Much needed game time for first team squad members as City beat Crystal Palace 3-0.

Coymay

I’ve mentioned before on here that, in my experience, the presence of multiple first team squad members in what is, effectively, a club’s reserve side is far from a guarantee of a win and a good performance. In fact, I might go as for to say that the opposite is more likely to happen, as men who. perhaps, don’t want to over exert themselves as they make their way back from injury or who believe they are too good for this level, struggle to overcome the challenge posed by younger, more enthusiastic, opponents.

Either way, the senior players don’t want to be performing in front of a crowd that often doesn’t reach three figures in a game that they probably feel means nothing in the grand scheme of things – the impression often given is that they would much rather be somewhere else.

A case in  point occurred last week when Cardiff City Development team traveled to East Anglia to take on Ipswich Town at Portman Road where they encountered a side with a smattering of first team squad members. With City fielding their usual mixtures of young professionals backed up by some Academy team members, the game represented a real test which they passed in impressive fashion by winning 1-0.

More than that though, even the home media reports had to concede that City were worth a lot more than the one Eli Phipps goal they did get. It’s hard to form too many firm opinions based on the few minutes highlights of the game I’ve seen, but the impression I gained from watching them was that we were on top throughout with Tommy O’Sullivan and Marco Weymans in particular looking good – with coach Kevin Nicholson talking on his Twitter page about a win to be proud of and of his team being “brilliant”, the distinct impression gained is of a season’s best performance from the Under 23s.

Well, the “reward” for ten of the team that had done so well last week was to be left out of the side for last night’s match at Cardiff City Stadium against Crystal Palace as the boot was put firmly on the other foot!

A few days after the match at Ipswich, Neil Warnock refereed what we were told was a pretty competitive behind closed doors game featuring first team squad members and young wannabees as the need for some match practice for players not currently in the senior side was met.

However, it would appear that it was deemed that they needed more match time because only captain Tom James survived from the starting line up last week. James was at right back in a team that featured Brian Murphy in goal with Bruno Manga and Semi Ajayi at centreback andDeclan John on the left. Patrolling the area in front of the back four was Emyr Huws, while Matt Kennedy and Lex Immers operated further forward. Kadeem Harris and Kenneth Zohore were used on the wings in what was a 4-5-1/4-3-3 formation, with Frédéric Gounongbé operating down the middle.

It wasn’t just all change out on the pitch either – Nicholson may have been there, but I didn’t see him if he was, as first team coach James Rowberry was the man in the technical area with another more associated with the first team, Ronnie Jepson, also playing his part.

Kenneth Zohore - two poacher's goal in the win over Crystal Palace last night and he wasn't far off a hat trick as his fierce shot from distance flew not too far over.*

Kenneth Zohore – two poacher’s goal in the win over Crystal Palace last night and he wasn’t far off a hat trick as his fierce shot from distance flew not too far over.*

Given what I said earlier about sides at this level featuring senior players under performing, it was to everyone involved’s credit that this never looked like happening as City overcame a young Palace side that sometimes showed they had a potential to have been very awkward opponents, comfortably enough by 3-0 – a victory margin which I’d say reflected the difference between the two sides pretty accurately.

The signs early on weren’t good mind as City were barely able to string two passes together in the opening six or seven minutes, but once Harris had been worked into the space that allowed him to fire in a shot that visiting keeper Kleton Perntreou pushed away, they warmed to their task and were soon in front when Gounongbe glanced in Huws’ corner with a near post header which found the net via the far upright.

With Zohore and then Gounongbe again coming close shortly afterwards and Harris and John combining well down the left, it looked for a while that City could be on for a really big win as Palace struggled to cope, but a combination of some lost intensity from the home team and better play from the visitors made for a more even contest as the match went into it’s second quarter.

In fact, Palace should have been level when Randall Williams capitalised on some sloppy City play which saw us lose possession on the halfway line – the forward showed great pace to burst clear of the defence, but then, rather than shoot, opted to try to find his colleague Corie Andrews and Manga was able to put the ball out for a corner which was headed not far over by one of the Palace centrebacks.

With City playing a couple of target men and a pair of big defenders, it looked for a while as if any second goal for them would come from a set piece. Gounongbe and Manga got their heads to corners and maybe should have done better, but, when the lead was doubled, it came from a fluent move which saw John nicely put into the clear behind the visiting defence. When the resultant cross failed to find a blue shirt, it looked like the chance had been missed, but the ball reached James who was about twenty five yards out.

What happened next was described as “a fantastic low ball” by the club website, but I must admit it looked more like a mishit shot to me – either way, James’ effort found it’s way to Zohore stood about eight yards out beyond the far post and he stabbed the ball in with Perntreou helpless.

