Weekly review 15/7/17.

According to Neil Warnock, Cardiff City completed their incoming transfer business for the summer this week with what was their most expensive signing of the close season period – almost certainly, it involved the biggest fee we’ve paid for a player since the reported £5 million we paid for Bruno Manga in August 2014.

I’ll come to the player involved shortly. but, before that, I should add the caveat our manager gave that we may still be looking for new arrivals before 1 September if we receive a bid for a current player that is too big to turn down.

Currently, it would appear that this may be relevant to two first team squad members in particular. Apparently, we’ve received another bid from an unnamed club for Sean Morrison who was the subject of an offer, believed to be £3 million, from Sheffield Wednesday about a month ago.

With a probable need for some balancing of the books following the signings we have made, I suppose it doesn’t have to follow that the latest bid for our captain was a bigger one than the previous one, but the likelihood has to be that it was. Either way, with his contract up next summer, Morrison is at that stage where interested parties probably think they’ve got their best chance of getting their target. Although he didn’t say it in as many words, our manager appeared to hint that the club were taking steps to sort out a new deal for Morrison in the near future, but, I’d say that further developments in this case cannot be ruled out if the player’s contract situation remains as it is now as the closure of the transfer window gets closer.

Hardly surprisingly, the other player I was referring to is Kenneth Zohore.  After having their first offer rebuffed, Hull City came back with a second one (£8 million, possibly rising to £10 million is the amount I’ve seen reported), which was, apparently, also given short shrift by City.

The word coming out from the club appears to be that potential suitors need to look at a minimum of £15 before they would think of doing a deal to sell our top scorer, with the implication that it would take a Championship record transfer fee for the Dane to move elsewhere in this window. I believe that by putting that sort of information in the public domain, the club are hoping to knock any more interest in Zohore on the head once and for, but I suppose, that it’s likely to mean that, in the unlikely event of anyone being prepared to pay such a fee for him, supporters would need to prepare themselves for his departure.

Anyway, let’s return to this week’s signing. There had been plenty of comment to the effect that we needed a number ten type player on the messageboards in recent weeks and it seems that Neil Warnock agreed because, in a move which surprised and delighted many fans, we brought in Bristol City’s Lee Tomlin on Tuesday for a fee which it’s reported could reach £2.9 million.

Twetny eight year old Tomlin, who plays mostly through the middle as opposed to other similar type targets we had in Jonny Hayes and Barrie McKay who favour the wings, was a real thorn in our side at times during his time with Peterborough and came to be recognised as one of the Championship’s best attacking midfielders cum strikers during his spell at Middlesbrough in 2014/15. It was generally thought his displays at Boro had earned hia deserved move to the Premier League with Bournemouth for the 15/16 campaign.

I don’t think Lee Tomlin has been signed as a replacement for Peter Whittingham, but in terms of set piece delivery and someone to provide that “wow factor”, he is the most likely in our squad to succeed Whitts. *

However, for whatever reason, it did not work out for him on the south coast and he was loaned to Bristol City for the closing months of the season where his contribution was considered to be a very important one in maintaining the wurzels’ Championship status.

Predictably this led to a permanent move to Ashton Gate last summer, but amid rumours of a falling out with manager Lee Johnson, Tomlin made less of an impact as Bristol endured a relegation battle they looked like they would lose at times last spring and the improvement that eventually saved them only came after our new man had been relegated to the substitute’s bench.

Therefore, it wasn’t a total surprise that our west country rivals were prepared to do business for the player, but it did come as one when, after initially enquiring about a loan deal, it turned out to be us who got him.

With his fall from grace at Ashton Gate and the odd rumour of him possibly being something of a problem player for Eddie Howe at Bournemouth, there are those Bristol fans who are glad to see Tomlin go, but there are at least as many who regret his sale and are of the opinion that Neil Warnock is just the sort of player to get him playing to the level he is capable of on a consistent basis – if that can happen, then I believe we’ve got a bargain.

Certainly, it was being reported before the speculation linking him with us blew up that Tomlin, a player who has tended to attract those “you fat bastard” chants from opposing supporters which are generally a recognition that you are a good player in a way because bad players don’t tend to get targeted in that way, turned up for pre season training at Bristol looking trimmer than he had last season, so that’s a good sign at least.

I commented on here about Tomlin’s diving in our 2-1 win over the wurzels at Cardiff City Stadium last season and I’m not going to change my opinion just because he’s playing for us now – I don’t like diving, but it’s part of the modern game I suppose and we got so many penalties during the Chopra/Bothroyd era which I still celebrated when the ball hit the net despite the suspicion that one of those two had gone to ground very easily!

Warnock has said that there was a time when Tomlin was his number one target for this summer, I can understand why he would think that – there is the risk that it could all turn sour pretty quickly given what’s happened to Tomlin since he left Middlesbrough, but with our manager making comparisons with the notoriously difficult Adel Taarabt who he got the very best out of in QPR’s title winning 2010/11, it shows how much he rates our new playmaker – I’ve  a good feeling about this.

