Cardiff City and Christmas Day football.

There was a programme on the BBC last year called “Back in time for Christmas” where a modern day family lived out a “typical” Christmas day from every decade from the forties onwards. My memories of Christmas Day stretch back to the sixties, so I found it very interesting to be reminded of how much it has changed and remained much the same in that time.

Anyway, the reason why I mention it here is that I just remembered something from the programme about the fifties, the decade I was born in, where the father and son went off to watch a football match on Christmas Day afternoon –  getting to the ground was easy enough, because public transport was still running on Christmas Day back then.

Now, I was aware that City had played matches on Christmas Day in their days as a Football League club and that their last such game was against West Brom at Ninian Park – I knew that it took place sometime in the mid fifties and that we won 3-2.

So, I thought I’d pass a bit of time researching City’s Christmas Day matches since they were elected to the Football League in 1920/21. Here’s a list of those matches with a few details as well about the next game they played ;-

1920/21

December 25 Coventry C  A  4-2 W Gill 2, Cashmore, Beare 22,000
December 27 Coventry C H 0-1 L 42,000

On the way to promotion from the Second Division in their first season as a Football League club, City had an odd pair of results as they won away, but then lost at home to the same opposition two days later. The home game was watched by their biggest crowd of the season so far, but it was bettered a month later when they entertained Bristol City and there was another 40,000 gate against Wolves for the last home game of the campaign. One other thing, George Beare who scored in the win at Coventry, also scored for City in victories over Merthyr Town on Christmas Day in 1915 and 1919.

The team that played Wolverhampton Wanderers in the F.A. Cup Semi Final at Old Trafford on 23rd March 1921.
(L-R): George Beare, Billy Grimshaw, Fred Keenor, Bert Smith, Charlie Brittan, Ben Davies, Arthur Cashmore, Albert Barnett, Billy Hardy, Jack Evans, Jimmy Blair.

1923/24

December 25 Sheffield Utd A 1-1 D Hardy 45,000
December 26 Sheffield Utd H 3-1 W Davies 2, Keenor 50,000

City were top of the league over Christmas in the season where they came as close as they have ever done to winning the League Championship. Again, the same team (this time from 250 miles away!) were played over the holiday period, but this time the games took place on consecutive days, with another impressive crowd (almost double the average for that season) at Ninian Park. Three huge names from City’s history got the four goals against the Blades with Len Davies (the man who missed that title losing penalty of course), getting two of them.

1924/25

December 25 West Ham Utd A 2-3 L Davies L., Gill 27,000
December 26 West Ham Utd H 2-1 W Davies L., Beadles 31,000

After the previous season’s heartbreak, City were more concerned with a possible relegation than league titles when they took on West Ham – their win on Boxing Day left them in sixteenth position with twenty points, but a better second half to the campaign saw them finish eleventh.

1925/26

December 25 W.B.A. H 3-2 W Ferguson 2, Davies W. 13,683
December 26 W.B.A. A 0-3 L 35,504

The defeat at the Hawthorns left City in seventeenth position and they ended up one place better off than that, but the thing that takes my eye is that Christmas Day attendance. There were only two gates lower than it in the league all season – perhaps the poor crowd was down to the weather, but it was a season where attendances looked to be a lot lower everywhere with only just over 9,000 watched City’s late season 1-0 defeat at Manchester United!).

1926/27

December 25 Newcastle Utd A League A 0-5 L 36,250
December 27 Arsenal League H 2-0 W Ferguson, Curtis 25,387

The Christmas Day trouncing at Newcastle of all places was a sixth loss in seven matches for City who would drop as low as twentieth within a week, but a win over the team they were beat in the Cup Final four months later hinted at better things to come. That Arsenal match was the first of only three league appearances for City for Merthyr born left winger Percy Richards.

1928/29

December 25       Leeds Utd  A       0-3     L  20,439

December 26       Leeds Utd H       2-1     W   Wake, Thirlaway  12,554

City’s eventual decline to the lower reaches of the Third Division (South) had started now and this was the season where they finished bottom of the First Division having conceded fewer goals than any of their rivals. The win over Leeds was only their second in fourteen matches and the first at Ninian Park in three months – that small crowd was fairly typical for a miserable season, with just 5,738 present for the final home game against Blackburn.

1929/30

December 25 Bristol C A 0-2 L 17,140
December 26 Bristol C. H 1-1 D Wake 25,244

City mounted a challenge for an immediate return to the top flight that was beginning to fizzle out somewhat when they faced the wurzels in a much more sympathetic pair of Christmas fixtures – they’d end the season in eighth place and that decent crowd was the second biggest of the home campaign (there were less than 6,000 present when City entertained Charlton two days later!).

