Wales carry on where they left off.

Coymay

Wales supporters of a certain vintage will remember this game from 1978, where a striker who played for Chester named Ian Edwards scored four times in a 7-0 win over Malta. There’s also been the occasional five or six goal victory, but, historically, Wales don’t really do big wins in competitive fixtures.

If I remember rightly, only San Marino have really copped a thrashing off us in recent years – the concept of “routine” 4-0 wins in a qualifying tie is an alien one for Wales fans during this century at least.

Not any more though, Wales’ 4-0 win over Moldova at Cardiff City Stadium as they got their 2018 World Cup qualifying campaign off to an emphatic start last night, was made to look routine by a team that sometimes gives the impression that it is developing too quickly for us fans to keep up with them!

Of course whenever your team wins by four goals or more, it is equally as valid to ask how bad the opposition were, as it is to question how good your side was.

In this instance, Moldova, with their record of two draws and eight defeats from the Qualifying campaign for Euro 2016 and FIFA World rating of 165 (August rankings), may have been the fifth seed of the six which make up our group, but the reality is that Georgia (the bottom seeds in the draw) are a stronger team and so Moldova at home is a match Wales should always be winning – in fact, it’s probably the easiest game in the group for us.

However, although I couldn’t see anything but a Welsh win, I did feel it would be a hard fought affair that would finish either one or two nil. Moldova may not be very good, but so much of this is down to the trouble they have scoring goals. They managed only four in their ten qualification games for the European Championships and I make it that they’ve scored sixteen times in their last twenty games – that might not sound terrible, but seven of them came in successive wins over Andorra and Saudi Arabia.

By contrast, their defensive record prior to last night was a lot better than you’d expect from a country ranked below sides like Myanmar (where’s that?), New Caledonia and Yemen.

At end of last month, I posted the following on a Cardiff City messageboard I use;-

“A look at this site

http://int.soccerway.com/teams/moldova/moldova/1506/

shows that no one has scored more than two in a match against Moldova since England beat them at Wembley three years ago and they have the sort of defensive record which could see them go to one of the fancied sides in our group and nick a draw. We have to ensure that it isn’t us that this happens to, but injuries to two of our most creative players and Robson-Kanu’s lack of game time make this an awkward game for us – as has been mentioned above, I’d gladly take a 1-0 win with the goal preferably coming from someone who is actually playing for the home team!”

Eight years ago, Sam Vokes scored Wales' first goal in their qualifying campaign for the 2010 World Cup. His late goal secured a 1-0 home win over Azerbaijan, but it turned out to be another tournament that we never came close to reaching, You would like to think that Vokes' goal last night will be the catalyst for something that can come close to emulating the elation generated before, during and after this year's Euros,*

Eight years ago, Sam Vokes scored Wales’ first goal in their qualifying campaign for the 2010 World Cup. His late goal secured a 1-0 home win over Azerbaijan, but it turned out to be another tournament that we never came close to reaching,
You would like to think that Vokes’ goal last night will be the catalyst for something that can come close to emulating the elation generated before, during and after this year’s Euros,*

The mention of Hal Robson-Kanu there alludes to one of two reasons why I was a little concerned about last night’s match from a Wales perspective. When you look at the side which started last night, I would argue that only Chris Gunter and Sam Vokes have been playing week in, week out first team football so far this season.

Many of the others (and a few of the subs) have been easing their way back into things after their exertions in the Euros. while others have been sidelined through injury – in the case of Aaron Ramsey and Johnny Williams, they were unable to shake off their knocks in time to be considered for selection.

The second reason for my caution was the memory of what heavy weather Wales made themselves of scoring during their previous qualifying campaign. Andorra have already been mentioned in this piece, but our two matches against one of only five European sides currently ranked below Moldova (and it won’t stay that way with Kosovo for long) in the first and last matches of the successful qualification process did strongly suggest that Wales did not pack the punch that someone with their lofty ranking should do.

Granted, there were extenuating circumstances in both matches with that awful pitch in the first game and the fact we had already qualified in the second one, but the ease with which the Andorrans dealt with us for much of the time must have given hope to any “minnows” that we were likely to face in the next few years.

To be fair, the signs were there in France that Wales had become more potent in front of goal and, while it’s always a little dangerous to suggest that former weakness have disappeared forever, last night’s outcome suggests that Wales are continuing to evolve and that opponents of all shapes, sizes and qualities are going to find it harder to get a clean sheet against us than they did in the past.

For thirty eight minutes though, there was a gnawing doubt that we may be in for the sort of blunted attacking that offered Andorra hope in both of those games mentioned earlier. On  second thoughts, I should rephrase that to “For thirty eight minutes though, there was a gnawing doubt in my mind that we may be in for the sort of blunted attacking that offered Andorra hope in both of those games mentioned earlier”, because it seemed like most of those present did not countenance such doubts.

I’ve mentioned before that people throw around words and terms like “legend” and “world class” far too easily these days and so they’ve tended to lose their true meanings. However, the wicked cross which Gareth Bale swung over onto Sam Vokes’ head seven minutes before the break was genuinely world class, as it was the perfect combination of pace and precision which only comes easily to the very best, given the temperamental nature of the modern day football.

Three minutes later Bale’s thirty yard shot forced Cebanu to concede a corner which Joe Ledley swung away from the keeper, but he seemed to have got a decent punch on an awkward ball only for Joe Allen to show admirable technique by keeping his half volleyed effort from the edge of the penalty area down – a little luck may have been needed for the ball to find it’s way past the forest of Moldovans between Allen and the goal, but it was deserved because it gave the Stoke man a long overdue first goal for his country.

From that point onwards, the match was as good as over and the object of the exercise for the visitors was to try and keep their defeat within what was a normal margin of defeat for them.

In times past, Wales might have been content to hold on to what they had as well, but, while they hardly went gung ho looking for more goals, there was a desire to give their goal difference an early boost.

Having assisted with one goal and forced the corner which led to the second, Bale took a more prominent role in the second half and when Jardan’s inexplicable back pass five minutes after the break rolled into his path, Wales’ talisman accelerated away from the defence (something I never ever managed while running with the ball at my feet during my illustrious career and I bet there are very, very many players far better than me who have not done it either), drew the keeper, then dinked the ball over him and into the net for another example of a great player making the difficult look simple.

Bale’s fall for the penalty Wales were awarded in the last minute was more dramatic than it needed to be, but there was a foul committed nevertheless and so the decision was a correct one and the Real Madrid man brought the curtain down on the evening by ignoring the shouts from the crowd to let Chris Gunter take the spot kick and scoring with ease.

Those two goals mean that Bale is by himself now as Wale’s second highest scorer and four more will see him overtake Ian Rush record haul – barring horrendous injuries or a decision to retire to a convent somewhere, it’s now a question of when not if, Bale becomes our greatest goalscorer.

I’ve concentrated on Bale there because I do believe there is a slight tendency by some to take his excellence for granted. Many were advocating Allen for the man of the match award that was given to Bale and I understand this (in fact, he would have been my nomination if I’m being honest), but TV analyst Dean Saunders had a point when he said that 85% of Wales goals feature some sort of contribution by Bale and last night he exceeded that in a match in which we scored four times.

So, I’m not demeaning what Allen did – far from it,  he’s one of those players who you watch playing for his country and think “why isn’t he playing for a better club than………..?” – James Chester is another one.

Wales did everything they had to last night and, just as in the summer at times, did it with a bit of style. With Sam Vokes’ career at a peak on the back of a promotion with his club and two goals from three matches for his country and Hal Robson-Kanu now a Premier League player, there is something looking a bit like strength in depth in the area where we were weakest.

Wales player's congratulate many people's man of the match Joe Allen as his first Wales goal put us 2-0 up just before half time - in this year of mad transfer prices, the £13 million Stoke paid Liverpool for Allen looks one of the best deals of the recently closed transfer window to me.*

Wales player’s congratulate many people’s man of the match Joe Allen as his first Wales goal put us 2-0 up just before half time – in this year of mad transfer prices, the £13 million Stoke paid Liverpool for Allen looks one of the best deals of the recently closed transfer window to me.*

Also, when someone like Andy King comes into the team and plays well enough to make the notion of our best player in the Euros not walking straight back into the team once he is fit not seem entirely ridiculous, you have to think that we aren’t just seeing a flash in the pan (albeit a pretty lengthy one!) here, Wales are good enough to feel justifiably confident about winning a pool which might not be a group of death, but does feature three other teams you could make a good case for as automatic qualifiers.

The results in the other two matches played last night offer proof of the size of the task facing Wales. With a recent win in Spain behind them, Georgia appear to be an improving team who can feel they have it in them to take points off the leading sides when they come to Tblisi, but they won’t be taking them from Austria as the side I cursed with a nomination of dark horses to win in France this summer returned home with a 2-1 win.

After looking very ordinary in the Euros, a result like that means that my slight hopes that we will be facing a team on the slide when we go to Vienna next month appear to have gone west.

In Belgrade, the Republic of Ireland rode their luck somewhat in ending up with their usual away draw – 2-2 against Serbia. The Republic will be tough, awkward opponents and I really hope it doesn’t come down to us needing to beat them at home in our final match to qualify or finish second, because they just don’t lose many at all on their travels.

As for Serbia, they have to be one of the most inconsistent teams around, but one thing they have been able to do on a consistent basis is get the better of us when we’ve faced them. Hopefully we can beat them in front of a passionate Cardiff City Stadium in a couple of months time, but we have a truly dreadful away record against the countries which came out of the break up of Yugoslavia and I’d willingly take the point the Irish got when we go there next June – in fact, give me an away draw against Austria and the Republic as well and I’d be perfectly happy.

So, a 4-0 win which keeps morale high for the seniors, but defeat by the same scoreline by group leaders Denmark at Wrexham on Friday ended Wales Under 21s hopes of topping their qualifying group. The Danes look a strong side, but, having got a goalless away draw with them last autumn, it was disappointing to see us succumb like that in such an important match.

All Wales can do now is beat Luxembourg today, then get three points when they visit bottom team Armenia in their final match and hope that this gets them above Romania into second place. If that happens, then we might earn the right to a Play Off spot if we are deemed to be one of the four best runners up, but, looking at all of the current tables, it seems like something of a long shot to me.

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

 

 

 

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Picture goal from Jamie Bird as City’s Under 23s keep on winning.

Coymay

There’s a certain type of match which has the “experts” saying at half time that “one goal will win this” and most of the time it probably turns out they are right. I can remember my mate turning to me after five minutes of the abysmal home match with Brighton in 14/15 and saying “this is going to end up 0-0”, I nodded my agreement – it just seemed so obvious that the two teams involved were incapable of scoring (as it was, they barely mustered an on target effort between them).

If such a game does produce a goal, then it tends to be a truly scruffy affair or something of a quality way, way above what precedes and follows it and after about fifty minutes of today’s Under 23 match with Colchester at the Vale, I was definitely watching such a match as two sides who had not lost a game between them this season were largely cancelling each other out – a goal seemed a long, long way away.

However, there is always the exception which proves the rule and this was it because, when a goal did finally arrive in the fifty third minute, it was followed by three more within ten minutes and then there was more late on for good measure – at the end of ninety minutes, City had maintained their 100% record with a fourth consecutive win.

4-1 sounds like a crushing victory and, by the end, City were certainly good value for their win, but the scoreline was harsh on a competitive Colchester outfit that I thought just about edged the first half.

During that first forty five minutes, City, using the same 3-5-2/5-3-2 formation as the first team, had their best spell early on as, having come through a first three or four minutes of the visitors dominating possession, they settled to produce three attacks which might have produced goals.

Firstly, strikers Eli Phipps and Jamie Bird linked nicely only for the latter to lose his bearings somewhat as he side footed what was a decent chance well wide. Bird was then played in by Lloyd Humphries only for him to fire over from a similar sort of position to his first effort.

I would have thought that a talented player like Bird would have been disappointed not to have hit the target with at least one of those attempts and things got worse for the number ten shortly after when he was yellow carded for a foul, but his afternoon would improve from that rather sorry start!

During this brief spell when City were on top, wing backs Marco Weymans and Dylan Rees caught the eye. The former did so by hitting the sort of crossfield diagonal pass that was much talked about as an essential part of the first team’s attacking play under the new system, but has barely been seen since the proper stuff started, while the latter showed a willingness to perform the attacking side of his brief with an enthusiasm not always seen from those who have played in the position so far for the senior team,

Captain Tom James also showed a liking for that long left to right pass when he fired a free kick into Rees’ path and lad from Tenby cut inside to get in a shot which the keeper had to turn for a corner at his near post.

Apart from a shot from twenty five yards from Phipps which looked for a second or two as if it might catch the keeper out, City had nothing else to offer really as an attacking force in the first half. Truth is, the same sort of problems with the three centreback system which have afflicted the first team for much of the time (e.g. isolated strikers, central midfield not able to impose themselves and wing backs unable to get into advanced areas on a consistent basis) all put in an appearance.

Without really causing City’s defence too many problems, Colchester were able to get slightly on top with their tendency to hunt in packs and win a majority of fifty/fifty tackles and it was becoming increasingly clear as to why they had come through matches with Sheffield United, Hull and Charlton unbeaten.

Just as in the first half, City offered signs that they might be able to break the deadlock early in the period, but this time it had more to do with the way they were able to counter attack at speed in a way that had eluded them up to now, rather than any tangible threat to the visitor’s goal.

As it was, when the whole character of what had been such a tight contest was changed by City scoring, it came following two counter attacks. First, Colchester broke dangerously down their left, but when City dealt with that threat, they took advantage of the visitors having committed so many men to attack by working the ball quickly up the same side of the pitch and Rees’ fine cross got the finish it deserved as Phipps nodded crisply into the corner of the net.

With Joe Ralls' and Anthony Pilkington's goals at Fulham, Sam Bowen's effort from the half way line for the Under 16s and the marvellous effort I saw from the same team in their demolition of Crystal Palace, there have been some great goals scored by Cardiff City teams already this season. Jamie Bird's first goal in today's 4-1 win over Colchester for the Development side deserves to be in that company - it was an outstanding effort which I hope the club will put put on a video which is available to all City fans, not just Cardiff City World subscribers.

With Joe Ralls’ and Anthony Pilkington’s goals at Fulham, Sam Bowen’s effort from the half way line for the Under 16s and the marvelous effort I saw from the same team in their demolition of Crystal Palace, there have been some great goals scored by Cardiff City teams already this season. Jamie Bird’s first goal in today’s 4-1 win over Colchester for the Development side deserves to be put in that company – it was an outstanding effort which I hope the club will put out on a video which is available to all City fans, not just Cardiff City World subscribers.

City were leading by an impressive goal, but the one which doubled their lead three minutes later was right out of the top drawer. Once again, it came from a counter attack, but whereas the first one had been a team effort, this was all the work of a one man as a Colchester corner was cleared to Bird standing just outside the edge of the penalty area and he promptly ran about sixty yards with the ball before steadying himself to guide a sublime effort from twenty five yards into the top corner of the net.

As someone who scored a goal for the Under 18s against Palace last season when he received the ball from the kick off for second half and waltzed past four or five opponents before scoring, Bird has already shown a penchant for the spectacular. However, I’d rate today’s as the better goal – the descriptions I’ve read up to now say that he beat two Colchester players during his lung bursting run up the noticeable slope on the pitch at City’s training centre, but I thought it was three and the shot to top it all off was of such quality that it would have been heralded as a great finish even if it hadn’t had such an eye catching build up.

There had been little up to now to suggest that Colchester could retrieve anything out of the match from this position, but they were back at 2-1 just past the hour mark when Luke O’Reilly, whose performance contained moments which those messageboard critics that accuse City keepers of not commanding their penalty area would have loved combined with some erratic kicking, presented the visitors with the ball about thirty five yards out and a quick pass gave Akinwande the chance to score with ease.

City were soon given the chance to go two goals clear again though when a defender miscontrolled and his attempt to retrieve his error ended up with MaCauley Southam being brought down for a clear penalty which Phipps confidently lashed home.

It was amazing to think that just a few minutes earlier, space had been at premium for attackers of both sides, but now the game had really opened up and both sides had the chances to keep the scoring burst going, However, there was to be only one more goal to follow when, in the eighty second minute, Humphries’ shot was pushed out by the keeper into the path of Bird who added what could be described as bread and butter type striker’s goal to his spectacular earlier effort.

I suppose when you look at the leagues that the respective senior sides play in, Cardiff should be beating Colchester at this level, but this was an impressive win for City because their opponents fielded a team with a smattering of players with first team experience including Owen Garvan, who is making his way back from injury. On the other hand, with regulars Tommy O’Sullivan and Theo Wharton away with Wales Under 21s and Rhys Healey loaned to Newport, this was a City team made up mainly of first and second year pros with only Tom James I believe not falling into that category – having rarely, if ever, fielded a team with eleven players under 21 when that was the category for selection. I believe City may well have done it when it’s been changed to a competition for Under 23s.

 

 

 

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