Mediocre season for City youngsters.

CoymayShortly before City entertained Nottingham Forest ten days ago, our Academy side brought their season to an end with a 0-0 draw against Barnet at Leckwith. This was the club’s ninth season at Academy level and there was a change this year as City were placed in a league with other Category Two sides (this link explains what a Category Two club is) . Previously, we had been placed in a league with the same teams every season and as this included clubs like Spurs, Villa, Reading, Watford and  Leicester (I’m pretty sure the first four are category one clubs now, while Leicester were very strong at this level and often won the league), I have to say that, having seen eight out of our ten home league matches this season, my impression is that the standard is lower than it was in our first eight seasons as an Academy club.

I’m grateful to Queens Park Rangers’ official website for including  a pretty up to date league table for the Under 18 league we compete in (why can’t our website do this?) . I’d say that just looking at the clubs involved would lead people to conclude that it wasn’t as strong a league as the one we used to be in – trying to be fair, I don’t think there’s a huge difference in the standard and it’s probably not right to jump to too many conclusions after one season. From memory, we finished in lower mid table in every one of the eight seasons we had under the previous system (I think we always finished between sixth and eighth in a ten team league) and so I suppose it could be claimed that it was more of the same this time around in terms of our playing record.

However, I don’t remember many, if any, seasons where we lost half of our league matches  (and this in a league which I believe is a bit weaker than the one we were in don’t forget), so I’m afraid 2012/13 was a far from vintage season for our Under 18’s. It should be said mind that Declan John, Josh Yorwerth and new signing Rhys Healey were barely seen in the team this season because of their Under 21 team commitments and so City were hardly ever fielding what would have been their strongest team at this level – when Yorwerth and Healey did feature, Swansea were thrashed 6-1 at Cardiff City Stadium. Similarly, the team gave a Nottingham Forest outfit which reached the Semi Final a tough time of it before succumbing 2-1 at the City Ground in the Youth Cup.

So, you get the feeling that City could have done better if the object of the exercise was to win as many Under 18 matches as possible, but it also needs to be said that the likes of Kane Owen, Tommy O’Sullivan, Theo Wharton, Jaye Bowen  and Gethyn Hill (before he was badly injured half way through the season), who all played their parts for the Under 21’s during the campaign, were available for most games and you would have thought that they had the ability and experience at this level to have enabled us to win more of them. That’s one of the reasons why, although O’Sullivan especially looked  a very talented played at this level at times, I wouldn’t nominate one of the “seniors” as my Under 18 player of the season – that goes to Brad Williams who pipped Ben Watkins to the award.

Just a couple more things about the Under 18’s. Firstly, I understand why people at the club say that it is all player development at this level, but the thought does occur to me that, after nine seasons of pretty similar playing records and league finishes, there is an argument to say that Cardiff City’s Academy has not advanced at the same rate as the senior side has during that period. Our first season as a club with an Academy was 2004/05 when we had our only relegation battle since we got back to the second tier in 2003, but we developed into one of the strongest sides in the Championship over the past five years, culminating in this season’s success – the Under 18’s have stood still while the senior side marched on ahead. It’s to be hoped that our change of status will have beneficial effects when it comes to youth recruitment and development – Cardiff has produced arguably the most successful Premiership player ever, the man reckoned by many to be the World’s third best player at the moment and the player who has starred at the top level for almost fifteen years before he came back to help his home town club to promotion in the last two decades and you’d like to think that, from now, City would at least be plausible contenders to sign similarly talented locally produced players in the future.

The House of Sport indoor training facility which enabled City to achieve Category 2 status under the new rules classifying football clubs' Academies. *

The House of Sport indoor training facility which enabled City to achieve Category 2 status under the new rules classifying football clubs’ Academies. *

The second point is that maybe the Cardiff City class of 2012/13 isn’t as bad as I’ve made them out to be. Although the club have not confirmed it yet, there have been messageboard reports that nine scholars have been offered pro terms by the club – this is far higher number than I can ever remember since we got Academy status. As I mentioned, nothing official yet, but, just by looking at Twitter messages, it looks pretty certain that Owen, Yorwerth and Hill have been offered contracts along with goalkeeper Dave Richards and striker Dane Griffiths.

Turning briefly to the Under 21 side, their place in the end of season Play Offs was confirmed almost a fortnight ago, but Charlton’s 3-1 win over Millwall yesterday means that the South London side were able to complete a notable double by  winning the Under 18 and Under 21 leagues that we compete in. We finished runners up on goal difference and so will face the Champions of the Northern section, Leicester City (who included Martyn Waghorn, Jamie Vardy and Ben Marshall in the team which drew 1-1 with Forest yesterday). Looking at the last paragraph in this link  from Charlton’s website, it looks like the Semi Final will be a one off away game, possibly at the Walker’s Stadium, or whatever it’s called these days, and, if we win that match, then I presume the venue for the Final would be decided on a toss of a coin?

Finally, we’ve only been a Premiership club in waiting for six days, but it’s already obvious that the national media are treating us very differently – everyone now wants to have their say on Cardiff City! To illustrate what I mean, there’s still eleven days of the 2012/13 Championship left (considerably more than that for the clubs who make it to the Play Offs) and yet the names of rumoured new players for 2013/14 are being chucked at us from all angles – here’s a decent looking team and subs bench of “transfer targets”;-

 

Bond (Watford)

 

Byram (Leeds)

Pearce (Reading)

Van Dijk (Groningen)

Bridge (Man City)

 

Williams (Palace)

Ramsey (Arsenal)

Ledley (Celtic)

Robson-Kanu (Reading)

 

Kalou (Lille)

Finnbogason (Herenveen)

 

Subs

Brayford (Derby)

Zamora (QPR)

Mackie (QPR)

Phillips (Blackpool)

LeFondre (Reading)

Eagles (Bolton)

Buckley (Brighton)

 

There’s a fair few names there who I’d be very happy to see us signing, but I’d be amazed if something like 85% of our signings this summer will be domestically based players as indicated here.

 

* Picture courtesy of http://www.cardiffcityhouseofsport.co.uk/

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2012/13 side second most successful Cardiff team after 1927 FA Cup winners?

CoymayHull’s feeble 0-0 home draw with relegated Bristol City (this season just gets better and better!) on Friday virtually guaranteed us the Championship title, but yesterday’s 1-1 draw at Burnley confirmed it and I suppose it would be nice now to see us get the two points needed from our last couple of games to give us a record tally for a season. This would give the current team another record to use as evidence to back up a claim that the 2012/13 side is right up there amongst the most successful Cardiff City teams ever.

The sobering truth though is that they probably have done more than enough already to guarantee themselves a top three place (at least) because the simple fact is that, if you measure how successful a side is by the trophies it wins (and that seems the most logical way to do it), then the current team doesn’t have many rivals for the title of our most successful ever. In ninety three years of Football League existence, Cardiff City have, to put it mildly, not been very good at winning things – obviously, there’s the FA Cup in 1927, but what else? Well, there’s been plenty of  Welsh Cup wins, but I’m struggling to think of anything else apart from the Third Division (South) Championship in 1946/47, that side won their league with a phenomenal sixty six points (ninety six in today’s money) despite only playing forty two matches, and the 1992/93 team who won the title in what I still call Division Four – they also managed a Welsh Cup win to further their claims.

So, by winning the domestic game’s second tier this season, the current team has proved itself to be Cardiff’s most successful ever in terms of trophies won in the Football League in my book because our only other two league winners did it at a lower level than them. However, to win a competition open to the best in the land surely has to be the criteria by which any contender for most successful City side ever has to be judged and so the 1927 FA Cup winners have to come out on top in my opinion, but I think the current side have certainly done enough to be classed as runner’s up to them.

The players and staff who made us all so proud and happy - congratulations and thanks to each and every one of them.

The players and staff who have made us all so proud and happy – congratulations and thanks to each and every one of them.*

Does that make them the second best City side ever? No, for me it doesn’t – I’m not really sure if the 1927 side (who finished fourteenth in the First Division in 26/27) were the best ever City team either. For a start, the 1923/24 side which came so agonisingly close to winning the First Division title, were more consistent at the highest level and there were four sides in the twenties and one in the fifties who finished in the top half of the best domestic league of their time who the current team would be absolutely delighted to emulate next season. As for the teams I’ve seen since 1963, I suppose the 70/71 side which came close to promotion, won the Welsh Cup and played some superb stuff to reach a Cup Winners Cup Quarter Final with Real Madrid would be the main contenders.

Turning to yesterday’s game, over the past few days I saw the hope being expressed that the team would be able to show what they were really capable of as the reins came off after promotion had been won and for forty five minutes they did just that. However, even as they had Burnley chasing shadows with their movement and ability in midfield and Craig Conway was scoring a fine goal from open play that gave the lie to any theory about us only being dangerous from dead ball situations, City were showing a weakness which I believe will be mentioned as evidence against them when the 2012/13 team’s merits are discussed in the decades to come.

Craig Conway celebrates his superb title winning goal.

Craig Conway celebrates his superb title winning goal.*

 

The gap between the teams in the first half was a huge one, but, even then, City reminded me in some ways of a cat that has caught a mouse or a bird, toys with it for some minutes and then allows their prey to escape. Although I accept that yesterday was not the day to be too judgmental on the side’s level of performance, that inability to go for the jugular (in the form of doubling their lead) and finish the job off when dominating is something which has stopped what is a very good side becoming a Reading (in 2006) or Newcastle that completely dominated the Championship in winning the title in my opinion.

I presume it was sheer frustration that led to Ross Wallace’s cynical and cowardly assaults on Kim Bo-Kyung, but that was no justification for a couple of elbowings which were, in my opinion, far more calculated and intentional than the one which got Forest’s Darius Henderson a red card against us last week. Kimbo ran the game in the first half as the three man central midfield shone once again and Conway showed that he has a fine all round game to go with his industry, but, although it was never as one sided as the opening forty five minutes had been, Burnley did a lot better after the break (credit to Sean Dyche for the half time reorganistaion which made his side far more competitive than they had been) and in the end it was hard to begrudge them an equaliser in added time which could mean so much for their season.

In different circumstances, City’s inability to get the three points after dominating so much would have led to calls for Malky’s head on the messageboards and a fair amount of stick directed at team and manager on here, but, for the second successive match, it was what the game meant, rather than the game itself, which was important. City needed a point on each occasion and a point is what they got, therefore any criticism of their performance should be of the very mild variety only.

I can't see the City sides I grew up watching doing this to Jimmy Scoular somehow!

I can’t see the City sides I grew up watching doing this to Jimmy Scoular somehow!*

Even though it’s always frustrating to concede an equaliser after the ninety minute mark. if it has to happen, then yesterday was the sort of time when it should and yet there were a few things about Burnley’s goal which say so much about why we are Champions of this league. Firstly, having been part of a defence which was under pressure for much of the second half but, apart from on one occasion, never looked being breached, captain for the day Andrew Taylor picked up a knock immediately before the goal which I believe led to the equaliser – Taylor’s lack of mobility and full concentration meant City weren’t as organised as they normally would be and Burnley took advantage of the slight delay in getting someone over to try and cut out the cross as the other City players realised our left back wouldn’t be able to.

Even allowing for that though, David Marshall (who, after having nothing to do for eighty six minutes foiled Danny Ings with a brilliant save on the one occasion Burnley opened us up during normal time) almost kept out Edgar’s point blank header – I must admit to being a bit sceptical when I first heard Malky Mackay describe Marshall as the best goalkeeper in the Championship some months ago, but, after watching him in the last few weeks when it really mattered, I’ve got to say our manager was right. The final thing was to see Kevin McNaughton’s annoyance when the ball hit the net – the goal didn’t mean a great deal from City’s point of view, but, in that moment when he realised that he maybe could have done more to prevent Edgar scoring, our full back showed the sort of desire which was one of the factors which has put us ahead of the other twenty three Championship teams.

The end of the game saw some great scenes as the players and backroom staff celebrated winning the title – as Malky Mackay said in a post match huddle which must have included about thirty people, these are great times and we should enjoy them fully while we can.

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

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