Just, as they did after the first goal, City raised their game after scoring and Ajayi may well have added another one but for a slight deflection off a defender which sent his well struck effort from twelve yards narrowly wide.

A couple of goals up at the break, City didn’t take too long to effectively end the game as a contest when it restarted. This time, there was no doubt what James’ intention was as he swung over a good cross which saw Zohore benefit from Perntreou’s reluctance to leave his line as he nodded home unmarked from about six yards out.

Perhaps understandably, City allowed their standards to drop a little after that as Palace enjoyed their best spell of the game, but this only gave the previously under employed Murphy a chance to impress as he produced a great save to deny the dangerous Williams.

City had introduced David Tutonda and Theo Wharton for Immers and Harris soon after the third goal and, with Gounongbe showing some signs of a groin problem, still went ahead with a third change as John made way for Tommy O’Sullivan only for sod’s law to kick in within a minute as the scorer of the first goal was unable to carry on.

Gounongbe will probably not make the bench for the Newcastle game if Rickie Lambert is declared fit, but he must be a doubt now if our first choice striker is still unavailable. However, City’s response to going down to ten men with about twenty minutes to go was an impressive one and there was only ever going to be one team who was going to score during that period.

That fourth goal refused to come, but it could have done when Manga headed just wide from a corner, when O’Sullivan stabbed over from five yards as the ball arrived at him too quickly or when Kennedy and Huws combined well only for some desperate last ditch defending to deny the latter a tap in.

Did anyone play their way into the first team on the basis of their performance last night? I doubt it, but the night went well – all fourteen players used were seen in a positive light at some time or another.

I wouldn’t pick a man of the match after what was a good all round performance, but I will say that, although he’s not getting enough game time, Semi Ajayi continues to look like a player who has come on this season, with his teammates doing a far better job of getting him into the game than the seniors did on Saturday, Kadeem Harris remains a real threat at this level, Matt Kennedy provided a reminder that he has a raw talent which not many at the club can better and I still say that Kenneth Zohore should be persevered with rather than consigned to the scrapheap like many City fans appear to want to do. Yes, he looks a complete novice at times as he makes so many wrong decisions, but he has pace, power and a decent touch for a big man – I think a loan move back to mainland Europe in  January would help in his long term development.

*picture courtesy of https://twitter.com/CardiffCityDVP?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor

 

 

Posted in The stiffs | Tagged | 6 Comments

Has Neil Warnock judged his Cardiff City squad correctly?

Coymay

One of the first things Neil Warnock said when he took over at Cardiff City was that when he comes into any club, he takes a look at the players available to him and then decides on the way of playing which best suits them.

Now, I think it could be said that if I were to ask anyone who was old enough to have followed his managerial career throughout it’s close to 1,500 matches to describe what they would call a typical Neil Warnock side, the answers I’d get would be pretty similar, but leaving that aside for now, what did yesterday’s 1-0 loss at Cardiff City Stadium to a managerless Wigan team, that still find themselves in the bottom three, tell you about how he judged the Cardiff squad he inherited?

Before attempting to answer that question, I will say that we gave the sort of committed and hard working display that we’d seen in Warnock’s three previous matches in charge and we managed to put our opponents under more pressure than we’d grown used to seeing in home games under Paul Trollope.

As a result of that pressure, there was a season’s best nineteen best goal attempts by City, but the fact that only four of them were on target tells it’s own story about a weakness which, I would say, has been apparent at the club  since the end of the Dave Jones era.

Yes, this fifth loss at our home ground with the season less than a third over was different from the other four because we made our opponents work harder than the quartet of previous victors had to do for their three points. However, in many ways, the similarities between all five of them are very concerning and tend to tell a story which suggests that getting clear of the relegation battle under Neil Warnock’s management may not be as straightforward as many thought it would.

There was a definite pattern to how we lost four home matches under Paul Trollope’s management and, although there was always a bit more hope that a goal might be coming for us yesterday, in the end what happened was suggestive that, despite the changes for the good that the appointment of Warnock has brought, fundamental problems that will continue to hold us back remain.

Yesterday, just as against QPR, Reading, Leeds and Derby, we had the better of a goalless first half in which our opponents had rarely offered a goal threat, but we were unable to carry that “dominance” into the second half. Just as previously, the visitors found it easier to cope in the second period as what momentum we had faded and they were able to capitalise on the fact that we are incapable of keeping a clean sheet these days at home (or away for that matter!) by scoring the vital first goal, which three of them added to with a late second.

