Appropriate end to a season which just faded away in it’s last six games.

CoymayAfter their deserved draw at eventual Champions Burnley on 5 April, Cardiff City had momentum – they were closing in on the top six and, with just two defeats in their last fourteen matches, the club’s stated target for the season of reaching the Play Offs did not seem as far fetched as it had done for much of the previous seven months.

Now City had six matches left which would define their season, it wouldn’t be easy, but there was a belief in the squad which backed the suggestion that much maligned manager Russell Slade was finally winning over significant numbers of his critics.

What followed merely enabled the cynics among City fans to exchange knowing glances with each other as the curtain came down on the season at lunchtime yesterday with an undistinguished 1-1 draw with Birmingham at Cardiff City Stadium – they knew that those fans who had allowed themselves to start to believe had been kidding themselves because, at the business end of the campaign, City had, in many ways, pulled a metaphorical sickie!

Those six truly vital games yielded a miserable total of five points – all of these came at home to ensure that City’s impressive record of having lost only twice at Cardiff City Stadium was maintained, but they were only good enough to beat bottom team Bolton, who had been playing with ten men for around an hour, thanks to a penalty deep into added time.

Away from home, it was losses all of the way as City subsided disappointedly at Fulham and Brentford and, to all intents and purposes, didn’t turn up for the “Play Off showdown” at Sheffield Wednesday which ended in their heaviest defeat of the campaign.

The last goal conceded by David Marshall in his time at Cardiff City? After a couple of years of speculation about him moving, I think he may well get his deserved opportunity to play more Premier League football during the summer. As for the scorer, although I don't mind Birmingham, David Cotterill has spent his career mostly playing for teams I'm not too keen on, so he's never been a favourite of mine, it was a good finish yesterday though and I expect to see him named in the provisional Welsh squad for the Euros which will be announced by Chris Coleman tomorrow.*

The last goal conceded by David Marshall in his time at Cardiff City? After a couple of years of speculation about him moving, I think he may well get his deserved opportunity to play more Premier League football during the summer. As for the scorer, although I don’t mind Birmingham, David Cotterill has spent his career largely playing for teams I’m not too keen on, so he’s never been a favourite of mine, it was a good finish yesterday though and I expect to see him named in the provisional Welsh squad for the Euros which will be announced by Chris Coleman tomorrow.*

Therefore, with nothing riding on the outcome of a game between two teams were just wishing away a season in which they had both had fleeting moments when they could entertain the notion of facing the Chelsea’s, Manchester United’s and, dare I say it, Leicester City’s of this world, I headed to the ground not expecting much and not much was exactly what I got.

There were some items of interest. For example, in another instance of the improvements being made at the club off the field in recent months, City wore their 2016/17 kit and, even an old misery like me who whinges away at football losing it’s soul because of such rampant commercialisation as changing your kit every year and charging a fortune for low quality versions of it with a sponsors name plastered across it, had to admit it looked quite good – better still, the new shirts can be ordered from the club now, so the days of waiting until about November before they appeared in the club shop seem well behind us.

It was also good to see Ben Turner back playing first team football again after an injury ruined couple of years which must mean that there are doubts as to whether he will be offered a new contract by the club when his current deal runs out at the end of June. However, Big Ben did his prospects no harm at all as he was one of our better performers on the day, even if he did find Clayton Donaldson’s pace and movement pretty difficult to deal with at times.

Before going on to the match, I should mention one other item of good news as it was announced that the club’s transfer embargo had been lifted at 2.30 yesterday afternoon.

As for the game, the BBC’s stats made for interesting reading because they showed both teams level when it came to goal attempts, efforts on target and corners gained. So, all of that would suggest that a draw was the right outcome, but when you consider that the visitors hit the woodwork twice and had a couple of efforts cleared off the line, whereas we struggled to create meaningful chances to add to the goal we were gifted, I think it’s fair to say that Birmingham’s impressive travelling support headed home thinking that their team were the ones who were the moral winners of the match.

One aspect where City enjoyed dominance was in the matter of possession. Unusually for them, City had the ball for as much as sixty per cent of the time, but, as I’m told by Sky’s commentators every time one of their matches is televised that Birmingham have the lowest possession figures in the Championship, this didn’t come as a surprise.

Speaking as someone who belongs firmly in the camp which wants my team to have as much of the ball as possible because the opposition cannot score without it, I have to admit that it’s been a good season for those who think differently to that. Sides who are comfortable with letting their opponents have the ball have prospered and the success of teams like Leicester has shown that this doesn’t have to mean that the anti football doctrine of Jose Mourinho has to be slavishly followed when it comes to these outfits who sometimes have you thinking they don’t want the ball.

Birmingham have just completed their best season in years and did so by, basically, inviting their opponents to break them down, while looking to break with pace and purpose if the opportunity arises.

As I watched Donaldson leading the Birmingham line so effectively, I found myself wondering what City might have achieved this season with someone like him or Cameron Jerome up front as opposed to the statuesque Kenwyne Jones and the willing but inexperienced, in that position at least, Anthony Pilkington.

Russell Slade appears to be contemplating what the future may hold for him . With a, so far, pretty vague job description for his new Head of Football tole, there are those who are speculating that could be very tempted to move elsewhere if a managerial offer comes in for him - in fact, with the club looking for a new "boss" for them, many of the City dtaff in this photo could face an uncertain future - how many of them will still be at Cardiff City come the new season?*

Russell Slade appears to be contemplating what the future may hold for him . With a, so far, pretty vague job description for his new Head of Football tole, there are those who are speculating that he could be very tempted to move elsewhere if a managerial offer comes in for him – in fact, with the club looking for a new “boss” for them, many of the City staff in this photo could face an uncertain future – how many of them will still be at Cardiff City come the new season?*

However, the way Birmingham were able to snuff out so many of our attempted attacks at source only served as a reminder that you need a complete package to compete at the very top of this league – we could have had, say, Andre Gray or Jordan Rhodes up front, but the lack of a quality final ball from midfield as the fitful Noone, Lawrence and Whittingham flattered to deceive and the earnest but, on this occasion, limited O’Keefe laboured with little effect meant that there would not have been an end product.

When Birmingham were inconvenienced, the cleverness of the fit again Lex Immers usually had something to do with it. Immers wasn’t as impressive as he had been a month or two ago, but he still did enough to have me hoping that, with the embargo lifted, the funding can be found to bring him here on a permanent basis in the summer.

Once Immers left the field to be replaced by Kenneth Zohore, who this time gave a performance which backed Russell Slade’s cautious approach towards playing the young striker, City became something of a mess.

Increasingly, they offered Birmingham hope that they could take the three points and our season ended with us clinging on pretty desperately for the draw which, in the event, was not enough to hold on to seventh place because, while we were ending our away season with no points from three matches, Ipswich were drawing at Sheffield Wednesday and Middlesbrough and beating Derby.

So, for me anyway, Russell Slade’s time at Cardiff ended in much the same way as it went for the majority of his eighteen months with us – playing unconvincing, functional, hard working and one paced football which left fans yearning for that something extra.

Mr Slade also leaves the manager’s job having been entirely consistent in his ignoring of young Welsh players who were at the club when he arrived. If we accept that Declan John was an established first team squad member going into the 2014/15 season, then I maintain that Russell Slade has not progressed the career of a single locally born young player who would have felt he had a reasonable chance of playing first team football in the next eighteen months at the time the new manager arrived – for me, the club has never felt less Welsh than it did under Russell Slade.

*pictures courtesy of https://www.flickr.com/photos/joncandy/

Posted in Down in the dugout, Out on the pitch | Tagged , | 13 Comments

What next for Cardiff after Russell Slade leaves manager’s post?

Coymay

With his contract due to expire in less than two months time, Cardiff City manager Russell Slade’s future at the club had become a matter of widespread speculation in recent weeks. Certainly, it is unusual for someone who is wanted by their club to have to wait so long for confirmation that they will staying and so, inevitably, the lack of a new deal, or even news that negotiations were taking place. led to many surmising that Mr Slade was on his way out.

For myself, I tended to think that, with the declared aim coming out of the club at many different levels being a top six finish, the ground had been laid for an official view that Mr Slade had “failed” by coming up short of this target and so he would be leaving shortly after the season ended.

However, Vincent Tan’s Cardiff City is hardly your average football club and, no matter how “informed” much of the speculation claimed to be, it was little more than just guesswork. In reality, there was only ever one man who would be making the decision and the only predictable thing about Mr Tan’s time in football so far is his unpredictability!

So, all that is being written on the subject of the decision to move Mr Slade “upstairs” to become Head of Football at the club as revealed in this statement on the club’s website yesterday afternoon has to be done so against the backdrop of what Vincent Tan has become in terms of his attitude towards “football people” and how he is  perceived by those who make their living from the game.

Just in case you missed it the first time the word “Trusted” appears in the statement, Vincent Tan wastes little time in repeating the message early in his contribution when he says “Crucially, he (Mr Slade) is a man who I have been able to trust.”.

The word “crucially” is so significant there I feel. Mr Tan, obviously, feels his trust was betrayed by a previous manager of the club and earlier departures of Gethin Jenkins and Alan Whiteley from Chief Executive type posts at the club is suggestive at least of someone who has struggled to come to terms with working with people experienced in sports management.

Whatever the truth regarding the relationship between Vincent Tan and Malky Mackay and the reasons why it broke down so spectacularly, and damagingly, it has had an impact on the club which cannot be overstated. I believe that the biggest thing Russell Slade had going for him in Vincent Tan’s eyes was, to borrow from another strong and overpowering personality, that they could “do business together”.

