Well, I didn’t see that coming!

CoymayIf I’d have been asked to make a score prediction for Cardiff City’s visit to Rotherham last night, I’d have gone for a 0-0 draw with the rider that either side may just have enough about them to manage the single goal that would sneak them a win, but there was no way that those attending the New York Stadium would see two or more goals. I’m sure there were more optimistic City fans who were quietly confident  of a victory and there may even have been a few who said we’d win 3-1, but, surely there weren’t any who said we’d win by that score and all of our goals would come in an eleven minute spell which would see us 3-0 up after thirty five minutes!

Football is a weird, weird game. Cardiff City’s  seven matches since the FA Cup defeat by Reading had produced a grand total of eight goals with only three of them being scored by Russell Slade’s team and yet here they were banging in the goals (and having another disallowed before half time), where previously they had mustered up the grand total of nineteen on target goal attempts in the 630 minutes of football they played after they exited the FA Cup.

There was nothing in the opening twenty minutes last night to suggest what was coming. In fact, shortly before our opening goal, I was thinking how similar it all was to the first match between the sides this season where Rotherham swarmed all over us to establish a dominance that they never really lost in one of the more one sided 0-0s I’ve seen us involved in.

However, then we get our first corner and one of our centrebacks nods it in. Ah, typical Cardiff City 2014/15 then – no doubt the other two goals were in a similar vein, but, no, both of those came from open play with the first coming via a sumptuous volley and the other following an incisive infield run by a winger (albeit aided by the odd lucky bounce)  with the player on the opposing flank finishing it off after he had burst into the penalty area as well.

A City goal of the season candidate - Federico Macheda's superb volley puts us 2-0 up. There aren't many, if any, other players at the club who could have scored that goal, but only four Championship goals all season shows is a poor return for someone with the talent to do much better.*

A City goal of the season candidate – Federico Macheda’s superb volley puts us 2-0 up. There aren’t many, if any, other players at the club who could have scored that goal, but only four Championship goals all season is a very poor return for someone with the natural talent to do much better.*

Now might be the time to mention that Rotherham have conceded twenty seven goals in the twelve matches they’ve played in all competitions so far this year and, of course, that has to be a factor in why City were suddenly able to find goalscoring so easy, but we’ve played sides with dodgy defensive records before now (e.g. Blackpool, Millwall, Fulham and Huddersfield) and barely looked capable of scoring – there must have been more to the goal rush (by our standards anyway) last night than just poor defending.

Well, it doesn’t take any brilliant analytical skills to notice that our side last night was significantly different from the one that Russell Slade normally picks. Now, on the face of it, Revell and Macheda strikes me as being a less threatening strikeforce than, say, Jones and Doyle, but when you think that Kenwyne isn’t really built for the relentless Saturday, Tuesday programme of recent weeks and that Eoin Doyle is showing ominous signs of going down the plenty of industry, but far too few goals route that Adam LeFondre was on, maybe it was time for a change up front.

However, for me, it was in midfield that the significant changes occurred. Peter Whittingham’s suspension and the decision to rest Craig Noone meant that we started with a very young looking midfield four with twenty five year old Aron Gunnarsson  as the “old head”, accompanied by Joe Ralls, Conor McAleny and Matt Kennedy with a combined age of sixty three.

I suppose there were risks involved in the selection, but, with Kennedy the youngest of the three at twenty, it’s hardly as if we were pitching a trio of raw teenagers into the action. All three players are at the sort of age where they should be breaking into the first team if they were good enough, but, as the one I’ve seen by far the most of, it’s Ralls who I want to talk about for now.

The first thing to say is that even when I was watching him as a sixteen year old in the Academy team, Ralls struck me as an “old head on young shoulders” type of player. Not only that, he has always had something of the Steve McPhail about him in that he always looking to be in possession of the ball. Now, that may sound a bit stupid – surely every player good enough to make it as a pro wants to have the ball? My answer to that is, yes, they want the ball when they and the team are playing well, but it’s far from true to say that they all show for the ball when they are struggling and if they do get it, they make sure they get rid of it pretty quick.

Ralls makes himself available no matter how the game is going and I don’t feel he has any obvious weaknesses to his game. When he first broke into the team at seventeen, I thought we had a superb prospect on our hands, but, perhaps, in a way, our promotion two years ago didn’t help his development at Cardiff. As a big supporter of his, I’ll admit that he hasn’t really put in the performances when he has been given a chance this season that have demanded that he retain his place for the next match, but I’ll also add that he has been the victim of what seems to be an unwritten law among football managers and coaches which states that when there is a choice to be made about who to leave out, it’s always the youngster, rather than the experienced under performer, who gets the chop.

