Headlines you never thought you’d see (No. 461) – Cardiff City sign 21 year old England International.

CoymayThe announcement that Spurs and England defender Steven Caulker had agreed to join City didn’t quite come as the complete bolt from the blue (that word again!) that our signing of Andreas Cornelius was a few weeks ago. Speculation linking the centreback, who was a member of the Great Britain squad at last year’s Olympics, with us began on Tuesday and everyone who is anyone in the media was reporting that he was having a medical at Cardiff in the hours before the signing was confirmed yesterday evening.

However, for a fanbase that had been through the long drawn out saga of the Thomas Ince bid and the protracted, and still ongoing apparently, negotiations with Etienne Capoue and his representatives (Malky Mackay’s response to questions about our pursuit of the French international midfield player after our games at Cheltenham on Saturday and Brentford on Tuesday were very similar except that he didn’t say anything about the negotiations being at a “delicate” stage in his latest response), the speed at which the Caulker transfer was sorted out must have come as a shock.

Malky Mackay’s comments in this piece make for interesting reading – Spurs Executive Chairman Daniel Levy is a notoriously difficult customer at the negotiating table if you are a club after one of their established players (I’d say Caulker would fall into that category despite his youth) and you can’t help feeling that City’s recruitment team need to be complemented for stealing a march on other Premier League sides by getting in first for the player and then for getting the deal concluded in a way that gave those other sides little chance of sabotaging  it – Liverpool and West Ham, to name but two, were mentioned as clubs who might have been interested in the player and I get the definite feeling that our chances of signing Caulker would have declined dramatically if things had dragged on for a few days.

The news came as a different kind of shock for numerous Spurs, Bristol City and Swansea fans (Caulker had successful season loan spells at the latter two clubs before becoming a regular member of the Tottenham team last season) as well as various sections of the media who expressed surprise that, firstly, Spurs were willing to sell the player and, secondly, that he chose to sign for Cardiff. I’ll admit to sharing those feelings when I first learned of the deal, but, perhaps, the perceived “facts” in this transfer are not quite the correct ones?

For example, the widely held view is that it was Spurs who instigated the transfer – after all, with Dawson, Vertonghen and a fit again Kaboul to choose from and reports of other central defenders coming in this month, it maybe that Andre Villas-Boas decided that Caulker was surplus to requirements. There may well be some truth in that, but I’d go along with the suggestion that, with England likely to playing in Brazil next summer in the World Cup, Caulker figured he needed to be playing week in, week out in the Premier League to stand the best chance of making it into his country’s squad for what I still regard as the biggest football tournament of  them all – so, while the player might not have been actively looking for a move out of White Hart Lane, did the Tottenham hierarchy know that he wouldn’t be averse to one either?

If that was the case, then the move to Cardiff does not look quite as surprising. I say quite there because the fact has to be faced that we are widely expected to struggle next season and questions might well be asked as to why Caulker didn’t opt for a more established Premier League team (I’m sure there would have been some out there willing to sign him given the opportunity). However, by choosing to come to Cardiff, Steven Caulker has sent out a signal that the club’s transfer policy this summer, which has seen us behave more like an “established” club rather than one tentatively trying to make their way in their new surroundings by going for “safer” signings (like people like me have been urging them to do!), is beginning to bear fruit and that a move to Cardiff need not necessarily mean nine months of struggle with a fair chance that you’ll end as part of a relegation squad at the end of it.

 

A real statement of intent by Cardiff City - record signing (it's being reported that he cost around £9 million) Steven Caulker at Cardiff City Stadium last night.

A real statement of intent by Cardiff City – record signing (it’s being reported that he cost around £9 million) Steven Caulker at Cardiff City Stadium last night.*

It has to be said that City’s approach in the transfer market so far this summer has been both interesting and brave – so many people were saying that it was essential that we bring in some experienced Premier League performers to guide what is largely an inexperienced squad at this level through the season. There is still a chance that we will see these old hands arriving in the coming weeks, but so far we’ve signed four players with the oldest of them being twenty five, have been rejected by a twenty one year old and there’s another twenty five year old in negotiations with the club.

I’m struggling to think of another newly promoted side who have gone down the route of buying very promising players for relatively large sums before and this is what makes us an interesting side for next season because one or two more signings in the Cornelius/Caulker mould would see us becoming a side which had the potential to comfortably avoid the drop, but it’s also a brave policy because, especially with the very testing start to our home programme we have, we could be left with a group that would find it very difficult to turn around a difficult start to the campaign.

