Dæhli shines in the archetypal game of two halves.

CoymaySuch has been the Under 21 Development team’s outstanding home form over the past season and a half, it’s hard not to treat last night’s 2-2 draw with Queens Park Rangers like a defeat. Last season the Under 21’s won all but two (a 4-1 loss to QPR , who are something of a bogy side for us at this level, and the 3-1 extra time defeat by Charlton in the Final of the Play offs) of the matches they played at Cardiff City Stadium and they had a 100% winning record there this season before last night.

This was therefore the first home draw at this level for City and over the ninety minutes I suppose this was a fair result, but I would say that if a team deserved to win, it was our youngsters because they had so many more opportunities to get that decisive fifth goal than the visitors did.

It was a strange game, with the first half seeing all of the goals scored – it was very entertaining fare for the opening forty five minutes with both sides eager, willing and able to play good football, but, as the rain emptied down after the break, it became a damp squib as two bedraggled teams tried, and failed, to recapture their first half invention and skill.

City started with two of their three recent Norwegian signings in the starting line up and Mats Møller Dæhli and Jo Inge Berget both played prominent roles in a fast start which, at times, threatened to overwhelm the visitors. City passed the ball crisply and swiftly from the first whistle and, although the first few minutes only saw them get close to opening up the QPR defence, it didn’t take too long for the chances to start coming. Left back Kane Owen was not far over the bar with his rasping twenty five yard effort and Rhys Healey’s superb lobbed finish after good work by Berget was ruled out by an offside flag – I was in line with the play for this and my feeling was that the linesman had got it wrong, but I suppose I would say that wouldn’t I!

Next it was Dælhi who tried his luck as his shot was blocked and fell to Jaye Bowen who shot from eight yards was diverted away by a covering defender, but City were now carving the QPR backline up at will and a goal had to come – when it did around the twenty minute mark, it was quite similar to the earlier disallowed goal with Berget again instrumental as he forced an error from the visitors central defence to play in Healey. This time the flag stayed down and when the young striker gets such a chance at this level there is almost an inevitability about what happens next – Healey opted to take the ball around the advancing keeper Lennox and then slide it into the empty net.

It seemed that this would be the first of plenty of goals in this game and, within two or three minutes, there was another one, but the problem for City was that this one ended up in their net. It has to be said though that it was a beautifully worked goal as Mike Petrasso finished off a neat passing movement with a fine shot placed high into the corner of the net from around the edge of the penalty area – this came from QPR’s first worthwhile attack of the game .

The match changed after this as, having been pretty sloppy in their ball retention up until then, the visitors went on to improve markedly in that department for most of the remainder of the game and, while it would be an exaggeration to say they dominated the rest of the half, it would be true to say they had more of the game than the City team. That said, when Petrasso scored  a second, well worked, goal with a shot low into the same corner of the net, it was hard not to feel sorry for Joe Lewis whose only real involvement in the game to that time had been to pick the ball out of the net after being beaten by two shots he had no chance of saving.

Lewis finally made a save when he beat out another Petrasso effort as QPR now enjoyed their best spell of the game, but, that apart, there was only really a header not far over the top from one of their centrebacks which threatened the City goal and, as it turned out, the visitors never came as close again for the rest of the game.

Although City never quite lost their earlier ability to test Lennox – for example, he had to beat out a shot from right back Luke Coulson and Dæhli forced him into a diving save with an angled effort from the right, there was a definite feeling that they needed to get to half time just the one goal down, but, as it turned out, they did better than that as the outstanding Mats Dælhi created a goal out of nothing by beating a defender and then cutting in on goal before finishing in fine style high into the net.

That lovely goal set the seal on a first half in which Dælhi had shown that the extravagant claims made about his potential were more than just hype. Allowances need to be made for the level at which the game was being played of course, but Dælhi’s display in the first half was an object lesson in what the term “close control” should mean because when he had the ball, whether it be looking for a pass or trying to take it past opponents, it almost seemed to be glued to his feet – rarely, if ever, did the ball get away from him in the manner that it did with his midfield partners Tommy O’Sullivan, Theo Wharton and Bowen (all of whom have good ball skills in my opinion), Dælhi was another level up.