A captain in all but name - besides doing the Iceland style mopping up job as well as he has done in the previous three matches, Aron Gunnarsson also came up with the best shot hit by a City player and a contender for pass of the match from central midfield.*

A captain in all but name – besides doing the Iceland style mopping up job as well as he has done in the previous three matches, Aron Gunnarsson also came up with the best shot hit by a City player and a contender for pass of the match from central midfield.*

All five matches have seen us unable to score and, for me, the most damaging thing about yesterday’s loss is that any thought that we had left the dark days of Trollope’s time behind us forever were banished because, despite a better level of performance from us, the outcome was exactly the same, with the same shortcomings at either end of the pitch, and through the middle of it for that matter, being exposed.

Eight home games have seen not one clean sheet kept, while, at the other end, we have only scored a paltry five goals – that’s a recipe for disaster, which is magnified when you look into the nature of the goals we have managed more closely.

To start with, we had those two own goals by the same player that handed us our first win. Besides that, we’ve managed a penalty (gained from, arguably, the most incisive bit of attacking play seen from us in a home match so far this season, but still needing a very tight offside decision to go in our favour), a trademark Peter Whittingham free kick and a scrambled goal from a corner.

That tells you so much about Cardiff City in 2016/17 – no home goals from a striker and no home goals created in open play in 720 minutes of football!

As I said, problems at either end of the pitch and also, a sobering confirmation of what many have said for some time – we lack the creativity, technique and coolness to create goals from open play.

There have been two passages of play that have unfolded right in front of where I sit at the corner of the Ninian and Canton Stands in our last two home matches, where, first, Sheffield Wednesday and then Wigan have employed short, high tempo and clever passing in a confined space to open up a congested left side of our defence – Wigan were unable to take advantage of the man free in our penalty area this created, but Wednesday could and so headed back home with a point for their efforts.

The reason I highlight those two passages of play is, first, to say that I’ve not seen anything from us in a home game this season to indicate that we are capable of playing with that sort of skill and coordination and, second, to question whether we would even if we could?

I ask that because it brings me back to my original question about how Neil Warnock rated the squad at his new club.

If we accept the manager on his word that he bases his approach to playing the game on the abilities and weaknesses of the players at his disposal (a point of view I wholeheartedly agree with by the way), then it seems to me that his opinion of the ones he found at Cardiff was not that high.

How else can you explain the switch from the, generally completely ineffective and cautious, passing style employed under Trollope to the approach that sees us look to play it long and aerially from the back all of the time.

The days of goalkeepers rolling the ball to defenders to play out from the back have, seemingly, gone forever under Warnock’s management. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, because the evidence accumulated throughout Paul Trollope’s time at the club as coach and then, to all intents and purposes, manager was that we were not very good at these attempts to play the game in the “right” manner.

Combine that with what I said about the nature of the goals we’ve scored at home this season and you have what amounts to some sort of justification for what is an unashamed long ball game that City are playing under the current manager.

As someone who will go to to his death bed wanting his team to play an attractive, passing game based on pace, skill and clever off the ball movement, I cannot really blame Neil Warnock for assessing the City squad in the way he has done – that is one that is, apparently, wholly unsuited to playing in such a manner.

Another thing Warnock said when he took over was that he wanted to play an attacking brand of football. Now, I believe that, just as with his recent claim that we are the number one side in Wales, was just a bit of old blarney from a manager who was saying things he knew the fans wanted to hear.

What has been clear from the first minute of the Bristol City game to me was that Warnock and his coaching staff have made shoring things up at the back their first priority and, despite our chronic inability to get a nil against our opponent’s name, four goals conceded in four games says that this has been a partial success.

However, what is true is that Warnock’s Cardiff teams have always included two wingers who are usually prepared to get chalk on their boots and, although they’ve both been expected to do their bit defensively, I always view that as a fundamentally attacking move.

So, I think the desire is to have at least three men in forward areas when we attack, but it still doesn’t alter the fact that whenever we get one of those wingers into a good crossing position in open play, there only ever seems to be one target for them to aim at!

It doesn’t have to be a winger, occasionally it can be a full back, the target man or even, as happened once with Joe Ralls yesterday, a central midfield player, but there only ever seems to be that one colleague waiting to receive the cross along with something like three defenders.

Yes, we can go on about a lack of quality on the final ball, but it’s uncanny how when you look at other teams who get one of their players into a similar position, he usually has more than one potential target to aim for.

Where the opposite winger disappears to in such situations is something of a mystery to me, but when you have a central midfield three of Aron Gunnarsson, Ralls and Whittingham you have a trio for whom bombing into penalty areas to make a third man running does not come naturally.