Whatever the merits or otherwise of the club’s recruitment policy, it needs to be said that defensive performances so far (yes I know they’re only friendlies!) indicate that we needed an injection of quality into the back four. Three goals conceded at non league Forest Green Rovers was followed up by an early goal let in from a corner in a low key 1-1 draw at League Two side Cheltenham on Saturday (Kimbo got our equaliser) and we conceded three sloppy goals in letting a 2-0 lead slip as we lost to a League One outfit on Tuesday, albeit a good Brentford side who I wouldn’t be surprised to see challenging at the top of the league this season, – Kimbo, again, and Fraizer Campbell got our goals at Griffin Park. Room for improvement then for the seniors, but the Development team followed up their win at Haverfordwest last week with a 3-2 victory at Barry with Kadeem Harris getting his fourth pre season goal and Etien Velikonja and Rhys Healey getting the others, while the in form Harris provided assists for Nicky Maynard and Joe Ralls in last night’s 2-1 win at Port Talbot – Saturday’s match at Hereford promises to be their toughest test so far.

Finally, as one centreback arrives, another leaves – albeit on a temporary basis. Ben Nugent has been loaned out to Brentford – I’ve seen it mentioned on  messageboards that it’s until 1 January but there’s been no official confirmation of that yet.

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

Posted in Out on the pitch | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Weekly review 27 July 2013.

CoymayI covered the resolution of the Langston loan note debt earlier in the week, but newly installed honorary life President of the club Sam Hammam didn’t waste any time in giving us the benefit of his opinion as this piece appeared in the local press almost within twenty four hours of the announcement of the settlement. It’s all pretty standard Hammam stuff in which he goes on about the need for fans to support Vincent Tan and make him feel loved. I’ll not comment on that except to remark that while someone receiving an endorsement from Sam Hammam a decade ago could have relied on the guaranteed support of a large percentage of the Cardiff City fanbase, I’m not sure that’s true anymore – in fact, it could be said that, with attitudes towards our former owner as they are amongst a very significant proportion of City fans, Sam Hammam’s public support might be seen as something of a poisoned chalice for the person concerned!

Anyway, enough off the pitch stuff, thankfully things have started happening on it, both in terms of new players arriving and some football being played, in the past week. The one guaranteed new player is Derby fight back John Brayford whose signing on a four year contract was officially confirmed yesterday – a fee of £1.3 million (which could rise to £2 million with various add ons) being the widely reported cost of securing his services. It’s also generally accepted that Brentford goalkeeper Simon Moore’s arrival at the club will be confirmed early next week and, seemingly, City are still chasing Toulouse midfield player Etienne Capoue, while a new name to enter the fray is Espanyol’s Mexican international centreback Hector Moreno who the Spanish media are reporting has been the subject of a bid from us.

Those last two players named appear to confirm that City are still chasing the sort of players that would not generally be targeted by a newly promoted club – Capoue has been a target for some of the top clubs in the UK (e.g. Spurs and Arsenal) over the past year or so and Atheltico Madrid, Fiorentina and Monaco are all being linked with him this summer. Under those circumstances, I suppose it’s not surprising that it was being reported in the French media a few days ago that Capoue had “refused” us and was not interested in coming to Cardiff, but it’s emerged recently that City have had a bid for the player accepted and it appears that there has been some dialogue between the player’s agent (and possibly Capoue himself) and the club. Malky Mackay is rumoured to have flown to Toulouse yesterday to handle negotiations and you get the impression that City are prepared to push the boat out in terms of wages for this transfer – the deal is not dead in the water by any means.

New signing John Brayford  pictured looking slightly different than he does now whilst winning an England C (non league) during his time with Burton Albion.

New signing John Brayford pictured looking slightly different than he does now whilst winning an England C (non league) cap during his time with Burton Albion.

Quite where we are at with Moreno is more difficult to gauge. Strangely, sections of the media are reporting that we’ve offered Espanyol (who probably need to sell because of their financial problems) £4 million a few days after Swansea’s higher bid was rejected by the Spanish club – my guess is that this information is wrong because City’s approach this summer to trying to sign players which I would say are on their A or B lists has tended to be to offer what the selling club wants in the hope that other clubs will not follow through on their interest in the player.

What cannot be denied is that Malky Mackay and his recruitment team have not been put off pursuing the type of player which I would guess most City fans thought we’d have no chance of signing because of their failure to land the likes of Victor Wanyama and Thomas Ince. The prevailing view in the media and amongst supporters is that 25 year old Capoue (a technically proficient defensive midfield player with a decent goalscoring record and six full caps for France) would represent a tremendous signing and a real coup for the club if we could get him (“the signing of the summer so far” is how I’ve seen him described in a couple of articles), while Moreno, who has an impressive forty five caps for his country at the age of twenty five, is seen as a footballing defender, capable of making the adjustment to the more physical Premier League.

