Draw inches City further away from drop zone, but same issues remain.

CoymayScott Malone’s seventh minute cross is misdirected by a foot or two or Kenwyne Jones doesn’t quite get the right contact on his header and City don’t score the goal that gave them the lead at Hillsborough against Sheffield Wednesday for more than an hour before having to eventually settle for the 1-1 draw that ended a run of four consecutive defeats. Those are the sort of fine margins that mean that the wolf has been kept from Russell Slade and his teams’s door for a few days at least.

Without Jones’ goal, from one of only two on target efforts by City, yesterday’s match would have panned out like so many others in the horror run that has seen us win just one league match in our last ten. There was the usual inability to maintain a decent level of performance for anything like the whole ninety minutes as a opening half that might not be able to be described as dominant, but relatively untroubled would do, was followed up with a second spell thats tone was set in it’s first fifteen seconds as the home side hit the woodwork.

City were able to show what I suppose has to be seen as one of the few strengths this team has in that second half as they, yet again, absorbed an awful lot of pressure to emerge relatively unscathed – Hillsborough, can thus be added to Ewood Park, Craven Cottage, whatever Pride Park is called these days, the AMEX Stadium and the Valley in the list of grounds where we have got away with a draw despite having to come through spells where we were completely overrun in the middle of the park.

The last ten words of the previous sentence in many ways say all you need to know about Cardiff City during 2014/15. It appears that no matter who the manager picks (and four of them have had a go at it now!), no matter what formation he uses and no matter who he signs, we just cannot get enough possession of the ball to ever get into a position where it feels like we are in control of the game – twenty nine matches played now and I can only think of maybe three (the home encounters with Huddersfield, Ipswich and Forest) where I have felt confident we were going to win going into the final ten minutes – in the last of them, a late goal for our opponents meant we were clinging on desperately to the three points at the end.

In his early days at the club, our manager talked about stability and the need to build partnerships. With another change of formation yesterday, that seems an awful long way time ago now, but there is some evidence, hardly compelling mind, to suggest that we might have home and away formations these days. Recent home matches have often seen us use a 4-2-3-1 system whereby a striker is supported by two wingers and a number 10, but yesterday there was a return to the 4-4-2 with a midfield diamond that was used at Norwich and Middlesbrough.

The high ball to Kenwyne Jones often seems to be just about our only attacking option from open play - you can complain about his lack of mobility and occasional lack of desire, but I dread to think where we'd be without his goals this season.*

The high ball to Kenwyne Jones often seems to be just about our only attacking option from open play – you can complain about his lack of mobility and occasional lack of desire, but I dread to think where we’d be without his goals this season.*

If 4-2-3-1 offers attacking width aplenty, the same cannot be said of our “away” formation especially when it was Craig Noone (who was the subject of a bid from Norwich on transfer deadline day) and Kadeem Harris who made way for newcomers Eoin Doyle and Conor McAleny – I’m showing my age here but my first reaction when hearing the team for yesterday was to think of the name given to describe England’s 1966 World Cup winning team, the wingless wonders.

As it turned out, the two new boys were among our better players, Doyle missing a good chance to mark his debut with a goal, but doing well overall with his industry and movement, while McAleny played a leading part in the creation of the goal and, judging by Russell Slade’s post match comments has already impressed the manager with his quick feet. From the very little I’ve seen of McAleny, I’m hoping that he is the natural number 10 we’ve lacked so far this season as all the others who have had a go at playing there have done is prove that it’s not a position they are at home in – now, all we need is a natural in the sitting midfielder/Makelele role and we might be getting somewhere!

One of the other things Doyle and McAleny seem to have added is a bit more attacking pace – something that was desperately required with the decision to leave out our two quickest forward thinking players. This should have offered the opportunity to hit Wednesday with effective counter attacks as the home side chased an equaliser and that’s why it was so disappointing to hear the manager talk about us not having the composure required to exploit such opportunities when they arose.

This brings me back to what I’m pretty sure is going to be my overriding feeling about this squad when I recall it in the future – just how poor it is when you consider how much it cost to put together and to pay in wages. Russell Slade had taken to saying, very often, in his media appearances that we are in a period of transition – this is an approach often used by under fire managers in a bid to deflect attention away from poor results and performances, but, to be fair, it’s also true this time.