1931/32

December 25 Luton T  A 1-2 L Keating  11,609

December 26 Luton T H 4-1 W Robbins 2, Keating, McCambridge 13,515

City were finding their first season in the Third Division (South) something of a struggle when they beat Luton (it was their first league win in eight games), they dropped as low as nineteenth, but, largely thanks to the goals of Jim McCambridge, they recovered to finish ninth.

The City side that lost 1-2 to Coventry City on 7th September 1931.
BACK (L-R): Frank Harris, Jack Kneeshaw (assitant trainer), Jock Smith, Len Evans, Fred Stewart (secretary/manager), Bill Roberts, Eddie Jenkins, Billy Hardy, John Galbraith.
FRONT: George Emmerson, Owen McNally, Jim McCambridge, Harry O’Neill, Walter Robbins.

1933/34

December 25 Coventry C League A 1-4 L Maidment 27,589
December 26 Coventry C. League H 3-3 D Postin, Curtis, Bisby (og) 10,729

What is probably City’s worst ever team were bottom of the Third Division (South) over Christmas and they stayed there until the season’s end – lowest league position, most goals conceded, most defeats and least points means that they were probably even worse than some of those teams from the eighties and nineties!

The City team that lost 1-4 at Coventry City on Christmas Day 1933.
BACK (L-R): Leslie Adlam, Bob Calder, Tom Farquharson, George Russell, Eddie Jenkins, Eli Postin.
FRONT: Eddie Marcroft, Tom Maidment, Leslie Jones, Ernie Curtis, John Duthie, Alex Hutchinson.

1935/36

December 25 Southend Utd A 1-3 L Everest 8,478
December 26 Southend Utd H 1-1 D Diamond 11,574

City, with Enoch Mort a regular in defence during the first half of the campaign, were still struggling, but not quite as badly as in 33/34 as four straight wins in March enabled them to reach the giddy heights of twentieth position at the end of the season.

1936/37

December 25 Torquay Utd A 0-1 L 4,582
December 26 Walsall H 2-2 D Walton, Melaniphy 31,954

City had topped the league in the autumn, but were in the middle of a run of one win in fifteen games come Christmas, so it’s hard to imagine where that amazing Boxing Day crowd came from. That said, there were even more at Ninian Park for the visit of Grimsby in the FA Cup a few weeks later and there were other 20,000 plus crowds that season. Irish law student Eugene (Ted) Melaniphy scored his first goal for the club against Walsall after having made his debit for us the previous day, while Charles Turner made the first of only two starts for City on Boxing Day (the other one came in an 8-1 defeat at Luton a couple of months later).

1937/38

December 25 Mansfield T A 0-3 L 12,114
December 27 Mansfield T H 4-1 W Pugh, Collins, Turner 2 (1 Pen.) 37,726

City were right in the promotion mix when they beat Mansfield in front of a season’s best crowd on Boxing Day (again, attendances were good with 35,000 watching an early season match with Notts County), but a slump in January and February saw them lose momentum to eventually finish tenth – a big improvement on what had gone previously though.

1946/47

December 25 Leyton Orient A 1-0 W Rees 12,947
December 28 Norwich C. H 6-1 W Richards 3, Rees, Allen, Clarke 36,285

No surprise that the all conquering team of the first post Second World War season was the first to record successive wins in these games. The Norwich thrashing made it fourteen wins in fifteen matches (the other one was drawn) for the side which delivered the club’s first league title as they returned to the Second Division after a gap of eighteen years.

1948/49

December 25 Brentford A 1-1 D Allen 22,813
December 27 Brentford H 2-0 W Allen, Stevenson 49,236

City were recovering from a start of one win in six and then four straight losses in October when that huge crowd saw them beat Brentford and they maintained their improvement to finish fourth.

1950/51

Coventry C. H 2-1 W Edwards 2 32,778
December 26 Coventry C. 1-2 L Grant 33,194

Again, an inconsistent autumn cost City dear – the Christmas Day triumph over Coventry was a fourth straight win, lifting us to fifth and we got as high as second at the end of March, before having to settle for a third place finish.

1951/52

December 25 Swansea T A 1-1 D Tiddy 19,260
December 26 Swansea T H 3-0 W Baker, Grant, Tiddy 46,003

By now a strong Second Division team, a “proper” pair of holiday fixtures left City top of the league, but one win in seven in February/March looked to have cost them, until five wins out of their final six matches saw them finish runners up.

1952/53

52/53 December 25 Newcastle Utd A 0-3 L 36,143
December 27 Newcastle Utd H 0-0 D 52,202

The Christmas fixtures went from the sublime to the ridiculous as City tried to establish themselves at the higher level. At times it looked like there could be an immediate relegation, but six wins in eight in March/April led to a comfortable twelfth place finish. The Newcastle game saw one of three 50,000 plus attendances at Ninian Park that season.

