My plan for keeping us up foiled as Under 21’s break the spell.

CoymayI’d figured out exactly how we were going to stay up this season – all the club had to do was pay for me to get to all of our remaining away matches and we’d be safe. No, this wasn’t me trying to con my way into getting to places like Newcastle and Sunderland, this was what looked to be a sure fire method of ensuring we would be in the Premier League next season. The reasoning behind my plan for us dodging the drop hinged on the fact that, suddenly, in football supporter terms anyway, everything I touched was turning to gold!

Somewhere along the line, I’d done or said something which had transformed City’s fortunes – as long as I was there in the flesh watching them. In the two days between the Hull City debacle on 22 February and the Under 21’s match with Charlton the following Monday evening, I’d inadvertently done the thing that was going to make all of the difference. What else could explain the fact that, since the Hull game, I had watched six matches (one City Under 16’s, 2 x Under 18’s, one Under 21, a first team match and a Wales international) and the team I had been supporting had won them all, with the one one game I’d not been present at (Spurs) having been lost.

So it was, I set off to Cardiff City Stadium yesterday lunchtime utterly confident that I would see out table topping Under 21 Development side beat bottom of the league Ipswich in their latest home game (the Under 21’s have a formidable record at Cardiff City Stadium as well).

The first inkling I got that things might not go to plan came when I saw the team sheet that was given to me as I entered the ground. Recently it seems that I have to write that the Under 21 side I’d just watched was the most inexperienced I’d seen us play at this level after every match I go to and that trend continued yesterday. Kadeem Harris (who had played for the first hour in that Charlton match I mentioned earlier) was missing, he was replaced by Anthony Bell, and we had someone called Robbie Cotton, a name which meant nothing to me, wearing the number eight shirt – I’ve subsequently done some research and it seems Cotton was formerly at Blackburn.

So, City’s side was, again, without any of the three over age outfield players they are allowed in this competition, but to be fair, there was only one familiar name in the Ipswich line up – Alan Lee, who is now combining playing with a coaching role at their Academy was leading the visitor’s attack.

What turned out to be an entertaining match in the Sunday lunchtime sun started off with City looking the sharper as Rhys Healey, seeking to add his excellent goalscoring record at this level this season, did well to get a shot away from a difficult angle which flew not too far wide and then Bell also didn’t miss by much with an effort from around twenty yards. With City only looking to have Josh Yorwerth physically equipped to cope with Lee and the two giant centrebacks in the visitor’s line up, Ipswich appeared to have an advantage from dead ball situations around the City goal and they came very close to exploiting this when centre half Omar Sowumni got his head to a free kick – it looked like a certain goal as keeper Ben Wilson was beaten and an Ipswich forward closed in to apply the finishing touch, but in a move which was very like Emerson Boyce’s matchwinning clearance for Wigan in their win at Man City a few hours later, Tom James did brilliantly to not only stop the ball going in, but also get it over the bar for a corner from only a yard or two out.

Ipswich did threaten at times in the first half after that, but never came as close to getting the first goal again, whereas City got on top in the minutes before the break with visiting keeper Michael Crowe doing well to keep Tommy O’Sullivan’s effort out, Healey having his effort blocked for a corner after intercepting a back pass and a combination of Crowe and one of his defenders denying Jaye Bowen.

It was something of a surprise that the match was still goalless at half time and the early signs were that the second period might not be as open as the first had been. The first fifteen minutes or so after the break only produced one opportunity for either side which both featured Ipswich centreback Matt Clarke -the first coming when he missed his header right in front of the City goal from about six yards out when he came up for a free kick and the second when he fired a Kane Owen cross towards his own net only for the ball to fortunately hit Crowe from point blank range and fly to safety.

After that freakish escape for the visitors I began to wonder if the game would ever see a goal when three of them came along in the space of about four minutes! For the first of them, Ipswich right back and captain Kyle Hammond did really well to go past three opponents and cross low from the bye line for Amir Berkane to fire low into the net for the visitors to go into a lead which flattered them on the balance of play. However, within less than a minute, they looked well on their way to the three points when another fine cross (this time from the left) enabled Lee to show his far post heading ability with an effort which was placed to perfection beyond Wilson to double the Ipswich lead.

Dane Griffiths - a dramatic late equaliser to rescue a point for the Under 21 Development side yesterday.*

Dane Griffiths – a dramatic late equaliser to rescue a point for the Under 21 Development side yesterday.*

Lee had been warned for use of the elbows on Yorwerth when they contested a high ball in the first half (it was the sort of incident which would have had the home crowd baying for a red card in a first team match, but in these more “genteel” surroundings, all that happened was that he got a lecture from the ref without seeing a card of any colour) and it typified an interesting physical battle between the two of them in which the City youngster did not back away an inch – Lee went off to applause shortly afterwards and gave the crowd an Ayatollah as he departed the pitch.

Facing their first home defeat of the season, City pushed Tommy O’Sullivan forward from midfield to accompany Healey and he got the goal needed virtually straight away when he broke clear from a Theo Wharton pass to round Crowe and calmly find the net.

With the game still not yet in it’s final quarter, it seemed that there was plenty of time for City to turn level things up and even go on to win, but, surprisingly, chances for either side were at a premium after that as the clock ticked  towards the ninety minute mark and, as the match went into added time there had only been a shot which flew just wide with Wilson beaten by Ipwich’s impressive winger Darren McQueen which threatened a goal.

For me, City had fallen into the trap of knocking in too many high crosses that were food and drink to the Ipwsich centrebacks and I couldn’t see them getting on terms, but, not for the first time (and certainly not for the last!), my opinion was proved to be completely wrong when James touched on a Luke Coulson cross which sub Dane Griffiths volleyed home in style to rescue a point with about a minute left of the four which had been signalled on the fourth official’s board.

City had done well to rescue a point which, for now at least, stretches their lead at the top to eight points, but my master plan for keeping us up was in tatters and it’s back to the drawing board now I’m afraid!

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

Posted in The stiffs | Tagged | 2 Comments

It looks like curtains for Fulham as City give themselves a chance.

CoymayCardiff City remain odds on for relegation with all leading bookmakers this morning and that has to be a fair reflection of their chances of avoiding the drop – City are still probably going to go down, but a Fulham side who were being tipped by many to be above us at 5 o clock yesterday afternoon look doomed.

The reason for that is that the Londoners were beaten 3-1 yesterday in the game that was billed as loser gets relegated by a media that were circling like vultures growing impatient for the first Premier League casualty of the season. City managed to avoid reading their obituaries this morning after a match which was everything you would expect from two sides deep in relegation trouble with the loser set to be cut adrift at the bottom.

That’s why I find the sort of comment that I heard in the media straight after the match and on messageboards from some City fans last night so puzzling. All of the radio reports I heard within an hour of the match finishing seemed to contain the words “no classic, but……..”, while there were plenty on the internet who weren’t happy with what they had seen.

I must confess that I’m at a loss to understand what those people were expecting from the game. At least, the presence of the word “but” in that quote I mentioned offered the clue that there was an understanding that in a part of the season where result is so much more important than performance, that applied more than ever to yesterday’s mother of all six pointers. However, there has been this strange season long insistence from some City fans that they be entertained while their side is battling to stay out of the bottom three – I find this baffling when you consider that this season was always going to be a struggle from first game to thirty eighth and we were hardly the great entertainers last year were we.

All I can think is that the people doing the complaining are too young to have seen City in a relegation scrap before or they have forgotten what tended to happen when we were in one. Actually, I can remember previous matches with Fulham quite late in the season when both sides were in danger of going down that were real blood and guts affairs with barely any quality on display – one of them finished 3-3 mind and must have been pretty entertaining for a neutral I suppose, but that was more down to the catalogue of mistakes being made than any brilliance by the players.

Having been present to see some true brilliance on Wednesday night, I accept that there wasn’t much of it about yesterday, but, despite what the doom mongers would tell you, there was some Premier League quality on show from Cardiff players. For example. after I was forgetting at times that Craig Noone was on the pitch during the first twenty minutes, the winger went on to become one of the game’s most influential performers – there were the usual infuriating moments from him, but, on the biggest day of the season so far, he largely delivered when the pressure was on and the cross which led to the third goal was a peach.

Fraizer Campbell's nifty piece of footwork enables him to get away a shot which forced Fulham keeper Stekelenburg into a diving save, but, in truth, it was the striker's defensive work which impressed most yesterday. *

Fraizer Campbell’s nifty piece of footwork enables him to get away a shot which forced Fulham keeper Stekelenburg into a diving save, but, in truth, it was the striker’s defensive work which impressed most yesterday. *

Steven Caulker got two goals, but also showed the sort of defensive qualities which marked his early Cardiff performances and, despite, one or two wayward passes, Gary Medel kept things ticking over in midfield while also performing his usual defensive duties better than many holding midfielders in this league – a word too for Declan John who just needed a bit more composure and confidence in the promising attacking positions he created for himself, but he was still the best full back on the pitch.

Other City players didn’t hit the same heights, but nearly all of them were not found wanting when it came to determination and a desire to work hard for the team – I didn’t think that was the case a fortnight ago when we capitulated to Hull. This time though, in a match where character and attitude was possibly more important than skill, there wasn’t much to complain about in those departments with two players for me eptimosing the City approach. Fabio still had his dodgy defensive moments, but he was sharper than previously, while if you had told me beforehand that Fraizer Campbell would be playing in a position where he had defensive responsibilities I would have been dreading the outcome, but he fulfilled the left sided covering role with typical unselfishness and in fact did surprisingly well – none more so than when he tracked back in the first half to break up one of the few Fulham threats we saw on he and John’s side of the pitch all afternoon.

Steven Caulker if congratulated by Craig Noone who provided the assist for the captain's first goal - the first City had scored in 445 minutes of Premier League football.*

Steven Caulker if congratulated by Craig Noone who provided the assist for the captain’s first goal – the first City had scored in 445 minutes of Premier League football.*

In fact, I would say apart from the enigmatic Kenwyne Jones, every City player was spot on as far as attitude went. I seem to be in a small minority who thought that some of Jones’ hold up play was pretty impressive – he’d be some player if he had Campbell’s mentality, but then I suppose he wouldn’t be playing for us if he did. Jones was probably too far out to beat Stekelenburg with first half header from a Jordon Mutch cross, but he put another easier opportunity from a pass by the same player too close to the keeper just before half time and missed a sitter when heading wide from another fine Noone cross just after the break.

At the time I was convinced that last miss would come back to haunt us, but, as it turned out, we managed to score three. Now, before yesterday, I had doubts whether we would score three more goals this season let alone in one game – I thought the chances of that happening were zero. Of course, it helps when you are playing against a side that has conceded fifteen more goals than anyone else in the division and Fulham’s defensive problems were neatly summarised in that sequence of three corners which ended with our second goal – for the first, Mutch was allowed to roll the corner kick to an unmarked Kimbo some fifteen yards from goal only for Stekelenburg to block the shot, then it needed a desperate late lunge to stop Campbell side footing in from six yards at the near post before Mutch went to the far post where Caulker and Campbell were both unmarked and the keeper made a mess of the former’s header.

It really was desperate defending, but City have to take confidence from the fact that they have ended their scoring drought and with, by the standards of this season at least, some style. Cardiff did not kick on and gain any benefits from their fortunate win over Norwich five weeks ago and with games against the Merseyside clubs to come in the next couple of weekends, the odds are that any benefits from the Fulham game will not come in terms of points, but then these are games where no one expects to take any, so anything we do get will be seen as a bonus – what has to be taken for granted now though is that, after the improved attitude seen at White Hart Lane and yesterday, Everton and Liverpool will be facing a City side which gives it’s all.

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

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged | 3 Comments