Rickie Lambert – the man who rescued City’s transfer window or another Robbie Fowler?

CoymayCardiff City kept their supporters waiting right up until the eleventh hour to confirm it, but it seems that a deal to bring in the striker we so desperately needed was done hours earlier when West Brom’s former England international, Rickie Lambert agreed to sign for us on a two year deal for an undisclosed fee.

I think it’s fair to say that Lambert’s arrival has raised spirits among most City fans because in the past few days a gloom, probably brought on by our joyless and punchless displays so far this season and a sense of resignation that we were unwilling and/or unable to pay the sort of fees so many other teams in our league were shelling out as the transfer window started to creak towards closing, had settled over the club.

As is always the case, most attention centred on the Premier League as the reality dawned that the latest television deal had created a situation whereby what I would call pretty mediocre players were being bought for eight figure sums. It seems to me that £20 million these days gets you a player which would have cost us around a quarter of that if we had bought him three years ago as we prepared for our season in the Premier League.

What concerns me is that this mad inflation has seen it’s way into the Championship and we are now in a position whereby sides who are not party to the sort of parachute payments that we are, like Bristol City, Wolves and Derby, are thinking nothing of making multi million pound bids (£14,000,000 in the case of the last named apparently!) for players.

This seems like madness and, although there’s a part of me that looks at the sort of spending which has been going on in the latter part of this summer at other clubs with envy, the truth is that I’m happy that we are not playing a game which, on the face of it, has to mean serious problems in the future for some of the clubs that have been splashing the cash in recent weeks. After all, it has to be that some of these sides are not going to make it into the Premier League in the foreseeable future.

However, if you examine things a little more closely, a slightly different picture emerges and a bit more research reveals that Cardiff City are shown in a very poor light compared to many other clubs in our league.

The biggest Championship spenders this summer have been the relegated pair Newcastle and Villa, but the parachute payments they now get put them at a level which is above virtually all of the sides they’ll be playing every week over the next eight months. However, certainly in the case of the first named, they have seen their coffers further boosted by the sales of players for the sort of sums that have become the norm in the Premier League.

If other sides in the Championship cannot compete when it comes to parachute payments, then many of them have benefited from shrewd work in the transfer market and an ability to develop their own high quality players through their own Academy system.

To show you what I mean, you only have to look at what’s happened at two clubs this summer that I wouldn’t have thought many would have regarded as serious promotion contenders at the start of last month. Bristol City have signed young international players from Sweden and Iceland who I wouldn’t have thought came cheap at all, signed players like Lee Tomlin and Gary O’Neil permanently, paid a six figure sum for the promising Callum O’Dowda  and brought in Tammy Abraham on loan from Chelsea who is currently scoring goals for fun for them.

All of these signings have been paid for by the possible £15 million they are getting for Jonathan Kodjia from Villa and I daresay that they’ve still got a few quid profit on top – let’s not forget either that Kodjia was someone who we looked at last summer and decided he wasn’t worth the £2 million he would have cost us.

Then we come to Barnsley who would generally be regarded as a more modest outfit than the wurzels. They have made a good start to life in the Championship and are profiting from clever use of the loan market and permanent signings which have tended to come from the lower divisions and yet, when you look at the income that has flowed into that club in the last couple of months, you have to think they have the means to be able to be a lot more bold in the transfer market if they wanted to be.

However, when you are able to spot a centreback in League Two who you can sign for £250,000 and then sell him a year later for twenty times that amount like Barnsley did when they bought Alfie Mawson from Wycombe and then sold him to Swansea, do you really need to be spending millions left, right and centre? This is especially so when you have an Academy that can unearth a player like John  Stones who makes you £7 million because you had the good sense to negotiate a sell on clause when you sold him three years ago.

You look at those two clubs and contrast it to the situation we’ve got ourselves in and it only reinforces the view that we have brought on so many of our problems ourselves.

Oliver Burke at Forest, Demarai Gray at Birmingham, Aaron Tshibola at Reading and Lewis Cook at Leeds are all examples of Academy products at clubs who are hardly in the moneybags category for this league being sold for sums that sustain those teams and, in some cases, fund their total transfer spend during a transfer window.