1954/55

December 25 W.B.A. H 3-2 W Ford 2, Montgomery 22,845
December 27 W.B.A. 0-1 L 50,885

City were looking comfortable in mid table when the Christmas games were played and things stayed that way until mid March before a run of four points from eleven matches (none of which were won) saw them plummet down the table. It needed a 3-2 win over Wolves in their penultimate match, thanks to two goals from Trevor Ford and a first one ever from Gerry Hitchens, to keep City up.

The team that played Preston North End on 1st September 1954.
BACK (L-R): Charlie Rutter, Roley Williams, John Frowen, Graham Vearnecombe, Mike Tiddy, Billy Baker.
FRONT: Tommy Northcott, Alan Harrington, Alf Sherwood, George Edwards, Wilf Grant.

And that was it, Christmas Day fixtures stopped after that. As to why, that crowd for West Brom’s visit in 1954 was well under half what we were getting for Christmas games only two or three years earlier, so maybe the appetite for Christmas Day football was on the decline? However, further analysis shows that it’s impossible to read too much into how Cardiff felt about football on 25 December, because, invariably, when City played that day, they were away from home.

There are eighteen seasons listed above where City played on Christmas Day, but in only three of them, was the game played in Cardiff. Only in 25/26, 50/51 and 54/55 did City not have to travel on Christmas Day and, only in the middle one of these games (nearly 33,000 against Coventry) does it strike me that there was a crowd that would bear comparison with the attendance there would have been if the match had been played a day later.

The other thing that leaps out at me from those fixtures is that while it’s almost certainly right to say that the modern day footballer needs to be fitter than his predecessors because of the pace of the modern game and the amount of ground a player is expected to cover now, it’s bit rich to hear all of this bleating about congested fixture lists and the lack of a winter break from so many within the game when you compare the Christmas Holiday programme now with what is was back then.

City had to travel to Sheffield, Leeds and Southend one day and play them in Cardiff the next during this time, while the authorities at least did City and Newcastle a “favour” by allowing them a days rest before they played the second part of their daft double header in 52/53 and all of this on the “maximum” wage – which I believe was around £20 before it was done away with in 1961!

A merry Christmas to all readers of this blog.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Memories, 1963 - 2023 | Tagged | 13 Comments

Bellamy looks on as Development team go second in their league.

Cardiff City’s Under 23 team started their season playing home matches at the club’s training centre in the Vale of Glamorgan, but since mid September the games have been shared at the Leckwith athletics facility and Cardiff City Stadium.

Last night’s game with with Coventry at the latter venue continued a strange trend which has seen results and performance vary greatly depending on where the team were playing. I’ve seen all three matches at Leckwith, with City’s displays getting progressively worse as they’ve drawn two without scoring and lost the other one 1-0 – believe me, if you had sent a naughty young son or daughter to watch one of these matches on a Monday afternoon and then told them they’d go to another one unless they started behaving themselves, you’d soon have a perfectly behaved little cherub or angel on your hands!

When the game is at Cardiff City Stadium though, it’s a different matter completely. After a draw against Sunderland in a match where the Under 23s were always the better team, there have been 3-0 and 4-0 wins over Palace and QPR respectively and now they have a 3-1 victory over a lively Coventry side who could feel that the margin of defeat was harsh on them.

In those earlier conclusive wins over the two London sides, City put out very experienced sides by Development team standards, with a sprinkling of first team squad members involved, but this latest match saw something in line with the sort of selections that have been the norm in recent seasons.

You would have thought that only Declan John out of last night’s ten outfield starters would have a chance, albeit a very slight one, of playing Championship football for us in the short to medium term. Therefore, to beat a Coventry side whose record at this level is a lot better than you would expect from a club where the first team look like they could well be relegated to the Fourth tier this season, was more of an achievement than it may at first appear.

When City rubber stamped their early authority with a goal after eight minutes as Semi Ajayi fired home from close range after Marco Weymans’ precise cross. I felt the game was going to be a very one sided, but, instead, Coventry had grounds to feel that they could, and should, have been in the lead after thirty minutes play.

City did get sloppy during this time, but that wasn’t the only reason for the away side taking control and visiting captain Devon Kelly-Evans should have equalised after Murphy, who had already made one or two decent saves, could only palm a shot out to him standing just six yards from goal, but the resultant effort flew wide when it looked easier to score.

Kelly-Evans was more impressive with a run past two or three opponents and then a shot that went just wide and the visitors then had  what looked like a good shout for a penalty turned down after Jordan Blaise barged into George Thomas, only for a referee who was an odd mixture of let them get on with it laissez-faire and officious clamping down on harmless looking tackles, to award a free kick on the edge of the penalty area for another offence.

