The Swansea/Cardiff divide in 2014.

CoymayIn what may come to be seen as the Cardiff equivalent of the famous “crying jack” interview from about twelve or thirteen years ago, local journalist and City fan Steve Tucker has stirred up something of a hornet’s nest with this piece on the current situations of Cardiff City and our rivals to the west, Swansea City. I must say, I think it’s a generally fair and pretty impressive piece with some capital city one upmanship thrown is as well to stir things up a bit! I don’t wholly agree with the use of the word “chasm” in the headline when it comes to on field matters because, unlikely as it might seem now, City could still be in the same division as the jacks next season (I’m assuming they aren’t going to get relegated) and the history of Cardiff/Swansea matches down the years tells you how it’s been impossible for one team to establish dominance over the other whenever they are in the same league.

Sadly though, I think “chasm” is a perfectly fair word to use in describing how the club’s compare in terms of off pitch matters such as financial and business management as applied to football. Swansea have a coherent policy and a playing philosophy at their club they’ve stuck with for a decade or more while at Cardiff there always appears to be some kind of discord and a playing style which seemed to change every ten minutes under our former manager!

Anyone wondered what would have happened if Cardiff City had gone into Administration in the summer of 2000 instead of being taken over by Sam Hammam? My guess is that the club would have gone down the Swansea route of starting afresh again, twice, and, who knows, we may have ended up with the same sort of arrangement that the jacks had after their second Administration in 2002 whereby fans (through a Supporters’ Trust) were given a say in the decision making process – would the jacks have been taken in by a “white knight” like Sam Hammam, supposedly, riding to the rescue when they were in Administration as well? My guess is they would.

Fair play to Swansea, in the last twelve years they have become everything we aren’t, but if I was a jack, I’d now be counting my blessings that there wasn’t a Hammam on the scene at the Vetch back in 2002.

Ridsdale Hammam

So, while Swansea went one way and prospered with the best period in their history, we’ve also had fifteen years of relative prosperity on the field at least, but, haven’t we paid a very high price for what success we’ve seen.

You can almost break the last 14/15 years into three periods of five years each at Cardiff City. Early on we had Sam Hammam whose bluster and bravado fooled a lot of people for a long time – they were exciting times, but the Kav’s, Thorne’s and Prior’s were all bought with money the club could never earn and, at one time, we, reportedly, had the third highest wage bill in the Football League despite us being in the third tier!

Hammam put us £30 million in debt (the debt was, I believe, £1.3 million before he arrived) and, worse than that, the club were lumbered with the £24 million loan note debt which would eventually see them taken to Court over with Langston (the company the debt was owed to) “representative” Sam Hammam to the fore! City had a brush with Administration themselves in March 2005 when the wages couldn’t be paid and a chastened Hammam brought in former Leeds Chairman Peter Ridsdale to try and sort the mess out before being forced out of the club himself in December 2006.

This saw the start of the Ridsdale era which, in general, saw a more realistic approach in terms of spending, but, even so, the debt level refused to come down despite a policy of selling the team’s best players every season along with talented youngsters who it seemed the club were trying to sell as soon as they broke into the first team. There was still the tendency towards spending money the club didn’t have both in terms of transfer fees and wages though, but, just as with Hammam, we were told our financial worries would be a thing of the past once the new ground was built.

To his credit, Ridsdale delivered where Hammam couldn’t in terms of the ground, but it was far from the panacea to the club’s financial woes it was promised to be. Ridsdale couldn’t  deliver as far as the club’s finances were concerned and things got so bad that season tickets for season 10/11 went on sale in October 2009 in a desperate bid to raise revenue for the club – there was also the dubious “golden ticket” scheme where fans were told the proceeds of season ticket sales would be spent on new players in the January transfer window, remind me, who did we end up signing that month?

Ridsdale was eased out by the new Malaysian investors in 2010 and, for a while, it seemed we had struck it lucky because billionaire Vincent Tan paid off the taxman, thereby removing the threat of possible liquidation through the courts, and provided funding which enabled the club to bring in the likes of Craig Bellamy and Aaron Ramsey (albeit on loan). Speaking for myself, 2011/12 is my favourite season in recent years. We reached a League Cup Final and, we may have failed, but, unlike so many other Cardiff sides from the Hammam era onwards, we failed heroically – the football wasn’t always great, but we had a team that seemed to give everything they had every week and we weren’t throwing money about like there was no tomorrow.

It was too good to last. In March 2012 Vincent Tan (who must have been as popular an owner as we’ve ever had at the time) decided he was going to be more “hands on” in his relationship with the club – it wouldn’t be fair to say it’s been downhill all the way since then, but let’s say the snakes have been quite a bit longer than the ladders! Tan Hammam

In the early days of Tan’s closer commitment to the club, it was often said that he might not know much about football, but he’s a shrewd business man who will not repeat the mistakes others at the club made in the decade before he arrived – if only that were true!

I’ll not go into details here about the examples of poor off field management at the club over the past two and a half years because I want to be able to watch the Reading match in nine days time, but, suffice it to say, the failure to use people with experience of football administration and  financial practices has I believe cost the club an awful lot, not just in financial terms.