Now, many in Mr Slade’s vast army of critics among the fanbase will argue that the reason he was trusted so much by our owner was that he was a yes man who indulged Mr Tan’s original and novel thinking on the game and how it should be played. However, for now, that is only more speculation. What would appear to be true is that Russell Slade is a decent man working in a profession where our owner, maybe rightly, believes that there aren’t too many such men around.

Therefore, I feel it’s reasonable to assume that the decision to relieve Mr Slade of his managerial responsibilities was not taken easily by the club’s owner – there’s also the fact that, right from day one, Vincent Tan made it clear that, unlike with previous managerial appointments, Slade was his personal choice to consider. In such circumstances, is it too much to assume that the Head of Football post that has been given to Mr Slade is in appreciation of what is regarded as being a good job done under very trying circumstances?

As for what a Head of Football at Cardiff City will do, sources at the club are, apparently, saying that it will not be like a Director of Football post because Mr Slade will not have a seat on the club Board.

Certainly, the wording of the club statement is sufficiently woolly and non committal to allow a feeling that the mechanics are in place to allow Russell Slade to gradually fade from the scene at the club until the news of his final departure, when it breaks, would pass almost unnoticed. However, my feeling is that Vincent Tan will not want that to happen, in the short to medium term at least, and I’d guess that Russell Slade will still have some influence when it comes to things like recruitment and the overall direction of the club.

This leads me on to the new Head Coach role. Those sources at the club I mentioned earlier are saying that we will be looking for someone who is young, dynamic and, perhaps very significantly, willing to accept a stats based approach to the job – if Russell Slade was, maybe, seen as “old school”, it is likely that the new man will be one of the new breed of managers in the game.

On the face of it, that would seem to open the way for Craig Bellamy who has been taking his time to acquire as much know how as he can by taking in different approaches in different countries before taking the inevitable plunge into management.

For me, Bellamy would be an ideal fit in so many ways. He has been a supporter of Cardiff City for decades, he knows the club, has given his time freely to help the Club’s Academy since retiring from playing two years ago and would certainly fit the young and dynamic requirement – a Bellamy appointment would, no doubt, galvanise the fanbase in a way that Russell Slade never could.

However, it would appear that Bellamy will not be a contender if the local press are to be believed because the club are looking for someone with previous managerial experience. Now, could this proviso, if it does exist, be in place precisely because it rules Bellamy out? Could it be that one or, possibly, both parties, have serious doubts as to whether a relationship between someone as combustible as Bellamy and as “hands on” as Tan would ever work? Could the fact that Bellamy might be seen as too strongly linked to Malky Mackay rule him out?

I’m just indulging myself in a bit of speculation of my own there while recalling that Vincent Tan was, apparently, happy to offer Bellamy a managerial position on a temporary basis after Mackay had left the club. The relationship between the two men may have changed in the intervening period of course, but, on the face of it, that earlier offer hardly suggests that Bellamy is a definite non starter when it comes to the new post.

It should not be forgotten either that when Russell Slade was appointed around eighteen months ago, the club’s first instinct had been to go for someone who would appear to have exactly the sort of CV they are now looking for.

One man who I think we can safely say will not be the new Head Coach is Paul Hartley. the Dundee manager's comments about the Cardiff job outline why finding a new man may not be straightforward.

Someone who I think we can safely say will not be the new Head Coach is Paul Hartley. Always assuming that there isn’t a deal done already, the Dundee manager’s comments about his reasons for turning down the Cardiff job eighteen months ago outline why finding a new man may not be that straightforward

The move for Dundee’s manager Paul Hartley was over almost as soon as it began. It was unclear at the time whether our interest in the former Bristol City player had ended because his club had denied us permission to speak to him or not, but, subsequently, it emerged that Hartley was never interested in coming to Cardiff.

This story from February of last year sees Hartley talk frankly about his reasons for staying at Dundee and it’s hard to avoid the feeling that there may be other potential targets this time around who will be thinking something similar to “There was a lot of stuff going on at Cardiff City that wouldn’t have made the job entirely mine, in terms of decision-making, so I just felt it wasn’t for me.”.

What cannot be denied is that Vincent Tan’s profile at Cardiff City is lower now than it was when we were last looking for a new manager, so it could be that the issues Hartley talked about are not as relevant today, but I cannot see that the perception of our owner among many of the football people I mentioned earlier will have changed too much over the past couple of seasons.

Rightly or wrongly, Vincent Tan is still perceived in a certain way by many in football and I think it would be naive to expect that there aren’t going to be some who might have been interested in such a post at a different club being put off because it is at Cardiff.