Even without the reported thigh injury which caused him to miss Bristol’s first warm up match of the campaign, Tomlin was never likely to figure in City’s opener at Taff’s Well last night. With those who played international football in June not included and a few others missing with minor knocks, City fielded what were almost two different teams for either half with the majority of the second half selection being youngsters.

There were four of the new signings on show in the opening forty five minutes. Neil Etheridge made one diving save during a quiet introduction which saw him replaced at the break by, first Brian Murphy and then Oliver Byrne. Nathaniel Mendez-Laing looked powerful and pretty effective in a roving role up front, Loic Damour was quietly impressive as he provided continuity and Danny Ward flashed a header just wide in an otherwise unspectacular first showing.

At right back in the first half was teenager Cameron Coxe and, as he played for something like twenty five minutes after the break as well, he had more game time than anyone else. I thought Coxe used that time well to show that he could make a league debut in the coming season – if not for us, then out on loan somewhere to a lower division club. Of the others, Matt Kennedy looked lively and Joe Ralls was his usual self alongside Damour in an effective central midfield pairing.

The game was decided by a single Anthony Pilkington goal (a fine volley from about fifteen yards out) after just six minutes and I’m sure that most of the crowd of almost three thousand who helped to make the event such a success in terms of fund raising for a couple of charities and for the home team anticipated that it was the first of many.

However, it was not to be. Credit goes to Taff’s Well for defending resolutely and, in particular, to their keeper for some good saves, but I could understand why Warnock confessed himself “disappointed” with the game from his team’s perspective – it felt like a training game on the pitch and one of those pre season matches we used to play every year at Merthyr off it with many of the crowd not fully engaged with the football being played out in front of them.

I’d count myself among those who weren’t really into the game, but I had the excuse of getting the confirmation as I set off for it of the news I was sure I was going to receive – my so loyal and friendly old Staff, Ruby, has got lymphoma.

I felt a lump just under her collar about three weeks ago, but, at the age of twelve, I didn’t read too much into it because it didn’t seem to be bothering her. This week however, three more appeared around her throat and the vet said she was 90 per cent sure it was lymphoma when she saw her.

Typically, dogs take four to six weeks to die from from the cancer without treatment and my guess is that she had that first lump for a while before I felt it, so I don’t think Ruby has long left at all.

Treatment options are Chemotherapy which is out of my financial range and, anyway Ruby’s probably too old for it now and steroids which surprised me by how cheap they are, but the downside is that, although more than half of the dogs treated with them alone go into remission, it’s only for something like two to four months, so, whatever happens, it’s very, very unlikely that my Ruby will experience another bonfire night (fireworks upset her so much).

At the moment my thinking is that, although there are times when you can see she is ailing, she is still definitely enjoying her walks with me and she certainly hasn’t lost her appetite, so I’m leaning towards giving her a great weekend and then taking her to the vets to be put to sleep on Monday, but I’ll see what the next forty eight hours hold.

Finally, despite the comments about no more signings this summer, it seems that City are giving trials to two Livingston forwards next week. I say “it seems” because the only source of this story is from Sky Sports.

On the face of it, Knox looks a talent and I would have thought that, at twenty two, we would only be interested in Mullen as someone who would become a member of the first team squad immediately – I’m not sure there is much to this story, but things should become clearer during the next seven days.

*picture courtesy of https://www.cardiffcityfc.co.uk/

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Weekly Review 9/7/17.

Well, the new players keep on turning up, but unlike the five that had arrived up to last week, I don’t think anyone saw the latest one coming!

On Friday afternoon I was sent an e-mail saying we had signed a player from Ligue 2 (France’s equivalent of the Championship) and within an hour or so, it had been confirmed by the club that central midfielder Loic Damour had joined us on a two year Bosman type deal from Bourg-Peronnas.

Now, that’s a club I’d never heard of before and my initial assumption was that they were from the third or fourth tier of the French game. It turns out that they are based in Bourg-en-Bresse, but, it’s hard to find too much on line about them in English, and the impression I get is that, with their 11,000 capacity ground, they are living somewhat above their station at a level they’ve only been playing at since 2015/16.

Last season was something of a struggle for Bourg-Peronnas as they finished in fifteenth position in the twenty team league, some six points ahead of the side in eighteenth that had to play in a relegation Play Off. So, on the face of it, a twenty six year old from a team like that on a free transfer hardly sends the expectation levels soaring at a time when Wolves are signing a player that has been described as one of the best prospects in Europe (Ruben Neves) from Porto for a Championship record fee of £16 million.

Damour could well turn out to be a French flop at Cardiff (anyone remember Luigi Glombard?), but there are a few grounds for hope that we may have got ourselves a bargain.

One thing you can say about our new player (who speaks good English) is that he is brutally honest, both in his assessment of his early career when saying;-

“I’m 26 years old. I was 17 then. I had a bit of a bug. I made mistakes. I left Strasbourg in 2011 as a pretentious young con. I was a little s***.