I’ve raised my concerns about the possibility of us missing out on cheaper, perhaps more realistic, transfer targets as we go off vainly pursuing players with a big reputation once or twice on here in the past couple of months , but, to be fair to the City hierarchy, it needs to be said that the signing of Andreas Cornelius is an example of this approach working and it’s probably true to say that it would only need to work again on  one or two occasions for it to be judged a success. It’s also reassuring to see that the signing of Brayford and the impending arrival of Moore indicates that City haven’t abandoned the sort of philosophy shown by Norwich for example in their first two seasons back at Premier League level.

The signing of Brentord goalkeeper Simon Moore has not been officially confirmed yet, but it's expected to go through early in the coming week - Moore adds to the number of internationals at Cardiff City Stadium having played four times for the Isle of Wight in the Island Games in 2009.

The signing of Brentord goalkeeper Simon Moore has not been officially confirmed yet, but it’s expected to go through early in the coming week – Moore adds to the number of internationals at Cardiff City Stadium having played four times for the Isle of Wight in the Island Games in 2009.

The Championship attracted more than it’s fair share of flak last season when it came to the standard of football on offer, but there were some decent right backs around at that level in 2012/13. Charlton’s Chris Solly and Burnely’s Keiran Trippier (who was picked in the PFA Championship team for last season) are two players capable of making the step up to the Premier League in my opinion and Huddersfield’s Jack Hunt might well be able to as well, but John  Brayford is, arguably, better than all three of them. I first became aware of him at Crewe, but it was at Derby where he really began to stand out as a quick attacking full back, capable of knocking in some superb crosses at times. Supporters of the team you bought a player from might not always be the best people to look to for an objective view of him (especially if he has turned down a contract offer and is looking to “better” himself), but you can usually piece together a consensus view on him as a player – Brayford is the first player I’ve come across who had a 100% positive feedback from his former team’s supporters when I went on one of their messageboards to gauge opinions.

Hopefully then, we’ve signed someone, for a relatively cheap fee, in one of the positions we needed to strengthen who will be able to cope with the step up in class from the Championship . There’s no indication yet of how much we are going to pay for Simon Moore, but I think it might well be a tidy sum – after all, the twenty three year old impressed so much in his first full season of league football that he was invited to train with Manchester United at one stage and was also linked with the likes of Newcastle and Sunderland during the winter. I doubt it very much if Moore will be displacing David Marshall any time soon, but I also can’t see him becoming our third choice either, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see one of him or Joe Lewis loaned out (or possibly sold in the case of the latter) in the coming weeks.

Anyway, the pre-season build up is well and truly under way now with all of the sides from the Under 18’s upwards having played a game. The Academy side drew 1-1 with Taffs Well’s senior team ten days ago with striker Yora Enzam getting the goal, the Under 21’s beat Haverfordwest 4-1 with a squad which included five trialists. Raphael Calvet from Auxerre, who I mentioned in last week’s review, was one of them and, another one, a Portugese winger called Correia got the fourth goal, but it was Kadeem Harris who took the eye with a fine hat trick – all this from someone who I had down as a poor finisher!

The senior side also scored four, but struggled to put away Conference side Forest Green Rovers before edging to victory by the odd goal in seven – mind you, 4-3 looks good compared to last year’s 1-0 defeat by the same side in the opening pre season friendly! Just like last year, Malky Mackay used all of his first team squad (with the exception of Aron Gunnarsson who is still recovering from the dislocated shoulder he sustained playing for Iceland in early June) with eleven changes made at half time and then Joe Mason and Rudy Gestede only getting a quarter of a game each as the latter replaced Mason midway through the second half. City goals came from first half headers by new signing Andreas Cornelius and Nicky Maynard, Peter Whittingham scored just after half time from the penalty spot after Mason had been fouled and a lovely goal by Craig Noone restored City’s two goal lead at 4-2, only for the home team to capitalise on some shoddy defending a couple of minutes later to ensure some dodgy moments for the side before victory was confirmed.

Today sees the first team go to Cheltenham where John Brayford is expected to get some game time and the Under 21’s will have Gestede, Mason, Velikonja and Kiss in their squad when they face Barry Town United. On Tuesday, the senior side go to Brentford and then face Italian team Chievo a week today in their first home friendly, while the Under 21’s travel to Port Talbot on Wednesday before playing Hereford at Edgar Street in a week’s time.

Posted in Out on the pitch, Up in the Boardroom | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Weekly review 27 July 2013.