All of this makes me think that we probably shouldn’t get too carried away in our speculation as to the sort of Head Coach we are going to have next season because it seems to me that the more high profile the candidate, the less Vincent Tan might feel he can trust them, while, conversely, those with the biggest reputation will probably feel that a job at Cardiff means too much off stage direction for their taste.

I’ve been wrong so many times on here before, so I’ll willingly accept that I could well be miles out here, but my guess is that our new man will be either from within the club, someone from the lower divisions (Neil Ardley? Michael Appleton?) or someone from continental Europe that most will never have heard of.

Anyway, let’s finish by talking about the man who has been managing the club since October 2014. I’ve got an inkling that Russell Slade’s stock among Cardiff fans will rise with the passing of the years, because, when all’s said and done, the general view from outside this area that he has done a difficult job in very testing circumstances pretty well will have to be acknowledged.

To have to oversee a big reduction in the wage bill while having little to spend (by comparison with his immediate predecessors at Cardiff and many at other clubs in the Championship) and still, slightly, improve his club’s position in one of the most competitive and demanding leagues around cannot just be dismissed out of hand like so many of his critics do week after week.

Russell Slade could have been a disastrous appointment given his background of almost completely having worked in the lower divisions without managing a single promotion in more than twenty years, but he wasn’t, and he can leave his job feeling that he has proved that he can manage pretty effectively at this level.

There is another side to this though. Sometimes your judgment can be adversely affected by being too close to the action and I daresay that many of those in other parts of the country who will be thinking Russell Slade has been hard done by will be thinking that today.

However, I have to say that if you have been watching Cardiff play regularly since autumn 2014, you have been spending your time looking at something that could be described as “functional” at best. I’ve said consistently on here that home games over the past six months have been a lot more watchable than they had been, but I also realise that we’re talking about a very low base here – last season was among the most deadly dull I’ve ever watched at Cardiff and the early stages of this campaign weren’t much better either.

One of the reasons for me saying that Russell Slade will be better appreciated among Cardiff fans in, say, ten years time than he is now, is that memories of his football philosophy and tactics will have faded by then. Mr Slade is the Cardiff manager who made me realise that I do want to be entertained when I watch my team play – I thought that the result was everything when I was watching City play, but I don’t anymore.

In ten years time the fact that we went into a match we had to win last week, with a team set up to “stay in the game” and that we used to take the ball to the corner flags in the closing minutes when we were two goals up will be fading memories. However, I will never completely forget them because they go right to the heart of what Russell Slade’s management of the first team was based on – I honestly don’t think he fully believed in himself at this level and it showed in the fear based approach of his teams.

My overriding memory of Russell Slade though will be of him being the worst Cardiff City manager I’ve seen when it came to youth development. He’s got today’s game with Birmingham to go yet, but, even if he were to fill the team with young players this lunchtime, that wouldn’t change my opinion when it comes to this facet of the game.

There’s no point me going into more detail here (I’ve done that more than enough times in the past), but, apart from Joe Ralls, who had played in around fifty Championship matches already and started a League Cup Semi Final nearly three years before Slade arrived, I don’t know of one young professional at the club whose career has progressed under him.

Tellingly perhaps, Wales Online were saying the following yesterday;-

“From what we can gather, another MUST from the new manager/head coach is that he is prepared to give youth a chance. That is a big mantra for Tan, who wants to see home-grown Welsh players wearing the blue of Cardiff City. Many fans have complained recently that Slade has not given any local youngsters their opportunity. Indeed, Declan John was bombed out of the team, with Slade preferring Scott Malone. Can anyone really say Malone is a better left-back than John?”

Now, it needs to be said of course, that just picking kids for the sake of it would be as bad, if not worse. than not picking them at all – they have to be good enough to have earned their chance. However, I’ll always be of the opinion that there are players at the club (and one or two who have now left) who had done enough to at least be given opportunities to show if they were able to cope at first team level – other managers did this in various Cup matches, Slade never did and he also had two months worth of meaningless games at the end of last season in which he chose not to give a single youngster a debut.

Hopefully what Wales Online said in that paragraph above is true, because, if it is, then the powers that be have realised the potential long term damage Russell Slade’s approach was causing – based on the evidence of the last eighteen months, I hope and trust that Mr Slade’s brief as Head of Football does not extend to the Academy and youth development.

I’ll finish by saying that just because I thought he was a dreadful Cardiff City manager in one particular facet of his job, this shouldn’t mean that I allow it to completely cloud my judgement of him. As I mentioned last week, I believe Russell Slade has proved over a period of years that he can be an effective “fire fighter” at a club and I repeat that I feel it will eventually be generally accepted that this is what he did at Cardiff. It appears that the club want more than that now though and I agree with them, while thanking Russell Slade for the work he did in “steadying the ship” at first team level.

Posted in Down in the dugout, Up in the Boardroom | Tagged , , | 10 Comments