New signing Eoin Doyle misses his big chance to mark his Cardiff debut with a goal, but he and fellow newcomer Conor McAleny probably did enough to keep their places for Tuesday's match with Brighton which may mean a return to 4-4-2 in home as well as away games.*

New signing Eoin Doyle misses his big chance to mark his Cardiff debut with a goal, but he and fellow newcomer Conor McAleny probably did enough to keep their places for Tuesday’s match with Brighton which may mean a return to 4-4-2 in home as well as away games.*

However, it’s felt like we were in team going through a transitional phase for about eighteen months now as players arrive and depart at a bewildering rate and one of the downsides of this is that those who have been here all along can be either ignored or pushed to the back of the queue. I’m thinking here in particular of Matt Connolly, a player who I still maintain should have been a regular starter this season. Granted, he’s not been at his best lately (but who has?) and giving away a slightly dodgy penalty within minutes of coming on for the injured Lee Peltier isn’t going to help his cause, but this is a player whose recent career path has seen him fighting and winning promotion battles for Championship clubs and yet he’s now, at an age when he should be approaching the best years of his career, reduced to being a bit part player in a team being sucked towards the relegation zone.

This constant shuffling of the pack in the apparent belief that every one who is at another team has to be better than what we have got here already is a sure fire sign of a club lacking an identity or coherent plan – I daresay all of these recent “periods of transition” were entered into with a clear aim in mind, but then everything soon gets ripped up as it’s decided we have to start all over again.

Although he will be staying at the club in an advisory capacity, yesterday’s game gave Wednesday fans the opportunity to say goodbye to owner and Chairman Milan Mandaric following the takeover by a Thai based consortium in the last week and it was interesting to hear what manager Stuart Gray had to say on the matter in his post match press conference;-

“When you’ve heard the chairman speaking, he’s handing it over to proper football people who want to get into the Premier League, like I do and the players do.”

As a Cardiff fan, I read those words I’ve highlighted and think “if only, if only” – it’s not the sole cause of all that has gone wrong in the last season and a half, but I strongly believe that the outlook would be a lot healthier for the club if our owner overcame his apparent mistrust of “proper football people” and got at least one of them in to act as a conduit between dug out and Boardroom.

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

 

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged | 4 Comments

The most pleasing City game I’ve seen this season.

CoymayWhen you consider that I watch nearly all of the home games played by our senior, Under 21 and Under 18 teams, a claim like I’ve made in the title of this piece should be quite an accolade to those involved, but given that the senior team is the worst Cardiff outfit I’ve seen in terms of value for money and the Development side has forgotten how to score at Cardiff City Stadium, it’s not really that impressive – 2014/15 is not a season that will linger long in the memory when it comes to the quality of football on offer unless we see a dramatic, and very unlikely, upturn in performance between now and May.

To be fair to the Under 18s, they’ve done their bit to keep the entertaining football flag flying this season, but, for a lot of the time, they’ve been fighting a lone battle – before today their matches with Brentford, Crystal Palace, Bristol City and QPR had all been good games of football and I’m afraid the seniors and Under 21s (who have been a very enjoyable team to watch in previous seasons) have not been able to manage that many between them.

Two of those four matches I mentioned were lost which proves that it doesn’t need a City win for me to rate a match as being entertaining and/or enjoyable – I’m talking about a quality game of football.

So, it’s not just for what must look the obvious reasons that I say that this lunchtime’s 5-0 win over Ipswich by the Academy team at Leckwith was the most pleasing game I’ve seen a City team involved in over the last six months.

I was going to say that there has been a debate in recent weeks about the rigid and one dimensional long ball game being played by the first team, but that wouldn’t be true because a debate by definition requires opposing sides to put their arguments forward and no one, not even Russell Slade, has been speaking in favour of the cave man football we’ve been playing.

So, while your team winning by five is always satisfying, I find it doubly or triply so when they do it by playing good, passing football completely removed from what we’ve had the misfortune to watch from the first team lately.

Eli Phipps - an assist along with two more goals this lunchtime in the 5-0 win over Ipswich , I think he's probably got the most goals in a season for any City player since we gained Academy status by now.*

Eli Phipps – an assist along with two more goals this lunchtime in the 5-0 win over Ipswich , I think he’s probably got the most goals in a season for any City player since we gained Academy status by now.*

 

Before going on to talk about the game, I should, as always, offer apologies to any player or friends and family of a player who I may misidentify – without team sheets and names on players’ shirts, it’s very hard to  be certain that you are getting names right. So, bearing that in mind, I’ll start by saying that the “number 10” role has become very trendy lately or, to be more accurate, calling the player who is the creative link between midfield and strikers, a “number 10” has become very trendy – the role, usually in central rather wide areas, is not a new one, but the name currently applied to it is pretty new (when someone like Paul Brayson or Jason Bowen played there ten to fifteen years ago it was called playing in the “hole”).

Anyway, City have had two players vying for the number 10 role this season – most of the time, it’s been filled by Jamie Veale, but Lloyd Humprhies has played there as well. I’m pretty sure I’m right in saying that both of them started today with Veale operating alongside captain Robbie Patten in a deeper central midfield partnership.

Having two “footballers” in your central three should mean that you will be trying to play in a way that will best utilise them and this is what City tried to do in an even first half on a pitch that wasn’t exactly difficult, but hard and slightly bobbly, thus making a sure touch a requirement if you were going to be able to pass the ball well. By and large, City passed the ball slightly better than Ipswich during the first forty five minutes, but there was little to come from it in the way of an end product – in fact, apart from a shot that flew a couple of yards wide by left back Dylan Rees, I cannot remember a real threat on the visitor’s goal as the game went into added time at the end of the first period.

City’s lack of punch could be at least partly attributed to Ipswich’s high work rate which denied the home side space in the middle of the park and on the flanks and it was the visitors who looked the more likely scorers for much of the time. In saying that, it wasn’t as if they were peppering the City goal, but they were able to work themselves opportunities for first time shots from distance which meant that they were probably well clear in terms of goal attempts – none of them came close to troubling Joe Massaro in the home goal mind.

Massaro impressed though when he was quickly off his line to snuff out what looked to be a good chance for the visitors as one of their strikers burst on to a long ball around the half hour mark. I mentioned earlier that City had barely had a shot as the match went into added time at the end of the first period and yet, although Ipswich were offering little going forward as well, I found the game quite watchable because two evenly matched sides were putting everything into it – it was one of those matches where the first goal, if one was going to come, would be very important.

City continued to probe patiently, but one passing movement in which they kept the ball impressively for a long period ended when one of their centre backs passed straight to an Ipswich player and within seconds they were having one of those pot shots from distance that flew high and wide. This showed the dangers in playing like City were, but when the visitors lost possession in  a similar position about thirty seconds before half time, they weren’t quite so fortunate as Abdi Noor took the ball down the right towards the byeline and then pulled back a low cross that was side footed home from six yards out by Eli Phipps.

Lone striker Phipps had done some good closing down work before that, but, overall, had not really featured much – however, give this young striker a chance and he invariably puts it away (he must have scored more than fifteen times this season by now).

So, half time arrived with City having got that first goal. Ipswich had good reason to feel hard done by given the way the game had gone, but, forty five minutes later, they could have few complaints about the outcome as City turned on the style to score four high quality goals without reply.

The first of these goals arrived about ten minutes after the interval when the ball was worked right to Humprhies who played a lovely pass out to City’s right back who flighted a delightful cross for Phipps who made the yard he had gained on his marker count with a fine header into the corner of the net. City now began to play some lovely stuff with right winger Noor to the fore – first, one of his crosses looked set to provide Phipps with an easy opportunity for his hat trick until a desperate intervention by the Ipswich keeper who a minute or two later, did well to turn aside a shot by our number eleven after another good Noor cross.

Ipswich had responded positively to going two down as a cross flew dangerously close within seconds of the restart and a bit later, a well struck snapshot forced the impressive Massaro to make a flying tip over the bar, but the balance of the game had changed and, in complete contrast to the first half, it felt like there could be a goal every time City went forward. As Ipswich tired, City’s clever passers in midfield were getting that extra little bit of time and space, with Humphries in particular coming into his own after a largely frustrating first forty five minutes.

Abdi Noor - the gifted winger caused Ipswich plenty of problems with his elusive running, dangerous crossing and clinical finishing.*

Abdi Noor – the gifted winger caused Ipswich plenty of problems with his elusive running, dangerous crossing and clinical finishing.*

With Patten yet again showing what a fine player he is at this level and Veale’s neat touches becoming more of a feature, City were now dominant in the middle of the park and a third goal duly arrived when a Phipps’ clever flick put Rees I think it was in down the left and his low cross was met by Noor on the near post to guide in another quality goal.

Ipswich’s frustration at seeing a game they had been well in for so long slip out of their reach so conclusively boiled over after a very strong Patten challenge that the ref saw nothing wrong with and, for a short while, things looked like boiling over only for normality to be restored fairly quickly.

With Phipps and Humphries substituted, it looked like the game was meandering towards a quiet ending, but the last five minutes saw City again demonstrate the class they showed on the day with another couple of goals. I was a  long way away from these two efforts as I made my way towards my car, but I’m pretty sure it was our number eight (who I’ve been assuming was Veale) who got the first of them – whoever it was, it came from a powerfully struck shot from what looked like some way out into the top corner of the net and the scoring was completed when Noor I believe it was burst on to a through ball to slot home to send City into next week’s match against Swansea in fine heart.

Everyone played well for City today, but, besides those I’ve mentioned already, I thought the centrebacks (Sam Williams and Ashley Baker I believe) both showed a promising blend of defensive solidity mixed with composed and constructive passing ability.

Finally, a very good lunchtime’s work by City’s youth teams was completed by another 5-0 win, this time for the Under 16s against their Ipswich counterparts.

* pictures courtesy of http://www.cardiffcityfc.co.uk/team/the_academy/

Posted in The kids. | Tagged | 4 Comments