We just do not produce players like this any more and, with rumours of Academy cutbacks being implemented within the past week, you have to wonder when we are likely to see another Aaron Ramsey or Joe Ledley coming through our ranks.

Bristol City had a price in mind for Kodjia and stuck to it throughout the summer and so have ended up with a deal which says that, based on one season in the Championship, he is three times the player, at least, that the current Scotland goalkeeper, who was regarded as the best in the Premier League in 13/14 by many, is.

Yes, I know it’s a different market when it comes to strikers and goalkeepers, but are you telling me that, with almost two years left on his contract and at an age which is often regarded as a goalkeeper’s peak, David Marshall is really only worth £3.5 million (possibly rising to £5 million) in this of all summers?

Rickie Lambert celebrates a fairytale England debut which saw him score the winning goal against Scotland with his first touch in international football. A late developer, who played in the lower divisions until he was twenty eight, Lambert was superb for Southampton in both Championship and Premier League as he combined traditional target man virtues with a skill and awareness not often seen in such players - still playing for his country two years ago, the thirty four year old is an intriguing, and perhaps excellent, signing for City.

Rickie Lambert celebrates a fairytale England debut which saw him score the winning goal against Scotland with his first touch in international football.
A late developer, who played in the lower divisions until he was twenty eight, Lambert was superb for Southampton in both Championship and Premier League as he combined traditional target man virtues with a skill and awareness not often seen in such players – still playing for his country two years ago, the thirty four year old is an intriguing, and perhaps excellent, signing for City.

The difference is that there is nearly always a desperation to sell at Cardiff (on the rare occasions when there isn’t, we tend to be throwing cash around as if there’s no tomorrow!). It may be eight years ago now, but the Ramsey transfer is so revealing – we produce a player who is better than those listed above and we sell him for peanuts without a sell on clause and even accept a cut in the agreed fee because the buying club are willing to pay us up front!

Cardiff City has been a club fighting, and mostly losing, a financial war since 2004 and when we reached a situation where we could have won it when we had all of that television money coming in after getting promoted, we proceeded to show that none of the lessons of the Hammam era had been learned.

There are those who blame Malky Mackay entirely for the Andreas Cornelius transfer which has come to symbolise why he “failed” at Cardiff City and the club were shown to be not good enough for the Premier League.

It was this deal, more than any other, that ushered in the Transfer Committee at Cardiff which would oversee all future player moves – owner Vincent Tan and Chairman Mehmet Dalman have been constants in this Committee since it’s inception in January 2014, with the club’s CEO (Simon Lim initially and now Ken Choo) and the manager at the time completing the foursome.

It’s very instructive to look at the list of players we’ve signed since the inception of the Transfer Committee and the end of last season (transfer values where available are taken from Wikipedia);-

Jan 2014
Magnus Wolff Eikrem – £2,000,000
Mats Møller Dæhli – not known
Jo Inge Berget – £2,000,000
Kenwyne Jones – Player-exchange
Fábio – not known
Juan Cala – Free, but I saw it reported as around £1 million at the time*.

Summer 2014
Guido Burgstaller – £800,000
Adam le Fondre -£2,170,000
Kagisho Dikgacoi – Free
Javi Guerra – Free
Federico Macheda – Free
Charlie Horton- Free
Tom Adeyemi -£882,000
Danny Johnson – Undisclosed
Sean Morrison- £2,620,000
Anthony Pilkington – £875,000
Danny Gabbidon -Free
Bruno Ecuele Manga -£4,400,000

January 2015
Scott Malone – £90,000
Alex Revell -£175,000
Lee Peltier – Nominal fee
Stuart O’Keefe – £750,000
Eoin Doyle – £750,000
Matthew Kennedy – Undisclosed

Summer 2015
Semi Ajayi -Free
Jordan Blaise -Free
Gabriel Tama? – Free
Idriss Saadi – Undisclosed
Marco Weymans – Free

You will see that I’ve not included loan deals here – I don’t think I’m exaggerating when I say that the money we spent bringing the likes of Zaha, Ravel Morrison, Ameobi and Lawrence to the club runs into millions, but, in the interests of fairness, I should add that Tony Watt and Lex Immers could be said to be good loan signings last season.

When you look at that list, it doesn’t reflect the Transfer Committee in a good light does it? Who among all of those players have made a profit for us in terms of their transfer fee when they left the club or would do if they were sold today?

Well, I suppose Scott Malone was valued higher than £70k when we swapped him for Jazz Richards and there’s no doubting that we made money on Fabio, but, when you factor in wages as well, I doubt it if that is the case.

There are also some current players who it could be argued that we could get the transfer fee we paid back and more, but I’m not fully convinced that this is true.

That Cornelius transfer is, rightly, held against Malky Mackay when the talk switches to his transfer dealings, but we tended to get all or nearly all of our money back when other very big buys by him like Gary Medel and Steven Caulker left the club.

The truth is that, Fabio excepted, the only times we make a profit on transfer fees in recent years is when a player signed by Dave Jones (e.g. Marshall) or Malky Mackay (e.g. Jordon Mutch, Joe Mason and Simon Moore) is sold.

So, while there were problems beforehand, I would strongly argue that things have got a lot worse under the Transfer Committee’s watch. They have, more than anything else, only strengthened the argument for those who say that there needs to be more people with football experience involved in the implementation of transfer policy.

I should say now, that, if you think I’m giving the club’s money men a hard time here, it’s fairly mild compared to what they would have got if we had not signed Lambert yesterday. I’ll also mention that, looking at that list, there is some evidence that the Committee might be learning from it’s past mistakes – I suppose time will tell on that score when we are able to make a proper judgment on the quality of the recruitment work done over the summer.

As it is, at the end of last season I would have rated the different departments of the team as follows;-

Goalkeeper – automatic promotion standard  (best keeper in the league and a capable understudy)

Full backs/wing backs – halfway up the league standard

Centrebacks – top six standard

Midfield – top ten standard

Wingers – top half standard

Strikers – bottom six standard

Based on what I’ve seen so far this season, I’d go

Goalkeeper – impossible to judge, but I fear it could be bottom three standard because we’ve made a right pigs ear of this position in the last fortnight or so

Full backs/wing backs – bottom third standard

Centrebacks – Bruno Manga is struggling a bit and Ben Turner’s gone, but Lee Peltier’s doing well in a new role for him and Semi Ajayi has improved, so I’ll stick with top six standard

Midfield – we’ve only lost players who weren’t going to feature, but we’re bottom half standard at the moment

Wingers – not used yet, so hard to tell

Strikers – still bottom six standard (if not lower)

Yes, it’s been a pretty miserable experience watching us so far this season, so it would be easy to heap even more blame on the Transfer Committee, but it should be said that when we start playing again, the probability is that we will have three new signings in our line up as well as someone else who has barely kicked a ball for us since he signed a few weeks ago.

When we play at Norwich, the odds are that Ben Amos will be in goal instead of Ben Wilson, that Joe Bennett will be playing on the left and that Rickie Lambert will be leading the attack – I’m hoping that Emyr Huws will finally be ready to start playing  a bigger part as well.

Now, it must be said that, with the exception of Huws, a look at the messageboards of clubs this foursome last played for does not make for encouraging reading – just as with Jazz Richards, there’s barely a good thing being said about Amos, Bennett and Lambert. I must admit to having no great faith in Amos either, but he does have a decent pedigree I suppose.

One of our regular correspondents on here has given us his far from complimentary opinion of Bennett as well in the Feedback section and so I can’t help thinking that so much relies on how Lambert fares for us.

City have previous when it comes to signing Liverpool born former England strikers and, having mentioned him in my last post on here, this has the feel of a Peter Ridsdale type transfer to me.

West Brom fans are glad to be shot of Lambert and as someone who will turn thirty five during this season, there always has to be the chance that he is into a steep rather than gentle career decline. However, he’s someone who I cannot remember ever having spent any significant time out with injury during his long career, so you’d like to think he has a few more years of good football, at Championship level anyway, left in him yet.

If he is still anything like the man who made playing in this division look so easy when he was with Southampton, then we will have got ourselves someone who could make a huge difference to the team – we still have to improve the connection between midfield and striker(s), but, hopefully, having Huws in there and Immers back in his best position will help in that direction.

Suddenly, I’m not quite as despondent about what will happen to us up to January. Maybe our Transfer Committee have pulled a rabbit out of the hat this time – at least we’ve not signed Kyle Lafferty who is one of those players who always has me saying “I’m so glad he doesn’t play for us” when I see him in action!

*I now recall that, although there was no transfer fee as such for Cala, he had agreed to sign for Getafe beforehand and we paid them a reported £1 million when they agreed to release him from that commitment.

 

 

Posted in Out on the pitch, The Championship, Up in the Boardroom | Tagged , | 5 Comments

Batten down the hatches – storms forecast for the Cardiff City Stadium area!

Coymay

I watched Cardiff City sides play three different matches yesterday and, on an individual basis, they left me entertained, thrilled and frustrated. Yesterday evening, as I contemplated what I had seen, both on the pitch and off it, at the end of what has been quite a momentous week for the club, I had a sense of concern for what the future held for City – it looks like there could well be stormy weather on the way.

Before going on to discuss the football that was played, I should set the background against which it came. There has been some coming and going on the transfer front in the past seven days. Paul Trollope had talked about the need to recruit a goalkeeper, a full back/ wing back (preferably with the ability to play on both sides of the pitch) and a striker before the transfer window closes on Wednesday night and there have been developments on the first two of those fronts in the last forty eight hours.

Bolton goalkeeper Ben Amos joined us on a season long loan deal on Friday and Aston Villa full back Joe Bennett arrived via a free transfer yesterday. Amos, who has first team experience with Manchester United, was Bolton’s first team keeper throughout last season and I daresay he would have been this one as well were it not for the fact that, as one of that financially stricken clubs bigger earners, they really needed to get him out on loan or off the books entirely now that they are in League One with it’s far lower television money and, presumably, lower gate receipts.

It’s fair to say that the on line opinions I’ve read from Bolton fans about Amos have not tended to be complimentary ones. Now, it needs to be said that they were never likely to be when you consider that he was playing behind a defence which conceded more goals than any other Championship club last year.

However, the problem I have with him is that I cannot forget that, in what I believe are his only two previous appearances at Cardiff City Stadium, he gifted us a goal each time as he was outjumped by Heidar Helguson while playing for Hull in 12/13 and allowed Kenneth Zohore’s near post shot to get past him in our 2-1 win over Bolton last season – I’ll try to give him the chance I give all new players, but it’s hard to get those two goals out of my mind for the moment.

As for Bennett, he was regarded as quite a prospect when he signed for Villa from Middlesbrough in 2012 at the age of twenty two. He was a fairly regular member of the team during his first season as well, but has spent most of the two previous campaigns out on loan at Championship clubs with spells at Brighton, Bournemouth and Sheffield Wednesday.

In fact, Wednesday looked to have signed him permanently during the summer, only for the deal to be blocked at the last minute by Villa owner Dr Tony Xia because he thought his club shouldn’t be letting players join possible promotion rivals when they would not be paying all of their wages. Now, you can say that the fact that Bennett has been allowed to sign for us tells a story as to how the good Doctor rates us this season, but the truth is that we were probably prepared to pay all of our new man’s wage, hence Villa’s willingness to do a deal.

So, Bennett, who it is said can play anywhere on the left, but has never played on the other side of the pitch as far as I’m aware, has not come cheap despite there not being a transfer fee. Again, he does not appear to be too highly rated by fans of his former club, but, as someone who has played an awful lot of football in this league down the years, he strikes me as being a decent addition to our squad.

The reality at Cardiff City for getting on for two years now is that players coming in has to mean that others must go out and Friday saw the announcement that Kagisho Dikgacoi had left us. As one of the three very big earners the club have been desperate to get rid of all summer, you might think that this was very good news, but the addition of the words “by mutual consent” told the story that the player had, in all probability, been given a fair sized payment by the club to help him on his way.

One of the few bonuses to emerge this season has been the form of Kadeem Harris. The winning goal came down his side, but he was left completely isolated by his team mates as he generally fulfilled his defensive duties well - I'd still like to see him getting forward more, but he's the one who is making the best job of the wing back role so far.*

One of the few bonuses to emerge this season has been the form of Kadeem Harris. The winning goal came down his side, but he was left completely isolated by his team mates as he generally fulfilled his defensive duties well – I’d still like to see him getting forward more, but he’s the one who is making the best job of the wing back role so far.*

Given how much he cost us in wages and how little he did for us on the pitch, the overriding feeling of this Cardiff fan to the loss of Dikgacoi was one of good riddance, but that’s far from the case with the other, almost certain, departure from the club within the next few days.

When the news of Simon Moore’s departure to Sheffield United first broke, I consoled myself by thinking that it should at least mean that the club was very confident of keeping David Marshall for at least the first half of the season – not a bit of it I’m afraid.

Sadly, the best player in our squad and the best goalkeeper I’ve seen at Cardiff missed yesterday’s home match with Reading because City have accepted a bid by Premier League side Hull City for him. Paul Trollope confirmed in his post match press conference that Marshall had agreed personal terms and would probably be undergoing a medical tomorrow..

Marshall’s imminent departure has to be a very big blow to supporters who I hope and trust will still wish him all the best for a move to the top flight which he undoubtedly deserves  Almost as bad for me though were the reports that a meeting was held with Academy staff on Friday where they were told that there would have to be as many as twenty redundancies (voluntary if possible, but compulsory otherwise).

Now I should emphasis that none of this has been confirmed officially and so there is still the hope that there is no truth to the rumour, but the sources from which it has tended to come from mean that it has the feel of being authentic to me. It’s not really fair to be too harsh about this decision, if it is true, without having access to what the club’s financial ledgers are saying, but, nevertheless, I can’t help feeling that this cost cutting exercise could end up doing far more harm than good.

Anyway, it’s high time that I started talking about those three games mentioned above and, having always been someone who has opted for the bad first when asked the question “do you want the good news or bad news?”, I’ll start with the first team’s game!

Trying to be positive, I’ll say that the 1-0 loss by virtue of a very late goal by one time figure of fun for Cardiff fans, Yann Kermogant was not as awful as our home defeat (we’ve already lost as many home matches now as we lost throughout the whole of last season) to QPR a fortnight ago.

For a start, it didn’t take us our usual hour to get a shot or header on target, Reading’s keeper was forced into action three times in the first half and there were some good headed chances that went a begging during this period.

With a couple of other presentable headed opportunities being missed after the break as well, I find it hard to reconcile Reading manager Japp Stam’s claim that his team deserved their win – not when they did so little to work stand in keeper Ben Wilson.

Wilson, who signed a two year contract extension last week, had no chance with the goal, but it must be said that he failed the only real examination he was given as he dealt poorly with a Sean Morrison miskick which looped up into the air and dropped just under his crossbar – City scrambled the resultant shot off the line, but were not so fortunate when wing back Kadeem Harris was left with two opponents to deal with and the resultant cross was swept home by Kermogant with less than two minutes of regular time remaining.

The fact that we lost points thanks to a goal conceded inside the final five minutes for a second consecutive match is a concern, but, for me, it’s the fact that our new 3-5-2/5-3-2 formation just isn’t working, in home matches at least, that is the most pressing problem.

It all looked so good in theory with three central midfield players, hopefully, ensuring we were not over run in that area as we have been so often before and wing backs on either flank bombing forward to get crosses and shots in.

Unfortunately, the reality has been so different. We are playing the Wales version of the three centreback system which sees players who primarily think like full backs selected as wing backs, so what we play is more 5-3-2 than 3-5-2. To be fair to Harris (who, of course, could never be described as primarily a full back), he did try and make things happen down the right in an attacking sense, but the way our wing backs are being deployed in games at Cardiff City Stadium means that, tactically, we appear to be treating it as an away match.

When your strikers are as limited as ours as are currently, you would like to think others in the team would try to compensate by getting forward as much as they could – our wing backs should be prime candidates to do that, but it hardly ever happens.

You would have thought help would come from central midfield as well, but, apart from the odd early foray by Aron Gunnarsson (who is surely best suited to a deeper role) it never happened. Whatever Gunnarsson, Peter Whittingham and Joe Ralls were doing for most of the match to cause them to offer Anthony Pilkington and the ineffective Lex Immers (nowhere near as influential for us so far as he was last season) so little support, it wasn’t trying to work out what to do with the multitude of possession we were enjoying.