City needed to raise their game if they wanted to hold on to their lead and, to their credit, they did. Centre forward Mark Harris probably should have done better with a header from about six yards out and then a fine pass from Ajayi found Macauley Southam on the left, who crossed low for Harris to sidestep keeper Addai, only to see the ball roll out harmlessly for a goal kick as he ran out of room.

Captain Tommy O’Sullivan’s performance had tended to mirror his teams with a strong start being followed by some careless stuff, but he then provided a moment of the sort of quality that had many thinking they were watching a probable first teamer of the future when he first played at this level about five years ago. O’Sullivan’s lovely ball found the influentiual Southam whose crisp shot gave the pass the finish it deserved.

City, who probably owed their lead to the fact that they were that bit more assured in front of goal than their opponents, were watched from the technical area by two more members of what seems to be a huge cast of coaches/assistants lately.

I think it was Jarrad Harvey who was the “main man” this time, but alongside him was Craig Bellamy, the newly appointed Player Development Manager. Bellars was lower profile than his colleague, but occasionally gave instructions to the players when he felt it was required. However, based on this evidence, if he ever does become our manager, those who like their bosses to be shouting, jumping about like a jack in the box and waving their arms about constantly on the touchline, are not going to be impressed!

Semi Ajayi puts us 1-0 up.*

Maybe the Bellamy influence was felt most in the choice and use of substitutes because, in what was the most interesting aspect of the night to me, we saw the sort of players the club must have had in mind with the “revamp” of the Development team talked about last week, given plenty of game time.

The replacement of Matt Kennedy, who was quiet by his usual standards at this level, by Under 18 team regular James Waite at half time did not appear to be a the result of an injury for the winger and the way Harvey spent time talking to him on the touch line for a minute or two just before half time gave the impression that it was a planned move.

Whatever the cause of Waite’s early introduction, he immediately looked confident and was soon getting away a well struck shot from twenty yards that caused Addai few problems.

On the hour mark, it was the turn of sixteen year old Sion Spence to get his first taste of football at this level. Spence, who started the season in the Under 16 team, has done well since becoming a regular in the Under 18s and his introduction in  place of Weymans, hopefully, represents the best example so far of the “fast tracking” into the level below the first team that will become a fairly regular occurrence under Bellamy’s watch.

Again, the substitution was almost certainly a planned one, but when Under 18s captain Cameron Coxe came on for Blaise for the last fifteen minutes or so it was because of an injury.

Coxe, a full back/wing back who I’d never seen play centre back before, slotted seamlessly into the middle of the defence and did a good job, while the two lads in midfield did not look out of place at either. There was the odd misplaced pass, but the way Spence and Waite combined to set Declan John free for a late shot that was turned around the post by Allai was a delight, with the former showing his trademark appreciation of what’s going on around him to slide a precise pass out to the latter, whose cheeky backheel put the full back in on goal.

With Coventry unable to fashion as many threatening positions as they had managed in the first half, the game was fizzling out somewhat, but then a run down the left past a few City defenders by a Coventry player produced a low cross which left Thomas with a tap in from a few yards out.

Having got the goal they deserved and set up what could have been a very interesting last quarter of an hour or so, Coventry, or rather their keeper, then proceeded to shoot themselves in the foot – while I didn’t mean that literally of course, Allai was pretty lucky not to have damaged his foot in another way.

When O’Sullivan took aim from about twenty five yards out, he produced another well struck shot, just like Waite’s had been, and although the save was more difficult this time for the Coventry keeper, he should have done a lot better than knock the ball out to the advancing Harris who had a simple task to restore City’s two goal lead from the edge of the six yard box.

Allai knew he was at fault and, like plenty of goalies before him when they have conceded a goal kicked one of the posts in frustration, but, this time, it was done with such force that the clang on contact echoed around the stadium – he really could have done some serious damage to himself, but the ironic thing was that his kicking, which had been pretty erratic, seemed to improve significantly after this!

As this table shows, City end the year four points behind Charlton (who usually win this league) in second place and travel to face the league leaders in their first match after the mid season break.

On the face of it, we look well placed to become one of the two sides to take their place in the end of season Play Offs. It’s not a new situation for us either because we have been regular contenders near the top of the league since the current format was introduced in 2012 I think it was.

However, the almost complete lack of youngsters breaking into the first team in that time rather backs up the notion that results at the levels below the first team are not that important, it’s about developing players who are good enough to make an impact with the seniors. Hopefully, they’ll then either have a long, successful career at Cardiff or earn them the sort of transfer fee that enables clubs to undergo the sort of rebuilding job that so many of our rivals did last summer.

Therefore. if the presence of the likes of Coxe, Spence and Waite in the Under 23 team helps brings about a decline in results that sees us miss out on a top two finish, it will still be for the best if it means that our Academy will eventually again be doing what it hasn’t been for far too long.

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

 

Posted in The stiffs | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments