Goalless home run continues for Under 21’s.

CoymayOn 15 December Danny Johnson scored the only goal of the game pretty late on to notch a win for Cardiff City’s Development team against Crystal Palace. I note this only because it was the last time our Under 21s managed to find the net in a home match. Since then, the Development teams of Colchester, Brentford, Charlton and now Millwall have all gone back up the M4 having prevented Cardiff from scoring, but at least the last named did not head east with all three points like the others did.

Sometimes 0-0 can be a very misleading scoreline because you get the occasional goalless match that keeps your attention throughout – anyone with a high boredom threshold and an awful lot of time on their hands could read through all of the entries on here and find two or three examples of them I’m sure. Sadly, last night’s 0-0 at Cardiff City Stadium did not come even remotely close to falling into that category because once Millwall had survived a pretty testing first twenty minutes or so, it never looked like a game that was going to produce a goal.

So, it’s still just the five goals I’ve seen us score in the eight Development team matches I’ve watched this season. Three of those came in one game when Bristol City were dispatched 3-0 (to put that result into some sort of context, Millwall, the least threatening side I think I’ve ever seen us play at this level, put seven on them in their previous match), there was a penalty in a 3-1 loss to Huddersfield and that Johnson goal against Palace.

I mentioned about Millwall’s lack of an attacking threat earlier – indeed it will only take one sentence for me to describe it. Just before half time in their best spell of the game, their number eight Jamie Philpot hit a sliding shot which forced home keeper Ben Wilson into a good diving save. That’s it, apart from that, Millwall never suggested they’d score, but, in the interests of fairness, I should say that Wilson’s save was, by some way, the most difficult one either keeper had to make in the ninety minutes.

In saying that, this was a game that City could and should have won. They controlled proceedings for long periods and must have done something like three quarters of the attacking, but they were unable to convert that “dominance” into anything tangible in terms of clear goalscoring opportunites. Actually, that’s not quite true because, shortly after Macauley Southam had a well struck twenty yard shot deflected not too far wide, they squandered the game’s outstanding opportunity when Abdi Noor, making his first start for the Under 21s, burst on to a Gethyn Hill headed flick to have a clear run in on visiting goalkeeper Harry Girling. It wasn’t a sitter by any means, but it was the sort of chance you’d expect a striker to put away on most occassions, instead, Noor sliced well wide.

Noor soon showed what he could bring to the team with a neat lobbed pass that almost put Ben Watkins in on goal and there was a similar clever pass to Tyler Roche that almost worked in the second half.

If Millwall had slowly grown into the first half to the extent that the half time whistle came at just the right time for City, the second period saw virtually all of the play heading in the direction of their goal – there were moments of alarm for the visitors when Tom James (playing at left back in Declan John’s absence) looked to have beaten Girling with a shot from the edge of the penalty area that flew just wide and he wasn’t too far away with a curling effort just before the final whistle, but it was hard to avoid the feeling that, for much of the time, City were not expecting to score.

The main attacking threat came from Roche on the left who generally had the better of his marker and so was able to get himself into good positions for crosses. Unfortunately the quality wasn’t always there when it came to the final ball from the winger, but he was also unlucky when a couple of intelligent passes aimed for Noor missed their target by inches. Roche also laid on a decent shooting opportunity from twenty yards that Southam dragged wide and despite the side’s miserable goalscoring record, I think it’s been a good first season at this level for the winger.

Roche apart, the better players for City were all defensively minded really, all of the back four could be pretty pleased with their contribution and Watkins was a solid presence sitting in front of them, but their lack of fire power is probably going to cost them when it comes to a top two finish and a place in the end of season Play Offs.

The question has to be asked though as to whether this should be the intention at the start of every season or should a “Development” league be about player development first and foremost? In the three seasons we’ve been playing at this level, there have been confused signals as to what the intention was.

Under Malky Mackay, there was always a smattering of senior players in our Under 21 teams and this may have explained why there were plenty of high scoring Monday nights wins during that time – the philosophy appeared to be that if you weren’t in the first team, then you would, in all likelihood by in the second side. After Malky left though, Ole’s approach was different, senior players might feature occasionally, but there was still a pretty strong Under 21 team because the better age group qualified players were still at the club.

Now, under Russell Slade, we are seeing a different approach again as, possibly driven by the need to cut costs, our “senior” Under 21 players have nearly all been loaned out to other clubs .

Slade cops a lot of, often justified, flak for his work with the first team, but I tend to be on his side on this matter. Players such as Healy, Johnson, Oshilaja,  O’Sullivan and Tutonda are better off playing first team football on loan (as long as they are being selected regularly) because, certainly in the case of the first four named, they have not got much left to prove at Under 21 level.

Therefore, although it’s hard to think like this when you’re freezing cold and getting wet while watching a miserable 0-0, City are probably serving the true purpose of this league by picking the sort of sides they are  (besides Noor, Under 18 regulars Robbie Patten and Dylan Rees got what I believe is their first experience of Under 21 football last night with substitute appearances) than they would do by including, say, Fabio, Adeyemi, O’Keefe and Macheda and winning by two or three goals last night.

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2014/15, the season which just keeps on giving when it comes to boring football!

CoymayUnless there is a wholly unexpected finish to the season which sees entertainment levels flying off the chart, 2014/15 is not going to go down as one of the most memorable I’ve experienced.

Of course, with so many televised matches these days, the armchair fan is always going to get to watch the occasional great game and a decent number of good ones. However, as someone who likes to attend as many matches as I can, the five teams I watch hoping they win have not really done the business for me this season.

Some of them are less guilty on the lack of quality and entertainment front than others – Wales have been great when they’ve played with two fine games in October played in cracking atmospheres and, although their results have been patchy, City Under 18 games are invariably entertaining affairs with plenty of goals in them.

The other three have certainly not done the business when I’ve been watching them though – City’s Under 21s are full of good intentions, but they’ve forgotten how to score goals at Cardiff City Stadium this year (I see they drew another blank when they switched their match to the Vale training ground last week).

So, that leaves City’s first team and Newport County. I’ll have some brief words about City’s match at Huddersfield later, but if you’ve watched them live this season, you’ll know that when it comes to results, entertainment and atmosphere, there have been far better seasons for them in the recent past.

As for County, well, they’re a bit like Wales in that I’ve only watched them twice this season, so I’ve not really seen them enough to be too judgemental on them, but I came out of today’s game with Morecambe at Rodney Parade thinking that County couldn’t be having the season they are, if they were really as bad as they have looked in the two matches I’ve seen.

Kenwyne Jones battles for possession - somehow, in lots of ways, this picture sums up Cardiff City under Russell Slade as an outnumbered striker looks towards the sky for the next long ball from deep, free kick, corner or throw in to come his way. *

Kenwyne Jones battles for possession – somehow, in lots of ways, this picture sums up Cardiff City under Russell Slade as an outnumbered striker looks towards the sky for the next long ball from deep, free kick, corner or throw in to come his way. *

To be fair, they deservedly beat Stevenage 2-0 in December, but then County manager Justin Edinburgh admitted himself after the match that it was pretty poor fare and it was more of the same today I’m afraid.

After a misleadingly promising start that saw County earn a corner inside twenty seconds, Morecambe opened up the home defence so easily in their first serious attack in the sixth minute as Jack Redshaw neatly shot past Joe Day.

It was all so simply done that it was quite surprising that they were never to come close to repeating the move in the remainder of the game – the visitors showed a pace and a purpose when they broke that County couldn’t really match, but were mostly prepared to sit on their lead and, given the lack of invention and threat from the home team, they were probably right to do so.

With a front two consisting of Shaun Jeffers (one goal in twenty nine games for Newport according to Wikipedia) and Rene Howe (whose career record makes you think that the term “lower league journeyman” was invented with him in mind), It always looked like County would struggle for goals and, in truth, I cannot remember them creating anything worthy of qualifying as a chance throughout.

County did work up a bit of a head of steam in the second half. There were a succession of corners and they had the ball in the net only for the goal to be ruled out for offside against Jeffers, but, by and large, Morecambe coped quite easily – they got their blocks in and County were limited to just the one on target effort all game.

This isn't meant to be critical of Matt Kennedy who was very good on his debut against Blackburn and did pretty well today by all accounts, but this team seem a pretty faceless bunch to me - in this picture Kennedy leaves Huddersfield skipper Mark Hudsom on his backside, but Hudson still seems more like "one of us" to me than nearly all of those who have come in since the end of last season.*

This isn’t meant to be critical of Matt Kennedy who was very good on his debut against Blackburn and did pretty well today by all accounts, but this team seem a pretty faceless bunch to me – in this picture Kennedy leaves Huddersfield skipper Mark Hudsom on his backside, but Hudson still seems more like “one of us” to me than nearly all of those who have come in since the end of last season.*

It was turgid stuff, but there was at least the chance to see how City’s David Tutonda got on in the second match in his loan spell.

County caretaker boss Jimmy Dack has scrapped the back three favoured by previous boss Edinburgh in favour of a flat back four which meant that Totonda played as a left back. Whatever the merits of the argument for a back four, I’d say that, purely from Tutonda’s point of view, using him as a wing back outside a back three would be preferable because that would be playing to his strengths. Tutonda wasn’t faultless – he gave the ball away in dangerous areas once or twice, but he also showed an ability to wriggle clear of opponents in confined spaces and there was an intelligence to some of his passing when in advanced positions that few of his colleagues could match.

Just a few words about the City’s 0-0 draw at Huddersfield. Given the precarious position that they found themselves in after their defeat by Derby at the end of last month, I would have thought that any fan would gladly have settled for the next four matches to pass without any of them ending in a defeat, but when your team has not won in eight in all competitions and has only one win in their past fourteen, draws are not really good enough.

Yes, City are inching their way away from the Blackpools, Wigans and Millwalls, but a defeat to the second of those three sides on Tuesday (Wigan have not won at home in the league since August, fourteen games ago) would make the “improvement” that has seen our run of league matches without a win stretched to seven would count for absolutely nothing.

City really should have beaten Blackburn in midweek and, the little I’ve heard about today’s match suggests that even though we were well beaten in the possession stakes again (61/39), we had the better opportunities to win a match that I’ve heard the words “dour” and “lack of quality” applied to on a couple of occasions already.

The best of these chances fell to Eoin Doyle who was denied by a great save from home keeper Ian Smithies, but the incident that attracted most attention came just before half time when Kenwyne Jones was brought down on the edge of the penalty area by Huddersfield’s Tommy Smith. The Radio Wales commentators were adamant that, as the last defender, Smith should have been shown a red rather than yellow card, but with us having lost both of the second halves we’ve played against sides down to ten men 1-0, we should perhaps be grateful to, rather than angry at, referee Mark Heywood for his laxity!

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

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