I already saw myself in Manchester United. I did not behave like a pro.”

and also in saying that the Championship represents a huge step up from the level he had been playing at.

Damour comes to Cardiff having had what he describes as the best season of his career – a season where it was reported that clubs from the French game’s top flight had been watching him.

There is the what has become known as the obligatory grainy You Tube video  and it’s hardly what I would call spectacular stuff. I’ve read very contrasting views on what those clips show, but my opinion is that Damour looks a tidy footballer, with a bit of a turn of pace and a good technique. Of course, the level he is showing these qualities at needs to be factored into the equation, but, with a total of thirty nine caps for his country between Under 16 and Under 20 levels, it’s fair to say that Damour was considered quite the prospect in his youth and with those comments I quoted above suggesting a more mature outlook at a time when players are generally regarded to be coming into their prime, there may be some grounds for optimism.

This picture of our newest signing appears in a story from 2015 which my grade nine O level French (I don’t want to talk about it!) tells me was entitled “Loic Damour, at last on the good wagon?” – more evidence of a career of unfulfilled promise in it’s early years.

Certainly, someone I know who watched City train on Friday was impressed by what he saw of Damour (he was also very complimentary about another new signing, Danny Ward), so, as in every case like this, it’s a case of wait and see really.

Also at that training session was Sheffield Wednesday attacking midfield man Lewis McGugan who it’s being reported is on a two week trial with us despite having a year left on the deal he signed when moving to the Hillsborough club two seasons ago.

This gives the clue that McGugan’s time at Wednesday has continued the generally downward trajectory of his career from a peak of around five years ago. At that time, Lewis McGugan at pre season training with City would have been greeted with huge enthusiasm by supporters because he was considered one of the foremost playmakers in the Championship with an eye for spectacular long range goals.

However, even then, my feeling was always “I wouldn’t swap him for Whitts”. We had the best player in the league of that type already and, if the thinking is that the former Forest and Watford man is being looked at as some sort of replacement for the man who did what he wanted, I would have preferred to have kept the original.

After making a positive impression initially at Wednesday, McGugan dropped completely out of the picture and this piece, coincidentally referring to a game against our Under 23 team in March, shows how far he has fallen since those early years of this decade when he had such a good reputation.

Before the Damour signing was announced, Neil Warnock was talking about still wanting to get more goals into his squad. With the greatest respect to the Frenchman, there is nothing in his previous career to suggest that he is going to fulfill that criteria for us, so it seems to me that we are still in the market for one or two more attacking players – in his pomp, McGugan would definitely have fitted the bill, but, with the local media saying that it was “unlikely” that he would be offered a deal by City, it seems we will be looking elsewhere for those goals.

As is the norm these days, it was a case of one out, one in at the club last week with Thursday’s news that Rickie Lambert had been released from his contract. Neil Warnock had outlined the dilemma the veteran former England striker was facing at City last season when he said he needed to get fitter, but could only do that by playing regularly and he just wasn’t going to get those opportunities here – self evidently, it was going to be the same again for Lambert in 17/18 if he stayed here and the current speculation is that he will be playing in League One next season with either Blackburn or Plymouth.

Unfortunately, despite there being much to suggest that City are a better run club these days compared to two or three years ago, they still cannot shake off their habit of being forced into terminating player’s contracts by “mutual consent” with the inevitable expenses (that, surely, come from the playing budget) which spring from such decisions.

For all of the talk of an increased budget compared to recent summers for Warnock to work with, our transfer activity so far seems much the same as it’s been since the splashing the cash approach which ended with Ole’s departure in September 2014. There have been fairly modest fees involved with the Danny Ward and Callum Paterson transfers, but, with Criag Noone, and, possibly, Anthony Pilkington available at the right price and some pretty big earners not having their contracts renewed, the potential is there to recoup these costs and more.

However, it’s encouraging that a bid, believed to be in the region of £3 million, for Sean Morrison from Sheffield Wednesday was turned down a few weeks ago and this week it was good to see speculation that Hull were thinking of paying something around double that for Kenneth Zohore being given very short shrift by our manager as he spoke about not accepting £20 million for the man who has probably become our most important player in the last six months or so.

That’s about it really, except for a couple of stories about pre season games. Firstly, Neil Warnock confirmed that efforts are still being made to arrange a replacement fixture for the one against Portsmouth scheduled for the weekend before competitive games resume which was cancelled after we were drawn against the same opposition in the First Round of the League Cup. Apparently, our manager would have preferred domestic opposition, but he seemed resigned to the fact that, if a game could be arranged at such short notice, it would have to be against a foreign team.

Secondly, next Friday we travel to Taff’s Well and as that’s as close as we’ll ever get to playing a game where I live in my lifetime (it’s about a six or seven minute drive away), I’ll be there to watch what should be a pretty strong looking City side get their first run out of the new season.

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