Ralls’ inclusion last night surprised me. It’s only just over a month ago that I was thinking he had little future at the club following the signing of Stuart O’Keefe, now we have a situation whereby O’Keefe played a few matches before disappearing from trace to the extent that he has been an unused sub in our last five games and it’s a player who has been at the club all along who comes in when the Whittingham/Gunnarsson axis has to be broken up.

If Ralls is considered a better bet than O’Keefe, then why sign O’Keefe in the first place? The only answer I can think of that may apply is that Slade uses a management by numbers approach which says there must always be a grafter/athelete and a footballer as his central midfield two. This may explain why Ralls and not O’Keefe, or Tom Adeyemi, started last night – if it has been Gunnarsson, not Whittingham, who was missing, then the decision would have been a different one.

Conor McAleny turns in the third goal - the on loan Evertonian showed up well, as did  former Goodison Park man Matt Kennedy on the other wing.*

Conor McAleny turns in the third goal – the on loan Evertonian showed up well, as did former Goodison Park man Matt Kennedy on the other wing.*

That to me feels like lower division thinking though. The best midfield players at this level are all rounders who can provide the graft and the craft and Ralls is, in my opinion, the player at the club who is best equipped to stand a chance of being able to do that – I feel he should be given a run of games to see if he can start to look a real first eleven performer, but I suspect that it will be Whittingham and Gunnarsson in central midfield again on Saturday against an in form Charlton side.

The way modern football is, there are probably very few times when a degree of experimentation that sees a manager selecting youngsters not yet established in the team can be attempted, but, surely, City are very close to that sort of position now with two months of the season still left?

I can remember Danny Baker’s Sunday lunchtime programme of about twenty years ago having a feature where listeners were asked to nominate a team that defined “mid table mediocrity” and the winners were deemed to be a Shrewsbury Town side that were twelfth or thirteenth in their division having won, drawn and lost the same number of matches with a goal difference of nought,

Now, we are not quite in the Shrewsbury class, but thirteenth position, sixteen points off a Play Off place, and thirteen points clear of the relegation zone is a fair attempt at matching it. If things go as they should do over the next few weeks, it would be good to see some of our young players being given a chance in the first team – otherwise, what is the point of having an Academy if all we are going to do is bring, often mediocre, players in from other clubs whenever a vacancy arises in  the first team?

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

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Ajayi impresses as Under 21s end goalless home run with a vengeance.

CoymayI’ve a strong suspicion that Semi Ajayi was in the Charlton Under 21 team which beat City in the Professional Development League Two Play Off Final back in May 2013. A few months later he secured a dream move to Arsenal, but, although he was a non playing sub for the Gunners on four occasions earlier this season, it’s looks pretty certain that he is not going to be offered a new deal when his current contract runs out in the summer.

During January, Ajayi played Under 21 matches for Sunderland and Ipswich as those clubs both took a look at him and last night the imposing centreback was in the City side that ended their long run without a home goal in style as they beat Coventry City 4-2 in what may well have been the most entertaining match I’ve seen at first team and Under 21 level this season.

Ajayi was to emerge as, arguably, the match’s most influential player in the second half, but in the first half, his, understandable, lack of familiarity with his team mates showed with a few misplaced passes that might have been punished more severely by a Coventry side featuring four players with plenty of first team appearances behind them this season and with former Watford man Al Bangura appearing as a trialist.

The City player who stood out most for me in the first forty five minutes was Tommy O’Sullivan. Back at Cardiff after a month’s loan at Port Vale that saw him get less first team action than I’m sure he and the club would have wanted, O’Sullivan featured on the right of midfield with workaholic Ben Watkins and Under 18 team captain Robbie Patten occupying the central positions. However, the Welsh Under 21 international had the licence to come infield as well and, often when he did so, there was a subtlety and incisiveness to his passing that we don’t see from City’s first team.

Coventry’s early tendency to give the ball away at the back in dangerous areas gave O’Sullivan and his team mates opportunities to create something and from one such instance, a delightful reverse pass set Abdi Noor through on goal, but, unfortunately for the youngster, his shot proved as difficult for Coventry keeper Richards to keep out as a routine backpass from one of his colleagues. However, the early indications were there for City that their long wait for a home goal would not go on much longer and, with Coventry also looking dangerous on the break (home keeper Ben Wilson had to make two good saves from visiting captain Ivor Lawton and then was tested by the experienced Simeon Jackson), there was plenty of evidence to suggest this was going to be a more open and entertaining game than most seen at the stadium this season.

When a goal did come, it arose from the visitors losing the ball too close to their own goal again and they were unlucky in some respects I suppose that it was O’Sullivan (someone who wasn’t going to lose his head when given such a good opportunity to create something) who was able to take the ball to byeline on the right before knocking over a low cross which left the advancing Watkins with an easy tap in.

With their clear edge on experience, it was to be expected that Coventry would come back strongly after this, but, in truth, City settled down to be quite comfortable throughout the rest of the first period with my feeling being that any further goals would come from the home team. Among other things, City owed their slight superiority to their greater attacking pace and it was the player most responsible for this who doubled the lead when the lively Tyler Roche cut infield following a corner and fired a low twenty five yard shot past Richards on his near post – the keeper looked to have been wrong footed by the shot, so maybe there was a deflection on it.

Within a minute or two, there was almost a third City goal as Ajayi got free on the near post, but didn’t get a strong enough contact on O’Sullivan’s corner, only to be given a second chance when the ball dropped to him six yards out and his follow up shot was just kept out by a fine save from Richards – the City player would not be denied after the break though.

Although a couple of goals behind, there was still the suspicion that Coventry were far from out of the game, but the early second half action saw City on the front foot and it wasn’t long before they had a third goal. Truth be told, it should have come sooner than it did, because good work by Roche and Noor created a great opportunity for Gethyn Hill who wanted too long when he was found unmarked about ten yards from goal and the visitors were able to scramble the ball behind for a corner. However, when O’Sullivan’s delivery found it’s way to Ajayi on the far post, he cracked home a shot from eight yards that went in off the underside of the crossbar.

Trialist Semi Ajayi in action for Nigeria Under 19's (he's also played for that country at Under 21 level). A memorable appearance in a Cardiff shirt, but was it enough to merit further interest from the club?

Trialist Semi Ajayi in action for Nigeria Under 19’s (he’s also played for that country at Under 21 level). A memorable appearance in a Cardiff shirt, but was it enough to merit further interest from the club?

A three goal lead with about forty minutes to play is often a prelude for a side to deliver a thrashing, but, not in this game as the deficit could, and probably should, have been reduced to one within two or three minutes. Perhaps it was the excitement of having just scored that caused Ajayi to go chasing a ball he was never going to reach, but his slip enabled Coventry to exploit the space he had left and within thirty seconds of conceding, they were back in the game. That said, it looked to me as if a poor touch from the scorer Shawn Miller had given Wilson the opportunity to make a save, but he dived over the ball and the scorer was able to walk it into the net.

If Wilson was at fault with that goal, he more than made up for it soon afterwards when he did brilliantly to stop Jackson from heading in a Ryan Haynes cross from point blank range. Coventry complained that the ball had crossed the line before the keeper’s intervention, but it was impossible to tell from where I was sitting – certainly, it was one of those situations where a goal looked inevitable and I have my suspicions that the visitors might have been hard done by.

The game settled down somewhat after that, but, with a quarter of an hour left, Jackson was not to be denied as City carelessly gave away the ball in midfield and the experienced striker moved on to a through pass to score confidently from the edge of the penalty area.

Coventry must have fancied their chances of getting at least a point out of the game at this stage, but the City youngsters reacted positively to this setback and, truth be told, the expected visiting onslaught never came. In fact, it was City who did most of the meaningful attacking in the remainder of the match, with Richards somehow denying Noor from close range after a neat move down City’s left. Whereas you could imagine the first team hanging on for grim death under similar circumstances, with players making their way towards the corner flag rather than towards goal if they were attacking (actually, forget that, when has this team ever been 3-2 up in a match!), it was refreshing to see the youngsters going for that fourth, match clinching, goal.

With the clock showing 85 minutes, Ajayi burst down the right to force a corner and he was there on the near post to head home powerfully when the ball was swing in. There was no way back for Coventry after that and the game ended with City still chasing more goals, but 4-2 was about right after a very enjoyable ninety minutes which leaves them two points behind league leaders Swansea, but with a game in hand.

I suppose the big question now is did Semi Ajayi do enough to earn another chance at Cardiff. On one level, that’s an easy one to answer – although not faultless, he was certainly impressive and, with more time to get integrated at Cardiff, I’m sure he’d be a very effective player at this level for us. However, he’s twenty one year now and I believe that, at that age, he should be somebody who is going to be ready to step straight into the first team and, hopefully, improve it, as opposed to someone who would make it harder for Academy products like Deji Oshilaja and Tom James to break into the senior squad.

It’s impossible for me to say for certain either way based on just one viewing of the player – the fact that Sunderland were interested certainly conveys one impression, but it could be said that Ipswich deciding not to take things further, for whatever reason, having had a look at him, conveys another.

 

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