Therefore, if Neil Warnock is of the opinion that these three can do the best job overall for him in the middle of the park, then the option of a percentage based, long ball game where even Sean Morrison is taking long throws in his own half to try to gain dead ball attacking situations where he can come forward with Sol Bamba to pose an aerial threat, becomes a viable one.

I’ll not argue too strongly against the approach Warnock is using because we need points and, up until yesterday anyway, it was proving successful, but, being the true fickle fan that I am, I would say that playing this way when we lose is pretty depressing.

I do wonder though about sticking to the same approach when your first choice targetman is out through injury. It seems to me that having Anthony Pilkington as the player who will be looked for when the ball is being launched by Ben Amos, one of the back four or thrown down the line by Morrison is not utilising his talents in the best way.

I’ll talk a bit about the influence the officials had on the game shortly because I believe that was a factor in the dual between Pilks and the Wigan centrebacks, but, generally speaking, I think Burn and Buxton at the back for our opponents would have been worried when they heard who our front player would be, but then delighted when they realised he was going to be utilised by us in exactly the same way Rickie Lambert would have been if he had been fit.

We didn’t play much football that could be termed attractive last season, but around February and March we played good, and more importantly, effective football by using Pilks as a lone striker. The difference compared to yesterday was that back then we looked to exploit his cleverness and  excellent movement off the ball by having an in form Lex Immers operating behind him – the stand out example of this was the 4-1 win over Brighton which was only really rivaled for the title of best performance of the season by the win at Wolves in January where the personnel may have been different, but the method of using a clever and mobile lone striker (in this case Joe Mason) was the same.

With Wigan playing so deep for much of the time, could we have sacrificed one of the central midfield three and used someone who is more at home in advanced areas like Immers to give Pilks a bit of help?

City thought they had got themselves a bargain when Joe Bennett joined on a free from Villa and four games into his career with us, there are a few signs that they might have been right.*

City thought they had got themselves a bargain when Joe Bennett joined on a free from Villa and four games into his career with us, there are a few signs emerging that they might have been right.*

Of course, it’s easy to say this with hindsight, but I believe we could have done. Better still, if we were always going to adopt such an aerial approach then play Marouane Chamakh from the start with Pilks operating as a number ten just behind him. While Neil Warnock’s post match explanation for the substitutions he made sounded logical, the non use of Chamakh from the bench seems odd to me and what cannot be denied is that Wigan came into the game more after the first two of the three changes he made.

Stuart O’Keefe for a Whitts whose influence on the game, while never that great in the first place, was in decline and Kadeem Harris for Junior Hoilett seemed okay at the time, but they just did not work. Neither made much impression, but in Harris’ case this had more to do with a midfield fade out that played it’s part in ensuring it was about fifteen minutes before he got a meaningful touch of the ball – when he did, he sent in the best cross of the game from a City player which was wastefully headed over by Pilkington.

I can’t help thinking that different tactics and substitutions might have seen a different outcome, but, given those stats about how hard we find it to be create things at home this season, I’m probably just indulging in wishful thinking.

However, something that could have helped us considerably was a better set of officials.

I thought Oliver Langford was a poor ref. The BBC’s stats show that he awarded thirty one free kicks for fouls in the match and yet there were no yellow cards issued . I’m with Langford in that I didn’t see anything that warranted a caution in the ninety minutes, but, with that in mind, doesn’t the fact that he was blowing his whistle so often to stop the game indicate that he was being too fussy?

I believe it was four times in the opening ten minutes that he saw fit to penalise Pilks and this gave an indication of so much of what was to come in terms of the way he and his linesman went about their jobs. I paid particular attention to the attacking dead ball situations City had in the second half and, in every one of them, a Wigan defender had a hold of the shirt of the City player challenging for the ball.

Now, there were times when there were fouls being committed by City players in these situations and, invariably, they were spotted and penalised, but, there were always fouls being committed by defenders that the linseman on the Ninian Stand in particular could see that were ignored – in that respect, Langford and his colleagues were completely inconsistent in their application of the rules.

There were some good performances from City players – Joe Bennett improves with each game and was a little unlucky with a fierce late shot from twenty yards that was blocked close to the line by Stephen Warnock, and despite a typical centreback’s effort from what was a decent chance to equalise, Sol Bamba continues to impress.

However, City man of the match for me was Aron Gunnarsson who seems to be a man transformed under Warnock’s management – he may not have been able to avoid that midfield fade out around the seventy minute mark I mentioned earlier. but, before that, he was head and shoulders our best player and definitely didn’t deserve to be on the losing side.

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Down in the dugout, Out on the pitch, The Championship | Tagged , , , | 16 Comments