trend that has been going on for decades that sees the number of specialist strikers a team fields decreasing.

By the same token, the temptation in the media, and probably, among supporters is to categorise a three centreback system as 3-5-2, with a justification of it’s use being that it’s a way you can can play with two strikers while also maintaining a central midfield presence and sufficient centrebacks to cope with the sort of weaknesses in those areas that a bog standard 4-4-2 may create.

However, increasingly, it seems to me that the three centrebacks in a “3-5-2″are being joined by wide players that look more like specialist full backs than the wing backs that system is associated with – certainly, when one of your “wing backs” is someone with the strengths and weaknesses that a Lee Peltier possesses, it seems a waste to use him further forward if it means his defensive strong points are going to be nullified somewhat.

So, I’d say our back three was actually more like a back five yesterday and when you throw in the debate whether our normal 4-3-3 is actually a 4-5-1, then you could make a case for saying we played a 5-4-1 system yesterday.

That sounds very defensive, but, as long as Junior Hoilett and Nathaniel Mendez-Laing were able to ensure Ward did not become isolated, it strikes me as being an eminently sensible approach for a visit to a team like Middlesbrough, even if it did place a huge workload on Joe Ralls and Craig Bryson, with the latter having less opportunity to spring forward than normal.

I say this despite the fact that Boro have been in the habit of conceding early goals lately – maybe if Zohore had been fit, we might have still included Ward and had a go at them in the opening stages, but, somehow, I doubt it. The most important aspect for me yesterday was not to lose and setting up to try and ensure that happened made the most sense – especially at a venue where there is that sort of atmosphere that is a mixture of expectation and frustration as a season that isn’t turning out as anticipated makes the home side more open to counter attacks the longer the match stays at 0-0.

City were not entirely on the back foot though. Sometimes I see the likes of Zohore and Hoilett sprinting forward to try and put the opposition goalkeeper under pressure as he receives a back pass and think to myself what a waste of energy, but that is to forget that the latter has a goal to his name this season precisely because he did that and yesterday he was at it again early on as he forced home keeper Darren Randolph into a hurried clearance which was half blocked into the path of Ward, standing totally unmarked on the edge of the penalty area. The striker had to wait for the ball to drop, but he got away a well struck left footed effort, only for Randolph to atone for his error by saving with his feet.

That was as close as either side got to scoring in the first half and, although the home team had more of the pressure and possession after the break, it was City that tended to carry the greater goal threat – notably when Manga brought the ball out from the back to feed Ward who shot narrowly wide and Bamba saw his appeals that his effort following a Hoilett free kick had crossed the line before Britt Assombalonga cleared turned down by video technology.

Last season there was much frustration at the number of points City dropped thanks to goals conceded late on, but we moved further into credit in terms of points won as against those lost this time around, when we turned one point into three on eighty four minutes. Mendez-Laing became more of a factor the longer the game went on and he was able to get to the bye line and fire in a low cross that was almost turned in on the far post by Peltier of all people. However, when the ball found it’s way back to the winger, he was brought down by what was a typical forward’s tackle by home sub Adama Traore for a penalty so obvious that even Garry Monk admitted it had to be awarded.

Ralls went on to make it five from five with his penalties following his most convincing spot kick yet and such was the vice like grip a City defence, which now has the best goals against record in the division, was able to keep the expensive home frontline in throughout, there was little chance of Boro finding an equaliser in the short time remaining. Indeed, there were better opportunities for City to extend their lead, most notably when Mendez-Laing burst past a couple of defenders and put over a cross which Hoilett really should have done more with than head narrowly wide.

There was a first sighting of Callum Paterson in action for the first team as he appeared as an eighty ninth minute sub for Mendez-Laing and Omar Bogle came on for Ward shortly afterwards as City successfully ran the clock down to record a fourth away win of the campaign. Home wins for leaders Wolves (by 3-2 over high riding Preston) and third placed Sheffield United (2-1 over Reading) brought home how important Ralls’ goal was and although we’re still not showing anything like our early season potency going forward, we remain one of a top three that has opened up a handy looking four point lead over the rest and wins in our two remaining games this month (both of them are at home) would leave us well ahead of the sort of target Warnock set for us going into November.

A few hours earlier, I had seen our Under 18s entertain Colchester at Leckwith in a game which was more watchable than it might have been, given the strong wind and driving rain much of it was played in.

City were able to extend their winning run to three as they continue to recover from a slow start, which saw them draw three and lose three of their first six matches, this season with a 3-0 win. The margin of victory flattered City somewhat I thought against opponents who could, and should. have got one goal for all of the effort they put in throughout.

City enjoyed most attacking success down the flanks in an even first half and almost took the lead when Isaak Davies missed his kick from a low cross by Sion Spence from the left and the ball fell to right back Connor Davies whose shot across goal struck the inside of the post and flew clear.

Colchester had fashioned one or two opportunities for themselves despite playing into the elements, but they were unable to reach half time all square because, in a move which eerily resembled the one described earlier, Spence was able to get to byeline and, this time, his cross was so good that Davies barely needed to break his stride as he side footed home from about eight yards out.

The first quarter of an hour of the second half saw City make the game safe with another couple of goals – for the first, Spence timed his run perfectly to fasten on to a long ball played into his path only to be taken out by keeper Phillips for an even more obvious penalty than the one given to us at the Riverside Stadium a few hours later.

Phillips was, rightly, given a yellow card for his foul and, after a couple of minutes treatment, Spence confidently slotted away the spot kick in the manner you’d expect from someone who had scored a hat trick in his last game.

For me, City were winning the game now because they had that little bit more quality going forward than their opponents did. Much of this superiority was down to Spence who, freed from defensive duties by effective central midfielders Sam Bowen and Keenan Patten, was able to turn in a “proper” number ten type performance playing just behind Isaak Davies.

It wasn’t to be Davies’ day in front of goal yesterday, but he could claim some part in the third as he occupied defenders to help Spence split the Colchester defence again, this time sending in Keiron Evans, who calmly rolled the ball past the oncoming Phillips to make it 3-0 with less than an hour played.

Colchester could just have caved in at this stage, but their response was impressive as they put the City defence under pressure which they coped with reasonably well on their way to a second consecutive clean sheet – that stat was confirmed when keeper George Ratcliffe did well to keep out a deflection off Bowen from close in.

So, all in all, a good day for City and, to end with the first team, it was illuminating to hear in the press conference afterwards that Middlesbrough had only managed to beat Neil Warnock sides four times in the thirty seven years he has been in  management. Little bits and bobs like that only tend to confirm why we are in something like unchartered territory this season. This is the first challenge for a top six finish when we’ve had with someone like Neil Warnock, with his seven promotions,  in charge – he knows what he is doing and people like me, who start having doubts after a couple of sub par showings really should have a bit more faith!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , | 3 Comments