Tan likes to give himself a fresh start from time to time which means he doesn’t have to take a share of the blame for things that happened under his watch. Hence the Committee that was set up around this time last year to discuss and make decisions on future transfers in the wake of the deals of the summer of 2013 that are still being investigated amid allegations of malpractice and yet were signed off by his appointee  and the inference that he was an innocent bystander when the decision, now seen to be a disastrous one, to appoint Ole Gunnar Solskjær was made.

On the subject of managers, I wouldn’t be too critical of most of them in terms of what they managed to achieve on the pitch despite all of the off field shenanigans – nothing has been proved against Malky yet except that he was stupid and indiscreet when it came to his text messages and Dave Jones’ teams may have had a tendency towards mental frailty, but he did a good job for the club given the circumstances he worked under. However, I’ve got to make an exception with Ole – I take no pleasure in saying this, but I’m struggling to think of a single saving grace to his time at Cardiff (his signings were poor, the, supposedly more attacking, football dreadful, results were shocking, his team selections mind boggling, tactics baffling and the Mackay induced team spirit evaporated very quickly).

As stated above, I don’t believe there is a “chasm” between the two clubs when it comes to on field matters. True, we fell an awful long way in the nine months when Ole was here, but differences in playing terms are small compared to what else separates Cardiff City and Swansea City.

1Ole

I’ve mentioned before that while Vincent Tan fails to deliver on promises made two and a half years ago regarding a new training ground (if I’m being honest, I’d not be too bothered if this came to nothing mind) and a debt to equity conversion, he remains no more than another Sam Hammam spending money left, right and centre and then leaving the club to pick up the tab – the truly worrying thing is that the figures involved now are so much more than they ever were under Hammam.

So far this season, Vincent Tan has opted not to come to any games this season preferring to make pronouncements on how things are going so well at Cardiff from his ivory tower in Kuala Lumpur. If he does get to take in a game this year (particularly one at Cardiff City Stadium) he may notice a few changes, because gradually throughout 2014 the feelgood factor at his club has been disappearing (not that there was much of it about in the latter months of 2013).

To me, this is another area where there is a “chasm” between the football clubs in Wales’ two biggest cities. Forty miles down the road from here is a club where a feelgood factor has been around for about a decade – it’s fun in so many ways being a Swansea fan, whereas at Cardiff, Tan’s rebrand has been a leading factor in turning his club into one lacking joy, enthusiasm and hope. Truth is though that Vincent Tan is not solely responsible for any chasm that exists between the two clubs – there’s a roll of dishonour starting with Sam Hammam that should be given their share of the “credit” as well.

 

Posted in Out on the pitch, Up in the Boardroom | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

City stop the away rot (kind of).

CoymayOn 19 October last year, Jordon Mutch put us ahead after ten minutes at Chelsea. Just over two months later, he netted our consolation goal fifty seven minutes into a 3-1 defeat at Liverpool on 21 December. In between those two goals, City played a total of 497 minutes without finding the net in an away match. Given that the two sides Mutch scored against were to finish third and second respectively in the Premier League last season, the identity of the sides who shut us out is quite surprising – trips to Norwich, Villa, Stoke and Palace were all considered winnable at the time, but although we ended up taking points at Carrow Road and the Britannia Stadium, the fact we couldn’t score against any of them played a large part in the change of perception of Malky Mackay’s team from one that could survive in the top flight to bona fide relegation candidates.

There are definite parallels between that run and the one the current team are having in front of goal on their travels after yesterday’s goalless stalemate with Birmingham at St. Andrews took it to 430 minutes without an away goal since Kenwyne Jones equalised for us at Brighton on 30 September and with our next five away matches being against teams currently in the top ten of the Championship. the potential is there for the current run to stretch well past last year’s.

This is especially true when you consider who we have played in our last four away matches – Blackpool, Bolton and Birmingham were all in the bottom three when we took them on and Milwall had not won in eight games. When we were drawing our away games without playing well in August and September, these were the matches that were supposed to lead to us climbing into the top six as the squad start to look as good as everyone kept telling us it was. Instead, we have had to rely on a 100% cent record in our last four matches to keep us in touch with the Play Off places, but the momentum such a run at the Cardiff City Stadium should have bought us has not arrived because of our woeful away results and, importantly, performances.

The current scoreless run is already comfortably the worst we’ve had at this level since our promotion in 02/03 and the conclusion I draw from that is that it’s all very understandable because our away performances have been the worst I’ve seen over a significant number of away games during that time – we really have been that bad away from home this season.

When a side isn’t scoring, attention will always fall on the strikers – on many occasions, this can be unfair because there are others missing the chances, but you have to say that, in recent away games at least, the few worthwhile opportunities we’ve had have fallen to our front men. Yesterday, Federico Macheda, who still doesn’t convince me with his all round play, but is at least scoring in home games, missed the two best chances we had, while Adam LeFondre, who always puts in a shift, but cannot buy a goal at the moment (the one he thought he got against Ipswich has, apparently, been taken off him by the dubious goals panel), had a couple of opportunities he might well have put away in more confident times.

