Cardiff City reverting to type after their best performance since October lifts them five places?

A Cardiff City fan who did not watch today’s 2-1 win at Queens Park Rangers could read that both of the goals came from headers from corners and be forgiven for thinking that this was another typical late 2023 type victory with an element of luck to it, but they would be wrong.

While there were things that could be criticised about City’s display, this was a well deserved win and I think the last time I could truthfully say that would be following either the Huddersfield or Bristol City games in October.

Where we were lucky I suppose is that the home team were without influential performers such as Willock and Chair, but we did a good job of beating what was in front of us on a ground where we had lost on five out of our last six visits and we were able to climb five places in the mega competitive middle reaches of the Championship to ninth.

I’ll mention that this takes us to within three points of the Play Off positions even though I feel talk of finishing in the top six with the current squad is pie in the sky. However, I can remember talk during the autumn about how Vincent Tan might be persuaded to “have a go” by spending more than anticipated in January if we were sufficiently close to the action to make a top six finish a realistic possibility.

Well, I’m not going to be a hypocrite and conveniently forget I have been criticising the squad for being short on basic technical qualities when it comes to ball control and giving and receiving passes, but, despite these fundamental faults, we have been able to stay within contention and we’ve managed to reach the opening of the transfer window in a much healthier shape than I was expecting us to do about a fortnight ago.

Erol Bulut and his players should be applauded for this. Realistically, we will need to sign some excellent players in the next four weeks or so to be challenging for a top six place come May, but, in a way, you can say that the current players have kept their part in the bargain and now need the help in the shape of new players to take the next step.

I’m not aware of any news yet regarding how serious Karlan Grant’s injury which forced him off the pitch against Leicester, is, but he was missing today as City made a couple of changes from Friday with Rubin Colwill coming in for Grant and Yakou Meite for Josh Bowler.

With the home side having lost the momentum three successive wins in late November had given them and currently on a run of five winless matches where their only goal has come from an opposing player, this was the sort of game that even a struggling City side should be looking to win, especially as Rangers have the worst home record in the division.

The early minutes were encouraging from a City point of view as, rather than sit back and look to absorb pressure like they have been doing recently, they took the initiative and while they weren’t steamrolling the home side they were forcing them back with the ball being played forward in a pleasant change from recent weeks.

City’s superiority was built around the fact that our midfield three were in control – Joe Ralls after a below par showing against Leicester was back in more typical 23/24 form and was able to play the whole game, Manolis Siopis was much more like his old self as he turned in his best display in weeks and Ryan Wintle again showed that he’s a better player than he’s often given credit for – I’d still prefer to see someone else used in the number ten type role, but there was no doubt that Ralls, Siopis and Wintle were a trio that worked well on this occasion.

Ralls would soon show as well that his poor set piece delivery on Friday was just a blip when, on sixteen minutes, his inswinging corner was powerfully met by Dimitrios Goutas from ten yards and his header flew beyond Asmir Begovic and into the corner of the net.

What was most impressive about the Greek centreback’s fourth goal of the season was that two Rangers defenders had a hold of him at different times as the corner came over, but  he was able to break clear of them to get his head on the ball.

Having been encouragingly positive in gaining a lead, we now come to the first of two aspects of the game that I found a bit disappointing. The first was that against opponents who were playing poorly and had the crowd beginning to get on their back, we could have put the game beyond Rangers if we’d been able to step things up a bit and chased a second goal.

I say that while recognising that this was the fourth match of a tough and unforgiving holiday programme and so there may not have been much left in the tank for many of the players, but we seemed to be content to just hold on to our lead, albeit against opponents who just could not get their attacking game going at all.

Rangers couldn’t keep on playing so badly though and in the five or ten minutes before half time there were signs of a change in the balance of power- rather like City, dominance did not equal chances galore for QPR, but there were little signs that the home team could be in business where previously there had been no hope for them.

The second disappointing aspect was how City started the second half. The word “passive” has been used quite a lot in recent weeks to criticise the team’s attitude and there was more of it here as the home side stepped up the intensity after the break and soon equalised when sub Rayan Kolli’s crossed to the far post where Paul Smyth got free of Jamilu Collins to jab a close range shot past Jak Alnwick.

The game was there for the winning for Rangers now, but they were unable to take the next step and it was soon City who were suggesting they had a second goal in them.

It was Colwill, again looking the City player most likely to “make something happen”, who was most responsible for the change as he, first, went on a surging run that ended with him getting away a shot that brought a fine save from Begovic as he tipped the ball around the post. From the resultant corner, it was good to see us trying something different as the ball was worked to Colwill whose first timer from twenty five yards had the keeper diving again to turn the ball aside.

Another player to improve on recent performances was Josh Bowler who came on for Kion Etete as Meite switched to centre forward and it was the winger who next forced Begovic into action as he made what might have been his best save from Bowler’s shot from the edge of the penalty area.

Around this time, there was some booing from the away fans when Colwill was taken off and replaced by Ollie Tanner, but, within seconds, Colwill was joining in with the celebrations as Begovic blundered this time by coming for, but missing, Wintle’s corner to leave Perry Ng with a simple far post header to record his fourth goal of the season.

Ebou Adams and Jonathan Panzo came on for Siopis and Collins as City looked to see out what was now a much more end to end game and this they largely did without alarms apart from when they got in a mess dealing with a long throw and Meite’s header fell to sub Sinclair Armstrong whose header from no more than five yards looked to be crossing the line only for Alnwick to claw it out with the save of the game.

One final thought, it strikes me that City are reverting to what they’ve been for three seasons now – strugglers at home who find it very hard to create chances and a more dangerous away team who have it in them to score goals more readily than at Cardiff City Stadium possibly because they are able to play on the break without the expectation which comes in home games..

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Seven decades of Cardiff City v Queens Park Rangers matches.

Is it really as long as four years ago that City played at QPR on New Years Day and were thrashed 6-1? -What a way to begin a new decade!

What tends to get forgotten about that match is that a few months later, we were contesting the Play Offs and, after what has become our traditional defeat in the home leg of a Play Off Semi Final, we gave Fulham the fright of their lives at Craven Cottage and were not far short of making the Final.

I think a repeat of that end of season outcome is very unlikely this time around unless Erol Bulut is able to come up with some superb signings during the next few weeks and we get a few months free from injury from an Aaron Ramsey playing like he was back in September, but, famous last words, I’m not expecting another New Year’s Day massacre tomorrow – I’d say a tight affair with no more than a single goal winning margin either way is more likely.

Whatever happens, a Happy New Year to all readers and good luck with these questions on tomorrow’s opponents – the answers will be posted on here on Tuesday.

60s. Born in an area of London that’s football club used to be have the word Avenue in its title, this forward played nearly all of his league football with QPR and, although not an automatic choice in the first eleven during the period in the late sixties which transformed the club, he was a regular member of it, as can be evidenced by his one hundred and seventy odd league appearances for them. His visits to Ninian Park were, apart from one occasion, always in a losing cause and when it was time to move on, he had a lower division reunion with a former QPR captain at a club not too far to the north. By now though, his career was on the wane and he dropped into non league football after a season going on to play for Barking and then Ware where there was another reunion at both clubs. Who am I describing?

70s. This defender started his career in London playing for a team which never really came close to regaining the top flight place it had lost a few years earlier while he was with them, but they did have a memorable day which, unfortunately, he played no part in. QPR were his second club and he was a part of a promotion squad there although the rise in standards involved meant that he was, to a large extent, the sort of casualty you always tend to find when a team goes up as some regulars turn into bit part players. Eventually, he opted to leave London and move south to a club that became a promotion rival of City’s in his first season there. He scored in his first and last home matches for this club with the latter occasion being not too long after they’d gone up – that signalled the end of his playing career, although he did manage a couple of clubs at non leaguer level, the second of which are now members of the EFL, can you name him?

80s. Stand in room only is the way you would have had to watch this forward at his peak! (5,8)

90s. He played thirty nine times for his country and played in three Cup Finals (two in European competition) for his first team. He scored the winning goal in one of those matches, but is probably best remembered now for something that happened after the game had ended. He also played a couple of matches against City for QPR during this decade, who is he?

00s. A Ramsay, Oliver or Stein used only in a shelter?

10s. Name the six former or future City players who were on QPR’s books in 13/14.

20s. Who or what links the following grounds, Plainmoor, the Bob Lucas Stadium, the Recreation Ground, York Road and Cardiff City Stadium?

Answers

60s. Ian Morgan played on the wing for QPR between 1964 and 1973 before following long time club captain Mike Keen to Watford for a season. He finished his playing days in non league football where he was joined in the Barking and Ware teams he played for by his twin brother Roger who had also been a team mate of Ian’s at QPR.

70s. Ernie Howe was a team mate of Bobby Moore and Alan Mullery at Fulham in the mid seventies, but he missed out on an appearance in the 1975 FA Cup Final against West Ham. Howe played for QPR between 1977 and 1982 before finishing his playing career with Portsmouth where he was a member of the team which won the 82/83 Third Division Championship with City finishing runners up. Howe later managed Basingstoke Town and Sutton United.

80s. Simon Stainrod.

90s. Northern Ireland international Steve Morrow was a member of the Arsenal side which beat Sheffield Wednesday 2-1 in the 1993 League Cup Final – in fact, he scored the winning goal, but, when captain Tony Adams attempted to pick Morrow up and carry him on his shoulders, he slipped and Morrow broke his arm in the resulting fall. This injury caused Morrow to miss the replayed FA Cup Final against the same opposition, thus robbing Morrow of two more probable Final appearances, but he went on to play in the Arsenal teams that contested the European Cup Winners’ Cup Finals in 1994 and 1995, the first of which was won. In August 1999, Morrow was in the QPR side beaten over two legs by City in a League Cup tie.

00s. Lee Cook.

10s. Brian Murphy. Armand Traore, Gary O’Neil, Junior Hoilett, Jay Bothroyd (on further checking, it may be that Bothroyd left QPR on a Bosman before pre season training for 13/14 started) and Ravel Morrison,

20s. QPR forward Sinclair Armstrong has terrorised the City defence in recent games against his club. Armstong scored QPR’s first goal in their 2-1 win at Cardiff City Stadium in August, but that remains the only goal he’s scored in forty four EFL appearances for QPR and his only other goals have come in loan spells to Torquay and Aldershot. He scored in a home match for Torquay against King’s Lynn (Plainmoor), a win at Weymouth (the Bob Lucas Stadium) for Torquay, a draw with Aldershot at Maidenhead (York Road) and a home win for Aldershot (Recreation Ground) over Notts County.

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