Mats Dæhli, the real deal based on last night's showing.

Mats Dæhli, the real deal based on last night’s showing.

A textbook tackle to rob an opponent showed that Dælhi can handle the other side of the game as well and made me think that his long term future may lay in central midfield, but, for now, he’s probably too slight for such a position and the floating role he was given just behind the strikers suits him fine on this evidence.

Dælhi was one reason why I was genuinely looking forward to the second half during the half time interval – it had been one of the most entertaining matches I’d seen all season up until then and I had no reason to suspect it would be any different in the second forty five minutes.

Quite why games can tail off so much after a very watchable opening period or improve so much after a miserable opening is a mystery to me. I don’t think there was any change in attitude from either team, they both still were trying to win the game and not shut up shop, but, for whatever reason, the quality that was there before had now, largely, disappeared. After a sloppy period from both teams, QPR were still able to string lots of passes together for the last half an hour of the game, but,as mentioned earlier, there was little to bother Lewis from them.

What goalmouth action there was came from City – O’Sullivan and Wharton didn’t bother Lennox with long range efforts and, unusually for him, Healey failed to get a shot away after being worked into a promising situation, but it was Dæhli again who provided the second half’s real talking points. The main one came from a superb run past three defenders which took him into an excellent position, only for him to shoot straight at Lennox. The keeper was not called into action though after neat work by Berget sent Coulson clear down the right, but Dæhli’s scuffed effort from his cross was a poor one and went well wide, while his attempt to score a similar goal to his earlier one ended when his attempt to place the ball high into the opposite corner narrowly failed after he had cut in from the left.

Brighton’s win over Crystal Palace on the weekend means that City grip on top spot has been loosened a little, but the latest table  shows that they still have a handy lead and they certainly appear to be well on their way to securing the top two place which would see them in the end of season Play Offs again.

 

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Season defining minutes.

CoymayIf we end up getting relegated then I believe those last few minutes of the Sunderland match where we let a 2-0 lead slip against the team who were bottom of the league at the time will be seen as pivotal in our season. The draw they got that evening is one of the factors in Sunderland’s transformation from the certs for the drop they looked in the autumn to likely mid table finishers, but, on the other hand, before yesterday ,Cardiff had not earned a single point since then (including a very damaging defeat by relegation rivals West Ham as more points were dropped at Cardiff City Stadium) and had replaced the Wearsiders at the foot of the table as the appointment of new manager Ole Gunnar Solskjær saw no improvement – in terms of results anyway.

However, if we manage to escape the drop, then I feel two separate periods of play in yesterday’s 2-1 victory over Norwich City will be seen as season defining. At half time, with Sunderland and West Ham having already won, Stoke, Villa and Hull all leading and Fulham drawing after forty five minutes and themselves trailing to another team battling the drop, City were staring at a position whereby a gap that would have begun to look too big was in danger of developing between themselves and seventeenth position.

Within five minutes of the restart though, the match had been turned on it’s head as, aided by Norwich’s habit of giving them the ball in dangerous positions, City tore into their opponents and netted twice in an amazing two minute period which also saw Jordon Mutch foiled as goalkeeper John Ruddy just about managed to turn his shot around the post. Buoyed by being in the lead for the first time in a league game since that Sunderland match, City now set about trying to hold on to it, but the giveaway that night meant that, even if Kenwyne Jones’ unwitting deflection of Mutch’s mishit shot had gone in, rather than hit the post, to give us a two goal advantage, the last half an hour or so was always going to be a nerve shredding occasion.

Craig Bellamy makes his point about what he felt about the crowd reaction to the performance of one of his team mates after scoring the equaliser. Bellamy's goal came from as assist by Wilfried Zaha, the man who replaced the target for some (emphasise some) of the crowd's displeasure, peter Whittingham.*

Craig Bellamy makes his point about what he felt about the crowd reaction to the performance of one of his team mates after scoring the equaliser. Bellamy’s goal came from as assist by Wilfried Zaha, the man who replaced the target for some (emphasise some) of the crowd’s displeasure, peter Whittingham.*

In particular, this applied to the closing minutes, but, this time, Cardiff somehow got through them to emerge with their first league victory since beating West Brom almost two months earlier – the seven games since then having yielded just the one point. On top of the damage the result did to Norwich, Everton had also turned a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 win against Villa and Spurs had pegged Hull back to get  a 1-1 draw – Stoke had managed a 2-1 win over Manchester United, but, best of all, Fulham had been taken apart by Southampton with their 3-0 loss sending them to the bottom of the table.

Before continuing, I’d just like to make a short point about being the bottom club in any league. We spent a fortnight propping up the division and, even when the situation is as tight as it is in the Premier League, I think just being there has a corrosive effect as far as morale is concerned (certainly in the case of fans anyway) – we had to move off the foot of the table as quickly as possible. Fulham look to have made some good signings in January, but, with a gap of two points (and an awful goal difference) separating them from everyone else and a tough looking next four fixtures, there has to be a chance that they may be in danger of being cut adrift, to some extent at least, by the time they make their scheduled visit to Cardiff City Stadium on 8 March.

Anyway, back to those two periods which just could be the occasions which shape the destiny of our campaign. Each of three new signings had a part to play as City attacked with a verve, pace and quick thinking seldom seen previously this season. The quick thinking came when Craig Noone and Fabio combined from a corner as Norwich snoozed to work the winger into acres of space to deliver the cross which led to the winning goal. This, as well as a few others instances of what looked a promising attacking partnership with Noone, was the highspot of the Brazilian’s afternoon – not so convincing was some of his defending (hopefully rustiness caused by so little first team football lately was a major contributor to this).

Noone’s cross was bundled in at the second attempt by Kenwyne Jones to net his first Premier League goal since December 2012 – a stat which tells you so much about the latter period of his spell with Stoke. Rather like Fabio, his lack of first team football showed, but in Jones’s case it was more to do with him being out on his feet in the closing stages. Apart from that, he showed surprisingly quick feet for such a big man at times while not quite being as effective in the air as I expected him to be and, besides his goal, his most valuable contribution was his defensive work from dead balls as Norwich piled on the pressure late on.

By the sort of coincidence which football often seems to produce, the equaliser came from another player who endured a goalless 2013, but while Jones had managed a few goals in cup competitions, in Craig Bellamy’s case it was his first goal in any game since December 2012. The veteran forward looks to have had a new lease of life in recent weeks and he was effective here in a more central role behind lone striker Jones as he even managed a headed clearance off the line to preserve our lead.

The assist for Bellamy’s goal came from the newcomer who made the most impact in my opinion. Wilfried Zaha lifted both the support and his team when he came on late in the first half and looked like somebody with a point to prove. His pace, trickery and, on this evidence at least, good eye for a pass helped give the team a cutting edge which has been sadly lacking for most of the time this season and, if his attacking influence waned as the second half wore on, there could be little doubt about his commitment to the cause.

If I can just go off theme again for a short while, talk of commitment to the cause brings me on to the reason for Zaha’s very early introduction. Peter Whittingham was having a poor game and things came to a head with just about the worst free kick I’ve seen from him in his seven years at the club – Ole deserves praise for being brave enough to make the decision which changed the match while it was still in it’s relative infancy and , in general, I find his use of substitutes to be one of the most impressive things about him so far.

So, credit to our manager for the change, but not to some of our fans for their reaction, firstly, to Whittingham’s struggles while he was on the pitch and then to the sight of him trotting off the pitch. There must be an element of humiliation for any footballer who gets dragged off for reasons not relating to injury in the first half of a game, and I think it’s fair to say that there was an degree of sympathy in the applause which greeted the decision. However, there were also those who were applauding for the wrong reasons – Cardiff City have always had more than their fair share of fans who are suspicious of players who are talented footballers, but don’t “get stuck in” and I daresay that they were questioning Whittingham’s commitment to the cause as he tried to find his missing form yesterday.

However, just because he doesn’t go flying into tackles, it doesn’t mean Whittingham isn’t a brave or committed footballer. At his best, he is like Steve McPhail or Aaron Ramsey in that they always want the ball and are willing to be ambitious with it no matter how badly things may be going for them. For a lot of his time at Cardiff, Whittingham has been in the same mould – I find it sad rather than annoying that a player capable of so much now looks to the safe, but ultimately unproductive, option so often – I can understand the frustration this causes, but he deserved better than he got from some in the crowd yesterday.

Indeed, Craig Bellamy chose to criticise the attitude of the crowd in his post match interviews – he was right to do so in my view, but I hope he realises that it was only a section of the support that his remarks should be directed at. Even if the stick Whititngham received is put aside, it wasn’t good from the supporters yesterday. By and large, City fans have gone some way towards winning over critics who expected to see a repeat of the sort of behavior and attitude which blighted the club through the closing decades of the last century with things like the fantastic support at the Man City home game, the applauding of Aaron Ramsey’s goals and the aftermath of the Liverpool match seeing us being viewed as a positive addition to the Premier League.

However, for the second home game on the trot, the atmosphere was so flat in the first half and it wasn’t that great after the break either – I don’t think there’s a correct answer to the question as to whether the players should get the fans going or vice versa, but it was definitely a case of the former yesterday.

Of course, much of the anger and the lack of atmosphere is down  to anxiety caused by our league position and it was no surprise that people got nervous as Norwich put us under more and more pressure – in fact, I would say that the crowd was probably more of a hinderance than a help to the team as everyone feared another late, late equaliser from our opponents.

This takes me on  to the second of those periods which could turn our season. Somehow, we got through that last half an hour with our lead intact. According to the BBC stats, Norwich have had a total of fifty eight goal attempts in their two matches with us – the fact they only scored from one of them says a lot about why there are where they are in the table. Twenty seven of those goal attempts came yesterday and, just as at Carrow Road, we enjoyed our fair share of luck on the day – having the excellent ex Norwich man David Marshall between the sticks didn’t do us any harm either.

A trademark celebration, something that had not been seen during a Premier League match for over a year, from Kenwyne Jones after he scored the winning goal.*

A trademark celebration, something that had not been seen during a Premier League match for over a year, from Kenwyne Jones after he scored the winning goal.*

To add to this though, it has to be admitted that a lot of our defending yesterday was not very convincing, but here I’d like to offer a few mitigating factors;-

1. I’ve quite often watched Academy games at Leckwith on the morning of home matches that have been played in high winds, but yesterday was the first time those high winds were present in the first team game I watched a few hours later. The design of Cardiff City Stadium helps make wind less of a factor, but it was as bad as I’ve seen it yesterday and I think this was a reason why our defenders (it tended to be Ben Turner most of the time) sometimes allowed high balls to bounce – it looked bad, but I think it was more difficult to “set” yourself to attack the ball because it was moving about a lot in the air.

2. Ole wants to play a more attacking game and I think most of us are happy with that. Players like Noone and Zaha will help in that respect while we have the ball, but they aren’t the best when we don’t have it. Yesterday’s was the latest in quite a long line of recent goals where the right side of our defence was carved open too easily. I think a full backs relationship with his wide midfield player is as important as the one he has with the centrebacks and part of the defensive problems I mentioned Fabio had stemmed from the fact that he wasn’t getting great help from Noone. On the other side of the pitch, Declan John was left to fend for himself much of the time before Zaha came on and then, what help he got wasn’t the best. This is a consequence of the way Ole wants to play – sides wouldn’t get in down the flanks as often with Don Cowie and someone like Craig Conway offering defensive help, but Ole is more likely to take a risk than his predecessor was and so one of the consequences is we look less secure defensively.

The thing is, despite everything that was against us, the team got through and grabbed a win which, hopefully, laid the Sunderland ghost and, having done it once under Ole, then, perhaps, they won’t find it so tough the next time they are in front with not too much time left. Anyway, I’ll finish by saying that, despite it not seeming that way after the transfer window closed, we will have the new centre back which for me was a major priority for February onwards because former Spanish Under 19 international Juan Cala has been signed as a free agent following his release by Sevilla. On the face of it, his club being prepared to let him go doesn’t sound too promising, but, apparently, Cala had played nineteen matches in all competitions for his old club this season so he must have something about him.

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

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