Three months into the season and Adam LeFondre still awaits his first goal in a competitive match. I suspect the prospect of facing his former club in our next match  will be enough for Russell Slade to keep him in the team, but even our manager's faith in our misfiring striker must be ebbing away by now.*

Three months into the season and Adam LeFondre still awaits his first goal in a competitive match. I suspect the prospect of facing his former club in our next match will be enough for Russell Slade to keep him in the team, but even our manager’s faith in our misfiring striker must be ebbing away by now.*

Kenwyne Jones is still off on compassionate grounds following the murder of two of his cousins in Trinidad last month and so wasn’t available for selection at Bolton and Birmingham, but it was a brave decision a month ago by Russell Slade to drop the man whose goals had been responsible for our 1-1 draws at Blackburn, Fulham and Brighton in favour of the players who have formed our front two since he took over at the club and, so far, it’s, at best, arguable if Macheda and LeFondre have repaid our manager’s faith in them.

When a team is creating so few chances on their travels I suppose it’s inevitable that there is a degree of anxiety involved for the person it falls to when one does come around, but Macheda and LeFondre are being paid more than most players they’ll face this season (as well as quite a few in the Premier League I daresay) to convert them – LeFondre in particular is struggling badly in that department of the game at the moment and, surely, there has to come a time when Russell Slade must seriously think of switching the attacking personnel and system (which we keep being told is an attacking one) for our away matches.

4-4-2 away from home under Slade has not delivered against three sides of the type this squad, laughably described as the best in the history of the Championship a few months ago, should be trampling all over if what we are told about it in the papers is to be believed. My own view has always been that we were not as good as the hype told us we were, but, on the other hand, we really should be doing a lot better than five points, and five goals, from nine away matches – particularly when you consider that six of the teams we’ve faced are currently in the bottom eight of the division.

Birmingham striker Wes Thomas is shown the red card by referee Kevin Friend after an off the ball scuffle with Sean Morrison who had to leave the field with a head injury. In truth, the sending off happened so late in the game that the only real effect it had was to virtually ensure us the draw at a time when the home side had been putting us under a lot of pressure.*

Birmingham striker Wes Thomas is shown the red card by referee Kevin Friend after an off the ball scuffle with Sean Morrison who had to leave the field with a head injury. In truth, the sending off happened so late in the game that the only real effect it had was to virtually ensure us the draw at a time when the home side had been putting us under a lot of pressure.*

All things considered, there were less changes from the Bolton game than I was expecting (especially when you consider Bruno Manga’s absence was an enforced one due to injury). Our manager’s continuing faith in LeFondre especially is, understandably, getting him criticism on the messageboards and, while the return of the fit again Anthony Pilkington for Joe Ralls was a predictable change, there was more flak coming Slade’s way when the news came through that Fabio, generally regarded as one of our best performers this year, had been left out. I can see why this decision would annoy people, but, having heard the guarded praise the manager gave when asked about the player (he was complimentary about Fabio’s play going forward, but less so about his defending) and seen two of the goals at Bolton come down his side, it didn’t come as a complete surprise to me – it had also been predicted by some in the local media.

In the event, I think it has to be said that Russell Slade could claim his defensive changes in particular worked as City managed just their fourth clean sheet in their last thirty nine league matches. Was it a coincidence that two “old faithfuls” from the promotion team of two seasons ago were in our back four yesterday? Ben Turner (solid and effective in his first Championship game of the campaign) and Matt Connolly (unlucky to have lost his place due to injury after being just about our most consistent player in the first six weeks of the season), along with Aron Gunnarsson, are players who were deemed to be not good enough for the Premier League by many of the critics – that may well be true, but they are proven performers at this level and, with the Icelandic international being possibly our most reliable performer since Russell Slade took over, I’m far from convinced that, with the possible exception of Bruno Manga, the expensive players brought in to replace them are an improvement on them.

Given that Connolly’s worst performance by some distance this season came when he played at left back against Norwich, Slade got it right in my book when he moved John Brayford over to the left to become Fabio’s replacement and slotted Connolly in at right back. Connolly will never be the attacking threat that Fabio can be and Turner will never be as composed on the ball as Bruno looks, but what we had yesterday was a back four that knows all about defending at this level and I don’t believe it was a coincidence that it resulted in our opponents firing a blank.

That’s one reason why yesterday can be seen as an improvement of sorts and another is that I believe that, for the first time this season in an away match, the claim “this was a game we could and should have won” had some justification to it. If we are going to improve to a level where we begin to look like the away team we have been at this level over the past decade and more, then the process is more likely to start with the sort of scrappy and grim encounter we saw yesterday than it is with us playing superbly and blowing someone away three or four nil.

So, I think yesterday has to be seen as a small step in the right direction, but the fact that we are talking about a draw, which offered continuing proof that we are getting things badly wrong at one end of the pitch, against a team who have an unbelievably bad home record as being some sort of progress, only goes to show how far we’ve fallen since Malky Mackay’s “boring” 2012/13 team ruled this league – all this with a squad which cost a lot less in transfer fees than this one did and I’m pretty certain it was paid significantly less than this one is.

Pictures courtesy of http://www.walesonline.co.uk/

 

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments