Huddersfield too good for City Under 21s.

CoymayLast week a fine second half comeback saw Cardiff City’s Under 21’s score three times in ten minutes to turn a 2-0 deficit into a great 3-2 win over Charlton at the Valley, but, the boot was well on truly on the other foot last night when Huddersfield scored three times in three minutes just after half time to record a 3-1 win after they had trailed at the break.

To be honest, any other result than a Huddersfield win would have been an injustice as they showed exactly why they won the North Section of Division 2 of the Under 21 League last season and why they are top again this year with eight wins from their last ten games. City’s half time lead was very much against the run of play and, if anything, the two goal margin of defeat flattered them slightly – on the evidence of what I’ve seen so far, the third season of this league structure is going to be the first one in which we have not qualified for the end of season Play Offs.

City’s side featured Kadeem Harris who I believe was making his first appearance back after an injury which took longer to repair than the club anticipated – he certainly played like someone lacking match fitness, there were a couple of flashes of what he is capable of, but he was nowhere near the exhilarating performer he can be at this level and was taken off after an hour or so looking like someone in need of more game time.

There was also a name I didn’t know in the team. My mate who was at the game with me was mainly responsible for finding out that Elliot Newby was released by Bolton at the end of his Academy scholarship and it seems he has been playing for Barrow since then – I presume he was playing last night as a trialist. If he was, then I’m not sure he did enough to convince City to take him on – he faded in the second half and, physically, at times he looked what he was really, that is a boy playing against men. That said, he also showed on occasions that he has a lot of natural ability and, if it was my decision to make, I think I’d want another look at him before making a final decision – here’s a video of him in action if any one is interested in seeing what he is capable of.

Newby made an immediate impression by revealing his dribbling ability and then getting in a weak shot that the Huddersfield keeper made something of a meal of before diving on the ball before Etien Velikonja could pounce, but that was the last time City got close to their opponent’s goal for a long time as the visitors took over for the next half an hour or so.

Huddersfield, with Adam Hammill one of four players in the side with first team experience, were dominant both physically and in footballing terms during this period and centreback Joe Wright should probably have done better than steer his header on to the cross bar when presented with a good chance about eight yards out, while Hammill forced City keeper Charlie Horton into a good save as he cut in from the left and the American Under 20 international did even better when he managed to palm a low shot by Sondre Tronstad wide.

Although Velikonja showed an exemplary attitude as he worked hard in his lone attacking role and was often seen encouraging his younger team mates, City were offering little going forward at this stage, but there were a few encouraging signs as they began to win more tackles and this helped them to retain the ball pretty impressively for quite long periods.

Tommy O'Sullivan - better off playing first team football elsewhere than playing Development team football at Cardiff with, seemingly, no chance of breaking into the senior side?*

Tommy O’Sullivan – better off playing first team football elsewhere than playing Development team football at Cardiff with, seemingly, no chance of breaking into the senior side?*

It was shortly after the best of these passing moves had ended with a shot which went well wide, that City were awarded a penalty. Newby started the move off by impressively creating a bit of space for himself and then hitting a beautifully weighted pass out to left back Kane Owen who didn’t have to break stride as he fed Macauley Southam who was upended by Jacob Hansen for a clear penalty which captain Tommy O’Sullivan converted by sending keeper Allinson the wrong way.

Despite City’s improvement, it was still in no way a deserved lead, but the confidence they gained from it helped take them to half time with no more alarms and they could contemplate the possibility that they were on their way to what I would say would have been the best victory of the season so far given the quality of the opposition.

Within minutes of the restart however, such thinking was made to look ridiculous as Huddersfield put the game beyond City with that devastating three minute goal burst. That said, the visitors had considerable help from City with each of the goals. Both of the first two came from free kicks conceded after City had carelessly lost possession – for the first Rekeil Pyjke was unmarked to head home and then he was left with a simple tap in after City had failed to deal with what looked a pretty innocuous delivery.

While the defending of the outfield players wasn’t perfect by any means for either goal, I’m afraid that Horton had to take a major share of the blame for them – for the first, he was caught in no man’s land as he left his line to to try and catch or punch the free kick, but ended up being stranded on the six yard line and he was even more culpable for the second as he dropped what should have been a simple pick up at Pyke’s feet.

Within no time, Southam dived in to try and intercept a pass and left Hammill clear to run in on goal, Horton kept out the angled shot this time and was blameless as the rebound was swept in by the other over age Huddersfield player, Joe Lolley.

Huddersfield’s general supremacy meant that it was never the most enthralling of games even before they scored and it became even less so now. City used all three subs and Harris’ replacement David Tutonda, who I’d only seen play at left back before last night, showed that he can be a powerful and effective runner with the ball, but, even though City were able to finally cause the visitors some more defensive problems as they pushed more men forward, the closest either side came to another goal was when right back Brad Wickham (the best of the first year pros on show last night in my view) cleared off the line to deny Huddersfield a fourth goal.

Before I finish on the game itself, just a quick word about the ref. Generally, I try not to mention them on here – especially when we lose, because it sounds like sour grapes. However, it seemed me that referee Mark Lawrence tended to favour Huddersfield throughout. This was best illustrated when having, rightly, booked Newby for shirt pulling a few minutes earlier, he played advantage after Huddersfield’s Duanne Holmes was seen clearly grabbing the shirt of the City player who was bursting clear of him. A few seconds later, the ref had a quiet word with Holmes, but took no further action – it was poor, inconsistent officiating, but at least he noticed the obvious shirt pull, unlike the one he missed by the visitor’s right back early in the second half.

Although both of them made the odd mistake, I thought our best players overall were O’Sullivan and Deji Oshilaja, but I can’t help thinking both of them would probably be better off playing first team football somewhere on loan rather than almost stagnating at a club where their chances of breaking into the first team appear to be practically nil. City seem to have this “save them for a rainy day approach” with their better younger players (I’m thinking of people like Joe Mason, Harris, O’Sullivan and Oshilaja in particular here) whereby they don’t seem to want to get rid of them for not being good enough, but they are all nowhere near the first team and, yet, when watching this season’s insipid away performances in particular, I can’t help thinking sometimes that it’s pouring down already!

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

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Top two finish a realistic target now for Wales.

Coymay17 November 1993 was a watershed moment in Welsh football – it signaled a sea change in the fortunes of the round ball game in a land where it is forever fighting an unequal battle against it’s “national sport”, rugby union. Of course, it was hardly a case of success all the way before then, but, after Romania beat us 2-1 at the old National Stadium twenty one years ago, we went from being an outfit good enough to beat the World Champions Germany in 1991 to one that was losing 3-2 in Moldova and 5-0 in Georgia in qualifying matches within a year.

It seemed that the psychological impact of another near qualifying miss where penalties had played a significant part (possibly a second occasion where there had been a death at one of these very important nights in less than a decade had an effect as well), but the departure of coach Terry Yorath didn’t help either. Also, although they’d play on for a while yet, Wales’ best players were going over the top (Southall, Saunders, Rush and Hughes were all in the team hammered in Tbilisi) and, hardly surprisingly, there weren’t the players coming through to seamlessly replace them.

The truth is that Wales have only had one decent tilt at qualification for a major tournament since then – the Play Off defeat by Russia for Euro 2004 when a team that also contained  a lot of players coming towards the end of their international effectiveness won the first four matches in their qualifying group.

However, and not before time, a second serious Welsh bid for qualification since Paul Bodin’s penalty miss all those years ago looks on the cards after last night’s excellent 0-0 draw in Brussels against Belgium (rated the fourth best team in the world in the latest FIFA rankings). Wales may have lost top spot in the group as Israel continued their excellent start to their campaign with a 3-0 home win over Bosnia, but I believe their chances of being at the 2016 European Championship Finals have to be rated higher than they were before the latest round of fixtures.

Eden Hazard was Belgiium's biggest attacking threat by some distance, but, on this occasion, he is foiled by Wales' most under rated player Chris Gunter who I still think should be playing for City by rights.*

Eden Hazard was Belgium’s biggest attacking threat by some distance, but, on this occasion, he is foiled by Wales’ most under rated player Chris Gunter who I still think should be playing for City by rights.*

I’ve only watched the game once and so may think a bit differently when I have a second look at it, but, although Belgium had the majority of the possession and pressure, I didn’t think they had that many chances to score because Wales were pretty effective at blunting them. In my opinion, the outstanding Joe Allen and, to a lesser extent, Joe Ledley did such a good job in screening the centrebacks that the hosts were unable to get to see the whites of Wayne Hennessey’s eyes too often.

When they did though, the keeper was in fine form with his best save being the one quite early on which denied Chadli after a very neat one two with Origi and his handling in the closing stages as the home team resorted to knocking more crosses in was assured. Without the injuries which have caused him so many problems, I believe Hennessey would only have the peerless Neville Southall in front of him as the best Welsh keeper of the past fifty years, but he’s still young for that position and, if he can stay fit (with Boaz Myhill having retired from international football, an injury to Hennessey could be almost as serious for us as one to Gareth Bale), he can still fulfill the promise of his early days in the national team.

Even the best keepers need some luck though and Hennessey certainly had it when Lombaert’s beautifully struck shot smacked off the inside of the post and bounced out not long after Chadli’s effort, but, although the irrepressible Eden Hazard always threatened to do something special which would unlock the Welsh defence, the last hour or so saw few real threats on the Welsh goal until the dying seconds when Benteke’s header was kept out by what seemed to be a combination of Hennessey and the covering Bale.

Thinking about it, that was the most expensive player in the world’s most important contribution of the ninety minutes and, if there was a down side to Wales’ night, it was that for long periods of the first half especially, Bale was reduced to something of a spectator who sometimes had to close down Belgian defenders when the ball was in their half.

I can understand why Chris Coleman (who had another good night and was vindicated in his selection of  a flat back four when many, myself included, were calling for three centre backs) used Bale as a striker given the injuries to Simon Church and Sam Vokes, but I’m not entirely convinced we are getting the best out of our most influential player when he is not involved for such long periods of a game.

If the Welsh midfield as a whole did a good defensive job, they were not as successful in providing the pass which would give Bale, and others, the chance to get the goal which could have got us three points not one – the only time Bale was a threat in open play was when he shot narrowly wide from an opportunity he virtually created on his own.

If we had an Aaron Ramsey operating at somewhere near his best, then I’m sure Bale would have seen more of the ball in areas where he could have hurt Belgium, but, like a lot of players at Arsenal this season, the playmaker is not looking too confident at the moment (a recent injury is probably not helping matters either). I didn’t think Ramsey was poor last night, but, for a player with such a good technique, the ball is taking a fraction of a second longer to “stick” with him than it normally does and so he is playing passes under that bit more pressure, hence the accuracy isn’t quite there.

Even with Ramsey firing on all cylinders, this Wales side has the same weakness that all better ones I’ve seen have had – they all had one department of the team where they were significantly weaker than the rest of it. In the seventies, we were let down by what was a threadbare strike force on the frequent occasions when John Toshack was out injured, while, the early eighties saw the advent of Rush and Hughes cure our striking problem, only for us to have a decade where the midfield no longer had the creators needed to feed them (if only Builth Wells born Kevin Sheedy had opted to play for the land of his birth!). Ten years later, we had a nice balance in midfield and Bellamy and Hartson up front, but we were weak at full back (especially if Mark Delaney wasn’t available) and short of depth at  centreback.

Four goals scored from four matches tends to tell a story and even with our injured strikers available, this is a barren era for Wales qualified senior players who play up front, with no obvious candidates to improve things coming up through the youth ranks as far as I can tell. Therefore, it would appear that, with the probable exception of the the final match at home to Andorra, all of the remaining games will be tight and tense affairs where wins after conceding two or more goals will be thin on the ground.

If things come down to goal difference (unlikely in the current format which shows goal difference in matches between the sides who finish on the same number of points applies before all other games are considered), then the signs already are that Israel and Belgium will pip us, but if we keep on playing with the discipline and organisation which has seen us concede only from a penalty and  a goalkeeping error so far, then we can make the top two in this group-.

Aaron Ramsey may not be firing on all cylinders at the moment, but he proved the old adage about class being permanent and form temporary to be correct last season and I see no reason why he can't do it again.*

Aaron Ramsey may not be at his best at the moment, but he proved the old adage about class being permanent and form temporary to be correct last season and I see no reason why he can’t do it again.*

Cyprus shouldn’t be ruled out yet after their 5-0 win over Andorra, but I don’t see them sustaining a challenge through to the end of the campaign and, unlike some, I view Israel’s win over Bosnia as a good thing. I say this because if it means that with just two points from four matches, the number one seeds in the group cannot afford to lose another game if they are to reach the eighteen point mark that is taken by many to be the number needed to make sure of automatic qualification and with Bosnia still to go to Belgium, they are going to find that difficult.

The decision to expand the Finals competition to twenty four teams had already given us our best chance of qualification for a major tournament in a decade. My suspicion always was that, if we were going to make it to Euro 2016, we would do so through a third place finish and victory in the Play Offs, but, lack of quality strikers notwithstanding, I’m quite a bit more optimistic of a top two finish now because it’s looking increasingly likely that it will be Israel who’ll be our main rival for automatic qualification. Israel have done very well up to now and, historically, they don’t lose too many qualifying group matches, but there’s a solidity, star quality and depth to this Welsh squad that we’ve not seen for a generation or more.

That might seem a bold claim, but, when you look at the team that faced Belgium, besides Bale, we had five players who are, arguably, first choices in the strongest team their Premier League side can field (Ashley Williams, Taylor, Allen, Ledley and Ramsey), a couple of Premier League players who are not regular starters at their clubs, but are proving themselves on the international stage (Hennessey and Chester) and three Championship players, two of whom have played quite a bit of Premier League football in their careers. You look at the teams the other nations in the British Isles have put out over the past few days and only England are stronger in my book – the Republic and Scotland have that bit more depth than us, but with Premier League regulars Dummett and Collins on the bench last night, we have real strength in depth in some areas of the pitch at least.

I know FIFA rankings can be baffling at times, but with twenty four European teams taking part in the tournament in France in 2016, shouldn’t the country whose football team is currently rated the twenty first best in the continent have real grounds for believing they will be one of them – our biggest guns have not really fired yet either.

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

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