Now, I’ve come around to agreeing that possession of the football isn’t as all important as I once thought it was, but, even so, the thirty two per cent possession we “enjoyed” yesterday just isn’t good enough when you are playing three central midfielders.

Anyway, that’s enough of about the first team for now, let’s talk about the far more enjoyable youth matches I watched at Treforest a few hours earlier.

Sometimes you can be at that venue and have a choice of two games to watch being played about fifty yards apart and still think what am I doing here? Not yesterday though, the two matches with Crystal Palace were great value with so much going happening on both pitches that it was impossible to keep track of all of the action.

I spent most of my time watching the Under 18s and before I get around to what happened I should just mention that, for the first time in my half a century and more of live football watching, there was a woman referee in charge. Now, I thought she favoured Palace somewhat, but then I would say that wouldn’t I and, at no time, did I find myself thinking “bloody woman referees!” – I wouldn’t say she was brilliant, but I’ve seen hundreds of worse men refs than her.

As for the game, I think the best way to describe it is to use captain Cameron Coxe to show what was good and not so good about the Under18’s performance in a match they lost 5-3. Coxe is a full back (he played on the left against Palace, but is usually used on the right), well he’s more than that really, he’s also a wing back – in fact, he’s just the sort of wing back I’d love to see in the first team for home matches because he spends more time contributing on the ball in the opponent’s half than he does in his own.

Yesterday, the team were playing a 4-2-3-1 formation, but even though he was supposed to be a full back, he was still playing more like a winger and contributed a fine goal to take his tally for the season to three I believe. There’s nothing wrong with such a sense of adventure in full back play in the modern game though – in fact, it’s actively encouraged at some clubs.

However, it’s usually the case that there are two central midfield players screening the centrebacks while the full backs play so far up the pitch – City only really had one yesterday in Jarrad Welch and he and the two centrebacks had an almost impossible task at times when Palace counter attacked because City often had as many as seven players in advanced positions.

From what I saw, Palace just about deserved to win a match between two evenly matched sides, but the Academy team played better in defeat than I’ve often seen them play in victory.

Saving the best for last, I now come on to the Under 16s’ 6-1 win. I can remember Ken Choo and Russell Slade saying in a meeting with Supporters’ Trust.members last winter that we had some outstanding prospects in the Under 16 age group. Certainly, the way the likes of Sion Spence, Keiron Proctor and Sam Bowen were able to seamlessly slot into the Under 18s yesterday  suggested that they were talented players, but that certainly didn’t mean that the more ordinary players were left to get by in the younger age group.

Now, I should just say here that I suppose that much that happened could have been down to Palace being awful at the back and it may be that they concede six or more every week, but I very much doubt it! If the Under 18’s attacked with a zest, purpose and freedom barely ever seen from the seniors, the Under 16’s played the most outstanding and effective counter attacking football I’ve ever seen from a City youth team.

I must have watched about half of the game either close up or from that distance of fifty yards away and what soon became apparent was that they were absolutely murdering Palace with their attacking pace.

I wish I could put names to faces to play a limited part in giving these kids some of the recognition  that they deserve, but I can’t – what I will do though is describe two goals I saw which really testified as to their attacking potency.

The first came in the first half (City led 4-1 at the interval) when one of the centrebacks intercepted, brought the ball out from the back and played a lovely pass through to free our number nine I think it was, who cut in from the right and fired a precise shot from the corner of the penalty area across the keeper and into the net.

If that was a fine goal, then the one I saw from closer up to make it 5-1 was outstanding. The build up was similar to the earlier goal as the other centreback, intercepted, moved forward confidently and sent a lovely pass into the path of the number nine in an inside right channel. The striker still had plenty to do, but made scoring look so simple with a gorgeous chip from twenty odd yards over the stranded keeper to complete what I believe was his hat trick.

Joe Ralls hasn't quite been at his best in our home matches so far and the trio of central midfielders that started yesterday will, surely, be looking over the shoulders when fixtures resume after the fortnight's international break when Emyr Huws will have to come into first team consideration, Pictured with Joe is Chris Gunter who I suppose may have been playing his last match for Reading given some of the transfer speculation there's been since the Euros.*

Joe Ralls hasn’t quite been at his best in our home matches so far and the trio of central midfielders that started yesterday will, surely, be looking over the shoulders when fixtures resume after the fortnight’s international break when Emyr Huws will have to come into first team consideration,
Pictured with Joe is Chris Gunter who I suppose may have been playing his last match for Reading given some of the transfer speculation there’s been since the Euros.*

If the sort of attacking pace that the seniors can only dream of was behind this marvelous win, it should be said that pace alone will only take you so far even in the modern game which values that commodity so much, but when you’ve got the talent to go with it, you’ve really got a chance.

All of this should be a really good news story at a club in desperate need of something to lift spirits currently, but, as so often happens at City, it has to be qualified by that word “but”. If the rumours about redundancies are true and these lads really are as good as they looked yesterday, then you have to wonder if we are going to be running a cut price Academy, how many of them will still be at the club when they reach an age where they come into first team consideration?

I think most supporters will appreciate that there is a need for financial prudence (there are things like the FFP regulations to be obeyed after all), but we are currently operating at a level in the transfer market many steps below sides which are not in receipt of the £8 million parachute payment we are having this season.

I would argue that we are currently in the same sort of position as we were for the majority of the Ridsdale years whereby we had to sell one or two of our best players every season in an attempt to remain financially viable.

Say what you like about Ridsdale, he had the knack of keeping supporters enthused every summer by making some eye catching signings, whether it be the veterans Fowler, Hasslebaink and Sinclair in 2007 or bargains like Chopra, McNaughton, McPhail, Loovens and Roger Johnson – add to that an Academy which produced a steady stream of youngsters good enough to shine in the senior team and you had an operation that was able to keep the punters onside when it came to on field matters at least.

Although much of the blame for our current woes lay at the door of Messrs Mackay and Solskjaer, they weren’t responsible for rubber stamping the deals between 2013 and 2014 which played such a part in seeing our debt levels rocket despite the huge level of income from television during our Premier League season.

There have been one or two signs lately that they are learning from past mistakes, but I don’t think it’s unreasonable to suggest that the transfer Committee system has been a disaster for the club given the number of poor or can’t be arsed players on huge salaries it has lumbered us with.

I wish David Marshall all the best at his new club, but I can’t help thinking that there may be more first teamers leaving before the window closes – the mess we have got into with goalkeepers offers all of the proof you need that we are operating very much on the hoof when it comes to transfer policy.

As things stand, the £3 million or so guaranteed income we are going to get from Marshall’s transfer (I understand that the much quoted £5 million is a maximum figure) means that we have had a transfer income of something like £6 million this summer.

With the Lex Immers, Emyr Huws and Joe Bennett signings making quite a dent in that figure I would have thought there may be a reluctance on the part of Messrs Tan, Choo and Dalman to release the sort of funding which would be needed to get us a striker of the quality we so patently need. Hwever, based on what I’ve seen so far in our home matches in particular, they are, figuratively speaking, dicing with death if they tell Paul Trollope he will have to look at cheap options to try to solve our striking, and goalkeeping, woes.

The money men might not think there is any chance of this squad going down, but combine our lack of firepower, pace and squad depth with the general feelbad feeling there is around the place and, oh yes, we can, and could well, be relegated this season.

Sorry for this being such a long piece, but it’s going to be a bit longer yet I’m afraid because Jon Candy (whose high quality photos of matches I’ve often made use of on here in recent years) has received a letter from the club asking him to stop taking his photos from now on. Now, it seems that Football League rules state that the club is well within their rights to make such a request, but it doesn’t half strike me as something of a sledgehammer to crack a nut approach when you consider that, as far as I know, Jon has never sought to make a profit from his photography.

Anyway, I’d like to express my sympathy towards Jon and thank him for his efforts down the years, I, and more particularly, this blog will miss his pictures – the day when this will be a photo free zone, when it comes to match action at least, draws ever closer I’m afraid.

Posted in Out on the pitch, The kids., Up in the Boardroom | Tagged , , , , , , | 19 Comments